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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XXVII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAR. 4. 1909. No. 0&#13;
Baked Goods&#13;
W e a r e now g e t t i n g a fine line of B a k e d Goods from J a c k s o n&#13;
i-&#13;
Below find a list of some of t h e articles we c a r r y&#13;
Bread&#13;
Graham Bread&#13;
Buns&#13;
Cinnamon Rolls&#13;
Jelly Roll Cake&#13;
Angel Cake&#13;
Cookies&#13;
Fried Cakes&#13;
Swarthout &amp; Placeway&#13;
L O C A L NEWS.&#13;
TrUBteeu&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Atsawwor,&#13;
(C.&#13;
[to&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler and wife were Detroit&#13;
visitors the last of last week.&#13;
Roger Carr and wife were guests of&#13;
relatives in Detroit the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Emma (Jraae of Hartland visited&#13;
her many friends here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. M. R Morttnson was in Toledo&#13;
last week to see Mrs. John Mortenson&#13;
Jr. who is very low.&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic Clob will&#13;
give a play at the opera house Friday&#13;
evening Mar. 19. See large bills for&#13;
cast of characters.&#13;
Kirk VanWinkle of Lansing, was&#13;
in town Tuesday night shaking hands&#13;
with bis many friends and attending&#13;
the masonic meeting:.&#13;
M. Mortenson and wile were in&#13;
Toledo las* week and brought home&#13;
his brother John's three younger&#13;
children. We are sorry to note that&#13;
their mother is no better.&#13;
The friends and neighbors ot Lakin&#13;
district gave Jebn Dtnkel and wife a&#13;
surprise visit last Friday at their&#13;
borne here. A very enjoyable time&#13;
was spent by all present.&#13;
A minister in Chicago has given up&#13;
his work, as he says he cannot live&#13;
and care for a family on $2,500 a year.&#13;
My! a goodly number of us would like&#13;
to try the stant; almost $7 per day&#13;
Sunday included.&#13;
Dr. W. J. Walsh, who h,ts been visiting&#13;
for Pivo».^l wpeks. was in town&#13;
the past week. H« is now visiting in&#13;
Ann Arbor and Detroit but will return&#13;
in a few weeks and again open&#13;
his dental parlors.&#13;
A correction—In the social events&#13;
items last week, Mr. and Mrs. J . A.&#13;
Cadwell joined with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Read in entertaining the pleasant company&#13;
at the homo of the latter at 6:30&#13;
o'clock dinner Monday evening Feb.&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
K#w goods a r e rapidly&#13;
fllHug t h e store a n d its&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
T h e best stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, R i b -&#13;
bons, Corsets, H a n d k e r -&#13;
chiefs, H o s i e r y and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Remember That&#13;
Every Day Is Bargain Day&#13;
The ladies of the North Hamburg&#13;
Mite society will meet with Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Ben Gartrell Thursday, Mar. 11,&#13;
for dinner.&#13;
A number of little folks held a party&#13;
at the home of Miss Ruth Helen Robinson&#13;
Tuesday afternoon in honor&#13;
of her fourth birthday. The Httle&#13;
folks enjoyed themselves to the utmost.&#13;
Larnont Nolan of Lake County was&#13;
in town a few days the past week.&#13;
His daughter Irene, who has been&#13;
spending the past year with her&#13;
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, M. Dolan&#13;
returned home with him. She will be&#13;
missed by her many young friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown teacher in the&#13;
Chicago schools has been granted a&#13;
four months leave and she and her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Sarah Brown will spend&#13;
that time in California. Their many&#13;
friends here will be glad to bear from&#13;
them occasionally through the DISPATCH.&#13;
Do not forget that Saturday is registration&#13;
day in the village and that&#13;
you must register if not already on&#13;
the roll, in order to vote Monday; and&#13;
every voter should endeavor to vote.&#13;
Remember that if you do not vote you&#13;
have no reason to find fault with the&#13;
the ones elected.&#13;
The March Regular&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7 6 ,&#13;
F. and A. (VI.&#13;
Village Election.&#13;
A Citizens caucus was held at the&#13;
Town ball in the Village of Pinckney&#13;
Feb. 27, 1909 and the following&#13;
named persons were nominated to till&#13;
the various village offices.&#13;
President, George Greeu&#13;
Clerk, Percy Swarthout&#13;
C. V. VaaWiakle&#13;
ohn Mouks&#13;
rank Peteru&#13;
J. C Dunn&#13;
Daniel W. Murta&#13;
Committee for next year: E. W.&#13;
Kennedy, D. H. Mowers, C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle.&#13;
D. W. Murta,&#13;
Clerk of said meeting.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney, this 27th day of&#13;
February 1909. ' v * *&#13;
01 course all are aware that the&#13;
election comes next Monday. There&#13;
is but one ticket in the field but all&#13;
voters should turn out jnst the same&#13;
and give these men their support and&#13;
let them know that you recognize&#13;
them.&#13;
The new depot at So. Lyon is being&#13;
constructed.&#13;
Joe Staskable of Whitmore Lake&#13;
was in town Saturday.&#13;
Gay Teeple and wife and Jdrs. Nettie&#13;
Vaughn were Detroit visitors last&#13;
week.&#13;
Today is the day this country&#13;
changes presidents—it will now be&#13;
President Tatt.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle is in Detroit&#13;
looking up the millinery styles for the&#13;
coming season.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. 0 . J. Hickey of Rose&#13;
City visited at the home of £ . W.&#13;
Kennedy the past week.&#13;
Mrs. William Mercer Jr., who has&#13;
been visiting in Detroit, returned&#13;
home Saturday morning.&#13;
The Byron electric light system geta&#13;
its power from water power at Shiawassee&#13;
Town nine miles distant.&#13;
Geo. Chapel of Howell has secured a&#13;
patent on a new bridge for spectacles&#13;
which is considered one ot the best.&#13;
Russel and Elva VanAmburg of&#13;
Howell visited their 'cousins, George&#13;
and Edna Webb, the last ot last week.&#13;
The M. E. Ladies are reminded that&#13;
they are to attend a business meeting&#13;
at Mrs. H. F. Siglers this p. m. at&#13;
2:30. ii&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Surdam, who has been!&#13;
with her parents for several weeks, re-j&#13;
turned to ber home in Detroit Friday j&#13;
last. j&#13;
There being so much ivork resting ! About 17 Masons from here attendupon&#13;
the lodge at this time, namely, ed a special meeting of degree work&#13;
the initiation of seventeen new mem-! at ^o. Lyon last Friday. A banquet&#13;
bers, four degrees were conferred, two&#13;
firsts and two thirds at the regular&#13;
m ;eting Tuesday evening.&#13;
The lodge opened at 2:30 p. m. with&#13;
the officers ail present and every seat&#13;
in the lodge room occupied. The two&#13;
firsts were out of the way at 6 o'clock&#13;
when sixty five sat down to a fine reception&#13;
dinner.&#13;
In the evening the lodge room was&#13;
crowded to witness the fine settings of&#13;
the third degree, as the work was done&#13;
by the past W. M., Kirk VanWinkle,&#13;
of Landing. He was beartilv received&#13;
by the brethren.&#13;
Brothers from New York City, Detroit,&#13;
Stockbridge, and Lansing sat&#13;
with the lodge daring the afternoon&#13;
and eyening and spoke in high terms&#13;
of the work did by the brothers in confering&#13;
the degrees. After the program&#13;
all went away feeling that a&#13;
day long to be remembered by Livingston&#13;
Lodge No. 76, had closed.&#13;
The Weather.&#13;
1L 1 &lt; • » .&#13;
HoweftVBusy Store&#13;
Hgtttor&#13;
» . - " — « • «•*&lt;*!&#13;
We have had fairly good weather&#13;
| the past week which took nearly all&#13;
the snow*: however the roads dfd not&#13;
break up- entirely. Tuesday night&#13;
| there w a r * :htfbt rain, t u n i n g to&#13;
8tf0w and about an inch feUr Wednesday&#13;
was a genuine March day wtfti a&#13;
little snow and rain in the air*&#13;
was served at the close.&#13;
The Temperance lecture at the opera&#13;
house last Thursday evening by&#13;
Mrs. E. L. Calkins was well attended&#13;
and appreciated by all.&#13;
Mrs. E. L. Calkins of Kalamazoo.&#13;
State Pres. of WCTU, has been nominated&#13;
as Regent of the U. of M., on&#13;
the Prohibitionist ticket.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Towle enterained&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Webb and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E . Tupper to dinner&#13;
last Saturday. A very pleasant trme&#13;
was spent.&#13;
Judge Minor has granted the writ&#13;
of mandamas compelling the Putnam&#13;
school distret officers to pay for the&#13;
woodshed. This caae was tried at the&#13;
last term ot court.—Tidings.&#13;
The fortieth wedding anniversary&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Placeway of&#13;
near Gregory, was enjoyed by a large&#13;
company of friends and relatives at&#13;
their home, Wednesday Feb. 24. A&#13;
very enjoyable time is reported.&#13;
Hiram Smith of near here was one&#13;
of the ton'* contestant* in the senior&#13;
lit. oratorical contest held in the Law&#13;
building at the U. ot M. recently. Hiram&#13;
was one of the two who won&#13;
honors and they will represent the&#13;
class ID the University contest. His&#13;
brother Clyde was also won ot the orators.&#13;
t&#13;
Don't Fail fo Attend&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL S&#13;
Dissolution Sale&#13;
For Bargains&#13;
Only Two Weeks More to Buy Goods at -&#13;
WHOLESALE PRICES&#13;
•I&#13;
Shoes at Cost Prices&#13;
Furniture at Cost Prices&#13;
Dress Goods at Cost Prices&#13;
A l l Heavy Foot Wear at Cost Prices&#13;
Best Prints at 5 1-2c yard&#13;
Best Tennis Flannels at 8c&#13;
All binen Crash, 12c value at 9 1-2&#13;
Groceries&#13;
25 pounds Sugar&#13;
25c Coffee&#13;
20c Coffee&#13;
8 bars of Soap&#13;
All Sales Cash&#13;
«1.25&#13;
22c&#13;
17c&#13;
25 c&#13;
Soda&#13;
Yeast&#13;
Extra Rice&#13;
50c T e a&#13;
.5c&#13;
3c&#13;
6c&#13;
42c&#13;
V . Produce Taken&#13;
P O S T C A R D S&#13;
Washington's Birthday&#13;
St. Patrick's Day and&#13;
Regular Birthday. Also&#13;
a line of Easter Cards,&#13;
Dispatch Office ... M.&#13;
j BEST PAINT VALUE&#13;
r,&#13;
•3i&#13;
rim*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
'-AU&#13;
:fWK&#13;
SK&#13;
§incht\eti fii&amp;pMct&#13;
i •"'*» j&#13;
F*AVK JJ. A V p U f f S , , P u b .&#13;
MNCfcN £ MICHIGAN&#13;
Why Not Be Independent?&#13;
It seem*-tq me, tft*t many people&#13;
miss the troe*BSy* Of outdoors by depending&#13;
top mueb on the assistance of&#13;
others.' One finds on all aides tales of&#13;
how rfwto go Into the wilda and give&#13;
themselVaiL offer to the enjoyment of&#13;
nature, b$;j&gt;Qt3ewhow many of these&#13;
btories show plainly that it was not&#13;
the sportsman who did thing*. Too&#13;
often j.h* sophisticated reader aud outdqor&#13;
juiap detects the fact that it was&#13;
the guide's skill which brought the&#13;
game in range of the rifle. The guide&#13;
did the tracking, or he called the&#13;
moose, or he pointed out the game for&#13;
ihe hunter to nee. Somehow most&#13;
trips into the wilds are not declarat&#13;
o r s of independence. They are, in&#13;
fact, plain statements of dependence&#13;
upon another's skill, another's kuowlrrtge&#13;
and another's strength. After the&#13;
Kiiide has driven the deer to one a&#13;
stand "To make a long story short,&#13;
half an hour passed before George, the&#13;
guide, who had come up, finally found&#13;
the deer dead." Then when wet leaves&#13;
gave good still-hunting—"The guide&#13;
mid 1 still-hunted," and it was the&#13;
guide who.got the shots. I do not decry&#13;
the value of guides, though I never&#13;
hired but one, writes Raymond S.&#13;
Spears in Recreation. If one is really&#13;
incapable of getting through the&#13;
woods alone, then stick to the guide&#13;
like a burr. If one wants packers,&#13;
cooks and other servants, well and&#13;
good. If does save time to have.,erne's&#13;
meals prepared and -dishes washed by&#13;
audtheiv But when it comps to the actual&#13;
hunting, why not strike out alone&#13;
and shoot game, without the assistance&#13;
of another's eyes, another's ears, and&#13;
another's rifle, whfcli happens frequently&#13;
when, a guide with a gun is&#13;
alongside at every stride.&#13;
An Amusing Controversy.&#13;
An amusing controversy is going on&#13;
in Berlin between MissOlga I)esmdnd&#13;
a n r t t b e P r o l a n d i e ^ U t i g a l t y f e *1ft©;&#13;
cult of beatay7. As m'&amp;r* bl'f remembered,&#13;
tfcjje lafo.Ls an/."altogether" dan-,&#13;
cer Who f a v o w t l i e unclothed truth as&#13;
a sartorial "rifHPlfilP J&gt;r &amp;|«nsa,&gt;wbo&#13;
led the onslaught on her, fate been&#13;
called down by her solicitor, who&#13;
draws attention to the fact that he&#13;
made use of certain very harsh terms&#13;
in his references to her. But Herr&#13;
Roeren declines to enter into correspondence&#13;
with the alluring Miss Des.&#13;
mond—wise man!—either directly or&#13;
indirectly, as to his "parliamentary activity"&#13;
in calling her by vigorous adjectives.&#13;
T h e affair has attracted an&#13;
enormous amount of attention }n Berlin&#13;
circles, and the dancer is not likely&#13;
to suffer any immediate pecuniary loss&#13;
through the debate in the diet. It ts;&#13;
declares the Boston Herald, a good&#13;
deal as if the beauteous Mhss Garden&#13;
should be haled up for her posturings&#13;
in Strauss' music drama by an insensate&#13;
member of congress; therefore&#13;
Dr. Roeren's interpellation on the cult&#13;
nf the nude falls flat, while Berlin&#13;
smiles.&#13;
Paris streets must, be in a queer way&#13;
wheu^the prefect of police, M. I^epine,&#13;
has to issue'a mandate that it is a punishable*&#13;
offense to throw'orange or banana&#13;
skins into the streets, and t h a t "&#13;
anyone eating an orange in them will&#13;
be watched by eagle-eyed policemen,&#13;
it. is nmbarrSSsfSg enough "to eat an&#13;
orange without'the police, inspecting&#13;
the operation, "tod lo~ conceal evidences&#13;
of the crime must&lt; be., worse yet.&#13;
But M. Lepine's order is absolute. He&#13;
says it is a detestable habit, that It endangers&#13;
life, for the fruit eater is selfish,&#13;
and easts away tho slippery skins,&#13;
regardless of who may slip on them&#13;
and break a bone! Xo, not even inter&#13;
the gutter can any such refuse go!&#13;
Persons who have slipped on the pavementfe&#13;
frequently sprained or fractured&#13;
their limbs, and with the rapid traffic&#13;
n&gt;f motor cars and 'buses there is every&#13;
chance of accidents that will prove&#13;
fatal. The home dust, bin is best.&#13;
Now a tuberculosis expert declares&#13;
that if he has five years and sixteen&#13;
millions he can exterminate the disease&#13;
from the face of the «arth. The&#13;
time, h s can have for the taking; the&#13;
millions might be handed .aver to him&#13;
by some of the billionaires who are la&#13;
iaily dread of dying rich. As yet, how-&#13;
&lt;°w, ihbre has been no wild rush to&#13;
nand over to him *he curse of wealth.&#13;
A New York . . Ir-tinT/Mir sent to jail&#13;
for a year on a cLn..ge"of manslaughter&#13;
represents what is called an "unusual&#13;
pnnisbment.". PosftiWyik Is, but&#13;
when t s w p e n a l t y is mfr«*tA*ial t W ' o K&#13;
tones wU^pft&gt;b«btv be terfs 0h r&#13;
MONEY SEEMS IB&#13;
BE PLENIIFUL&#13;
THE BANK REPORTS SHOW THAT&#13;
MICHIGAN PEOPLE ARE&#13;
PROSPEROUS.&#13;
THE SAGINAW TALK FEST&#13;
The Increase in Savings Runs Into&#13;
Large Figure*—Mr. Burt Incensed&#13;
Over a Socialist Meeting.&#13;
The deposits in state banks have&#13;
Increased $9,240,630.36 in t h e last&#13;
year, according to the report made by&#13;
the state banking department for the&#13;
period ending February 5. Commissioner&#13;
Zimmerman also states that&#13;
the legal rtserve of the banks on that&#13;
date amounted to ¢47,358,108.86, constituting&#13;
a reserve of 22.1 per cent, of&#13;
the total deposits. The cash reserve&#13;
that day was $15,137,208.18, equaling&#13;
a cash reserve of 7 per cent.&#13;
The increase In, loans, discounts&#13;
and mortgages during the year covered&#13;
in the report amounted to ¢4,&#13;
925.292.5S. Commercial deposits Increased&#13;
$33cS,9ScX.S9, aud savings deposits&#13;
$8,901,631.47.&#13;
The last previous report of state&#13;
banks was made on November 27,&#13;
1908, and during the period between&#13;
that date and February 5, the loans,&#13;
discounts, securities and mortgages&#13;
of the 352 state banks and six trust&#13;
companies increased .$738,910.80; the&#13;
commercial deposits $2,854,090.41, and&#13;
the savings deposits $3,223,906.20, or&#13;
a total increase of deposits of $6,077,-&#13;
996.61.&#13;
Indication* ot oU bave been disoov&#13;
ered nj?ar Morrioe and samples of Ux*&#13;
oil are being tesltecL&#13;
The Luther bHft frtAool burned dowv&#13;
Tuesday. AJ) t f o pugUs escaped. LOSB&#13;
$8,000; insurance, $3,000.&#13;
James McQuire. 20, a lumber jack,&#13;
was crushed by rolling togs, near Pern&#13;
bine. He died twenty minutes aftei&#13;
the accident.&#13;
Seven Traverse City ealoonkseperf&#13;
have now appeared In court as tbe result&#13;
of the activity of the Law and&#13;
Order league.&#13;
The Traverse City basket factory&#13;
will start March 15, giving employment&#13;
to 800 men. Because of a rush&#13;
of orders, the factory will have to run&#13;
10 months this year.&#13;
Charles Em long, a Lake township&#13;
farmer, was killed by a Pere Mar&#13;
quette passenger train near Steveusville.&#13;
His wife and daughter found t h t&#13;
botly beside the track.&#13;
For the first time In Its history the&#13;
Branch county Jail has not had a pris&#13;
oner in the past two weeks. In that&#13;
time the sheriff's and the police forces&#13;
have not made an arrest.&#13;
Dick Comstock, a 17-year-old Jack'&#13;
son boy, has been sentenced to pay a&#13;
$10 fine or spend five days in jail for&#13;
contempt of court. He refused to tell&#13;
where he obtained seme liquor recently.&#13;
Though he refuses to discuss the&#13;
matter it Is generally believed that&#13;
Attorney General Bird is investigating&#13;
ffairs of the Ann Arbor university&#13;
Mr. Burt's Denunciation.&#13;
The so-called mass meeting at t h e&#13;
Auditorium in Saginaw has been t h e&#13;
subject of unfavorable criticism and&#13;
a number of prominent persons who&#13;
were persuaded to attend the meeting,&#13;
some of whom addressed it, are&#13;
said to feel chagrined at having been&#13;
drawn into connection with the affair,&#13;
which is asserted ho have -developed&#13;
into a ranting Socialistic tirade&#13;
by Detroit and Chicago agitators.&#13;
\V. It. Burt, who gave the Auditorium&#13;
to the city, denounces the meeting&#13;
in a signed statement as an anarchistic&#13;
gathering. His attack has&#13;
caused a sensation. In the course of&#13;
hie statement Mr. Burt declares that&#13;
he and other reputable men of the&#13;
city, including two leading ministers,&#13;
were tricked into attending the meeting&#13;
under false representation as to&#13;
its character. He says he helped defray&#13;
the cost of the meeting and recommended&#13;
that the committee secure&#13;
Rev. Mr. Bradley as a speaker. He&#13;
says he Is ashamed of having attended&#13;
and regrets that he influenced others&#13;
to go. Mr. Burt denounces the inflammatory&#13;
speech of a Detroit man&#13;
In particular. He says in effect that&#13;
the meeting defamed the Auditorium,&#13;
and warns that "when they bring&#13;
speakers who declare that the judiciary,&#13;
from the supreme court at&#13;
Washington down, is corrupt, and that&#13;
an honest man cannot get justice, it&#13;
is time these people came out and&#13;
held such meetings by themselves,&#13;
instead of tricking the labor people&#13;
and outsiders under false representations."&#13;
STATE NEWS BRIEFS, LAST U S ME&#13;
VERY STRENUOUS&#13;
HOUSE HAS A RECORD-BREAKING&#13;
SESSION, FULL OF WILD&#13;
TALK.&#13;
COOK LETS WRATH OUT&#13;
Billingsgate Flows Freely and the&#13;
President Is Given a Large Dost&#13;
of It.&#13;
Looks Worse.&#13;
"Apparently the further Hie thing&#13;
£oes tho worse it seems to get for&#13;
Armstrong," said Thomas J. Navin,&#13;
member of the Jackson prison board&#13;
of control, in commenting on the matter.&#13;
"On the face of it things look very&#13;
much against Armstrong, He is now&#13;
completely out of the employ of the&#13;
prison board, as is also his wife. Their&#13;
formal resignations were received by&#13;
Capt. Stone, bookkeeper at the prison,&#13;
and will be accepted at the mooting&#13;
of the board next month."&#13;
"Will action on the appointment of&#13;
a new warden be taken at the next,&#13;
meeting?" Mr. Navin was asked.&#13;
"I cannot say as to that," Mr. Navin&#13;
answered. "Tho appointment, however,&#13;
will not be made in a hurry; the&#13;
board will see to it that time is taken&#13;
to give the matter careful consideration."&#13;
Storm Bound.&#13;
The worst, storm of the season&#13;
struck Menominee Wednesday night.&#13;
It was general throughout the upper&#13;
peninsula. Snow is piled in huge drifts&#13;
from three to ten feet high, making&#13;
traffic nearly impossible. All trains are&#13;
hours behind time. One fatal accident&#13;
occurred in the yards here. Albert&#13;
Bird, switchman and lamp tender for&#13;
the Northwestern railroad, was hit by&#13;
a switch engine, the engineer of which&#13;
could not see him, owing to the storm.&#13;
Both Bird's legs were broken and he&#13;
sustained other injuries.&#13;
Change of Venue.&#13;
Attorney \V. S. Cobb, who is associated&#13;
with John W. Miner in defending&#13;
Allen N. Armstrong, the suspended&#13;
warden of the Michigan state&#13;
prison, says that the defense had not&#13;
considered for a moment the asking&#13;
of a change of venue for the trial of&#13;
Armstrong on ihe charge of soliciting&#13;
and receiving a bribe. The prosecution&#13;
does not appear to care a fig&#13;
Whether a change of venue is asked&#13;
and secured or not.&#13;
Owing to the large quantity of salt&#13;
on hand, t h e Port Huron Salt Co. has&#13;
bfcjb forced to temporarily decrease&#13;
its forces.&#13;
Mr a view of disclosing possible&#13;
g r a f t&#13;
The mangled form of Irving McGerr,&#13;
a laborer from Oakley, was found by&#13;
W. A. Taggart, station agent of the&#13;
Mi*&gt;hi«an Central road," on a eoiKSbound&#13;
passenger train's trucks- at&#13;
Owosso Monday'night, v •&#13;
Because the new Saginaw and Flint&#13;
electricMine has .raised the. fare flfonr&#13;
Bridgeport to Saginaw one cent over&#13;
that charged by the old D., F. &amp;&#13;
S. road, citizens threaten to fight the&#13;
newccompany In the.courts.&#13;
A;tten Jacklin, a-'lad befriended, by&#13;
Mrs, Edna Pollard, of Flint, after h h&#13;
parents, it Is alleged, had left him and&#13;
moved to Detroit, was in„court Tuesday/&#13;
charged with'stealfyig $,1,60 from&#13;
his beriefactres. He/will be. tried soon-&#13;
Dan, a horse in a Kalamazoo fire&#13;
statiou, has been declared insane, by&#13;
several of the leading yeterjbarl^s.'and&#13;
will be killed. He raves like a madman,&#13;
throws himself around fn hts&#13;
stall, and.attacks everyone who- comes&#13;
near him.&#13;
Miss Jessie Mellwalne, 'who 'left&#13;
Kalamazoo recently to accept a position&#13;
as stenographer in Seattle, Wash.,&#13;
has written friends that she had&#13;
changed her mind after arriving there,&#13;
and was married to Edward Cramer,&#13;
a former Kalamazoo man.&#13;
The Kent County Medical society&#13;
has drafted a bill providing a penalty&#13;
to be inflicted on dealers, who sell&#13;
milk for the "certified" article which&#13;
contain* over 10,000 bacteria to the&#13;
cubic centimeter. The bill also provides&#13;
for inspection of milk by a&#13;
state commission.&#13;
The state livestock commission is&#13;
sending out notices to the effect that,&#13;
the quarantine in townships In Oakland,&#13;
Wayne and Macomb counties&#13;
caused by the foot and mouth disease,&#13;
have not been raised, but, on the contrary,&#13;
the regulations will be enforced&#13;
with increased, vigor.&#13;
Matt Helkkila and Ma,tk,Maki were&#13;
buried by a fall of slate In t h e Mary&#13;
Charlotte mine. They were working&#13;
in a drift and had just entered on the&#13;
night shift when the accident occurred.&#13;
The men were both Finland'ers,&#13;
single, and had come ^ v e r from th«&#13;
old country together shdrtly after&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Isaac Bowermnn, ased 75, of Shelby/&#13;
a chnroh member of long \gtafidt.n?r,;&#13;
was sentenced at Hart, to SO' days in.&#13;
the Ocean* county jail for attacking&#13;
a KVvear.-oUJ girl. The court took&#13;
into consideration the fact that Bowerman&#13;
bad lived a lifetime ^without&#13;
committing a single offense and showed&#13;
him leniency.&#13;
' Some of Ann Arbor's residents are&#13;
stirred up over the Stevens bill prohibiting&#13;
fortune-telling and soothsay&#13;
ins, believing that, possibly it. make?&#13;
the practicing of astronomy a felony&#13;
Prof. Hussey, instructor in etar-gaz&#13;
ing at the U. of M., says he has nc&#13;
fear that, the legislators have struck&#13;
a blow at science.&#13;
Convict LeBeau, sentenced from&#13;
Monroe November b\ 1907, to Jackson&#13;
prison for larceny, made a vicious attack&#13;
Wednesday on Keeper Ernest&#13;
Birney, striking him to the ground and&#13;
jumping upon him. Birney, who had&#13;
to be taken to the hospital, had&#13;
angered t h e prisoner by reporting him&#13;
for infraction of jules.&#13;
Judge Padgham has neither patience&#13;
nor mercy for violators of the&#13;
liquor laws. He haR just, sentenced&#13;
Harry Allgeo. a Way land druggist, to&#13;
pay a fine of $381.60 and serve 90&#13;
days in jail for repeated violations.&#13;
August, Hardy, saloonkeeper, also of&#13;
Wayland, and Reginald F. Graves,&#13;
druggist, of Plainwell, got off with re&gt;&#13;
pectlve neH of $218.flO and $59.50.&#13;
Mrs. Maude Prickett, widow of Asa&#13;
Prickett, late of Ann Arbor, has sued&#13;
the D. IT. R. for $25,000 damages alleged&#13;
to have been sustained when her&#13;
husband, a motorman, was killed In a&#13;
collision at Bun-ell's switch, April 20&#13;
last, when his limited car collided&#13;
with a local. Mrs. Prickett was left&#13;
with nine children. George Meade,&#13;
conductor, injured is the same crash,&#13;
demands $5,000&#13;
All records for the sixtieth congress&#13;
were broken by the house session&#13;
which ended at 3:21 o'clock Friday&#13;
morning, having extended over a&#13;
period of 10½ hours.&#13;
Efforts of the house leaders to rush&#13;
through all the important appropriation&#13;
bills in the closing hours of the&#13;
session, which terminates next Thursday-&#13;
at noon, together,with the obstructions&#13;
placed In their way by the Democrats,&#13;
probably will necessitate long&#13;
night sessions on every one of the five&#13;
remaining days. The records of the&#13;
stenographers show that the aggregate&#13;
of the remarks made during the day's&#13;
session exceed those of any day dnring&#13;
the last quarter of a century.&#13;
By an overwhelming vote, and without&#13;
party distinction the house sustained&#13;
the committee on approprir&#13;
ations in again reporting a provision&#13;
in the bill, restricting the operations&#13;
of the secret service detectives of the&#13;
treasury department.&#13;
Debate over the clause brought out&#13;
a torrent of invective and abuse of&#13;
President Roosevelt by Rep. George&#13;
Washington Coqk (Col.) So torrid&#13;
.was the display of venom Cook was&#13;
stopped b y - t h e house before he had&#13;
spoken more than a few minutes'.&#13;
Bpecinjefis of the tirade follows:&#13;
i "President Roosevelt seems to think&#13;
he'alone is the government and that&#13;
nls^ipse dixit must rule everybody, including&#13;
t h e poor and friendless black&#13;
soldiers of Brownsville, insulted, dismissed&#13;
and degraded without proof or1&#13;
trial, by executive Order and without&#13;
any warrant of reason or law:&#13;
"President Roosevelt runs the government&#13;
on the same, pr.lndnje that the&#13;
beef trust; runs |tsv ,sausage factory,&#13;
from a', personal1 standpoint, using executive&#13;
and judicial pdrk as the crude&#13;
material of his fantastic administration.&#13;
"He &gt;has built up a Roosevelt ring&#13;
in the army, navy and cWll service, all&#13;
fpr his personal and political glory, supreme&#13;
in his Impudence, vanity, arrogance&#13;
and imperial egotism.&#13;
"He rides through and around the&#13;
arfna of political action, on his broncho&#13;
of arrogant, egotistical impulse,&#13;
pretending to throw his lariat of execution&#13;
at the heads and broad horns&#13;
of capital for tho delectation of votlrfg&#13;
labor, and ending the scene with the&#13;
cunning catch by a priarie wolf of 8&#13;
gopher."&#13;
The World's.End.&lt;&#13;
"A collision of an unknown dark&#13;
planet with the sun will terminate&#13;
life on the earth," said Prof. Percival&#13;
Lowell, director of the Lowell observatory&#13;
at Flagstaff^ ^riz., in a lecture&#13;
before the students of Massachusetts&#13;
Institute of Technicology.&#13;
"The event will be prophesied^ 14&#13;
years before the catastrophe occWs,"&#13;
continued tho astronomer, "and Chaotic&#13;
confusion will reign in the world&#13;
preceding the days of the calamity."&#13;
The chance of the catastrophe happening&#13;
in the near future was declared&#13;
to be very slight by Prof. Lowell, nowever.&#13;
.&amp; England's Army.&#13;
Secretary of War Haldane gives la&#13;
general outline of the strength - .of&#13;
England's over-sea forces as contemplated&#13;
' u n d e r the .great imperial&#13;
scheme. Canada, he said, could easily&#13;
raise five or six tectorial divisions.&#13;
Australia five, New Zealand one and&#13;
South Africa forur or five. These in addition&#13;
to the existing 14 divisions of&#13;
the territorial forces of the United&#13;
Kingdom would give a total of 30 divisions&#13;
for home defense. Writh the&#13;
1G divisions of regulars ready for&#13;
over-sea service it was thus hoped to&#13;
attain an imperial army of 46 divisions,&#13;
equivalent, to 2,1 army corps. This&#13;
was just the strength of the German&#13;
army, Mr. Haldane said, and no other&#13;
army in the world had so great au&#13;
organization.&#13;
^Jutjipt Brewer Knoo*iev&#13;
Justice DaW&lt;rrjr«3fer, of U»&#13;
* States BupreiI»toojirl in addre a ^ U . « f » . atuMt* OB The Mlsti&#13;
of ThbjvC«iuniiy~4i^t** Oftuie&#13;
PtAce/hit «t ROOHTSU*fcd%p|&#13;
fol^rsVsgancria-ttsiirii»«fi I&#13;
army and navyr Among otbtt thiflfl.&#13;
'%• s a i d : -*....- +*&gt;• * -4» &lt;-&lt;&#13;
"The assertion t h a t the b*at w a r t f&#13;
preserve peace Is to build Up » frSM&#13;
navy and armyjibjsws saUgnomnce ot&#13;
h i s t o r y . i * : i • ?• •-&#13;
"The trip o d tJfe fleet around thft&#13;
world, as a bfcattfll Abo* ot our n s y |&#13;
strength, has been nothing out a waslf&#13;
of money. AfterxiU'its fbUV.-Ue frff*&#13;
ence o a U i p ^ ^ t ^ V #&#13;
peace one day a M r a / * (Jver-ft*e Bpilions&#13;
of the people's money7 s a v e been,&#13;
spent for coaling this fleet atone.&#13;
What benaflt^has Jtfe Ration ^ecei^W&#13;
fron} ths£r e&amp;endltur%? Qverj66 per&#13;
oVnfc of^Msv c&lt;wntfy'a"**Pe ajeB a r e&#13;
due to the army and navy. In 1907&#13;
the sum spent in this way totaled&#13;
$£65,000,000, the largest sum spent by&#13;
any nation. &gt; rr&#13;
"From football to warships, we 4r«&#13;
developing a love fotr fighting. W e a r e&#13;
rapidly drifting into an admiration for&#13;
the trappings of war, Instead of taking&#13;
the lead for paaoe. '•*"&#13;
"There never^fc^s ,b&amp;eA.. a.^naUfift,&#13;
that built a great army and.navy, but&#13;
that they got into, war,^ Peace born of&#13;
force is only temporary. Not until a1.*&#13;
nations settle their differences by arbitration&#13;
will the world enjoy peace."&#13;
Mob- Violence.&#13;
A mob of 5,000 citizens attached the&#13;
Creek quarter in O m J i a and from&#13;
early Sunday afternoon until early&#13;
Monday morning the streets of t r e&#13;
district were a scene of rioting. The&#13;
attack was lb retaliation for the murder&#13;
of Policeman Lowrey by a Greek&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Five persons are suffering with gunshot&#13;
wounds, 11 Greeks are so badly&#13;
beaten they are In hospitals and about&#13;
15 other persons are suffering from assaults&#13;
or as the result of misdirected&#13;
missiles. Scores of others have slight-&#13;
•cr hurts. No estimate can be placed&#13;
^on the financial loss resulting from&#13;
the destruction of property by the&#13;
mob. Five shops of importance were&#13;
almost wholly wrecked, while 16 smalljrr&#13;
ones escaped serious damage.&#13;
FLOOD WARNINGS ARE ISSUED.&#13;
Government Foretells Dangers on&#13;
Ohio River and Other Streams.&#13;
&lt; Washington, Feb. 26.—Flood warnings&#13;
were Issued by the weather bureau&#13;
last night for the Ohio river&#13;
from Parkersburg to Cairo, for the&#13;
Mississippi river from Cairo to Helena,&#13;
Ark., and for the lower Tennessee&#13;
and lower Cumberland rivers.&#13;
Fifty-five feet of water is expected&#13;
at Cincinnati to-day, with possibly&#13;
five feet more to come, and 42 feet at&#13;
Bvansville by Tuesday of next week.&#13;
A flood stage of 42 feet is indicated&#13;
at Helena by the middle of next weei&#13;
and 38 feet at Memphis in about tes&#13;
days.&#13;
Cincinnati, 0., Feb. 26.—That the&#13;
Ohio river here will reach a Btage of&#13;
60 feet on the present rise was the&#13;
prediction made yesterday by Local&#13;
Weather Forecaster Bassler. If this&#13;
stage is reached it will Inundate considerable&#13;
property on the river front&#13;
and cause considerable damage. Already&#13;
Water and Front streets a r e&#13;
flooded and about 300 residences In&#13;
low lying lands In Covington, Newport&#13;
and Bellevue, Ky., are submerged. /&#13;
Surveying for Railroad.&#13;
Mason City, la., Feb. 25.—Surveyors&#13;
are running a line between this&#13;
city and Forest City. Those who arb&#13;
'in a position to know say that they&#13;
are employed by the Rock Island railroad.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Heavy Touch for Money.&#13;
Unless members of the present legislature&#13;
put on the brakes, the fortyfifth&#13;
session will go down Into history&#13;
als the most costly in the history of&#13;
the state. Appropriation bills which&#13;
have already made their appearance&#13;
will call for a touch on the state treasury&#13;
to the amount of $1,458,255. Many&#13;
of these measures are not the regular&#13;
appropriation bills, but have been introduced&#13;
to provide means for special&#13;
purposes. When the regular appropriation&#13;
bills make their appearance, the&#13;
total sum will be given a big boost.&#13;
(Game Was Swift.&#13;
During a hot scrimmage between&#13;
Rirl basketball teams at. Hermansville,&#13;
Clara Lyppe, a star player, fell to&#13;
the floor senseless. For half an hour&#13;
she talked incoherently, but was&#13;
finally restored to consciousness by a&#13;
doctor. Her weak heart was the cause.&#13;
The man killed by an M. U. R. cat&#13;
pear Jackson has been Identified by «&#13;
son-in-law as Jean Rose, a farmer.&#13;
wfcoB^Trotne was In Summit township&#13;
Detroit.-— O a t t l t v — M a r k o t 2!&gt; l o w o r&#13;
than l a s t w o r k on a l l Rrarlos. . KKtrn.&#13;
d r y - f e d s t o r r s a n d l i r l f c r s $.".n0t&lt;Ti)5.&lt;i0;&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f o r s , 1,000 t o ' 1.200 lbfv«T.&#13;
©,'.25; s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , 800 t o 1,000&#13;
lbs, $ I.?;} (&lt;? !"&gt;• s t e e r a a n d h e i f e r s that, arc&#13;
fat, ,r}00 t o 700 lbs, ¢ 4 ^ 4.25; rhojer. f a t '&#13;
r o w s . $ 3 . 7 5 ^ 4 . 2 5 : Rood f a t r o w s . $3.50&#13;
(??)3.7.r&gt;: r o m m o n c o w s , S3; r a n n o r s , $1.50&#13;
© 2 ; c h o i c e h e a v y h u l l s . $4.25: f a i r t o&#13;
Rood b o l o R n n s , b u l l s , $3.50(^3.75; l i g h t&#13;
bullR, $3(9)3.25; m i ' k e r s , larprr, young1 ,&#13;
m e d i u m ag-e, $40tfji50; c o m m o n m i l k e r s .&#13;
$20ff?130.&#13;
V e a l c a l v e s — W a r k r t 25rffir)0c h ' . . * ' ^&#13;
t h a n l a s t w e e k ; best, JSfffiD; o t h e r s , $;'&#13;
@7.50.&#13;
Milch r o w s nnrt s p r i n K o r s — G o o i l&#13;
flt^ajy, c o m m o n dull.&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t 25o l o w r *&#13;
t h a n l a s t w e e k . P r a t l a m b s , $7.2R; faff&#13;
to Rood l a m b s , $6.5Q(f7)7; Hg-lit t o comm&#13;
o n I n m b s . $5(fi)fi; y e a r l i n g s , $ 5 . 7 5 *&#13;
$6.10; fair to Rood b u t c h e r s h e e p , $4 {&#13;
4.50; c u l l s a n d c o m m o n , $3.50&lt;fi)4.&#13;
H O R S — M a r k e t 1 0 r ® 1 5 o h l « h « r t h a n&#13;
l a s t w e e k . R a n g * of prloewT'lArht t o&#13;
ROOT! b u t c h e r s , $6.50; p i g s , _tfc.7t; 2iffll%&#13;
y b r k e r a . $6.25; i t a R s , 1-3 o&#13;
Grain, K&lt;e.&#13;
D e t r o i t . — W h e a t — C a s h No. ' 2&#13;
41.22¾ ; M a y o p e n e d u n c h a n R e d a t $1.21.&#13;
lost V£c a n d a d v a n c e d t o $1.21¾ ; J u l y&#13;
o p e n e d a t $1.0fi, a d v a n c e d to $1.06½.&#13;
d r o p p e d b a c k t o t h e o p e n l n R a n d a d -&#13;
v a n c e d t o $1.07; S e p t e m b e r o p e n e d a t&#13;
$1.00¾ a n d a d v a n c e d , to $ 1 . 0 1 % ; N o . 3&#13;
r e d . $ 1 . 1 9 % ; No. 1 w h i t e . $1.22¾.&#13;
C o m — C a s h No. 3, 66•'Vic; No. 3 y e l -&#13;
low, 2 e a r n a t 67'-iC, 1 a t 67 \f.&#13;
O a t R — C a s h No. 3 w h i t e , 4 c a r s at.&#13;
65Vic;. No. 4 w h i t e , 1 c a r a t 5 4 % c ; M a y .&#13;
No, 3 w h i t e . 56c.&#13;
Hye-—Cash No. 2. S1c hid.&#13;
B e a n s — C a s h , $2,40; May, $2.4',&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d — P r i m e s p o t , 60 hatrs a t&#13;
$5.40; M a r c h , $5.40; s a m p l e , 25 lm.R.4 At&#13;
$5.25. 10 at $5.10. 15 a t $.'., 20 n t $4,75;&#13;
s u m p l e a l s l k e , 10 b a « s a t $7.75, 10 a t&#13;
$6.7R, ' Y&#13;
T i m o t h y w e e d — P r i m e spot, 75 baffs&#13;
a t $1.65.&#13;
B a r l e y — G o o d s a m p l e s ' . $1.40(^1.^0 p e r&#13;
e w t .&#13;
F e e d — T n 100-lb «ack»», JobbinR* lot.i:&#13;
B r a n . $2fi; c o a r s e m i d d l i n g * , $29; fine&#13;
m i d d l i n g * , $31; r w i c k e d c o r n . $2.S:&#13;
c o a r s e c o r n m e a l . | i &lt; ; c o r n , a n d o a t&#13;
c h o p , $25 p e r ton.*' r '&#13;
FK&gt;ur*-rftMt Aflrbljran P»t«n». tfi.lftj&#13;
rdlnftry p a t e n t , $5.Tr&gt;; s t r a i g h t , $;&gt;•»:,;&#13;
Msar, fS.fO per bbf In wood, Jobblns&#13;
4&#13;
*&#13;
fit*&#13;
FLEETS f&#13;
By&#13;
ROY NORTON&#13;
ILLUSTtATED BY A. WEIL&#13;
Copyrl^t, MOT, bjr Tt». AwucUwA Hand*/ M ^ JUtca.&#13;
SYNOP3J8.&#13;
•'VanlBhln* Fleets," a *tory of "what&#13;
might have happened," openn in WabhinKton&#13;
with the United States and Japan&#13;
near war. Guy Hilller, secretary of the&#13;
Brittuh embtusay, and Mlsa Norma Roberta,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
Introduced as lover*. Japan declares war&#13;
and takes the Philippine*. Guy Hilller&#13;
wtarts for England. Norma Roberts&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. All ports&#13;
ar« closed. Tokyo learns of miaalnK Japanese&#13;
fleet and whole world becomes convinced&#13;
that United" States has powerful&#13;
war agency. England decides to send&#13;
a fleet to American waters as a Canadian&#13;
add U&gt; the;h&lt;m$r» yfl* fctetit.'faoj £ e *&#13;
tract from-whtot you Baye &lt;|on&amp; '"fltttj?&#13;
well performed requires no prajsa;&#13;
bm a* nwsiftenUq? the United State*&#13;
r ^ t n a n k i y d f . t.jiimjth© o ^ e f ^ n o la&#13;
boaored^a^elugjpria/iltrgef t o call you&#13;
&lt;3oun^ryriIen.,, ' ~ *'&#13;
He faltered, and 1U the Btrong light&#13;
upon him they oould s e e ' t h e muacle*&#13;
of his face twitching -with repression.&#13;
He turned from them aa If to hide hits&#13;
emotion, and took a few step* which&#13;
brought him tct tbp bl«Je of the ;radi?-&#13;
plane. His long a r m reached out, aad&#13;
slowly and in silence he chalked upon&#13;
its metal side in big white letters,&#13;
NO-R-M-A.&#13;
The men of the plant stood quietly&#13;
until the significance of his act&#13;
dawned upon them, and then burst&#13;
into a frenzy of cheers, forgot the dignity&#13;
of his position, and crowded&#13;
round him, talking as man to man.&#13;
Norma tried to make her protests&#13;
heard; but they were unavailing. The&#13;
men were elated, and her father was&#13;
satisfied.&#13;
With little delay the party boarded&#13;
the craft, the president being the last&#13;
to say good-by. T h e big metal door&#13;
was closed, and the Norma rose into&#13;
the air on its return journey, while&#13;
the men stood with bats off and&#13;
watched it disappear before returning&#13;
to their work.&#13;
The radiuplane was making its last&#13;
flight before the war, because it was&#13;
deemed that all risk of discovery&#13;
should be obviated, eyen though other&#13;
methods of transportation were comparatively&#13;
snaillike.&#13;
And so t h e months went on with activity&#13;
a t the key, placidtty in the administration,&#13;
and preparations for a n&#13;
protection against what the British suppose&#13;
is a terrible submarine flotilla. Hilller&#13;
is sent with a message. Fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears. The kaiser is missing.&#13;
King Edward of England is confronted&#13;
by Admiral Bevins of the United&#13;
States. The Dreadnaught, biggest of England's&#13;
warships, Is discovered at an impassable&#13;
point In the Thames. The story&#13;
now goes back to a. time many months&#13;
before the war breaks out, and Inventor&#13;
Roberts visits the president and cabinet,&#13;
telling of and exhibiting a metal production.&#13;
This overcomes friction when electrified&#13;
and Is to be applied to vessels to&#13;
Increase speed to over 50 miles an hour.&#13;
A city for the manufacture of the mysterious&#13;
discovery is built gn the coast of&#13;
Florida. Dr. Roberts' first attempt to electrify&#13;
plates proves a failure. In a second&#13;
effort Norma Is knocked unconscious, but&#13;
the mystery of true levltatlon is solved,&#13;
making the most Important discovery of&#13;
centuries. Roberts evolves a great flying&#13;
machine. rendering warships useless.&#13;
The cabinet is taken for a visit and plans&#13;
for a radioplane war against Japanese&#13;
yre st&amp;rted.&#13;
CHAPTER XVII.—Continued.&#13;
The president in a reverie found&#13;
himself contemplating them. Here, he&#13;
thought, was the personification of&#13;
t h a t anomaly the American workingm&#13;
a n : Ofttimes turbulent, frequently&#13;
dissatisfied, sometimes waging warfaro&#13;
with employer and capital and&#13;
ourying political parties^ but when&#13;
country and home were endangered,&#13;
oouragoous as a lion guarding whelps,&#13;
reckless of life, and unheeding wounds,&#13;
plunging to the front in a frenzy, and&#13;
asking no reward save the satisfaction&#13;
of seizing the invader by the throat&#13;
and throttling him to the death. "God&#13;
save the enemy who underestimates&#13;
the temper and patriotism of the&#13;
American workmen!" he muttered as&#13;
he returned to the long motionless&#13;
line of radioplane*.&#13;
The ray of light, broad, steady and&#13;
clear, was" still there, and aa the visitors&#13;
entered its borders the quick,&#13;
sharp blast of a whistle in the rear, as&#13;
if by preconcerted signal, caused every&#13;
wheel lo come to an abrupt stop.&#13;
From the buildings and quarters men&#13;
came running to the scene and surrounded&#13;
the guests, who were grouped&#13;
together in the fan of white and immediately&#13;
in front of t h e monster&#13;
which had given them passage. That&#13;
they were not to depart without some&#13;
further attention was obvious. "Old&#13;
Bill" Roberts made t h e meaning of&#13;
the call plain when he addressed his&#13;
friend in the old term of intimacy.&#13;
"Paul, we have left to you t h e honor&#13;
of christening the first radioplane ever&#13;
built. She isn't named yet. The boys&#13;
here wanted to call her the RobeTts;&#13;
but I forbade them. I guess you know&#13;
who I wanted to call her after," he&#13;
said, laying, his hand on the president's&#13;
a rm and looking up into his&#13;
face; "but. then I wasn't sure yon&#13;
would like that, so we have compromised&#13;
by loaving it to you."&#13;
The president, had in his hand a&#13;
piece of carpenter's chalk which he&#13;
had Idly picked up from one of the&#13;
be had traversed. He stood&#13;
; ft*over between his long rough&#13;
which bore evidences of hard&#13;
physical labor in early youth, and&#13;
looked affectionately down into the Inventor's&#13;
eyes. He turned from him&#13;
and looked at. those around him. Tn&#13;
the edges of the light and stretching&#13;
back into the darkness behind he could&#13;
discern the faces of the workmen, the&#13;
reflection giving them a singularly&#13;
pallid look and making them seem like&#13;
visages dismembered, their bodies being&#13;
absorbed into the blackness of the&#13;
background. They expected a speech;&#13;
but he felt, a paucity of words when he&#13;
thought, of their endeavors and&#13;
achievements. He started to address&#13;
them, but choked with the fullness of&#13;
his heart. Without sotfh work as they&#13;
had given, what would be the condition&#13;
of t h e nation to-night?&#13;
'Men," he MM, using tfc« atrftngetfe&#13;
"f appellations, "no word* of m i a t cax&#13;
deadly engine ever-conceived, and we&#13;
should be delinquent in our duty if we&#13;
failed- t o uae it a s a means for con*&#13;
trolling and thereby ending wars for&#13;
all time. Let JIB bear •.•with* fortitude&#13;
whatever reproacaea m a y 4&gt;e heaped&#13;
upon us. for we1 are'the-instrumerits of&#13;
God, a n d t h e trial wilt last only a little&#13;
longer. Let no man speak!"&#13;
His -eyes flamed with inspiration/&#13;
and, like a prophet of old, b e led bis&#13;
followers in his own footsteps, i n&#13;
those trying times he was very near to&#13;
the, God in whom h e believed, a n d&#13;
only the walls of his room knew how&#13;
often he appealed for light and guidance,&#13;
trembling in spiritual agony,&#13;
andy like t h e martyrs of all ages, crucified&#13;
by his fellows.&#13;
Events began t o move with light&#13;
ning like rapidity a s May approached.&#13;
Secret orders had been given to all&#13;
the principal ships In Pacific waters to&#13;
withdraw into neutral harbors, it being&#13;
t h e wish of the men who were&#13;
playing the stern game that all possible&#13;
loss of life through accidental&#13;
meetings might be obviated. Pacific&#13;
commerce withdrew from the western&#13;
seas, believing itself unprotected and&#13;
the administration mad. From all&#13;
sources of Information came the certain&#13;
reports that Japan was about to&#13;
attack. H e r communications became&#13;
daily more Insolent; but were invariably&#13;
treated with suave contempt.&#13;
And then came a day which brought&#13;
the most portentous news.&#13;
The first was a message from t h e&#13;
key that Dr. Roberts had broken&#13;
down. I t was from Brockton, who&#13;
made a pitiful appeal to the secretary&#13;
of t h e navy to find Norma and either&#13;
In Silence He Chalked Upon its Metal Side in Big White Letters—&#13;
N-O-R-M-A.&#13;
onslaught on Japan. As the work of&#13;
construction advanced, Norma found&#13;
respite to make occasional brief visits&#13;
to Washington, where her time was&#13;
monopolized by Hillier, who did not&#13;
dream of his forthcoming trip to London;&#13;
but "Old Bill" Roberts came no&#13;
more to the capital.&#13;
Now began that series of orders&#13;
which subjected the men at the head&#13;
of the government to their greatest&#13;
trial. Work was stopped on all fortifications,&#13;
beginning with those in the&#13;
Philippines. It was accepted by the&#13;
public as a foolish curtailment of expense.&#13;
Before this had ceased to&#13;
rankle in the public mind construction&#13;
ceased in nearly all the navy yards;&#13;
but the clamor then arose to such a&#13;
pitch that outwardly it was resumed,&#13;
being done for appearance's sake only&#13;
and to prevent a revolution.&#13;
So dangerous was the pitch of indignation&#13;
that, some of the president's&#13;
advisers quailed before the show of&#13;
wrath, and feared that, an army of&#13;
Americans might march on Washington.&#13;
They besought the president to&#13;
alter his plans and make broadcast announcement&#13;
of the state of defense;&#13;
but he, hla Americanism exceeded only&#13;
by his humanitarlanism, stood steadfast.&#13;
His answer was characteristic:&#13;
"If our secret becomes knov."n,&#13;
there-will be no war, and w a r is a ftea&#13;
e * j i t | \ f o r our purpose. In our tyjUuUt, home from various ships&#13;
give permission for her to be brought&#13;
back by a radioplane, or to have her&#13;
sent a t once by special train to Miami,&#13;
inasmuch as she, being the sole&#13;
sharer of her father's secret, was now&#13;
the only one who could -be depended&#13;
upon for the • metamorphosis of the&#13;
plates. The message added that the&#13;
inventor was not in a serious condi&#13;
tion, hut that overwork, overstudy&#13;
and overstrain had so taken toll that&#13;
t h e surgeons declared he was coming&#13;
down with brain fever and that his&#13;
very life depended on his taking absolute&#13;
rest.&#13;
To hazard another trip of a radio*&#13;
plino was out of the question, because&#13;
the administration was aware that&#13;
spies were still in t h e capital. The&#13;
president himself sent messengers to&#13;
find the girl on whom so much depended,&#13;
only to learn at a late hour&#13;
that she had not yet reached Washington,&#13;
but was expected to arrive that&#13;
night. He preferred to communicate&#13;
his tidings to her in person, and therefore&#13;
left word that, she should call at&#13;
the White House t h e following morning.&#13;
In the meantime advance preparations&#13;
were made for h e r conveyance&#13;
to the island, together with the grim&#13;
old fighting admiral, Bevins, who was&#13;
now to assume command of the aerial&#13;
forces of America, and those officers&#13;
• h o from time to time had been called&#13;
**m^t ""*» 'Jt '&#13;
has been gfven by a miracle the m o a t ! Anf*&lt;bea&gt;when night fell and the&#13;
p r e e l u e ^ ' s &lt; c ^ pe*meo&gt; fuH, came thq&#13;
swift and unexpected announcement&#13;
taAUtfa, J a j j h n e e ^ ] ^ * t t f e n upon th«&#13;
Piufopkiesffarar &gt;w%s ai, and the long&#13;
e x i t e d !4"HU4t ' l a y T W the lists,&#13;
while the natiou,Jwj*yed and rocked&#13;
In turmoil, quivered With lp_»uk, »ud&#13;
cried aloud for vengeance.&#13;
When Norma appeared at tae'Svbitu&#13;
House she was told of her father's&#13;
condition by t h e president himself,&#13;
who was plainly harassed to &amp; e Ktoit&#13;
by anxiety.&#13;
"You can go a t once," he said; "but&#13;
what then4? ' A r e there any who pan&#13;
work the radioplanes?"&#13;
"Yes, by nightly "flight/ Wo have&#13;
trained crews for all and more than&#13;
we have biuUt."&#13;
"But there should be some expevt&#13;
guiding mind who knows t h e secret ;f&#13;
the craft."&#13;
"Father had intended to accompacy&#13;
them and himself direct the leading&#13;
radioplane in case of attack."&#13;
The president threw up his hand in&#13;
a gesture of hopelessness. T h e time&#13;
for attack was fast approaching, and&#13;
could not be poatponed on account of&#13;
the Inventor's illness. Norma, who&#13;
had been standing beside a window,&#13;
confronted the worded head of the&#13;
nation.&#13;
"You forget," s h e said, "that I have&#13;
youth, strength, will and knowledge.&#13;
Neither my father's nor my country's&#13;
cause shall suffer."&#13;
He walked across the room, towering&#13;
above her in ungainly strength,&#13;
took both her hands in his and looked&#13;
deeply Into her eyes. "You mean—"&#13;
"That If my father is too ill to go, I&#13;
myself will fight the Japanese. I myself&#13;
will give what expert advice is&#13;
needed, and will demonstrate to the&#13;
others what must be done In battle."&#13;
Inflamed by the thought of what was&#13;
dependent upon her, pride in her father,&#13;
and Americanism, she was ready&#13;
to accept the responsibility, even&#13;
though it might cost her life.&#13;
They stood in silence, holding each&#13;
other's hands. He stooped over her,&#13;
his sad eyes filled with an admiration&#13;
which was akin to veneration, and&#13;
kissed her.&#13;
"Joan of Arc! Joan of A r c ! " he&#13;
whispered, and said no more.&#13;
She had been told that a train&#13;
awaited. Together they walked to the&#13;
door of the president's study through&#13;
the halls, and to the outer portal. Unheeding&#13;
those who were near, he&#13;
caught her hand and held it to his&#13;
breast, looking once more into her&#13;
eyes.&#13;
"God bless and keep you, my child!"&#13;
•he said, and abruptly turned back to&#13;
his seclusion, his hoad dropped forward&#13;
between his massive shoulders&#13;
and his arms swinging looselv at his&#13;
sides.&#13;
The day was not yet clone, and beforo&#13;
the next had dawneil came the&#13;
announcement that the Hawaiian islands&#13;
had also been surrendered to&#13;
the foe. The coterie of men within&#13;
the secret held their meeting and congratulated&#13;
each other that orders had&#13;
been obeyed, no defense made, and&#13;
loss of life obviated. But the public&#13;
must be pacified. T h e swift convening&#13;
of congress, its authorization of the&#13;
administration to act, and the appeasing&#13;
notice to the public that a wolldeflned&#13;
policy was being pursued, followed&#13;
one after the other, but still&#13;
were not understood.&#13;
Night and day now the president&#13;
and his associates toiled and planned.&#13;
Report after report came to them, until&#13;
they knew that the hour to act had&#13;
come. The spell of seeming lethaigy&#13;
was at an end, and with unprecedented&#13;
swiftness the cordon was&#13;
thrown round the nation, its ports&#13;
closed, and its communication shut&#13;
off save through channels of the secret&#13;
service, which was intensely active.&#13;
Time was computed to the minute,&#13;
and when the fleet, of conquest sailed&#13;
from Japan the very latitude and&#13;
longitude of the point where It was&#13;
to be met were communicated to th*&#13;
headquarters in Florida, where had&#13;
been renewed energy.&#13;
Hence it was that, as darkness once&#13;
more mantled that isolated spot, a&#13;
strange scene was witnessed. It was&#13;
the departure of that invincible&#13;
squadron of the air for the scene of&#13;
battle. Night, after night, they hati&#13;
maneuvered, till those who manned&#13;
them were masters of their craft and&#13;
of the new form of signals which were&#13;
to be used in case of emergency. Ev.^ry&#13;
detail was complete, every possible&#13;
precaution was taken to avert accident.&#13;
I.TO UK CONTINT"l-;n.)&#13;
Baby's Quilt.&#13;
A most, attractive baby's quilt is&#13;
made by putting two thicknesses of&#13;
lamb's wool between surah silk. The&#13;
quilting, instead of being made with&#13;
stitches. Is caught, in place by large&#13;
roses made of ribbon. Ribbon is also&#13;
ised in the style of art nouveau to&#13;
decorate the border of the quilt. Usually&#13;
it is made in long green stems, terminating&#13;
at (he end with large sunflowers,&#13;
each petal of the flower being&#13;
a loop of the ribbon caught at the&#13;
point by a single stitch. Quilts of&#13;
such an elaborate design are used as&#13;
coach covers for the baby indoors does&#13;
not wear anything quite t o exquisite.&#13;
W&#13;
OLDEST MAN IN AMEBIC!&#13;
o f C&#13;
Escapcd Terrors of .Many W i n t e r s b y&#13;
Using Pe-ru-aa.&#13;
Isaac Brock, 120 T e a r s of Age.&#13;
Mr.Isaac Brock, of McLennan county,&#13;
Tex,, is a n ardent friend to Peranu and&#13;
speaks of it in t h e following t e r m s :&#13;
"Dr. Harttnau'a remedy, Peruua, X&#13;
have found to be the best, if not the only&#13;
reliable remedy for COUGHS, COLDS,&#13;
CATARRH a n d diarrhea,&#13;
I **Pmruaa hum been my stand-by tot&#13;
j many yean, and I attribute my good&#13;
j health and my extreme age to thin&#13;
I remedy* It exactly meets ail my re-&#13;
I qulrementa.&#13;
I k*I have cjome t o rely upon it almost&#13;
entirely for t h e many little things for&#13;
[ which I need medicine. I believe it to&#13;
be especially valuable t o old people."&#13;
Isaac Brock.&#13;
There's Danger&#13;
Ahead&#13;
if you've b e e n neglecting a cold&#13;
Don'texperiment with your health.&#13;
Get a remedy that you know will&#13;
cure—that remedy is&#13;
DR.D.JAYNETS&#13;
EXPECTORANT&#13;
It's safe. In the severest cases of&#13;
coughs, colds, bronchitis, croup, inflammation&#13;
of chest sod lungs it is the&#13;
most effective remedy known. It does&#13;
its work quickly, removes the cause of&#13;
the disease&#13;
Sold every when in three size&#13;
bottles, $1.00, 50c, 25c.&#13;
If yon hata c hluilfdlhrern f,r oomr fPrieitnad, »F atlhliantg dSoic Fk&lt;n&gt;,e nss.y, SNpeawsm D* lAor- cdoo rloaT toj sawoidll frnerl laePvraa eth Be m&gt;t,; l*an od( a'.I you are asked to&#13;
It bDa*r . cuMr*ia y['(si ouEupnldlie pwthicerled ee veCryuthrein.g elM Gffcui!a«rda.n teSe«da t bfrya eM wayi thM dadirieccalt ioLnasli.o rEatxnpryre.s so cPdreerp atihde. Nanattyio Nnaol. 1F3o9o7d1 .a ndP D)amasge» gAlrcet, AJtGmEe Wandh-.f,u 1U°0a«d.d raG&amp;uaa r-&#13;
DR. "IV. H. MAY,&#13;
548 Pearl Street. New Vork City.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
P o s i t i v e l y c o r e d b y&#13;
t h e s e Little P i l l s .&#13;
They also relieve Distres&amp;&#13;
f roia Dyapepslsjtln*&#13;
digest ion and Too Hearty&#13;
Eatlnp. A perfect remedy&#13;
for Dizziness, N*h«&#13;
sea, Drowsiness, Bad&#13;
Taste in the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain in aha&#13;
Side, TORPID LIVBR,&#13;
IThey regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PR1GE.&#13;
Genuine Musi Bear&#13;
Fac-Simite Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
•tfJMEBSSUCKERS&#13;
wear well&#13;
and they Keep you&#13;
dry while you are&#13;
wearing them&#13;
¢300&#13;
E V E R Y W H E R E&#13;
OWMED WAJEPPMOf.&#13;
CUALQG FR£E&#13;
AJ.TbWER CO. BO3T0M. USA.&#13;
TbWEH CANADIAN C O UMITKD, TOPONTO. GAM.&#13;
GAU STONES « H ? ^ DISK ASK.&#13;
&gt;ix about it.&#13;
W i l l tell DffkCUIV &gt; W .&#13;
AddreM C. COVKY, B D. 5. Lan!tiuj;,Mlch.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 10, 1909.&#13;
In Austria no fewer th4n 44 out of.&#13;
I every 100 doctors die of h M t t tfiaYsa.&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
J f&#13;
"i» ffortnt? fHspatch&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S &lt;* C O . HuowtirroRa.&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , MAK 4 , i m&#13;
If &gt;ou naejd a piil take Da Witts Lit&#13;
tie Early Risers. Insist? \ u them;&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little liver pilla.&#13;
Hold py all dealers. :&#13;
Clfaffon to Non-pe»fdent Owners* f»tc.&#13;
- — - T % -&#13;
Taxtts are as sure as death, but&#13;
the former has a little tb^ advantage&#13;
in regularity.&#13;
Near Heath In Big Fund.&#13;
It was.a thiijl^nK experience to Mrw.&#13;
Ida.Soper to face death. "For years a&#13;
severe Urn* trouble yave me intense&#13;
suffering," aha writea "aud several&#13;
times nearly caused tnv death. All&#13;
remediea and doctors said I was incurable,&#13;
t h e n Dr. Kings New Discovery&#13;
brought quick relief and a&#13;
cure so permanent that I have not&#13;
been troubled in twelve years.' Mrs.&#13;
Soper lives in Big Pond, Pa. It works&#13;
wonders in Coughs and colds, sore&#13;
lungs, hemorrhages, la grippe, asthma&#13;
croup,-hooping cougb and all broncfblal&#13;
affections. 50c and $1.00. Trial&#13;
bottle free. Guaranteed by F. A.&#13;
S i l l e r . , . ;•&#13;
STATK OF MIl^HIiMN, County of LiriagstOli :-8S.&#13;
A i M "futon fit fW Probata Court for to* laid County of Livingston, held at the Probate Ofllo*&#13;
,u the V11J,K.&gt; &lt;&gt;f gowsU on Mofcday tin 8th day of February, A. D. WW. 1 Preaept, ilott. ArthW A. MonUgTie, Judm af Probata. In the mattar of the applies tloa of&#13;
the Coanty Drain CesamiasloaerB of the Counties of Livingston and Wauhtaaaw in aald Stat*&#13;
for the appointment of three disintwestsd Speeial Comtaiaaioo*n to delermiae the neoeaalty for a&#13;
dndn known aa the "Baa* Lake Drain* aad for the taking or private property for the use and benefit&#13;
of the public forth* purpoee thereof, and the just compensation to aa made tat«r*for,&#13;
W h c r &lt; « i , O D tbeoth dny of February A. D, lttjft an appUoation U wrtUua was wad* to&#13;
thiaoourt by the add County Drain Commissioner, for the appointment of tares disinterested Special&#13;
Commissioners to determine the necewiaiy foe the aald Drain, and for the taking of private property&#13;
for the uee and benefit uf the public fur the purpoee thereof, and the Just oomp*u»atton to be mad*&#13;
therefor; i&#13;
A n d W h e r e a s . Thin Court 'did on the 8th day of February A. D, 1WW upon a&#13;
due exawauation of Buob application and of all the prooaOttlngs theretofore taken in the premises,&#13;
find and declare the name to be In accordance with the statute in auoh oaee made aad provided&#13;
and did thereupon by an order entered therein; appoint Friday the 8th day of March. A. D. 19» at&#13;
ten o'clock ip the forenoon of that day as the time, and the ottoe of the Judf* of Probate in the Village&#13;
of Howell in said County, ae the plaoe when and where a hearing upon each application would&#13;
Dad. and did then and there order that all persons whose lands were to be traversed by auoh pro&#13;
ilre, i&#13;
! perso.&#13;
Dy a&#13;
-wit:&#13;
poaed Drain and who had not released right of way and all damages on account thereof, to appear at&#13;
the time and plaoe designated and to be heard with respect to Bach application, If they so desire, and&#13;
and to show cause, If any there be, why eaid application anonlc? not b* granted;&#13;
A n d W h e r e a s , There lb now on fife in in the Court a description and survey of such proposed&#13;
Drain from which said deecriptiou and survey it appears that the land to be traversed by aaoh&#13;
Drain aud the uotuuieuoameut, general cuurae, and terminus Of such Draiu are aa tuJluwa, to-&#13;
B A S S LAKE. DRAIN.&#13;
Mluuteb or survey or the center line of a Drain in the Townships of&#13;
aad Lyndeu In Waahtenaw County t a d in the Townahipe of Putnam and Unadella&#13;
in Livingston County, State of Michigan, to be known aa Baas Lake Drain. .&#13;
Commencing- at a atake marked "6," aald stake standing in the channel of the&#13;
Portage River In the upper end of Reevea Mill Pond (ao oalied),&#13;
Frl. K Sec. ti Tp. 1 s. R. 4 K. Mloh., aad aald stake standing&#13;
East and 7 c. 7 L S. of 8. W. Cor. Beo, I I Tp. 1 N.&#13;
running up stream (commencing at 8 t I there are&#13;
ineuBUiement in this aurvey).&#13;
10&#13;
on the N.&#13;
12 ch&amp;lna 7&#13;
4 HL Mloh., a&#13;
c that don't count&#13;
BL&#13;
la&#13;
S&#13;
«&#13;
In Oregon a bill has been passed,&#13;
prohibiting persons marrying&#13;
without a certificate of good&#13;
health.&#13;
~t+-&#13;
I t Saved His Leg.&#13;
"All thought I'd lose my leg," writes&#13;
J . A. Swenabn, Watertown, Wis. "Ten&#13;
years of Eczema that 15 doctors could&#13;
not cpre, bad at last laid me up, Then&#13;
Buckl&amp;ns Arnica Salve cared it sound&#13;
and well.' Infailable for akin eruptions,&#13;
Eczma, Salt Rhenm, Bo la, Fever&#13;
Sores, Burns, Scalds. Cuts and&#13;
Piles. 36c at Siglers Drug Store.&#13;
II!&#13;
u&lt;a&#13;
3&#13;
O&#13;
« S&#13;
N. 45«&#13;
N. 45°&#13;
N. 45s&#13;
N. 45°&#13;
N. 46'&#13;
N. 45°&#13;
W. ww..&#13;
ww.. w.&#13;
CD&#13;
.c .ft&#13;
-i c c&#13;
2S^ £, , o&lt;Dc o gdoJ&#13;
a S «°&#13;
3 ^ c&#13;
B C a&#13;
QUO&#13;
10.00&#13;
13.00&#13;
14.00&#13;
16.00&#13;
18.&#13;
20.&#13;
01&#13;
5 u bsC&#13;
^5&#13;
«&#13;
O&#13;
-a&#13;
id&#13;
. id&#13;
ic&#13;
0u&#13;
O&#13;
« a&#13;
V. o&#13;
at&#13;
C&#13;
a&#13;
W&#13;
I! a&#13;
o&#13;
cv i&#13;
10.09&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
4.00&#13;
4.00&#13;
4.00&#13;
4.00&#13;
4.15»&#13;
ft ft g&#13;
cc la **•&#13;
a) o&#13;
Q P&#13;
Bench Mark Dry.&#13;
Oak 18, level with&#13;
Pond.&#13;
tba&#13;
10.00&#13;
Croaa Base Lane 15 o. BL&#13;
of Sec. Cora. 81 and t l&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
On N. E. FrL ¼ Sea I&#13;
Dexter, which ia hare&#13;
left and enter 8. W. H&#13;
of S. W. ¼ Sec 81 Putnam.&#13;
ThenceN. 16H»W,&#13;
Thence N Si&#13;
Thence N. 15%'W.&#13;
Thence N. 86 4 ° "&#13;
Thence N. 85 H*&#13;
Thence N. 89½°&#13;
Thence S. 58»&#13;
i Thence S. 56*&#13;
Thence S. 56»&#13;
Thence N. 66"&#13;
Thence N. 66°&#13;
Thence N. 44°&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. w.&#13;
11.&#13;
14.&#13;
16.&#13;
18.&#13;
SO.&#13;
iff.&#13;
84.&#13;
16.&#13;
18.&#13;
40.&#13;
49.06&#13;
I .&#13;
S.&#13;
4.&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
IS&#13;
14&#13;
IS&#13;
16&#13;
11&#13;
18&#13;
10&#13;
10&#13;
S.1S&#13;
5.10&#13;
S 5 9 1&#13;
S 6 7 4&#13;
S.S6&#13;
10.11&#13;
4 6.41&#13;
10.SS&#13;
1 M S&#13;
M.0S&#13;
ThenceN. 44"&#13;
Thence N. 44°&#13;
Thence N. 44«&#13;
W .&#13;
HP&#13;
There may he rpRflone&#13;
greater navy than the&#13;
States now hns. Fear of&#13;
is;not one of them.&#13;
fof a&#13;
United&#13;
Japan&#13;
There is not a better Balve than De«&#13;
Witts Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve,&#13;
We hereby warn to nublic that we are&#13;
not responsible lor any injurious&#13;
effects caused Iroiii worthleto or poisonous&#13;
imitations oF our DeWitta Carbolized&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve, the original.&#13;
It is «rood for anything when a&#13;
«alve is needed, but it is especially&#13;
Kood for piles. Be sure you pet De&#13;
Witts. Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
Thence N. 84'&#13;
Thence N. 84*&#13;
Thence N. 84'&#13;
Thence N.S4"&#13;
Thence SL 65°&#13;
Thence S. 66*&#13;
Thence S. 66*&#13;
Thence S. 68*&#13;
Thence S. 66*&#13;
Thence N. 68*&#13;
Thence N. 68*&#13;
Thence N. 68*&#13;
Thence S. 85½1&#13;
Thence S. 85½1&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence 8.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thenee 8.&#13;
86%«&#13;
86H'&#13;
8 5 V&#13;
8 6 V&#13;
86¾1&#13;
86 V&#13;
8 6 V&#13;
8 6 V&#13;
44*&#13;
44°&#13;
W.&#13;
w.&#13;
ww.. ww..&#13;
* ww.. ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
At&#13;
44.&#13;
45.84&#13;
46.&#13;
48.&#13;
80.&#13;
S0.11&#13;
SI.&#13;
B4.&#13;
S6.&#13;
68&#13;
SS.&#13;
St.&#13;
61.&#13;
64.&#13;
66.&#13;
68.&#13;
70.&#13;
71.&#13;
74.&#13;
76.&#13;
78.&#13;
80.&#13;
SI.&#13;
88.&#13;
84.&#13;
85.10&#13;
S.S4&#13;
S.U&#13;
I N&#13;
1S.H&#13;
t l&#13;
11&#13;
I S&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
IS&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
IS&#13;
SS&#13;
81&#13;
88&#13;
88&#13;
14&#13;
SS&#13;
SS&#13;
IT&#13;
SS&#13;
89&#13;
40&#13;
41&#13;
41&#13;
W. Oak 10.&#13;
W. Oak 24.&#13;
Cut S.56 Cen. highway.&#13;
Croaa Sao. Line 4 c. N.&#13;
of Baae Line at oan. of&#13;
Bridare.&#13;
Oa 8, W. * of 8. W. ^&#13;
Bae. SI whioh la laft&#13;
hare and enter 8. BL M&#13;
SI.&#13;
6.SS&#13;
S.14&#13;
6.4S&#13;
8.11&#13;
M S&#13;
7.1t&#13;
6,64&#13;
T J t&#13;
T.44&#13;
l1WLS1!&#13;
7.11&#13;
The excavatlona for&#13;
roda each aid&#13;
to be plaoad on&#13;
side of Ditch.&#13;
axuda S&#13;
a «o«th&#13;
Willow 10—7.98.&#13;
B. Oak IS.&#13;
Tba cut will be 7.11 to&#13;
and include 8 t 1S8.&#13;
IS Enter Lake.&#13;
Line&#13;
41.06&#13;
£ • ?&#13;
The Piesidents salary has been&#13;
fixed at $75,000 a year, which is&#13;
practically the same as before.&#13;
Heretofore the President has received&#13;
125,000 extra above his&#13;
$50,000 salary, for traveling expenses,&#13;
which he will not receive&#13;
now.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S,&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
44s&#13;
44*&#13;
44"&#13;
44"&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. w.&#13;
86.&#13;
88.&#13;
90.&#13;
91.S1&#13;
48&#13;
44&#13;
46&#13;
6.71&#13;
The Lurid Glow of Doom&#13;
was seen in the red face, hands and&#13;
body of the little son of A. M. Adams,&#13;
of Henriettat P a . His awful plight&#13;
from eczema had, for five years, defied&#13;
aU remedies and baffled the 3octtors,&#13;
who said the poisoned blood had&#13;
affected his lungs and nothing could&#13;
save him, "Bntn writes his mother&#13;
"seven bottles of Electric Bitters completely&#13;
cured h i m " For eruptions,&#13;
eczema, Salt Rheum, sores and all&#13;
Blood Disorders and Rheumatism&#13;
Electric Bitters is Supreme. Only&#13;
JiOc. Guaranteed by F. A. Siprler.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
T h e n c e S.&#13;
44"&#13;
44°&#13;
44"&#13;
44°&#13;
44»&#13;
44s&#13;
44°&#13;
44"&#13;
44»&#13;
44°&#13;
44°&#13;
44'&#13;
445&#13;
44°&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
91.&#13;
94.&#13;
96.&#13;
98.&#13;
100.&#13;
101.&#13;
104.&#13;
106.&#13;
108.&#13;
110.&#13;
112.&#13;
114.&#13;
116.&#13;
117. 14&#13;
46&#13;
47&#13;
48&#13;
49&#13;
89&#13;
61&#13;
62&#13;
18&#13;
84&#13;
SS&#13;
66&#13;
57&#13;
68&#13;
L0e&#13;
Crosa N. and 8. Qr.&#13;
4 c. 56 L N. of&#13;
Line.&#13;
In the Lake.&#13;
On P. E. % Sec. 81, whioh&#13;
la left here and enter 8.&#13;
B. % of S. W. % S e c I I .&#13;
Cross Base Line 1 c. SO&#13;
L w . of Town Cor'i of&#13;
Townships Dexter and&#13;
Lynden.&#13;
On 8. E. % S. W. % S e c&#13;
SI Putnam, whioh 1« left&#13;
here and enter EL Vi of&#13;
N. E. Frl. % S e c 1.&#13;
Lynden.&#13;
11&#13;
Sf.19&#13;
T h e n c e N\&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e X.&#13;
T h e n c e N*.&#13;
T h e n c e X\&#13;
T h e n c e X.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Sri"&#13;
85a&#13;
85»&#13;
85°&#13;
8;V&#13;
SS"&#13;
85°&#13;
filV&#13;
filVi&#13;
R9"&#13;
fi9°&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
w.&#13;
"w w. . w.&#13;
118.&#13;
120.&#13;
122.&#13;
124.&#13;
126.&#13;
128.&#13;
ISO.&#13;
132.&#13;
134.&#13;
13fi.&#13;
138.&#13;
IS. 6*&#13;
4.0«&#13;
69&#13;
60&#13;
61&#13;
61&#13;
61&#13;
64&#13;
66&#13;
46&#13;
«7&#13;
88&#13;
69&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
1 6 9&#13;
4.6J&#13;
4.19&#13;
4.49&#13;
Crosa N. and 8. ft line&#13;
16 c 95 L 8. of Baae&#13;
Line.&#13;
On E. H of N. % FM.&#13;
% Sec 1, whioh la here&#13;
left and enter W. K N.&#13;
E. Frl. ¾ Sec. 1.&#13;
A large number of persons in&#13;
Michigan will be directly or indirectly&#13;
interested in Cnbas legislation&#13;
to restrict ownership of her&#13;
land to her own people. There&#13;
are comparatively few, indeed, in&#13;
this stati' who cannot call&#13;
to mind friends who have already&#13;
gone to the island, or who were&#13;
about to go there.&#13;
1L17&#13;
tor tho)&#13;
AfltfM •Lit par&#13;
T h e n c o N". fi!T&#13;
T h e n c e N. R91&#13;
T h e n c e N. fifl&#13;
T h e n c e N. «9°&#13;
T h e n c e S. 76°&#13;
T h e n c e S. 75*&#13;
T h e n c e S, 1 4 ½&#13;
T h e n c e S. 8 4 ¼&#13;
T h e n c e S. 1 4 ¼&#13;
T h e n c e W e s t&#13;
T h e n c e W e s t&#13;
T h e n c e N . IS*&#13;
T h e n c e N . 11°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 11*&#13;
T h e n c e N. IS*&#13;
Thence N. IS*&#13;
Thence N. 1 8 '&#13;
Thence N. 18*&#13;
w .&#13;
W.&#13;
W,&#13;
ww.. 0 ww.. ' w.&#13;
• w.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. w.&#13;
140.&#13;
141.&#13;
142.&#13;
142.52&#13;
144.&#13;
144.SS&#13;
146.&#13;
148.&#13;
180.&#13;
161.&#13;
161.66&#13;
1S4.&#13;
156.&#13;
IS 8.&#13;
160.&#13;
MS.&#13;
1S4.&#13;
16«.&#13;
SJSI&#13;
LOS&#13;
S.4t&#13;
S.M&#13;
70&#13;
71&#13;
78&#13;
78&#13;
74&#13;
71&#13;
TS&#13;
TT&#13;
78&#13;
79&#13;
SO&#13;
81&#13;
SI&#13;
SS&#13;
14&#13;
16&#13;
1«&#13;
17&#13;
4.1S&#13;
4.6S&#13;
4.18&#13;
S.IS&#13;
•.ft&#13;
The cut here is from the&#13;
bottom and is from the&#13;
bottom to stake 188.&#13;
Enter Ford or Narrows. •&#13;
Cross N. A 8. Qr. Line&#13;
U c 72 L 8. Base Line.&#13;
On W. H N. E. Frl. ¼&#13;
Bee. 1, which is left here&#13;
and enter N. W. FrL ¼&#13;
Sec 1.&#13;
Bridge at Ford. Cut la&#13;
t.07 from Bench Mark&#13;
on Double Him 14.&#13;
Leave Narrow*. 64 Hade&#13;
Thence N. I T W. 169.&#13;
Thence N. IS* W. 168.89&#13;
83«&#13;
Thence N. II*&#13;
TheaoeN. 8^*&#13;
Thence N. 8&#13;
Thence N . I&#13;
Thence N. S&#13;
Thence N. SI* &amp; 1TI.I1&#13;
VIM g II&#13;
ST&#13;
81&#13;
8.04) s i I f&#13;
W . * t A w .&#13;
wall* to fcsje&#13;
lUa.&#13;
aad eai&#13;
Cut here of 10, B. a*&#13;
•bout 1¼ ft.&#13;
Thence N. 18* HL 180. Of W .&#13;
Thence N. 28'&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
a. i 8 i . 4.04) f l M&#13;
1S4.&#13;
186.&#13;
181.&#13;
190.&#13;
192.&#13;
104.&#13;
196.&#13;
198.&#13;
I I&#13;
M&#13;
04&#13;
M&#13;
16&#13;
ST&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
200. 18.00 10« n&#13;
201.&#13;
204.&#13;
101&#13;
101&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
4 V W.&#13;
4 V W.&#13;
4 V W.&#13;
4 V W.&#13;
4 V W.&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
69*&#13;
69*&#13;
206.&#13;
206.&#13;
208.&#13;
210.&#13;
211.&#13;
114.&#13;
216.&#13;
216.66&#13;
218.&#13;
221.48&#13;
1.00&#13;
1LM&#13;
Thence N. 69* W. 220.&#13;
108&#13;
104&#13;
10S&#13;
10«&#13;
107&#13;
108&#13;
109&#13;
11«&#13;
IS&#13;
line of- the&#13;
tlea N. line df land ^&#13;
deacrlbed, 1 c 11 links&#13;
SL of the N. W. Cor.&#13;
On land last above te&gt;&#13;
scribed, which la laft&#13;
her* aad enter N. ft at&#13;
8, E. ¼ of &amp; BL ¼,&#13;
Crosa V* Una 10 c.&#13;
Town Line. There&#13;
a mistake made in&#13;
chaining* this course,&#13;
J4 chains instead of 4&#13;
c. the distance is loat&#13;
In the Lake and should&#13;
be 192 c. at S t 91.&#13;
1 U I On land last above described,&#13;
which is left&#13;
here and enter N. E. hk&#13;
S. E. ^4, 36.&#13;
• cut here between Patterson&#13;
and Loud Lake&#13;
of, SI rods of an average&#13;
of S f t&#13;
To Qr. Line 10 c W.&#13;
Town Line.&#13;
10.00 On N. E. % S. B. fc&#13;
Sec. 86, here run W. on&#13;
Qr. Line 5 c.&#13;
S.00 On line between ^ 1 1 . ¼&#13;
of S. E. M and E. H of&#13;
N. E. 14 Sec. 86, whioh&#13;
la lert at angle 22 aad&#13;
enter E. H N. E. ^ , ML&#13;
15 c. W. Town Line.&#13;
The line of the dltok&#13;
is to run and the right&#13;
of way will be required&#13;
from angle 20 to angle&#13;
22, which line waa i m -&#13;
possible to survey or&#13;
measure, running in an&#13;
outlet between the lakes&#13;
most of the way.&#13;
10.41&#13;
Thence N. 69*&#13;
Thence N. 69°&#13;
Thence N. SS*&#13;
Thenoe N. SS*&#13;
Thence N. SS*&#13;
Thence N. SS*&#13;
W .&#13;
W .&#13;
W . ww.. w.&#13;
111.&#13;
114.&#13;
186.&#13;
IIS.&#13;
ISO.&#13;
110.9«&#13;
111&#13;
7.14 111&#13;
111&#13;
114&#13;
IIS&#13;
M S&#13;
Thenoe N. SS*&#13;
Thence N. SS*&#13;
Thence N. SS*&#13;
Thenoe N. SS*&#13;
Thence N. 88°&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
Thence&#13;
N. 88°&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
N. 29°&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
N. 29»&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
N. 29*&#13;
W . 2SI.&#13;
W . 284.&#13;
W . 116.&#13;
W . 188.&#13;
W . 211.28&#13;
W . 840.&#13;
W . 141.&#13;
W . 144.&#13;
W . 146.&#13;
W . 148.&#13;
W . 250.&#13;
W . 152.&#13;
W . 164.&#13;
W . 256.&#13;
IIS&#13;
117&#13;
IIS&#13;
111&#13;
T.IS&#13;
Thence N. 29*&#13;
Thence N. 29*&#13;
Thence N. 29°&#13;
Thence N. 29°&#13;
Thence N, 29*&#13;
Thence N. 29°&#13;
Thence N. 29°&#13;
Thence N. 19°&#13;
Thence N. 29'&#13;
Thence N. 29s&#13;
Thence N. 29"&#13;
W. ww.. ww..&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
Thence N. 79¾° W.&#13;
Thence N. 79*4° W,&#13;
Thence N. 79¾° W.&#13;
Thence N. 79%* W.&#13;
ThenceN. 79"&#13;
Thence K. 79^&#13;
Thence N. 79"&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
268.&#13;
260.&#13;
161.&#13;
264.&#13;
264.41&#13;
266.&#13;
268.&#13;
270.&#13;
272.&#13;
274.&#13;
276.&#13;
278.&#13;
280.&#13;
282.&#13;
284.&#13;
286.&#13;
288.&#13;
290.&#13;
291.&#13;
292.&#13;
!«.#• 110&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
i n&#13;
114 uuss 117&#13;
118&#13;
110&#13;
110&#13;
1S1&#13;
1S1&#13;
11.77&#13;
1.40&#13;
118&#13;
1S4&#13;
186&#13;
186&#13;
1S7&#13;
86.04 188&#13;
189&#13;
140&#13;
141&#13;
142&#13;
148&#13;
144&#13;
14.00 145&#13;
146&#13;
26 T.ll&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.1S&#13;
7.10&#13;
7.1S&#13;
1L«0&#13;
27&#13;
T . l l 1S.00&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
Thence W,&#13;
Thence W.&#13;
294.&#13;
296.&#13;
298.&#13;
800.&#13;
SOI.15 11.81&#13;
147&#13;
148&#13;
149&#13;
150&#13;
18&#13;
T . l l&#13;
7.1S&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.1S&#13;
10.S6&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
202.&#13;
204.&#13;
106.&#13;
108.&#13;
110.&#13;
112.&#13;
114.&#13;
116.&#13;
151&#13;
161&#13;
1SI&#13;
164&#13;
1S5&#13;
166&#13;
1S7&#13;
11 i&#13;
818. I S . ! ! 169 IS&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
IS*&#13;
SS*&#13;
6s**&#13;
ww.. TA.&#13;
B.&#13;
810.&#13;
I11.SI&#13;
IaIs Li.O S&#13;
S.S*&#13;
ISO&#13;
i n 80&#13;
7.19&#13;
7.19&#13;
7.19&#13;
7.19&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.11&#13;
7.19&#13;
7.19&#13;
S.8S&#13;
1 1 1&#13;
1.11&#13;
1LII&#13;
1C«S&#13;
4.01&#13;
Thenoe N. I* H 814.&#13;
Thence N. I* S. SIS.&#13;
Thenoe N. S* M. III.&#13;
Cross N. &amp; S. % line IS&#13;
c. 28 l. N. of Qr. line.&#13;
On E. * N. E. % Sec SO.&#13;
which la here left and&#13;
enter S. W. % N. E. %&#13;
Sec. 86.&#13;
A cut between Patterson&#13;
and Bass Lake of 84 B.&#13;
of an average of 2 f t&#13;
Cross E. &amp; w . % line S&#13;
c. 65 1. W. of N. 4 8. W&#13;
line of N. E. ¼ 16.&#13;
On S. w . * N. E. * S e c&#13;
86, whioh Is left here&#13;
aad enter W. H of B. 14&#13;
of N. W. Vi N. E. hi 86.&#13;
Cross farm line 14 c.,29&#13;
L 8. of Sec. Line.&#13;
On W. ¼ E. ft N. W. ¼&#13;
N. E. % 16, which is&#13;
here left and enter W.&#13;
H N. W. y4 N. E. * 8«.&#13;
Cross Sec. Line S c. IS 1.&#13;
E. of Qr. P o s t&#13;
On W. a N . W. % N. B,&#13;
% Sec. 86, which 1B here&#13;
left and enter S. W J \L&#13;
8. E. % Sec. 25. f&#13;
C r °s« N. &amp; S. % ime 6&#13;
c 98 I N . of Qr. Post-&#13;
On 8. W. y4 S. E. hi, 21.&#13;
which is here left and&#13;
enter all S. of River of&#13;
E. hi S. W. %, 25, 80 A.&#13;
Leave Lake and leave&#13;
land last described.&#13;
On said land last described&#13;
In water and eater&#13;
all N. of River of B.&#13;
½ 9. W. Y* 9 e c 26. 50 A.&#13;
Corner of Forties, Com.&#13;
8. W. % 26.&#13;
On land last above deacrlbed.&#13;
which is left&#13;
here and run on line between&#13;
E. U of N. W. U&#13;
of 8. W. hi and of N. S&#13;
A. of S. W. % of 8. W.&#13;
% Sec. 28.&#13;
Corner of the twenUatstl&#13;
On line of lands&#13;
above described.&#13;
Is here left and&#13;
line between E. U&#13;
W. ¼ of N. W. * of rL&#13;
W. H 25.&#13;
tjajsjassjajael&#13;
On line of lands laat&#13;
above deacrlbed, which&#13;
la here left and enter&#13;
W. % of N. W. H of &amp;&#13;
W. « sec. 26, I e. 41 L&#13;
8. of hi line.&#13;
Oen, highway. Crosa Qa.&#13;
llaes 8 o. 78 l. E. of **••&gt;&#13;
Una. TT&#13;
sraWifA-ar-1&#13;
B*&amp;1%£*&#13;
• a Veert sHicfa.&#13;
i '&#13;
ThU isju*t the time ot year when&#13;
you are moat likely to have kidney or&#13;
bladder trouble, with rheumatitm and&#13;
r beam a tic pains caused by weak kid-&#13;
W»ys. Delays are danKerous. Get De&#13;
Witts Kidney and Madder pills, and&#13;
be sure you tfet what you **k tor.&#13;
They are the bests pills made For back&#13;
•Che, wi&gt;a&amp; back, uiinary disorders,&#13;
inflamatiou of Hie bladder, etc. Tbey&#13;
»re antiseptic and art prtituptI\&gt;. Snd&#13;
and reucom mended t&gt;y all dealers.&#13;
8 h e H a d to M end T h e m .&#13;
B e n h u m 1 ludievi' in p u l l i n g my&#13;
b«Bt f o o l f o r w a r d . .Mrs. Kenhuni 1&#13;
b&amp;ve n o t i c e d t h a t y o u r t o e a l w a y s&#13;
• D M r i g h t t h r o u g h y o u r s t o c k i n g&#13;
•tow York Preiw.&#13;
W A N T E D — H a c e e s s Magazine require*&#13;
thw bervic«B of a uiau in Viuckuey to look&#13;
after expiring subscriptions and to secure&#13;
new bind newt by means pf special methods&#13;
unusually effective, position permanent,&#13;
prefer oue with experience, bui would conaider&#13;
any applicant with good natural&#13;
; qualification*; aalary $1.50 per d*y, with&#13;
| comiuitftdou option. Address, with references,&#13;
K. C. lVac&lt;ik. Kcuui 1015, Success&#13;
[ M,ttg»ztne Kldy;., JNew York.&#13;
I&#13;
( I JO Y O U W A N T T O G O T O C O L .&#13;
LttOK? If 8o we c a n help y o u . W e&#13;
have already put hundreds through college&#13;
by ujemiH ufdiir plan. Write today f o r&#13;
; full inl'orunttioii regarding our offer of a&#13;
i free Bt-'hola^ahip in iiny Hchool or college.&#13;
AddreHH, Robert J . Sherlock, '21i-!&gt;l East&#13;
!ilind S h e e t , New York City.&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
WITH OR WITHOUT BOLTING ATTACHMENT.&#13;
The cut shows machine with . This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
20 inch Saw and Shingle Car- 4wet*^kflBt&amp;« t o l 2 i 0 0 ° »rtingles per day.&#13;
riage, ready (or cutting shingles ^ ^ ^ » M B ^ K ^ § H j Carriages made from aelected&#13;
IB In. long, and 4 in. wide. ' ^ B B B H P ^ ^ ^ ^ B I h a r d w o o d " T r a c k l * s o l l d&#13;
Price $75.00. ^fUmBS^Tf^Ji rolled "*"'•' foT cultln9 •"'"•&#13;
With 36 inch Bolting Saw and HH^^^BfS*lUJ[ gles require* 4 to 6 H. P. For&#13;
Boltinc Carriage. ^ f l f ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ b o l t , n fl 6 to 8 H. P. weight&#13;
Price f 2B.OO extrau » ^ 6 SO lbs. IT IS A MONEY-MAKER&#13;
Equipped with the bolting attachment it i« a complete ehingle outfit in itoelf. Can be ad-&#13;
Justed for uny deeirud taper or thicknei*. Fur cutting the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
manufacture a high grade,low priced drag saw machine, Send for clrculart&gt;&amp; apecial net prices. GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
Engines, Bolle»ra», Saw Willi Maohlnery, Etc.&#13;
Does your back ache ? IB your skin leathery and yellow.&#13;
IB your urine murky f These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out often persons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They don't always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect i t The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible Bain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before you feel I t&#13;
That is why it is so necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. I f&#13;
anything is wrong with your kidneys it should be attended to at once,&#13;
akmx take strong, drastlo drug*. They are dangerous.&#13;
You will be perfectly safe and sure of a permanent cure by taking&#13;
DR THACHERS LIVER &amp; BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing t h e cause and&#13;
| driving the inflammation ana the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All Dealers Sell 50c, and f 1.00 Bottles.&#13;
T H A C H E R MEDICINE C O . , C h a t t a n o o g a , T e n n .&#13;
THE DOBEL SHOE TREE J Easily a d j u s t e d . Light, ventilated, indestructible, sanitary.&#13;
''AH sizes, Made of metal. L e n g t h e n s life of s h o e s am"&#13;
t h e m ir» perfect s h a p e . Dobcl Shoe T r e e s are also in&#13;
p e n s i b l e t o a person w h o s e f e e t perspire. Moist s h o e s&#13;
sure t o curl o r wrinkle u p w h e n d r y i n g o u t , a n d are h&#13;
a n d l u m p y w h e n p u t o n again. L e t t h e m d r y o n a paii&#13;
Dobel Shoe T r e e s dtui notice t h e d i f f e r e n c e ; insteai&#13;
b e i n g shrivelled up, tuird a n d l u m v y . t h e y a r e s m o o t h&#13;
a n d i n perfect shape.&#13;
Send for circular and prl'" list.&#13;
For sale by dealers.&#13;
T H E CONTINENTAL. N O V E L T Y IV! FC- C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
1453 W3a:.;,•:**a 3*.&gt; Buffa! V J ' I i n ' i&#13;
m* ,m i H t , H j » » n /&gt;&#13;
( THE HIGH GRADE LEHR PIANO 18 USED AND ENDOR8ED BY&#13;
The Grand Conservatory of Music, New York CRf.&#13;
The Pennsylvania College of Music, Philadelphia.&#13;
Chicugo CeMenotory A Hinshaw Softool of Opera,CWtSp.&#13;
The Pueblo Conservatory of Music, Pueblo, Colo.&#13;
ANLV OTHER LEADING CON8IRVATORIN&#13;
A sweet yet brilliant and powerful tone, exqtrfatte&#13;
.case, perfect adjustment and durable workmanship&#13;
place it in the front rank of the best instruments made&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano foi the home, where its&#13;
presence is a sign of culture and refinement&#13;
The L E H R P I A N O is manufactured under singularly metTtaJJeiMHiflH!&lt;mis which I&#13;
the cost of production, and it has achieved a brilliant success aa the most elegant instrument&#13;
In the market at a satisfactory price. W R I T K F O B CATALOGUE A N D PRICKS.&#13;
H. LEHR * C O M P A N Y , M a n u f r s , • E a s t o n , P a .&#13;
Better Not Get&#13;
Dyspepsia&#13;
If you can help i t Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by&#13;
effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion.&#13;
But don't trifle with Indigestion.&#13;
A great many peoplo who havn j&#13;
with indigestion, havn been&#13;
for it—when nervous or&#13;
Chronic dyspepsia resulted, and ,&#13;
they have not been able to euro it.&#13;
TTse Kodol and prevent having&#13;
"Dyspepsia.&#13;
Even-one is subject to indigestion.&#13;
Stomach derangement, follows 1&#13;
stomach abuse, just, ns r.at orally j&#13;
and .iu^t. as surely as a, sound and i&#13;
healthy ston-,.ir 11 results t.^nn the&#13;
taking of Kodol.&#13;
When you experience sourness&#13;
of stomach, belching of gas and&#13;
nauseating fluid, bloated sensation, j&#13;
pnawing pai:i in the pit of the&#13;
stomach, heart, burn (so-called).&#13;
diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or&#13;
chronic tired feeling—you need Kodol.&#13;
And then t i e quicker you take&#13;
Kodol—the better. Eat what you&#13;
want, let Kodol digest It.&#13;
Ordinary papain, "dyspepsia tab-&#13;
Bets," physics, etc., are not likely&#13;
to be of much benefit to you, in&#13;
Clgeetive attapfe 'Pepsin It oaly&#13;
a partial digester—and physics are&#13;
not. digesters at all.&#13;
Kodol is a perfect, digester. If&#13;
you could see Kadoldigestingevery&#13;
particle of food, nf all kinds, in the&#13;
glass test-tubes in our laboratories,&#13;
you would know this just as well&#13;
as we do.&#13;
Nature and Kodol will always&#13;
cure a sick* stomach—but in order&#13;
to be cured, the stomach must rest.&#13;
That is what Kodol does—rests the&#13;
stomach, while the stomach gets&#13;
well. Just as simple as A, B, C.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Go to jrour rtrnjrgist today and fret a dollar&#13;
bottle. Then after you have used the&#13;
entire contents of the bottle If you car*&#13;
honestly aay, that it h a s not done you a n y&#13;
pood, return the bottle to the druggist a n d&#13;
he will refund your money without quee»&#13;
tlon or delay, w e will then pay the drugglHt&#13;
for the bottle. Don't hesitate, a l l&#13;
drutnriRts know that our guarantee 1» good.&#13;
This offer applies to the larpr* bottle only&#13;
.1/11.1 to tmt one In a famiiy. The hvr^e hottie&#13;
contains gft tinea aa much aa the fifty&#13;
cent bottle.&#13;
Kodol is prepared at the labor*&#13;
torieaof E, C. DeWitt &amp; Co., Chicago,&#13;
IP.&#13;
If all who hate would l o r e us,&#13;
A n d all o a r loves were true,&#13;
T h e start that s w i n g above its&#13;
W o u l d brighten in the blue.&#13;
If cruel words were kisses,&#13;
And every scowl a tmiile.&#13;
A belter word thau this is,&#13;
Would hurdly be worth while;&#13;
If pur sen would uutighlen&#13;
T o meet a brothers uejed,&#13;
T h e load we bear would lighten,&#13;
Above the grave of greed.&#13;
If thube who w h i n e would whistle,&#13;
Aud those who languish laugh,&#13;
The rose would rout the thistle,&#13;
T h e grain out ruu the chaff,&#13;
If hearts were o n l y jolly,&#13;
If grieviugs were forgot,&#13;
A n d tears aud melenchoiy,&#13;
W e r e thiagu w h i c h now are not—&#13;
T b e u love would kneel to duty,&#13;
And all t h e world would aeem&#13;
A bridal bower of beauty;&#13;
A dream within a dream.&#13;
If men would cease to worry,&#13;
And woman cenbe to sigh,&#13;
Anil all be t*lad to bury,&#13;
Whatever has to die—&#13;
i f neighbor ttpake to neighbor,&#13;
A s love d e m a n d s of all,&#13;
T h e rust would eat the saber,&#13;
T h e bjiear stay o u the wall;&#13;
A n d every day would glisten,&#13;
And every eye would shine,&#13;
And God would stop to listen,&#13;
And life would be divine.&#13;
A. E . G.&#13;
FLASH&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Dirt&#13;
Hustler&#13;
P L A S H is prepared ior the linndb (all hands, none excepted) to clean thoroughly&#13;
a n d Q u i c k e r than any other cleaner or t*jap product ou t h e market. f U U A S H&#13;
ib different from other similar preparations iu that it contains no acid or l y e , aa it i^&#13;
uot a doap, but ib the re«uh of a long period of numeroutj secret experitueata combining&#13;
glycerine and other antiseptic healing oilb in conjunction with finely ground pumice&#13;
and a small percentage ol chemically pure suap block, very beneficial to the ekin. E v -&#13;
erything in it is pure and healthful and guaranteed not to injure t h e mopt delicate&#13;
handn. It in made to d o vw h a t s o a p c a n n o t d o and baa become T H E hand&#13;
eleauer, for cleaning aud preserving the handy o f a l l p e o p l e * I n e v e r y c l a s s&#13;
and e v e r y p l a c e .&#13;
Prepared in a paste form, it is applied with t h e fore tiugerb to the palm of the h a n d ,&#13;
aud b y the addition of a little water preduces a pleasing aiifibeptii' scented lather that&#13;
cleanses the handy thoroughly. It i» put up i u 12 ounce tin boxes, bevelled edge to&#13;
p r e v e u t cutting the fingers.&#13;
ASK YOUR DE ALER IOC 1*ARGE CAN&#13;
BETTER THAN SOAP&#13;
He Was Sensitive.&#13;
Blobbs— You're pretty much stuck on&#13;
Miss Gobbs, aren't you, old man?&#13;
Hobbs—I was once, but after what&#13;
she said to me last night I'm not going&#13;
to pay any more attention to her.&#13;
Blobbs - Gee! What did she aay?&#13;
Hobh«-"No r-OleveJand&#13;
Kills Would.Be Slayer.&#13;
A njttrciless murderer is Appendicitis&#13;
with many victims. But Dr. Kings&#13;
New Life IJilLs kill it by prevention.&#13;
They gently stimulate stomach, liver,&#13;
and bowels, preventing that clogging&#13;
that invites appendicitis, curing Constipation,&#13;
Biliosness, Chills. Malaria,&#13;
Headache and Indigestion. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Sillers.&#13;
STATE OK MICHIGAN, the prouate court for&#13;
the county of Livingston At a session of&#13;
said court, held at the probate office in the village&#13;
of Howell In said county ou the 12th day of&#13;
February A. n, 190¾. Present: Hon. Arthur A.&#13;
Montague, judj,'e of Probate. In the matter of&#13;
thoeBtate of&#13;
WILLIAM GHISSON, deceased.&#13;
Vuldairsr UriSAon having filed In aald court his&#13;
petition prayinc that the Bdminstration of said&#13;
estate, be granted to J. L. Kisby or to some&#13;
other suitable person.&#13;
She fhubuiy gjtepgtth,&#13;
PUBLISHED K V I S T f B C I S S l Y HOKNIHe BY&#13;
Sinscription Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Entered, at the Postotnce at.FlqckJiey, Michigan&#13;
as second-class metier . '&#13;
Advertising rates made known.oo application.&#13;
FRANK. L-. A N D R E W S ^ CO&#13;
EOlTOae AND PROPRIETORS.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ETHOD1ST EPISCOPAL CtiUitUH.&#13;
Kev. i). C. Littlejoha pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:'Au, and every Sunday M1&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. Miss MABY V A N F U K T , Supt.&#13;
^ONtittKGATIONAL (JHUKCtl.&#13;
Sunday morning at 1^:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7 :oc o'cijek. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evening". Sunday school &amp;t close of morn&#13;
inn Bervke. Mrs, Urace Crofooi, Supl„ J, A,&#13;
Cadwell Sec.&#13;
U T . MAUD'S 'JATHULIC UHtfKUH.&#13;
O Kev. M. J. Coniuierf&amp;rd, Pastor. 'jerYicea&#13;
every Sunday. Low maas at?:3uo'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 10 '.30 a. ni. Catechism&#13;
*t3;0Up, m., vespers an - be . 'diction at 7;3U p.ru&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
rpne A. 0 . H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
X third Sunday intne Kr. Matthew ilall,&#13;
John Tuomey and M. i \ fc^aily, County Delegate&#13;
riUlii W. C. I . U. meetd tu£ aeooa'd Saturday of1&#13;
i.«ach month at i:Jnj p. m. at tne'houidi ot the&#13;
meBibers Everyono mtereete'd in tetnuerince is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs; Leal Sigler, Prea. Mrs&#13;
i Jennie barton, Secretary.&#13;
Fluttering Hearts&#13;
"I h a v e ha*! he^rt t n i u b h - f o r JO&#13;
y e a r s ; after t a k i n g i,S b o t t l e s o f&#13;
D r . M i l e s ' H e a r t R e m e d y 1 a m e n -&#13;
t i r e l y c u r e d , a n d t o - d a y I d o n o t&#13;
f e e l t h e s l i g h t e s t effect o f h e a r t&#13;
t r o u b l e . " D A V I D F R A Z I E R ,&#13;
State Soldiers Home, Hrie, Co., Ohlft.&#13;
F l u t t e r i n g i n d i c a t e s a w e a k n e s s o l&#13;
t h e n e r v e s a n d m u s c l e s p f t h e h e a r t&#13;
L i k e p a l p i t a t i o n , s h o r t n e s s ' o f b r e a t h ,&#13;
p a i n i n • s i d e a n d ' s h o u l d e r , i t i a&#13;
f r e g u e n t l y f o l l o w e d . ' b y t h e w o r s t&#13;
f o r m o f h e a r t disease.; t h e r e f o r e ift&#13;
s h o u l d n o t b e n e g l e c t e d .&#13;
D r . M i l e s * N e r v i n e&#13;
is a m o s t r c ] i a u ] e h e a r t m e d i c i n e . I t&#13;
s t r e n g t h e n - • - ' :&lt; - h u - s t h e h e a r t&#13;
a c t i o n , stimulates"frTe d i g e s t i v e o r -&#13;
g a n s , a n d i n c r e a s e s t h e c i r c u l a t i o n .&#13;
t h e first bottle will benefit; if not.&#13;
y*ur druggist, will return, your -money.&#13;
hew Hall&#13;
I It in ordered, that the 1'Jth day of March&#13;
A D 190», at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at I tpadiaUyJnyited. Mrs; Leal Sigler,&#13;
said probate oft'ee, bo and is hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice&#13;
thereof be given by publication of a copy of this&#13;
order for .'5 successive weeks previous to said day&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPATCH, a newspaper,&#13;
printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAODK,&#13;
t '* Judge ot Probate&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. society of this place, me« 1&#13;
every third Saturuay evening in the F«&#13;
John Donohue, President.&#13;
le Fr.'Svat&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABiiES.&#13;
Me etevery Friday evening on or before full&#13;
ol the moon at their haliiu t he Swarthout bldg&#13;
Visiting brothersarecordiallyinvited.&#13;
C, V. Van Winkle, Sir Knight Oommaadei&#13;
N. P. Atortanson, - Record Keeper&#13;
F, (.T. Jackaon, Finance tLe^per&#13;
K I L L T H E C O U G I&#13;
MO CURE THE LUNC8&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. ?6, F 4, A. M. Kegular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
thefull of the moon. Kirk VanWinkle, W. M&#13;
-&#13;
WITH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
RDfiR OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A A. M. meeting, MBSJSKTTK VAUGHN, W. M.&#13;
PRICE&#13;
O L D S "&#13;
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.&#13;
FOR C S H S I 1 8 «* * ***&#13;
1 u i i ^ Q L D S Trial BoWe&gt;t&#13;
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY&#13;
OR MONEY R E F U N D E D .&#13;
OKL'ER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meot the t&#13;
first Thursday evening of each M&#13;
Maccabe* hall. C. L.Grimes V. C&#13;
)f MoDth iu the&#13;
The Great Oiarriioea&#13;
and Dysentery Remedy&#13;
Cures acute and chronic diarrhoea, dysentery,&#13;
cholera morbus,", summer complaint,"&#13;
Asiatic chdlor.ij'aiid prevents the development&#13;
of typhoid fever. Same wonderful&#13;
results obtained i n all parts o f the world.&#13;
"WORKS LIKE MA6IC."&#13;
NIGHTS OK THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L. -Andrews P. .M.&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous&#13;
C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
S CENTS&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
them send to us for a box as&#13;
a trial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this k tjie cigar for you&#13;
to smcVp&#13;
MAXuracfrjuD Bt&#13;
CHRISTOI IHts, &lt;&#13;
1&#13;
Price 28 cents per box.&#13;
Don't accept a substitute—a so-called " h a t&#13;
as good." If your druggist hasn't it and don't&#13;
care to g*»t4* fw^you-send.^iirect to&#13;
THE ONTARIO CHEMICAL COMPANY,&#13;
'Oswego, If. V . , U S. A.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.S'GLER M. D- C. L. SIQLER M. D&#13;
pv DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PhyBiciau.-. -tna Mir^^n*. All calls promptly&#13;
attended today or tught. Ottice nn Main street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, 1 all at t h e P i n c k n e y D I S -&#13;
P A T C H office. Auction Hill's Free&#13;
D e x t e r l n d e p e n d a n t P h o n e&#13;
Arrangements m a d e for sale b y phone »•&#13;
my e x p e n s e . Oct 07&#13;
A d d r e s s . D e x t e r , .&gt;\k:hi_aan&#13;
LT W . D A N I E US,&#13;
XliL ftEN'KRAO. AUCTION BEB.&#13;
SatiatactK u G u a r a n t e e d . F o r information&#13;
call at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
Uregory, M i c h , r. f. d. 2 . L y n d i l U p h o n e&#13;
connection. A u c t i o n biiia . ..1 t i n c o p&#13;
iurniah«d t r e e .&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS- '&#13;
WITH sai&#13;
ATDWMkTOHOfFlCL.&#13;
LEARN TO BE A CHAUFFER&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
Our T w o Book*&#13;
DISEASES OF THE&#13;
AN ATOMY OF THE AUTO&#13;
AND&#13;
MECHMCH CHART&#13;
ONLY $ ? . 7 5&#13;
We also have 50) books&#13;
which give all the niapfl&#13;
and coaDties of Misotiria,&#13;
and all names* 'of • Auto&#13;
Owners in B t Louis; - -&#13;
Only 75c&#13;
PHQEIHJWTQ SUPPLY CQ,&#13;
St. Louis, lio, - *&#13;
3932 Olivefiu&#13;
m&#13;
^ - ¾ HER 1&#13;
LIFE TO&#13;
eFJBE&#13;
"** Pinkham's&#13;
. -S^feefttn*! o w ten years of my Hfe&#13;
P&amp;khAnx'fi-Vegetabte&#13;
Cbmpotiiid.&#13;
Eleven years ago \&#13;
t w a s a w a l k i t g&#13;
shadow. I had been&#13;
under the doctor's&#13;
carebutgutnorelief.&#13;
My h u s b a n d persuaded&#13;
me to try&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound&#13;
and it worked&#13;
like a charm. It relieved&#13;
all my pains&#13;
misery. I advise all suffering&#13;
women to take Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound." — 2£RS. E M M A&#13;
W H E A T O N , Vienna, W- Va.&#13;
liTdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comnound,&#13;
made from native roots and&#13;
Herbs, contains n o narcotics or harmf&#13;
u l drugs, and to-day hblds the record&#13;
for theTargest number of actual cures&#13;
ot female diseases of any similar medi-&#13;
•cine i n the country, ana thousands of&#13;
voluntary testimonials are on file in&#13;
t a * Pinkjbam Wbor^tory^, at Lynn.,1&#13;
Mass., from women who have been&#13;
cured from almost every fomi of&#13;
female complaints, inflammatiqn, ulceration,&#13;
displacements, fibroid tott|Qr&amp;&#13;
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,&#13;
indigestion and nervous p&gt;e«tratIon.&#13;
Every such suffering woman owes it to&#13;
herself to give Lydia 13* Pinkham'*&#13;
v&#13;
^yVW.^^W^^*''&#13;
FOR COMING SEASON&#13;
S t Y L E S OF I N T E R E S T TO T H E -&#13;
HOME DRESSMAKER.&#13;
QBE&#13;
r . . . — „ .&#13;
*r . • - ! « • - •&#13;
"Marked Down" Goods, Now tq Be&#13;
Picked Up Everywhere—Princess&#13;
t Dress to Give Way to Skirt&#13;
Wai*t Effect.&#13;
Between-seasuu dressmaking Is always&#13;
a gamble, and yet this is just the&#13;
time when the daughter of the household&#13;
should be trying her hand at&#13;
dressmaking- While spring styles and&#13;
summer modes are not yet settled, the&#13;
new fabrics In wash goods are offered&#13;
ih all the shops, and tor the benefit of&#13;
the ambitious but unskilled sewer,&#13;
there is, a wealth of "marked &lt;Jown"&#13;
JMMVK jrour c a&#13;
Ha\ letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at&#13;
lornn, Mass. H e r advice is free,&#13;
~ always helpful.&#13;
Western Canada the Pennant Winner&#13;
"TheLast Best West"&#13;
Thie government ol&#13;
Canada now gives&#13;
to every actual settler&#13;
1 6 0 a c r e s of&#13;
w i t * at- ^row | ntf&#13;
land free and an&#13;
additional 160 acres&#13;
-at $3.00 an acre. The 300,000 contented&#13;
^American settlers making their homes in&#13;
Western Canada is the best evidence oi&#13;
the superiority of that country. They are&#13;
becoming rich, growing from. 25 jtp 50&#13;
boshels wheat to the acre; 60 tp llOD$fehrfs&#13;
oats and 45 to 60 bushels barliyyibe*'&#13;
•sides having splendid herds of cattle raised&#13;
on the prairie grass. Dairying is an important&#13;
industry.&#13;
Thr crop of 1908 still keeps W«tteTf» Canada&#13;
i n the lead. The world wait qitn.icoH.lo it as&#13;
i t s food-producer.&#13;
4'Tile tliinjf which most tmprossort us was thf&gt;&#13;
•aiaunitiittr nf the country thm is nvaihihlo for&#13;
aurii'iiltunil purposes."—-Anfrtwii HdUorial&#13;
Corrttpondoice.l'Jim. ^&#13;
Low railwi^ ptQes, food schools and churches,&#13;
markets conVenrent, prices the highest, climate&#13;
perfect.&#13;
Lands nrs-for sain .Ijy fc&lt;*41 way and Land (Vimgandie,&#13;
tie., -Teplaising" strfpes, dote&#13;
etc., and very elaborate designs art&#13;
ahown in the new. swisees, uuGh at&#13;
trellises, with flowers running ovei&#13;
them, and crossbars with blossoms&#13;
between the bars. Plaids are very pop,&#13;
ular. There Is also the promise or a&#13;
return to colored shirt waists, which&#13;
have not been in vogue for several&#13;
seasons.&#13;
Linens are either very heavy, with'a&#13;
Russian crash effect, or sheer as batiste.&#13;
Machine embroidery In colore&#13;
on white, cream, ecru and black and&#13;
of white on colors Is much used.&#13;
It also promises to be a season of&#13;
embroidery and braid trimming rather&#13;
than lace, and the princess dress will&#13;
give place to the skirt and waist effect&#13;
with matching belt. In fact, all&#13;
things point to a distinct return to&#13;
curves and the small waist, in direct&#13;
contrast to the waistless, hlpless,&#13;
straight-up-and-down effects of winter.&#13;
Sleeves will be long on shirt waists&#13;
and tailored tub costumes, while&#13;
the elbow sleeve will be worn with&#13;
dainty, huffy afternoon frocks, and&#13;
evening gowns will have very short&#13;
sleeves indeed.&#13;
With these few general hints let the&#13;
would-be dressmaker plan her first&#13;
work.&#13;
Our Illustration shows a design with&#13;
the shirt waist and skirt both closed&#13;
on the left side. Skirt and waist are&#13;
made separately, then attached by&#13;
narrow belt over which a fancy belt&#13;
may be worn. This joining prevents&#13;
sagging and insures a straight line of&#13;
buttons from shoulder to hem.&#13;
The skirt is in eight gorta with an&#13;
inverted plait in the back. The waist&#13;
gives the broad-shouldered effect by&#13;
coming out over the sleeves, which are&#13;
snug-fltting, with only a few gathers&#13;
at arm's eye and cuff, a striking fea&#13;
ture of all short waist sleeves this&#13;
spring.&#13;
For a blue and white chambray&#13;
dress, use crocheted linen buttons or&#13;
cover molds with the chambray, embroidered&#13;
in Frenoh knots with white ;&#13;
mercerized floss. This design would I&#13;
develop in colored linen, blue, raspberry&#13;
or lavender with white stitching&#13;
and white buttons; A very smart combination&#13;
is gray chambray, with whito [&#13;
stitching and buttons. If checked or&#13;
plaid material is used, then the buttons&#13;
must match. Plaids in particular&#13;
will stand no trimming,—Boston&#13;
(Jlobe,&#13;
*WI" JKARffVINfl lOlWfetf*&#13;
Justfea fttorastt. L*w H#S a^oKajt/ A i l&#13;
flaeofdS. i*. t)&#13;
w, justice of the Peace,&#13;
S t , ) fesasll, Jnd., Is&#13;
lpftflfn far- a i d wide&#13;
as the "Marrying&#13;
Squire," from the&#13;
. factv that he has parried&#13;
more couples&#13;
than any other official&#13;
in Indiana. Judge&#13;
Law wrote a letter&#13;
In 1906, recommending&#13;
Do&amp;n's Kidney&#13;
Pills, which h e said had made a had&#13;
back well, enabled him to sleep better,&#13;
nights and feel more fit for worit.&#13;
The treatment ajso cleared up the&#13;
urine. On January 5, 1909, Judge. Law&#13;
confirmed his previous testimony. "I&#13;
have recommended this remedy to&#13;
many people since I first used It,"&#13;
said he.&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
A Billionaire'* Motto.&#13;
"Forgive and forget is my motto,"&#13;
said Mr. Dustln Stax.&#13;
"But you don't forgive your business&#13;
rivals."&#13;
"No. We expect the public to do&#13;
the forgiving and we'll do the forgetting."&#13;
$33.00 P E R S O N A L L Y C O N D U C T E D&#13;
EXCURSIONS.&#13;
Colonists' one-way tickets Chicago&#13;
to the Pacific coast, via the Chicago,&#13;
Union Pacific and Northwestern Line,&#13;
are on sale daily during March and&#13;
April at the rate of $33.00. Correspondingly&#13;
low rates from all points.&#13;
Double berth in tourist sleeping car&#13;
only $7.00, through without change to&#13;
San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland.&#13;
No extra charge on our personally&#13;
conducted tours. Write for itin-&#13;
T^BSSf- *Kffli"faliJP SfUKOtO . M mm ism. v. • a&#13;
AMERICANS PROFITED LARGELY&#13;
AND 8END BA6K ftAtiSFAtf *3"'&#13;
TORV: REPORTS.&#13;
The census branch of the Department&#13;
of Agriculture. Ottawa, Canada,&#13;
has completed lta/toeturas of the shew*&#13;
Jng of Western v Canada's grain yield&#13;
for 1908, and the reports- make Very&#13;
interesting reading. In the three provinces&#13;
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and&#13;
Alberta, which comprise what may heknown&#13;
as Central Canada, there was ft&#13;
total wheat yield of about '107,000,060&#13;
bushels, worth to the farmer about&#13;
$85,000,000; in addition to this the oat,&#13;
barley and flax crops were worth another&#13;
$35,000,000. Letters have bee*&#13;
received from many of the settlers&#13;
from the United States. Prom these,&#13;
that of Rev. Oscar L. King has been&#13;
selected. He Uvea in the vicinity7 of&#13;
Edmonton, Alberta, and what he says&#13;
will be of interest to those who contemplate&#13;
moving to Central Canada.&#13;
Every line of the letter i s interesting.&#13;
Those who wish for the particulars as&#13;
to how to secure homeste*d*.-and preemptions&#13;
should write any Canadian&#13;
Government agent. Mr. King says:&#13;
"Mr. M. V. Mclnnnes, Detroit, Michigan:&#13;
I am wen satisfied with' Alberta.&#13;
This country offers exc,eJUent&#13;
opportunities for anyone to ma£e a&#13;
good home; for himself and family&#13;
if he is willing to put up with a fow&#13;
hard knocks for the first two or three&#13;
years. But it is..worth a few hard&#13;
knocks to get a 160-acre farm of rich,&#13;
productive land with no mortgage on&#13;
it. This province is well fitted for&#13;
grains, stock raising and dairying. We&#13;
have found the climate generally&#13;
healthful, more healthful than Mich*&#13;
igan; and although the thermometer&#13;
sometimes drops to 40 degrees below&#13;
erary and full particulars to S. A. I zero In winter, yet we do not seem to&#13;
Hutchison, Manager Tourist Depart- | feel that temperature any. more than&#13;
ment, 212 Clark Street, Chicago, Hi.&#13;
jnaifK. Inscriptive pamphTotsflnd maps sort free.&#13;
Wor rnllwny mtos and otlw information apply to&#13;
SapOTintondent o f Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or&#13;
tfceautaoiizeti Canadian GoYornmont Agent:&#13;
tL V. MclNNBS, 176 Jefltnos Arrant, Detroit,&#13;
or C. A. UOBItt. Saall Ste. Hari*. Mica.&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
$300 iriOEi&gt; *350&#13;
•*kVtosson X W e s n d 8«U MOM Men's $3.00&#13;
4b f» JW SaotfThan Any Other Manufacturer&#13;
la Swam I gin tha m m the btsHt of &lt;&amp;a aoat&#13;
aSXtpm of tniMi «xp«ta u d akflkd&#13;
Tfca i&lt;ttliu atiU nmtbmn far aacX put ef tfc* aho«.&#13;
, a4wtry&#13;
If Iee«l« t»0*rra kmr eartfUIy W. L. DoogUa thorn&#13;
da, yo» womwthan «ad«nt»nd why UUraeld tbttr&#13;
mmm^, aKt»£^aMta**Vf.. MaqWjlwVaIaUr llooasccaarr «thoaann aaaeyy oovthaearr ia aaaa.&#13;
M§ Mttliiffi^fintnqthBScfea makes tfHtm Hon&#13;
FWimm4m4 Vtogtr Wmrlng than cuig othtrs.&#13;
« &gt; * « for * v « r y M e m b e r «»rtrte FnmUy,&#13;
M e a , BAVIK Wmmr-n,M laae« and ChUdre'au&#13;
_^TMiaa3ftnT aho« dealers ftwrywherc&#13;
OSllTlnSJl Sone i^nniw tvithont W. L. DonpHu&#13;
v r l U | l \ B T f a&lt;me and price atamped on N)ttom.&#13;
Tm*Otinlifl4*Vm&amp; Zxcliui-nlT. Catalog auflad fraa. y 'typWlM, 167 Sparfr St, BrocJooa, AUM.&#13;
D R . JtfcINTOSU celebrated NATURAL UTERINE&#13;
SUEPORTER «***»1rt«l*n»t*r«llof. Hold by att snwVcal Inrtromrntrtpateriaal&#13;
loadlnjrdrnierlRtain uaitrtl stntai&#13;
•&amp; l^anAdn. f35ailing ft prir^ lint writ on anpliration.&#13;
THK UAsrn^rrfiJjL M^INTOSH TBI SH CO_&#13;
• n Walnnt Mt,'ffl!!fl0rtS!fl(T Pif.. *J!vSaTnctnjMT* of&#13;
« m * « and ar8r&gt; makors of tbe **ntalno stamped&#13;
'-MClNTOSri*" S*i»»Jft«»f. ' p&#13;
Excellent iMo*«lf 'for Reps, Piques or&#13;
Plaid Weaves.&#13;
good^ frgm^lasfc sumpaer on which to&#13;
test her abnity? '&#13;
In turning over tho offerings at bargain&#13;
counters, bear these few hints in&#13;
mind. It is to be a season of colors.&#13;
The new high-priced goods *ire all In&#13;
bright colorings, most of them bordered&#13;
Flowers in Sprays or conventionalized&#13;
form are shown on the more&#13;
Freddie's impression;&#13;
This little boy attending Sunday&#13;
school for the first time was greatly&#13;
impressed by the teacher and the&#13;
larger boys of the class. On returning&#13;
home his mother questioned him in regard&#13;
to what was said and what h e&#13;
f must learn for his next lesson. The&#13;
I child in a frank way, replied: "Oh,&#13;
I mamma, it was all about Qod and love&#13;
I and a lady named Eve, and how she&#13;
| gave an apple to a man called Adam,&#13;
j who never gave her a bite." The&#13;
j mother, to lead him on, said: "Who&#13;
I was Eve?" "Why, mamma, she was&#13;
; Mrs. Eve Adam, a friend of God's, who&#13;
kept house.in a garden!"&#13;
f)us8ian House Slippers.&#13;
Delieiously comfortable are the Rus&#13;
si;in house slippers of deerskin.&#13;
They are fur inside and out, even&#13;
I he soles are of the same luxurious&#13;
materia!,&#13;
They have long pointed toos, some&#13;
gaily decorated with red and blue felt&#13;
and others have a heart shape of white&#13;
fur set into the instep. \&#13;
They are all edged with white fu: i&#13;
up&#13;
he&#13;
Down the Old Road.&#13;
The big autumn moon rolled&#13;
above the frosty pines.&#13;
"You like to go out driving?"&#13;
said after a long silence.&#13;
"Yes," she answered, nestling closer&#13;
to him.&#13;
"And you always liKe to go with a&#13;
young man who knows how to handle&#13;
we did 5 or 10 degrees below zero in&#13;
Michigan. We like the winters.&#13;
"The Government takes great interest&#13;
in the education of the people and&#13;
quickly aids the settlers in. establishing&#13;
schools where they are called for.&#13;
The schools, though graded differently&#13;
than those in the States, are efficient&#13;
and advancing. Our great drawback&#13;
has been the limited and inadequate&#13;
railway facilities, but new roads are&#13;
being rapidly built and many more&#13;
are projected through various parts&#13;
of the province. The new policy of&#13;
the Alberta government to construct&#13;
a great many branch lines throughout&#13;
the province will greatly help all parts&#13;
of the country. If those new settlers&#13;
who have to go back a considerable&#13;
distance from existing railroads and&#13;
towns to find free homesteads will&#13;
but locate along the line of a projected&#13;
railroad they will in two or three&#13;
years be near both town and railroad.&#13;
When I first came to this country&#13;
three and a half years ago the homestead&#13;
t took was 75 miles from a railroad&#13;
town; now there is a railroad 25&#13;
miles north, another 25 miles south,&#13;
delicate goods like lawn, batiste, or- j around the top&#13;
SOFA P I L L O W S OF SAME S H A D E .&#13;
Decorators of " D e n " Seem to&#13;
Involved a New Idea.&#13;
Have&#13;
Since velveteen has so largely&#13;
taken the place of corduroy and ef&#13;
velour for upholstery purposes, and&#13;
the antique tufted sofas are being recovered&#13;
with it in soft wood browns&#13;
and dusky reds and blues, the sofa pillow&#13;
is being reconsidered. The motley&#13;
crowd of den cushions is not in keeping&#13;
with the dignity ol one of these&#13;
old sofas, and it dawns upon the decorator&#13;
that to keep the sofa a thing of&#13;
beauty it is necessary to cover all the&#13;
sofa pillows with the same shade of&#13;
velveteen.&#13;
The two oblong pillows that, so often&#13;
were a part, of these high-backed, hugearmed&#13;
sofas have on them a touch of&#13;
gold to vary what might be monotony&#13;
if the velveteen is too dark in, color.&#13;
A two-inch band of galloon, dusky gold&#13;
and of an antique richness, decorates&#13;
the pillow top. It is laid three Inches&#13;
in from the edge along each sideband&#13;
the two send strips, which are longer;&#13;
cross over the other ones, hang down&#13;
and end in large gold tassels.&#13;
NOVEL L I T T L E TEA-COSY.&#13;
;he ribbons?"&#13;
-Wen, er—sometimes I like to go j and a third is being built through my&#13;
with a young man who knows how to i neighborhood,&#13;
drop them." ! "* t n i n k the prairie country or coun-&#13;
And after that the old horse jogged ! t r y l h a f is partly prairie offers much&#13;
Design Here Shown Has One Great&#13;
Point of Advantage.&#13;
Our sketch illustrates a novel little&#13;
tea-cosy, and it has this advantage&#13;
over the ordinary cosy, that when i*&#13;
has once been placed on the teapot it&#13;
need not be removed each time P&#13;
fresh cup of tea is required. It if&#13;
made very much in the same shape as&#13;
an ordinary tea-cosy, but in a smaller&#13;
T H € T O I L E T T A B L E .&#13;
**+• ACTIVE AfiENTS MAKE&#13;
$ 2 5 TO $100 WEEKLY avIUm; the famous m&gt;w*)."i typewriter. Klmt praot*&#13;
r-»1. Htawlard two-tiaml kpyhnerrl. vlHfWe-waUliur.&#13;
pr^tnlilp typewriter f.vcT sold for KO low n la-lc*&#13;
Po*« wrak 1 Ufl «100 nm&lt;'hrn««. CmtWnt l&gt;o Wtfrr.&#13;
At »ny lirtrp.. Flrerv!»Mlv w »nts nnr&gt; Tlljf prnfiU,&#13;
mjrr nAlm. PTohmlve territory. Writs for lull&#13;
particulars tcwlay to&#13;
tmmlur Tv[M.wrli»r &lt;'o. • IV;&gt;' Tl, SSI nr*»rt»«r« X.T.CHy.&#13;
P A R K E R ' S '&#13;
H A I R B A L S A M&#13;
CIMBSM . ind bauitiriei th« babv&#13;
lVntnotug • hnrftrUnt rrowth.&#13;
When polishing'fhe finger nafTs, rub&#13;
across, not. up and down. Dust tb«&#13;
hands with orris powder for excessive&#13;
perspiration.&#13;
In order to keep the head clean for&#13;
a month', a tonic"should be used, after&#13;
which the hair should be thoroughly&#13;
gtwie over with a clean brush. It is&#13;
I surprising how much dirt is removed&#13;
' by this process.&#13;
J A simple but effective way to make&#13;
[ hair wave in big ripples, which coiv&#13;
I tinue to he fashionable, is to dampen&#13;
i it and tie it down with bands of baby&#13;
! ribbon, pulling the hair out in loose&#13;
: waves between the bands.&#13;
J To prevent noise round pa(?s of&#13;
i leather, cut. from old hoots and "nailed&#13;
to the legs .Qf, .kitchen^8^8,^reveaJL&#13;
the grating noise upon a brick or tiled.&#13;
flooj whldr fs so dlatresirins tov .tbjl;&#13;
n*ftNK*l4MBsUiv* peojfe* { , '&#13;
size, anr&gt; it should he constructed to&#13;
fit the pot it is Intended for. A£ either&#13;
side there is a slit, and through ,oue&#13;
the handle of the teapot projects', and&#13;
through the othe?; to* spqftt; So- that&#13;
cosy and teapot ctoVb* lifted'together&#13;
when tq£ tea is jjenired o u t It can.&#13;
of course, he made in any material we&#13;
fancy, atid a floral- tiealgn may be&#13;
worert on either skle^r . ,f&#13;
It. Is shown in a very plain form in&#13;
our sketch, to clearly illustrate the&#13;
way in which it. may be used. Care&#13;
must he taken In making the coay&#13;
that the slits on either^ side be of a&#13;
large enough size to Sllow the cosy to&#13;
be drawn easily over the teapot.&#13;
along unguided.&#13;
In a Safe Place.&#13;
"We have a man in this prison who&#13;
never tried to escape," declared the&#13;
head keeper.&#13;
"What's he in for?" inquired the&#13;
visitor.&#13;
"Bigamy," replied the head keeper.&#13;
—Bohemian.&#13;
NEW IDEA&#13;
Helped Wis. Couple.&#13;
It doesn't pay to stick too closely to&#13;
old notions of things. New ideas often&#13;
lead to better health, success and happiness.&#13;
A Wis. couple examined an idea new&#13;
to them and stepped up several rounds&#13;
on the health ladder. The husband&#13;
writes:&#13;
"Several years ago we suffered from&#13;
coffee drinking, were sleepless,&#13;
nervous, sallow, weak and irritable.&#13;
My wife and I both loved coffee and&#13;
thought it was a bracer." (delusion.)&#13;
"Finally, after years of suffering, we&#13;
read of Postum and the harmfulness&#13;
of coffee, and believing that to grow&#13;
we should give some attention to new&#13;
ideas, we decided to test Postum.&#13;
better opportunities than the hilly&#13;
portions."&#13;
An Illusion.&#13;
Alonzo—Tell me, old man, isn't that&#13;
fair creature over there beckoning to&#13;
you?&#13;
Alphonzo—No—no—that's only a&#13;
marcel wave.&#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 S O Years.&#13;
! The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
' Deserves Censure.&#13;
j A Boston woman is charged with&#13;
I throwing a pie in her husband's face.&#13;
! That's a fine way to waste pie!&#13;
j Bed, Weak, Weary, Watery E T M&#13;
; Relieved by Murinn Eye Remedy. Com*&#13;
j pounded by Experienced Physicians. Murine&#13;
Dorsn'r. Smart: Soothes Eye Pain.&#13;
Writo Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.&#13;
| for Illustrated Eye Book. At Druggteta.&#13;
Even in fishing for husbands it Is'&#13;
generally the big ones that get away.&#13;
Try the Natural laxative, Garfield Teal (IT&#13;
"When we made it right we liked it overcomes constipation and regulates&#13;
and were relieved of ills caused by&#13;
coffee. Our friends noticed the change&#13;
—fresher skin, steadier nerves, better&#13;
temper, etc.&#13;
"These changes were not sudden,&#13;
hut relief increased as we continued to&#13;
drink and enjoy Postum, anjl we lost,&#13;
the desire for coffee.&#13;
"Many of our friendB did not like&#13;
Postum at first, because they did not&#13;
make it right. But when they boiled&#13;
Postum according to directions on&#13;
nnd&#13;
Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, tf. Y.&#13;
kidneys. Samples sent upon rcqiMC '&#13;
Tell a married man he doesn't look&#13;
it and he will he terribly flattered.&#13;
PTT/ES CITRKT&gt; I V S TO 14 r»AY8.&#13;
PA7.0 OINTMBNTIstruarantppd to c.nrn ftnr rauw&#13;
nf iN-hlnt. mind. Bieedlrttr nr Fh»trnd!n» Piles In&#13;
!ito 14 days or money refunded. r&gt;0q.&#13;
Life does not make us, we make&#13;
life.—Kavanagh.&#13;
Tf Your F « * t Arho or B n r n&#13;
Lightweight Suit Case*.&#13;
Suit esses especially made for worn ' benefited by the change.'&#13;
en to carry are extremely light {p a Reason."&#13;
weight and are lined with silk anc»&#13;
fitted with silk pockets. These weifb&#13;
little more than an ordinary shopping&#13;
hag, but Will not stand any rough&#13;
^'handling and should never be checked&#13;
whqn traveling.&#13;
tpnk. ,g..J, ui«n ti,l ,i.t wa..s dark a_ nd rwivch-u, , trhucervj ! (*ju°l\c l£c r*n'?ll,r sSf.^ T,^w"rn n" 'AIoInM pI'aHc kKag&lt;exs&gt; ts-Kolnd.&lt; »y.r -iatr l?s iren liked it better tthhaann ccooffffeeee aanndd wweerrte, «»««&lt;s*oiayeanj.&#13;
There's&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvlile"&#13;
in pkgs,&#13;
»*•* ren* IS* mfeov* Uttwt A new&#13;
on* appear* from t i n e to tlnre. Th*r&#13;
•r* I M I I M , trn*. « 4 * fall of htnnti&#13;
Uteraat*&#13;
Silence isn't alwayg goldon. Sometimes&#13;
it is an admission of guilt. •&#13;
Mr*. Wln«low'« ftoothlnff Syrnp.&#13;
TorchlMrnn UsMhlnjt, Hoft*n»thA uurni, reduce* tiv&#13;
fl&amp;mmatlon, allay* pain, cur*« wind oolfu. 95c » bottle.&#13;
• • - • " C . ' — - - - -&#13;
..• About the easieai. thing irr the work!&#13;
i for some people to make (a a break. '&#13;
» in i . » » » » 1 1 1 1 mi&#13;
r&#13;
• &gt; ' » •&#13;
RIDES ON FtfREET CAR&#13;
' - - . . v &gt; i 'i».'n&#13;
^ E N J ^ I N OF NORTHERN FORE8T&#13;
QIVEB CONDUCTOR AND MOTORMAN&#13;
A BAD FRIQHT.&#13;
. Winnipeg, Man.—The idea ofr meeting&#13;
a real, live, sure enough timber&#13;
wolf within, the limits of a full-grown&#13;
city U.rather a startling one, but in&#13;
Winnipeg it It sot uncommon. A recent&#13;
vhilt from oae*of these sharks of&#13;
MM lorest was noted in the society&#13;
columns of local papers. A late street&#13;
car was whirling along making up&#13;
time on a suburban avenue running&#13;
parallel to the famous Red River of&#13;
the North when the motorman saw c&#13;
gray streak fiauh to a position just&#13;
between the two- rails and stand there&#13;
threateningly. He had just time to&#13;
realize.that the object waa an unusually&#13;
laree, gaunt, gray timber wolf,&#13;
rrcrrr-&#13;
Th« Fender Smashed Down to the&#13;
Accompaniment of a Terrifying Howl.&#13;
with its neck ruff abrlstle, when the&#13;
car struck It. The fender snapped&#13;
down to the accompaniment of a terrifying&#13;
howl of mixed fright and rage,&#13;
and Tom Jones, the motorman, shout:&#13;
Ing to his conductor, turned off the&#13;
power and yanked the reverse. The&#13;
conductor and two passengers who&#13;
were on the car rushed to the front&#13;
door, the conductor with a heavy&#13;
switch thrower In his hand, just as the&#13;
car came to a standstill.&#13;
The moment the car stopped the big&#13;
wolf sprang to the ground, bewildered&#13;
and frightened. The motorman and&#13;
the conductor elammed open the doors&#13;
of the vestibule as the wolf leaped&#13;
Into the darkness and loped off towafil&#13;
the river bank. Jones pulled his gun&#13;
and took a couple of pot shots for&#13;
luck, and the "bone picker" was gone".&#13;
A moment later, from the river bank,&#13;
the men heard the long, quavering&#13;
howl of the true timber wolf echo&#13;
through the night. The great gray&#13;
beast was making for the forest in the&#13;
outlying parks over the snow-covered&#13;
Ice of the frozen Red.&#13;
Periodically Winnipeg receives a&#13;
visit from one or more of these great&#13;
wolVeB, driven into civilization from&#13;
the north by the pangs of hunger.&#13;
They cover great distances In single&#13;
nights, following the river over the&#13;
ice.&#13;
SEVEN DAYS WITHOUT FOOD.&#13;
Last of Auto Party Lost in Desert in&#13;
Rescued.&#13;
' ^ * LUMBERMAN, ACCOMPANIED BY&#13;
PET, HAS DE8PERATE FfQHT&#13;
WITH WOLVES. , -&#13;
CANINE DOES DEADLY WORK&#13;
Frank Trathin GJvea Up Work, Buys&#13;
Rifle and 8tart» Out to Avenge&#13;
Death of Animal by Slaughter&#13;
of Brutes.&#13;
Traverse City, Mich.—Frank Trathiu&#13;
Df Emerson, which Is 45 miles north oi&#13;
Newberry, is mourning the loss of his&#13;
fine bulldog, and that mourning is none&#13;
the less sincere because the dog died&#13;
In fhe defense of Trathin's life.&#13;
Emerson is only a small place, consisting&#13;
of six or seven houses and a&#13;
sawmill, and the sawmill is the ex&#13;
cuse for the village, as well as for num&#13;
erq.ua camps in . the thick woods.&#13;
Toward one of these camps Trathin&#13;
started rather late one afternoon. The&#13;
bulldog always accompanied him&#13;
wherever he went, and in thia case it&#13;
was lucky that he did.&#13;
Trathin has no love for wolves, but&#13;
despised them for their cowardice, be-&#13;
Ilevlng that they would not dare attack&#13;
a man in the daylight, hence he&#13;
took no weapon with him. After he&#13;
had gone some distance on his way, he&#13;
became aware of the fact that he was&#13;
being followed by wolves. The bulldog&#13;
was much affected by this and he&#13;
would run back, growl and then, with&#13;
his hair standing on end, would use&#13;
every means at his command to induce&#13;
hie master to hasten: The eonduct,&#13;
of th,e dog was such, the animal&#13;
not usually being afraid of anything on&#13;
four legs, that-it* fears' Were communicated&#13;
to Trathin, and be started to&#13;
r u n . •»•.:.&#13;
This was the worsi thing he could&#13;
have done, a» at once four wolves&#13;
closed in upon him. He had just time&#13;
to grab a stout club and back up to a&#13;
tree when they were upon him. With&#13;
the assistance of the dog, he managed&#13;
to beat them off and mnke them keep&#13;
their distance until within sight of the&#13;
Do you tMrit^you-pen manage wrth&#13;
my salary of *lfc Bweek, darling?" he&#13;
taked, after she bad said yet. V ,. :&#13;
Lea*©* -"*-** *«^-2T&amp; &gt;uW^&#13;
HAD AWFUL WEEPING ECZEMA.&#13;
Face and Neck Were Raw—Terrible&#13;
Itching, Inflammation and Soreness&#13;
—All Treatments Failed.&#13;
Cutjcura Proved a Great Success.&#13;
With the Assistance of the Dog&#13;
Managed to Beat Them Off.&#13;
H«&#13;
T.os Angeles, Cal,—D. V. Williams, j&#13;
tho K\st_of threo members of an auto- j&#13;
mobile party lost in tho desert over o '&#13;
week Agor was found the other day !&#13;
and taken to Randsburg. Williams f&#13;
was discovered by a searching party, I&#13;
too weak to walk. He had been seven '&#13;
days without food and 72 hours without,&#13;
water.&#13;
Williams had taken refuge in a&#13;
cabin, and was eating some coffee he&#13;
had found, when he hoard a shot He&#13;
fired his own revolver and the searchers&#13;
soon located him. Williams was&#13;
suffering from cold and hunger, and&#13;
his feet were in a bad condition. Unless&#13;
he suffers an attack of ferer he&#13;
will recover...&#13;
R. E. Bashaw, the chauffeur, stagmtm&#13;
M t o r a t . All the members&#13;
•tJftjrBBftf'Btw are safe In Randsfcfcatisted&#13;
and half crazed from&#13;
thirst, Sarnuel F. Hammond, a Los&#13;
Angeieu broker, the first of the party,&#13;
was rescued at Ballarat, at the edge&#13;
of Dwith valley.&#13;
"When we reached Granite Wells,&#13;
30 miles east of Johannesburg," he&#13;
said, "we took the Death valley road&#13;
by mistake, and later the machine&#13;
broke down. The party then divided.&#13;
Williams remained with the automobile.&#13;
I started, accompanied by tho&#13;
chauffeur, In hope of finding some&#13;
placp where I could get supplies. Bashaw&#13;
soon became exhausted. We&#13;
wandered three days before&#13;
reachen us.&#13;
Uncle Sam'e Coins.&#13;
They say they're inartlatlo—, i.&#13;
In fart, extremely rank;&#13;
put ti»'v«-f mind; they'll always&#13;
A aelcomc at the bz-.u.&#13;
camp. Then the animals seemed tc&#13;
perceive that fhelr prey was about. 1c&#13;
escape them and again they attacked&#13;
tho man, apparently rendered desper&#13;
ate by hunger.&#13;
This time the battle wag even more&#13;
strenuous than at first, and the attacV&#13;
was so sudden that Trathin and his&#13;
dog were caught in a space so that, the&#13;
four animals could attack him on all&#13;
four sides. For several minutes he&#13;
fought them off with his stick, the dog&#13;
fighting valiantly, and finally the bulldog&#13;
grabbed one of the brutes by the&#13;
throat. This relieved Trathin and he&#13;
beat about with the stick to such good&#13;
effect that the three wolves departed,&#13;
the bulldog lying down in the snow&#13;
with its victim, waiting tor it to die.&#13;
With his face and his hands bleeding&#13;
and his clothes practically torn to&#13;
ribbons, Trathin ran Into the camp&#13;
just at dusk and, as soon as he could&#13;
speak, told the men his story. He was&#13;
given a rifle and, with several lumberjacks,&#13;
set out to kill the band.&#13;
Arriving at the ptere where the last&#13;
battle had occurred, the men saw the&#13;
four wolves apparently fighting amons&#13;
themselves. Firing into the bunch,&#13;
two of them were killed and the other&#13;
two escaped. Lying to one side was&#13;
all that was left of the bulldog.&#13;
When Trathin left the other three&#13;
wolves had returned to aid their companion,&#13;
and the bulldog, to wive his&#13;
own life, had been obliged to let go his&#13;
wolf and fight the others. The other&#13;
helj, ' w a s n o t h u r t t 0 a n y ^Tezt extent and&#13;
1 joined the other three, the odds of&#13;
I four to one being too much even for a&#13;
fighting dog. But before; the bulldog&#13;
1- waa wjped out be.had given a good Aft&#13;
count of himself, as the bodies of the&#13;
find two dead wolves shuwM&#13;
DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
, PILLS&#13;
B E T f c S&#13;
•Guar«^&#13;
TEXAS STATE LAND Millions of acres of sohnol land to he ^lrt by the !&#13;
Stat*. 11.00 to 16.00 per acre; only i&gt;ne-fi&gt;rtloTh i-ssb ;&#13;
and «1 year* tlnoo on balance: three por cent interest;&#13;
only U'J.CO cash for 1«M aervs at COO pvr a r n \&#13;
(Jroatefct opportnnfty? food agricultural land: send&#13;
McentsforUookof Instraotlonsand New State&gt;Liiw.&#13;
J. .T. snyder, Hohool Ijtrd Locator, 1« ¥ h St.&#13;
Austin. Tex. Reference, Austin National Baa*.&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
Tbay Barer fait.&#13;
Let aa Mod yoe oar catalog.&#13;
M It la frea and tolls TOU all&#13;
JarmaadBeM asatfa, t a a l new 8ben harvest tl m» com es.&#13;
tMentin Seed 6row»rV AM'R, La Cruse. Wit.&#13;
SEEDS about vegetable,&#13;
• r dltappolat yon&#13;
"Eczema began over the top of my&#13;
ear. It cracked and theu begatt to&#13;
spread. I had three different doctors&#13;
and tried several things, but they did&#13;
me no good. At last one side of my&#13;
face and my neck were raw. The&#13;
water ran out of it no that I had to&#13;
wear medicated cotton, and it was so&#13;
inflamed and sore that I had to put&#13;
a piece .of cloth over my pillow tp keep&#13;
the water from it, and it would stain&#13;
"the cloth a sort of yellow. The eczema&#13;
itched so that it seemed as though&#13;
I could tear my face all s to pieces.&#13;
Then I began tp use the Cutlcura Soap&#13;
and Ointment, and it was not more&#13;
than three months before it was all&#13;
healed up. Miss Ann Pearsons, Northfleld,&#13;
Vt, Dec. 19, J907."&#13;
Potter Diug X Caeui. Corp., bole Vrupa., Bwaton.&#13;
History Revised.&#13;
The Professor—What was, it defeatad&#13;
Leonidas at Thermopylae?&#13;
The Bright Student—The new rules.&#13;
He held the pass too long.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for am&#13;
laae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's&#13;
Catari-n Cure.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO.. Toledo. O.&#13;
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney&#13;
for tee last 15 years, and believe nlm perfectly honorable&#13;
bx all butinesa tranaacUozuj and financially&#13;
able to carry out any obligation* made by bis firm.&#13;
WALDINQ, KIT.NAN A MARVIN,&#13;
Wholesale Druggbrte, Toledo, O.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure la toJten internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucou* surfaces of the&#13;
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per&#13;
bottle. Suld by all Druggists.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
Struck Senseless.&#13;
"When she hit him with f!he golf&#13;
ball, did it knock him senseless?"&#13;
"I guess so. I understand they are&#13;
soon to marry."-•-Town and Country.&#13;
A Cure For Colds and Grip.&#13;
There • i« itwonvenience, suffering and&#13;
danger in a cold, and the.wonder is that&#13;
people Mill take no few precautions againnt&#13;
colas. One or two Lane s Pleasant Tablets&#13;
(be sure of the name) taken when the first&#13;
snuffly feeling appears, will stop the progress&#13;
of a cold ana save a great deal of unnecessary&#13;
sutTering. Druggists and dealers&#13;
Generally sell these tablets, price 25 cents.&#13;
f you cannot get them send to Orator F.&#13;
Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y. Sample free.&#13;
The Present Fashion*.&#13;
Stella—Isn't it all you can do to&#13;
dance in your new gown?&#13;
Belle—Yes, but it's too tight to »it&#13;
down in.&#13;
There Hat Recently Been Placed&#13;
In a l l t h e d r u g s t o r e s a n a r o m a t i c , p l e a s a n t&#13;
h e r b c u r e i o r w o m a n ' s I l l s , c a l l e d Mother&#13;
Grajr'a A U S T R A L I A N L E A F . It i s the only&#13;
c e r t a i n r e g u l a t o r . Qniokly r e l i e v e s female&#13;
w e a k n e s s e s a n d B a c k a c h e , Kidney, Bladder&#13;
a n d Urinary t r o u b l e s . At a l l D r u g g i s t s or by&#13;
m a i l W c t s . .Sample FIIKE. A d d r e s s , T o e&#13;
Mother G r a y Co., Le Roy, N , Y.&#13;
An insinuation.&#13;
"He's as honest as the day is long."&#13;
"Especially in the winter time."&#13;
If It's Your Eye Use Pettit's Eye Salve,&#13;
for inflammation, stys, itching lids, eye&#13;
aches, defects of vision and sensitivity to&#13;
strong lights. All druggists or Howard&#13;
.Bros., Buffalo, X. Y. j&#13;
If thou speakest what, thou wilt, j&#13;
thou shalt hear what thou wouldsl j&#13;
not,—-Bias. ;&#13;
F o r r e l i e v i n g O o u p h s , A s t h m a nml T?rnn- !&#13;
c h i l i s " J J m w n ' s U n i n c h i a l T r o i ' h r s " a r c !&#13;
efYoctivo. ITi c o n i s a b o x . S a m p l e s frr»\&#13;
J o h n I. B r o w n &amp; S o n , 15oston, M a s s .&#13;
Faith is obedience, not. confidence.&#13;
—Mac don aid.&#13;
ONT.Y O V B " H R O M O Q U I M X E . " j&#13;
That is LAXATIVE BKOMO QUiXISK. LtK.k f&lt;ir&#13;
the siKTlamr* of K. \V. (ilU)VK. l*std tho World&#13;
over to Cure a Cold in o n u D a y . i^5c. i&#13;
Our powers owe much of their en- j&#13;
ergy to our hopes.—Johnson. ;&#13;
W&#13;
Contains&#13;
^*^e»w*^p«e^e«F , 40 09«fS,&#13;
And each dose is inert effective&#13;
than four times the same quantity&#13;
of any other cough remedy,&#13;
however well advertised and bowever&#13;
strongly recommended that&#13;
remedy may be&#13;
Remember always that&#13;
is the&#13;
H e m p ' i&#13;
Bra* Cough Ciiro.&#13;
It has saved, thwutidw from con*&#13;
is saved thousands of lives.&#13;
druggists', 25c, 50c. and $L&#13;
•n&#13;
Cabbage :.K&#13;
,_ Per Salxer'i ea(alee,M&lt;» i * I&#13;
[ T h e bigtfcfitmoney nuCfcllrjcrdpif.*«cetabiaal&#13;
l i t cabbage. T h e n c o m e t WHP4K padiah«s,|&#13;
I peat, cucumber*. Bigeatafog%rjprj)r, %ead\&#13;
II C o in abunps and r e c d v a catalfc and K M&#13;
[kernel* c a d i of onloa*, baffrot»,^Mry, rad-J&#13;
I i abas, i5os each l e i i u c e , rutabagas, turnips*I&#13;
|jU*&gt; iMLSiey, i»a .tomato—. j«e»melon*. l u o l&#13;
[cnarroing flower'seed*. in aU lfvooc- kernels.[&#13;
lcaaUy-worthSjUWorMngi&amp;sdb money. Or»|&#13;
[send S O o ana w e add e s e &amp;•*. vt EUrlieatf&#13;
Pfei* O'Day Sweet CtW». ! i&#13;
M U E R SEED CO., Box MT. Li. Crowe, Wis. I&#13;
K N O W N S I N C E I 8 1 6 A S R E L » A R L S&#13;
W S BLAC K&#13;
^ ° ^ CAPSULES&#13;
SUP£MIGrtR£r4EDY. -URINARY DiStnA«.L&#13;
DRUGGISTS o» BV MAIL ^ P E f . r r T r&#13;
H P L A N T ( N &amp; SON. 93 HENRY STBKO'Miv* N&#13;
' • - » »• I ' I I Mi, •&#13;
{ Us»oBrel leertaesd. &lt;wulei h) &gt;ITBht R* ilMf lnS«Oi ifMl &gt;Se&#13;
•Virfr&#13;
hi"&#13;
i:&#13;
^n aiGhing Ixiqlc is instantly relicye4 .by an&#13;
application of Sloan's Liniment- ,&#13;
.This liniment'takes the place of massage arid&#13;
is better than sticky? plasters. It penetra|ef-~&#13;
without rubbing—through the skin and fiilisct*-&#13;
lar tis$Ue right to the bone, quickens the y.oo(Jt&#13;
relieves, congestion, and gives 'permanent as&#13;
well as temporary relief.&#13;
Sloan's&#13;
Liniment&#13;
has no equal as a remedy for&#13;
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any&#13;
pain or stiffness in the muscles&#13;
or joints.&#13;
P i i e e 25e., 50c., and $1.00.&#13;
D r . E a r l S. S l o a n , B o s t o n , M a s s . , U S. A .&#13;
Sloan's book on horsea, cattle, aheep and poultry sent free*&#13;
AL.ZERV GREAT BEARDLESS B A R L E Y . %&#13;
SILVER KING BARLEY&#13;
Wlseonnln iafaraeri an the fcxwt barley&#13;
Rtate In the Hnion. Certain&#13;
it !• that It produces th« heaviest&#13;
Jlaldlnc harleyn on eartb.&#13;
OP ee VARierriE*&#13;
teeted by th« WiRtwnsin Arrifflt&#13;
tnral atatlon,etela«r*a ftllvor Kina;&#13;
Barley he«d9 the list aflthebljgeat&#13;
ylfldarl Thafe a r«»rd yra »rt&gt;&#13;
prmid oft Bnt it's what Belxer's&#13;
seeds do eTBrrwher*.&#13;
BEARDLESS&#13;
BARLEY&#13;
T h e b a r l e y of&#13;
your dreama* IM&#13;
beards; e a s y to&#13;
hsrrect, yield!nc&#13;
la New York state&#13;
121 bosheia per&#13;
OAT&#13;
Onr now EmperorWt^'&#13;
Uan^oat la taa ersa**.&#13;
wrraat ottHe tonfatyartrjoseaaireatasttei&#13;
E n peter h&amp;B self. Yaa&#13;
will want I t It's a&#13;
marvel.&#13;
Big trial packa«e. e e&#13;
SALZER'S BILLIM DOLLAR GRASS AID TEOSfflTE Billion Dollar Grass corered Itself with tlory loMsV It's hay n o p to the&#13;
fTnlted States alone 1» mtlmated a t 110,000,000.00. It will bo much more for&#13;
1909. Ererybody Is talking about It. Everybody will now it &lt;or l*u». an It&#13;
co^rta bat too to 9oc per more. Is ready with Its t i n t crop within six weeks after&#13;
seeding and seldom yields less then S to IS tons per acre of matnlflsaat aay.&#13;
XBOeiNXX, well, the cataloi tella of this 100 ton green food freak.&#13;
PURE CLOVER AND TIMOTHY SEED&#13;
Sailer's ssth Century strains of elorer and tlsaothyseed staad all alone la&#13;
tnetr absolute parity. Of course they cost more than any other i&#13;
bat they are tree from weeds. That's worth the difference.&#13;
We (taw* ay ail soss 1&#13;
• e t ear eeilara a * lea&#13;
M OlO IHPOIHMI-**&#13;
_ BIQ CATALOG F R E E&#13;
Or fnrlOatn stamps we mall freeofall costs samples of SUrer King Bar*&#13;
ley. yielding 1 7 3 bo. per acre: Maoaronl Wheat, yielding e « bo. per acre;&#13;
»....__ ^_. Spelts, the cereal and hay food prodigy, together with&#13;
na, et&amp;, easily worth S*ie.OO oi any man's raattsy to&#13;
Blliton Collar Q&#13;
timothy, OIOTST. g&#13;
get a Ktart therew t th.&#13;
And if yon send 14« we add to abore a&#13;
Barer seen by you before.&#13;
i of Jams Besd Soralty&#13;
JOHN A. SALZFR SEED coMPrw|s&#13;
I — PINK EYE FOR ffwmTtr ffiirin WSTIMPER&#13;
CATARRHAL rtVES&#13;
AND ALL NOSE&#13;
AND THROAT DISEASES&#13;
Cur*s the Hirk and acta a s a pre»entlve for oth^r*. Liquid (fiTerj o a&#13;
the tonjjne. Safeft^r bri.&gt;o&lt;l m n r e s H m l all others. X^-st kUlucy r*tne&lt;ly;lg&gt;&#13;
c e n t s ami #1.00« b o t i l e ; *5.00 ifiul JlQ.OO Ihe &lt;U»zen. Sold by a l l d r u ^ a i a t *&#13;
a n d horse (^oods h o u s e s , o r s e n t e x p r e s s p a i d , "by t h e m a n n f a ' U&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL C O , Chemist*, GOSHEN, INOIAJIA&#13;
WIZARDOIL M a . • ! • I I B I i •Txmmr'' r»t_i' r s « • i •&#13;
G R E A T&#13;
r-' O '• '&#13;
ssmai&#13;
fr&lt;&gt; $+ •&#13;
•n '''^''"'i1 ?*^-^1 "*"" I" .&#13;
• Business Pointers.&#13;
•v..&#13;
•W.I . ' v r '&#13;
.^.&#13;
!•«*.&#13;
i*&lt;.&#13;
'$?•&#13;
0&#13;
4 f flaong Oifr Cumspeadsnlj i&#13;
vwvwvifirw i&#13;
OJUO, cook stove, hearing stove, range&#13;
and organ. Jnquire of .leave Henry&#13;
on Sharland farm.&#13;
0tf&#13;
r ^ « MALM.&#13;
Second growth, dry block wood.&#13;
L. Spears&#13;
FOR SALE " ™ "&#13;
Six Puiand Uhjua brood sows due m&#13;
April, James 8pears,&#13;
9R Unadilla.&#13;
H. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sales? as usual.&#13;
Than kins you for past favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I remain&#13;
yours. R. CLINTON.&#13;
IDM IAJJI. ,&#13;
Farm of 80 acres, five miles south&#13;
west of Pinckney, known as the Dave&#13;
Chalker farm. Stock and hay. will go&#13;
with the farm it purchaser so desires.&#13;
Will go cheap, it bought at once. Inquire&#13;
of Luther L. Pollok,&#13;
, 8tf Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
SOUTH GREGORY&#13;
Pay year bubacrlptkm this moath&#13;
Farmers and&#13;
Horsemen&#13;
We Do&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
New Shoes 30c&#13;
Setting 12 l-2c&#13;
Calking and lf.&#13;
Setting , o c&#13;
ART FLINTOFF&#13;
Pettysville, Mich.&#13;
Spring Time&#13;
R u t b W h i t e h e a d is visiting iu&#13;
Plainfield.&#13;
Mra. B u h l was buried iu P l a i u -&#13;
tield Monday.&#13;
Haukel W o r d e u is helping C. J .&#13;
Williams bail hay.&#13;
Mrs. J . Daniels is visiting h e r&#13;
son H u m a n near Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Whitehead is visiting h e r&#13;
sister Mrs. Lewis in Dausville.&#13;
H a r r i s o n Bates a u d wife visited&#13;
their parents G. W. Bates a n d&#13;
wife F r i d a y .&#13;
T h e people of Plainfield have&#13;
t h e i r play at this place T h u r s d a y&#13;
night March 4. E y e r y b o d y come&#13;
out a n d hear it for it is worth&#13;
t h e money.&#13;
is&#13;
Paper Time&#13;
I am here with&#13;
a full line of&#13;
Wall P a p e r&#13;
See Our Samples&#13;
before p u r -&#13;
c h a B i n &lt;$&#13;
J. C. Dinkel.&#13;
2nd door south of hotel.&#13;
E. N. BROTHERTON&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
CALLS ANSWERED PROMPTLY&#13;
DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
Gregory, Michigan&#13;
P h o n e 2 l o n d 3 s h o r t&#13;
FLADTETELD.&#13;
Mrs. Sawdy is able to walk some&#13;
since h e r recent illness.&#13;
Rev. Saigeon is holding special&#13;
meetings in Marion this week.&#13;
J o h n B u s h a n d family a r e preparing&#13;
to move back to L a n s i n g .&#13;
Mr. Stevens and family attended&#13;
services at Gregory Baptist c h u r c h&#13;
last F r i d a y evening.&#13;
P e o p l e from Stockbridge, G r e g -&#13;
ory, Anderson a n d P i n c k n e y attended&#13;
t h e play at t h e hall last&#13;
week a n d all pronounced it a fine&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
T h e drama, " O a k F a r m " will be&#13;
given in t h e Maccabee hall G r e g -&#13;
ory, T h u r s d a y evening, M a r c h 4.&#13;
If you do not think it worth going&#13;
to hear, just ask someone who&#13;
heard it last week. R e m e m b e r&#13;
the date, March 4. Admission 20&#13;
and 10 cents, reserved seat 25c at&#13;
H o w l e t t Bios, store, Gregory.&#13;
SOUTH HA&amp;I0K.&#13;
Geo. Mitchell is visiting his sister,&#13;
Mrs. J o h n Roberts.&#13;
Miss E l v a Caskey entertained a&#13;
number of friends S a t u r d a y p. m.&#13;
Mrs. Blanche Cameron is visiting&#13;
h e r mother Mrs. Amy V a n&#13;
K e u r e n .&#13;
Mrs. Amy V a n K e u r e u visited&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. L e n a G r o r e r&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
A n u m b e r from here a t t e n d e d&#13;
the play at Plainfield T h u r s d a y&#13;
and F r i d a y evenings.&#13;
Mr. a u d Mrs. H o m e r W a s s o n&#13;
and little d a u g h t e r visited at D a -&#13;
vid R o b e r t s ' S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. J o e R o b e r t s and t h e Misses&#13;
H a r r i n g t o n called on M r s . M.&#13;
D u n n F r i d a y afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Caskey of&#13;
Anderson, Mr. a n d Mrs. Bert R o b -&#13;
erts and family visited at T. Wainwright's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
T h e Misses B e r t h a aud Clara&#13;
Harrington returned home S a t u r -&#13;
day after spending a few days&#13;
with their sister, M r s J o e R o b -&#13;
erts.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
T h e r e is quite an e p i d e m i c of&#13;
colds in this vicinity.&#13;
Revival Hervices a r e in progress&#13;
at t h e Baptist church this week.&#13;
Mrs. O. L. Smith is confined to&#13;
her bed and under t h e care of D r .&#13;
Siglor.&#13;
Undertaker, B r o t h e r t o n h a d&#13;
charge of the funeral of Mrs. B u h l&#13;
last, week.&#13;
Alfred Taylor broke his leg&#13;
Mar. 1, while d r a w i n g hay from&#13;
a stack some distance from t h e&#13;
barn.&#13;
T h e Gregory young people will&#13;
give a silver medal contest at M a r -&#13;
ion Center church Friday e v e n i n g&#13;
March 5. All a r e invited. A silver&#13;
collection will be taken to d e -&#13;
j fray e x p e m t g ,&#13;
T h e second class of medal contestant*&#13;
will h o l d t h e i r contest i n&#13;
t h e hall a t G r e g o r y March 12.&#13;
F o i l p r o g r a m next week.&#13;
Messrs Geo. a n d O t t o A r n o l d&#13;
received t h e sad aews Monday of&#13;
the death of their niece, M r s .&#13;
Blanche Duockle, of near W e b -&#13;
berville. S h e leaves two small&#13;
children, o n e only Dine m o n t h s&#13;
old.&#13;
Geo. Arnold went to J a c k s o n&#13;
last S a t u r d a y with t&gt;0 p o u n d s of&#13;
butter, t h e result of five days&#13;
m i l k i n g d u r i n g t h e time t h e milk&#13;
on this route was shut off from&#13;
t h e factory a t Jackson. H e r e -&#13;
ceived 25c p e r p o u n d cash.&#13;
Mrs. Charlotte B u h l was buried&#13;
at Plainfield M a r c h 1. Rev. Saigeon&#13;
preached a sermon full of&#13;
good t h o u g h t s for t h e living. S h e&#13;
was a m e m b e r of t h e W C T U a n d&#13;
a good christian, one who will be&#13;
missed by all who knew her. S h e&#13;
leaves two sons, William a u d J u l -&#13;
ian who a r e left to mourn t h e loss&#13;
of a kind m o t h e r a n d they have&#13;
the s y m p a t h y of t h e entire community.&#13;
T h e friends a n d societies&#13;
fairly buried t h e casket in&#13;
beautiful flowers.&#13;
ANDEBS0K.&#13;
J a m e s Hoff was in Howell&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Will Caskey a n d wife visited&#13;
friends in Plainfield S u n d a y .&#13;
P e t e r Poole a n d wife of Marion&#13;
visited his m o t h e r here o n e day&#13;
last week.&#13;
Will D u r k e y visited relatives in&#13;
J a c k s o n from S a t u r d a y night till&#13;
Monday night.&#13;
Miss Grace Poole spent S a t u r -&#13;
day a n d S u n d a y with h e r mother,&#13;
Mrs. E l m e r Book.&#13;
Miss M a r y S p r o u t started F r i -&#13;
day m o r n i n g for Mesick to visit&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Clarence Powell.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Chas. Bullis spent&#13;
Tuesday with h e r brother, F r e d&#13;
S h a r p near Stockbridge.&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s . R e g . Shafer, of&#13;
Marion; R o b e r t Wassou of Stockbridge;&#13;
Miss Belva Denton, of&#13;
Gregory, s p e n t S u u d a y at Charles&#13;
Bullis.'&#13;
L a s t Wednesday a large company&#13;
of friends a n d neighbors g a t h -&#13;
ered a t t h e home of Mr. a n d Mrs.&#13;
Samuel Placeway to celebrate&#13;
their fortieth wedding anniversary.&#13;
They presented them with&#13;
a beautiful d i n n i n g table a n d two&#13;
nice rockers as tokens of esteem.&#13;
They departed wishing them m a -&#13;
ny more happy years of wedded&#13;
life.&#13;
ADDITIOIIL LOCH.&#13;
WEST P i m i A M .&#13;
Mrs. Will Doyle was in J a c k -&#13;
son Saturday.&#13;
W m . Doyle sold a fine span of&#13;
horses last week.&#13;
Florence Doyle has accepted a&#13;
position in Jackson.&#13;
Miss Sadie H a r r i s is visiting&#13;
Miss I r e n e D u p u i s in Detroit,&#13;
Miss Mabel Monks e n t e r t a i n e d&#13;
a few friends T h u r s d a y afternoon.&#13;
H. B. G a r d n e r was in W h i t -&#13;
more L a k e Tuesday on business.&#13;
Mrs. O. P . Noah of North Lake,&#13;
called on Mrs. Wm. G a r d n e r F r i -&#13;
day.&#13;
Miss J e n n i e McGinneas of Dexter,&#13;
was a guest of her friend Miss&#13;
F a n n i e Monks, t h e past week.&#13;
H. B. G a r d n e r and Wales Leland&#13;
attended t h e masonic school&#13;
of instruction at South Lyon last&#13;
F r i d a y .&#13;
Literary Irrigation.&#13;
"Your In tosf novel seems very dry,"&#13;
Hid the reader of the publishing house&#13;
to the youug but rifling author.&#13;
"I was pretty sure you would N.H&#13;
that," rejoined the author. "Conse&#13;
guently if you will count them yon&#13;
Will And the heroine weeps real tears&#13;
m Just 258 pagM of my stor7.H—Clevetand&#13;
Plain Dealer.&#13;
B. Clinton was in Detroit this waek&#13;
on business,&#13;
Mr*. M. L. Sprout is spending a few&#13;
weeks with ber Bister, Mrs. Powell in&#13;
Mesiok.&#13;
Frank Lare of Howell, secretary of&#13;
the Mutual Telephone Co. was in town&#13;
Wednesday on buuiuesa.&#13;
The most drastic prohibition measure&#13;
ever suggested is in Kansas where&#13;
a bill has been passed, in which it&#13;
provides that physician* cannot prescribe&#13;
liquor and a druggist cannot&#13;
sell intoxicants for any purpose whatever.&#13;
Gov. Stubbs is known to be&#13;
favorable to the new bill.&#13;
Tbe pricipals in a timber land sale&#13;
in Louisiana comprising 18,889 acres;&#13;
amounting to $1,127,400 in cash value&#13;
are Alex McPberson of Detrqifc, Wm .&#13;
McPberson Jr., Martin McPherson, R,&#13;
B. McPberson, Mrs. Alice Spencer, of&#13;
Howell and Mrs. Biglow of Detroit.&#13;
Tbe McPbersons reserve tbe oil and&#13;
mineial rights.&#13;
Cause of Fatty Heart.&#13;
The groat dimmer from obesity lies&#13;
In the liability of the fat to invade the&#13;
ecllular elements of the body, especially&#13;
the muscles. This produces fatty&#13;
degeneration of the muscular tissues,&#13;
which greatly weakens and Impairs&#13;
their functional activity. When the&#13;
fat invades the tissues of the heartmuscles&#13;
the disease known as "fatty&#13;
degeneration of the heart" results, and&#13;
the patient Is In serious danger. Whenever&#13;
a slight additional strain upon the&#13;
circulation results from undue exercise,&#13;
excitement or other cause the&#13;
muscles interfere with the heart's action,&#13;
aud It Is liable'to cease beating.&#13;
Anaemia and hysteria often are accompaniments&#13;
of obesity. Because of the&#13;
Increased weight and difficulty of&#13;
moving about such patients are pre&#13;
vented from taking an ordinary&#13;
amount of exercise. Often, too, there&#13;
are a lassitude and a positive dislike&#13;
for muscular exertion of any kind.&#13;
What to Eat.&#13;
M. £. Church Note*.&#13;
Tfce MFvises Sunday were well attended.&#13;
There were 86 who stayed to&#13;
Sunday school and the ~ collection&#13;
amounted to 11.74.&#13;
Do not forget tbe prayer meeting&#13;
this evening and the Mission class foll&#13;
o w i n g&#13;
The Difference.&#13;
Last week while m Detroit, we noticed&#13;
a crowd gathering around the&#13;
window railings at tbe Journal build*&#13;
ing. They were interested in tbe&#13;
printing presses about to start up in&#13;
the basement.&#13;
Tuesday afternoon as we were&#13;
about to «o to press in the basement&#13;
of the DISPATCH; office a crowd gathered&#13;
about tbe railing abovs and were&#13;
interested, not in tbe printing press,&#13;
but in tbe actions of a "balky" gasoline&#13;
engine. Tbe "thina:" said it&#13;
wouldn't with all the vim it had. but&#13;
we conquered tbe animal and all went&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
PUOTAM AJTD HAK3UBG FAMT&#13;
US' CLUE&#13;
From Medicine to tha Drama.&#13;
The earlier part of Victorlen Sardou's&#13;
career was beset with many&#13;
trials and difficulties. His parents&#13;
wished him to take up a medical career,&#13;
and he began his studies with&#13;
some zeal. The love of the drama,&#13;
however, was far greater than the&#13;
love of the pill box, and In the Inter&#13;
val of the other work Sardou was&#13;
busy upon a play. Life was a struggle&#13;
for him, for he had little money,&#13;
though he managed to get Journalistic&#13;
work to supplement his more.slender&#13;
Income. His first play was a failure.&#13;
and Sardou rushed from the theater&#13;
vowing never to enter one again. He&#13;
fell seriously ill, was nursed back to&#13;
health by Mile, de lireeourr, an actress&#13;
who lived on a floor below, and&#13;
from that time his fortune was made.&#13;
A very pleasant day was spent by&#13;
some ot the members of the Putnam&#13;
and Hamburg Farmers club at the&#13;
home of Mr. Hendricks. Tbe crowd&#13;
was not very large but what it lacked&#13;
in quantity was nude up in quality.&#13;
Aftet a oouutilul dinner a very interesting&#13;
program was listened to. Song&#13;
b y t b e u l u b ; Reading by Alae Van&#13;
Fleet, entitled "A Fence on the Cliff&#13;
or an Ambulance in tbe Valley;" and&#13;
a recitation by Myrna Selioenbals. Mr.&#13;
Merril gave an interesting talk on&#13;
pointers be received at the Washtenaw&#13;
Farmers Association atrAun Arbor.&#13;
This was followed by a solo by&#13;
Will Nash and the question box in&#13;
which were many interesting question*&#13;
cahng forth much discussion.&#13;
The last Saturday in Match being&#13;
caucus day it was decided to hold the&#13;
next meeting the third Saturday, at&#13;
the home ot S, E. rivvarthput. There&#13;
will ba temperance music and a temperance&#13;
program,&#13;
Notice.&#13;
H, Knickerbocker of Ho,veil, form-&#13;
' er!y with Mr. Weimeister, lias rented&#13;
the blacksmith shop ot K K. Hrown,&#13;
and is prepared to do first class u ork&#13;
of every discretion. Horseshoeing a&#13;
specialty. Twenty years experience.&#13;
Would like to soik-u a share of your&#13;
patronage, all work gua.anteed.&#13;
Very respectively,&#13;
t 10 H.Kniekn'boeker&#13;
flow B. P. S. Paint Saves Money.&#13;
The principal item of expense in painting is the painter's&#13;
lime.&#13;
Paint for the average house co&amp;s but $15.00 to&#13;
$20.00. The painter charges three or four times as&#13;
much to put it on. When you pay a painter by the&#13;
hcur for mixing your paint you can see your hard-earned&#13;
dollars taking wings.&#13;
B. P. S. is ready to put on;&#13;
spreads easily because finely&#13;
ground. Coarsely ground or hand-mixed paints drag&#13;
on the brush and add hours to the painter's lime.&#13;
Ask your dealer or send us a postal for our B. P. S.&#13;
Paint Budget a package of useful information.&#13;
THE PATTERSON -SARGENT (MPANY&#13;
GENERAL OFFICES A^} FACTORY: CLEVELAND, OHIO&#13;
Chicago New York Boston Kansas City St. Paul Cincinnati&#13;
DONT PAV [VICE \&#13;
F O R T H E S A M E ROOF.&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofinra are really&#13;
never paid for, because they need painting or&#13;
eoatinpr every year or two. If you add to the cost of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting during the number of years in service,&#13;
you will readily understand why&#13;
J-M ASBESTOS ROOFINGwhich&#13;
needs no coating-i3 the "cheapest-per-year" Roofing.&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanently durable and resists fire.&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or cold can affect it. Costa&#13;
less than, slate, iron or shingles. Can be applied by anyone.&#13;
A a k f o r s a m p l e s a n d p r l o e a *&#13;
H. W JOHNS-MANVIL.bE Co.&#13;
72 Jefferson A v e . Detroit, M Ichl^an&#13;
f / • •&#13;
•V»&#13;
.J-.&#13;
: , &lt; * &gt; •&#13;
t ASS&#13;
M?&#13;
Thence N. 5" «1 I M .&#13;
T h e n c e N. bu H. M l .&#13;
Thence N. DJ £ . 834.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 6" E. «JT.&#13;
TheneerN. 5* £2. I M .&#13;
T h e n o e N . 6" E. 140.&#13;
T h e n o e N . 6* K »40.76&#13;
T h e n o e N . 5 2 % P E . 841.&#13;
T h e n o u N . 5 * g " B ! 1 4 1 «&#13;
Thence N. &amp;2%MIC 3*4.&#13;
10.40&#13;
111&#13;
186&#13;
107&#13;
168&#13;
16»&#13;
170&#13;
171&#13;
I I&#13;
7.11&#13;
8.78&#13;
8.00&#13;
8.71&#13;
8.70&#13;
».«0&#13;
7.60&#13;
10.41 D r y W. Oak 20.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 61&#13;
T h e n c e N . 68&#13;
T h e n c e N. 62&#13;
T h e n c e N. 62&#13;
Thence N. BU&#13;
346.&#13;
848.&#13;
860.&#13;
862.&#13;
868.&#13;
T h e n c e N. hS5%w SB. 364.&#13;
Thence E,&#13;
T h e n c e E.&#13;
T h e n c e K.&#13;
T h e n c e E.&#13;
T h e n c e IS.&#13;
T h e n c e E.&#13;
T h e n c e E.&#13;
Thence E.&#13;
The rice E.&#13;
Tin; nee E.&#13;
T h e n c e E .&#13;
356.&#13;
S58.&#13;
»58.&#13;
3 60.&#13;
362.&#13;
864.&#13;
366.&#13;
368.&#13;
870.&#13;
872.&#13;
372.66&#13;
172&#13;
178&#13;
174&#13;
176&#13;
176&#13;
177 82&#13;
178&#13;
178&#13;
178&#13;
180&#13;
181&#13;
182&#13;
188&#13;
184&#13;
186&#13;
186&#13;
7.60&#13;
8.00&#13;
8.20&#13;
8.81&#13;
8.24&#13;
! 7.80&#13;
7.78&#13;
7.6«&#13;
7.66&#13;
7.66&#13;
7.46&#13;
7.86&#13;
7.68&#13;
6.84&#13;
6.84&#13;
7.00&#13;
1 U U&#13;
f.74&#13;
18.86 IB&#13;
Thenwe N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N .&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
ThenceN.&#13;
390.&#13;
382,&#13;
894.&#13;
396.&#13;
398.&#13;
400.&#13;
408.&#13;
404.&#13;
406.&#13;
408.&#13;
410.&#13;
412.&#13;
414.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence NT.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
59*&#13;
58°&#13;
69*&#13;
59°&#13;
39°&#13;
59°&#13;
69°&#13;
59°&#13;
59°&#13;
69*&#13;
59»&#13;
59°&#13;
59°&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. w.&#13;
416.&#13;
418.&#13;
420.&#13;
428.&#13;
424.&#13;
426.&#13;
428.&#13;
480.&#13;
4S2.&#13;
484.&#13;
486.&#13;
488.&#13;
4S9.7I&#13;
208&#13;
209&#13;
210&#13;
211&#13;
212&#13;
218&#13;
214&#13;
216&#13;
816&#13;
217&#13;
218&#13;
219&#13;
Thence N. 86* W . 461.80 T.lt&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S.&#13;
Thence S,&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N,&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
8 6 ¼ 8 W.&#13;
8 6 ¾ 0 W.&#13;
8 6 ¾ 0 W.&#13;
8 6 ¼ 0 W.&#13;
8 6 ¾ ° W.&#13;
1 8 ¼ 8 W.&#13;
1 8 ¾ 0 W.&#13;
1 8 % ' W .&#13;
1 8 ^ W .&#13;
1 8 ¾ 0 W.&#13;
4° W.&#13;
4° W.&#13;
462.&#13;
4 64.&#13;
466.&#13;
468.&#13;
470.&#13;
472.&#13;
474.&#13;
47«.&#13;
478.&#13;
480.&#13;
482.&#13;
482.60&#13;
1.70&#13;
16.00&#13;
Thence N. 4" W. 608.86 81.16 I I&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
20"&#13;
20*&#13;
20*&#13;
74°&#13;
74°&#13;
74*&#13;
74°&#13;
74"&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
604.&#13;
606.&#13;
607.70&#13;
601.&#13;
610.&#13;
512.&#13;
514.&#13;
616.20&#13;
4.16&#13;
262&#13;
211&#13;
264&#13;
166&#13;
16«&#13;
267&#13;
40&#13;
T h e n c e N. 74° W. 61«.&#13;
Thence N. 2SH-* W. 6 1 7 . l t&#13;
T h e n c e N. 21&#13;
T h s n o e N. I I Se n s e N. 4&#13;
enoatf.&#13;
Thenoa N.&#13;
T h e n o e N .&#13;
Tnrffoa M.&#13;
T t j e n e a N .&#13;
l e n e e B.&#13;
tirnoe &amp;&#13;
ItnceflL&#13;
lencafl.&#13;
i n c s S .&#13;
10.&#13;
8.00&#13;
t . i t&#13;
11.46&#13;
18.46&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
174.&#13;
876.&#13;
871.&#13;
ISO.&#13;
881.&#13;
884.&#13;
186.&#13;
388.&#13;
187&#13;
188&#13;
189&#13;
190&#13;
181&#13;
192&#13;
198&#13;
194&#13;
7.00&#13;
7.88&#13;
6.74&#13;
6.60&#13;
6.40&#13;
6.80&#13;
6.20&#13;
6.10&#13;
18.8*&#13;
195&#13;
116&#13;
197&#13;
198&#13;
199&#13;
200&#13;
201&#13;
202&#13;
208&#13;
204&#13;
205&#13;
206&#13;
207 84&#13;
6.00&#13;
6.10&#13;
7.70&#13;
7.08&#13;
7.40&#13;
7.68&#13;
7.78&#13;
7.40&#13;
7.20&#13;
6.26&#13;
6.26&#13;
6.78&#13;
i 6.80 16.06&#13;
6.76&#13;
6.00&#13;
8.78&#13;
6.67&#13;
6.68&#13;
7.27&#13;
6.67&#13;
7.37&#13;
7.00&#13;
6.41&#13;
4.14&#13;
4.47&#13;
2I.T6&#13;
Thence N. 69°&#13;
Thence N. 59*&#13;
T h e m e N, 59"&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
w.&#13;
440.&#13;
442.&#13;
443.60&#13;
220&#13;
211&#13;
6.48&#13;
6.10&#13;
10.62&#13;
8.76&#13;
T h e n c e N. 59"&#13;
Thence N. 69°&#13;
Thence N. 59°&#13;
Thence N. 59°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 69°&#13;
Thence N. 59°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 85°&#13;
Thence NT. 85°&#13;
Thence N. 86°&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
444.&#13;
446.&#13;
448.&#13;
460.&#13;
462.&#13;
I l l&#13;
221&#13;
124&#13;
226&#13;
226&#13;
464. 46.06 227 81&#13;
466.&#13;
458.&#13;
460.&#13;
228&#13;
229&#13;
280&#13;
4.96&#13;
4.40&#13;
6.17&#13;
4.80&#13;
6.10&#13;
i 6.60&#13;
6.86&#13;
4.88&#13;
6.68&#13;
17.16&#13;
281&#13;
288&#13;
211&#13;
284&#13;
235&#13;
286&#13;
287&#13;
288&#13;
289&#13;
240&#13;
241&#13;
87&#13;
88&#13;
5.84&#13;
6.16&#13;
6.06&#13;
4.86&#13;
4.77&#13;
4.64&#13;
4.62&#13;
6.82&#13;
6.68&#13;
6.14&#13;
6.46&#13;
26.60&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
V&#13;
4°&#13;
4*&#13;
4°&#13;
4C&#13;
4°&#13;
4°&#13;
4°&#13;
4»&#13;
4"&#13;
4°&#13;
W.&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
4S4.&#13;
486.&#13;
488.&#13;
490.&#13;
492.&#13;
494.&#13;
496.&#13;
498.&#13;
500.&#13;
502.&#13;
502.16&#13;
242&#13;
243&#13;
244&#13;
246&#13;
246&#13;
247&#13;
248&#13;
24»&#13;
260&#13;
261&#13;
6.44&#13;
5.16&#13;
£.11&#13;
5.17&#13;
5.40&#13;
5.61&#13;
7.06&#13;
6.86&#13;
«.00&#13;
5.20&#13;
11.61&#13;
16.66&#13;
1.0»&#13;
4.81&#13;
6.61&#13;
4.81&#13;
4.7»&#13;
6.21&#13;
4.60&#13;
11.66&#13;
1.10 268 41 5.48&#13;
1.86&#13;
266&#13;
2«o&#13;
261&#13;
262&#13;
2«!&#13;
864&#13;
866&#13;
166&#13;
H 7&#13;
118&#13;
86»&#13;
« 7 «&#13;
48&#13;
48&#13;
44&#13;
«.70&#13;
6.11&#13;
S21&#13;
6.68&#13;
R.88&#13;
S.48&#13;
6.66&#13;
«.77&#13;
7.7»&#13;
7.86&#13;
7.06&#13;
6.24&#13;
T h e n o e N . 7 8 f c * W .&#13;
Thence N. 7 2 £ - W.&#13;
Thence N. 7a*»"W.&#13;
641.&#13;
544.&#13;
646.86&#13;
871&#13;
272&#13;
6.78&#13;
6.42&#13;
I K . I 6&#13;
Croaa hi &amp; W. * Un* 11&#13;
O . U B . S e c l i n e .&#13;
O l 8. W. | N . W. K&#13;
• a s . 86. w h i c h la h e r e&#13;
left a n d enter N. W. ¾&#13;
of N. W ¼ £ « c 18.&#13;
Crams % line 16 c. 47 L&#13;
S. of Sec. line.&#13;
On N. W. %, N. W. ¼&#13;
Sec. 26. w h i c h la here&#13;
left a n d enter E. ^ u l&#13;
N. W. ft, L'6.&#13;
E l m 6—7.67. To N. * B.&#13;
Qr. line at_a point 16 c&#13;
86 1. S. o f T i r . P o e t&#13;
On B. % of N . W. K, 86,&#13;
w h i c h la here left and&#13;
run N . o n Qr. l i n e bet&#13;
w e e n E . % N. W. %&#13;
a n d W. % uf N. K_ * ,&#13;
26.&#13;
I h e u o e N . 'ilti&#13;
T h e n c e N. 62'&#13;
T h e n o e N . 62«&#13;
T h e n c e N. 52J&#13;
Thence N. 62'&#13;
Thence N. 5 2 t f u W .&#13;
T h e n c e N. 5 2 % g W.&#13;
T h e n o e N . 5 2 ¾ ° W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 52*4" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 52*4" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 62*4" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 52%" W.&#13;
Thence N. t&gt;2U"W.&#13;
Thence N. 5ZHU W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4 1 % " W.&#13;
646.&#13;
646.&#13;
6 M .&#13;
661.&#13;
654.&#13;
656.&#13;
658.&#13;
660.&#13;
668.&#13;
584.&#13;
688.&#13;
670.&#13;
671.50&#13;
572.&#13;
678.51&#13;
i.?e 271 4ft e.84&#13;
174&#13;
176&#13;
176&#13;
177&#13;
278&#13;
17»&#13;
88»&#13;
181&#13;
282&#13;
284&#13;
286&#13;
1.87&#13;
fl.OO&#13;
0.0«&#13;
«.81&#13;
6.10&#13;
6.80&#13;
6.17&#13;
6.1»&#13;
6.74&#13;
7.17&#13;
8.50&#13;
28.14&#13;
28.00 286 46 t.»I&#13;
2.0Z&#13;
T h e n c e N. 41V4" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4 1 % - W .&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4 l g ° W .&#13;
T h e n c e N . 4 1 f t - W .&#13;
T h e n c e N. 41 tt-W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4 W 4 UW.&#13;
T h e n c e N . 46'» W .&#13;
T h e n c e N. 46" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 46° W.&#13;
574.&#13;
57«.&#13;
678.&#13;
580.&#13;
682.&#13;
287&#13;
288&#13;
28»&#13;
2»0&#13;
291&#13;
7.46&#13;
6.78&#13;
6.61&#13;
6.40&#13;
8.16&#13;
5 8 4 . . 11, #0 2»» 47 8.16&#13;
586.&#13;
688.&#13;
588.67&#13;
2»8&#13;
294&#13;
5.71&#13;
5.80&#13;
16.16&#13;
&lt;^r. Poat be twe en Sec*.&#13;
24 and 25.&#13;
On line b e t w e e n lands&#13;
laat a b o v e deecrtbed.&#13;
w h i c h la l e f t here a n d&#13;
run on line b e t w e e n E.&#13;
% S. W. % and W. %•&#13;
S. E. %, 2i.&#13;
D r y W. Oak 24—10.87.&#13;
T h e n c e N . 46"&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10"&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10"&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10°&#13;
T h e n c e Nv 10"&#13;
T h e n c e N. 1°&#13;
ww.. ww.. ww..&#13;
590.&#13;
688.&#13;
584.&#13;
596.&#13;
697.&#13;
598.&#13;
6.00&#13;
7.00&#13;
285&#13;
2»«&#13;
297&#13;
2»8&#13;
2»»&#13;
48&#13;
4»&#13;
6.76&#13;
6.10&#13;
7.10&#13;
6.51&#13;
8.21&#13;
On line of landa laat&#13;
above deecrtbed, w h i c h&#13;
la here l e f t and enter&#13;
8. W. ¼ S e c 14, 16 c&#13;
N. o f ¾ Poat.&#13;
P r o m w a t e r .&#13;
8 U I&#13;
T h e n c e N .&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
ri°&#13;
i"&#13;
i 8&#13;
7°&#13;
7°&#13;
7"&#13;
7°&#13;
78%.'&#13;
78¼1&#13;
78%'&#13;
8°&#13;
8"&#13;
8"&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
Ew. .&#13;
E.&#13;
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a&#13;
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' E.&#13;
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W.&#13;
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600.&#13;
602.&#13;
604.&#13;
606.&#13;
608.&#13;
«10.&#13;
612.&#13;
614.&#13;
616.&#13;
618.&#13;
618.27&#13;
620.&#13;
621.47&#13;
6.00&#13;
8.00&#13;
4.17&#13;
800&#13;
801&#13;
801&#13;
101&#13;
804&#13;
105&#13;
806&#13;
307&#13;
808&#13;
809&#13;
810&#13;
66&#13;
51&#13;
61&#13;
7.66&#13;
7.64&#13;
8.00&#13;
7.76&#13;
7.16&#13;
7.66&#13;
8.86&#13;
7.28&#13;
7.8«&#13;
7.68&#13;
7.88&#13;
E l m 24, 6, 18.&#13;
Croaa R A W . * line 18&#13;
c. 68 I. E. o f Qr. P o s t .&#13;
On 8. W. %, 84. w h i c h La&#13;
here l e f t a n d e n t e r all&#13;
8. of hljfhway of W. %&#13;
o f N. W^ %, 14.&#13;
Center h i g h w a y at&#13;
bridge croaa farm Una.&#13;
On all W. * N . W. M&#13;
14, S. of h i g h w a y , w h i c h&#13;
ia here left a n d e n t e r all&#13;
W. ft N. W. H N . of&#13;
h i g h w a y .&#13;
1S.4T&#13;
8tt&#13;
4"&#13;
4°&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
Thence N.&#13;
T h e n c e N.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 11°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 18"&#13;
Thence N. 13°&#13;
Thence N. 21°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 21°&#13;
j Thenoe N. 4*&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 4"&#13;
Thence N. 11°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 11°&#13;
T h e n c e N. 11°&#13;
W.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
W.&#13;
W.&#13;
W. ww.. ww.. w.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
Tarn. 6—6.16.&#13;
Croaa Sec. Una 8 c N. of&#13;
Qr. P o a t&#13;
On all N . of h i g h w a y of&#13;
W. * N. W. tt 24, w h i c h&#13;
ia here left a n d e n t e r&#13;
8. E. * N. E. H S a c 81.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 8 2 ¼ 0 E.&#13;
Thence N. 3 2 ¼ 0 E.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10" E.&#13;
Thence N. 10» B.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10s E.&#13;
Thence N. 10° E.&#13;
621.10&#13;
822.&#13;
621.14&#13;
624.&#13;
626.&#13;
628.&#13;
680.&#13;
682.&#13;
684.&#13;
686.&#13;
687.&#13;
638.&#13;
688.&#13;
640.&#13;
642.&#13;
644.&#13;
646.&#13;
648.&#13;
650.&#13;
660.86&#13;
M l&#13;
1.64&#13;
4.76&#13;
4.06&#13;
I . M&#13;
1.66&#13;
4.06&#13;
611&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
114&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
117&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
l i t&#13;
180&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
111&#13;
114&#13;
126&#13;
61&#13;
T.41&#13;
7 4 6&#13;
7 4 0&#13;
7.66&#13;
7.76&#13;
7.76&#13;
7.64&#13;
LIT&#13;
IM&#13;
7 4 1&#13;
».»6&#13;
7.07&#13;
7.67&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10e E. 660.40 6.56 60 16.88&#13;
Thence N. 10° E. 651.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10° E. 664.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10° E. 656,&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10° E. 658.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10" E. 660.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10" E. 662.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10° E. 662.71&#13;
121&#13;
887&#13;
828&#13;
111&#13;
110&#13;
111&#13;
11.46&#13;
B. Oak 10—7.11.&#13;
Cross E. &amp; W. % line 8&#13;
c. 45 1. E. Sec. line.&#13;
On S. K. % N. E, *^ 21,&#13;
which is l e f t here and&#13;
enter N. E. K N. B. K&#13;
28, except R. R.&#13;
S. line Mich. Air LJne&#13;
R. R, r i g h t o f w a y .&#13;
Cut f r o m t o p of R. R.&#13;
rail.&#13;
On N. E . fc N . E. H. 13,&#13;
except R. R., w h i c h la&#13;
here l e f t 11 c 6 1. W. of&#13;
Sec. line and e n t e r R. R,&#13;
r i g h t o f w a y .&#13;
On R. R.&#13;
N. Line R. R. Leave R.&#13;
R. 11 c. 36 1. W . Sec&#13;
Line, which leave here&#13;
and enter E. % S. E. H&#13;
14, ex. R. R,&#13;
Thence N. 10° E. 664.&#13;
Thence N. 10* E. «66.&#13;
Thence N. 10° E, 668.&#13;
Thence N. 10" E. 670.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 10° E. 672.&#13;
Thence N. 10° E. 673.38 21.98&#13;
Thence N. 4nn TV. 674.&#13;
Thence N. 45° W. fi76.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 46° W. 677.76 4.88&#13;
Thence N. 51° W. 678.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 51r W. 680.&#13;
T h e n c e N. Rl" W. 682.&#13;
Thence N. 51° W. 684.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 61" W. 685.27 7.52&#13;
T h e n c e N. 75° W. 686.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 75° TV. 688.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 75" W. 690.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 76° W. 690.67&#13;
882&#13;
811&#13;
314&#13;
116&#13;
816&#13;
887&#13;
338&#13;
339&#13;
840&#13;
341&#13;
842&#13;
843&#13;
844&#13;
845&#13;
61&#13;
«1&#13;
61&#13;
»7.67&#13;
• * * * .&#13;
T h e n c e N. 7R*&#13;
Thence N. 75*&#13;
W.&#13;
w.&#13;
692.&#13;
694. 8.78&#13;
84«&#13;
847 «4&#13;
8.88&#13;
W. Oak 80—9.62.&#13;
Crona N . &amp; 8. % Una 6&#13;
c 50 1. N. o f R R.&#13;
On E. ¼ 8. E. ¾ S e c 14&#13;
e x c e p t R. R.. w h i c h ia&#13;
here l e f t and enter t h e&#13;
8. 86 R. of W. % of 8.&#13;
E. ¾ e x c e p t R. R. Sec.&#13;
14.&#13;
\&#13;
Croaii f a r m line I t 6« 1.&#13;
W. of ¼ line.&#13;
On 8. 3« R- of W. ¼ 8.&#13;
E. M e x c e p t R. R-, w h i c h&#13;
la here l e f t and onter&#13;
W. % S. E. V* except S.&#13;
8« R&#13;
Thence. N. 70 ¼" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 7 0 ¼ ° W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 70½^ W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 37" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 37° W.&#13;
T h e n c e N 26° W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 26" W.&#13;
T h e n c e N. 26* W.&#13;
«9«.&#13;
«98.&#13;
«98.41&#13;
700.&#13;
702.&#13;
704.&#13;
706.&#13;
70«.&#13;
4.41&#13;
8.59&#13;
4.00&#13;
848&#13;
34»&#13;
850&#13;
851&#13;
862&#13;
8S8&#13;
«6&#13;
«6&#13;
• •&#13;
7.07&#13;
7.67&#13;
Croaa Qr. L i s a 17 c 61 L&#13;
« . of earner aX 14.&#13;
O i W. )4 6 . £ % of 14&#13;
e x c e c t 8. 16 B-, w h i c h ia&#13;
left here and enter &amp; &amp;&#13;
B. W. ' i uf 14 e x c e p t C&#13;
8« K.&#13;
P o p l a r 6—8.08.&#13;
CroM VI. &amp;. fL ¼ line 1&#13;
c. 42 1. a. of Qr. Una.&#13;
On E. H 8. W. ^4.. 14,&#13;
e x c e p t 8. 36 R., w h i c h la&#13;
here l e f t a n d e n t e r N .&#13;
W. ¾ of 8. W. ^ 14.&#13;
Croaa E. &amp; W. % line 1&#13;
c. 21 1 W. of Cor.&#13;
On N. W. ¼ 8. W. ^&#13;
w h i c h la here left and&#13;
enter E. % 8. W. ¾ N.&#13;
W. ^ 14.&#13;
Croea f a r m line 7 c. 68 L&#13;
a of t h e B. &amp; W. Va&#13;
line.&#13;
O n £ . H of a W. ^ 1 4 .&#13;
w h i c h la here l e f t and&#13;
enter W. ½ 8. W. ¾ N.&#13;
W. ¼ 14.&#13;
H i c k o r y 12-—12.18.&#13;
Croaa E. &amp; W. % Una 4&#13;
C 65 L W. Of Oct*. Of&#13;
t h e t w e n t i e s .&#13;
On W. ¼ S. W. ¾ N . W.&#13;
¼ 14, w h i c h la hare l e f t&#13;
a n d e n t e r N . W. £ N.&#13;
W. ¾ 14.&#13;
£ 0 1 ¼ . W. Oak 8 - 8 . 6 6 .&#13;
F r o m a n g l e 51 to tha&#13;
end t h e atakea are act&#13;
18 llnka f r o m tha center&#13;
Instead of 75.&#13;
Croaa S e c L i n e 11 c U&#13;
L. B. S e c C o n . Cut l a&#13;
canter h i g h w a y I s I t f t&#13;
O B N . W. H N . W. % 14.&#13;
w h i c h la here left a a d&#13;
A n d W h e r c a a , Lt al».» jpueanitnat&#13;
the tollowiujj described tracts uf Jaudb ore&#13;
o w n e d by p&lt;-*rt**u» wku arc uuu rcoiduuia n*&#13;
the tuwueliipe uf lJiia.ililia and I'ulnam the&#13;
exevution ul a relens*; uf Die ii^hu»f way for&#13;
which haw been ne^lecLed or refused by&#13;
iheuj, will be iravci*t&lt;1 hy Haul prupoued&#13;
Drain, to- wir:&#13;
Kate C. Lane, uwuer of S\V \ uf JNW f&#13;
uet'iiun II, Tuwu-iliip 1, N uf K 3 K Micliigau.&#13;
Kutb E . Chapman, owner uf W 'A) acres&#13;
uf N W } uf NKJ and SVV \ of N E \ section&#13;
,'-56, towriBiiiji 1 N, uf R 3 K Michigan.&#13;
Viola \i Kiilin owner of the K i of IS W&#13;
\ of SW [ e x c e p t K 10 AVU-V, Bcctiuu 25&#13;
Townshij) 1 N of K 3 K Michigan.&#13;
1'Lobert Kelly owner of N 5 acreu of H\V&#13;
^ of HW 4 aection 2-t, TuwnHhip J N of Kt&#13;
3 K Miclii^an.&#13;
(irittith J'almer owner of W J of NVV^ of&#13;
S W I extent W 10 acree aectiuu 25, Towu-&#13;
«hij) ! N i.f K 3 K M i c h i g a n .&#13;
Frank Uirney owner of all N of Kiver of&#13;
Ki uf S W i section 26 township 1 N , uf R&#13;
'.' K Michigan.&#13;
William and Mary Murphy owners of&#13;
NK \ of S E I, section 36, tuwunhip 1 N of&#13;
K 3 E Michigan.&#13;
A n d W h e r e a s , It appears that&#13;
K a l e V. Lane, Huth E. tJhapman, Viola B .&#13;
K u h n , Hubert K e l l y . Griffith Palmer,&#13;
Frank ISirney, William and Mary Murphy,&#13;
owners of the following described lands,&#13;
to-wit:&#13;
K a t e C . L a n e owner of the SW { of N W&#13;
} section i l , T o w n s h i p 1 X of K 3 K Michigan.&#13;
Rutli E. Chapmau owner of W 20 acres&#13;
! &lt;&gt;t N W | of X E J and S W i of N E r »ec-&#13;
I ion 36, township 1 X of R 3 E Michigan.&#13;
Viola B. K u h n owner af the E £ of N W&#13;
J of S W ^ except E 10 acres section 25&#13;
T o w n s h i p I X of R 3 E Michigan.&#13;
Robert Kelly owner of N 5 Meres of SW&#13;
i of S W \ section 26, T o w n s h i p I X of R&#13;
3 E M i c h i g a n .&#13;
Griffith Palmer owner of WJ of X W k of&#13;
S W i e x c e p t W 10 acres section 2b, town&#13;
I N of R 3 E Michigan.&#13;
Frank Birney owner ef all X of River of&#13;
E } of S W \ section 25 township I X of R&#13;
3 E Michigan.&#13;
William and Mary Murphy owaera of&#13;
X E \ot S E J section 36, township I N of&#13;
R 3 E Michigan, and that said lands, the&#13;
; execution of a release of the right of way for&#13;
j said Drain and damages therefor for which&#13;
i hn$ been neglected or refused by them,&#13;
; will be traversed bv Baid D r a m ,&#13;
r&#13;
. . . . ^ „ . . N o w , T h e r e f o r e , All such non-&#13;
Anftie 66 o n t o p of B e * * - . . ,&#13;
« 1 ^ 1 « W. O a k BtanBe&gt; resident persons, u.w.cio ut iut above des-&#13;
S^itar^floatinc DOC BoaT i ' " b ^ l a n d s (anrt Ouardiaos, or persons,&#13;
t o L a k e . j having the care of, or with whom resides&#13;
and ^ e i L i n e T . ^ ^ l n t O ' a n y m ' U u r o r incoinpctent person hereinbet&#13;
h e laka f r o m here. | fore mentioned) and each of them are&#13;
j hereby cited to be and appear before this&#13;
.. %A m% Court, at the time and place last above set&#13;
r r o a a f a n a u n a H o. 1 1 , . , , , , i .,i&#13;
B. S e a Una. forth, to be heard with respect to each ap-&#13;
0 , 1 f " « ^ j r » \ ^ - - 1 - ¾ 0 ¾ I piicft'ion, if they so desire, and show&#13;
here l e f t and' 'enter If. cause, if any there be, why the said appli-&#13;
, cation for the appointment of three disint-&#13;
1 erested Special Commissioners as aforesaid&#13;
! should not be granted and failiug so to do,&#13;
' they will waive all irregularities ia said&#13;
proceedings already had.&#13;
A R T H U R A, M O N T A « I T E ,&#13;
J u d g e of Probate.&#13;
e a t e r &amp; W. %&#13;
e x c e p t N . 66 A.&#13;
Tain. U — 1 L 6 6 .&#13;
11,&#13;
60 "JL "of "s. W. ¼ I t&#13;
Croaa Qr. L i n e 16 c&#13;
I. B. S a c Una.&#13;
On N. 60 A. o f a W.&#13;
I I , w h i c h la here l a *&#13;
a n d a n t e r 8. W. % N.&#13;
W. ¾ . 11.&#13;
60 i&#13;
H !&#13;
&gt;s.&#13;
Croaa E . &amp; W. % line 3&#13;
c. 8 1 E . of Sec. Una. t&#13;
On B. W. ¾ N. W. % 11. i&#13;
w h i c h la here left and !&#13;
enter N . W. H N. W. % :&#13;
11. i&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN \&#13;
County of Livingston l*&#13;
Probate CcurL for S:ii«i County&#13;
1, Kitlie Monl:igat, Clerk of the Probate&#13;
, Court for said county, do hereby certify&#13;
| that I have compared the foregoing copy&#13;
J of Xon-Resident with Original Record&#13;
thereof, now remaining in this office, and&#13;
that the same is a correct Transcript there-&#13;
'• from and of the whole of such Orignal&#13;
I Record.&#13;
Ana;le fi4 on Sec- U n e 1&#13;
a 18 1. N. of the Core.&#13;
of the F o r t i e s .&#13;
On N. W. 14 N. W.&#13;
11, w h i c h 1« here&#13;
and enter K. ½ N. E. ¾&#13;
Sec. in.&#13;
left&#13;
•1 In Vcstimony whereof, I have&#13;
hereunto set my hand and affixed&#13;
the seal of said Probate&#13;
Court, at H o w e l l in said County&#13;
this 8th dav of February A. D .&#13;
1909.&#13;
KlTTIK MON-TVGUK,&#13;
Probate Court.&#13;
W. Oak So—4.6*.&#13;
Enter La.kc&gt;.&#13;
Knd In T&gt;aka i&#13;
12.00 On E. ¾ N. B. ¼ 10. !&#13;
Said atako 3B3 belna; 9 \&#13;
c. fl 1. N. and 8 c. 2 1. W. 1&#13;
of S. W. Cor. of N. W. 1&#13;
V4 N. W. &gt;4 Sec. 11. T o - |&#13;
tal d i s t a n c e to be dug; 1&#13;
Si2 c . 2168 Rod*. ,&#13;
Station s t a k e s and irrade h u b s are p l a c e d every 2 chain* m e a s u r e d from the&#13;
c o m m e n c e m e n t and are n u m b e r e d s e p a r a t e l y a n d c o n s e c u t i v e l y up fttream and are&#13;
placed on the riRht bank 76 l i n k s from the c e n t e r line to angle 51, then 18 llnka&#13;
' from the center to the end.&#13;
j Anjrle s t a k e s are n u m b e r e d c o n s e c u t i v e l y and are s e t in the center Una&#13;
rojrether w i t h s t a t i o n s t a k e s a t each SO rode.&#13;
I N o jrrade s t a k e s or h u b s or a n * l e s t a k e a aet In the I*akes, hu£ are numbered&#13;
i tn thla aurvey Mil a s If ao placed.&#13;
All a n g l e s are to be turned at an e a s y irrade by c u t t i n g t w o rnds each w a y&#13;
from the a n g l e on a c u r v e or circle.&#13;
The h i g h w a y s are to be c r o s s e d at right anglaa to the same.&#13;
All e x c a v a t i o n s are to be placed a t l e a s t s i x feet from the e d g e of tha bank.&#13;
The total w i d t h for the r i g h t of w a y to be four rods f^om the center line each&#13;
i side.&#13;
1 The w i d t h on the b o t t o m to be t w e n t y f e e t and rhirty f e e t on the top f r o m&#13;
; the c o m m e n c e m e n t to a n g l e n u m b e r 2R. s t a k e 168, and from said a n g l e I I t o the&#13;
end the h o t t o m w i d t h is e i g h t feet and t w e n t y f e e t w i d e on the top.&#13;
F o u r seta of a b u t m e n t s will be required a n d three bridges.&#13;
Openings are to be l e f t t h r o u g h the e x c a v a t i o n s a t the m o s t desire.* nolnta ao&#13;
as not to o b s t r u c t the flow of w a t e r from t h e o u t s i d e into said ditch, or d i ^ l - .&#13;
Said drain ia all c o n n e c t e d together, fofrmlnsT o n e complete a n d e n t i r e dra'-i.&#13;
The purvey w a s ordered by the C o u n t y D r a i n Commlaalon«r of L i v i n g s t o n&#13;
Countv and of W a s h t e n a w County. M i c h i g a n , a n d wma finished October R, 190S.&#13;
* * ~ — " W. B U L L O C K .&#13;
Surveyor.&#13;
Easter&#13;
Post&#13;
Cards&#13;
2 for 5c&#13;
At&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
Office f a • 1 «•.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch March 04, 1909</text>
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                <text>March 04, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1909-03-04</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="9693">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. xx m. P I N C K N E Y , LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAR. 11. 1909. No. 1 0&#13;
Baked Goods&#13;
We a r e uow g e t t i n g a fine Hue of IJakod (Joock from J a c k s o n&#13;
Below find a Hat of Home of t h e a r t i c l e we c a r r y&#13;
OBITCAEl. i&#13;
mmmmmmmmmm im&amp;&amp;:W*sr'w.&#13;
Bread&#13;
Graham Bread&#13;
Buns&#13;
Cinnamon Rolls&#13;
Jelly Roll Cake&#13;
Angel Cake&#13;
Cookies&#13;
Fried Cakes&#13;
t Swarthout &amp; Placeway&#13;
LOCALNBWS.&#13;
Read tb« advertisements.&#13;
Only a little over three weeks before&#13;
township election. j&#13;
E. R. BrooD of Detroit spent Sun- •&#13;
day and Monday with his family here.&#13;
E. R. Cook and family are moving&#13;
into Belle Kennedys house on East&#13;
Unadilla street.&#13;
Jas. A. Greene and wife of Howell&#13;
were quests of her parents W. A.&#13;
Carr and family over Sunday.&#13;
Re v. A. G. Gates is spending the&#13;
week at Edrrore and delivers an address&#13;
at Olivet. He returns Saturday.&#13;
The spring fever of moving has already&#13;
taken hold of many and many&#13;
changes of residence will soon take&#13;
place.&#13;
Willis Tapper and family and R. G. j&#13;
Wehh and family were entertained&#13;
at supper by Mr. and Mts. S. Gilchrist&#13;
Friday evening.&#13;
Mrs. r&gt;n&lt;&gt;st Peters entertained her&#13;
mother Mi-1. Case, and sister-in-law&#13;
a Mrs C i v , also a nephew, Will&#13;
Case of Ntivth I'arma, the past week.&#13;
Mrs. K. A. ttigler visited in Detroit&#13;
the past wi&gt;ek. Hei grandson, Donald&#13;
Carr, who has been spending a few&#13;
weeks here returned to the city with&#13;
her.&#13;
We understand that Mrs. Wiu. Pottert.&#13;
on will give her residence vacated&#13;
by E. H. Cook, a complete ehanep,&#13;
paint!J. •' and decor.u inT, and then&#13;
move t here herself.&#13;
The 8. S. social held at the pleasant&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Clark on&#13;
Wednesday evening of last week was&#13;
a very pleasant one. The weather&#13;
was bad and kept, many at, home that&#13;
would otherwise have been there. A&#13;
good musical program, together with&#13;
selfctions from Mr. Clark's phono&#13;
graph, refreshments and games, made&#13;
the evening very enjoyable for all&#13;
present.&#13;
IMis-; Ruth Potterton visited in |&#13;
Hamburg Fr.day evening. |&#13;
Miss Lucille McCluskey, who has&#13;
been ill for some time, is able to be&#13;
out again.&#13;
On page 4 may be found a letter&#13;
t&gt;om Miss Jennie Huze ot Bradentown,&#13;
Fia , which may interest you.&#13;
R. Clinton made a deal Monday&#13;
whereby be becomes the owner of&#13;
the Bock property on Piety Hill.&#13;
Senator F. J. Shields has been put&#13;
on the committee of five, to investigate&#13;
the state land office.—Tidings.&#13;
We have our commencement samples&#13;
on hond and anyone desiring to&#13;
inspect the same can do so. We are&#13;
prepared to put them up up in any&#13;
manner, or ongraved if so desired.&#13;
H. Knickerbocker, the new black*&#13;
smith, is now busy in E, R. Hrown's&#13;
old stand and has a notice in another&#13;
column. He and family are located&#13;
in the M. C, Wilson house on Unadilla&#13;
strett.&#13;
A letter from Mrs, 11. Baker ot&#13;
of Beach, Va., states that fruit trees&#13;
have blossomed out. and everything&#13;
has the appearance of spring. She&#13;
wishes to be remembered to her many&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Do not forget that the Columbian&#13;
Dramatic Club are arranging to put&#13;
the comedy, "Champagne and Oysters"&#13;
on the stage at, the opera house here&#13;
Friday evening, March 19. The cast&#13;
is good :uid all will he delighted.&#13;
Tickets on sale at Sitr'ers drug store.&#13;
The Supreme Court sustained the&#13;
decision of the Circuit court at Howell&#13;
in the Mary Haney vs. the Village of&#13;
Pinckney in the suit, for damages.&#13;
The lower court gave her &amp;1.200 for&#13;
damages received for falling on a defective&#13;
walk several years ago. Of&#13;
corse it cost extra to carry the case to&#13;
the higher court but nearly every citizen&#13;
was in favor of doing so and the&#13;
council should not be censured.&#13;
Elsie, wife of J . C. Mortenson, died&#13;
at their home in Toledo, Ohio, Wednesday,&#13;
M.r. 6, ct««d HI years, 9 mos.&#13;
and 26 days.&#13;
E'sie Hendee was born May 10,&#13;
1872. She was married to J . C.&#13;
Mortenson the 22nd of September,&#13;
1898. To thein were born eight children,&#13;
seven of whom, tour girls and&#13;
thiee boys, with the husband still survive&#13;
her. Besides these she leaves a&#13;
mother, one brother, two sisters and&#13;
a host of friends to mourn their loss.&#13;
The remains were brought here for&#13;
burial and the funeral was held from&#13;
her home church, the Methodist Episcopal&#13;
in Pinckney, Monday at 1 p . in.&#13;
her former paster, Rev. D. C. Littlejohn&#13;
officiating. The large number in&#13;
attendance at the last sad rites, spoke!&#13;
of the esteem in which she was held;&#13;
by her former friends and associates.&#13;
The burial took place in North Hamburg&#13;
cemetery.&#13;
Out for Business&#13;
1,000 Rolls of Wall Paper 10001&#13;
5c per Double Roll&#13;
Border not guaranteed&#13;
Farmers and Stockmen&#13;
Excelsior Insect and Lice Destroyer&#13;
Guaranteed and Positive in results&#13;
Or No Pay. » • • •&#13;
F. A . SIGL.ER&#13;
CABD OF THANKS.&#13;
We desire to thank the many&#13;
friends who so kindly assisted us in&#13;
our late bereavement in the death ot&#13;
our wife and mother. Your kindness&#13;
will never be forgotten.&#13;
J. C. Mortenson and Family&#13;
Obituary.&#13;
De Lagrand Rolison died, near midnight&#13;
March 4, at his h:me in Ham&#13;
burg township, aged 54 years, 9 mos.,&#13;
and 6 days. Legrand was one of seven&#13;
children, barn to Lewis and Charlotto&#13;
Rohson.&#13;
In 1895 he was married to Mary E.&#13;
Todd and in 1896 left the old homestead&#13;
in North Hamburg and moytd&#13;
to Hamburg village, where they lived&#13;
abont two years, then moved to thenpresent&#13;
home.&#13;
He leaves a wife and three little&#13;
girls to mourn their loss. Also, four&#13;
brothers ami one sister: Charles, Bell&#13;
M., (now Mrs. Henry Kice) of North,&#13;
Hamburg; David and Frank ot Webster,&#13;
and Fred D. of Detroit. John&#13;
the oldest brother haviDg passed to&#13;
the Great Beyond Jan. 4, 1898.&#13;
The funeral services were held Sunday&#13;
afternoon Rev. A. G. Gates officiating.&#13;
Village Election.&#13;
As there was but one tier et in t.ne&#13;
field Monday the battle did not get&#13;
warm at any stage of the game. There&#13;
seemed to be some dissatisfaction by&#13;
some and there was a good many&#13;
| marked off and in some instances&#13;
j names written in but in no instance&#13;
enough to make any showing as there&#13;
seemed ta be no system iii the cutting&#13;
only "just to cut." There were 92&#13;
ballots counted and the result is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Don't Fail to Attend&#13;
JACKSON &amp; C A D W E L L S&#13;
Dissolution S a l e&#13;
FOP Bargains&#13;
Only Ten Days More to Buy Goods at&#13;
WHOLESALE PRICES&#13;
Shoes at Cost Prices&#13;
Furniture at Cost Prices&#13;
Dress Goods at Cost Prices&#13;
All Heavy Foot Wear at Cost Prices&#13;
Best Prints at 5 l-2c yard&#13;
Best Tennis Flannels at 8 c&#13;
All Linen Crash, 13c value at 9 1-2&#13;
.. Ai&#13;
Groceries&#13;
25 pounds Sugar&#13;
25c Coffee&#13;
20c Coffee&#13;
8 bars of Soap&#13;
All Sales Cash&#13;
$1.25&#13;
22c&#13;
17c&#13;
25?&#13;
Soda&#13;
Yeast&#13;
Extra Rice&#13;
50e Tea&#13;
5c&#13;
3c&#13;
6c&#13;
42c&#13;
Produce Taken&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
New goods are rapidly&#13;
filling t h e store a u d i t s&#13;
worth y o u r t i m e to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
T h e best stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, R i b -&#13;
b o n s , Corsets, H a n d k e r -&#13;
chiefs, H o s i e r y and N o t -&#13;
ions shown in town.&#13;
R e m e m b e r T h a t _«MMMh.&#13;
£very Day is Bargain Day&#13;
L A. BOWMAN&#13;
" f e w * * Busy Store&#13;
Farmers.&#13;
B r i n g in y o n r h a r -&#13;
nesses a n d have t h e m&#13;
repaired, wased a n d&#13;
oiled ready for y o n r&#13;
s p r i n g work. If y o u r&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
l can do that work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rips, etc., in fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
President,&#13;
Clerk,&#13;
Trustees&#13;
George Green&#13;
Percy Switrthout&#13;
fC. V. Van Winkle&#13;
&lt; John Monks&#13;
( Franh Peters&#13;
P O S T C A R D S&#13;
Washington's Birthday&#13;
S t . Patrick's Day and&#13;
Regular Birthday. Also&#13;
a line of Easier Cards,&#13;
Dispatch Office&#13;
new. BARROW&#13;
i*fc'"&#13;
Treasurer, J . l \ Dunn&#13;
Assessor, Daniel W. MurtA&#13;
Committee tor next year: E. W.&#13;
Kennedy, D. H. Mowers, C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle.&#13;
Robins have put in an appearance.&#13;
We hear rumors ot a business&#13;
change in tin- village.&#13;
People needed weights attached to&#13;
them Wednesday— March wind.&#13;
The ladies of the Cornel church will j&#13;
hold a St.. Patricks supper at the hall,&#13;
Wednesday, March 17, f.om 5 until&#13;
all are served. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Engene Reason, has gone to Flint&#13;
to work tor the Bnick Anto Co. having&#13;
resigned his position with toe&#13;
American Express Co., of Detroit,&#13;
where he has been employed as book&#13;
keeper and stenographer, for Ik*&#13;
two years.*&#13;
I&#13;
TltVlE IS THI&#13;
( t &gt;'..,rah:'.-! v i n a hie"-. --V'-*1'-' , : ' - '&#13;
rv -i o t h e r r..rtehi.u' a f a r m e r I;*-.&#13;
e v e r y d a w \einti. -. an*1, s 13-:-.mo .-. : :&#13;
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?tr.:&gt;t!:.-: cin.y .1.-&#13;
:. rnu.st h e tfi.r." C R E A M&#13;
• S E P A R A T O R S M&#13;
a r c hi: it for ' .n;; s e r v i o e . A ••.&lt;&#13;
tVi-..- u p e r a f ir._i parLs, p n tcr-;r.&#13;
J u r w T h e p a r t s a r n v v . sirii-&#13;
«t hiijh sp'-"il pnhv. ... :.. i i ' . ,&#13;
n s w e l l a s i n s a n e t . ; o --:1-01- •".&#13;
cnigh r c m s t r r . r t i o i i i j -,e':;-.i t_-.'&#13;
.-TV I-.it;-? e r . c ' n s c - o r . ' .-e"_ -. .&#13;
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v : tl-o f . 0. :.; 1. ; t : r r ^&#13;
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S T A N D T H U T 2 S T&#13;
t h a n ;.nv o t h e r s«"pr.'-atf»r. Von d o n ' t h»i- e t o h u v a n e w r.rtc e v e r y y r a r o r&#13;
txvo. And r . Tue-nih'or : t h e U. S. d o c s t h : c l e a r e s t xkhnml:&gt;e; a l l t h e txtne.&#13;
K i a m i u e t h e t ' . S. y o u r s e l f ami s e c ii.^ Kt K x l J &gt; O : J U . I t 15 r o l d b y&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
|&amp;£'" •n&#13;
'".tiffiL t ' i »»&#13;
^.zMtt&amp;v'.'-t^-i. ^ ---^---^ &amp;3&gt;&amp;\ ^ T . * 1 *&gt;.^:&#13;
, « • • • • . " * - «&#13;
gintkqqi §i^iihl\&#13;
r&amp;AXK h. JftTOBBTWS, f"^-&#13;
PIW6XKBY, MlOHIOAtj&#13;
BJSSJBJflSSBBSHttSSBBCSSS^^^&#13;
»*uie Atr Made to o r d e r .&#13;
A man or bcience iu Merlin uai taken,&#13;
|C running ordjrmry $lr through * uia-&#13;
Slllne to make belter stuff tu bieathu&#13;
pf it. Not satiRfled that the atmosphere&#13;
wfeich nature funfilBhWJ for the purpose&#13;
la all that it should be, ha has undertaken&#13;
to make of It a teore acceptable&#13;
and useful and vcViable human asset.&#13;
The only queer thing about the matter,&#13;
too, is that he ia accomplishing it-&#13;
Everybody knows that oxygen in our&#13;
air ia a good thing. It is possible to&#13;
get too much or it, !ike Other- good&#13;
things, hut' then- is comparatively little&#13;
suffering caused among members&#13;
of the human race, just at this Mage&#13;
of the world's life, by a superabundance&#13;
of this particular desirable. In&#13;
fact, sometimes it t'wuis as if many&#13;
uf us were trying to Hd?.e how little of it&#13;
we can assimilate,' without actual asphyxiation,&#13;
instead of enjoying a full&#13;
measure as one of the luxuries of existence.&#13;
But it isn't always our own&#13;
fault, l^t.Beems, and"that'ti why the Herliner,&#13;
.Dr. Fischer by name, a member&#13;
of the faculty of the famous Berlin&#13;
university, has produced his invention.&#13;
It is no news to the world that&#13;
the oxygen in our air is capable of being&#13;
changed into a thing called oaone,&#13;
a mighty enemy of bacteria and other&#13;
things inimical to human lungs and&#13;
human blood, destroyer of bad smells&#13;
and powerful purifier in general. Sunlight&#13;
itself, by constantly producing&#13;
trie . stuff in dilute form, disinfects&#13;
daily and hourly, to a degree, the air&#13;
we breathe, says the Technical World&#13;
Magazine. The trouble is that "we have&#13;
too little sun, because of our smoke&#13;
and our dust and our roofs, under&#13;
which we stay too large a portion of&#13;
the time when the ozone-producer is&#13;
working.&#13;
PRESIDENT TUFTS&#13;
OFFICIAL FAMILY&#13;
SKETCHES OF THE NINE&#13;
EMINENT MEN FORMING&#13;
HIS CABINET.&#13;
Wrinkles are in many cases caused |&#13;
by bad temper—especially in a woman, j&#13;
The average man'prizes physical and&#13;
mental comfort above the glory of possessing&#13;
for a wife a beautiful, attractive&#13;
creature with an uncontrollajflp&#13;
temper, for he knows that peace and J , —&#13;
™ltt:^"&lt;r:^P-c KNOX HEADS THE GROUP&#13;
that she has a bad temper, and is&#13;
proud of it, has kept more than one&#13;
man from asking her to he his wife.&#13;
The womfia who can oontrol^herseJf&#13;
under the mont trying chrcumstauceB&#13;
is the woman who holds the strongest&#13;
power in the home; and amiability is&#13;
not only power, it is mental progression,&#13;
health and happiness to the possessor&#13;
thereof and to the lucky ones&#13;
who move in her orbit. Giving way to&#13;
&gt;fcft«l temper shortens life, says the New&#13;
York Weekly. **When yon-teH-'a woman&#13;
that each time she loses control of&#13;
Pennsylvania.! la Secretary of State—&#13;
Franklin MacVeagh, Chicago Merchant,&#13;
Holds the Treasury Portfolio—&#13;
Jacob M. Dickinson, Tennessee&#13;
Democrat, to Manage the Army—&#13;
Affairs of the Agricultural Department&#13;
Left in James Wilsoq's&#13;
Hands.&#13;
Philander Chase Knox of Pennsylvania,&#13;
secretary of state in the cabinet&#13;
of President Taft, was born at&#13;
Brownsville, Pa., in 1853. He waB&#13;
her temper she unhinges a moral brain ; graduated from Mount Union college,&#13;
Ohio, in 1872, and three years later&#13;
was admitted to the bar. During the&#13;
years 1876 and 1877 he served as assistant&#13;
rnit.ed States district attorney&#13;
("or the western district of Pennsylvania.&#13;
In the latter year he formed&#13;
cell and weakens by several degrees&#13;
her ability.for self-control, and at the&#13;
same time strengthens tremendously&#13;
her chances for an attack of nervous&#13;
prostration, you are wasting breath.&#13;
But when she is cool and serene, and a l a W partnership with .Tames H. Reed&#13;
at peace with all the world, if you ran which still exists and which has represented&#13;
many la'ge corporations, including&#13;
the Carnegie Company. Mr.&#13;
Knox entered President. McKinley's&#13;
cabinet as attorney general In April,&#13;
1001, serving until 1901, when he was&#13;
elected United States senator from&#13;
Pensylvania. The latter position he&#13;
resigned to become the head of President&#13;
Taft's cabinet.&#13;
MacVeagh for the Treasury.&#13;
...., ; Franklin MacVeagh, secretary of the&#13;
A rare old picture was cut. from the ! treasury, was born on a farm in&#13;
frame in a New York art gallery when Chester county, Pennsylvania, gradu&#13;
convince'her that each fit of lemper&#13;
adds months to her age by weakening&#13;
her rhental force and by tracing crowtracks&#13;
about her eyes and ugly lines&#13;
around her mouth, she will probably&#13;
think twice before again forgetting&#13;
herself. For, no matter what, she asserts&#13;
to the contrary, woman prizes&#13;
youth and beauty above other gifts.&#13;
the guard was not looking. Now a&#13;
large, reward is offered, for a clew to&#13;
the thief. It is beyond understanding&#13;
what, anyone would want with a picture&#13;
secured in that way. If it couldn't&#13;
be framed and hung on the wall and&#13;
tts history and price explained to callers&#13;
what would be the use of having&#13;
it? A cheap chromo would be much&#13;
more serviceable. No one would care I&#13;
to hide it in the bottom of a trunk to |&#13;
gloat over unless he were a picture |&#13;
miser, and the thing couldn't be sold j&#13;
for anything but old paper rags unless ]&#13;
the seller could furnish a written guar- j&#13;
anty that it. was genuine. We can't see |&#13;
why anyone, should steal a thing of]&#13;
that sort, exclaims the Chicago Daily I&#13;
News, unless he was an amateur thief j&#13;
who felt that he needed the practice.&#13;
ated from Yale in 1SR2 and from&#13;
Columbia Law school in 1864. He be-&#13;
Good Company.&#13;
Religion cannot illuminate philosophical&#13;
discussions. Philosophical&#13;
discussions can confirm religious&#13;
truths. And therefore seek the company&#13;
of truly religious people and of&#13;
real philosophers, the living as well&#13;
as the dead.—Tolstoy.&#13;
A Matrimonial Oversight.&#13;
It never seems to occur to persona&#13;
who are getting married that t.h«y&#13;
ought to take each other for good as&#13;
well as for better or worse.—Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
Prof. ft. Stanley Hall says in a ni;&lt;ea&#13;
nine article: "I 'do not think that ii'&#13;
the pay of all teachers in the country&#13;
inadequate as it'&amp;»wore-doubled to&#13;
morrow that the quality or quantity of&#13;
actual service rerKjewti.tJfcB ohfldren nf&#13;
the state.* by them would" firfoWTrftfch&#13;
Improvement for-some tfme." Maybe&#13;
aot, but 1B that case&#13;
| Child's Pathetic Suicide.&#13;
At Bolivcr, Pa,, recently, Mary Es-&#13;
; fella, .eight, years old, committed sul-&#13;
I cide. She grieved over the death of&#13;
her mother. "Papa, I am going to&#13;
shoot," she said, and before he had&#13;
time to realize the meaning of, the.&#13;
words the girl fired a bullet into her&#13;
temple.&#13;
. _ ^&#13;
, J o . Kill an Evil Odor.&#13;
Dried ,pmnge peel allowed to smolder&#13;
rin_j,asT«w of red'hot iro»H&gt;» ofr*a&#13;
t n e ' t e a c h e r s ' o M shovel, will kill any bad'otfor ln«a {*tur&#13;
getting what they earn. room and leave a fragrant one behind.&#13;
gan the practice of law in New York&#13;
city but ill-health forced hirn to abandon&#13;
it and i«&gt; 186S he went to Chicago&#13;
and fcngaged in the wholesale ..grocery.&#13;
business. In this and other commercial&#13;
pursuits he has amassed a large&#13;
fortune. Hefoie entering tho cabinet&#13;
he disposed 0J.his_h9ldi.ngg in the big&#13;
grocery firm and*resigned as director&#13;
of the Commercial National bank of&#13;
Chicago.". Mr. MacVeagh has always&#13;
been interested in. movements for the&#13;
public w,elfare, locally and nationally.&#13;
He has been president of the Chicago&#13;
Citizens'' association, the Chicago&#13;
Rureau of Charities and the Municipal&#13;
Art League, vice-president of the&#13;
American Civic association, and chairman&#13;
of the immigration department of&#13;
the National Civic Federation. Mr.&#13;
MacVeagh formerly was a Democrat&#13;
and in 1894 he was nominated for&#13;
United -Slates senator by the Democrats&#13;
of Illinois, but was defeated in&#13;
the legislature. He supported Grover&#13;
Cleveland, but afterward changed his&#13;
party allegiance because of the altitude&#13;
of the Democratic party on the&#13;
money question.&#13;
Dickinson Is War Secretary.&#13;
Jacob M. Dickinson of Tennessee&#13;
and Chicago, the new secretary of&#13;
war, was born in 1851 at Columbus,&#13;
Miss. He graduated from the University&#13;
of Nashville in 1872 and afterward&#13;
studied law at Columbia college,&#13;
at. the University of Leipsiz and in&#13;
Paris. He served several times by&#13;
special commission on the supreme&#13;
bench of Tennessee and was assistant&#13;
attorney general of the United&#13;
States in 1895-97.&#13;
Wilson Retains His Place.&#13;
Only one member of the Roosevelt&#13;
cabinet retains his portfolio under&#13;
Mr. Taft, That is James Wilson of&#13;
Iowa,'secretary of agriculture. So excellent&#13;
had been his work In that position&#13;
that there was no serious talk of&#13;
making a change. Born in Scotland in&#13;
1835, Mr. Wilson came to the United&#13;
States in 1852 and three years later&#13;
settled in Iowa. In 1861 he engaged In&#13;
farming in Tama county. He was a&#13;
member of the Iowa assembly for&#13;
three sessions and speaker of the&#13;
house for one session, and also was a&#13;
Hint for the Talkative.&#13;
There is much to be said for silence.&#13;
If the majority of people could be&#13;
made to exercise themselves regularly&#13;
in restraint of the tongue the general&#13;
business of this planet would be considerably&#13;
expedited.—Pall Mall Gazette.&#13;
As We Sow, We Reap.&#13;
Man Is the artificer of his own happiness.&#13;
Let him beware how he complains&#13;
of the disposition of circumstances,&#13;
for It is his own disposition&#13;
he blames.—Henry D. Thoreau.&#13;
To One Kind of Woman.&#13;
Here's to the woman who has a&#13;
smile for every Joy, a fear for every&#13;
j sorrow, a consolation for every grief,&#13;
an excuse for every fault, a prayer for&#13;
every misfortune, and encouragement&#13;
for every hope.—What-to-Eat.&#13;
Peanut OH Well Liked.&#13;
In Europe a first-class peanut oil Is&#13;
the m o s t highly eafeein,ed 6T vegetable&#13;
otls after olive oil." i t Js .also used&#13;
in t t ^ * a n u f * &lt; A a r £ ftT'lffitter 1&#13;
member of the Iowa ataU tailway j&#13;
commission. In 1873 he w « elected *&#13;
to congress, serving two terms, and&#13;
was sent to the'national legislature&#13;
again' for'om* term in 1883. He was.&#13;
regent o f the State university of&#13;
Iowa in 1870-74, and in 1890 wai&#13;
made director ot the agricultural experiment&#13;
station and professor of agriculture&#13;
a t the Iowa Agricultural college,&#13;
Ames, la. In 1897 he became&#13;
secretary of agriculture.&#13;
Postmaster General Hitchcock.&#13;
The- first cabinet officer aelecteii by&#13;
Mr, Taft after his election was Frank&#13;
H. Hitchcock of Massachusetts, who&#13;
gave up his place us first assistant&#13;
postmaster general to manage successfully&#13;
the Taft presidential campaign.&#13;
He has been given the offl«» of postmaster&#13;
general In the uew cabinet.&#13;
Mr. Hitchcock was born at Amherst,&#13;
O., in 186?, and graduated from Har-^&#13;
vard in 1891 and from Columbia Law&#13;
school in ! S 9 4 . ^ S l n c e 1891 he has&#13;
been a government official.&#13;
Nagel Has Commerce Portfolio.&#13;
Missouri has been rewarded fpr its&#13;
switch to the Republican column by&#13;
the appointment of Charles Nagel as&#13;
secretary of commerce and labor. Mr.&#13;
Nagel is a leading lawyer of St.&#13;
Louis and the wesL He was burn in&#13;
Texas in 1849, moved to St. Louis&#13;
when, a child aud graduated from the&#13;
St. Louis Law i^hool iu 1873. He has&#13;
been senior member of the law firm&#13;
of Nagel &amp; Kirby, professor iu the&#13;
St. Louis Law school and a trustee&#13;
of Washington university. In 1881-83&#13;
he was a member of the Missouri house&#13;
of representatives, and in 1893 97 was&#13;
president of the St, Louis city council.&#13;
H e is a member of the Republican&#13;
national committee and for years&#13;
has been an intimate friend of Mr.&#13;
Taft. He was one of Mr. Roosevelt's&#13;
most enthusiastic supporters. As an&#13;
attorney Mr. Nagel was identified with&#13;
several important caaes dealing with&#13;
the numerous complications in the&#13;
affairs of the Five Civilized Tribes in&#13;
the then Indian territory.&#13;
Navy Under Meyer's Charge.&#13;
President Taft's secretary of the&#13;
navy, George Von L. Meyer of Massachusetts,&#13;
has* had wide experience as&#13;
a business man, legislator, diplomat&#13;
and cabinet officer. He was born in&#13;
Boston in 1858 and graduated from&#13;
Harvard in 1879. He then entered&#13;
business aud has been prominently&#13;
conected with a number of ilnancial&#13;
and mercantile concerns. His career&#13;
as a public official began in 1889, when&#13;
he was elected to the Boston common&#13;
council. He then served on the board&#13;
of aldermen, and In 1892-96 he was a&#13;
member of the Massachusetts isgtalature,&#13;
the last two years being speaker&#13;
of the house. In 1900 Mr. Meyer was&#13;
sent to Italy as American ambassador,&#13;
and In 1905 was transferred to Russia.&#13;
In January, 1907, President&#13;
Roosevelt called him home to enter&#13;
his cabinet as postmaster general.&#13;
This portfolio he has relinquished for&#13;
that of the navy.&#13;
Ballinger Secretary of Interior.&#13;
After about one year's service as&#13;
commissioner of the general land office,&#13;
Richard A. Ballinger of Seattle,&#13;
Wash., has entered the cabinet as&#13;
secretary of the interior. He Is a&#13;
native of Iowa, having been born in&#13;
Boonesboro in 1858. After attending&#13;
the University of Kansas and Washburn&#13;
college at Topeka, he went to&#13;
Williams college, graduating in 1884&#13;
and afterward studying law and removing&#13;
to Washington. He was&#13;
United States court commissioner in&#13;
1890-92 and later was judge of the&#13;
supreme court in Jefferson county,&#13;
Wash.&#13;
Attorney General Wickersham.&#13;
George W. Wickersham, who becomes&#13;
President Taft's attorney general,&#13;
has had the reputation of lining&#13;
ono of the ablest lawyers in New&#13;
York city. Born in Pittsburg in 1858,&#13;
he studied civil engineering in Lehigh&#13;
university and in 188T) graduated from&#13;
the law school of the University ol&#13;
Pennsylvania. For two years he practiced&#13;
law in Philadelphia. In 1884 he&#13;
became associated with the law firm&#13;
of Strong &amp; Cadwalladare, to which&#13;
Henry- W. Taft, brother of the president,&#13;
belongs.&#13;
ST*!KEX€&gt;fi«to(fc* •i'*!H&#13;
b i e m itf! Bsy'pWtHel'rtif * * * 1f«v«*«&#13;
«*. attugftli Again. i: &gt; &lt; $&#13;
llae bj*tenitmt ot President -Tintsdale,&#13;
of the Delaware. Lackawanna- &amp;&#13;
Western rail road, tn^irhich be flakes&#13;
the charge over hlB own sigtfranra.&#13;
that the bituminpusoperators control&#13;
the United Mine Wdrkers and are try*&#13;
ipg to Involve .the anthracite operator*&#13;
in a costly labor-wa£, was laughed j £&#13;
when read at the national headquarters&#13;
of the Ufltte* Men* -WoJket* * »&#13;
Indianapolis. President ? Lew la. is n o t&#13;
i t hia-.desk. bAing at &amp;1» -MtneWn&#13;
Bridgeport, O., but oHftr v^Bcere oC&#13;
the union expressed surprise that*&#13;
llMiesdale would start proceedings f a r&#13;
a renewal o f ais^cablf ajrOnlementB.&#13;
with a fluar^l. W^sijSent\LeJ|lB will&#13;
go from Bridgeport to New York city^&#13;
where he will remain moBt of Jhe&#13;
month making arraugements for peacej&#13;
or war iu the forthcoming anthracite,&#13;
crisis.&#13;
There, are. Judication*.. th*t for thefirst&#13;
time in six years complete secret&#13;
arrangements are being made for a&#13;
prolonged anthraci4e strike. The lead^&#13;
ers of the organization are^ ou tJuJuoj&#13;
with expectancy and are more'secretive&#13;
than they have be^en since the&#13;
days before Mitchell balled out the&#13;
anthracite miners six years ago.&#13;
Still a Democrat.&#13;
A banquet iu honor o f . J a c o b M.&#13;
Dickinson, new secretary of war, to begiven&#13;
hy the Iroquois: club of Chicago, •&#13;
a Democratic organization, ex-Mayor'&#13;
Dunne refuses to attend. He say*&#13;
Dickinson has gone over to the Republican&#13;
party. Dlckinsop denies&#13;
Dunne's allegation.&#13;
"I have always been a Democratic*&#13;
and am still one," he says, "although I&#13;
did not vote for Bryan/'&#13;
Mr. Dickinson expressed his belief&#13;
in a formidable navy. He said: "I believe&#13;
that evidence of the ability of a&#13;
people to take care of themselves in&#13;
case of war is one of the strongest&#13;
factors in maintaining peace."&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
substitowfcftte&#13;
""Otis' * are "used&#13;
for soap.&#13;
How the 8now Comes Down.&#13;
In a western home, Lynne, fonr&#13;
years old, was kneeling on the carpet&#13;
before a low window, intently&#13;
watching the falling snow as it was&#13;
rapidly covering t h e prairie. He&#13;
turned aad said reverently: "Aunt&#13;
Lizzie, God sends it down, and he&#13;
spreads it so smooth."—Delineator.&#13;
Rep. Townsend's bill, providing one&#13;
day in the v/eek when members may&#13;
bring up bills without being subject to&#13;
suppression by the speaker, was&#13;
passed, 1(58 to 162. The insurgents,&#13;
who wanted more than that, told the&#13;
Michigan man he had "cold feet," but&#13;
ne was happy.&#13;
The local option movement is&#13;
spreading broadcast over Indiana.&#13;
Four counties have fixed dates for&#13;
option elections and during this week&#13;
elections will be ordered for the pres-&#13;
(nt month in perhaps a dozen other&#13;
counties. Elections will bp held in six&#13;
counties this week.&#13;
Because she failed to carry out the&#13;
literal terms of the 99-year lease under&#13;
which she held a piece of downtown&#13;
New York properly belonging to Tiinity&#13;
church, the lease demanding a&#13;
lump cash payment and one peppercorn&#13;
per year, Miss Anna Nevison,&#13;
woman capitalist, found herself subject&#13;
to penalty by the court when she&#13;
tried to transfer the lease. She paid&#13;
$1,075 penalty for the missing peppercorn.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — f . ' n t t l o — M n r k e t ljic to Ifia&#13;
l o w e r tJian l a s t w e e k . E x t r a d r y f e d&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , $:, r,0fa) 6; s t e e r s arvd&#13;
h e i f e r s , 1.000 to 1,200, J5i?i!5 25; s t e e r *&#13;
anil lioifern. f.oo to 1.000, M r»0(fi)r&gt;;&#13;
s t e e r s mid h e i f e r s t h a t . a r e f a t , - 5 0 0 t o&#13;
700, $4 25ft;4 80; eholeo f a t r o w s , $5 25&#13;
frM U-r&gt;; Rood I n t r o w f . $1 75; e'ommon '&#13;
n i w s , $.TfTa 2r&gt;, r u n n e r s , $1 50&lt;ffi3;.:&#13;
r l i o i r e h e n v y IniTts. 14 2'&gt;f&lt;il 50; f a i r&#13;
t o K.iorl b o l o g n a s . !.nn&lt;-\ $" TfiiiiM; liprht&#13;
b u l l s . %2'iiT, ^.",; m i l k e r s , larK«, y o u n K ,&#13;
inerlhim npre, fl0ffi\*0; c u m m o n m i l k e r s ,&#13;
V r n l r .'lives- -'Mr. r k e t s t e a i l y ; lttfit&#13;
w o r k ' s pi I r e s ; best, ?S r&gt;f&gt;S&lt; S .Tfi; o t h e r s ,&#13;
$1^1 7; niilr.h c o w s ;inil s p r i n g e r s ' s t e a d y&#13;
for g o o d ; c o m m o n v e r y tiu]I.&#13;
S'hrrp n n d la nibs - - M a r k e t . s t e a d y&#13;
w i t h "VWn'nerilny 2Ti:r h i g h e r flinii T;iFt&#13;
v,-&lt;ok; b e s t Inmhs-, $7 fift; f n l r to Rood&#13;
b u n h s , Sfi 50^(.7 J.J; l i p h t to rnmujnrv •&#13;
, l a m b s , $5' SOtfrfi; yen rj hiR.«, $."&gt; fiO/Ufi:&#13;
j f a i r t o Rood :slif«p. p4frf.^: e.ulJs ;irta&#13;
r o n i m n n , 2 uO^i^- T.O. , : - ..&#13;
Tlrif*«—Market s t e a d y w i t h "vVed/ie^-&#13;
d a y . Uir to l.rM&gt; h i t r h r r t h a n In'fit w o r k .&#13;
R n n « e of pr,l*eF: \J%Ut to prood b i r t c h -&#13;
r r s , $6 .Vifi'S fi5; p i g ? , ?0; l i g h t yorkcr.«,&#13;
?fi 2515?« nS; s t a g s , ' 1 - 3 off.&#13;
K a s t nnffRlo. - f ' n t t l e — M a r k e t K t r a d x ; - .&#13;
l u s t s t e e r s . tfi.2Stfffi.fiF.: b e s t 1 200 t o '&#13;
1,300-lb s h i p p i n g « t e e n . 45.75 (»15.25;.&#13;
b e s t 1.000 to l . t n o - l h do, Jn.QO^f.. b e s t&#13;
fat cow*. t4(8&gt;4.*v&gt;: fnlr t o gTTnrt. $3.7.1 A ' "&#13;
4; t r i m m e r s , $2.40^2.7.1; be.vt f a t -heife&#13;
r s , $F».2Fi £?5.7!i: b u t c h e r heifern. 8 0 0 . t o&#13;
000 l b s , ti.ZnfJZ, H g h * f a t - h e ! f e r B , $3.5(1&#13;
tfjU: hPst null". $4.f&gt;0ff?&gt;&amp;. ,• * : . .. i .&#13;
H o g n — M a r k e t xlotv; h e a v y . $fi.7fl®&#13;
«.80; y o r k e r s . $6.ftO€f*5.7A; pips,-$0.30.&#13;
S h e * r &gt; — M a r k e t nc-Hve; b e s t l a m b s , ;&#13;
$7.9Sta&gt;S; f a i r t o jcood. 17.400)7.90: eullR,&#13;
$6 7 6 0 7 . 8 0 ; yearltnSTB. »«.S0«^.2r»;&#13;
w e t h e r s . $5,7r.0«.2«. e w e a . $r».25 fo)G.75;.&#13;
m i l *h««p. $* :,06M.50.&#13;
Calvefl. $5@11.50.&#13;
Daiiy Thought&#13;
To refuse to yield to others when&#13;
reason or a special caune require It&#13;
Is a mark of pride and stiffness.—&#13;
Thomas a Kempis.&#13;
Blackbird with Two Heads.&#13;
At Linwood, near Paisley, Scotland,&#13;
a hlackbird, which is tho unique professor&#13;
of two almost distinctly formed&#13;
heads, has heen seen. It has two bills,&#13;
and has been seen to pick and make&#13;
use of .hothj but whether it can pass&#13;
food through -bothv canaol yet be definitely&#13;
stated.&#13;
* World's Largest Incubator^&#13;
T h e largest Incubator-in 4fc« world&#13;
J s I V S t &amp; n f o M V U t e t W - Australia.&#13;
f i t accommodates ll«ifN ducks' eggs&#13;
or 14.OH tens'&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h p a t — C a s h No. ?. $1 2R;&#13;
M a y o p e n e d w i t h o u t rtisriKP a t $1 23, •&#13;
Kalnerl l - 4 r , d r o p p e d t o $1 22 1-i a n d&#13;
a d v a n c e d t o $1 23; J u l y o p e n e d a t&#13;
$1 08 1-4. a r l v a n r e d to $1 OS 1-2. d e -&#13;
c l i n e d l e iind a d v a n c e d t o SI OS 1-2;&#13;
• S e p t e m b e r o p e n e d a t $1 02. trained l - 4 r ,&#13;
l o s t 1c n n d a d v a n c e d to 1 02; No. 3 red,&#13;
$1 22; No 1 w h i t e , f t 2"&gt;.&#13;
f n r n — f a s h No. 2. RS l - 2 c ; No. 3 y e l -&#13;
Io,v, ? re.ru a t fift ] - 2 e .&#13;
O a t s — f ' a « h No. 3 w h H e . 2 c a r s a t&#13;
T.fic, c l o s i n g fit Ifi 3- tc; May, .^7 l - 2 c .&#13;
H y e - - C a s b No. 2. Srj 1-2c.&#13;
T-SeanF--(',tHh. $2 4 0; Mny. *,?. 1.1.&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d - P r i m e s p o t . 1 V ."i ' b a •„;&gt;- a t *&#13;
f.r&gt; IS, M a r c h . 200 U.tR;* ar $.V-|';: 1-2. L'OO&#13;
•f $1 41; i':i:nt'lr uls.lk" ii*. ' r . : ^ n t&#13;
S.", 21, 40 a l . .'. lil. fin nt $.".. I ' :i! M 7fi.&#13;
:,»"i a t '» l.~&gt;; v a m p l e n l f i k c , 11! b a r s a t&#13;
?N. 7 nt $7 2.1.&#13;
T l n i i i t h y 5=eed — P r t m e s p o t , TS hnK* "&#13;
i * 1 r " • i * " \&#13;
M a r l e y ' — F i r m &amp;t $1.3.&gt;|CV.40 p e r r w . t ,,,&#13;
for fcood JTimplns.&#13;
Fertd-H~Tn -IflO-Wi. «6cVn, jobblnsr lots-: -&#13;
T-trun. I2K; f ^ W * c - m ^ d l i n f r s . »20; fin ft-,,*&#13;
mirftTl'nAj •faTT crack**! f o r m 12«; 4&#13;
coirrne'crtrnYrfeAl,'*?; I w r n a n d Bat rbnt,&#13;
%2'&gt; p e r t o n . '• '' \ '&#13;
F l o u f — B p s t Ml^hlg-nn pstfttit, $« t«»;&#13;
. o r d l n a r v p a t e n t , $1 ~'&gt;: s t r a i g h t , $li fi."»;&#13;
I e l ^ a r , 6 »0 p e r bbl. i n W0o4, J o b H i n s&#13;
lots.&#13;
/&#13;
&amp;•&amp;* J—&#13;
«'».^&#13;
H«w:x''\ikj&amp;F&amp;mr''~' 'tMWGffmttwmm'iwm--. -•*« v &gt;«&gt;&#13;
.*JL,H&gt;. . . . | » M l ¥ &lt; .!-•..»-.&lt;•. -•WII ';&gt;-jm*&lt;i*/—y\** .«'.-•i%'•itwmiii -.•• ;.'••. . •.T'.-^-J-'- - ' -4*** *•*•••"•*»« r - ^ ~ &gt; rrT=urtli^-e'liJtl'i!5l»l&gt;«t»|Mrai-'''.:;?-&#13;
s&#13;
[VANISHING&#13;
FLEETSf&#13;
VyJ#»fc to &lt;Jo wi»t. ww $lght, and have&#13;
given the best that was in you .¾ the&#13;
4t»&amp; \X°*.wMK4o.ao,4cw no*^' ,,.&#13;
Ija the glare of the-arc Ught* be&#13;
tgpk yut U«t louk $t his comrades in&#13;
4r;»B, andstjben, as tf.pnce more at sea,&#13;
loudly ordered: "BoaI'd ship, all!"&#13;
He uncovered and stood aside In an&#13;
attitude o( the greatest respect while&#13;
Norma passed and entered the flagship&#13;
bearing her name. With,steady&#13;
precision the other officers saluted*&#13;
took possession of their radiuplanea,&#13;
ami as the. doors clanged shut behind&#13;
them a mighty cheer burst from those&#13;
outside. Before it had subsided the&#13;
dynamos in the strange collection&#13;
were humming and droning with unleashed&#13;
energy, and the unshuUered&#13;
ports stared out into the gloom like&#13;
eyes of Are suddenly opened from&#13;
sleep.&#13;
From the Norma there shot up into&#13;
the sky swiftly alternating streaks of,&#13;
red, white and blue, the night signal&#13;
asking if all was. ready. From the&#13;
other monsters came flashing answers&#13;
of acquiescence. There was an instant's&#13;
pause. The flagship gave a&#13;
slight upward shock and lifted slowly&#13;
into the air. Immediately behind In&#13;
stately upward sweep followed another&#13;
radioplane, and In quick succession,&#13;
"Vanishing Fleets," a story of "what like gigantic birds of the night, they&#13;
iffiSn with %?%S?&amp;£ a°&amp;%£a"£*n took night In a great swinging circle&#13;
•da* ye***** all passed your Hve» la«twllowed'oot aeroei the waters, • w a ^ f e f a a m f r Metal *agaIniT^meta! laid&#13;
drilled &amp; ugp'^hg answering the call.&#13;
The hour wargjtity for tne per^pt use&#13;
of flag signals; sip from- one' warship&#13;
B y&#13;
ROY NORTON&#13;
ILLUSTRATED BY A. W £ U __ 0 mi 1 rif&#13;
SY NO PS 18*.&#13;
ening the other v e s s e l ^briljl pi- Quick ejsjjjgsign told that hits wtre Replugs,&#13;
the staccato blafe;j*&amp;mjlee, and Jug nladeT anlfcwirough the ports the&#13;
the sound - of running • i $ t told the i Tadluplanes. jMttpk suffer^ could pm&#13;
btor^-of-e*ait#tdVut lad' that well-|:tBeni4xock46iktflsively #hen ftricck.&#13;
.The^Ir seeanadi'whlui^'Wn death&#13;
jffhlch* was eiampring jj§z&amp;duil*slon to&#13;
its prey. Shot *6d sheff swept through&#13;
to another flashed the, searchlighti«©ace; but feig&amp;0t and higher soared&#13;
warnings, and wireless operators i ^ t ^ jadto&amp;meip, while tbeotdMrar dog&#13;
' "' studied the foquationUy: the fleet be&#13;
low. '"'&#13;
"My God! Seventeen is Tilt* Seventeen&#13;
is hit!" screamed the lookout,&#13;
RATHER FATTKAN 8ERVC&#13;
theic &lt;£blns ticked Jrfcnttc me#aag«s&#13;
to outlying members of tbft. fleet to&#13;
close in for action. Admirals and cap*&#13;
itains, who had fought successfully iu&#13;
other wars attd" counted their .sejjyicetond tjb^ admiral audi Nortmt'•eta red&#13;
as valuable adjuncts in any engage&#13;
ment, stood upon the b/tdges 6r th&lt;&#13;
flanks o| the great turrets and Stared&#13;
spellbound a t . this tiyparltjpn jyhjcq&#13;
sinister and menacing; 'JoweHfey over&#13;
them us .|jt •waiting opportuntjfcjOT biding&#13;
its time to strike. w&gt;. &gt; : ,l^juu&gt;e*&#13;
A sudden evolution brought 'flue^-of 4y$th1 a&#13;
those terrible adversaries to ^fijf ute?&#13;
edge of tbo aerial formaUoj^J^and&#13;
through their glasses they saw uirown ^^&#13;
out to the wlnNf* of the mondtrg} whipy ^nitant cheering. The&#13;
near war. Guy Hillier, secretary of the&#13;
British embassy, and Miss Norma Roberts,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
introduced as lovers. Japan declares war&#13;
and take* the Philippines. Guy Hillier&#13;
starts for England. Norma Roberta&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. All porta&#13;
are closed, fykyo learns .of missing Japanese&#13;
fleet and whole world becomes convinced&#13;
that United States has powerful&#13;
war agency; England decides to send&#13;
a lteet to American waters as a Canadian&#13;
protection against what the British suppose&#13;
Is a terrible submarine flotilla. Hillier&#13;
is sent with a message. Fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears. The kaiser Is missing.&#13;
King Edward of England is confronted&#13;
by Admiral BevinB of the United&#13;
States. The Dreadnaught. biggest of England's&#13;
warships, la discovered at an impassable&#13;
point in the Thames. The story&#13;
now goes back to a time many months&#13;
before the war breaks out, and Inventor&#13;
Roberts visits the president and cabinet,&#13;
tslllng of and exhibiting a metal production.&#13;
This overcomes friction when electrified&#13;
and is to be applied to vessels to&#13;
Increase speed to over 50 miles an hour.&#13;
A. city for the manufacture of the mysterious&#13;
discovery is built on the coast of&#13;
Florida, Dr. Roberts' first attempt to elec-&#13;
"trlfy plates proves a failure. In a second&#13;
effort Norma is knocked unconscious, but&#13;
the mystery of tnie levitation Is solved,&#13;
making the most important discovery of&#13;
centuries. Roberts evolves a great flying&#13;
machine, rendering warships useless.&#13;
The cabinet is taken for a visit and plans&#13;
for a rudloplane war against Japanese&#13;
are started. The first radioplane is&#13;
christened "Norma," In honor of the Inventor's&#13;
daughter. The start for the&#13;
scene of conflict with a large fleet of&#13;
monster airships la made with Norma in&#13;
command.&#13;
until they reached a common altitude.&#13;
The cheer below had died away, and&#13;
all was still. *&#13;
Then, as if answering the call of 8&#13;
baton swung by a god, the palpitant&#13;
air was riven by a mighty chorus from&#13;
beneath. Mounting upward there penetrated&#13;
to them, quivering with terrific&#13;
fervor, the cry of invincibility voiced&#13;
in the majestic wordB of that deathless&#13;
song of battle:&#13;
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the&#13;
coming of the I^ord;&#13;
He is trampling ou^ the vintage where&#13;
his grapes of wrath are stofcd:&#13;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of&#13;
his terrible swift sword;&#13;
His truth 1¾ marching on.&#13;
Out to the west, over sleeping cities&#13;
and homes, across mountain and plain,&#13;
chasing the long set sun, they went&#13;
to meet the fleet of an enemy which&#13;
was steadily sailing to its doom. The&#13;
sword of a nation's vengeance was&#13;
cleaving the night skies in its deliverance&#13;
of an overwhelming blow.&#13;
Ju long* .weird, dizify oJrcJaj^ like a&#13;
wounded man striving to recover his&#13;
bilane*, a -radlopjane wan -dropping&#13;
had come upon thenJ4in the ^Ight.^ alowly down toward the waters, in&#13;
There it was, a iillent'flefet of tip air.&#13;
ping and writhing, thej flag of the nation&#13;
they had coxae &lt;to cqoftyjfr; the&#13;
oldest banner in the world*. gad the&#13;
one they had been taught1-through&#13;
months of consideration to * deep-fee.&#13;
Stars on a field of blue, fit emblem for&#13;
warriors of the clouds! And.then ere&#13;
the first flag had straightened out its&#13;
heavy folds, the colors fluttered'from&#13;
each birdlike craft, a challenge to battle&#13;
in which the odds were against&#13;
them. • -&#13;
Aloft inthat fleet of the,, air, where&#13;
all was quiet, there was ao sudden call&#13;
of excitement. For hours, they had&#13;
watched an* waited for the appearance&#13;
of the enemy, and when he was&#13;
sighted far below In the murk of the&#13;
dawn each man took his post wlthoutwords;&#13;
but the martial spirit which&#13;
sends men to battle burned clear and&#13;
effectually fighting to -regain its balance.&#13;
The four inch shells had, done&#13;
ho damage; but the far ot»tIy*ng&#13;
er had made an. accidental hit&#13;
a heavy gun. Zigzagging here&#13;
atfd there in erratic swoops the radioplane&#13;
continued to plunge. From the&#13;
waters, below came the sounds of exenemy&#13;
were gain&#13;
CHAPTER XVII.—Continued.&#13;
And what a difference there was&#13;
between this fleet and those to which&#13;
fhe men aboard were accustomed! On&#13;
those battleships of the seas were&#13;
magnificent forces of men trained to&#13;
light, which were numbered by thousands;&#13;
but here each crew consisted&#13;
of a bare half-dozen. In the hulls of&#13;
those vessels of the sea strove a&#13;
small army, watching over and&#13;
driving huge engines, and supplying&#13;
them with steam; here were only one&#13;
man and an assistant standing before&#13;
levers,- switches and buttons,&#13;
which did their work instantaneously&#13;
and with no noise. In those destroyers&#13;
of the waters throbbed mighty&#13;
engines considered the modern triumph&#13;
of speed; here was a craft that&#13;
by a finger's pressure could almost&#13;
run abreast the sun. Those ships&#13;
bristled with mighty guns; here were&#13;
no frowning muzzles or unwieldy turrets.&#13;
Science was bringing an end to&#13;
brute force, and the last battle against&#13;
barbarism was at hand.&#13;
For the first time since its birth&#13;
the great plant was silent and idle&#13;
and the men who had created it and&#13;
by its means built this new fleet of the&#13;
air were at rest. They had done all&#13;
they could, and now gathered silently&#13;
round the radioplanes, which stood in&#13;
orderly array with portlike doors&#13;
yawning wide to receive their crews.&#13;
"Fighting" Bevina stood by his flagcraft,&#13;
the Norma, and looked at the&#13;
force under his command. Captains&#13;
who had handled hundreds ef men&#13;
and driven their great floating crafts&#13;
of steel, and engineers' who had&#13;
learned new calling* waited attentively&#13;
for his last Instructions.&#13;
The battle-scarred veteran addressed&#13;
thera In a voice that needed&#13;
no high pitch to be audible to all&#13;
his hearers. "Gentlemen," he said, "I&#13;
have nothing more to say to you. You&#13;
are going out to fight what will probably&#13;
be the last great battle in history.&#13;
You are active participants in&#13;
the final chapter of international war.&#13;
The time is approaching when our profession&#13;
win be useless, and I for one&#13;
shall gladly turn to ways of peace."&#13;
Norma, who had left the bedside of&#13;
the sleeping inventor, joined the officers,&#13;
and Bevlns stopped and saluted&#13;
her.&#13;
"With us," he continued, "is a girl&#13;
who has laid all her talents on the&#13;
altar of country, and is now prepared&#13;
to jeopardize her life for victory. We&#13;
can do no less. It may be that some&#13;
of us will not return—the hazards&#13;
of war can never be foreseen. You&#13;
B*V« been put 1n a strange position.&#13;
tatf are aven robbed of the tailor's&#13;
fight to Ma* A laat meaaag* to your&#13;
too, baa bee* tor the&#13;
To my peivonAl kaowl*&#13;
. » -&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.&#13;
The Battle.&#13;
It was in the long gray dawn of the&#13;
summer morning, and the wide reaching&#13;
ocean, slate colored in the early&#13;
light, seemed asleep in its quietude&#13;
save where it was disturbed by movin&#13;
fancied security, knowing that not&#13;
on Pacific waters were there enemies&#13;
capable of staying its progress, and&#13;
insolently careiess In superb strength,&#13;
went the Japanese fleet. The huge&#13;
flagship, the Ito, forced her way in&#13;
advance, the apex of a great and formidable&#13;
trlange, whose sides were&#13;
formed by other battle ships of scarcely&#13;
lesB tonnage, graceful cruisers, and&#13;
swift-moving destroyers, while bringing&#13;
up the far rear were the colliers&#13;
in whose hulls were carried fuel for&#13;
the great armada.&#13;
Here was the Kashima, which could&#13;
drive her 17,000 tons of steel through&#13;
the v ater at 19 knots speed; the Katori,&#13;
but little smaller and almost as&#13;
fast; the Asahi, the Mikasa, the Asama,&#13;
the Tokiwa, and others which were&#13;
dear to the heart and pride of Nippon&#13;
— a gallant navy, carefully planned,&#13;
well constructed, and of invincible&#13;
size and strength. No squadron that&#13;
breasted the waves might cause it to&#13;
hesitate.&#13;
In the stillness of the morning there&#13;
came a sudden, sharp exclamation&#13;
from the man on the lookout, an excited&#13;
call to the bridge, and the quick&#13;
step of an officer in answer to the summons.&#13;
Almost instantly he was followed&#13;
by another, who brought with&#13;
him a pair of powerful binoculars,&#13;
through which he gazed in the direction&#13;
indicated by the sailor. There in&#13;
the immeasurable void of the upper&#13;
air, so high above that it floated in&#13;
the broader light, soared a covey of&#13;
gigantic objects unpictured in the lore&#13;
of flight. Onward it came until almost&#13;
above, when it stopped and majestically&#13;
hovered over them, and&#13;
ing prows. Steaming across Its bosom&#13;
seemed to be watching and waiting&#13;
for some rav of broader light. The&#13;
pallid blue of those far-floating bodies&#13;
rendered them almost indistinguishable,&#13;
save when now and then they&#13;
swung broadside to in deploying, resumed&#13;
their speed, and swept round in&#13;
circles.&#13;
Puzzled and amazed, the officer&#13;
handed the glasses to his companion&#13;
and watched his face attentively, as if&#13;
hoping to read from its expression&#13;
some solution of this mysterious visitation&#13;
from the immense unclouded&#13;
^&gt;ace above. The glasses were lowered,&#13;
and the two men with the superstition&#13;
of ages behind them turned to&#13;
each other with pallid faces, fearing&#13;
the supernatural or the unknown.&#13;
Again they looked, and saw that the&#13;
flying specks traveled with incredible&#13;
rapidity, and were apparently observing&#13;
them, after which, aa they&#13;
watched, they saw them cotm to an&#13;
abrupt stop. It was enough. Whatever&#13;
they were* tfeelr presence would&#13;
be made k O n . '&#13;
T»e om*m qpilin to tba* alarms.&#13;
aad la an iMtMa^hmaderont voitaft&#13;
•ulutijikU!l.i1ii^l^llie^»llMM|kHilPfltH»lill«liti&gt;i^i^^til wmmmmmm^&#13;
tng heart. They had found what they&#13;
believed to be a chance for hope and&#13;
to In vulnerable spot in the American^&#13;
.ar^or. Nerma started back to&#13;
her'leveraj but the admiral called&#13;
'excitedly:&#13;
^Look, look! Good boy. Nineteen!&#13;
Good bpy!"&#13;
Again she looked through the port,&#13;
and ^vas transfixed with the daring attempt'&#13;
0I1 another radioplane. Nineteen,&#13;
witfcita W* white letters biasing.&#13;
In the light, hid taken a swift downward&#13;
shoot.&#13;
"It^ Jenkins! Its Jenkins!" Norma&#13;
called in excitement, knowing that the&#13;
little scientist was maiming the hood&#13;
of that craft.&#13;
C ^ T * M . ¾ ¾ ^ Unique 14,*. tf * *&#13;
Duties of a Sentry.&#13;
Australians still, tell stories of t ] * '&#13;
C. L. V.'s, although the war is a far&#13;
memory. One, a member ef the Stoat&#13;
Exchange, was left one wet and miser*&#13;
able night to guarft a wagonload at&#13;
goods.&#13;
He shivered In the unsheltered place&#13;
for some hours pondering many things,&#13;
and theu a bright thought etruck htm&#13;
Juat a* the coloa#| -c*ni* wound on&#13;
his tour of inspection.&#13;
"Colonel," he asked, "how wach is&#13;
this wagon worth?"&#13;
"I don't know," waa the answer.&#13;
"Much or little, we can't afford to lose&#13;
it."&#13;
"Well, but colonel," persisted the&#13;
amateur soldier, "/ou might give me a&#13;
rough idea of the value."&#13;
"About £201)," said the Colonel&#13;
testily.&#13;
"Very well," waa the anawer. ; **I&#13;
will come down to the camp and give&#13;
you a check for the amount. Then I'll&#13;
turn in. I wouldn't catch my death of&#13;
cold for twice that much."&#13;
What the colonel said Is not recorded.—&#13;
Melbourne Times.&#13;
BABY HORRIBLY B U R N E D&#13;
By Boiling Grease—Skin All Came Off&#13;
One 8ide of Face and H e a d -&#13;
Thought Her Disfigured for Life.&#13;
Used. C ticura: No Scar Left.&#13;
"My baby was sitting beside the&#13;
fender and we were preparing the&#13;
breakfast when the frying-pan full of&#13;
boiling grease was upset and it went all&#13;
over one side of her face and head.&#13;
Some one wiped the scald with ft&#13;
Tb«n before she could say more, towel, pulling the entire skin off. W«&#13;
He Gazed In the Direction&#13;
by the Sailor.&#13;
Indicated&#13;
»(••1 * .-.¾&#13;
•»&lt;*&gt;!.' •» ' ' t&#13;
. 1 &gt;&#13;
at*.&#13;
high. The supreme test was at hand,&#13;
and the wait and preparation were at&#13;
an end. The issue was in the lap of&#13;
the gods.&#13;
The Norma had been the first to decry&#13;
the oncoming fleet, and Fighting&#13;
Bevins with his own hand had signaled&#13;
his followers to reduce speed.&#13;
Now he stood at the transparent ports,&#13;
heard the sudden booming alarm, witnessed&#13;
the excitement on the decks,&#13;
and smiled with grim joy. By his side&#13;
stood Norma, and not even he, trained&#13;
to strife and accustomed from early&#13;
manhood to scenes of carnage, was&#13;
more cool or determined. He looked&#13;
at her questtonlngly, wondering&#13;
whether or no he should read in her&#13;
eyes a sign of regret or weakness, and&#13;
turned from her with a glow of admiration.&#13;
"Who is going to handle her?" he&#13;
queried, glancing at the hood.&#13;
"I am," she replied, as quietly as if&#13;
answering a query of no moment.&#13;
He held out his hand and shook hers,&#13;
warmly.&#13;
From away in the outer distance,&#13;
where the angle was not too sharp to&#13;
prevent its elevation, came the sullen&#13;
report of a gun, and a shell flew past&#13;
at such close range that its screaming&#13;
came to them through the thickness&#13;
of their plate nnd the open upper&#13;
ports, sounding Its challenge and defiance&#13;
above the droning hum of the dynamos.&#13;
The girl glanced apprehensively&#13;
upward, but the admiral continued his&#13;
calm inspection of the Japanese fleet.&#13;
Again from a vessel closer at hand&#13;
came a series of sharp reports. The&#13;
radioplane felt a shivering impact, and&#13;
careened slightly in answer to its&#13;
force. The admiral waR hurled&#13;
against her metal aide, and one of the&#13;
engineers seized a rail to prevent being&#13;
thrown headlong against the machinery.&#13;
"They're trying four-inch shells on&#13;
ua! are they?" shouted Bevins. "Well,&#13;
we'll put an end to that right now!"&#13;
He sprang to the signal box, and&#13;
Norma, reading his intention, hurried&#13;
to her post in the hood. He ordered&#13;
the other craft to increase speed and&#13;
traverse circles till he. should notify&#13;
them which war vessels of the fleet be*.&#13;
neatb were to be their individual prey.&#13;
Now the n u l l ab*Bs were&#13;
lag Ue air arojad U**. Ta#.&#13;
^Jirieteen's object was made plain. The&#13;
gretft radioplane shot to a lower altitude&#13;
than that of its crippled fellow,&#13;
dove here and there like a bat, caught&#13;
a simultaneous speed, and rounding&#13;
apward in a deft swoop poised Itself&#13;
firmly beneath the lower nlate of Seventeen.&#13;
"For an Instant the two, locked&#13;
together and overweighted, slid sldwly&#13;
downward through the air, and then&#13;
Nineteen deemed to gather,itself, came&#13;
to a stop, hesitated for a moment, and&#13;
began a steady upward movement.&#13;
As if divining its purpose, two other&#13;
radioplanes swooped down toward the&#13;
stricken monster till their sides&#13;
touched, and then, like a group of warriors&#13;
carrying a wounded comrade&#13;
from the field, assisted the ascent into&#13;
the upper void. Focusing their fire on&#13;
the. group, t^he, J^panqae made • it a&#13;
target, and the scream of shot and&#13;
shell broke into a pandemonium until&#13;
the air around was churned as by a demon's&#13;
wrath.&#13;
Up—up they went till they were&#13;
mere specks against the dome of&#13;
the heavens, where they were beyond&#13;
range and in the profound silence of&#13;
solitude. The others of the fleet, led&#13;
by the Norma, hastened to soar toward&#13;
them; but before tbey could get&#13;
within speaking distance the wireless&#13;
brought to all radioplanes this message:&#13;
"Seventeen was struck by a ten-inch&#13;
shell directly below her dynamos. Tbe&#13;
jar caused a temporary break which&#13;
cut off the current for a short time.&#13;
This is nearly repaired. No damage&#13;
of consequence has been done, and&#13;
she will repert for duty within two&#13;
mluutes."&#13;
Bevins and Norma looked at each&#13;
otVer with a great relief. "Thank God&#13;
for that!" the admiral said, and it was&#13;
echoed by his subordinate.&#13;
They turned again to the port, and&#13;
as they did so they saw the specks&#13;
above disintegrate, and ia a few moments&#13;
Seventeen, repaired, and again&#13;
capable, was in line of battle. The&#13;
cheering below ceased; but from the&#13;
doomed battle ships and cruisers a&#13;
continuous hail of ineffectual siots&#13;
was fired, while the admiral of the&#13;
aerial fleet, his plans formed, was&#13;
calmly sending orders.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
took her to a doctor. He tended&#13;
a week and gave me some stuff to pot&#13;
on. But it all festered and I thought&#13;
the baby was disfigured for life. I&#13;
used about three boxes of Cuticura&#13;
Ointment and it was wonderful how&#13;
it healed. In about five weeks it was&#13;
better and there wasn't a mark to tell&#13;
where the scald had been. Her skin&#13;
is just like velvet. Mrs. Hare, 1,&#13;
Henry St., South Shields, Durham,&#13;
England, March 22, 1908."&#13;
Potter Drag A Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston.&#13;
MADE H I M SIT U P .&#13;
A Kissing Acquaintance.&#13;
As Rev. Edward Everett Hale,&#13;
chaplain of the United States senate,&#13;
was walking along a Boston street, in&#13;
company with a friend, he waa suddenly&#13;
accosted most familiarly and affectionately&#13;
by a woman who, without&#13;
further warning, proceeded to throw&#13;
her arms round his neck and kiss him&#13;
on both cheeks.&#13;
Then followed a brief conversation&#13;
-—gushing on the woman's part,&#13;
guarded on Dr. Hale's, who confined&#13;
himself to discreet inquiries as to the&#13;
wolfare of the woman's family; were&#13;
they--well?—and living in the same&#13;
place?—and so forth.&#13;
Finally the woman tore herself&#13;
Wifle—I'll make you sorry you evei&#13;
quarreled with me!&#13;
Hubby—What will you do? Go home&#13;
to your mother, I suppose?&#13;
Wine—No; I'll bring mother here!&#13;
Lost Articles Department. '&lt;&#13;
Bridget, who had administered**!•&#13;
culinary attain ot the Morse housefcoM&#13;
for many years, was sometimes torn&#13;
between her devotion to her mistress&#13;
aad loyalty to the small' son of the&#13;
bouse.&#13;
"Bridget," said Mrs. Morse, in" a&#13;
tone of wonder, after an inspection of&#13;
the storeroom, "where have those&#13;
splendid red apples gone that the maa&#13;
brought yesterday—those four big&#13;
ones?"&#13;
"Well, now, ma'am," said poor Bridget,&#13;
"I couldn't rightly say; but I'm&#13;
thinkin' if yen was to find where my&#13;
loaf o' hot gingerbread is, likely thlm&#13;
four red apples would be lyin* right on&#13;
top of it, an' I'm hopin' his little stummick&#13;
can stand the sthraln."—Youth's&#13;
Companion.&#13;
Hit First Visit.&#13;
The wide check: of his suit and hlJ&#13;
monocle proclaimed his nationality&#13;
from afar. HN first American ac&#13;
quaintance, met on the steamer, had&#13;
supplied him with an immense amoun?&#13;
of strange and wonderful information&#13;
about the United States.&#13;
"And since you are an Englishman,"&#13;
j It was explained, "every store will al&#13;
j once charge you from five to ten time.T&#13;
what they would ask an American."&#13;
"Eh! What?" said the Britisher&#13;
j aghast, and then with a !ook of grea!&#13;
i cunning: "But, my word! I shawn'*&#13;
j tell them, don't you know!"&#13;
. . .&#13;
A Last Retort.&#13;
"The young heiress I told you oi&#13;
: refused her last wooer with fear and&#13;
I trembling."&#13;
! "Why so?"&#13;
j "He threatened that if she would&#13;
away, and the venerable divine turned n o t h a v e h i m b e w o u , ( 1 d o something&#13;
to his companion&#13;
«1 should have been glad to Introduce&#13;
you; but I did not know tfce&#13;
lady's name." he said, with his gentle&#13;
smile. "To tell the truth," he&#13;
^dded, reflectively, "I didn't even&#13;
krow I had a kissing acquaintance&#13;
with her."—Sunday Magasine.&#13;
Discovered.&#13;
Puppy Dog (looking into foWflaL&#13;
fJobe)—Ha! ha! So you're tome of&#13;
thett-people w**t livee ia fteat&#13;
—Yato fteoort&#13;
desperate.'&#13;
"Well, did he?"&#13;
"He did. He went to work."-&#13;
more American.&#13;
-Baltl-&#13;
A New Standard.&#13;
*I knew they were putting on air*.&#13;
They let on that their silverware waa&#13;
all soHd and now the whole wor*d&#13;
knowt it ian't"&#13;
"How did H eome e«rt*M&#13;
"Burglar* broke Into tbeir home* tfc*&#13;
otlMr aight and dldat t t t a a tfctaa.'W&#13;
Datre*-&#13;
M&#13;
.4'&#13;
V J&#13;
*.'!&#13;
v.'l&#13;
;r&#13;
•M&amp;j.&#13;
• * * ficrksrg m*f&amp;k&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S dt C O . P K O P N I E T ^ S .&#13;
, » i&#13;
THUHSDAY, MAH. 11*1909.&#13;
i *•-..— - ^ . .&#13;
The inautfunratioiTbf the baaeball&#13;
seanon ib the next important&#13;
.coming event.&#13;
• ' '• * ^ V - ? " - : ,., ,&#13;
I t y o u need a pill t a k e DeWi'tts L i t&#13;
t i e E a r l y Risers. Insist ' o&amp; ','&lt; t h e m ;&#13;
g e n t l e , easy, p l e a s a n t U n t i e liver pills.&#13;
Bold b y a l l d e a l e r s .&#13;
Local Optwn fiotes.&#13;
W h e n you hear a man denouncing&#13;
the qx-preBident, ask him&#13;
what kind of skullclti^'ry RooHevelt&#13;
detected him in.&#13;
Near Death In Big Puad.&#13;
I t w a s a" tbrillifitf e x p e r i e n c e td Mrs.&#13;
I d a ^ o p e r to bice d e a t h . "ITdr y e a r s a&#13;
s e v e r e lunar t r o u b l e wave m e i n t e n s e&#13;
b u f f e r i n g , " she w r i t e s " " a n d several&#13;
t i m e s n e a r l y caused my d e a t h . All&#13;
r e m e d i e s a n d doctors said I w a s inc&#13;
u r a b l e . T h e n Dr. K i n g s S e w Disc&#13;
o v e r y b r o u g h t q u i c k relief a n d a&#13;
c u r e so p e r m a n e n t t h a t I h a v e n o t&#13;
be^u t r o u b l e d in t w e l v e y e a r s . ' M r s .&#13;
S o p e r lives in Wuj P o n d , P a . I t w o r k s&#13;
w o e d e t s in (Jonahs a n d colds, sore&#13;
l u n c s , iu'iu : i i !M e6, la t.'. ippe, a s t h m a&#13;
c r o u p , hcopnit.' i o a ^ t i uii&lt;J all bronchi&#13;
a l a f f e c t i o n s . 50c a n d 3^.00. /1'rial&#13;
fcottle free. G u a r a n t e e d by F . A.&#13;
B i z l e r .&#13;
- ——* -.&#13;
A atalewirle prohibition bill&#13;
wafrdafeftted id the Arkauaaa legislature&#13;
hjat week only because&#13;
the "wei" benatora abaeuted themselves&#13;
and broke a quorum. In"1&#13;
the hoube the bill pa»»ed by 53 to&#13;
27.&#13;
Laaj, w.eek the 'prosecuting attorney&#13;
b from three dry counties—&#13;
Covert, of Oakland; Warner, of&#13;
VanBnreu and Andrews, of Berrien,&#13;
and Pliny W. Marbh, repre-&#13;
Benting the Anti-Saloon League&#13;
appeared before a joint meeting&#13;
of thy senate and the house liquor&#13;
committees to urge an amendment&#13;
to the liquor laws prohibiting&#13;
druggists from selling liquor except&#13;
on a physicians prescription.&#13;
"Oh! Lord, don't let the birdies&#13;
get into Robbieb trap out there in&#13;
the garden. Oh! 1 know tbey&#13;
won't, though. Amen."&#13;
"Harry" said his mother, "what&#13;
makea you so certain?"&#13;
" 'CauBe I smashed the trap."&#13;
*' A r e you praying for local option&#13;
with the same faith as t l a r r y ?&#13;
Are you smashing the trap—the&#13;
-saloon'* s&#13;
A Oood Q u a n t i s a t i o n ,&#13;
TIM m/otwry of t b e M f * o mtofl t*&#13;
t D u s t r a t e d b y a s t o r y which t h e P h i l a -&#13;
d e l p h i a Record print*. J o h n , t h e colored&#13;
a p p l i c a n t for t h e p o r t i o n of butler&#13;
in a family living in o n e of t h e&#13;
P e r h a p b y o u ( y o u | fashionable s u b u r b s of P h i l a d e l p h i a ,&#13;
' s t r o v e to i m p r e s s h i s would b e em-&#13;
Bradentown, Fla.&#13;
Mar. 4, 1909.&#13;
Editor Dispatch,&#13;
The government has won the&#13;
first point in the Standard oil&#13;
case. Last time we won the&#13;
whole case, but what good did it&#13;
do?&#13;
It stared Ills Leg.&#13;
"All thought I'd lose my leg," writes&#13;
J . A. Swenson, Watertown, Wis. "Ten&#13;
years of Eczema that 15 doctors could&#13;
not cure, had at last laid me up, Then&#13;
Bucklens Arnica Salve cured it sound&#13;
and well.1 Inffiilahle for skin eruptions,&#13;
Eczma, Wait Ubeum, Bo Is, Fever&#13;
Soree* Bums, Scalds, Cuts and'&#13;
Piles. 25c at Sigleis Drug Store.&#13;
K u&#13;
Who says that higher education&#13;
does not amount to something—,&#13;
over 100 college graduates will'&#13;
play with/the big leagues this&#13;
season.&#13;
. The number of boys and young&#13;
men who die annually by the careless&#13;
handling of firearms is assonishing,&#13;
but it is nothing to the&#13;
number who die annually by the&#13;
use of liquor.&#13;
There is not a better Salve than De-&#13;
Witts Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve.&#13;
We hereby warn to nublic that we are&#13;
not responsible for any injurious&#13;
effects caused from worthless or poisonous&#13;
imitations of our DeWitts Carbolized&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve, the original.&#13;
It is stood for anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially&#13;
tfood for piles. Be e:ure you get De&#13;
Witts. Sold bx All Dealers.&#13;
I t is ex-president Roosevelt&#13;
now, b u t we firmly believe that if&#13;
he would accept the office and the&#13;
people were to vote on it tomorrow&#13;
that he'would receive the biggest&#13;
majority of any president.&#13;
There is a chance for him to be&#13;
president again.&#13;
God is silently, but surely, sifting&#13;
the American people into two&#13;
classes—home defenders and saloon&#13;
defenders; these two forces&#13;
now confront each other in j o u r&#13;
county.&#13;
Iu St. Johns, Clinton county,&#13;
when canvassing with local option&#13;
petitions, Mr. Eagle, one of our&#13;
canvassers, watched for three days&#13;
to find a certain man sober enough&#13;
that he might ask him to sign his&#13;
petition. He finally found&#13;
t h e m a n 9ober /Enough,&#13;
a n d when he /presented&#13;
his petition to him this/ poor man&#13;
almost snatched the piper and remarked,&#13;
"Sigh the petition? Yesand&#13;
not only will I sign i f b u t I&#13;
will vote against the saloons when&#13;
opportunity isgiven in April! If&#13;
the people of this city and county&#13;
had done this ten years ago and&#13;
put out the saloons, I would not&#13;
today be the common bum I am&#13;
on the Btreet."&#13;
"If it is a crime to.make counterfeit&#13;
dollars, it is ten thousand&#13;
times a worse crime to make a&#13;
counterfeit man."—Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
"The liquor traffic tends to produce&#13;
criminality in the population&#13;
at large, and law breaking among&#13;
the saloon keepers themselves."—&#13;
Theodore Roosevelt&#13;
"The liquor traffic is a most degrading&#13;
and ruinous of human&#13;
pursuits. By legalizing its traffic&#13;
we agree to share with the liquor&#13;
seller the responsibilities of his&#13;
business."—Wm. McKinley.&#13;
"A greater calamity has been&#13;
inflicted on mankind by intemperance&#13;
than by the three great&#13;
scourges of war, famine and pestilence&#13;
combined.'1—Wm. E. Gladstone.&#13;
Yankees) would like to know&#13;
how "we Southerners" are progressing.&#13;
Tne oranges are now&#13;
being picked in our grove, a demaud&#13;
for them at last. Many&#13;
bushels have fallen and wasted&#13;
weeks ago, especially during the&#13;
high windb that wept the South&#13;
recently. Beautiful roses are in&#13;
blossom, geraniums and in fact&#13;
all flowers and nearly ull shrubery&#13;
and vines, 'tho some of the&#13;
latter shed their leaves during&#13;
the winter mouths. A large bush&#13;
hibiscus iu a neighbors yard is&#13;
bright and beautiful with large&#13;
red flowers, which are bell shaped.&#13;
I have made an effort to learn&#13;
the names of different palms, b u t&#13;
they are so numerous that I have&#13;
given it up. However the date,&#13;
coconut, palmetto or cabbage, banana,&#13;
besides a large variety of&#13;
ornamental palms are iu sight&#13;
from the house. While there's&#13;
"Wtoy Is your certUtau* not made out&#13;
uo kutym-ber?" asked ttt old man.&#13;
"Th« fact is, fWbw," coolly replied&#13;
voutb, "there'are more barristers&#13;
** In Hungary, and so them IN&#13;
h kutya-ber to make dlplo-&#13;
KIK"—London AuawWU&#13;
ployer with h i s e n t i r e fitness for t h e&#13;
yluee."&#13;
"Oh, yes. s u b , " h e bald, " l ' s sholy well&#13;
educated," s u n . l ' s paaaed u civil service&#13;
e x a m i n a t i o n . "&#13;
" I n d e e d , " r e s p o n d e d t h e g e n t l e m a n ,&#13;
" t h a t Is very line, I ' m sure, b u t I&#13;
c a n ' t s a y t h a t t h a t will be of a n y part&#13;
i c u l a r value to m e In u butler."&#13;
"NoV" said t h e s u r p r i s e d applicant.&#13;
" I t shore is s t r a n g e h o w g e m m e n ' s&#13;
t a s t e s do differ. N o w , Mr. Williams.'"&#13;
uamiui-v his f o r m e r employer, " h e say,&#13;
'John, one tiling 1 deiiiun' is civil&#13;
service 1o uiali q u e s t s , ' a u ' he d o n e&#13;
g a v e mc a z u m i u u t l o n r i ' there, s u h ,&#13;
a n ' t h a t ' s t h e truf."&#13;
T h e n t h e g e n t l e m a n s a w it g r e a t&#13;
light. H e replied:&#13;
"Yes, you a r e q u i t e right, J o h n .&#13;
Civil service is n very i m p o r t a n t a n d&#13;
r a t h e r u n u s u a l v i r t u e , so If y o u h a v e&#13;
p a s s e d t h a t e x a m i n a t i o n I think we'll&#13;
consider you e n g a g e d . "&#13;
AU the awwi tar 9LM P«&#13;
I, L. AHDBEWS &amp; CO, PUBS.&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
A Mogul Hero.&#13;
H e r e is a Aittle v i g n e t t e of R a b a r ,&#13;
t h e first of t h e g r e a t moguls. At eleven&#13;
Jie succeeded t o h i s k i n g d o m of&#13;
F e r g h a n a . H i s f a t h e r w a s accidentally&#13;
killed, a n d " I , " s a y s t h e boy, "immed4ately&#13;
m o u n t e d in g r e a t h a s t e a n d ,&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
D C B I Q N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S 4 C&#13;
ATivmio uenrttrig a hketch mid deNcrlptlnn m»*&#13;
quickly uMiertntil our o|&gt;inUui frue whf-uier an&#13;
Jnvuritl-iu is i.n.hnljly puteiiUfMei. ruimiiuiilcattori&#13;
»ntricfiy«'&lt;»iifideiit»al. HANDBOOK t»i Patent*&#13;
BtJiit freu. Oldest Huency fur HiMiuniij* I'utonis.&#13;
Patents taken through liuiiu &amp; Cu. rttuelT*&#13;
tfjtcial notice, without ubai-KO, iu thw Scientific American AfcandaomelyHhwtrated weeHJy. J-anceat circulation&#13;
of any aelentlHc Journal, Tenua,93 A&#13;
year; four montha, fL Sola by an uewadwUwj. MUNN&amp;Co"l°'M*&gt;&gt;'NewYQr![&#13;
Branch Offloo. &amp;6 V tiU Washington, D. C.&#13;
t a k i n g such followers a s w e r e a t h a n d ,&#13;
no place like home, it has seemed ' set out to secure my throne." He suegood&#13;
this winter to wade in sand c**u&gt;a i u !,,,la&#13;
l&#13;
ln8 i{&gt; n,nH'ly !°ff " hy.&#13;
r , . . - , ,- t r u s t i n g a t r a i t o r w h o w a s " t h e best&#13;
instead of snow, even if you havn t&#13;
had much of the latter.&#13;
A trip to St, Petersburg recently&#13;
and from there by boat to Pasa-&#13;
Grille, a water trip of about 5&#13;
or six miles, was delightful. St.&#13;
Petersburg is several miles from&#13;
here by steamer which leaves at&#13;
5:25 a. m., necessitates some hustling&#13;
iu early hours. We breakp&#13;
l a y e r a t leapfrog h e h a d ever s e e n "&#13;
a n d actually lost it by g r a s p i n g a t t h e&#13;
possession of S a m a r k a n d . T h e n c a m e&#13;
t w o y e a r s of w a n d e r i n g . Then he got&#13;
F e r g h a n a again a n d lost it a second&#13;
t i m e by t r y i n g to m a k e his Mongol&#13;
soldiers restore t h e i r loot to t h e peasa&#13;
n t r y . And all this before he w a s&#13;
s e v e n t e e n ! T h i r t y - t w o y e a r s later h e&#13;
died, t h e last scene being t h e most&#13;
s t r i k i n g of all. H i s d a r l i n g son&#13;
H u m a y u u w a s d e s p e r a t e l y 111. Only&#13;
some g r e a t sacrifice could save him,&#13;
f a s t e d i n t h e b o a t a n d r e a c h e d S t . j said t h e doctor H e entered t h e c h a m -&#13;
ber, walk«Hl round t h e bed t h r e e times,&#13;
saying, "On me be thy suffering." a n d&#13;
Thf Lnrid Glow of Doam&#13;
was HPen in the red f-iee, hands and&#13;
body of the little son of H. M. Adams,&#13;
ot Henrietta, Pa. Hi« awful plight&#13;
from eczema bad, for five years, de&#13;
fied all remedies and baffled the jocttors,&#13;
who said the poisoned blood had&#13;
affected his lun^s and nothing could&#13;
savfi him, "Bat" writer .-*ns mother&#13;
"seven bottles of Electric Bitters completely&#13;
cured him." For eruptions,&#13;
ecxema, Salt Rheum, sores and all&#13;
Blood Disorders and Rheumatism&#13;
filectric Bitters is Supreme. Only&#13;
60c, Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
There are 101 cities in the United&#13;
States with school savings&#13;
banks, and on J a n . 1, 1909, there&#13;
was dne depositors $759,646.&#13;
i Since 1885 these school savings&#13;
banks have been deposits aggregating&#13;
£4,419,454, which is a&#13;
pointer as to what the entire&#13;
American people might do in the&#13;
saving line should every postoffice&#13;
become a savings bank.&#13;
P. about 8 o'clock. Took trolly&#13;
ride of about seven miles to reach&#13;
boat, waited a short time, then&#13;
about 10:30 reached the island.&#13;
Two hotels, restaurant, bath house&#13;
and a number of houses comprise&#13;
the village. But after a short&#13;
walk, you come to the Gulf of&#13;
Mexico and its a sight worth seeing.&#13;
Standing on the white beach&#13;
picking up shells, moss and other&#13;
curiosities which the waves&#13;
brought to our feet, it seemed as&#13;
if life and vigor were in the salt&#13;
laden breeze. And the waves.&#13;
Green and blue, light and dark&#13;
shades. Capped with snowy foam&#13;
as they broke in feathery sprays,&#13;
were enough to fill au artists&#13;
heart with envy, (only we wern't&#13;
artists).&#13;
As we sat on t h e veranda of the&#13;
large bath house and watched the&#13;
water, and noted the beautiful&#13;
tint of the sky, the snowy mountains&#13;
of clouds, heaped up in what&#13;
we call "thunder heads", the&#13;
white line of sand edging the&#13;
dark weter far as sight could&#13;
reach, sea gulls hovering o'er, we&#13;
wished an artist wore there to&#13;
capture and preserve the scene.&#13;
In closing will say that gardens&#13;
are in their prime, everything&#13;
fine and strawberries are excellent.&#13;
The friends join me in&#13;
wishing the readers of the "Home&#13;
Paper" (without which we could&#13;
not do) a Happy and Joyful&#13;
Easter.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jennie M. Haze.&#13;
n f e w days&#13;
Spectator.&#13;
a f t e r w a r d died.—London&#13;
The Dogskin Wouldn't Go Round.&#13;
H u n g a r y s w a r m s with b a r r i s t e r s . It&#13;
la t h e greatest a m b i t i o n of t h e H u n g a -&#13;
r i a n p e a s a n t to m a k e o n e of h i s sons&#13;
a n advocate.&#13;
T h e son of a s m a l l f a r m e r In t h e&#13;
neighborhood of B u d a p e s t w a s sent by&#13;
his father to t h e l a w school of t h a t&#13;
town, but either from lack of p u r l s&#13;
or t h e necessary application he w a s&#13;
plucked in t h e qualifying e x a m i n a -&#13;
tion.&#13;
Not d a r i n g to r e t u r n t o t h o p a t e r n a l&#13;
abode e m p t y htinded a f t e r a l l t h e money&#13;
that hail been spent on his education,&#13;
he conceived a m i e\o&lt;ulotl t h e&#13;
plan &lt;&gt;f f o r g i n g a legal d i p l o m a . T h e&#13;
fat her was not, h o w e v e r , MO igie ;i &lt; ni&#13;
as not i n |M&gt; a w a r e t h a i such (linleinas&#13;
DETRi,&#13;
HeadqK •:'&#13;
TKC&#13;
t.&#13;
POSTAL &amp; M03F.Y, P r o p s&#13;
G AMERICAN PLAN 52.50 to $3.50&#13;
Prr t&gt;»v&#13;
EUROPEAN PLAN- $1.00 to $2.50&#13;
il'e a l w a y s w n l t e&#13;
1 tier idols'., in i&#13;
on&#13;
i'l I I'&#13;
na ' : l n:"it i&#13;
CStrictly modern nnd re»od: tchoterf&#13;
centrally located, -.,: th-' very&#13;
heart of the re tail shopri.':;? district of&#13;
Detroit, corner Gri;,woU; r.nd C-rand&#13;
River Aves., only &lt;&#13;
Woodward Ave. Jci&#13;
Fonvtei.'::'.h cars p; .- •&#13;
WI.-n yon virit ^ '&#13;
GiiswoM .;&#13;
; V'.•.&gt;•!•: i r o m&#13;
;o:i. T i u r d a n d&#13;
•', i'.it h ' u i s e .&#13;
•- *•' •• at t h e&#13;
#&#13;
DONIT PAV , V ' ! C E N&#13;
FOR THE SAME ROOF. »&#13;
Iron, tin and moat prepared roofings are really&#13;
never paid for, because they need painting or&#13;
eoating every year or two. If you add to the coat of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting during the number of years in service,&#13;
you will readily understand why&#13;
J-M ASBESTOS ROOFING-„ ^&#13;
which needs no coating—is the "cheapeat-per-year Roofing.&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanently durable and resists fire.&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or cold can affect it. Costs&#13;
less than slate, iron or shingles. Can be applied by anyone.&#13;
A s k f o r s a m D l e s a n d p r i c e s *&#13;
H. W. J O H N S - M A N V l b b E i Co.&#13;
7-: d r i !c r s o n . A v c , D e t r o i t , Y l l c h i A a n&#13;
He W a s Sensitive.&#13;
Blobbfl—Y ai're pretty much stuck on&#13;
Mtsfi Gobbs. a r e n ' t you, old m a n ?&#13;
H o b b s - - I w a s once, b u t after w h a t&#13;
• h e said to m e lagt nlfcht I ' m n o t ffolng&#13;
to p a y a n y more a t t e n t i o n to her.&#13;
Btobbs - O M I W h a t d i d a t e myl&#13;
H o b b i - " N o r - C t o Y « l a n d&#13;
Vicissitudes of a P i c t u r e .&#13;
T h e vicissitudes of Leonardo da&#13;
Vinci's picture, " L a s t Supper," re&#13;
minds a c o r r e s p o n d e n t of t h e s t r a n g e&#13;
experiences of H o l b e i n ' s "Field of t h e&#13;
Cloth of Gold," which m a y be seen&#13;
any d a y at H a m p t o n Court palace.&#13;
After t h e downfall of C h a r l e s 1., Crom&#13;
well in o r d e r t o raise f u n d s proposed&#13;
the sale of certain p i c t u r e s , t h i s a m o n g&#13;
the n u m b e r . T h e b a r g a i n w a s already&#13;
made, but when t h e would be purc&#13;
h a s e r c a m e t o Inspect H o l b e i n ' s m a s -&#13;
terpiece he discovered t h a t t h e head&#13;
of H e n r y V I I I . h a d been c u t from t h e&#13;
eanvaa. H e n a t u r a l l y w i t h d r e w his&#13;
offer, a n d t h « p i c t u r e WAR preserved&#13;
to t h e nation. On t h e restoration a&#13;
nobleman confessed to h a v i n g committed&#13;
t h e theft for love of a r t a n d his&#13;
country, a n d h e returned t h e m i s s i n g&#13;
h*ad, which n o w occupies Its original&#13;
position In t h s c a n v a s . T h e circle&#13;
m a d s by t h e knife Is still plainly vision&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
How One Man Saved&#13;
Three Gallons.&#13;
M l&#13;
•• r • -j i C- ; , - * * • - •&#13;
( ) n e nf our customers says: a;v; King t l P . S .&#13;
Paint on my house. The painter estimated ten gallons.&#13;
anct&#13;
hii! it looks now as if soven would finish the job."&#13;
r x o n o m y in gallons mean* economy in dollars&#13;
r r n K&#13;
B. P. S. PAINT is always economical&#13;
because of its ^.&#13;
s^reat spreading capacity. . -,'?&#13;
- • v - &gt; - H a v e it understood with the paintci doim» your work&#13;
that B. P . S. will h e \i*rc\. It covers 2 5 % more surface&#13;
than lead and oil.&#13;
Ask your dealer or send us a poflal for our B. P . S.&#13;
Paint Budget, a tree package of useful iniormation on&#13;
p,-'ir., r.nd painting&#13;
THE PATTERSQH-SARGENT COMPANY&#13;
' GWERAL OFnCtt'ssWrACTORY: CLEVELAND, OHIO&#13;
jCfcigo NewYori Balm Kansas City SUPaal CiBdniuti&#13;
i&#13;
, »«*m»r*-' ",'*- •*» • " ^ " m ; " ' " - •&#13;
A.. •ffitl&amp;ft W ' m&#13;
JM mittmmt ml&amp;iiH &gt;in.|i'»ii'i uMum i.inigw m^g*&#13;
• M &lt;&#13;
'v&#13;
T b i s i s j u s t t b » t i o U e o l y e a r w h e n W A N T E D — S u c u e i * Magaaine require*&#13;
y o u a r e t u o s t ^ t k * * ^ tu h a v e k i d n e y o r j the *ervio(B» of a u * u in Piuckuey to look ,&#13;
b l a d d e r t r o a l j l e , w i t h rbbumut'i&amp;n a n d 1 after e x p i r i n g BubkJrSptKHss aad to secure&#13;
r h e u t i m t n j pjiiiib Criused b y w « a k kid- j new business by m e a n s o f special methods&#13;
n e y s . Dwlays a i * d a n g e r o u s . G e l Dt&gt; j unusually etffectiv'e-, pObitiun permanent,&#13;
W i l i s K i d n e y a n d IllatluYr p i l l s , d a d | I , r e f e r o u e w U h «ptfri«nee, but would con&#13;
bo s u m y u u K « I w h a t y o u nsk f ( J I , ; « ^ r auy^ applicant with K uod&#13;
T h e y ar« t o e bebts p i l l s m a d e f o r back&#13;
ttchu, w«-ak back, u r i n a r y d i s o r d e r s ,&#13;
i n t i a i n a t i o u o f t b « b l a d d e r , e t c . T u « y&#13;
a r e a n t i s e p t i c a u d a c t p r o m p t l v . S o l d&#13;
a n d recoomiuHndud i*y all riealnis.&#13;
natural&#13;
qualification**; salary $1.51) per dny, with&#13;
cuuimitbioii option. Address, with references,&#13;
K. C. lAiu-uck. Ki'oui 102, Success&#13;
Magazine BUlg-, N e w York.&#13;
Council Proceedings&#13;
( j o T O&#13;
help&#13;
COL.&#13;
S h e H a d t o Mend T h e m .&#13;
B e n b a n i I indu'vi- in i m i i i i i - a i y&#13;
bent f o o t for w i n d . Mr*. IW-hliaut-1&#13;
h a v e n o t i c e d i h a t yotfr t o e a l w a y s &gt;flin" ^ b i d a r s h i p in any sdiou&#13;
• p e n r i g h t t h r o u g h y o u r stoi-klng.&#13;
tfcrw Y o r k Prw**.&#13;
DO Y O U W A N T T O&#13;
LKOE? It so we can help y o u . We&#13;
have already put hundreds through college&#13;
by menus o l our oluu. Write luday for&#13;
ftdl itifoi million re^ui iJin^ our otter of a&#13;
or college.&#13;
I Address, K o b e n J . Sherlock, 2t)-.'!l East&#13;
i 22nd Street, New York (.'ity.&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
W I T H OR W I T H O U T BOLTING A T T A C H M E N T .&#13;
The cut *how« machine with » This Machine will cut 10.000&#13;
20 Inch 3a* and Shingle Car- ^jm^M0tf^m. t o l 2 , 0 0 0 * h i n 8 l e * p e r d a y -&#13;
rlage, ready for cutting shingled - ^ , - - S I O S H ^ H B P C a r r l a 8 e 8 m t t d e f r o m »e l t ) c t e d&#13;
18 In. Igng, end 4 in. wide. "J^BBBP^J^T^ h a r d w o o d ' T r a c k '" *0 , i d&#13;
P r i c e $ 7 8 . 0 0 . ^ - 1 1 1 ¾ ^ ^ ^ H rolled steel. Fur cutting shin-&#13;
Wlth 38 inch Bolting Saw and B H ^ i S S * P l L ^ B ' e 8 r e , ' u i r M * t o 6 H P - F o ,&#13;
Boltino Carriage. ^ l l ^ ^ ^ *• bolting 6 to 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
P r i c e $ 2 0 . 0 0 e x t r a * l a &gt; ^ 550 lbs.&#13;
IT IS A MONEY-MAKER&#13;
Equipped with the bolting attachment it ia u complete Bhinjrle outfit in itself. Can be adjuajted&#13;
**• any desired U*&gt;er or thickness. For cutting the round log iuto shingle lengths, we&#13;
manufacture a high grade.low priced drag saw machine. Bend for circulars &amp; special net prices. GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
C O L U M B I A , S O U T H C A R O L I N A .&#13;
Kngine*, Bollor», Saw Ml 111 Machinery, Etc.&#13;
Does-your back ache? Ia your akin leathery and yellow.&#13;
Ia your uriue murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten persons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They d o n t always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before you feel i t&#13;
That is why i t ia so necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. I f&#13;
anything la wrong with your kidneys i t should be attended to at once.&#13;
Don't take strong, drastic drugs. They are dangerous.&#13;
You will be perfectly safe and sure of a, permanent cure by taking&#13;
D P THACHERS LIVER &amp; BLOOD S Y R U P&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing the cans© and&#13;
driving the inflammation and the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All Dealers Sell 50c, and ft.00 Bottles. TMACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.&#13;
THE DOBEL SHOE TREE j Easily a d j u s t e d . Light, ventilated, indestructible, sanitary,&#13;
All sizes. Made of metal. L e n g t h e n s life of shot's and k e e p s&#13;
thern in perfect shape, D o b e l Shoe T r e e s are also indispensible&#13;
t o a p e r s o n w h o s e feet perspire. Moist s h o e s are&#13;
sure t o curl o r wrinkle u p w h e n drying out, a n d are hard&#13;
and l u m p y w h e n put o n again. L e t them dry o n a pair of&#13;
Dobel Shoe T r e e s a n d notice t h e difference ; instead of&#13;
b e i n g shrivelled u p &gt;iard a n d lumyy&gt; t h e y arc s m o o t h&#13;
a n d i n p e r i e c t ahape.&#13;
Smd for circular and pri " list. ^C&#13;
For sale by dealers.&#13;
T v * CONTINENTAL NOVELTY |7?!TG, C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
I45C0 N i a g a r a S t . , B u f f a l o , N.&#13;
BWWH « M i e \ /&gt;&#13;
. T H E HIGH GRADE LEHR PIANO&#13;
The&#13;
I S USED A N D ENDORSED B Y&#13;
tfOfcMrvitarr of Music, New tort f%.&#13;
• • Cortege of Muate^hlladalpMa.&#13;
tary* Mnsfciwldttol of Opera,&#13;
of Magic, Pueblo, Colo.&#13;
ND OTHIR LEADING OONSfRVATORItS&#13;
brilliant and powerful tone, exquisite&#13;
ustment and durable workmanship&#13;
, n t rank of the beat instruments made&#13;
jBthe ideal piano for the home, where Its&#13;
" * r n P I A N O ia manufactured under singularly fsWOrtbleoOfidltiotis which&#13;
r&gt;rj|ejsMj&amp;jMaVn of culture and refinement&#13;
of production, and it haa achieved a brilliant BUOOSR as the most elegant instrument&#13;
market a t a satisfactory price. WRITES F O B CATALOGUE A N D P R I C E S .&#13;
£Hfe &amp; COMPANY, Manufrs, Easton, Pa.&#13;
Eat What&#13;
^ou want of the food you need&#13;
Kodol will&#13;
'ti€p,(i a, snftWiont amount of&#13;
^ ^ wholesome food anrl more than&#13;
I ® ' yetrnecd t o fully rlipffst it.&#13;
^iRSI'yTJU c a n ' t gain stronpth, nor&#13;
Can you strengthen your stomach if&#13;
It is weak.&#13;
~\ky You must e a t in order to live and&#13;
maintain strength.&#13;
You must not diet, because the&#13;
body requires t h a t you e a t a sufllcient&#13;
amount of food regularly.&#13;
But this food must be digested,&#13;
and it must ho digested thoroughly.&#13;
When t h e fitomach can't do it,&#13;
you must take something t h a t will&#13;
help the stomach.&#13;
The proper way to do is to eat&#13;
what you want, and let Kodol digest-&#13;
the food.&#13;
digest it.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
G o t o your druggist tod;iy, and&#13;
purchase a dollar bott !e, and if you&#13;
can honestly say, t h a t you did not&#13;
receive any benefits from it, after&#13;
using t h e entire bottle, the druggist&#13;
will refund your money t o you&#13;
without question or delay.&#13;
We will pay the druggist the price&#13;
of l.ho bottle purchased by you.&#13;
T h i s offer applies t o t h e large&#13;
bottle only and t o b u t one in a&#13;
family.&#13;
Nothing elae can do this. When&#13;
t b s sWiatitb Ja weak t t needs help;&#13;
it by giving i t rest,&#13;
s*n2ftft do that.&#13;
We could not afford to make such&#13;
aii offer, unless we positively knew&#13;
what Kodol will do for you.&#13;
I t would bankrupt us.&#13;
The dollar bottle contains 2¼ timm&#13;
as much as the fifty cent bottle.&#13;
Kodol is made a t the laboratories&#13;
of E. C. I&gt;eWitt &amp; Co., Chicago.&#13;
•i AIL DRUGGISTS • 3 L&#13;
Or t h e V i l l a * * o t F l n c k u e y&#13;
M o n d a y , 3 4 a r . 1 , 1909«&#13;
C o u n c i l c o n v e n e d a n d c a l l e d t o o r d -&#13;
er by P r . « . K e n n e d y .&#13;
T r u s t e e s p r e s e n t — i J e t « r s , Itoobe,&#13;
J o h n s o n , MOWMCH.&#13;
A b s e n t - S i l l e r , V a n W i n k l e .&#13;
M i n u t e a uf Jaht uiHHtiug r e a d a n d&#13;
a p p r o v e d .&#13;
T h e i o l l o w i n g billb w e r e r e a d .&#13;
Gardner 1. Co, lighting f o r F e b . $o7.80&#13;
F D J o h n s o n , 117 feet ceaieut&#13;
uidewulk, H . l »&#13;
F D Johubou, meaBure sidewalk, 1.00&#13;
J o h n Diukel, '6 tripa bnow plow 5 . 2 6&#13;
J o h n D i u k e l , auuw plow repairiug . 7 5&#13;
W H Placewtty, Justiee tiervictw 1 6 . 7 5&#13;
18P J o h n s o n , liolltJctiug old lamps 1.00&#13;
A MonkUj s h o v e l i n g BUOW 1 . 0 0&#13;
M o v e d by S i l l e r a n d s u p p o r t e d b y&#13;
J o h n s o n t h a t bills be a l l o w e d OH r e a d .&#13;
A y e : J o h n s o n , Movverw, Petern,&#13;
K o c b e .&#13;
A f t e r r e a d i u ^ a bill p r e s e n t e d by&#13;
L. E . S m i t h . i t w a s m o v e d b y j l o v r e r s&#13;
a n d s u p p o r t e d b y J o h n s o n t h a t t h e&#13;
bill be t a b l e d u n t i l n e x t m e e t i n g .&#13;
A y e : J o b n a o n , M o w e r e , P o t e r s a n d&#13;
R o c h e .&#13;
U p o n m o t i o n C o u n c i l a d j o u r n e d&#13;
P . H . S W A K T H O U T , V i l l a g e C l e r k ,&#13;
S l e e p l e s s .&#13;
B l o b b s — W h y don't y o u c o n s u l t a&#13;
d o c t o r a b o u t y o u r i n s o m n i a V S l o b b s&#13;
W h a t ! A n d r u n u p m o r e b i l l s ? W h y ,&#13;
it's b e c a u s e o f w h a t I *:VVA -:111 nvw&#13;
that I c a n ' t s l e e p .&#13;
FLASH&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Dirt&#13;
Hustler&#13;
P L A S H i s prepared for the huuds (all bauds, none excepted) to clean thoroughly&#13;
a n d Q u i c k e r thitu any other cleaner or boap product o n the market. f l » A S H&#13;
ib different from other biiiiilar preparations in that it contains no acid or l y e , a» it J»&#13;
not a soap, but is the result of a long period of numerous t-ecret experiment* combining&#13;
glycerine and other antiseptic healing oi!» in conjunction with finely ground pusrnce&#13;
and a sinull percentage of chemically pure scap Block, very beneficial to t h e BKjn. b v -&#13;
erythiug in it is pure and healthful and ^uaratrteed not to injure t h e moat delicate&#13;
haudH. It is made to d o w h a t s o a p c a n n o t d o a " d lias become T H £ baud&#13;
cleaner, for cleaning and p r e s e r v i n g , t h e hands o f a l l p e o p l e * i n C V f c P y c l a a i »&#13;
and e v e r y p l a c e .&#13;
Prepared in a paste form, it is applied with the fore tingeis to the palm of t h e h a n d ,&#13;
aud by the addition of a little water produces a pleat-lug aupBeptic hcenttd lather that&#13;
cleanses the hands thoroughly. It in put up in 1^ ounce tin boxes, bevelled edge t o&#13;
p r e v e n t cutting the tinkers.&#13;
A S K YOUR D b A L b K IOC hARGE GAN&#13;
B-ETTER THAN SOAP&#13;
W a n t e d F u l l C r e d i t .&#13;
" N o w , my little m a n , y o u a r e a c c u s e d&#13;
o f Btriklng a n o t h e r boy a u d k n o c k i n g&#13;
o u t o n e o f h i s t e e t h . "&#13;
" ' S c u s e m e , j e d g e , t w o o f h i s t e e t h . "&#13;
- l i f e .&#13;
W h e n H e E n j o y s H o m e .&#13;
" D o e s y o u r h u s b a n d e n j o y h i s homeV"&#13;
" Y e s — w h e n e v e r 1 w a n t h i m t o t a k e&#13;
m e t o t h e t h e a t e r . " — C l e v e l a n d L e a d e r .&#13;
V e n e z u e l a rocciveo1 i t s n a m e f r o m&#13;
the e a r l y S p a n i s h r e s i d e n t s , w h o s a w&#13;
n It a r e s e m b l a n c e t o V e n i c e .&#13;
F r e s h m a n M a t h e m a t i c s .&#13;
F r e s b b y - P r o f e s s o r , is it o v e r possi&#13;
hie t o t a k e t h e g r e a t e r f r o m t h e loss?&#13;
"Then" i s a pretty c l o s e a p p r o a c h t&lt;&gt;&#13;
it w h e n t h e c o n c e i t is t a k e n o u t o f a&#13;
f r e s h m a n . " - J e w i s h Ledtrer.&#13;
f UBHSHED KVKBT THCK3DAY MUKN1JJO BV&#13;
S iDacription Frice f t in Advance.&#13;
Entered at the 1'oatolilce at Pinckney, MichlgsD&#13;
aa secoad-clasa matter&#13;
AdvertiBinte rates made known on application.&#13;
F R A N K L.. A N D R E W S &amp;, C O&#13;
EDITORS *«D PH0PHIET0H8.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHUU18T iliHSCOPAL CttUitCU.&#13;
Kev. I&gt;. C. Littlejona paator. Services everj&#13;
Sunday morning Ml iu:3u, and every aundaj&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock, i'rayet meeting Thureday&#13;
evenings. Sunday schuoIajt'oloBe of muialn^&#13;
service. ilise MABY VA'NFLKKT, Supt.&#13;
(^ONOHKCiAl'iONAL UUUKCU.&#13;
„' Eev. A. &lt;J. Gates paator. Service eveij&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:40 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:W1 o'clock. iJrayer meeting Phure&#13;
day evening'. Sunday school at cio&amp;e of morn&#13;
in^ service. Mrs. Grace (Jrotoot, Supt,, J. A,&#13;
Oadweli bee.&#13;
Sleepless Nights&#13;
" M y w i f e i s o f a n e r v m - i c m p e r a -&#13;
m e n t , a n d l-:i- .-uh'crcd ny.ich iroffl&#13;
s l e e p l e s s n e s s S i n c e u^iii;v ! ' r . Miles*&#13;
N e r v i n e &lt;hc lias g r e a t l y i m p r o v e d&#13;
a n d n o w i l e e p s well.''&#13;
W . W . F I S H B A C K , R c d k c y , I n d .&#13;
W h e n t h e n e r v e s b e c o m e w e a k ,&#13;
^Fvorn-out, e x c i t a b l e f r o m o v e r -&#13;
w o r k , w o r r y , grief o r m e n t a l e x *&#13;
h a u s t i o n , their t u r b u l e n t c o n d i t i o *&#13;
p r e v e n t s that t o t a l r e l a x a t i o n t h a t&#13;
i n d u c e s s l e e p .&#13;
D r . M i l e s ' N c n r i i i e&#13;
b y i t s s o o t h i n g a n d q m e t t a f f « i a f t | *&#13;
e n c e a m i l i y s t r e n g t h e n i n g and" f t *&#13;
p l e n i s h i n g the e x h a t i ^ t e d n e r v e&#13;
b r i n g s p r o t o u m i a n d restful s l e e p .&#13;
T h e first bottle w i l l benefit; if not;&#13;
drugglat will return your money.&#13;
t;'!1. M A « r S 'JATHULluCUUKCli.&#13;
3 Hev. M. J. Comuierford, i'ustor. »iervi:eB&#13;
every Sunday. Luw mass at V:3Uo clock&#13;
higli mass withBerruoQ at 10'^ba. m. Catecbism&#13;
4 a : W p , in., vespersan &gt; be . Jdictiun nt 7 :4\) p.m&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
Kills Would.Be Slayer.&#13;
A merciless murderer is Appendicitis&#13;
witb many victims. Hut Dr. Kings&#13;
New Life 1'iMs kill it by prevention.&#13;
They gently stimulate stomach, liver,&#13;
and bowels, preventing that clogging&#13;
that invites appendicitis, curing Constipation,&#13;
Biliosness, Chills. Malaria,&#13;
Headache and Indigestion. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Siglers.&#13;
The A. 0 . U. Society of tblB place, meets every&#13;
tbird Sunday intue Kr. \Uttuew dall.&#13;
Jotan Tuotn»y and M. i \ K.&lt;Hy,Couuty Delegates&#13;
riiiiii W. o, r. U. rueeta tlie t»dcond Saturday ot&#13;
Xeach month at J:3o j). m, at tue lio.aei ot the&#13;
members Kveryoao intereeled in tmaperanue is&#13;
coadiaily invited. Mrs, UiaL Sigler, i'ree. Mrs&#13;
Jennie Barton, Secretary.&#13;
The U. T. A- and B. society of this place, m* e&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in the Fr. Jkat&#13;
hew Uali. John Donohuo, Ire*iderit,&#13;
KN1GUTSOF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet ever v Friday evening on or befurefull&#13;
ol the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg&#13;
Visiting brothbrs arecordialiyinvited.&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle, Sir Knight Coinmnntl«r&#13;
N. I'. Mortanpon, - Keoord Keeper&#13;
F.'G. Jackson, - l'inance Keeper&#13;
KILL THE COUGH iU&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
W I T H Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery PRICE&#13;
O L D S Trial Bottle F t *&#13;
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.&#13;
FOR C ? y e H S&#13;
GUARANTEED SATISFACTOB&#13;
OR MONET REFUNDED.&#13;
ivingeton Lodgt;, No.TG, F A. A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening,on or before&#13;
thelull of the moon. i \ G. Jackson, W. M&#13;
0&#13;
A A&#13;
RDiSR OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F .&#13;
M. meeting, Maa-NKTris VAUUBN, W. M,&#13;
OKI ER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maecabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C&#13;
1&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous&#13;
G. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
S CENTS.&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
themtaud to us for a box as&#13;
atrial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this h tt* cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
MANUf ACIUBBD Bf&#13;
CHRfSTJU H O , .&#13;
•a&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEUS. Meet every le&#13;
and 8rd Saturday of each month at 2:80 p m.&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sistera cordially in&#13;
vited, LILA. CONIVTAY, Lady Coin.&#13;
K NIGHTS OK THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L, Andrews F. AI, Tt&#13;
The Great Diarrhoea&#13;
and Dysentery Remedy&#13;
Cures acute and chronic diarrhoea, dyaentciy,&#13;
cholera morbus," summer complaint,"&#13;
A-ntic cholera, aud prevents the development&#13;
of typhoid fever. Same wonderful&#13;
rti'.lts obuinerl in all parts o f the world.&#13;
"WORKS LIKE MAGIC."&#13;
Price 25 cents per box.&#13;
Don't accept a Bnbstitute—a9fMalled"jt»rt&#13;
as Rood." Ifyonr drufrgist hasn't it anddon*t&#13;
care to get it for vou send direct to&#13;
THE ONTARIO CHEMICAL COMPANY,&#13;
Oswiigo.N. Y.,U. S.A.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M.D- C. L, SIGLER M. 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PhyaiciauK ;ina Mir^tumn. All i-aiin promptly&#13;
attended to day nr tnxht. Othce on Mam stieet&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
LEARN TO BE A CHAUFFER&#13;
Our T w o Books&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
.PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
c^or information, call at i h e I'inckney D t s -&#13;
T A T C H ottice. Auction Bills Free&#13;
D e x t e r Inde.pendant P h o n e&#13;
Arrangements made for anle by phone a&#13;
my e x p e n s e . Oct 07&#13;
A d d r e s s . D e x t e r , .Michigan&#13;
DISEASES OF THE&#13;
ANATOMYOF THE AUTO&#13;
AND&#13;
M W. DANIELS,&#13;
ITi, QKNK8AL AUCTIONEKK.&#13;
Satiatacucn G u a m n t e e d . F o r irrformation&#13;
call at D I S P A T C H Office o r «ddre*B&#13;
Gregory, M i c h , r. f. d. 2 . Lyndilla phone&#13;
e^an«ctiona A u c t i o n bitla ;iud t i n c u p&#13;
LUraiahed f r e e .&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
.SOTARf PJILIC.&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
• AT oti^ATCH OFFICE'&#13;
MECHAICAL CHART&#13;
ONLY $ 2 . 7 5&#13;
W e also h a w t50G books&#13;
which give all t h e mape&#13;
and cqtinties of Mfsburia,&#13;
and all names of A u t o&#13;
O w n e r s in B t L o o i s , - -&#13;
Only 75c&#13;
PHOEIIXAUTOSUPrtrta.,&#13;
St. Louis, ilo.&#13;
3932 OliTftH.&#13;
• • • #&#13;
• • " f t&#13;
• It&#13;
[,&#13;
%&#13;
J&#13;
t&#13;
i 1&#13;
v.: j&#13;
m BuHLH&#13;
&lt;-*-&#13;
^ ^ L T O I i ^ B ^ &amp; W l l N , Wfifb BRUTAL&#13;
LY 8 L W r W 8 A « E * M O T H E R ,&#13;
19 SeitTENCEIT q } /&#13;
Takin^4ydia£. Riukbaoi's&#13;
Vegetable Compound&#13;
Columbus^ Ohio. — M I have taken&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com?&#13;
[pound ' -J ~&#13;
"W IV. J&lt; ;*t* • »•&#13;
: ~^a .&#13;
'0*' "'"'-' QSrfi.0^E IN JACKSON&#13;
Made Confession on Fcrday, \AMis Sentenced&#13;
on Saturday jii^d Taken Away&#13;
to Begin H»* Term.&#13;
STATE NEWS BRIEFS. • — • » • • » • * « . - •&#13;
d u r l n g&#13;
change of life. My&#13;
doctor told me it&#13;
£ %w*a good, and since&#13;
taking it I feel so&#13;
dftich better that I&#13;
can.do all my work&#13;
again. I t h i n k&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V f l g ^ t a b l e Compound&#13;
a tine remedy&#13;
tor a 11 woman's&#13;
[troubles, and I&#13;
svef forget to tell&#13;
my friends what it has ddne for me."&#13;
—Mrs. E. H A N S O N , 304 East Long S t ,&#13;
Colutabus. Ohio.&#13;
A n o t h e r W o m a n H e l p e d .&#13;
GraniteYille, V t — " I was passhig&#13;
through the Change of Life and suffered&#13;
from nervousness and other annoying&#13;
symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound restored myhealthand&#13;
strength, and proved wqrth mountains&#13;
of gold to me. For the sake of other&#13;
suffering women I am willing you&#13;
should p u b l i s h my letter."—^MRS.&#13;
C H A R L E S B A B C L A Y , E.F.D., Graniteville,&#13;
V t&#13;
Women who are passing through this&#13;
sight&#13;
of the fact that for thirty years Lydia&#13;
E. Finkham*;-Vegetable Comtound,&#13;
whioto i« matfefaMft root84tad%erbtv&#13;
has been the standard remedy for&#13;
female ills. In almost every community&#13;
«you will find women who have&#13;
been Testored t o health by Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
Bad Breath.&#13;
A well-knoj^n physician, who&#13;
undoubtedly knows, declare* lUat&#13;
.bad br*Ath*haa brokea ©ffvutore&#13;
matches than bad temper.&#13;
There are ardent&#13;
l o v e r s who must&#13;
s o m e t i m e s : ; wish&#13;
t h e i r sweethearts&#13;
prescnte&lt;l swectpr&#13;
mouths tatje kissc^.&#13;
Good le«lUcATjiM3t&#13;
prevent bad breath&#13;
when the stomach is&#13;
disordered.&#13;
The best cure for&#13;
bad b r e a t h is a&#13;
cleansing out of the&#13;
body by use of Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine&#13;
(called also L a n e ' s T e a )&#13;
Mrs. Mary Baldwin, a widow, 50&#13;
years old*.who was round unconscious&#13;
on the floor of her farm house, two&#13;
miles from Saugatuck, early Thursday&#13;
morning, and who died before^medical&#13;
assistance arrived, was filahJ by her&#13;
son, Elton, 35 years1 old, who confessed&#13;
the brutal deed. Developments&#13;
in the case came as soon as the Inquest&#13;
was gotten under way. The&#13;
son had told conflicting stories, and&#13;
he was suspected from the first. The&#13;
jury first listened to the testimony of&#13;
two other neighbor women whom the&#13;
son, Elton, notified that his mother&#13;
was lying unconscious in the home,&#13;
and who assisted in getting a doctor.&#13;
Theu the son was questioned.&#13;
It was not long after the questioning&#13;
began before Elton coolly confessed&#13;
that he klled his mother with a&#13;
hatchet because' he feared she would&#13;
inform the authorities that he fired&#13;
t^e barns on .the farm which they rented&#13;
and caused a heavy loss to the&#13;
owner. Within CO hours after he slew&#13;
his mother he was on his way to Jackson&#13;
prison to serve a sentence of life&#13;
critical period or who are suffering imnHaonment&#13;
f r o n x a a r j &gt; f 1 f c Q W T ^ ^ nleade'd guilty Friday,&#13;
cuhar to their sex should not lose sight w„ a. s? bJro^ugLht* ISn tAo c1o!u!r!t Saa£t„uir2da. y ~ml\orr&gt;n,l&#13;
ling and said he ha*' nothing further&#13;
to add to his confession of the day before.&#13;
Judge Padghani therefore sentenced&#13;
him - to life imprisonment at&#13;
Jackson, and Baldwin was taken there&#13;
that afternoon. ' ' •''&#13;
the tonic laxative.&#13;
. Jl'his is a herb medicine, sold in&#13;
25c. and 50c. packages by druggists.&#13;
It saves doctor bills.&#13;
It cures headache backache, indigestion,&#13;
constipation and skin&#13;
diseases. 25c at druggists.&#13;
Contract P/isOn* Labor.&#13;
QoV. \Varner made bis first vfsit;,t6&#13;
the.JDeitroit house.pf cpjrerjtlon Sat!ur:&#13;
day afternoon. Supt. McDonneT took&#13;
him on a tour of inspection through&#13;
;th(&gt; institution, which sella everything&#13;
manufactured by the prisoners, inclnd&#13;
ing furniture and pearl buttons.&#13;
After Sin*. McDonnel's pxplanatk&gt;n&#13;
of the system the governor declared&#13;
that he would hereafter oppose, the&#13;
private contract sj^t,em in any of the&#13;
state prisons? Ifut Instead would favor&#13;
the state employing convicts at various&#13;
industries. ,&gt;;&#13;
"It would be very &lt;*asy," said the&#13;
governor, "*o eiilaigerittie binder twiae&#13;
industry at Jackson as fast as .present&#13;
private eontrWts expire. The slatv&#13;
could manjojacuue I'op^.^aud,. f rafci&#13;
bags, very easily and J,hU %ciuhj interfere''&#13;
Very little with freV'fabor in&#13;
the state."&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
IrVrrEuR PILLS.&#13;
positively cured by&#13;
these Little Pills.&#13;
They also relieve Di*&#13;
Dyspepsia, Indigestion&#13;
andToo Heartj&#13;
Eating. A perfect rem&#13;
edy for Dizziness, Nau«&#13;
sea, Drowi»liiea#t B a d&#13;
Taste In the Mouth, Coat&#13;
ed TOTIRTUO, Pain In thi&#13;
S i d e , TORPID LIVER&#13;
They regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable&#13;
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICt&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Similc Signature&#13;
Women's Wages.&#13;
Women Ret wagt.s 84 per cent us&#13;
large as those paid men in Wayne&#13;
county, according to the figures of&#13;
Commissioner of Labor R. H. Fletcher,&#13;
prepared lor his annual report for the&#13;
state and issued in advance by courtesy.&#13;
The average wage of 18,150 women&#13;
employed, is computed at $1.9:1 a&#13;
day, which is more than is earned by&#13;
many male heads of a family.&#13;
The 55,051 men employed average&#13;
$2.29. Of boys from 14 to 1G there&#13;
are l,38fi. averaging 8U cents a day,&#13;
and of girls of the same age, 1,071&#13;
averaging 68 cents. The agfSrfegate&#13;
daily wages are $147,390.90.&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
IFYOUVE&#13;
NEVER WORN&#13;
SUCKER you've yet&#13;
to learn tn« bodily&#13;
comfort it gives in&#13;
the wettest weather&#13;
• . » . , • • — - A N D .&#13;
-CUAPAWTC05&#13;
ATAUGO0O5TOBU&#13;
• CATAJJOQ n n&#13;
»J TBBtt CO. M W . I I U&#13;
CMMMMt CA iWTtSl TBM0TO. CM&#13;
Suit for Damages.&#13;
On the calendar for the next term&#13;
of the Hillsdale circuit-court .ate the&#13;
cases of Louis Britton and his wlf*~&#13;
against Gov. Fred M. Warner, in whiclj&#13;
damages to the extent of $6,000 ar$&#13;
asked from the state's chief executives&#13;
The basig for the s u i t s i s an accident&#13;
which happened last August dur4&#13;
ing Gov. Warner's campaigning tour&#13;
in Hillsdale county. The Brittona allege&#13;
that the governor's automobile&#13;
frightened their horse, causing it to&#13;
run away. Mrs. Britton was thrown&#13;
out of the buggy and injured. She aski&#13;
for damages because of the severe&#13;
nervous shock she sustained, and Mr.&#13;
Britton because he has been deprived&#13;
of her company.&#13;
ACTIVE MENTS MAKE&#13;
$25 TO $100 WEEKLY aMllnc "»• fainons new aU typewriter, f lr»t prxv&#13;
ttc*l. «t*B(UnI tvo-hand hefbatkTd, *Hibf»-&lt;mtihtig,&#13;
p&lt;rvrt»hl« type writer «T«T «ola tar M l n w t pr\m.&#13;
DOM wnrk.lllt»•«• m»4t)Ut«*. Cnaldn't hm frttar&#13;
»* »nr ptl«». TrirfttMT wants on«. Blcr proflu.&#13;
M r aalaa. «xo&lt;u«lva (MTltory. Writ* fa* fait&#13;
partldaten t*v-d«y to&#13;
- - - sr-ttr'WXPa , „ , H.T.fMy.&#13;
OCFUMCC iTAMCk etotBM^&#13;
Ten Million Budget.&#13;
"Gov. Warner, Speaker Campbell&#13;
and the members of the house ways&#13;
and means committee held a session&#13;
at the home of the governor Wednes*&#13;
day lo. dl?c4iss stafe appropriations.&#13;
They went carefully over the various&#13;
appropriation bills submitted" in the&#13;
house, and it was declared by everyone&#13;
that a great. de$l 'of pruning&#13;
would be- necessary. But all hope of&#13;
holding the budget for the -next two&#13;
years below $.10,000,OOQ has about fled.&#13;
Armstrond/s Evidence.&#13;
' t h e report Is rife that Allen N,&#13;
Awntftrong.th*-deposed wardeh of the&#13;
state prison, may figure as n witness&#13;
before the grand jury. It is said that&#13;
negotiations to that end were recently&#13;
started .quietly by fome of his&#13;
friends, and^they say that in all probability&#13;
he will see th* interior of the&#13;
grand jury room within a short time.&#13;
Isabelle Mootehead, th« pretty vau&lt;&#13;
dftttfi singer charged wtth board bill&#13;
jumping at Petoskey, sought the sheriff&#13;
in Cadillac and gava herself up,&#13;
_ _ - - while tfcjt pol-i ce were wa^tc^h in_g., trains (nee, roM^d-«rtr«f»pM(&#13;
to wort wiui«ifrd^tnr4 Isfcaoturarientgk mthi et ^ci ty ?t»«« •f tlnocd^ lb «pr,o lutio»v^ cJh*gxp*t^k j a^t M^&amp;i^-llm^*L wi u , ^ r&#13;
The opiHlttg*"feu»ifal t«e Branch&#13;
coimty&gt; catupatgoi'for local cation wae&#13;
fired Friday night.&#13;
Four pairs of twins arrived in Musk^&#13;
«pn by the&gt;atwrtr apeciar, between b&#13;
a. m. and 4 p. m. Wedueaday.&#13;
KuiWA Carpenter, the Port AuatiD&#13;
girl who mysteriously disappeared&#13;
from her home some weeks ago, ha*&#13;
been located in Detroit,&#13;
Charles Bradburn was probably fatally&#13;
injured when he fell 18 f«et on&#13;
broken ice cakes at Square lake&#13;
where he was employed.&#13;
Mayor Spies, of Menominee, request&#13;
ed the council to cut hs salary to hall&#13;
the former amount. A motion to cul&#13;
the aldermen's salary was loHt.&#13;
CHom Goodhall, 17, ot Pentoga&#13;
died, while under the influence of gas&#13;
in the office of a dentist. Weak huartaction&#13;
is assigned as the cause oi&#13;
death.&#13;
Mrs. Carrie Ward, tried for the al&#13;
Ieged attempt to burn her divorced&#13;
husband's home near Nashville, was&#13;
acquitted by a jury utter flv* minutes'&#13;
deliberation.&#13;
Cojdwater is to have a large amphitheater.&#13;
Tbe work of construction will&#13;
be begun this year. The new building&#13;
will have a seating capacity of from&#13;
800, to 1,000.&#13;
With the remark that tbe fire&#13;
seemed to be going out, L. D. Smith,&#13;
of Port Huron, leaned over to stir&#13;
up the coals and fell dead on the&#13;
floor from heart failure.&#13;
Owosao order of Elks will compete&#13;
in the ritual contest to be held at&#13;
Calumet in June. The lodge has voted&#13;
to pay the entire expenses of the&#13;
degree team on the trip.&#13;
Alleging local option as the cause,&#13;
the Capital Brewing Co. has filed no&#13;
tice of dissolution with the secretary&#13;
of state. The company had planned to&#13;
build in Lansing in the spring.&#13;
Flint women will organize a Dorcas&#13;
society to support orphan children. A&#13;
speech by Mrs. Theodore M. Euler,&#13;
president of the Dorcas society of&#13;
Owosso, was the determining factor,&#13;
After an illness lasting for several&#13;
months Sheriff George R. Smith, of&#13;
Allegan, is dead. Mr. Smith was&#13;
forced to take to his bed only a few&#13;
days after being sworn in as sheriff.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Sanberg, of Port Huron,&#13;
whose husband disappeared seven&#13;
years ago. ana who sued the Macca:&#13;
bees for his $1,000 insurance, has been&#13;
given a verdict of $1,000.58 against the&#13;
order. ^ ' ^ f IffT^* - -&#13;
A "vtM"&lt; aad "dry" war fs heing&#13;
waged at,„the Ann Arbor, university.&#13;
About 40 students are preparing to&#13;
stump the ctmnty in the interests oi&#13;
local option* aodv a hard struggle is&#13;
looked for. (t&#13;
Harold Bea] WUliams. aged 21, a&#13;
nephew of Regent Beal/oY the U. qt&#13;
M., has been removed to his h o m e ^&#13;
Ann Arbor, suffering fromVfln attack&#13;
of mental derangoiaent brought aboSft&#13;
by overstudy.&#13;
Because he":says that his wife is&#13;
needed at home to cafe for their children,&#13;
Alouzo Baker, of Owosso, has&#13;
secured her release from jail, though&#13;
she was confined cm a charge preferred&#13;
by himself.&#13;
The 4-ysar-old daughter of E. C.&#13;
Fulghum, of Traverse City, has suP&#13;
l'ered a paralytic stroke and is unable&#13;
to move her body from the waist&#13;
dowv Paralysis in a person so young&#13;
is a very unusual occurrence,&#13;
Coldwater Thursday celebrated the&#13;
inauguration of William H. Taft as&#13;
president. For five minutes, from 11&#13;
o'clock to 11:05, whistles and horns&#13;
were tooted and a general ovation&#13;
given the country's new executive.&#13;
The committee tor the outdoor circus,&#13;
to be given by the Ann Arbor&#13;
university students, are making arrangements&#13;
to have the affair a big&#13;
undertaking. There will be everything&#13;
from a parade to the concert.&#13;
Called home by the news that his&#13;
mother had sustained a stroke of apoplexy,&#13;
F. A. Clemence, of Clairmount,&#13;
Cal., arrived in Battle Creek JUBt one&#13;
hour after his father had died from&#13;
heart disease. The mother is still&#13;
alive.&#13;
Miss lone Rikerd, a stenographer&#13;
of Lansing, has been notified that she&#13;
is one of several heirs to a fortune&#13;
of $45,000,000 left by her mother's&#13;
great, uncle. If the reports are true&#13;
Miss Rikerd's share will amount to&#13;
$6,000,000.&#13;
"Buckshot Dan" McPhail, the 104-&#13;
ycarold Muskegon river hermit, who&#13;
had been unheard of all winter, came&#13;
out of his hut on Muskegon river bottom&#13;
with the incoming of March, all&#13;
doubts as to his whereabouts thus being&#13;
removed.&#13;
The school house at Birch- Run,&#13;
Saginaw county, has a unique blackboard.&#13;
Tha board is a single piece&#13;
of white pine, 37 inchei wide and 9&#13;
feet long, and has done service for&#13;
many years^lt hi probably the largest&#13;
single hOftfd in- the Saginaw valley.&#13;
On* Jhe%;foflrMh attempt,' ptto Rut&#13;
kowsklj-'of'Grand Rapids, succeeded in&#13;
destroying htttwelf by' inhatttig gaa W&#13;
a local rooming house. Fifteen years&#13;
ago his mother hanged herself when&#13;
despondent over the death of a child&#13;
and it i £ said that her death made a&#13;
lasting Impression" on the son, he having&#13;
bnflbded on the Incident ever since.&#13;
Alleri Jacklin, arrested in Detroit&#13;
for stealing $lCfl and a gold nugget&#13;
from th&gt; "tib'vse'lf * Fifnt family who&#13;
CONGRESS 10 BE •u&gt;&#13;
SPECIAL 8ESSION CALLED&#13;
M A K E REVISION OF T H E&#13;
T A R I F F .&#13;
TO&#13;
NEW CABINET SWORN IN&#13;
Latest Now a and GoaaJp From^ttHCl'flF*'&#13;
tionat Capital lntorc«WBgl|r * * d&#13;
Brlofly Told. ' • • ; * ' "&#13;
All but two of the nine members ot&#13;
President Taft's cabinet are now inoffice.&#13;
fc'Ix, Including Secretaries&#13;
Knox, Meyer, Wilson, Nagel and Ballinger,&#13;
and Postmaster-General Hitchcock,&#13;
took the oath of office Saturday;&#13;
Attorney General Wickeraham waa&#13;
sworn in Friday, and Secretary Dickinson&#13;
and Secretary MacVeagh presenteded&#13;
themselves later on Saturday.&#13;
President Taft issued a proclamation&#13;
calling congreaa in extraordinary session&#13;
March 15 to revise the tariff.&#13;
President Taft's second day at the&#13;
White House, like the first, was one&#13;
of handshaking and glad words. Delegation&#13;
after delegation was received.&#13;
His methods, in the art of "mixing"&#13;
were demonstrated tp be different&#13;
from those of ex-President Roosevelt.&#13;
Mr. Taft takes much more time than&#13;
did his predecessor in maiUJg the acquaintance&#13;
of his Cfrtlehe/and Insists&#13;
on knowing not on£y their fail names,,&#13;
but their-residence and matters of&#13;
family history. ^-.--&#13;
ColQTjfrt*'Mfr+*&amp; ti«**8-Chicago&#13;
^ to the f ^ c i f l e f f c * * , n v h v m ' Cjhlaago,&#13;
Union Pacific and North western Line,&#13;
art «m aaie daily during* I*area'and&#13;
April *Ut*a*ral* of f | 3 . h | . ^ t&amp;rreapondlngjy&#13;
k&gt;w rates frdm all points.&#13;
Double berth in tourlaF sleeping car&#13;
only 17.00, through without change to&#13;
San Francisco, Loa Angeles and Portland.&#13;
No extra charge on ourtpersonally&#13;
conducted tours. Write for Itinerary&#13;
and full particulars to B. A.&#13;
Hutchison, Manager Tourist Depart*&#13;
xneut, 212 Clark Street. Chicago. Ill,&#13;
The Correction of the Oath.&#13;
It became known Saturday that&#13;
Chief Justice Fuller in pronouncing at&#13;
the Inauguration the oath which Mr.&#13;
Taft was to take, made a mistake. The&#13;
chief justice said:&#13;
"I do solemnly swear, that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the constitution of&#13;
the United States," etc.&#13;
Senator Knox was standing near Mr.&#13;
Taft as the oath was being adminis^&#13;
tered. He noticed the mistake and&#13;
smilingly whispered to Mr. Taft:&#13;
"Don't do it."&#13;
There was a pause of a few sec&#13;
onrs and then Mr. Taft with upraised&#13;
hands spoke the oath in its correct,&#13;
form: "I do solemnly swear that I will&#13;
faithfully execute the duties of the of&#13;
flee of president of the United States&#13;
and will to the best of ability presf rve,&#13;
protect and defend the constitution of&#13;
the United States "&#13;
The Inauguration.&#13;
William H. Taft, of Ohio, and Jameu&#13;
S. Sherman, of New York, were in&#13;
augurated Thursday as president and&#13;
vice president of the United States.&#13;
Sherman took the oath at 11:12 p. m.&#13;
and Taft at 12:55.&#13;
The ceremony of the Inauguration&#13;
was accompanied with all due formality&#13;
and finality, but under most&#13;
unusual conditions, owing to a terrible&#13;
blizzard which swept over the national&#13;
capital, paralyzing street traffic, destroying&#13;
communication with the outside&#13;
world and bringing dismay to&#13;
the thousands of assembled visitors&#13;
who had gathered in expectation of&#13;
the usual spectacular demonstration.&#13;
Notwithstanding the adverse conditions,&#13;
all of the main features of the&#13;
inauguration were accomplished. The&#13;
main change was in modifying the&#13;
original program so that the inaugural&#13;
address, usually delivered from the&#13;
east portico of the capitol, was pronounced&#13;
by Mr. Taft in the. senate&#13;
chamber, where he also took the oath&#13;
of office.&#13;
RooMvelt Again 1&#13;
A mysterious and anonymous cam&#13;
paign for the renomination and re-election&#13;
of Theodore Roosevelt to the&#13;
presidency after President Taft nhall&#13;
have served four years has begun In&#13;
Chicago. The identity of those behind&#13;
the movement is carefully concealed&#13;
and those who are distributing the lit&#13;
erature calling on the voters to get in&#13;
line for the former president, refuse&#13;
to say by whom they are employed&#13;
The first campaign document is in the&#13;
form of a yellow card on which in&#13;
large black letters appears the follow&#13;
ing:&#13;
"Teddy again, following Taft."&#13;
At the top appear the words "lis&#13;
1912" and at the side and bottom:&#13;
"The campaign has begun," and "Do&#13;
your part "&#13;
The Oklahoma Land Cases.&#13;
The government's prosecution of&#13;
over 23,000 defendants in Oklahoma in&#13;
an effort to recover millions of acres&#13;
of land said to have been secured from&#13;
members of the five civilized tribe?&#13;
before it was subject to allotment, Is&#13;
being pressed with vigor. Assistant&#13;
Attorney General Russell will leave&#13;
in a few days to argue these cases before&#13;
District Judge Campbell, in Muskogee.&#13;
Keep Dirt Flying.&#13;
Dirt continues to fly on the isthmus&#13;
of Panama at a constantly increasing&#13;
rate. The total excavation during Feb&#13;
ruary was 3,148,879 cubic yards, com&#13;
pared with 2,924,551 last January&#13;
With 65.900,803 cupbic yards excavat&#13;
ed, 108,765,792 cubic yards remain to&#13;
be moved.&#13;
Want Navy Yards Open.&#13;
:" "J". I ^ L U V " * iTiIu"*! - : 7 - - " . * - - * t As a renult of appeals to President&#13;
had " ^ ^ ^ / ' j ^ * * ' ™ J**5* T"*JC f Taft and Secretary of the Navy Meyer&#13;
^ . . . ^ ^ southern delegation from Loaisi&#13;
. ana and Florida, the first business to&#13;
two-and-a-halt to fire-year sent „ l C o x n e . before the new navr*t secretary&#13;
Js the reoQBstderatloa of the order&#13;
wfcsinw At th« closing the navj yards la New Orleans&#13;
Truthful Beasts.&#13;
There had been a lovers' quarrel&#13;
and It was his first Yjslt In two w^eks.&#13;
"I guess you know there was a difference^&#13;
between your sister anlfinyself&#13;
?" he ventured, trying to pump0 tbe&#13;
little sister.&#13;
"Yes, Indeed," responded the ratter&#13;
without hesitation.&#13;
"Well—er—4o you think Claray will&#13;
make up when she comes down?"&#13;
LUIe Bessie leaned over nearer and&#13;
whispered:&#13;
"She ought to, Mr. Bilkina. She Is&#13;
upstairs making up now."&#13;
$100 Reward, $14)0.&#13;
I V iwwlwi or tab p«pw wu be&#13;
ttel then to »t 1MM ooe 4rwd«t &lt;U» _&#13;
btt baea able to oun la all Its stagta, and tba* to&#13;
Catarrh. Hall* Catarrh Cure to tha only neaitlv*&#13;
cur* now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
belay a oMtotltutkma! dtoeaae, requires a conautu-&#13;
UonaJ treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cum to taken Internally,&#13;
acting directly upon the blood and mucous&#13;
aurtacea ot tbe system, thereby destroying tha&#13;
foundation or tbe dtoeaae. and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution and aastottaa&#13;
nature to doing Its work. The proprietors hate&#13;
so much faith in lta curative powers that they offer&#13;
Ooe Hundred Dollars t«t any case that U faBs to&#13;
curs. Send for list of teaUoxtalato.&#13;
Address P. J. CHENEY * CO. Toledo, O.&#13;
Bold by all Druggists. 7S&amp;&#13;
Take Hall's Family Fills ior constipation.&#13;
Nautical Error.&#13;
"I am sorry to hear, captain, that&#13;
your wife left you so unceremoniv&#13;
ously."&#13;
"My mistake, sir; I took her for a&#13;
mate and she proved to be a skipper."&#13;
—Tit-BIta.&#13;
This Will Interest Mothers.&#13;
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chll«&#13;
dren, used by Mother Gray, u nurse In&#13;
Children's Home, N e w York, cure Constipation,&#13;
Feverlshness, Teething1 Disorders,&#13;
Stomach Troubles and Destroy W o r m s ;&#13;
30,000 testimonials of cures. All druggist*,&#13;
25c. Sample F R E E . Address Allen S. Olmsted,&#13;
Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
The Lessons of the Feat.&#13;
Knicker—Washington threw a dollar&#13;
across the Rappahannock.&#13;
Bocker—Take notice, he didn't sink&#13;
it in a barge canal.&#13;
Pneumonia and Consumption are always&#13;
preceded by an ordinary cold. Hamlin&#13;
s Wizard Oil rubbed into the /chest&#13;
draws out the inflammation, breaks-* up&#13;
the cold and prevent*) all serious trouble.&#13;
A sacred burden is the life ye bear.&#13;
Look on it, lift It, bear It solemnly.&#13;
Stand up and walk beneath it steadfastly.—&#13;
Kemble.&#13;
T r y Bfortae B y e R e m e d y&#13;
For Red, Weak, Weary. Watery Eye*.&#13;
Compounded by Experienced PliyalcUtns.&#13;
Conforms to the Pure Food and Dru&lt;*&#13;
Law. Murine Doesn't Smart. Soothes E y e&#13;
Pain. Try Murine for Your Eyes.&#13;
A little sighing, a little crying, a little&#13;
dying and a great deal of lying&#13;
constitute life.—Philadelphia Telegraph.&#13;
Breoklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Address the Garfield T«a Co. &lt;VR alxwe&#13;
whan writing for free ^amplea of Uarficld&#13;
Tea, the true remedy for constipation.&#13;
Opportunities fall in the way of&#13;
every man who is resolved to take advantage&#13;
of them—Samuel Smile*.&#13;
PII.EM CURED I N « TO 14 DAYS.&#13;
PAZO OINTMSNT is guaranteed to rar* any eaeo&#13;
of Itching, BUnd, Bleeding or Protruding PIfew in&#13;
S to U days or money refunded. Mo.&#13;
No life can be pure In Its purpose&#13;
and strong In its strife, and all life&#13;
not he purer and stronger thereby.&#13;
Mrs. W i n d o w ' s Soothing; Byron.&#13;
For children teething, softens the gains, redoees h&gt;&#13;
flaaapistloa, allays pain, enr— wtad oaUo. ascabotuo.&#13;
Fortunate is the woman who remembers&#13;
that frowns beget more wrinkles&#13;
than smiles.&#13;
t\\ ! • %&#13;
Cteawscs the Svstetu&#13;
EftectuaWy&#13;
Dispels cotts and Itea&amp;cwtes&#13;
&amp;a*\o CcmsX\\K*\\«Wr\;&#13;
Acts Tvatacco\\y% acXsXnAy as&#13;
aLaxaYvve.&#13;
lk^5oTMwn&gt;VcmbmaT^LOvMr&#13;
TOsv-youn^ awA OVd.&#13;
To $ e * \Vs bweJVctaX eJJ-cU&#13;
&gt;*a*ufectufW by tk*&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
Fio SYRUP Ca&#13;
{awty£ I T A l l I rWHIW W&gt;lftfflHf&#13;
*fw)0«0ftry.&lt;*r&gt;^erto* 50* par b e * * .&#13;
^V*^&#13;
'ffl^srvrmi^m'SsssjWS^^ ..„. *ss&#13;
&lt; * - *&#13;
,&gt;. ^'"•' i » '&#13;
•v&#13;
&lt; &gt; H M"l CftPTWN WINS A&#13;
BRIDE IN RftFFLE&#13;
GALLANT GUARDSMAN TOOK&#13;
CMANC,fe8 A t ^ER86Y FAIR&#13;
.&#13;
AND GETS A WIFE.&#13;
. • • : « • •&#13;
• L D LONG KNOWN EACH OTHER&#13;
Robert Brunner of Rutherford, P#?&#13;
auadad to Take Chance on Steamship&#13;
Ticket*—Proposal and Romantic&#13;
Marriage Reaulta.&#13;
New York.—Acting, perhaps, on tht&#13;
theory that marriage 1B a lottery, Capt.&#13;
Robert Brunner of Rutherford, N. J.,&#13;
won hla bride at a raffle at a Masonic&#13;
fair. Of course the^ lady, who waa&#13;
Miss .Marlon Brinckerhoft Kipp, well&#13;
known in society and church circles in&#13;
Rutherford, was not put up as a prise&#13;
to be raffled for, but, she was won at&#13;
the raffle jtost the same.&#13;
Capt atui Mre. Brunner hate just&#13;
returned from their honeymoon trip&#13;
to the south. The fact that they went&#13;
south on that trip is an important part&#13;
of their romantic marriage—and the&#13;
raffle.&#13;
Now as Capt. Brunner command*&#13;
Company M of the Fftth regiment/N.&#13;
G. N. J., is a Freemason, nn Elk and&#13;
belongs to about everything else of&#13;
the kind in Rutherford, and as Miss&#13;
Kipp, who was, was very active in&#13;
church and club work and belonged&#13;
to about everything worth belonging&#13;
to, also, they saw much of each other&#13;
socially. But there was never a hint&#13;
that they were to be more than mere&#13;
friends until that Masonic bazar.&#13;
Miss Kipp was very active in helping&#13;
at the: bazar. She sold flowers for&#13;
large sums, and she persuaded gentlemen&#13;
to take chances in raffle's.&#13;
Among the prizes to be raffled for&#13;
were two first-class tickets on the Old&#13;
Dominion Steamship line from New&#13;
York to Richmond and return. Miss&#13;
Kipp, who looked upon the young jeweler&#13;
as fair game at the bazar, made&#13;
«&#13;
A N U R s f f t E X P f c R ^ N f fa , t&#13;
Backset*, f^fmto **.*}**•*•&gt; •!«**-&#13;
" t i n fli f w .0*iro|&gt;rn«.&#13;
A nurse is expected.to know what&#13;
to do for common ailments, and. wpmkLU.&#13;
| en who suiter hackache,&#13;
constant languor,&#13;
and other common&#13;
symptoms of&#13;
k i d n e y complaint,&#13;
should be grateful&#13;
t o M I B . M i n n i e&#13;
Turner, of E. B.&#13;
_ ^ _ ^ _ _ ^ St., Anadarko, Okla.,&#13;
pointing out the way to find quick&#13;
relief. . Jtfrs. Turner used Doan's Kidney&#13;
Bills for a run-down condition,&#13;
backache, pains in tike Bides and kidneys,&#13;
bloated limbs, etc. "The way&#13;
they have built me up is simply marvelous,"&#13;
says Mrs. Turner, who is a&#13;
nurse. "My health improved rapidly.&#13;
Five boxes did so much for me 1&#13;
am telling everybody about it,"&#13;
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster MJlburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
TROUBLES OF JUNGLE DENT18T.&#13;
"Oh, I WW," Said Miss Kipp, Laughing.&#13;
• • '&#13;
him take a chanca- in the round-trip&#13;
tickets to Richmond.&#13;
"Pshaw!" said, fcapt. Brunner. "I&#13;
wouldn't have any u^e fox them. I'm&#13;
not going to Richmond, and if I did go,&#13;
1 could only use one ticket."&#13;
"Oh, take »chance, anyhow," ploaded&#13;
Miss Ktrm.r "It only costs a dollar."&#13;
"But who, will goF with me if I win?"&#13;
asked»the captain. -&#13;
"OhV I wi 11,'' sald Miss Kipp laugh':"&#13;
tngJy.., f&#13;
Out came - the dollar from Capt.&#13;
Rninner's pocket.&#13;
'TIL take you., at -a^mr-word;' he&#13;
"All righfr laughed the young w#'m.&#13;
an, neyex ifrjtam^ng »$batr anything&#13;
would come offttr * ^J ' ,1 ? - •-'&#13;
Wh«$i tfie ra01etcam« off Capt.. Brun-:&#13;
ner won the tiokals. He put them,&#13;
carefully away in tds pocket and tha&gt;&#13;
next Sunday. afternoon drove f p to&#13;
Mhra Kipps house "in a buggy and&#13;
jMked her to go for a ride. She w e n t&#13;
\ Precisely what was said on that trip&#13;
n't make any difference, but when&#13;
returned, Mias Kipp had an engagement&#13;
ring on her hand.&#13;
The wedding took place in the First&#13;
Presbyterian church of Rutherford.&#13;
It waa the biggest social event of the&#13;
season. The church waa so crowded&#13;
that fully two hundredfperadiia were&#13;
unable to get' inside. ' Company M attended&#13;
in a body, and all the Masons&#13;
and Elks for miles around were there.&#13;
It was 1n the evetfrtrfr,- utid after the&#13;
ceremony Company M., headed by a&#13;
brass band and carrying torches, escorted&#13;
the^}apn&gt;*|QO«nile to the home&#13;
of the bridals tafether.7&#13;
That Dight-Gapt. and MfsT Brunner&#13;
took train for N * ^ ¥orVf and-they&#13;
Dentist—I wonder does, he really&#13;
want that tooth pulled, or Is he scheming&#13;
for a breakfast?&#13;
Less Majeate.&#13;
A teacher in one of the schools of&#13;
Berlin has given to the papers of that&#13;
city a composition written ^by one of&#13;
the pupils in his school on the subject,&#13;
"The Kaiser," in the course of&#13;
which the young author says: "Prince&#13;
Wilhelm was born on the kaiser's&#13;
birthday. From the dome of the castle&#13;
101 salute shots were fired. The&#13;
old grandfather and old Wrangel&#13;
hopped into a cab and went to the&#13;
schloss, and old Wrangel said: The&#13;
boy is all right,' and the father made&#13;
a bow from the balcony, and it was&#13;
awful cold. And when the boy was&#13;
baptized his father held his watch in&#13;
front of the litle fellow's nose, and he&#13;
grabbed it and never let go again, because&#13;
he is a Hohenzollern."&#13;
Why There Waa a Funeral.&#13;
"That looks like a newly made grave&#13;
—that little hummock over there on&#13;
the desert," said the traveler from the&#13;
east.&#13;
"That's just what it is, neighbor,"&#13;
answered Arizona Al. "The editor of&#13;
the Weekly Cactus Spine was buried&#13;
•*er there last week."&#13;
"What was his complaint?"&#13;
"He didn't have none, it was Coyote&#13;
Cal that had the complaint. You see,&#13;
there was a baby born up to Cal's&#13;
house a spell ago, and the editor wrote&#13;
an item about it, sayin' a tow-headed&#13;
little girl ked come to make Cal and&#13;
his woman happy, but it 'pears that&#13;
the printer got the letters mixed somehow,&#13;
Leastways it said in the paper&#13;
when Cai read it that it was a twoheaded&#13;
baby, and him bein' an impulsive&#13;
cuss, there wan't nothin* to do&#13;
but. hold the funeral the "next day but&#13;
one."&#13;
CONGENIAL WORK&#13;
And Strength to Perform It.&#13;
•^"f^rT^TrTrMSf^^^T^^^^B^T^r^iTr^^T^^^vTr •UU*.&#13;
Na Tempertmant, ,,&#13;
rOna of your dftucntors married ma&#13;
irtlat, did aha not?"&#13;
"Yea, and ha bead* her dreadfully."&#13;
"The artistic temperament. Who did&#13;
her sister marry?"&#13;
"A coal hea.verr, and he loves her de»&#13;
fotcdly and neVer given her a cro##&#13;
word."&#13;
"How uneventful life must seem&#13;
wrth an unthinking clod like that."—&#13;
Houston Post.&#13;
.Different Destinations.&#13;
"Mollle," he said, "I believe that If&#13;
you were in heaven you would ask the&#13;
angels If your hat waa un straight."&#13;
"Yes," was the reply. "Just about&#13;
the time you'd be asking Satan to put&#13;
a little more brimstone In the 'Hot&#13;
Scotch!"'&#13;
Breaking Up Colds.&#13;
A cold way be stopped at the start by a&#13;
couple gf J^aue'a lJka*uut Tablet*. Even&#13;
in cunea where a cold has seemed to .guin&#13;
so strong a hold thut nothing cuuld break&#13;
it, these tablets have done it in un hour or&#13;
two. All druggibtfc and dealers sell them at&#13;
25 cents a box. If you cannot get them&#13;
send to the proprietor, Orator F. Woodward,&#13;
Le Roy, N. Y. Sample free.&#13;
A Question of Value.&#13;
"Politeness coats nothing," sai-1 the&#13;
proverbialist.&#13;
"Which may explain," answered&#13;
Miss Cayenne, "why some people of&#13;
ostentatious wealth have so little of&#13;
it"&#13;
T h r o a t T r o u b l e m a y f o l l o w a C o u g h , o r&#13;
H o a r s e n e s s . " B r o w n ' s B r o n c h i a l T r o c h e s " fi v e relief. '&amp; c e n t s a b o x . S a m p l e s f r e e .&#13;
o h n I. B r o w n &amp; S o n , B o s t o n , M a a a .&#13;
It is better to remain silent than to&#13;
apeak tlie truth ill-humoredly, and so&#13;
spoil an excellent dish by covering it&#13;
with bad sauce.—St. Francis de Sales.&#13;
ONHLY OJTE " B R O M O Q C I N I N K . "&#13;
j That UL.AXATIVH BKOMO QUININE. Look for&#13;
the slipiutur» «&gt;f K. W.UKOVK. Ubed Uw World&#13;
over to Cure a Cold In One Hay. 'Ac.&#13;
Things past may be repented but&#13;
not recalled.—Livy.&#13;
! I t C a r e s W h i l e Y o a W a l k&#13;
! Allen's Ftmt-tSust; for command buiiiun*. hot, sweaty&#13;
callous aching feet. "Jx; ull Druggi.sts.&#13;
The moBt certain sign of wisdom is&#13;
a continual cheerfulness.—Montaigue.&#13;
DODDS 05&#13;
K I D N E Y ;&#13;
&gt;. PILLS ^&#13;
K I D N E Y&#13;
'Guar**!&#13;
A person in good health is likely&#13;
to have a genial disposition, ambition,&#13;
and enjoy work.&#13;
On the other hand, if the digestive&#13;
organs have been upset by wrong&#13;
food, work becomes drudgery.&#13;
"Until recently," writes a Washington&#13;
g i r l , - I was a railroad stenographer,&#13;
which means full work every&#13;
day.&#13;
"Like many other girls alone in a&#13;
large city, I lived at a boarding house.&#13;
For breakfast it was mush, greasy&#13;
meat, soggy cakes, black coffee, etc.&#13;
"After a few months of this diet I&#13;
used to feel sleepy and heavy in the&#13;
mornings. My work seemed a terrible&#13;
effort, and I thought the work was&#13;
to blame—too arduous.&#13;
"At home I had heard my father&#13;
apeak of a yorras; fellow" who went&#13;
long distances in the cold on Grape-&#13;
Nuts and cream and nothing more for&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
"I concluded If it would tide hint&#13;
over a morning's heavy work, it might&#13;
help me, BO on my way home one&#13;
night I bought a package and next&#13;
morning I had Grape-Nuts and milk&#13;
for breakfast.&#13;
"I stnck to Grape-Nuts, and in let.3&#13;
than two weeks I noticed improvement.&#13;
I can't. Jnst tell h o - well I&#13;
felt, but I remember I used to walk&#13;
the 12 blocks to business and knew&#13;
how good it was simply to live.&#13;
"As to my work—well, did yon ever&#13;
feel the delight of having congenial&#13;
work and the.strength to .perform it?&#13;
That's how I felt. I truly believe&#13;
there's life and vigor in every .grain of&#13;
Grape-Nuts.**&#13;
Name given by Poatum Co., Battle&#13;
"A Little Cold is a&#13;
Dangerous Thing"&#13;
and often leads to hasty disease and&#13;
death when neglected. There are&#13;
many ways to treat a cold, but there is&#13;
only one right way—use the right&#13;
remedy.&#13;
DR.D.JAYNFS&#13;
EXPECTORANT&#13;
is the surest and safest remedy known,&#13;
for Coughs, Croup, B r o n c h i t i s ,&#13;
Whooping Cough, Asthma, Pleurisy.&#13;
It cures when other remedies fail.&#13;
Do something for your ccld in time,&#13;
you know what delay means, yon&#13;
know the remedy, too—Dr. D. Jayne's&#13;
Expectorant.&#13;
Bottles in three sizes, SI, 50c, 25c&#13;
DYSPEPSIA •'Having taken yonr wonderful *Cajcarets'&#13;
for three months and being entirely&#13;
cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia,&#13;
I think a word of praise is due to&#13;
*Cascarcts' for their wonderful composition.&#13;
I have taken numerous other socalled&#13;
remedies but without aval], and I&#13;
find that Caseareta relieve more in a day&#13;
than all the others I have taken would in&#13;
a year." Janea McGune,&#13;
*o8 Mercer S t , Jersey City, N. J.&#13;
Vlmmmat, PalaUbto. Potent Taste Good.&#13;
Do Good. N«V«T Sicken.Wetkaa or Gripe.&#13;
10e.2Sc.S0c. NOTW sold labo3k. TbagnniiMUhtotatanipadCCC.&#13;
Gaaraaseedto&#13;
can or yow money back, fil9&#13;
V&#13;
(tyOoDKUf'Sj&#13;
ALCdHOL-3 FER CENT&#13;
AWfefcsbie Preparation lor Assimilating&#13;
the Food andReguJaimg&#13;
rt*? Stomachs andBoWb of&#13;
5 l N r A V l * &gt; . - ' ( . H I L D I U . \&#13;
CASTDRIA&#13;
The Kind Yon Have&#13;
Aways Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
* • . • &gt;&#13;
Promotes Drgeition.Chetrfdnes&amp;&#13;
and Rest Contains neither&#13;
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A H c O T I C&#13;
/W//W eroidOrSAMVElimtEft&#13;
ftunpJttm S*nl -&#13;
jttxSm+m ~&#13;
Atyiit JttJ -&#13;
Pkoptrmimi ~&#13;
BtCnrimmUSitt*. -&#13;
*m~S*,d .&#13;
Ctm*fi*d ifttyw&#13;
WiMkryrtt" fhvor&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation&#13;
. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms Convulsions Teverishness&#13;
and L ~&gt;5S OF SLEEP&#13;
Facsimile S.ignalure of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPAMY.&#13;
N E W Y O R K .&#13;
\ i t&gt; m o n t h v old&#13;
'Guaranteed under the Foodi&#13;
Bxact Copy of Wrappat&#13;
For Over&#13;
thirty Years&#13;
CUSTOM*&#13;
A flavoring t h a t l»ii«e«l"th'eHameas l e m o n&#13;
or v a n i l l a . By d i s s o l v i n g ^ l a m i l u t e U s i i K a r&#13;
i n Muater a n d a d d i n g 3&amp;apl4»iae,'s&gt;d4!Iel«*MS&#13;
syrufj in made Olid-a syrnp better than maple.&#13;
Mapleine Is bold by groiwrs. If tiut srtod oScfur&#13;
2o*.bot. and recipe buck. CrtMeaUfg. f*., S*atU«. MAPLEINE&#13;
RHEUMATISM Western Canada&#13;
^ #&#13;
I want every rhronic rheumatic to throw&#13;
away all medicines, all liniments, all&#13;
planters, nnd slve MI'NYON'S RUKUMATISM&#13;
KEMEDY a trial. No matter what&#13;
j-uur doctor may say, no matter what&#13;
jour frleads may say, no matter how&#13;
prejudiced von may be against all advertised&#13;
rpmeok'8, co ot one* to yonr drngtirt&#13;
and get a bottle of the KHEUMATISM&#13;
HEMKDY. If It falU to fftre ntlsfactlon.&#13;
I will refund yoar mon«y.—Munyoa&#13;
Remember this remedy contains no sailer&#13;
lie acid, no opium cocaine, morphine or&#13;
other hnrmful drwrft. It ts put tip under&#13;
the guarantee of the Pure Food and Drug&#13;
Aft.&#13;
For sale by all drafgists. Price. 26c.&#13;
GALL STONES •r u ; LITIK B1SKA8S.&#13;
Writo Dd iiXaboTitlt.&#13;
Will rrllofucnrprfw*.&#13;
A d d r e s s C. C O V E Y . B D . 5 , Loosing-. M i c h .&#13;
DEFIMCE STARCHj&#13;
—airier it»rch*!« only 1i onnc*»—una prtee »nd&#13;
" D E F I A N C E " 18 S U P E R I O R Q U A ' - I T Y .&#13;
MORE BIG CROPS IN 1908&#13;
Another 00*009 — - - ,&#13;
tiers frosn the Vnstcstl&#13;
States,&#13;
t r i e : * i&#13;
tlement.&#13;
oflandtoeachset* »&#13;
t i e r , — 1 6 0 tree I&#13;
homestead and 160 at $3.00 per acre.&#13;
a A v a t t rich c o u n t r y and a contented pro*-&#13;
pCJOua people."—Extract from corrtsfcndetti*&#13;
of a National Edttur, tvhou visit to W'tUtrn&#13;
Caftad*, im August. JQOS, was am instiration.&#13;
Many have paid the entire cost of their | .&#13;
farms and pad £ balance pf ton § &amp; 0 0 to&#13;
$20.00 per acre as a resuft of one crop.&#13;
Spring wheat, winter wheat, oess, barley,&#13;
flax and peas Are the*principal ctopa, while&#13;
the wild grasses&gt; bang to perfection the&#13;
best cattle that have ever been sold on,&#13;
the Chicago market.&#13;
Splendid climate, schools and clrarchear&#13;
in all localities. Railways touch most of '&#13;
the settled districts, and prices for produce i -'&#13;
are always good. Lands may also be purchased&#13;
from railway and land companies&#13;
For pamphlets, maps and Information re- *&#13;
g a r d i n g l o w r a i l w a y rales, apply t o Superint&#13;
e n d e n t of Immigration, O t t a w a , Canada, or&#13;
t h e a u t h o r i i e d C a n a r i i y Q o v s r o m e n i Ag-«rrl£ .&#13;
IS ounce* t6&#13;
the package&#13;
H. V. McTimtS. 1» Jeasrssa Aveeaw. ,&#13;
MkUgsa; tr C. a. LA0%TM. Sa«n Stt. Marls, ka.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO- 11, 1 9 0 *&#13;
kTtT ts« whota (if e » - D^soaly assigns^ a w u s l i f « a I T r taaa T m t , gtwws warn* oafltl&#13;
TO** pat tocatbvr. Why! She has s o batter s o u taaa aaytadt Sttawl&#13;
btgyleldlagTartettea. — ^ - ^ - » « ^ ^ sTJfPMMsl WrTLUAM OAT«.&#13;
Som«y*awafa^tm»aOerM*By.we»l«%eaMptaJ»ieiiaMfcaDteoat&gt;Bat&lt;&lt;-ha1^Taneyaf&lt;&gt;s&#13;
TRrMiaol* p. aTekkoaagaam Siaid. sotaxBerleaJi&amp;Wl&#13;
i m « d i n a s t y a a r a a a a « » l o o d a a i t i iim, Its pmlse.&#13;
, ••JUVtTHATsTO WHrrst •OMASIZA OATS. a»tMrSt Wait* B » B w n O M . t i T « i * a«o. took tae world's prtM«*gM0.S»ta goM f o r t h *&#13;
fc«»-»iort jttfduut «•* varlotr. (OtteaSUeg tall* taa lassrssttag story4 Webavai&#13;
UasoataadogorltacaUaaeaaBauaasaaitaaaoTathaoralaary.&#13;
waano«iajrrstsai PO« muneuvTuauu.&#13;
•sv* aa Mla»OM&gt;t» Vo. • and So. al Oats. Wlaeonala&#13;
•laaeeota Ko. s aad So. MS Barter, Mliiasswai Ho. M&#13;
Whaii, s t s . ato. — _ « _ « _ _ —&#13;
Wfm fcsw ay an m44» tfca targsat W&#13;
•uaju. c*UMm «&#13;
Svatfiaa OataJOtlertai&#13;
S a a d MorUDakoSk&#13;
brack** (Wta, Xa. W).&#13;
No. US FkUuOocaw&#13;
BKk&#13;
**» fjahMsn tke mtmt oriiiaat ssaa aataloa la i&#13;
Or, it T«« ramit 1«* ta pottac 1 * 1 will ammdrtm i&#13;
idlag BilUoa DaUar (1mm*. thai a *oa Bav Woadar.&#13;
It Srletlas wftk&#13;
blalotottaraiM&#13;
•tadtai - - - Boatta. tke a a am. eareal a*&#13;
Bil-nw gtag Baxlar. yiaiala« 1 7 3 kav sar&#13;
wortk STl • • • • «t aay nan's sanaay to &gt; at«. start tkaravtuv.&#13;
Or raaUttaasartwawtUaSdagaskaeaofaa— gaima— itHo^atty&#13;
daamvaaala.&#13;
1 hat n a d l g y .&#13;
I gaWMM. the next 4%JLIOVLNOAV , S [ 0 e k ' **loh. Raaa*-"Tb€ Road to WelV&#13;
t^KaVJolk Ihey- \&lt;frt 8«tof&#13;
congratnln&#13;
COLT DISTEMPER ^sJITf ssBatrttP'* T I M * srt*lMs*^i* ^ssTTwl, sKsW • t l i&#13;
tmxirr b o * •wiiwanJ." kept r»asa_ksTta«_the).&#13;
^ ^ - ta«&#13;
.Chattel&#13;
BtaM*. ao fiwt _^_&#13;
tqr n«ta«; KPOH1T8 _ , _ - — ,^--—^---&#13;
oB«B*.or tn r M d . i t f o a l ) M b M aad «p&lt;^» u-_-. -&#13;
torma ot dUrtMitMrr. B S r b a S M y s d s r t e a w a for luasylaJoaL&#13;
oaabotUa«rim»aJita«ltne«m»oB«&lt;w9aw SKejHSIaDOtHaiSSaai&#13;
r»rtax*n of droearlata and b a n n e dealer*, or oast erpraa* patd ky&#13;
mmnfartHT^ni. Ctat abows bow v&gt; ponHlee tkroaav O^r&#13;
« rrz ^-ta&lt; ' ------ —&#13;
nVeasitsrtwswttsvtlsMasjatW to. Vi _&#13;
•JfaMa? DXUa CO,, Osrisjgty. Utmrntm.&#13;
» . . - . k ^ ^ m »&#13;
JV^^-ket-&#13;
^¼ &gt;&#13;
« « ;"' *'-*«:«&#13;
4V¾* f*c**#&#13;
'$£.&#13;
it&#13;
* • • : •&#13;
?&#13;
I Bu»lnt»i Pointful. i&#13;
Good cow, coming in sbou. I n q u i r e&#13;
ot W. B. Darrow.&#13;
Asong Oilr Comspondenh&#13;
Don't forget the St. Patricks P a r t y&#13;
a t the opera house . Friday evening,&#13;
March 19. Muaic by Geigers Orchvutfa&#13;
of Jackson. Bill 75 cents. Spectators&#13;
will be d a r n e d 10 cents.&#13;
.' •W9H 1AJLK.&#13;
Second growth, dry block wood.&#13;
9tf L. Spears&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Six Poland'China'bi oixl sows'due in&#13;
April. James Spears,&#13;
9tt Unadilla.&#13;
R. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to cond ict auction sales? as usu&#13;
al. 'Thanking you tor past favors,&#13;
andv sohciting your patronage, 1 remain&#13;
yours. K. CLINTON.&#13;
rum. SAJM.&#13;
Farm of 80 acres, five miles youth&#13;
went of Pinckuey, known as the Dave&#13;
Obalker farm. Stock and hay will go&#13;
with the farm if purchaser so desires.&#13;
Will go rheiip, it bought at once. In&#13;
quire &gt; t Lather L Pollok,&#13;
.8( f Pine km 7 , Mich.&#13;
Fay your subscription this month.&#13;
Farmers and&#13;
Horsemen&#13;
We Do&#13;
HORSESHOEING&#13;
New Shoes 30c&#13;
Setting 121-2c&#13;
Calking and ,R&#13;
Setting IDC&#13;
ART. FLINTOFF&#13;
Pettysville, Mich.&#13;
Spring Time&#13;
18&#13;
Paper Time&#13;
I a m h e r e w i t h&#13;
a full l i n e of&#13;
W a l l P a p e r&#13;
See Our Samples&#13;
b e f o r e p u r -&#13;
c h a a i n g&#13;
J. C. Dinkel.&#13;
2 n d d o o r s o u t h of h o t e l .&#13;
E. N. BROTHERTON&#13;
UNDERTAKER&#13;
CALLS ANSWERED PROMPTLY&#13;
DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
Gregory, Michigan&#13;
P h o n e 2 l o n g 3 s h o r t&#13;
N O R T H P U T N A M .&#13;
P a u l Brog&amp;xi of Ohiluon wab&#13;
h o m e o v e r S u n d a y .&#13;
C l y d e L i n e t r a n s a c t e d b u s i n e s s&#13;
i n H o w e l l S a t u r d a y . ,&#13;
Mrs. E t t a B l a u d culled O«J M r s .&#13;
C a r r o n e d a y l a s t week.&#13;
M i a s L u l u A b b o t t is at H o w e l l&#13;
t a k i n g m e d i c a l t r e a t m e n t .&#13;
P e t B a c k u s of H o w e l l h a s b e e n&#13;
b u z z i u g w o o d iu t h i s v i c i u i t y .&#13;
O r l a Bruff is v i s i t i n g liis g r a n d -&#13;
p a r e n t s , M r . a n d Mrs. G e o . B l a n d .&#13;
H a r t l e y B l a u d of O c e o l a v i s i t e d&#13;
h i s f a t h e r G . B . B l a n d , T h u r s d a y&#13;
last.&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . P a t L a v e y of&#13;
A n d e r s o n v i s i t e d at C. B r o g a u s&#13;
F r i d a y .&#13;
T h e W e l c h e r g i r l s of H o w e l l&#13;
v i s i t e d E d n a A b b o t t S a t u r d a y a n d&#13;
S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. W m . B l a u d s little n e p h e w&#13;
of W e s t M a r i o u s p e n t a few d a y s&#13;
with h e r l a s t week.&#13;
A n u m b e r of f r i e n d s a n d n e i g h -&#13;
b o r s of I . J . A b b o t t s p e n t l a s t&#13;
T l i u r s d a y a t h i s h o m e .&#13;
M r s . F r e d B u r g e s s a n d d a u g h t -&#13;
e r F l o r e n c e s p e n t a few d a y s l a s t&#13;
w e e k v i s i t i n g r e l a t i v e s at G r e g o r y .&#13;
M r s . O h a e . F r o s t of D e t r o i t i s&#13;
c a r i n g for h e r m o t h e r M r s .&#13;
S h a c k l e t o n w h o h a s b e e n v e r y ill.&#13;
Mrs. L i a m N e w m a n of F o w l e r -&#13;
ville s p e n t a few d a y s last w e e k&#13;
w i t h h e r p e o p l e , M r . a n d M r s . I .&#13;
J . A b b o t t .&#13;
Mr. a n d Mrs. C. B r o g a u w e r e&#13;
t w o of t h e m a n y g u e s t s w h o w e r e&#13;
p l e a s a n t l y e n t e r t a i n e d at J . P .&#13;
H a r r i s ' S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g .&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . O h a s . M a p e s&#13;
• p e n t l a s t week i n C h e l s e a a n d&#13;
D e t r o i t&#13;
Mtaa May B i c k f o r d of G r a n d&#13;
L e d g e s p e n t S a t u r d a y a n d S u n -&#13;
d a y w i t h M j . a n d M i u G r e e n i n g .&#13;
T h e G r a n g e r s a r e p r e p a r i n g for&#13;
t h e i r a n n u a l b a n q u e t for F r i d a y&#13;
e v e n i n g M a r . 12. T h e y e x p e c t&#13;
i t h&#13;
b e&#13;
M i s s J e n n i e B u e l l to&#13;
t h e m . w&#13;
•AAaaAAAAfcAAA»AaAH44AA4AA*&#13;
Partners to the End&#13;
W E S T PTJTKAM.&#13;
Mrs. P a t r i c k K e n n e d y is v e r y&#13;
ill at t h i s w r i t i n g .&#13;
H . B . G a r d u e r a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
G r a c e w e r e in H o w e l l S a t u r d a y .&#13;
H . B . G a r d n e r a n d wife w e r e&#13;
g u e s t s a t A. G . W i l s o n s T h u r s d a y&#13;
last.&#13;
D a l e C h a p p e l of W h i t e O a k is&#13;
s p e n d i n g a few d a y s with W. B .&#13;
G a r d n e r .&#13;
J o h n D i n k e l a n d wife of P i n c k -&#13;
n e y s p e n t S u n d a y at M r s . W m .&#13;
G a r d n e r s .&#13;
H . B . G a r d n e r sold his d r i v i n g&#13;
h o r s e , G y p s i e , to p a r t i e s in S o u t h&#13;
L y o n last w e e k .&#13;
Mrs. W m . K e n n e d y of S t o c k -&#13;
b r i d g e s p e n t S u n d a y a n d M o n d a y&#13;
w i t h r e l a t i v e s h e r e .&#13;
D a v i d C h a l k e r of Mason, f o r m -&#13;
e r l y of t h i s p l a c e , was t a k e n to&#13;
t h e S a n a t o r i u m at B a t t l e C r e e k ,&#13;
last week for t r e a t m e n t w h e r e&#13;
g r e a t h o p e s a r e e n t e r t a i n e d for a&#13;
s p e e d y r e c o v e r y . H i s m a n y&#13;
f r i e n d s h e r e a r e g r i e v e d to l e a r n&#13;
of his d a n g e r o u s i l l n e s s .&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
E . E . P h i l l i p s lost a cow M o n -&#13;
d a y n i g h t .&#13;
M i s s E u n i c e B r a d l e y is m u c h&#13;
i m p r o v e d in h e a l t h .&#13;
J a m e s W a l t e r s r e t u r n e d l a s t&#13;
w e e k f r o m a visit at C o l l i n s ' .&#13;
Mrs. A. W. E l l i o t t is v i s i t i n g&#13;
h e r d a u g h t e r M r s . A r n o l d of Y p -&#13;
s i l a u t i .&#13;
A. W . M e s s e n g e r a n d Will B u t -&#13;
l e r r e t u r n e d Monday, from W a s h -&#13;
i n g t o n .&#13;
M i s s E d n a R e e d is s p e n d i n g&#13;
h e r t h r e e w e e k s v a c a t i o n w i t h h e r&#13;
p e o p l e in D e x t e r .&#13;
Mrs. J. M. B r a d l e y a n d E u n i c e&#13;
B r a d l e y v i s i t e d M r s . J o h n M o r a n d&#13;
of W h i t e O a k o n e d a y l a s t w e e k .&#13;
J . M. B r a d l e y sold a s p a n of&#13;
h o r s e s t o C h r i s G e h r e n g e r last&#13;
week a n d a l s o a h o r s e t o C h a s .&#13;
T e a c h o u i&#13;
ID ICopyrlght. 1SU8, by T. C. McClure.J&#13;
One day when Colonel Day came&#13;
back to hia top story room at Mrs.&#13;
tyllkirm' rooming house he found the&#13;
room next to his occupied. It had been&#13;
vacant for a year, and the colonel was&#13;
not only curious, but nettled. The garret&#13;
of the house WBH divided into two&#13;
rooms, uud his wab one, and he had&#13;
never eveu looked into the other, but&#13;
as he had so long been the Hole tenant&#13;
ef the top atory he felt that ho ought&#13;
to have been consulted as to a newcomer.&#13;
When he heurd a person moving&#13;
around in the other half of his do&#13;
main he went down to Mrs. Wilklns.&#13;
The colonel waa a man of sixty. He&#13;
had threadbare garments and an empty&#13;
puree. While he occupied the cheapest&#13;
room in the house, it was veil known&#13;
that he was often hard put to p;iy his&#13;
rent, while his meals were always taken&#13;
at the cheapest restaurants. l i e was&#13;
a man of dignity and education, and&#13;
that he had once occupied a place in&#13;
the world could not be doubted.&#13;
"Mrs. Wilklns," began the colonel as&#13;
he entered the landlady's presence, "I&#13;
take it that you have rented the other&#13;
room, and to a female at t h a t ? "&#13;
"Yes, colonel, but It is to a young&#13;
woman who is trying hard to make a&#13;
Irving."&#13;
"But you should have consulted me.&#13;
I have been with you for a year, and I&#13;
ihould hate to remove to other quar&#13;
fairs, but please remember that I have&#13;
certain rights and privileges, and they&#13;
are not to be abrogated without my&#13;
consent. I will think it over and con&#13;
aider what steps to take."&#13;
Five minutes later he knocked on the&#13;
door of tlie other room, and it was&#13;
young woman of&#13;
ile 1 &gt;o\vcd stithy,&#13;
; ;in iuvitat ion for&#13;
locked around the&#13;
old inink on the&#13;
aN i.'les of weariii*&#13;
MII the nulls&#13;
A .eroml trlanee&#13;
have no hop* of getting w e l l *&#13;
"None whatever."&#13;
"Ton remember our talk of tang aguY&#13;
The time eeemed far off then, b u t It is&#13;
here tonight. Why should you be n&#13;
month In dying? Why should I seek to&#13;
Bve for three or four y e a n nior*v"&#13;
"Yes, wo had a talk," she quietly&#13;
laid.&#13;
"Have you any money?"&#13;
"A dime. Take It and buy you something&#13;
to eat."&#13;
"Partners to the last," he said a s ha&#13;
lulled and rubbed his hands together.&#13;
"It makes ic far easier where we are&#13;
to go together. I will be back soon."&#13;
"And it is going to happen?" she&#13;
» k e d as he returned with a bulky&#13;
package.&#13;
"It must. Why should it n o t ? "&#13;
"Yes- why not?"&#13;
Half an hour later the colonel eat&#13;
ftowxt beside the bed and kindly said:&#13;
"We have been partners—true partners.&#13;
I will sit here and hold your&#13;
hand while we sleep."&#13;
They found them thus- the policethe&#13;
tearful landlady the bustling coroner—&#13;
the reporters.&#13;
"They simply fell asleep," said the&#13;
toroner. "The fumes or charcoal always&#13;
leave that peaceful, restful look&#13;
in the h u m a a face." M. QUAD.&#13;
H i a Glauses.&#13;
He came home In the small hours&#13;
of the morning, and his loving spouse&#13;
confronted him with wrath in her eye&#13;
and a telegram In her hand, saying,&#13;
"Here Is news that has been waiting&#13;
for you since supper time."&#13;
He 1 (linked, looked wise and, braced&#13;
up against the hatrack, felt through&#13;
his pockets, murmuring, "I left my&#13;
glasses down town."&#13;
"Yes," she replied, with scathing&#13;
irony, "but you brought the contents&#13;
with yen."&#13;
! A F r i e n d I n N e e d .&#13;
| .Mont half an h.air had been ex-&#13;
I pend: (1 by 1 he bashful young man in&#13;
a levies of advances aial retreats, and&#13;
little .Johnny's cramped position behind&#13;
(he sofa was becoming somewhat&#13;
painful.&#13;
"I wish 1 dared" the young mar.&#13;
•oi'O'rMI. cd Mi a new attack, when the&#13;
coup!:' were electriiicd by an impatient&#13;
CM'!;! mati"ii behind them: "Aw, make&#13;
a break! She's (bad easy!" Brooklyn&#13;
Life.&#13;
opened to&#13;
a b o u t I sv &lt;&#13;
a n d ^ be b i&#13;
l l t ' l l ! • • •' '&#13;
r o o m •;,&#13;
ti&lt; or ;:n&#13;
i I): V a j &gt; p&#13;
e , ' i v e : i i&#13;
in in by&#13;
ni v five.&#13;
• ide&#13;
111'&#13;
a v.'&#13;
a b&#13;
c l i c&#13;
!'el ii ! | i : ; i l u ; '&#13;
io | he \, nl:,&#13;
M i l&#13;
l'enix'd. I li i i : com,'&#13;
s o / . c u e 1 a li: t le.&#13;
out a s k i n g .Miss,&#13;
"I'lif why':" she&#13;
''l&amp;eoause 1 occupy&#13;
because we a r e both&#13;
i i''e t o l d h i m&#13;
, i p ! i o n ,&#13;
III! :-a.&#13;
but 1 c&#13;
el us s&#13;
asked,&#13;
the next room&#13;
victims of lickli&#13;
&gt;u v&gt; liy yon&#13;
as his face&#13;
n see withlake&#13;
hands."&#13;
fortune; because we should feel sorry&#13;
for each other; because I feel more&#13;
Borry for you than you can for me."&#13;
"I hardly understand you, sir," she&#13;
said as she slowly put out her hand.&#13;
"You are trying to make a living, I&#13;
take It?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"And I am tightin^jjQyerty in hopes&#13;
to live a few years longeTT^^hauKh&#13;
why I should care to live another week&#13;
I do not know. The bond of poverty&#13;
la between us. Let us be friends."&#13;
That night, instead of taking his&#13;
meal at a cheap restaurant, he brought&#13;
home a loaf of bread and some snugage.&#13;
Instead of going out to hunt, up&#13;
a cheap place, she went, out for a&#13;
bit of butter and a jar of marmalade.&#13;
They had dinner together In her room.&#13;
It was the first of many meals.&#13;
The colonel and the young lady got&#13;
to be very good friends. They counseled&#13;
with each other; they cheered and&#13;
encouraged each other; they deceived&#13;
each other, or tried to, as to what the&#13;
future had In store. The woman suffered&#13;
moat, and yet she was the bravest&#13;
hearted. From almost the first&#13;
day of their meeting they looked forward&#13;
to certain things. Some day the&#13;
last of his friends would disappear anil&#13;
his precarious income would cease altogether.&#13;
He would die before asking&#13;
I stranger for charity. Some day the&#13;
Aisease eating at her lungs would demand&#13;
the penalty, and there would bo&#13;
no avoiding, it. They talked the matter&#13;
over for an hour and then dropped&#13;
It anil never referred to k again. It&#13;
was the black shadow in their pnth,&#13;
and yet they fought. It away. One&#13;
night, a year later, the colonel came&#13;
borne and found the young woman in&#13;
bed. The doctor had been there, and&#13;
the landlady had done all she could do.&#13;
[t waa the beginning of the end. The&#13;
eolonel eat down with a softer light on&#13;
bis face than his partner had seen&#13;
there for week*, and there was a touch&#13;
of the exultant In hia voice as he said.&#13;
"I have come home penniless. The&#13;
last of my friends has turned his beck&#13;
0« me. I am no beggar of alms."&#13;
I U D M s o n y , • she signed.&#13;
Inconsistent.&#13;
Howell — Kowell is an Inconsistent&#13;
fellow Powell—That's right: he wool,:&#13;
bell you ttike all the time you wanted&#13;
end then have you arrested for steal&#13;
fesf bis w a t c h . - N e w York P r e s s&#13;
A D D m O K A l LOCAL.&#13;
ber t t e t r |^imxJta«rJte^anaDJ&amp;&gt;«t you&#13;
We understand that Will Jeffreys&#13;
baa secured a position in L a n s i n g ,&#13;
Joe Placeway and wife are m o v i n g&#13;
their goods to their farm this week.&#13;
We have a few very fine Easter&#13;
Post Cards at 5c each and some at 2&#13;
for 5c left at this office.&#13;
The Villages of Chelsea, D e x t e r&#13;
Fowlerville and Finckney had but&#13;
one ticket in the; hold Monday.&#13;
Sperial Communication Livingston&#13;
Lodjzft F. &amp; A. M. No. 76 T h u r s d a y&#13;
evening March 16. F C Degree.&#13;
R. J. Carr, Secty.&#13;
The Chelsea g r a d u a t i n g class this&#13;
year departs from the usual oratorical&#13;
display and will give an up to date&#13;
play instead.&#13;
Bills were issued from this office the&#13;
past week a n n o u n c i n g a St. Patrick's&#13;
party at the opera house, Friday evening,&#13;
March 19.&#13;
We are in receipt of a copy of the&#13;
Gratiot County Herald in which is&#13;
the address of J u d g e Sear I in sentencing&#13;
a man tor r u n n i n g a "blind pig."&#13;
He handed out to him a fine of $200&#13;
and 90 days in the Detroit house of&#13;
correction.&#13;
Editor Adams had to hire a farmer&#13;
to haal his anto about 40 rods t h e other&#13;
day ao he could make repairs. He&#13;
says, "Now everybody laugh.'"—Fowlerville&#13;
Standard. Wow, we suppose&#13;
oui t u r n is coming some time t h e n —&#13;
we will not brat?.&#13;
The proposed raise of freight, rates&#13;
by the railroads met with such a vigorous&#13;
protest from the press and shippers&#13;
t h a t it is said they have abandoned&#13;
the project and will c o n t i n u e to&#13;
operate on the present schedule.—&#13;
Fowlerville Review.&#13;
The Fowlerville tire company was&#13;
called ont three tim^s last week h a t&#13;
each time a conflagration was averted.&#13;
Once by the company and the other&#13;
times jopt as the boee W M coupled&#13;
reAdj for bosmesfl l i p$j% a n y w a y&#13;
to have the p r o t e c t i o n&#13;
T h e citiiena ot Howejil s r e anxious&#13;
to have t h e proceedings of the council&#13;
printed in their local papers. T h e&#13;
oounoil there last veer c a t it o a t to&#13;
save an expends of less than 9 2 5 .&#13;
Cong'I Church Now&#13;
Two weeks have passed without any&#13;
notes from thia church. We would&#13;
say however for both Sabbaths t h a t&#13;
Rev. Grtites has given u s splendid sermons.&#13;
T n o interest in every branch&#13;
of the church work is very satisfactory.&#13;
Thd ladies wish to thank Mr. C.&#13;
J . Teeple tor the baautil'ul hell he&#13;
gave them a short time ago.&#13;
T h e Third Division will servn t»&#13;
8t Patricks Tea at lht&gt; Mactjabee hall,&#13;
and you are very uordialiy invited to&#13;
be present.&#13;
R e v . Gates is attending the 5th&#13;
Dis. C. K. C o n v e u t h n at Olivet this&#13;
week. He will deliyer the address for&#13;
the closing meeting Friday evening(&#13;
We very much appreciate the honor&#13;
conferred by the executive committee&#13;
in choosing Rev. Gates for the most&#13;
i m p o r t a n t address of the Convention.&#13;
We are sure the committee have made&#13;
no mistake in their selection.&#13;
P r a y e r meeting Thursday evening.&#13;
Services as usual next S u n d a y . Everybody&#13;
welcome.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Services Sunday were well attended.&#13;
The attendance at Sunday school was&#13;
89 with a collection of $2.&#13;
The pastor is delivering sermons&#13;
Sunday evenings on different characters&#13;
of the bible and they are proving&#13;
very interesting. H e ? r the one next&#13;
Sunday evening.&#13;
Prayer meeting tonight with the&#13;
mission class following.&#13;
Yeu are especially welcome to the&#13;
services ot this c h u r c h .&#13;
Already we hear whisperings about&#13;
Easter and there will be doings as&#13;
usual by the Sunday school on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The Weather.&#13;
The pa3t week has been a tine one&#13;
for this time of the year, although we&#13;
have had some raw March winds.&#13;
Monday n i g h t a heavy stcrm of&#13;
sleet visited this section and everything&#13;
was covered with a coat of ice.&#13;
There was a good deal more rain than&#13;
ice however and the roads were made&#13;
into mud.&#13;
The weather has t u r n e i colder and&#13;
it is freezing as we go to press Wednesday,&#13;
with high wind.&#13;
Silver Medal Contest.&#13;
There will he a Silver Medal Contest&#13;
given at the Maccahee Hall,&#13;
Gregory, Friday night Mar. 12 under*&#13;
the auspices of the Gregory W. C. T„&#13;
U. Admission 15c, children under 12&#13;
tree.&#13;
Names of Contestants: Beal Daniels,&#13;
Marlow Mnnsell, Glen Marlatt,&#13;
Myrtle P a r k i n s o n , Gladys Smith, Iva&#13;
Richmond, Hazel Arnold, Florence&#13;
Reade, J u n i a Ray Brotherton.&#13;
P r o g r a m :&#13;
The New Marching t h r o u g h Georgia&#13;
by Congregation.&#13;
° o n g by Senior L. T . L,&#13;
Contestants Nos. 1, 2, 3&#13;
Cornet Solo, Ikie Williams&#13;
Contestants N o s . 4, 5, 6&#13;
Solo, Miss Maud K a h n&#13;
Contestants Nos. 7, 8, 9&#13;
Violin Solo, S. A. Denton&#13;
Mrs. M E Butler of Detroit, who&#13;
has trained the class, will speak while&#13;
the J u d g e s are out. All who heard&#13;
her at Stock bridge last week pronounce&#13;
her tine. Come and hear it.&#13;
Mrs. Butler has a r r a n g e d a pantomime&#13;
by the girls of the class, "My&#13;
Faith Looks Up to Thae."&#13;
Notice.&#13;
H. Knickerbocker of Howell, formerly&#13;
with Mr. Weimeister, has rented&#13;
the blacksmith shop of E. R. Brown,&#13;
and is prepared to do first class work&#13;
of every discription. Hor9e shoeing a&#13;
specialty. Twenty years experience.&#13;
Would like to solicit a share of your&#13;
patronage, all work g u a r a n t e e d .&#13;
Very respectively,&#13;
t ! 0 H. Knickerbocker.&#13;
1 ^&#13;
¥&#13;
•&lt;i&#13;
»«- ,**4 .'.4k\w »»"^» »'*• * P * i '"•*•* &lt;-,9rW^S' j*V» . . - ^ . - v - w * * / « M . M M i '</text>
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                <text>March 11, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. n m . PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., T H U R S D A Y , MAR. 18. 1909. No. 11&#13;
• * L *&#13;
»b Baked Goods&#13;
We are now getting a fine line of Baked Goods from Jaokbon&#13;
Below find a list of Home of the article** we carry&#13;
Bread&#13;
Graham Bread&#13;
Buns&#13;
Cinnamon Rolls&#13;
Jelly Roll Cake&#13;
Angel Cake&#13;
Coolyes — ~&#13;
Fried Cakes&#13;
Swarthout &amp; Placeway&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
fin* "SftfMr" iftows the past&#13;
w*tk.&#13;
Okat, Webb of Bay City wan in&#13;
town one day last week.&#13;
H. R. Gillette and wife were in Detroit&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Miss Flora Culbane of Ann Arbor&#13;
visited her parents here the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chae. Doody of Lyndon&#13;
visited her parents here the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
E. N. Brotherton, undertaker of&#13;
Gregory was in town on business one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
S. U, Byer is moving his family&#13;
t t t h l D r o w n bouse which he recently&#13;
parthased, this week.&#13;
Walker Sbarland, who ha« been in&#13;
Detroit a couple of weeks, was in&#13;
town the last of last week.&#13;
Mrs. H. P. Smith and Mrs. J. I).&#13;
White spent Tuesday with Frank Al-&#13;
-tatand family in Hamburg.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle returned this&#13;
week from Detroit wbertj she has been&#13;
studying the styles in millinery.&#13;
A card from Norman Wilson, of&#13;
Kirksville, Mo., states that they have&#13;
been caring for a nine pound baby&#13;
girl since March 7.&#13;
Tuesday was a genuine March day&#13;
—wind, snow, sunshine and all. At&#13;
night it turned very &lt;*old and froze&#13;
hard. Wednesday was a finn day hut&#13;
the usual raw, March wind.&#13;
Do not forget that the Columbian&#13;
Dramatic Club are arranging to pat&#13;
the comedy, "Champagne and Oyatort"&#13;
on the stage at the opera hooae b a n&#13;
Friday evening, March 19. Tfce cart&#13;
is good and all wiM to dtUffctod&#13;
last week&#13;
error in the&#13;
- • * • • &lt; &gt; &amp; . . •&#13;
«t*.&#13;
'•u,,.-&#13;
U UM oooatil prottftiiAffi&#13;
wr, o f fjphdrmJM* *a erro&#13;
I AMI wfco moved the ac-&#13;
&gt;*f the bills. It should have&#13;
TCftd Mowers and Peters instead of&#13;
Sigler and Johnson. Mr. Siglor was&#13;
not present.&#13;
Clyde Darrow of Jackson visited his&#13;
parents here the past week.&#13;
Party at opera house Friday night.&#13;
See notice in "business pointers."&#13;
You aie especially invited to attend&#13;
the services at the M. K. church Sunday.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with friends in&#13;
Toledo.&#13;
Frank Robinson of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent last Wednesday with his cousin,&#13;
J. D. White.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Monks were&#13;
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Spears&#13;
Sunday last.&#13;
Edward Gal pin has taken the Geo.&#13;
Plintoff farm near Pettysville for the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Mrs, Wm. Fitsspatrick of Detroit,&#13;
has been a guest at the home of her&#13;
brother, Ed. Far nam.&#13;
The WCTU will meet Saturday&#13;
March 20 at 2:00 with Mrs. E. W.&#13;
Kennedy. Everyone invited.&#13;
There will be a shadow social at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Nash Friday&#13;
evening Mar, h 19. Ladies please&#13;
bring ?ake. Everybody invited.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Burt moved to&#13;
Novi, Oakland county, Monday, and&#13;
will make that place their home in&#13;
the future. We understand that they&#13;
have purchased a farm there, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Burt have been residents in&#13;
this village and vicinity and their&#13;
many Iriends ara sorry to have them&#13;
leave but, wish them success,&#13;
H. R Gear, a graduate of Cloary's&#13;
business college, has been engaged to&#13;
work in the Pinckney Exchange Bank&#13;
to take the place of Herbert Gillette&#13;
who has been hare for several years&#13;
and made many friends. Mr. Gillette&#13;
goes to Howell where he will have an&#13;
Mr.&#13;
and&#13;
We&#13;
re-&#13;
S o c i a l E v e n t s .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Sykes; Mr. Had&#13;
Mrs. John Tweple entertained the club&#13;
oi ladies and gentlemen at tbe home&#13;
of the laitm, Monday evening, March&#13;
8, which wau a vary pleasant affair.&#13;
Mrs. Ella Ja-jkuon entertained a&#13;
party of ladies and gentlemen at her&#13;
home Wednesday evening, Mar. 10.&#13;
Games was tbe urder of tbe evening&#13;
with social cbat and luncheon. A&#13;
pleasant time was spent.&#13;
Last Friday evening at the home of&#13;
Mrs. W. A Carr a large company of&#13;
ladies enjoyed a very pleasant even"&#13;
ing. The house was beautifully decorated&#13;
in red aud green. Dominoes&#13;
was the order of the evening, and a&#13;
dainty lunch of ice cream, cake and&#13;
coffee was served.&#13;
Mrs. John Cadwell and Mrs, Thos.&#13;
Read entertained about thirty ladies&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Cadwell, which&#13;
was tastily decorated in white and&#13;
green buntinur and beautiful hyacinths,&#13;
Tuesday afternoon, March 16.&#13;
Shamrock was tbe design used for&#13;
place cards, and tbe same was in&#13;
evidence in sandwiches and cakes that&#13;
were served with other refreshments.&#13;
The afternoon was spent with music&#13;
and game?, and the company spent a&#13;
very enjoyable afternoon.&#13;
V&#13;
^&#13;
mmmzmm^mmmmsmmzmmge.]&#13;
interest in the Parshall Mills.&#13;
Gear comes well recommended&#13;
will cnmiTifinofi work April 1.&#13;
understand that Mr, Gillette vvil&#13;
main dm inj? April,&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
New food* AT* rapidly&#13;
filling the tfcoc* and its&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
The best stock of Embroideries,&#13;
Laces, Ribbons,&#13;
Corsets, Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Hosiery and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Rcmcaibcr That, • k&#13;
Every Day Is Bargain Day&#13;
Farmers 9&#13;
Bring&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
Howeirs Busy Store&#13;
in your harnesses&#13;
and have them i&#13;
repaired, wased anil&#13;
oiled ready for your&#13;
spring work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can do that work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rips, e t c , in fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
U B W t | * • a • •&#13;
W. B. DARROW&#13;
Uivery Changed Hands.&#13;
Last week Percy Hwartbout and&#13;
Horace Saylea purchased the livery&#13;
outfit of Jaa. Wilson and took posession&#13;
Saturday night. Mr. SayleB of&#13;
the new firm has done considerable&#13;
driving for the liyery the past few&#13;
years and is well known by all patrons.&#13;
Mr. Wilcox b is conduoted the livery&#13;
here for many years and has made a&#13;
success ot it. He baa always been&#13;
genial and has won many friends&#13;
among the citizens here as well as&#13;
among the traveling public. We&#13;
understand that he will look after the&#13;
farm be recently purchased just north&#13;
of town.&#13;
Cong I Church Notes&#13;
Rev. Gates returned from tbe C. E,&#13;
convention held at Olivet Saturday&#13;
evening. He will give a report of&#13;
the meetings next Sunday night at&#13;
the regular hour, 6:45.&#13;
The sermons last Sunday were very&#13;
helpful and practical. The anthem at&#13;
the morning service wa^ exceptionally&#13;
fine and, as remarked by the pastor, it&#13;
was a sermon ot itself.&#13;
The Subject next Sunday morning&#13;
will be Resolving and Doing. Everybody&#13;
will be welcomed to all the services&#13;
of this church.&#13;
PUTNAM AHD HAKSTJXG FAltf-&#13;
EBS* 'TLTIB.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg Farm&#13;
ers club wi!l im.et Saturday .uarch 20,&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. E.&#13;
Swarthout. Everybody is invited to&#13;
attend, &amp;n&lt;.i to ha prepared to talk on&#13;
the question, 1&lt; Local Option a remedy&#13;
for the saloon evil? Please bring&#13;
lapboards and dishes.&#13;
PROGRAM:&#13;
liiHt. Solo, Florence Kice&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Duet,&#13;
Mai&#13;
Mary VanFleet&#13;
Fannie Swnrthout&#13;
Mr. Cameron&#13;
Fern Hendee&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Kennedy&#13;
F. H. Swarthout&#13;
Nellie Van Horn&#13;
Fred Grieve&#13;
Mr. Hendricks&#13;
Last Chance&#13;
Before Inventory&#13;
TO BUY GOODS AT&#13;
WHOLESALE PRICES&#13;
Saturday, Monday, Tuesday&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 20. 22, 23&#13;
•&lt;&gt;**. - i j&#13;
and&#13;
24 4'&#13;
Dress Goods at Cost&#13;
Underwear at Cost&#13;
Ginghams and Prints at Cost&#13;
Shoes and Rubbers at Cost&#13;
Furniture at Cost&#13;
Gent's Furnishings at Cost i &lt;&#13;
No Goods Charged Produce Taken&#13;
DO NOT FORGET WE SELL GROCERIES AT COST PRICES&#13;
5o&#13;
3c&#13;
7c&#13;
17c&#13;
13c&#13;
J A C K S O N &amp; C A D W E L L S&#13;
'Mi&#13;
25 pounds Sugar&#13;
8 bars of Soap&#13;
Best Corn&#13;
Coffee&#13;
4 lbs Crackers&#13;
$1.25&#13;
25c&#13;
13c&#13;
25c -&#13;
| Soda„&#13;
t Yeast&#13;
Peas&#13;
' 20c-Coffee&#13;
i Salmon&#13;
-•-*- POST CAR&#13;
Will Nash&#13;
Grace and Harold Grieve&#13;
Recitation, Majole Whitlock&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Inst. Solo, ,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Cornet Solo,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Washington's Birthday&#13;
S t . P a t r i c k ' s Day and&#13;
Regular Birthday. Also&#13;
a line of E a s t e r Cards.&#13;
: &lt; i f r * Dispatch Office&#13;
. ^ i ' •I f'AJ&#13;
"Sit.*'&#13;
D e m o c r a t i c C a u c u s .&#13;
The dsmocratio electors will meet&#13;
at the town hail in the village of&#13;
Pinckney on Satnrday, March 27, at&#13;
2 o'cloek p. m.t for the parpose tf&#13;
placing in nomination a ticket to be&#13;
voted on at the spring election to be&#13;
held Monaay, April 5, 1909, and for&#13;
transaction of any other business that&#13;
may come before the caucus.&#13;
Bv Order of Com.&#13;
T I M E IS T H E TEST rf :'..^ability in a. hi^h-speed mnchine like the cream separator.&#13;
N,i other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
every dav, winter and summer, it must not only do thorough work,&#13;
hut to bepcruianeotlv profitable, it mil»tbe durable.&#13;
| l ^ CREAMI&#13;
are built for lonjf service. A solid, law frame encloses entirely all&#13;
_the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger o( in-&#13;
"lurv. The parts arefew, simple and easy to sret at. Ballbearings&#13;
at nigh speed points, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wear&#13;
as well as insure tbe easiest operation. Such careful and thorough&#13;
construction is what enables the V. S. to better&#13;
STAND THE TEST I j. than anv other separator. You dont have to buy a j ^ w oat *vety ;&#13;
two. And remember : the U. S. does the cleanest .sklamilnff all i h&#13;
UiKiami*e the U. S. yourself and tee jits good point*. It is aold by&#13;
i*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
^x±£*Z*i t ' ^ t J - Y i J . ^ v - j&#13;
r_- i 14 rr* '( »...«"•'• . t • » v *&#13;
«*J i M i&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
§imhtitQ H&amp;jjattli&#13;
TMAMM L, AVDUWt, F u b .&#13;
NH&lt;9UnBY', MIGHIGAH&#13;
What t b t Mouth D«not%».&#13;
A certain philbaopber declares that&#13;
a woman 1B known by her mouth. Not&#13;
by the wordb that issue therefrom, hut&#13;
by the shape and color of the Jiys, and&#13;
th«t jUipu* *Ud d^wplee that gather about&#13;
ihlBittiporuuit feature. He 1« supported&#13;
In his theory by physiognomists, who&#13;
sill endeavor To impress us with the&#13;
fact that no woman with the small red-&#13;
Itfcped, "Cupid-how" mouth, so praised&#13;
in song and story, was ever intellectual&#13;
ar generous of heart; and it is consoling&#13;
to those whose mouths are not In&#13;
iccotdauce with the lines or beauty&#13;
'aid dwwh by the poets to be told that&#13;
i ''wide, Ktruight mouth, with strong&#13;
white teeth" denotes the woman of superior&#13;
intelligence, goodness of heart,&#13;
strength of mind and a thousand and&#13;
irne other sterling qualities, which we&#13;
jyl| like to think we possess, says the&#13;
New York Weekly. It is the fashion&#13;
*t present to hold the lips very slighty&#13;
apart. ; T h i s fs supposed'to give-that&#13;
nnocent, wistful, wonderful expression&#13;
which wag'tlffer" peculiar property of&#13;
the heroines of old-fashioned novels,&#13;
5ut which bicy.cle riding and kindred&#13;
•spodern amusements have caused to&#13;
vanish.&#13;
HE WENT&#13;
PAYS THE&#13;
- C -*+-&#13;
A YOUNO MAN'S BRIGHT FUTUHC&#13;
BLASTED BY A PRISON' '&#13;
SENTENOt.&#13;
STATS NBWS BRIEFS,&#13;
WAS SKILLED MECHANIC,&#13;
f_V&#13;
Secretary Straus does c o t believe In&#13;
wrenching the contract* labor law out&#13;
?f its legitimate function"trf protecting&#13;
American labor. He has recently admitted&#13;
to the United States a Canadian&#13;
girl who desired to enter a trainng&#13;
school for n'urses. BecaWe all the&#13;
?lrls who take the training course are&#13;
flowed a small compensation, she was&#13;
\t first denied admission, as a contract&#13;
laborer. The secretary remarks that&#13;
training schools for nurses are among&#13;
'he most humane of educational insti&#13;
'utions, and the fact that certain work&#13;
Is required as a part ol the training,&#13;
and certain compensation allowed for&#13;
It, does not make the student a contract&#13;
laborer. ,&#13;
Do you chew gum? Certainly not!&#13;
Why ask the unnecessary question?&#13;
But then, maybe you eat starch, which&#13;
a New York authority says is a grow^&#13;
Ing habit and one of the most deadly&#13;
of health destroyers. At all events,&#13;
young people are so nervous nowadays&#13;
they must chew something, and if not&#13;
gum, why then starch, which appeals&#13;
to vain girls who wish to be beautiful,&#13;
out it is a pernicious appetite when&#13;
once contracted, Like every such&#13;
habit, says the Boston Herald, it is the&#13;
result of a vacant mind. Feed the&#13;
mind with thoughts worth the thinking,&#13;
and girls and boys will not care to&#13;
be gum chewers or starch eaters.&#13;
It is always gratifying to meet a&#13;
person who is contented with his lot.&#13;
For-that reason it would be delightful&#13;
to make the acquaintance of the woman&#13;
who lately had the last word in a&#13;
brief suffragist controversy. The writer&#13;
of a suffragist communication in a&#13;
newspaper wrote, sadly, that, "woman&#13;
is nothing but a female relative of a&#13;
man; the man is the noun, the woman&#13;
Is the preposition." "Well, what,do I&#13;
care?" was the triumphant retort. "The&#13;
preposition governs the noun."&#13;
Among recently elected members to&#13;
Phi Beta Kappa, the society of picked&#13;
scholars, is a Harvard student named&#13;
Tien Tin Chan of Tientsin, China. Two&#13;
Chinese, Mr. Wen and Mr. Chen, graduate&#13;
this month from West Point, where&#13;
they have been, in a sense, guests of&#13;
the United States. The students who&#13;
are to come to America as beneficiaries&#13;
of the returned "Boxer indemnity"&#13;
fund will find that their countrymen&#13;
have set them a high standard in&#13;
American colleges.&#13;
•M i ; . ' i C T -&#13;
The Argentine government during&#13;
be J&amp;S4 ye»r has begun the developof&#13;
a new petroleum field at&#13;
Comodoro Rivadavia, on the Bay of&#13;
8t. George, east coast of Patagonia.&#13;
The first oil-bearing stratum was&#13;
- ' found at a depth of 1,770 feet, in a cretaceous&#13;
formation. The government&#13;
well yields 13 or 14 tons of oil per&#13;
day without pumping. The oil ia dark&#13;
brown and very heavy, and seems especially&#13;
adapted for fuel. ,&#13;
© • m a n explorers are making inferi.,,&#13;
eatfpg discoveries on the supposed site&#13;
jiipf ancient Jericho, near the Dead spa,&#13;
.'-tailing recently uncovered the city&#13;
j ^ ' * l f t , a structure built In three parts—&#13;
^"S-fock foundation, a body of rubble&#13;
and a top of clay bricks. The wall as&#13;
a whole was dome thirty feet in1 height,&#13;
*a«d &lt;a4though, like the wall that preceded&#13;
it, it might have fallen at the&#13;
iJOMMd cf Josbua'a-.trumrietsH k\. appears&#13;
^ H i a t afcuordinary assailant would have&#13;
jj^und It hard to pass&#13;
The Current Events and Happening*&#13;
That Have Been Noted About the&#13;
State Briefly Told.&#13;
William Miley, aged !J4, who was&#13;
sentenced to serve 15 years in the&#13;
Michigan state prison for robbing .the&#13;
postoflice at Hillsdale, is the soil of a&#13;
well-known Indianapolis famriy. u H e&#13;
is also the inventor of a' continuous&#13;
rail device for use on railroads and&#13;
interurban lines, which his family&#13;
values at $150,uUU. Since- he waa a&#13;
small boy, William Miley has em*&#13;
ployed his leisure hours working with&#13;
different sorts of mechanical devices.&#13;
He has patented a number of minor&#13;
inventions, but his continuous rail device&#13;
on which he obtained patent papers&#13;
one year ago last month, is the&#13;
most valuable. Mrs. Miley, the young&#13;
man's mother, stated that she was in&#13;
possession of a cigarmaking machine&#13;
which her sou completed recently,&#13;
and for which she intends* to ask patttUtij,&#13;
When seen at the home of her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Miley said that her&#13;
son had never been in trouble before.&#13;
She declared that he had always&#13;
been industrious, and that he&#13;
had no bad habits that she knew of.&#13;
Knowledge of his arrest in Michigan&#13;
came as a surprise. It is thought she&#13;
is sufficiently recovered to prevent&#13;
her condition being made worse on&#13;
account of the news of his sentence.&#13;
Miley is by trade a cigarmaker. He&#13;
worked for a number of years at that&#13;
trade.&#13;
Homer Giddiaga, of Hasting*, w i t&#13;
convicted.-ef selling liquor to Indiana.&#13;
He wiJ^he aeajLenceU-lat^r^ .&lt; ...&#13;
Zen(th Phillip*, a rural mail v e r i e r ,&#13;
of Kejsuj, *»a&gt; dj« * i the. $eault of being&#13;
kicked in the stomach by a horse.&#13;
O. Z. Ibe la u n d e r arte** In Hasting*,&#13;
charged with departing bU blind w,;te,&#13;
to whem he had been married but a&#13;
few weeks.&#13;
T h e Dickinson county board ot supervisors&#13;
has voted down t h e proposition&#13;
to submit the local option question&#13;
to the people.&#13;
E m m a Carpenter, the Port Austin&#13;
girl who mysteriously disappeared&#13;
from her1 home some weeks ago. baa&#13;
been located In Detroit&#13;
Happy over his release from Ionia&#13;
reformatory and with enough money&#13;
to tide him over a rainy day, Charlts&#13;
Alexander has returned to Flint.&#13;
Leo grots." sawmill at Sutton's Bay&#13;
was totally destroyed by Are causing&#13;
a loss of ¢3,000, with no insurance.&#13;
The large lumber yard waa saved only&#13;
by'"hard work.&#13;
RedfoYd is to have a private bank&#13;
with a capital of $20,000 arid a backing&#13;
among the stockholders of $150,-&#13;
000. Gov. Fred M. Warner it* one ot&#13;
the stockholders.&#13;
Arrangement* have been made for&#13;
having a detachment of.regulars camp&#13;
with the M. N. G. at Ludington, in August.&#13;
Battery A will go to ^parta,&#13;
Wis., for target practice.&#13;
Congreawnen Loud and Tpwnsend pi.&#13;
"chigan,- Fassett of New York and&#13;
itnbbr.ey of Washington were - the&#13;
speakers a t the eighth annual banquet^&#13;
of the .Adrian McKinley club.&#13;
i. Frank Shaarer is under arrest In&#13;
Flint, 'charged with deserting the United&#13;
States battleship Mmnesotas Shaarer&#13;
is said to have been punlsjaed for&#13;
desertion on a previous occasion.&#13;
A Carnegie medal and a substantial&#13;
purse Will be awarded Mary Armstrong,&#13;
heroine of the Haskell home*&#13;
fire in Battle Creek, if the plans o f&#13;
the' committee in charge carry.&#13;
*TCPED OUT.&#13;
•rinkfey, AHc, Swept fey Torsade art*&#13;
•' P i * to&lt;wHute p«ao4at«v&#13;
Wfateej* whlte»'«»d a r negroe* are&#13;
•a»db Dymovnatto and fir**Mricken&#13;
•rinlOey, Ark. Forty persoa* ajt» a *&#13;
rtfluily h u r t . * l x rolfeM** aiandwg&#13;
in the midst ot the ruins are all that&#13;
rtpkftin of t h e town where hundreds&#13;
of gftyf-stricken people are homeless.&#13;
Property valued at more than, a million&#13;
dollars has been destroyed. T h e&#13;
tornado struck witheut a moment's&#13;
warning. Its path was the width of&#13;
the town.&#13;
Two trains reached Brinkley shortly&#13;
alter daylight. One waB from Helena,&#13;
the other from Little Hock: The- relief&#13;
parties found the inhabitants almost&#13;
helpless. The shock of the disaster&#13;
had rendered them almost apathetic&#13;
and little had been done toward&#13;
relieving the suffering of the injured&#13;
or caring for the dead.&#13;
, In the negro section the destruction&#13;
was most, complete.&#13;
In the business section the scene is&#13;
desolate. The buildings have been&#13;
twisted about and tumbled over into&#13;
the street: •- • ,&#13;
' 'Huddled about the ruins of their&#13;
homes families ' were- standing In&#13;
groups clinging together In -terror^&#13;
while here and. there, a searcher was&#13;
groping about in q u e s t - o ! a mtssiug&#13;
member of the household. . The sAorm&#13;
swept on to Kerr, through B a u c n m&#13;
W plowed a path about&gt;sixty feejt wide,&#13;
leveling buildings and uprooting trees.&#13;
-Report* Xro-tt-southern and southeastern&#13;
Arkansas, say that a- hesjvy&#13;
windstorm passed over those sections&#13;
last night, doing considerable damage.&#13;
mm • M M M f M M n * £35ST&#13;
•**+-&#13;
Taftf Will Talk.&#13;
President.Taft'a'first cabinet meeting1&#13;
convened at 11 o'clock Tuesday.&#13;
All t h e members of the new cabinet&#13;
except Mr. Dickinson, who is to, be&#13;
sfeoprt«ry &lt;jf war, were present, Presi-&#13;
4«bt Taft determined not to* perjojtt&#13;
fhe membe'rs of Ais cabinet tc^UBews&#13;
(he business; k traiMcted. - - '&#13;
The Wet and Dry Fight.&#13;
The battle of the drys and wets in&#13;
Michigan Is on in earnest for the control&#13;
of the counties where the liquor&#13;
question will be submitted next&#13;
month. The counties irr which the&#13;
great fight will be pulled off a r e :&#13;
Allegan, Berrien, Calhoun, Charlevoix,&#13;
Dickinson, Jackson, Genesee,&#13;
Washteuaw, Eaton, Alcona, Benzie,&#13;
Branch, Clare. Emmet, Hillsdale",&#13;
Huron, Ionia, Iosco, Isabella, Kalkas&#13;
ka, Lapeer, Livingstone, Mecosia.&#13;
Monroe, Newaygo, Ottawu,. Sanilac&#13;
and Tuscola.&#13;
In many counties—in fact, practically&#13;
all of'them—the result is-going to&#13;
be very close, according to the best&#13;
information available, it is very hard&#13;
to obtain a definite line on the counties,&#13;
because both sides are claiming&#13;
victory by overwhelming figures,&#13;
Allegan was dry, but went wet two&#13;
years ago, and is very likely to remain&#13;
wet, the principal argument being&#13;
that feaugatuck, which is a big&#13;
summer resort center, openly violated&#13;
the law under tho dry regime and&#13;
conditions were worse than with the&#13;
saloons operating under a tax.&#13;
This same argument is being used&#13;
with effect in Berrien county, where&#13;
both Benton Harbor and St. Joseph&#13;
are resort towns. South Haven, which&#13;
is in Van Buren, supposedly dry, is&#13;
tho horrible example held, up.&#13;
The biggest fights of all are being&#13;
made in Jackson, Washtenaw and&#13;
Genesee. In the first and last of the&#13;
trio are big cities, Jackson and Flint,&#13;
and it is a warrior dry indeed who is&#13;
willing to stake much that prohibition&#13;
could over be enforced in eiiher of&#13;
these cities.&#13;
Refused Renewal of License.&#13;
Thirty Michigan branches and 2,."&gt;00&#13;
Michigan members, of whom upward&#13;
of 1,000 are residents of Detroit, are&#13;
affected by a decision of State Insurance&#13;
Commissioner James V. Barry&#13;
to refuse renewal of the license under&#13;
which the Catholic Knights and&#13;
Ladies of America fraternal insurance&#13;
society is doing business in Michigan.&#13;
Notice of the commissioner's ruling&#13;
has been forwarded to tho supreme&#13;
president, of the order, and any attempt&#13;
on its part to secure new business&#13;
will be expressly against his injunction.&#13;
The reason assigned by Commissioner&#13;
Barry in refusing to renew the&#13;
society's license is that as yet no&#13;
satisfactory explanation has been&#13;
made his department for the treatment&#13;
accorded Mrs. Catherine A. Tattan,&#13;
a widow of Detroit, formerly flrRt.&#13;
vice-president of branch No. 148.&#13;
/Flofld Fuller, who .was acquitted re i vf A c w i p e u p n M T W E « W T D I ? « rently of' the charge o£ attempting to ^ X - A ^ n a b IJICUXVI I r l t W 1 K 1 « &gt;&#13;
The Ice Harvest.&#13;
Some 500 men are employed cutting&#13;
&lt;ce overtime on Mullett lake, south of&#13;
this city. The ice is a foot to 18&#13;
inches thick. So anxious are the icemen&#13;
to get all they possibly can out&#13;
before the break-up comet? that the&#13;
Michigan Central gives the ice trains&#13;
the right of way over all others.&#13;
About 200 carloads a day are being&#13;
shipped to Bay City and points aoulh-&#13;
So well is the company co-operating&#13;
with the icmien that even passenger&#13;
trains are sidetracked so ns not. to&#13;
delay the ice trains.&#13;
Rut busy as they all are, the reports&#13;
tell that, al all points of delivery there&#13;
will " s u r e l y be a s h o r t a g e in t h e supply&#13;
for next s u m m e r . ' '&#13;
The n*w hoard of control of' the&#13;
Wlchlpan reformatory„-, appointed by&#13;
Gov. Warner, .elected Amos Mussejmrm&#13;
president of the bo.ird. The other&#13;
I'U'tnhi rs are Leor.;:nl Freeman and&#13;
Alfred R. Locke.&#13;
centl&#13;
kill, hi?; father, has passed the civil&#13;
^crvice examination.. for mail. driver&#13;
and will have a" route from Leroy.&#13;
Maurice Madigati, who was arrested&#13;
Thursday :&lt;m a warrant held by the&#13;
Buffalo police Charging wife desertion,&#13;
feft - "Flint Sunday for the New&#13;
York city. He,.was in-(Charge-,pf .a&#13;
Buffalo officer.&#13;
Two 14-year-old boys who applied for&#13;
shelter at the Ge'nessee county Jail&#13;
aave been returned to their parents.&#13;
They said that they had* run away&#13;
fr.om home because,they didn't, like&#13;
their school teacher.&#13;
' Adumea A. Russell, 33, a civil w,ar&#13;
vet«ran, and Mrs. Kate K. T^nbrook,&#13;
C£, were married recently at Kalamazoo.&#13;
This is the fourth venture for&#13;
Mr,, Russell,,while his bride has been&#13;
married three times. ^&#13;
The class of 1908 of the Big Rapids&#13;
Jligh school has presented a silver&#13;
cuptvalued at |5Q to the school, to bo&#13;
used as an incentive for oratorical contests'&#13;
aiaaong the students. The class&#13;
winning the cup will hold it for one&#13;
year.&#13;
Ira Moore, a Mancelona cobbler,&#13;
isn't the least excited about a "notification"&#13;
he has received, that he is&#13;
one of 160 heirs to the site of the city&#13;
of Providence, R. I. The woods are&#13;
full of great inheritance fakes just&#13;
now. . . K&#13;
Samuel H. Row, of Lansing, first&#13;
insurance commissioner of Michigan,&#13;
and prominent in state insurance&#13;
circles for many years, died Wednesday&#13;
morning, aged 69 years. His death&#13;
was due to paralysis, from which he&#13;
had suffered for several weeks.&#13;
After repeated threats to end his&#13;
life, Michael S'chelf, 83, of Grand Rap&#13;
ids, was found hanging in his wood&#13;
shed. ' The body was still warm, but&#13;
life was extinct. The old man's daughter&#13;
had recently moved into the house&#13;
with him to prevent, an attempt tc&#13;
take his life.&#13;
Indications point to an early open&#13;
ins of navigation at the Soo ship canals,&#13;
The ice on the river is not as&#13;
solid as in former years owing to the&#13;
mildness of the winter. The canal has&#13;
been* undergoing the usual repairs&#13;
while empty, and will be ready for&#13;
business as soon as needed.&#13;
Alexander Campbell, aged 71 years&#13;
of Alpena, was burned to death in a&#13;
fire which destroyed his home. He&#13;
was born in Ottawa, Canada, and came&#13;
to Alpena 46 years ago. He was a&#13;
member of the common council 24&#13;
years, and board of education eight&#13;
years. He leaves a widow and seven&#13;
children.&#13;
After lying for nearly an hour in a&#13;
drizzling rain with her face badly cut&#13;
and hip broken, Mrs. Mazella Pettis&#13;
one of the oldest residents In Lapeer,&#13;
crawled from the back walk leading&#13;
from her residence down into her eel&#13;
lar. Mrs. Pettis is 87 yeara of age,&#13;
and on that account she is in a very&#13;
precarious condition.&#13;
John and Edward Hicks, of Perry&#13;
waived examination on a charge ol&#13;
selling liquor without a license anri&#13;
were bound over to the circuit court&#13;
for trial. It is understood that an arrangement&#13;
exists to dispose of the&#13;
case as soon as possible, (hat thr&#13;
Hicks Rros. may dispose of their bus!&#13;
ness at Perry and leave thr&gt; county.&#13;
Mrs. Xeda William's, of Lnngford.&#13;
S, D., has secured a warrant for the&#13;
arrest of Earl G. Sherrard. 21, on a&#13;
charge of perjury. Sherrard, she saya.&#13;
iwnrc that Laura Williams, daughter&#13;
of the woman, was IS years old when&#13;
he secured a nparririco license last&#13;
e ffffllcf flVr' v Took In T&#13;
Andrew Carnegie, advocate of international&#13;
peace, has a plan. He suggests^&#13;
that Great Britain agree to defeud&#13;
the American coast along th?&#13;
Pacific, Including Hawaii and the&#13;
Philippines, while the United States&#13;
defends from, attack the British possessions&#13;
in the Atlantic, including the&#13;
islands in the south. This agreement&#13;
would terminate on five year?' notice.&#13;
D'1. Ira C. Landrith, of Nashville,&#13;
Tenn., secretary of the State Anti-Saloon&#13;
league, in discussing how Tennessee&#13;
wentv'dry," says it cost,the league&#13;
$30,000 to* win the fight. ''And," he&#13;
addst.'"wft4tr Tennessee, has done any&#13;
other s,t#te may dp. Even New York&#13;
caa easily regulate Us liquor problem&#13;
if it really cares to. It cost us $30,000&#13;
to do the ^ork, but It cost the liquor&#13;
interests millions and they lost."&#13;
December and May were wedded in&#13;
Santa Monica, Cal., in the perspns of&#13;
Miss Electa Hawkins, 21, and Varnum&#13;
Wescott, 83. Wescott Is an inmate of&#13;
the soldiers' home in Sawtelle and BO&#13;
is Mrs. Wescott's father. For some&#13;
time the aged veteran had courted the&#13;
pretty woman. Although nearly four&#13;
times the age of his bride, Wescott&#13;
is exceedingly active and enjoys robust&#13;
health.&#13;
The , Intermediate vya.yey . ,frujt&#13;
Growers' association has been organized&#13;
at Bellaire with $10,000 capital.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Market 1 f)c to ITic&#13;
h i g h e r t h a n la«t wrpk. W P quote &lt;lryfod&#13;
Ptoors, $,r); steers anil lietfers, 1,000&#13;
to 1.208. $3&lt;fr&gt;n.2'i; Bte^rs and heifers,&#13;
800 to 1,000, $4.r&gt;0&lt;S&gt;5; steers a n d heifers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700, $4.25(^4.65-,&#13;
choice fat cows, $4.2^((7) 4.r&gt;0; eood fat&#13;
cows, $3.7"); common cows'. $3&lt;§&gt;3.2S&gt;;&#13;
cfluners, $1.50(6:2; choice heavy' mill's,&#13;
$4.25^1.50-. fair to proort bolognas, nulls,&#13;
$3.75f?M; liR'ht, $3^1).1.25: milkers, larpe,&#13;
vouiif,', medium age, $40(?t50; common&#13;
milkers, $20^30,&#13;
Veal calves—Market 50c lower than&#13;
last w e e k ; best, $S(K8.25; others, $ 4 #&#13;
7.50; milch cows and s p r i n g e r s , prood&#13;
steady, common dull.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Market s t r o n g at&#13;
last week's prices: best lairths. $7.50(¾&#13;
7.60; fair to good lamhs, $6.25&lt;g)7.2d;&#13;
lig-ht to common lambs, $5.50(86; y e a r -&#13;
lings. $5.50(6)6.25; fair to good b u t c h e r&#13;
sheep, $4(¾ 5; culls and common, $2.50©&#13;
3.50.&#13;
H O K S — M a r k e t quality common. tOc&#13;
to 15c h i g h e r t h a n last week. R a n g e of&#13;
prices: Light to good butch era, $6.65®&#13;
6.75: piprs. $6®«.15; ll^ht y o r k e r s , $6.2K&#13;
tf»6.50; atasrs, 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo—Cattle—Market 10&lt;iM5o&#13;
higher ; best steer*, $6 25®6 75; best&#13;
1,200 to 1.300-lb s h i p p i n g steers, $5 85(H)&#13;
6 50; best 1,000 to 1,100-lh do. $5 «0®*;&#13;
best fat cows,$4@5; fair to good. $3 7fi&#13;
¢¢4- t r i m m e r s , $2 4 0 0 2 75; best fat&#13;
heifers, $5 25©5 7fi: b u t c h e r heffers,&#13;
800 to 900-lb, $4 25©fi: light fat helfem&#13;
$3 SO&lt;8&gt;4; best bulls, $4 50@6; bologna&#13;
bulla, $3 75@4 50.&#13;
HORK—Heavy. $7 ©7 10: yorkers,&#13;
$6 90(8)7; pigs, $6 70(5)6 75; r o u g h s ,&#13;
$5 90(9)6; stags. $4 25@R.&#13;
Kheep—The m a r k e t w a s active and&#13;
about 5c higher than S a t u r d a y ; top&#13;
lambs. $7 75fl&gt;7 80; farr to good, $7 40&#13;
filil 70; cull In.mbR, $6 7R©7 50; skin&#13;
culls, $5 50ffS56; yearlings $6 50(5)7;&#13;
wethers. $5 75(fi)fi 25; ewes, $5 25(3)5 75;&#13;
cull sheep. $3 50((1)4 50; best. voal8,!9(®&#13;
fl 25: medium to good, $7tf?S 75; heavy,&#13;
$4®5 50.&#13;
njarnaco lie&#13;
mon-ffY:*1- Tfic twice \fiv vf&lt;&#13;
Crnlh; Kte.&#13;
j Del roil.•• Whent---Prlops in tho De-&#13;
, iniit market, a year ago wore 07 Vic for&#13;
i No. 2 i i'd wheat, il.V ior No. 3 corn and&#13;
( :&gt;;. Up (*nr \-n 0 white oats.&#13;
No receipts a n d . Vo shirunents of&#13;
I whi at ii)i Thursrlfiv. Stocks are 324,S24&#13;
j in) a;-rainKt 29»,443 bn a ye.fr ago. '&#13;
i'ovn had a weak spell yewtcrday and&#13;
, rhiseil with a loss of Vic Receipts have&#13;
hern lrti'^e for several days,&#13;
l-ip.t,iis; n.vp Uftdcss and u n c h a n g e d tn&#13;
. !&gt;i [co There lulls been ho Ihrslpe^s In&#13;
| this line-for several days.&#13;
(lain closed with a drop of \^c and&#13;
not miirh business doing.&#13;
| Kecelnts of flour yesterday were 1,200&#13;
I bids. N'o shipments. ,,&#13;
Kyr. Is quiet and In fair '''demand. N(&gt;&#13;
f0T ; change in price. . .;, r&#13;
Chicago reporter! a decrease&#13;
'%&#13;
. waBiLApiQPfirty^onuerJowwI'noUi&#13;
. er. *t would not be 10 If the^pro;&#13;
'owner would j J . w a y . hjxa &amp; f&#13;
iw{9ter, and^theh j t e a | y leave c&#13;
&gt;thips to trim. &lt; H I p i e *ott»«-Qwn&#13;
,-qflt.ea fools hlnUeW I n «ne or the 1&#13;
*o( these things. , , T&#13;
J The skilled p A i f t t e i ^ t W cotoAii.&#13;
*nit?**ydpin$ «Be toOftlutoto^HbrJt&#13;
joompetltoei Vm ' e w i f e i e d V c o a s c I -&#13;
eotiou* -workman or contractor, an&amp;&#13;
the lncoilopeWtite^^ J o b i i e ^ e r a l l ^ y&#13;
w o r k l n ^ c h e a i n -I. KM t h | s t ^ t place,&#13;
^ ' h ^ t ^ q ^ i A i f i i * * hired, {hey&#13;
".do [not leave everything to him, a* »0&#13;
.many property-owners boast they] do.&#13;
• They interfere most ignorantly&amp;nd&#13;
rmo£t family. ,'^Fhey: lnaist s o m e t f a e s&#13;
on. using paJnt materials without In-&#13;
"Ve^Ugating whether they a r e good or&#13;
ipol O f pertAp» t n e r RiBlst o n . the&#13;
{p«ijrter'»iinTTyin» the ^rorfc——&#13;
mens mro&amp;nd my house a ttofrttr^he&#13;
wife Bays, and wkaA wtfe sayB goes—&#13;
at the cost of a lot of wasted painting&#13;
money. , L w . . i ***i-it.-i&lt;-'&#13;
If tfie painter stays' )$wj|^ a/f fcw&#13;
days to allow the paint to thowuShly&#13;
dry t h e otfner i a y s : , H ^haVl?0W^, *8&#13;
neglecting this work—guess i W a sidetracking&#13;
m e for Jones' work, ^i won't&#13;
stawut";"';:;;, ,,-,. ^1'1 ,.;!% ,:\&#13;
W h a t chance does a palmer have t o d o&#13;
good work for A m a n w h o i s eon^Unuatay&#13;
nagging at htm and otherwise handicapping&#13;
Wto (wlthoft^^ae^ninlg 1^1 of&#13;
course)? A poor job is the inevitable&#13;
result of such Interference.&#13;
Poor painting costs the homeowner&#13;
money—don't foTjget that, ft - m i | h t&#13;
pay yon to get the practical paint&#13;
book, painting apecrficitioas a n d ; i n -&#13;
strument for detecting p a l a t s adulterants,&#13;
which .National Le^d Co. a r e&#13;
offering u n d e r . t h e title « * ||MHJB&gt;&#13;
Owner's Painting Outfit M0L ' # , 4d&gt;&#13;
dress National Lead Co., 1½½ T H t i l T&#13;
Bldg., New York City. T s J i _&#13;
do not make paint (they leave" thaY~t6&#13;
the painter to do) but they make&#13;
pure white lead ("Dutch Boy Painter"&#13;
trademark kind), and they can tell&#13;
you how to save money by securing&#13;
durable painting.&#13;
CONSOLING.&#13;
Artist—Yes, ray art is my fortune.&#13;
Model (cheerily)-—Never mind. Poverty&#13;
is no crime.&#13;
CUTICURA CURED H I M .&#13;
the couplr. who have not t e r n « r m ! demand , , p n r u ' n a ««"™«e &gt;" &lt;'"&#13;
since tho wr-drlin^. ' Barley I? firm snd in pood demand * •&#13;
Eczema Came on Legs and Ankles-&#13;
Could Not W«tr Shoes Because&#13;
Of Bad Scaling *nd Itching.&#13;
"I have been successfully cured ot&#13;
dry eczema. I waa inspecting the removal&#13;
of noxious weeds from the edge&#13;
of a river and was constantly in the&#13;
dust from the weeds. At night I&#13;
cleansed my limbs but felt a prickly&#13;
sensation. I paid no attention to it.&#13;
for two years but I noticed a scum&#13;
on my legs like fish scales.. I did not&#13;
attend to it until i t , c a m e to be too&#13;
itchy and sore and began getting two&#13;
running sores. My ankles were all&#13;
sore and scabby and I could not wear&#13;
shoes. I had to use carpet and felt&#13;
slippers for weeks. I got a cako or&#13;
the Cuticura Soap and soja* Cutteum&#13;
Ointment, In less t h a n .Is*, 4**» I&#13;
could put on my boots a n d * * JflffetiMftA&#13;
three weeks I was free f r e ^ M N J M * '&#13;
founded itching. Capt. George r / B t t s s ,&#13;
Chief ot Police, Morris, Manitoba, Mar.&#13;
20, 1907, and Sept. 24, 1508," ,&#13;
Potter Drug a Clwm. Corp., Sol* Propt* Boitoo.&#13;
What Ailed Tdmmie&#13;
Totnmle was eating welftiiis. —R&#13;
mother cautioned h l o l . l A p e t&#13;
many, fearing they mmH&#13;
sick. Presently he cajtji^li,&#13;
on his stomach and a"ve1ry"&#13;
look In his face.&#13;
"Those t u t s have made you sick, 1&#13;
see. I just knew they would," said&#13;
the mother. i&#13;
"They haven't, either," whined Tonv&#13;
mle. "1 am not sick; it's' just my&#13;
pants are too tight,"—Deltheator.&#13;
The Grip of Sprlritf.'&#13;
Durirljr the last twerity years rmny of our&#13;
(MtizmslmVft been nttaeked in'the spring&#13;
months by grip. Home liftve 'had wrious or&#13;
slight att«ck» every year,or two* All knew&#13;
it to be a dan«erou8 disease.. If Lane's&#13;
Pleasant' Tablets (wMpri, tirv "xolrl "n.t; 2,T&#13;
rents ^1-)ox bv drugfri«t« and dealers) n.ra&#13;
tiken M+en tfte fir»t gyn\pk&gt;m9 aro, fplt,&#13;
there in hardly a .chnneo of the uwdauy Ret*&#13;
linK n foothold.. If you. ennnot get them&#13;
near hnnic, send 2fl eehta to Ofntor F.&#13;
Woodward, Le.Boy, N. Y. ..'SAmpUy.free.&#13;
iir , ' .;('.• *•: »-V n r 4 • »c&#13;
Tho dentist is invited to attend,&#13;
many a swell gathering.&#13;
- \&#13;
•*'*v-&gt;»v.,„&#13;
' - ' , 1 . ' ( • : &lt; • • -r^-,'&#13;
.'^lp**.&#13;
* • ' - , •&#13;
r&#13;
1 BOY NORTON&#13;
P ^ ' ^ x S P ^ f c ^ f f ' ^ ^ ? ^ ^ ^ 7 7 " ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^*^*^SSS™&gt;&#13;
They're ouri!&#13;
8 Y N « P « i a .&#13;
:n: " M&#13;
"Vanishing FleeU," a story of "-what&#13;
intent, ba»% happened." &lt;^uu lx» Waahinjfton&#13;
with the United Jtate* and Japan&#13;
n«3|(i«kCrOuy I«Uler. aecretary of the&#13;
BrlrteK •mbaMy. and Viae Norma Roberta,&#13;
cnsgf aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
Introduced aa lovers. Japan declare* war&#13;
amMajcea; the Phlltoplnee. .Guy HJHJer&#13;
starts for England. Norma Roberta&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida ooaat&#13;
H%waM4a-oaBt*jre4 by the 4»P*- AH port* are. tfaaJassaJapssajJ86-'* '*&#13;
*n«se beeomes eottwerful&#13;
before&#13;
"^Se"&#13;
fery of&#13;
Roberts&#13;
vloced ihM-United States. ha« powerful&#13;
a fleetfo AmericAr? watereaa a Canadian&#13;
protection agminit what the British suppose&#13;
is a terrible submarine flotilla- Htifier&#13;
Is sent with a message. Fleet mystertoustar&#13;
disappears. The kaiser is missing.&#13;
King Edwardj&gt;f England to confronted&#13;
by Admiral fievina of the United&#13;
Stale*. Tka.Dreadnaught. biggest of England,'&#13;
s warship*. 4« dlHcovered at an-impassable&#13;
point 1n the Thames; The story&#13;
now goeevback to a ttJSM.nett!. month*&#13;
- - - ^ —- «MXnventor&#13;
and cabinet,&#13;
produc-&#13;
&gt;n elec-&#13;
_ -vessels. A&#13;
of the mysbuilt.&#13;
The naystrue&#13;
levUatlort is solved,&#13;
evolves a great flying machine.&#13;
The cabinet plans a radloplaae&#13;
war against Japanese. The start for the&#13;
•bene of conflict with a large fleet of monster&#13;
airships is made with Norma in command.&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.—Continued.&#13;
"Number One will engage the cruiser&#13;
on the extreme right Two will attack&#13;
the battle ship on the port bow&#13;
of thf flagship. Three will take the&#13;
battleship on the extrette left,%'atf$ so&#13;
on, ending &lt;with the declaration that&#13;
the Norma, would often JJ^B engagement&#13;
by.' •IrUtJug the Tt*h«t -the hjad&#13;
of th»ui»tta«t&gt;r,(.ct^v; '&#13;
Fighting ^Jevifce tajtniad away from&#13;
hi8 signal box.when tfte lae^ confirmation&#13;
of his Instructions had been received&#13;
And looked at the girl in the&#13;
hood. At tbat«higk 'altitude the early&#13;
rays,.of the sufy were shiverJtng^he&#13;
gloo&amp;of the Interior through the glags&#13;
' porta-In the dome. As If In a glory&#13;
of silver she stood before him, outwauUy&#13;
earn aad emotionless; but in&#13;
the ealtaate pals* of her body, the expeetaat&#13;
waittaf of* her hands, and the&#13;
ateee&gt; eat f l a y of the dials before her,&#13;
s h e ww'ftie embodiment of sufficiency.&#13;
Feeling his look and waiting for hiB&#13;
command, she moved her head till her&#13;
face was' tamed full upon him, and in&#13;
her eyes shone the Are which through&#13;
all the ages has led valiant warriors&#13;
to fields of victory. The glory of&#13;
youth, the Inspiration of patriotism,&#13;
and the determination of fearleastress&#13;
were blended in their light and exultantly&#13;
waiting the battle call.&#13;
Accustomed as he was to the terrible&#13;
intoxication of fierce conflict, the&#13;
gray old admiral felt himself enthused&#13;
by this slip of a girl. He was a man&#13;
making the last fight of his life with&#13;
the incarnation of the Goddess of War&#13;
at his elbow and mutely cheering h i »&#13;
on to the charge. Every nerve wtthta&#13;
him strung itself in tensity, tfet matcles&#13;
of his body I s t s H i to contract&#13;
until bis baa* IMrtT tfcTmak between&#13;
tari flfcaihw rteifljail, Ms resolute&#13;
Hw t w f w m * a » a * « * 5 his short hair&#13;
awalw^ 4» kiif#lj 'as he leaped toward&#13;
*Wr; ^fkv« w a y to his excitement and&#13;
fairly shouted: "Now! Go to them!&#13;
Quick, hard and fast! At them!"&#13;
He jumped back to his point of observation,&#13;
and even as he did so the&#13;
great radioplano shivered with a surcharge&#13;
of energy, reeled drankenly&#13;
ffcroaji 4 * w r • * • * *fr t h e A c t i o n of&#13;
• i i ^ ' W u t r w J * 1 U ^ f . and in one&#13;
Open her tip wide.&#13;
They're o u n ! "&#13;
UOutaUe the &amp;iMiBa*ajr*wag torn t y&#13;
a whirlwk»»V at »aaiM»b«it» 8rcd in a&#13;
MM»«Mt^ic»' a^amo^ Uttwd mttbiM&#13;
ad?amaryi^wbiob w*» .lajlvinx; dbwswara)&lt;&#13;
unaa tbg Ita It Wag thettr lalt&#13;
h6p#- at H0tB&amp;ju&gt;&gt; Tlfey had 'tested&#13;
their guns repeatedly at' long range,&#13;
an]t preyed them ineffectual .aAmjst&#13;
an enenly that cojuld tr^vef*w^ft; a&#13;
speed beside which that of the awifteat&#13;
bird of prey wa* InHignincant.'-' They&#13;
ha4 watched thiMV.gtntnge uncatta*-&#13;
thiuga lift themselves to a prodigious&#13;
altitude with Incomparable eaee, carry&#13;
awajr-.and rejavenate a wounded oompaniea&#13;
which had bees struck by the&#13;
rtereat chance, turn toward each other&#13;
as if ih communication, whirl out in&#13;
long lines, betokening the perfection of&#13;
Cf n|rgl, had waited for a downpour of&#13;
'missiles; and then, when amazement&#13;
at this marvelous demonstration had&#13;
reached its climax, they had witnessed&#13;
the sudden swoop in their direction.&#13;
Now in hopeless impotence the men&#13;
on the deck ftf,the, doomj^i I^o lost&#13;
their heads and ran frantically to and&#13;
fro. Up to the very.laet, one or two&#13;
«f the.4iua crew* elev#ted.and firedrelevated&#13;
and fired—with methodical&#13;
precisian like men in a trance and&#13;
aetaated by hawrtonly.&#13;
The panic-stricken swallow vainly&#13;
winghvg .his way through the air in&#13;
wild endeavor to escape the talons' of&#13;
l a J t ^ y ^ o ^ e y ^ ^ a ^ ^ odt Wit o ^ w Ihey haanl&#13;
her can.. rHbldjrwtr 4Va&gt;a going to&#13;
strike!"&#13;
And then, even as they sought positibni&#13;
of aetitffity, the great nulloplane&#13;
felt a s*add*n?»harp cwieuifalon&#13;
of i m p e c ^ a * tbe top: ©t thfe flghttng&#13;
mast strttek tta bottotfe plete, crumpled&#13;
like a match, and Went eras&amp;lhg downwartf/&#13;
¢, debris 'or-twi»teO," useleas&#13;
steel. Even witbin the chamber there&#13;
penetrated to them the terrified&#13;
shieks a,nd despairing cries ti the men&#13;
Of Japan., ' * " ' j&#13;
Another quick smashing blow almost&#13;
threw those at the dynamoH from their&#13;
fe^t, more cries were.heard without,&#13;
aed tbe^t t ° r the. small part of a second&#13;
there waa sileace and immobility.&#13;
Even the storm of fire {rom, the. other&#13;
ships had ceased.&#13;
Norma alone seemed endowed with&#13;
power of movement, and sprang Quickly&#13;
from lever to lever and switch to&#13;
switch, issuing her battle cry. "The&#13;
dynamos! The dynamos!" she called.&#13;
"Full speed, and stand clear for fear&#13;
of accident! I've thrown the magnet&#13;
currents! Quick! all your power before&#13;
others can train a gun on us!"&#13;
Her voice was sharp and decisive, end&#13;
her words snapped like lashes, driving&#13;
them to action. "Steady, steady!''&#13;
With almost the instantaneouaaess&#13;
of its stop, the radioplane shivered and&#13;
throbbed with increased energy. The&#13;
dynamos hummed and roared, the&#13;
rar^Sw-WIe their prows' tWtha * ° ° D wT«*W~TO MORAL,&#13;
Scream of Shot and Shell Broke Into a Pandemonium.&#13;
-^•Wftr^/^^^11^^ at 8UCh&#13;
::^m-4fmjm;Hrf» of speed that the engineers&#13;
by the dynamos instinctively&#13;
threw themselves to the floor, the man&#13;
on the lookout'seized the bars before&#13;
him, gasping for breath, and the admiral,&#13;
startled, whirled toward the&#13;
figure in the hood, fearing that some&#13;
fatal accident had occurred.&#13;
There, erect, triumphant, and fierce,&#13;
stood the woman glorified who was&#13;
striking the first blow for her country's&#13;
honor and her father's exaltation.&#13;
She was fairly hurling the machine&#13;
through space, her hands grasping the&#13;
levers of descent and; her eyes on the&#13;
periscope which portrayed the position&#13;
of their helpless victims.&#13;
Bavins, in a fury of excitement,&#13;
shouted U s approval with storms of&#13;
oaths, completely swept out of himself&#13;
oy the fierceness of the assault "Good,&#13;
the darting hawk would have had&#13;
more chance than they before this onslaught.&#13;
This gigantic embodiment of&#13;
doom was leaping down upon them&#13;
with su*ch terrific velocity and at such&#13;
an angle of flight as to preclude all&#13;
possibility of defense. Irresistible,&#13;
implacable, and noiseless, it was&#13;
plunging for the final thrust. Its very&#13;
method of attack was so surprising&#13;
and so unexpected that, they were&#13;
awed with fear, helpless, benumbed,&#13;
despairing and conquered. They were&#13;
men done to death and suffering the&#13;
agonies of wounds before the blow had&#13;
fallen. It was all accomplished with&#13;
such rapidity that not even the most&#13;
terrified had time to rush to the rails&#13;
and throw himself into the sea. When&#13;
the instant of death seemed imminent,&#13;
they were paralyzed into inaction and&#13;
cowered together, waiting for the&#13;
shock of annihilation.&#13;
And their suspense, although of a&#13;
different nature, was scarcely more&#13;
keen and heartbreaking than that of&#13;
those in the radioplane which was&#13;
hurtling at them.&#13;
The admiral was still crouching like&#13;
a man prepared for a blow, when Norma&#13;
with quick energy tilted over another&#13;
lever and checked the descent.&#13;
Those within the shell felt, their hearts&#13;
come back to the normal and were&#13;
once more able to breathe freely. It&#13;
was like the application of a powerful&#13;
brake to a falling elevator, save that&#13;
there was no abrupt jar, no discordant&#13;
sound of steel on steel, and no shock&#13;
of friction.&#13;
Norma quivered like a race horse&#13;
under a cruel whip, then steadied&#13;
itself, seemed to gather its forces together,&#13;
gave one mighty lift, and began&#13;
to ascend. The frightened cries&#13;
from without subsided in stupefaction.&#13;
The fighting admiral with clenched&#13;
fists was running the length of the&#13;
radioplane, staring through the lower&#13;
ports, and hoarsely voicing his exultation,&#13;
hiB eyes flaming with the joy of&#13;
victory.&#13;
Out on the sluggish waves which&#13;
had now changed to a coldly gleaming&#13;
gray the other vessels of the Japanese&#13;
fleet witnessed the beginnings of&#13;
catastrophe. They had seen this incredibly&#13;
monstrous thing drop from&#13;
ether upon their flagship, crumple its&#13;
upper works like paper, attach itself&#13;
to the turrets, and then with phenomenal&#13;
power actually lift from t i e&#13;
ocean 20,000 tons of steel—a floating&#13;
fortress believed but an hour ago to be&#13;
invincible—and bear it away. Even&#13;
as they watched they saw this strange&#13;
god which had grasped the pride of&#13;
Japan in his clutch deliberately shaping&#13;
his flight higher and higher into&#13;
the great void of the heavens and&#13;
passing out of their world.&#13;
Of what use were guns against&#13;
these strange visitants, whose only&#13;
human mark was the flag of the despised&#13;
enemy? In hopeless screams of&#13;
terror their sirens awoke the echoes&#13;
with weird, despairing wails, and their&#13;
engines under full speed sent the&#13;
screws lashing through the water ia&#13;
a last desperate effort to escape kf&#13;
waves the superstitious,, sailers t e es&#13;
ancestors, and prostrated themselves&#13;
M r \i\$ in fpee^'tpieva** seizure&#13;
was Ineffectual.&#13;
3 •$*?*., * s , the- Mfi, f held f ^ k by the&#13;
Norma, was becoming a spejk agalntst&#13;
the disk of the moaning sky, a n t ^ i r&#13;
of those strange creatures made a&#13;
scarcely less abrupt descent upon the&#13;
Kasbima.VStacka and.masts -went&#13;
down with a crash as had those others.&#13;
The great wiagies* terror jticfeed&#13;
her up into the air before b,er enginea&#13;
could be stopped, ajaq,, with her scrtsw&#13;
beating the atmosphere like the flutteriug&#13;
Huts of a fish captured by a&#13;
marauding eagle, sailed off with her&#13;
Into the blue above.&#13;
Once moro they tripd the effect of&#13;
gunnery, when the Katori was threateuv4;'&#13;
but it was futile, and, reading&#13;
*heir doom, they w.aited their turn. It&#13;
was .not long, in coming; for s e w by&#13;
twos and threes they were t#rn train&#13;
the ocean and lifted ajgft. The colliers&#13;
were the last to'saccumb, and&#13;
their crews, realizing that the bulhi&#13;
alone would come in contact with the&#13;
implacable demon* above, ran screaming&#13;
below decks to continue their supplications&#13;
to the deaf gods who had&#13;
deserted them.&#13;
From the thick glass of his port the&#13;
admiral looked down upon his conquered&#13;
foemen and watched the precision&#13;
with which his orders were being&#13;
obeyed. Each time a victim was.&#13;
seized he shouted: "Three's done her&#13;
work!" or "Good boy, Seven! You've&#13;
got him!" and so on enumerating each&#13;
success.&#13;
Some movement on the deck of the&#13;
I to close at hand arrested his attention.&#13;
His brows came together again&#13;
In a fierce scowl. "Stand by the magnet&#13;
levers, Miss Norma," he commanded,&#13;
"because of these fellows below&#13;
mean to show the least resistance&#13;
whatever, we'll drop 'em!"&#13;
- She had been standing serenely in&#13;
her hood, her head thrown back, reveling&#13;
in the glories of triumph. When&#13;
the fate of the battle had hung upon&#13;
her performance, and when her own&#13;
life was threatened, she had thrown&#13;
herself body and soul into the fray,&#13;
wide eyed, unresistant, and without a&#13;
tremor; but now, at the thought of being&#13;
the executioner of perhaps a thousand&#13;
men, her face blanched, her&#13;
limbs trembled, and her hands forgot&#13;
their task and clasped together in imploration.&#13;
She was the woman again,&#13;
ready to plead for the lives of those&#13;
she had conquered.&#13;
• "My God! You wouldn't do that,&#13;
would you?" she said.&#13;
The old gladiator of the sea turned&#13;
upon her fiercely, "Do it? Do it? I'd&#13;
drop them to hell a3 quick as I would&#13;
to the bottom of the Pacific if they&#13;
show fight!" he responded. "We're&#13;
out here to teach a lesson, and they&#13;
deserve all that's coming to 'em! War&#13;
is no child's game," he concluded grimly,&#13;
"and the first ship that wants&#13;
trouble goes down like a thunderbolt,"&#13;
As if to emphasize his remark, he&#13;
sprang to the signal box and Issued&#13;
this sanguinary order to every radioplane&#13;
in the fleet, while Norma, faint&#13;
and sick at heart, shut her teeth and&#13;
with a look of inexpressible pain&#13;
turned back to her levers.&#13;
But she was spared this dreadful&#13;
work. The Japanese officers and men&#13;
had learned the absolute futility of resistance,&#13;
and doubted the efficacy of&#13;
appeal! Their one hope for life now&#13;
rested in tha humanity and leniency&#13;
of those who held them in thrall.&#13;
It took no long chain of reasoning&#13;
to conclude that an enemy who could&#13;
pluck them from the seas and without&#13;
visible effort, lift them more than a&#13;
mile high could as readily release has&#13;
hold and send them to destruction&#13;
with meteorlike speed. Even were it&#13;
possible to destroy those monsters&#13;
which clutched them, to do so would&#13;
be self-annihilation.&#13;
They were ignored, cut off from&#13;
those above, and divorced from the&#13;
waters beneath as if they were creatures&#13;
of no importance/to be treated&#13;
like mere troublesome insects, exterminated&#13;
or spared as their captor's&#13;
whim might dictate. The glory of an&#13;
easy conquest in the Philippines, the&#13;
boastings which had followed the subjugation&#13;
of Hawaii, the pomp and circumstance&#13;
of previous conquests—all&#13;
were obliterated, all erased fsom the&#13;
scroll of valorous deeds b^ an action&#13;
which had lasted less than an hour.&#13;
And now, like beaten legionaries&#13;
chained to the victor's car. they were&#13;
being carried away toward the rising&#13;
sun and an unknown fate.&#13;
(TO B E C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
Tf" ^^¾¾¾¾ ^ ¾&#13;
"RabBfcJoseph Jfcrauskopf, Onr eloquent&#13;
preacher^ said a Philadelphian,&#13;
"bflf s. aqpd rather than evty in the frequency&#13;
ef \ inrlcan e^vuape. He sees&#13;
in it a a l g n ?&amp;aL-A*** rl**n wives will&#13;
not endure the treatment that European&#13;
.wjvtju put up with. H«f,aeti8 in&#13;
it a yrojnlse that the married men of&#13;
the future will live better.&#13;
"Discussing the divorce question the&#13;
other day. he told me-tbajt'tKey'Wtlo&#13;
pereelved only evil in it ieminded&gt;bim,&#13;
In their illogical and confused viewpoint,&#13;
of a little boy with, whom he&#13;
oojce took a stroll.&#13;
"As they utrolled, they passed the&#13;
young girls of a neighboring boarding&#13;
school out on their daily walk. The&#13;
rjirls moved in military formation, two&#13;
by two. In front were the youngest, in&#13;
skirts to their knees. Next came the&#13;
older ones, in the order of their ages,&#13;
their skirts lengthening with their&#13;
years. And in the rear came the oldest&#13;
of all, the young ladles, whose&#13;
skirts hid even their boots.&#13;
"The little boy looked at the girls.&#13;
Then he frowned and said:&#13;
" W h y Is it that their legs grow&#13;
shorter as they grow bigger?"'&#13;
I N H E R I T E D K I D N E Y T R O U B L E .&#13;
Squelched Eccentric Poet&#13;
One day Charles Baudelaire, the eccentric&#13;
French poet, came to Maxino&#13;
du Camp's rooms with his hair dyed&#13;
green. Du Camp affected not to&#13;
notice it. Baudelalro did all he could&#13;
to direct attention to it. and finally, as&#13;
his friend persisted in not noticing&#13;
it, he hurst out: "Don't you see anything&#13;
strange about me to-day?" Du&#13;
Camp answered:. "Not at all; lots of&#13;
people have green hair." Baudelaire&#13;
At onoa, disgusted,&#13;
Could Feel U Constantly. Gaining&#13;
Ground as Time Paaeed.&#13;
Mrs. Frank fcoseooom, 512 W. Washington&#13;
St., Moscow, Idaho, says: "Kidney&#13;
trouble was hereditary,&#13;
and my&#13;
parents spent hundreds&#13;
of dollars trying&#13;
to cure me. * I&#13;
was nervous, my&#13;
eyesight had failed&#13;
noticeably, my circulation&#13;
was bad,&#13;
sleep fitful, heart&#13;
action Irregular, and my back so weak&#13;
and painful I could hardly stand it.&#13;
There was also an irregularity of the&#13;
kidney secretions and a cold always&#13;
made the whole trouble worse. I could&#13;
tell many other symptoms, too, but&#13;
shall only add that Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills made me free of all of them."&#13;
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
What He Lacked.&#13;
It Is related of a South American&#13;
general, who was extremely well&#13;
pleased with himself, that once, when&#13;
about to sally forth to a grand dance,&#13;
he surveyed htmself contentedly in the&#13;
mirror, and then soliloquized thus:&#13;
"Ah! Thou hast all—bvawecy,&#13;
wealth, position, good, looks. Ah, what&#13;
dost thou lack?"&#13;
Whereupon his orderly, who, unknown&#13;
to the general, was close at&#13;
hand, remarked:&#13;
"Sense, general, sense!"&#13;
STATS or Oaio CWY or TOLEDO. )&#13;
LLCAJ COUNTY. f •*•&#13;
FRANK J. CHE.NET makes oath that he Is »»101&#13;
partner of the flrin of F. J. C'MEMEY &lt;fc po., doing&#13;
business In th* City1 of'Toledo.* Co«»»ty and Stata&#13;
aforea^l. and that said firm will pay the sum oi&#13;
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eaoh and every&#13;
! caso oi GOPAJUUJ ttiat.caanp^he.WU'fid, by the u*i ol&#13;
I HALL'S CATARRH CURB.&#13;
FKATiv J. CU5NKY. 1 Sworn to before me aad'Mbwrtbed tn.&amp;y presence,&#13;
UiU 6th day of December. A. I).. 1886.&#13;
i ~*~ i A. W. OLEASON,&#13;
' ^ t . f NOTABT PTOUC.&#13;
Halt s Catarrh Cure 1» taken Internally and *et*&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho&#13;
' system. 8eod for testimonials, frrc.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O&#13;
Hold by all Driunrtota. rise.&#13;
I Tafcc Hall'a Family Pills lor constloatlon.&#13;
\ Diplomacy.&#13;
"When a man has an argument with&#13;
his wife, and she proves thai he is is&#13;
' the wrong "&#13;
"Yes?"&#13;
"Should he own up to it?"&#13;
"Xn. That's bad business. He&#13;
should maintain he was right, and&#13;
then so out and buy her something&#13;
nice."—Cleveland Leader.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t to M o t h e r s ,&#13;
: Examine carefully every bottle sf&#13;
I CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that It&#13;
i Bears the&#13;
j Signature of&#13;
| In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
| The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
Hospitality.&#13;
"And did you enjoy your African&#13;
trip, major? How did -you Ilka. t s »&#13;
savages?"&#13;
"Oh, they were extremely&#13;
ed. They wanted to *eep rae'tlittstils*'-^&#13;
dinner "—London Opinion.&#13;
Just Shoot Twice.&#13;
"I thought you said this gun would&#13;
shoot a thousand yards?"&#13;
"It will."&#13;
"It won't. It only shoots 500 yarda."&#13;
"Well, it's a double-barreled g\ua/&#13;
ain't it?"&#13;
A Domewtlt? B y e R e m e d y&#13;
Compounded by Experienced Phyalc:&#13;
Conforms to Pure Food and Drug's&#13;
W i n s Friends Wherever Used. Ask&#13;
gists for Murine E y e R e m e d y&#13;
rlno in Your Eyea. You Will U k e&#13;
- i&#13;
k&#13;
' Some people would have tQ&#13;
1 overtime if they practiced halt&#13;
I they preach.&#13;
&lt;3wt,&#13;
PILKM CITKBD I X S TO 1 4 D A T S .&#13;
PA20 01NTMKNTtssrti»**ntA«l to eur* a&#13;
of Itching. Hllnd. BIMWIIM or Pi-otradiai&#13;
S to 14 day a or money refunded ~&#13;
*&#13;
Some people avoid popular eoi&#13;
{because they are food of music .-•• ,.*i.&#13;
''"IT&#13;
,J&#13;
KT&#13;
f&amp;&#13;
, i ?&#13;
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'CC"' " T -&#13;
? # •&#13;
tar?&#13;
A"v&#13;
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:%&#13;
r&#13;
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F. L. ANDREWS db CO. PROPRIETOBS.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAtt. 18,1909.&#13;
I t i s r e p o r t e d t h a t - t h e ways and&#13;
m e a n s c o m m i t t e e h a s decided t h a t&#13;
t h e new tariff bill shall carry a&#13;
t a x on coffee, «ttd tea a n d a n i n -&#13;
creased t a x ' o n beer.&#13;
From Florida.&#13;
•v&#13;
If &gt;ou ntwi &amp; pill ttke D'a Witts Lit&#13;
tie Early Risers. Insist on theru;&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little !iv«r pills.&#13;
Bold by all dealers.&#13;
It Saved Ills Lag,&#13;
"All thought I'd losu my l e / " writes&#13;
J . A. Swenson, Water t w n , Wis. "Ten&#13;
years of Eczema that !•"• doctors could&#13;
act cure, bad at last laid rue up, Then&#13;
BnciJens ArnicA Salve cured it sound&#13;
and well.' lnfailable for skin eruptions,&#13;
Ecztna, Salt libeuui, Ho Is, Fever&#13;
Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts and&#13;
File*,. 25c at Sillers DruR Store.&#13;
You may not be a n y too well&#13;
off yourself, b u t think of how&#13;
rich you' h a v e helped to make&#13;
J o h n D . Rockefeller. E v e r y&#13;
cloud has a silver lining.&#13;
Tlmv i.. not H Iw-t't'r Salve than De-&#13;
Witts Cai-buli^ri Wndi Hazel Salve.&#13;
We hereby wain to ouhlic that we are&#13;
not responsible tor :"any injurious&#13;
effects caused tVuni worthless or poisonous&#13;
imitations or our DeWitts Uarboliied&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve, the original.&#13;
It is good for anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially ! shooting in t h e n i g h t a n d&#13;
Tallahassee, Flu.&#13;
March 7,1909.&#13;
P e a r H o m e F r i e n d s ,&#13;
1 call you "homp&#13;
friends" for a l t h o u g h home to me&#13;
now ie anywhere I h a u g my h a t&#13;
and 1 try to feel very much a t&#13;
home in each place yet t h e r e i s a&#13;
different feeling one has for t h e&#13;
bceues and friends of t h e childhood&#13;
home d a y s ; therefore, w h e r e&#13;
ever I roam you will alwhys be&#13;
"home friends."&#13;
Since my leaving D e t r o i t last&#13;
S e p t e m b e r my work has taken m e&#13;
to mauy places in Ohio, K e n t u c k y&#13;
Tennessee, N. Carolina, G e o r g i a&#13;
Alabama, a u d now for a m o u t h o r&#13;
so will be iu Florida.&#13;
1 am now in tue laud of s u n -&#13;
shine aud flowers where the mocking&#13;
bird sings in t h e trees, a u d&#13;
where the soil p r o d u c e s cottou&#13;
and tobacco fields n e a r Tallahassee.&#13;
T h e expense of k e e p i n g&#13;
these fields covered so they will&#13;
produce a thin, h i g h g r a d e leaf, i s&#13;
enormous. E e r e t h e negro s w a r m s&#13;
the streets, looks a t you from t h e&#13;
reed h u t s and cabins near t h e&#13;
railroads, a n d i s constantly a t&#13;
your side in the d i n n i n g rooms to&#13;
serve you according to h i s best&#13;
knowledge of polite form. I stayed&#13;
over n i g h t in Blakely, Georgia,&#13;
last week a n d in t h e m o r n i n g a&#13;
travelling mau asked at the b r e a k -&#13;
fast table w h e t h e r we heard t h e&#13;
had&#13;
good for piles. He stive you get&#13;
Witts. Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
Le j heard of the lynching. N o n e of&#13;
J us had. H e said a negro h a d stol-&#13;
. . i e n a m u l e . An officer arreBted&#13;
I t is fortunate indeed t h a t the j h i m &lt; H e resisted the officer a n d&#13;
thirty-five t h o u s a n d shoe factory s h o t ^ mounding h i m badly,&#13;
h a n d s a t L y n n , Massachusetts, T h e negro was jailed. Five m e n&#13;
ordered out on a stiko, a r e n o t ! , ,, r . nn u , , IA~„™™^&gt; a o ;/i&#13;
iv _ t e i i u *. J of the town so t h e ' d r u m m e r said,&#13;
t h e makers of r u b b e r boots a n d , . . . , . r r i&#13;
shoes this slushy s p r i n g weather. P l a u n e d to lyuch hlm' lheJ&#13;
_ ; sawed around the lock in the jail&#13;
Kills Would-lie Slayer. jdoor aud got him out. They c u t&#13;
A iLercile.s* IMU &lt;i«-ivr \&gt; Appendicit- 'his head open a n d d u g his b r a i n s&#13;
is with many victims. Hut Dr. Kings out, s t r u n g him t o a tree, t h e n&#13;
New Life Piil.-. kill it by prevention, shot his body fall of holes. All&#13;
They gently stimulate stomach, liver, 'this occured about midnight, just&#13;
and bowels, preventing that clogging a few yards from where I slept&#13;
L a s t e v e n i n g I read several selections&#13;
for some elite t o u r i s t s in&#13;
t h e spacious p a r l o r of t h i s beautiful&#13;
L e o n hotel. I did n o t d a r e&#13;
(rive t h e m a n y t h i n g s e n t i m e n t a l&#13;
because of a few native s o u t h e r n -&#13;
e r s in the g r o u p . T h e y asked me&#13;
to give s o m e t h i n g in t h e negro&#13;
dialect a n d I gave t h e m "Dafc&#13;
Fretful T i l d a Strong." . T h a t r e p -&#13;
resents an old colored w o m a n cousoling&#13;
her fretful, w o r r y i n g neighbor&#13;
by t e a c h i u g her to stroke t h e&#13;
porcupine of life the r i g h t way.&#13;
T h e r e is a good lesson iu it, if i t&#13;
does come t h r u t h e c h a n n e l of&#13;
negro blood.&#13;
T h e m o r e one travels t h e more&#13;
he realizes t h e sacredneas a u d&#13;
value of c o n t e n t m e n t with t h e&#13;
q u i e t home life s u r r o u n d e d by&#13;
vines of your o w n planting.&#13;
Therefore t h o you may b e enduring&#13;
the severities of *he cold winter&#13;
w e a t h e r i n Michigan, i t i s a&#13;
physical e n d u r a u c e t h a t i s easy in&#13;
comparison to t h e m e n t a l h e a t&#13;
a n d unrest and revenge t h a t makes&#13;
many lives miserable in t h e south.&#13;
T h e y tell some of the n o r t h e r n e r s&#13;
t h a t all t h e wealth we have iu t h e&#13;
n o r t h we got by c o m i n g down&#13;
here and stealing it from them,&#13;
devastating their homes a u d crippling&#13;
t h m for centuries t o come,&#13;
a n d as I have learned t h e conditions&#13;
in many homes a n d schools&#13;
w h e r e my work has t a k e n me I am&#13;
moved to sympathize w i t h their&#13;
feelings and ask for solutions to&#13;
the great problem t h a t confronts&#13;
t h e American people today, t h a t&#13;
of the race question.&#13;
Y o u r s most sincerely,&#13;
F r a n c Adel© B u r c h .&#13;
ADDHIQMJX10CUL&#13;
A motor track Go. will locate in&#13;
Ann Arbor and employ 600 hands.&#13;
The residence of the late Gov. Pin*&#13;
gitje a*o boon sold and will bo turned&#13;
into in Eastern Star temple.&#13;
A uood many have been paying&#13;
their subscription the past two weeks,&#13;
but there are a few more we should&#13;
hear from soon or we shall be obliged&#13;
to send out statements.&#13;
Nearly every village in this vicinity&#13;
voted dry at their chapter election last&#13;
week. This speaks well for the coming&#13;
local option question that is to&#13;
come in the several counties in1 April.&#13;
However, the friends of local option&#13;
do not want to trust too much until&#13;
after they have votei. Let eyeryone&#13;
gat out and vote.&#13;
ty hai loll therf&#13;
V liftoff^&#13;
uto.48 being%fcr*irtt» tfcator of*&#13;
KktMganU&#13;
govtmmeoi_ m&#13;
which £Mi to&#13;
oo&#13;
operations.&#13;
Robert UoFadden of Howell has a&#13;
Scotch colhe whioh has taken •«••»-&#13;
teen first p r i z e s twiee beating J .&#13;
Fierpoot Morgans $8,000 dog. I t has&#13;
been shown in New York, Philadelphia,&#13;
Toledo and Detroit a n i goei,&#13;
next to Cbicago,~Jaekson Citisen. , f&#13;
The department of agriculture b l i&#13;
issued a bulletin advocating the do&#13;
mesticationt of deer pn the farms showing&#13;
that it could be d.ne,.w^b little&#13;
expense, whiob*#C»W briegVvenison&#13;
within the raaob of everyone. Deer&#13;
are easily domesticated, and, unlike&#13;
many other wild animals, will breed&#13;
in captivity.—Republican. .&#13;
** ?*&gt;% • tf&#13;
D O N T P A V T W I C E \&#13;
V FOR T H E SAME ROOF. "&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofings are really&#13;
never paid for, because they neea painting or&#13;
coating every year or two. If you add to the cost of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting during the number of yeass in service,&#13;
you will readily understand why&#13;
J - M ASBESTOS ROOFING-;&#13;
which needs no coating—is the "cheapest-per-year Roofing.&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanently durable and resiflts fire.&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or cold can affect i t Costs&#13;
leas than elate, iron or shingles. Can be applied by anyone.&#13;
Aak for aamplea and prices-&#13;
H. W JCHNS-MANVIbUECo.&#13;
7&gt; J e f f e r s o n A v e . D e t r o ' t , Michigan.&#13;
•X F?,EG OFFER TO YOU&#13;
that inyitPs appendicitis, curing Constipation,&#13;
Biliosntss, Chills. Malaria,&#13;
Headache and Indigestion. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Siglers.&#13;
The Arkansas senate has passed&#13;
t h e state wide prohibition bill&#13;
b u t with an a m e n d m e n t attached&#13;
s u b m i t t i n g the question first t o&#13;
p o p u l a r vote on J u l y 14.&#13;
The Lurid Glow of Doim&#13;
was spen in the red f^ce, hands and&#13;
body of the little son of A, M. Adams,&#13;
of Henrietta, Fa. His awful plight&#13;
from eczema bad, for five years, defied&#13;
all remcd.es and haffied the .ioctsoundly.&#13;
I went t o t h e scene w h e r e&#13;
groups of white men a n d women&#13;
and black people were g a t h e r e d&#13;
about the pitiable object d a n g l i n g&#13;
from the t r e e — t h e white people&#13;
coming away, some of them l a u g h -&#13;
ing; the negros, no doubt, q u a k i n g&#13;
with fear a n d secret revenge.&#13;
I kept my m o u t h shut b u t d i d&#13;
some thinking. I t is not wise o r&#13;
seemingly helpful to express a n y&#13;
sentiment down here. Much of&#13;
" N o r t h e r n s e n t i m e n t " i s r e -&#13;
Near Death In Big Pond.&#13;
It was a thrilling experience to Mrs.&#13;
Ida Soper to face death. "For years a&#13;
severe lnng trouble gave me intense&#13;
suffering," she writes " a n d several&#13;
times nearly caused my death. All&#13;
remedies and doctors said I was incurable.&#13;
Then Dr. Kings New Discovery&#13;
brought quick relief and a&#13;
cure so permanent that I have not&#13;
been troubled in twelve years.' Mrs.&#13;
Soper lives in Big Pond, Pa. It works&#13;
wonders in Coughs and colds, sore&#13;
lungs, hemorrhages, la grippe, asthma&#13;
croup, hooping cough and all bronchial&#13;
affections. 50c and $1.00. Trial&#13;
battle free. Guaranteed by F. A.&#13;
Sijfler.&#13;
In order fo tell yoa more fully about the merits&#13;
of B. R S. P;unt we offer you free, our B . P . 5 .&#13;
P a i n t B u d g e t . This is a package of pa'nt&#13;
iitrrauiri: that \n;i wilt isnJ ul value whether you are&#13;
thinking of using paint now or later on.&#13;
One oi the booklets in the Budget tells how&#13;
to avoid pamt troubles, another is a handsome&#13;
iolder, showing how to test your paint before&#13;
buying. Still another is a booklet of color samples&#13;
ull, of in'ormation on estimating the quantity required, with special rules AM}&#13;
.&gt;ther information which will mean money in your pocket.&#13;
We offe this to you ' i w n order thai yo\: may " i n v e S - t l g a t e&#13;
B. P. S. before investing.'&#13;
THE PATTERSON-SARGENT CO.&#13;
GLNLRAL OFFICES AND FACTORY: CLEVELAND OHIO&#13;
Chicago New Yorh Boston Kansa.« City St. Paul Cincinnati&#13;
our&#13;
garded as "rotten s e n t i m e n t " by&#13;
these S o u t h e r n e r s who know t h e&#13;
tors, who said the poisoned blood had only way of h a n d l i n g the "nigger."&#13;
affected his Inngs and nothing r;onld ^ 0 y 0 l l 0 f the north I can safely&#13;
save him, "But" wnt&lt;w bis mother ] e x p r e 8 8 o n e t h o u g h t with which&#13;
"seven bottles of Electric Bitters com- -i, i V ,„. i.u„ c n _ M&#13;
, . , , . „ you will a g r e e — t h a t t h e so-conpletely&#13;
cured him. For eruptions, „ u . , , , . , , -L , eczema, Sa ult PRhLeu m, sores an,d a,l l sidered educated w.h ite man who&#13;
u\nnA n j ^ ^ n , , , n~A T?U *• does a deed like t h i s 1 have d e s -&#13;
Dlood Unorders and Kheunaatism&#13;
Electric Bitters ia Supreme. Only b r i b e d , is guilty of a crime far&#13;
ftOc. Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler. more atrocious and deserving of&#13;
— severer p u n i s h m e n t t h a n t h e ignorant&#13;
negro, who stole t h e mule&#13;
and animal-like resisted the officer&#13;
when taken captive.&#13;
Out in that: region of Infinite Li^ht,&#13;
W h e n the soul nf the black nmn is a*&#13;
pure as the white,&#13;
Out where the spirit thru sorrow made&#13;
wise,&#13;
XII Innperiresortw to deception and lies;&#13;
Out where the flesh run no limber control&#13;
The freedom nnd faith nf t h e G o d -&#13;
given soul.&#13;
W h o shall determine what fate m a y&#13;
hefall&#13;
J o h n and Peter and Robert :uid l'mil?&#13;
T h a t is t h e kind of s e n t i m e n t&#13;
The Sleeping Sickness.&#13;
The terrible sleeping sickness of&#13;
Ifcepical Afrieii la discussed at length&#13;
In* an article in Popular Mechanics.&#13;
disease, which long baffled sclen-&#13;
, Is spread by the tsetse fly, a&#13;
bloodsucking, dny flying Insect. On tho&#13;
^pprnarh of wither man or animal at a&#13;
liver crossing in the densest forest&#13;
tfce victim is soon" scented out. by the&#13;
Hy, if there Is one In the vicinity, ami&#13;
then, either Hilently or with a peevish&#13;
buzz, it makes straight for the most&#13;
•Ccessible spot and &lt;tfvea Its stab.&#13;
The usual course of the disease is&#13;
ftotn four to eight months. At the&#13;
qutaet there are headache, a feverish&#13;
CtOditou, lassitude and a correRpondteg&#13;
dlrtacllnation to work. The facial&#13;
MptQt Changes,and a previously happy&#13;
a M btonift&#13;
J Mtl«4 dull, heavy and aparhoth . , « . , , .. t u&#13;
Lntft^trein(• r in the tongue develops. , o n t o t t h e rottenness of such&#13;
•peech ' Is uncertain, and mumbling, t h o u g h t t h e r e m a y sometime&#13;
walk shuffling mid progressive weak- ; c o m e f h w t h f t t , w i l l r e v i v i f y&#13;
oess, drowsiness and oblivion to his n . , . . . ., .&#13;
•nffoondinjfs aifllct the sufferer. The : and regenerate t h e false mtellecthMt&#13;
itafe i» markod by axtrame ema Uftl pride of southern arintocracy&#13;
ciatlon and a com* it—twmii^ into and t h e blackman may have h i e&#13;
hand on t h e lever of t h e wine&#13;
press.&#13;
teent looking negro becomes t h C f t l l r o t t e n d o w n h e r e hnt&#13;
lull, apathetic. . „&#13;
aye Timber Bonds&#13;
9f Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company qf Ground Rapids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable serrri-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st.&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n a l $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 a n d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
Thttt bonda are dated March 4th, 1909, and mature at the rate of $50,000 each year, coraimnriog&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any iaterttt peri«d and carry tht pffcitafjl&#13;
of regiitration aa to principle.&#13;
T r u s t e e : T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . G r a n d R a p i d * . MichagMa. Michigan -Pacffic Lumber Co.&#13;
9/ Gra.nd Rapids Michigan.&#13;
Capitalisation. $1,500,000. P a r Value $10.00. Bonda. $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property teeming thin issue consists of 31,63a acre* of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, lorated an&#13;
the southweil shore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoiia aaat;-'&#13;
within itomilea of all important ports on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vaflr •&#13;
ceuver. Mr. J. P. Bray ton of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremost tiaaaaV&#13;
tzperta of the country has examined this tract of timber for us and reports a stand of mora Ittttt'&#13;
1,500,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than 20c per M ft. stumpage.&#13;
•J The present equipment compiises a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam Tug,&#13;
Rolling; Stock, ate, capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S )&#13;
CHAR. W. U K R N SRBKWAINO, MICH.&#13;
Pres,, Huron Bay I.umbrr Co.&#13;
y H. MOORR SBATTT.B, WASH.&#13;
Kx. Supt. Motivr rower, Chi., BUT. &amp; Q_. K. R.&#13;
W. T. COLHMAN, - 8BATTT.F, \VAIHII»QTO»&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska Investuent Co.&#13;
8. M. COCHRANE, CApiUlist, SBATTI.B. W A S H .&#13;
WM. L. CARPKNTHR. - - DBTBOIT. MtCH.&#13;
Of tbe firm of Stevenson. Carpenter &amp; Butzel.&#13;
CHAS. A PHBI,PS, . ORAWD B A M M , MtCB.&#13;
Timbrr Operator. Treas., Hackley-Phelps-Bonnell&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
W. P. McKXIGHT, GRAND R A P I M , Mxca.&#13;
Pres , White River Lamher Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B. B. CADWKTX, NRW TOBUI&#13;
Vice-President, Standard Screw Co.. Detroit.&#13;
C. T. MOORE, BBATTLC, WASJB.&#13;
Timber Krpert and Mill Operator.&#13;
Wo of for thoao bonda at p*r and aooruod Intarost to ytold t&gt;%.&#13;
&lt;H Privilege will be granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount ef stock of&#13;
the company. €(] Further information and prospectus showing photographs of the property furaiihedon request. E. B. Cadwell &amp; Co.,&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS&#13;
7 7 0 MN0MC0T MlfLOIIVa&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
f'i.'.-y^yf.'.Wi.^jp&#13;
^ ^ ¾&#13;
\ . * ; • * •&#13;
/•&#13;
^ - jS tmv tm^-&#13;
W&#13;
&amp;&#13;
#$w*&#13;
•I*'*,**''&#13;
PATENTS f HOCURCO A N D DtrENocif. *«alWJ&lt;|&#13;
dmwiur orphoto. for uxiwrt MttucKaud f re* wport I&#13;
Free advitx), how to obutin patents, trade marka, j&#13;
a&gt;py«1«b*«Uk, |M ALU C O U M T R i e r&#13;
Business &lt;m4ct wllk Washington sav*s tim*A&#13;
monty a/u^uften the patent.&#13;
Pitant wfd Irrfringaitunt Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or CO«M te ut *t&#13;
• I S Xtetfc Stnrt, «pp. UnraVS U M « ratart OaVw,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N . 0 . C.&#13;
CASNQW&#13;
This is juBt the time at je^r when&#13;
jou are most likely to have kidney or&#13;
bladder trouble, with rheaiuatiiui and&#13;
rheomatic p^pe t«un«4 by we».k kidneys.&#13;
Decays are daugeroub. Get De&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder pill*, and&#13;
be sure you jjnt what you auk for.&#13;
Tbey are the bests pills made for back&#13;
ache, weak back, urinary disorders,&#13;
iutiatnation of tiin l&gt;ladde,r, etu. J'liev&#13;
are antiseptic md net promptly, Sold&#13;
and reccom mended i&gt;y all dealers.&#13;
WANTED—Succi'hH Mngaaine requires&#13;
the servioefi of a man in Pinckney tu IcuJk&#13;
after expiring Bubueriutiuiib and to secure&#13;
new buainewj by means or' sjucial methods&#13;
TRAOE M A R K *&#13;
D C S I O N t&#13;
0O#*V*U^MTt) a%&amp;&#13;
Anroeeaenrlla* a i ketch .and daaertpticn may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
unusually effective, position pennanei t, _^&#13;
prefer one with experience, but woul 1 con- ! I0OII8 f o r 1 9 yettrrJ, httB o h l y&#13;
sider any applicant with yood natural j d r u g BtoreB tiud f o u r o f t h e u i&#13;
qualifications; salary ¢1.50 per day, with^ u o t He]\ ]\^noT ttt a l l , n o t e v e n t a k&#13;
Local Opt/on Notes.&#13;
Do not be afraid of the "empty"&#13;
stores after the saloons are driven&#13;
o^t of th» county. They will b e&#13;
taken in a few month's a n d good&#13;
legitimate business installed in&#13;
their places.&#13;
All the Livingston county papers&#13;
are contending that the local&#13;
option element is very stroug&#13;
throughout the county. Don't&#13;
let thia cool your ardor for the&#13;
cause, Bro. Voter, your vote must&#13;
be counted iu its favor April 5.&#13;
Van Buren county with no sago&#13;
do&#13;
FLASH&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Dirt&#13;
Hustler&#13;
commission option. Address, with references,&#13;
1(. C. Peacock. Room 102,&#13;
Magazine Bldg., New York.&#13;
Success&#13;
"~ " BT lof jewruji*patenu. aba rgMa,u innn t h&amp;e Co. recall flmcrkan. £*A"'w«*a^akkvllwy . IT&gt;.aaiKrftiAeaatt. rcAto -&#13;
Journal, Turns, $3 a&#13;
Sold by afl newsdealers.&#13;
Offloir&amp;Q V 8U Wash'lStoS; D. C?&#13;
= *&#13;
t^Beirf. for «1.00 per year.&#13;
ibecrfpe lor tfee Pliiekaer Diipatoit&#13;
*&#13;
[THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
, ; , • • , W I T H OJR W I T H O U T B O L T I N G A T T A C H M E N T .&#13;
i •§•-«* thoMt maehlrra with • This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
JO-inch Saw-and Shingle Car- -^sWiAjt^^m. *° 12,000 «hfocjes per day.&#13;
jaocr ready for cutting aalnolu ^^dSK£xSS8Sk C a r r i a 9 e 8 mii* t r o m selected&#13;
8 in. loot, a** 4 to. «10»,- '^^BHtf^^wT h a r d *ood- T r i c k '• toM&#13;
I P l l l l ITl.0%. ^aUfaW^BaWafl rolled rteel- Fot cutting shin-&#13;
*M*0*mj$+-mi - Z/P^O^T'lij gles requires 4 to 8 H. P. For&#13;
- - j ^ * ' T • ^ I j i ^ V L bo,tin9 6 to 8 H. P. Wetflht&#13;
IT IS A MONEY-MAKER Equipped with the bolting attachment it is a complete Bhingle outfit In iteelf. Can be adjusted&#13;
for auy desired taper or thickness. For cutting the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
) manufacture a high grade,low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net prices.&#13;
CIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
K n g l n e s , B o l l o r s , S a w M i l l M a c h i n e r y , E t c&#13;
iug out a government license;&#13;
while the sister County of Berrien&#13;
having 54 saloons, has also 40&#13;
UO YOU WANT TO (H&gt; TO cOL-1 drug stores.&#13;
Drunkenness has been decreased&#13;
more than 75 per cent in both&#13;
Clinton and Gratiot couuties,business&#13;
is better than before, and&#13;
men who opposed local option are&#13;
now supporting i t actively. I n&#13;
my judgement with t h e present&#13;
strict enforcement of the law continued,&#13;
the voters would bury a&#13;
proposition to return to the license&#13;
system. -Kelly 8. Searl.&#13;
The great cause of social crime&#13;
is drink. The great cause of poverty&#13;
is drink. When I hear of a&#13;
family broken up, I ask the cause&#13;
—drink. If I go to the gallows&#13;
and ask its victim the cause, t h e&#13;
answer—drink. Then I ask myself&#13;
in perfect wonderment, W H Y&#13;
DO NOT MEN PUT A 8TOP TO THIS&#13;
THING?—Archbishop Ireland.&#13;
L K ( r E ? If so we c a n h e l p y o u . W e&#13;
h a v e a l r e a d y p u t h u n d r e d * t h t o u g h college&#13;
by m e a n s of o u r plan. W r i t e today f o r&#13;
full in formation r e ^ a r d i n y o u r offer of a&#13;
free s c h o l a r s h i p in any school o r college.&#13;
A d d r e s s , R o b e r t J . Sherlock, 'J'J-31 Kant&#13;
U2nd Street, N e w Y o r k C i t y .&#13;
All the newt for $100 per year.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO., PUBS.&#13;
P L A S H is prepared tor the lian.lt, (all hands, noue excepted) to clean thoroughly&#13;
a n d Q u i c k e r than any other cleaner ur soap product on the market. F L A S H&#13;
iu different from other similar preparations iu that it contains uo acid or lye, a# it ig&#13;
not a soap, but is the result of a long period of i-umerous secret experiments combining&#13;
glycerine and other antiseptic healing oils iu conjunction with finely ground pumice&#13;
and a small percentage of chemically pure soap slock, very beneficial to the okin. xi,verything&#13;
in it is pure and healthful and guarautted not to injure ihe most delicate&#13;
hands. It is made to do w h a t s o a p c a n n o t d o »uil has become T H E D a m *&#13;
cleaner, for cleaning and preserving the hands o f a l l p c o p l K . * i n e.V«;ry c l a » »&#13;
and e v e r y p l a c e .&#13;
Prepared in a pasie form, it is applied with the fore tiugejs to the palm of the hand,&#13;
and by the addition of a little water produces a pleasing antiseptic scent*d lather that&#13;
cleanses the hands thoroughly. It.is put up in 12 ( uuce tin 1 i-xts, i;e\elled tdge to&#13;
prevent cuttiug the lingers.&#13;
ASK YOUR D E A L E R IOC kARGk CAN&#13;
J3ETTER THAN SOAP&#13;
an;&#13;
Does your back ache? Is your skin leathery and yellow?1&#13;
Is your urine murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten peraons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They don't always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before you feel it&#13;
That is why it la so necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. If&#13;
ything is wrong with your kidneys it should be attended to at onoe.&#13;
Don'»tt tt ake strong, draatio drugs. They are dangerous.&#13;
Yen will be perfectly safe and sure of a permanent cure by taktng&#13;
DR THACHERS LIVER £ BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing the caoae and&#13;
driving the inflammation and the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All Dealers Sell BOo. and tl.OO Bottles.&#13;
THACHER MEDICINE C O . , C h a t t a n o o g a , T e n n&#13;
C r a z y .&#13;
"We find the prisoner not gtiilty by&#13;
reason of Insanity.''&#13;
"But the plea w a s not that of insanity,"&#13;
remarked the court.&#13;
"That's just the point wo made," rejoined&#13;
tin- foreman. "We decided that&#13;
.»ny i n u n w h o d i d n ' t h a v e s e n s e eiioii;;h&#13;
fo know that an insanity plea was :!•&lt;•&#13;
;&gt;roper caper must be crazy."--IMiil::&#13;
'f'dnlua Ledger.&#13;
The t r o u b l e w i t h m a n y a m a n ' s [&gt;&lt;&#13;
t P M ' i t y is That i t n e e d s c o n s t a n t v l n d !&#13;
&lt;•"! ' i o n ' h i ' H ^ n N e w s&#13;
&amp;bc fturtmty gifrpatch&#13;
PUBLISHED KVJCBT THCKSDAY MOBMNU Bit.&#13;
S loacription Price $1 In Advance&#13;
Sutured at the Postomce at Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
%a second-class matter&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
F R A N K . L., A N D R E W S So C O&#13;
EDITORS ANO PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ME T H O n i S T EPISCOPAL CUUKUH.&#13;
Key. L&gt;. C. Littlejoha pastor. Services ever)&#13;
Sunday morning at tu:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer uieetingThurfcday&#13;
eveniajje. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. Miss MARY V A N F L K S T , Supt.&#13;
CONCiUKOAflONAL, CBUHUU.&#13;
' Kev. A. (i. Gates pastor. Serviceeveo&#13;
Sunday morning at lv&gt;:i0 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T:UC 6'cijck. Prayer uieetinjj 'I'hure&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of muru&#13;
iny service. Mrs. Grace Crotoot, Supt.,, J . A,&#13;
Cadwell Hoc.&#13;
WT. MA U l"5i 'J ATHUUlC OdU UOii.&#13;
O itev. -M, J. OomuierJorii, 1'aBtor. "iervi;eb&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at V:30o cluck&#13;
iugli mass with sermon at iu-.^0 a. m. Cateclusui&#13;
- t a :UU p. ui., vespersan be jd;clion at 7 :-iU i&gt;. re&#13;
I TT&#13;
tsOClLTIES;&#13;
THE HIGH GRADE LEHR PIANO IS USRD AND ENDOR8BD BY&#13;
The BtaiialCoBaemtery of Itete, Mew York ft%.&#13;
The Ptnnijlvanlt College of Music, Philadelphia.&#13;
Chicugo CiManrattry A Hlnsfcftw Sehoel of Opera, OtatHfJ*.&#13;
The PuaMo Conaamtort of Wuak, Pueblo, Colo.&#13;
ANO O T H I R LEADING 0 O N 8 E R V A T O R I I 4&#13;
• sweat yet brilliant and no&#13;
case, perfect adjnrtment and &lt;&#13;
place ft in the front rank of the 1&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano fot the home, where its&#13;
preaaaoo la a sign of culture and refinement&#13;
The 1VEHK PIANO la manufactured under atngnlarty fa^WltieooadlUoM which lenen&#13;
the ooat Of production, and it has achieved a brilliant snoceaa aa the most elegant instrument&#13;
In the, market at a satisfactory price, WRTTK FOB CATAIiOOUE AND PRICKS.&#13;
H. LEHR &amp; C O M P A N Y , M a n u r r e , - E a s t o n , Pa.&#13;
', adjustment durable workmanship&#13;
e best instruments made&#13;
werful tone, exquiarfca&#13;
workmanshil&#13;
K I L L T H S C O U G I&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
fPhe A. O. H. Soclsty of tuia place, meeti ever)&#13;
X third Sunday intue S'r. Mittuaw ilall.&#13;
John Tuoiusy anu M. i". K.ally, Ooanty Dtjlegatt^&#13;
i l\lili \V. &lt;J. 1'. U, meots the i-iymii s.±urliy 1 &lt;&#13;
WITH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
_,each month at-J;Jo p. m, at. tu&gt;j ho ua &lt; Jt t h e&#13;
members ijiveryono intereated in LeiUpuraiice la&#13;
cuaUiaity invited. Mra; *uen{ ^i^ler, L'ree. i l r s&#13;
Jennie Barton, Secretary.&#13;
he C. T. A. and li, society -if tnis place, u±« &lt;&#13;
sataruay evening in the Fr&#13;
John Donohuo, i resident. T hew Hail&#13;
eve/y third Sataruay Fr. Ai-.i&#13;
FOR O O U C H S&#13;
I U i ! ^ O L D S Trial Bottle ree&#13;
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.&#13;
PBICB&#13;
10c A «1JXL&#13;
G U A R A N T E E D S A T I S F A C T 0 B 1&#13;
O R M O N E Y R E F T J N D E D .&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEKb.&#13;
Meetevery Friday evening on or before tu;&#13;
I oi the moon at their h a i l i n the Swarthout bUl^&#13;
i Visiting brothers ,-\ro;or.liaiiyinvited.&#13;
K C, V. Van Winkle, s i r tiniiilitOiinin-dnd.i&#13;
h . P. -Mortan^on, - Record Keeper&#13;
F. u.Juckaon, - Finance Keeper&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.;'3, F A. A. i i . KOJJ'IIHT&#13;
Conimunicaiion Tuesday evening, on or bo: ir._-&#13;
theuill of the moon. ' P. U. Jackson, \\ . &gt;i&#13;
KDKR OF FASIKKN STAK raeetaeach month&#13;
the Friday evon:ng following th* rn^ula.&#13;
M. meeting, MB.^.NETTE VACUHN, \V. M.&#13;
O. L. Cirimea V. C&#13;
i n t h e&#13;
Kodol&#13;
Dyspepsia and Indigestion&#13;
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas on&#13;
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,&#13;
ftfib, ft little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet ovory la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at ^::10 p m.&#13;
Visiting -tisters cordially in&#13;
, Lady Com.&#13;
K. O. I . M. hall.&#13;
V l t e d . LlLA CoNlWAY&#13;
(TATK OF MICHl/lAN, thn prouate conrt t o r&#13;
ollowing thrt fibular F&#13;
aaici coiirt; held nt the probate office in the village I * -^-&#13;
of Howell in *aid county on the 16th 4:&gt;y of,I / { ~ E R 7 ) F ~ M T i b ^ y w7)01)MEx"Mee"t the&#13;
March A. n. 1909. Pre.ont: Hon. Arthur A., | ^ f l r s t Tnurriday evening of each Month&#13;
Montague, judge of Probate. tn the matter of | Maccabee hall,&#13;
the estate of ,&#13;
MAHOARKT ii. WESSON, deceafwd.&#13;
Milton L. Wasson having tiled in aaid court hts&#13;
petition praying that the adrainBtration of said&#13;
estate, be granted tn himaeli or to soma&#13;
other aiiitnhle peraon.&#13;
T) i^ ordered, that t h e 9th day of April&#13;
A D 1909, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probate office, be and ia hereby appointed&#13;
&lt;"or hearingsnid petition.&#13;
It ia further ordered that public notice&#13;
thereof be given by publication of a copy of this&#13;
order for 3 RucceeBive weeks previous to said day&#13;
K NIGHTS' ov THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L, Andrews F. „u, 1 BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
t l T A&#13;
l«l|Tptfta1.tlHiinTii" clip'Stivp&#13;
thtkt ftre'tound in a liealthy&#13;
¾tomach. Being a liquid, it ^t.itts&#13;
digestion at once.&#13;
Kodol not; only digests yonv food,&#13;
tint helps yon enjoy every mouthful&#13;
you eat.&#13;
You need a sufficient amount of&#13;
good, wholesomeLfood to maintain&#13;
strength and health.&#13;
1 Bfit, this food must, to, digested&#13;
thoroughly, otherwise the pains of&#13;
indigestion and dyspepsia are the&#13;
result.&#13;
' When your stomach cannot do its&#13;
ffork properly, take something to&#13;
helfe vour Rtoroach. Kodol is the&#13;
oiiliV thing that will give Ibsetoni-&#13;
Kit complete rest&#13;
Why? JBefe$u» Kodol does the&#13;
aamework as a strohg stomach, and&#13;
it in a ^ u r a i .way.,.,,. f u&#13;
So, don't ncglort your stomacli.&#13;
lHm't Ix'como a ohronic dyspeptic&#13;
Keep your stomae-h healthy and&#13;
strong by taking a little kodol.&#13;
You don't have to take Kodol all&#13;
the time. You only take it when&#13;
you need it.&#13;
Kodol is perfectly harmless.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Go to your rlnr,'(fist today and get a dollar&#13;
txitti*'. Tht&gt;n aftor you have used the&#13;
entire contents of the bottle If you can&#13;
honestly say that it has not done you any&#13;
pAjd, return the bottle to the druggistand&#13;
he will refund your money without question&#13;
ordelay. we will then pay thedrug-&#13;
H. F. 5'GLER M. O- 0 . L. StGLER M. D&#13;
DKS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPA fCH, a newsu Physiciau- .-ind sur^e.'nr.. All rails prompti&gt;&#13;
naper, printed nnd circulated in .»aid connty. attended to day a r u u ; h i . Oitice on Ntain -it teet&#13;
AHTHI-R A. MOVTAOITK, j Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
-! J. W. BIRD&#13;
.PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, rail at tile i'inckney D I S -&#13;
PATCH otn.ee. Auction Hills Free&#13;
Dt'xtfr Independant Phone&#13;
Arrangements made for sale by phone a&#13;
my expense. Oct 07&#13;
Address, D e x t e r , Michigan&#13;
KtSt. Dont healute, aJldriaMlsts know&#13;
that our gnarant** la Rood. This offer applies&#13;
to the l a m bottle only and to But one&#13;
In a family. The lartre hoUle cxmUina^i&#13;
times aa much n&lt;* the-flfty cent bottla&#13;
Kodol is p-vptirort • r t! o 1 ihorator-&#13;
| ica of K. U LioWitL &amp; Lo., L.'hica^fQk.&#13;
i l L DRUGGISTS&#13;
'ounty ol Livingston, •&#13;
At a seMinn of said court held at the Pro- j&#13;
bate office in the village of Unwell, in *&lt;aid '&#13;
county, on the l.Mli day of Niarch A. II. 1ft',9.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montague, .Fudge of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate of }&#13;
N o r m a L.. V a u g h n , m i n o r .&#13;
Nettie M. Vanghn h:i\ ing tlted in said court her I&#13;
petition praying tor * licence to *ell at private |&#13;
sale interest of aaid estate in refrain real eg- I&#13;
t»te therein iie«rril&gt;ed. I&#13;
It i« ordered that me ninth day of&#13;
Apri. \ . D. lSKr.t, at teu o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
:itml&lt;\ probate nfttce, be and ia hureby app&#13;
o i n t s for hearing said petition, ;tnd t.h.it all&#13;
peraons interested in aatd estate appear hefora&#13;
naid court, at eald tim&gt;» and plaoe, t &gt; show c.4use&#13;
why a licen.oe to sellthr interest of o&amp;iil estate&#13;
in i^aid r»ai estate should not be granted.&#13;
It in further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
ba (riven by publication ot a copy ot thix ordar&#13;
for three Bucoewaive week» previous to saul day of&#13;
bearing iu the Tinrkne-f l&gt;i^p«tph. ;i r&gt; &lt;rwpaper&#13;
P1 luted .inii i irt-'iiiaii^ ml. .,.,1 k ,j„...j. i -J.J&#13;
ARTHXJB A. WoNTAQUaa,&#13;
Jw4n 4V r nWw a V&#13;
M W. DAN1EL8,&#13;
" A , OKNKaAX AUCTIONF.EB.&#13;
titttiatacti^ n Ciuaranteed. For information&#13;
cavil at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
UngOry, Mich, r. f. d. 2. hyndilla phone&#13;
oganecnon. Auction bills and tin cap&#13;
lOniLgiied tree.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
HOTARf PUBLIC&#13;
WITH sat&#13;
ATDairATCHOF^FlCG,&#13;
Women Who Suffer&#13;
\iin Pi s arc the&#13;
Mother&#13;
the past&#13;
"Dr. Milt-' Ami&#13;
best pain rcmeily un eart1&#13;
and I have u.-ed them -'&#13;
seven vears."'&#13;
M I S S O R L E A N A SCTTI'.XKE,&#13;
Lnul, OklaV&#13;
Pain is simply nerve disturbance.&#13;
D e r a n g e m e n t s in a n y part of t h *&#13;
b o d y irritate t h e nerves centered&#13;
there. i&#13;
Dr. Miles' A n t i - P a i n P i l l s&#13;
stop pain and misery because t h e y&#13;
allay this irritation. W o m e n find&#13;
.great relief from periodical .suffering&#13;
by takin.tr D r . ' M i V s ' Anti-Pain&#13;
Pills on first niUica'c n -d pain Of&#13;
distress.&#13;
T h e f i r s t p a c k a g e w i l l b e n e f i t ; i f n o t ,&#13;
y o u r d r u g g i s t w i l l r e t u r n / o u r money.&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
S CENTS.&#13;
if your dealer don't handle&#13;
them aeud to us for a box as&#13;
a trial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this is the cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
MANUFACTURED B t&#13;
CHRISTUM BB0t, . tensor?, ft.&#13;
The Great Diarrhoea&#13;
and Dys&amp;ilery Remedy&#13;
Cures acute and chronic diarrhoea, dysentery,&#13;
cholera morbus,'4 summer tomplainl,"&#13;
Asiatic cholera, ami preve«ts the development&#13;
of typhoid fever. - Same 'wonderfnl&#13;
results obtained in all parts cfthewctkL&#13;
" WORKS LIKE MAGIC."&#13;
Price 3 6 e e n t s per b e t .&#13;
D o n t accept a «nb«titute—aao-ealled"|a\aA&#13;
asxoori.'*' IfyoiiMlrugirist haan't It and doaVt&#13;
care to get i t foe, you send direct to • v&#13;
THE ONTARIO CHEMCAw COMPAlft*&#13;
Oswego, N. Y., U. $. A. *&#13;
•0&#13;
• ilM»&#13;
%•&#13;
s&#13;
'rm •VM&#13;
jr-v.'?r.f. :v '*tf- ; / - - ; • « •&#13;
r U T&#13;
31&#13;
. &lt; - • • ! •&#13;
*..*'*&#13;
* ! * «&#13;
• ! • : , : * • • • •&#13;
•.r&#13;
LW &gt; • &gt;&#13;
...7.&#13;
E #&#13;
'£&#13;
?-^t%*:.&#13;
* $ .&#13;
'fc-%1&#13;
« SIP •WlWff HORTICULTURE&#13;
i O i p N T ftEAttfB&#13;
toow Injurious Coffee Really Was&#13;
Many persona go on drinking coffee&#13;
y e a r after year Without realizing that.&#13;
i t is the cause of many .obscure but&#13;
^erpj^tent, ailments.&#13;
^ *rtje. drug-r-caffeinr—in coffee and&#13;
fea, ,is very like uric acid and-is often&#13;
.the cause cf rheumatic attacks which,&#13;
Sfteft coffee Is used habitually, become&#13;
&gt;sh rente.&#13;
f .- A Washington lady said, recently:&#13;
"I &amp;m,aixty-i]ye and have had a good&#13;
deal of experience with coffee. I consider&#13;
It very injurious and the cause&#13;
of m a n x dj&amp;eases. I am sure it. causes&#13;
decay of teeth in children.&#13;
. "When I drank coffee I had sick&#13;
spells and *till did not realize lhat&#13;
coffee could be so harmful, till about&#13;
I ,ft. yP*r * * ° * h a d rheumatism in my&#13;
fc satins and fingers, got so nervous I&#13;
not sleep, and was all run down.&#13;
"At last, after finding that medicines&#13;
' m e no good, T decided to quit cofentirely&#13;
and try Postum. After&#13;
ft six monlhs I fully recovered&#13;
' h e a l t h beyond all expectations, can&#13;
sound and my rheumatism is all&#13;
M "There's a Reason."&#13;
Maine given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek. Mich. Bead the famous little&#13;
book, "The Road to Wcllville," in pkgs.&#13;
ttv»r m * ike nbovf letter? A a r w&#13;
m tr+m Mme to time. TMey&#13;
•e, thif, ami fall of k s n u t&#13;
( U s * W * as Attractive «• Po«sibl*&#13;
INDIVIDUALITY}&#13;
.j,,s .&#13;
Wanted Longer Sermons.&#13;
, It was a proud boast one clergyman&#13;
made to two or three others who were&#13;
h a v i n g a quiet chat in his study the&#13;
o t h e r night—namely, that he had actually&#13;
on one occasion been asked to&#13;
m a k e his service, both prayers and&#13;
sermon, a bit louder.&#13;
His brethren regarded him with superstitious&#13;
awe, and one asked, feebly:&#13;
. -"Where on earth was that'.'".&#13;
&gt; "Well, boys," was the t'ranjk. confession,&#13;
"it was with a goal where I acted&#13;
a s chaplain for a short time. The&#13;
Itoor beggars dreaded to leave the&#13;
church for their cells."&#13;
A Tabloid Fable.&#13;
A man once collided with an opportunity.&#13;
* -&#13;
**Why don*f you look where you? are&#13;
iSQing?" growled the man. — &gt;* •—&#13;
"Don't you recognize me?" asked the&#13;
opportunity, pleasantly.&#13;
• TOo^.a^.^dpirt &lt;iare to. You have&#13;
•troddei ©fll sty tsdrmV' replied t h e man&#13;
a s he limped away.&#13;
Moral: Don't believe the people&#13;
•who say they have neyer had a chanca&#13;
:—New York Times.&#13;
Proving His Caution.&#13;
Elder W. H. Underwood, chaplain&#13;
of the state senate; Was walking down&#13;
jlk, street at his homo at Clay Center recently&#13;
with a friend. Another friend,&#13;
with whom Underwood joked a good&#13;
.deal, met theni aud said: "Klder, I&#13;
thought you were careful of the company&#13;
you keep."&#13;
" l a m , " replied the chaplain, walking&#13;
l i g h t on. "I'm not going to stop."—&#13;
Kansas City Journal.&#13;
Alas, How True!&#13;
"I often wonder," remarked Mr.&#13;
StHbb, in solemn reflection, "if the last&#13;
tnan on earth will have the last, word." j&#13;
"Of course he will, John," laughed j&#13;
Mrs. Stubb. I&#13;
f ^Iftnt why are you so sure?"&#13;
"Because (he last, woman will give&#13;
It to him."&#13;
Trees are much like human Velngs&#13;
and each tree has an individuality all&#13;
its own, and muat be dealt with accordingly.&#13;
As in any other business,&#13;
one must have a liking for the work&#13;
and become acquainted with all of the&#13;
factors that enter into the problem.&#13;
Where one succeeds another faJJs^although&#13;
the environments of aaoja ilay&#13;
be the same: Success ' d o W notr depend&#13;
wholly on t h e kind of soil ifrr* the&#13;
location or the orchard; these .are&#13;
minor factors.&#13;
With a young orchard the first object,&#13;
after the trees are well set in&#13;
soil that has had at least two years'&#13;
preparation,'is'to* adopt stieh'method*&#13;
of cultivation and fertilization for the&#13;
land as shall give the tgee&amp;jpoajible^&#13;
healthy growth to tk«H treas. The few&#13;
years that intervene between the setting&#13;
and the bearing periods are the&#13;
most vital to the future productiven&#13;
e s s of the orchard. During this*, period&#13;
a judicious method of pruning&#13;
• teust be systematically followed in,&#13;
order to grow trees of the desired&#13;
shape.&#13;
No orchard will yield good returns&#13;
unless it receives good care and attention..&#13;
. .-... . . .&#13;
Clover is the apple tree!s best friend&#13;
and right hand supporter. It Is the&#13;
economical nitrogen . storage battery,&#13;
the most essential element for the production&#13;
of the tree.&#13;
In any case it is much better for&#13;
each individual orchardist to try his&#13;
own experiments to determine what&#13;
his own particular orchard needs in&#13;
the way of fertilizer than to go haphazard&#13;
and think that he must do just&#13;
as his neighbor or some one else does.&#13;
The fertilizers required on another&#13;
orchard might be entirely thrown&#13;
away on his own. A few years spent&#13;
in a careful, judicious, manner will be&#13;
the only way to reach a satisfying&#13;
solution of the fertilizing problem.&#13;
We writ assume that the belief is&#13;
prevalent ^haf it pays1 to cultivate and&#13;
spray whatever the other conditions&#13;
of the orctiard^Wrty be: s#Mn erdei ?o&#13;
make the fertilizer test one should&#13;
treat the trees of the whole orchard&#13;
alike as to all other conditions.! Th,ls&#13;
is the only way to make'a satisfactory&#13;
test and if it is not thoroughly and&#13;
accurately done the owner will be the&#13;
only loser and the experiment will be&#13;
a total failure. Ijt is one of the things&#13;
to be deplored that the average farmer&#13;
does not try to use his own individuality&#13;
in-his business, but is willing&#13;
to follow the same methods from year&#13;
to year that he has learned from those&#13;
who went before. These tail-end&#13;
methods are not successful and'never&#13;
will be.&#13;
The business methods of a decade&#13;
past could never succeed under the&#13;
present system. If not in business&#13;
why should they in farming? The&#13;
present generation has every opportunity&#13;
for advancing over the one just&#13;
passed.&#13;
HOIMK O R O U N M .&#13;
i»k. .&#13;
r&#13;
lav* • Lawn.&#13;
'J - * ' ) M»&#13;
id plantB surmunding&#13;
"analogous to the frame&#13;
iT&amp;&amp;&amp;****t1* a*raiged&#13;
* 4 ^ f o W t f s ^ * * * i £ ^ * * t n e \&#13;
and help to present a natur- l..^^o^N«dW|:afVO f A good Matty sell &lt;*«oneeded to be&#13;
, M't^tyjbest for trees and ornamentals,&#13;
- -.- -¾½¾ ivMtH#M&amp;*W•*"*%• M ^ ^ t o&#13;
Dealt with Intelligently. ] haul this kind of soil to aUrt the trees&#13;
in,i&lt; • . i&#13;
The 'Bise uf the hole to dig for the&#13;
trees depends on the size of the plant.&#13;
However, one rule cap be given: Be&#13;
sure and dig the hole; large enough to&#13;
accommodate all t h e roots without&#13;
crowding them.&#13;
, Before selecting your trees, take a&#13;
'drive thxdugh the neighborhood to see&#13;
^what. t r e e s and P ^ a t e * r e al*"e a d y&#13;
growing W t h : success in tfte yards of&#13;
your neighbors; also write to your&#13;
experiment station and get its list.&#13;
From the two sources you can make&#13;
a list of the ones that would suit your&#13;
si£e best.&#13;
In ordering trees do not select those&#13;
«fcat sure too large, because. it has&#13;
been found that the best success has&#13;
been secured -with smaller trees, especially&#13;
with conifers.'&#13;
All plants, to insure the best success,&#13;
should be transplant*!- 'during&#13;
the dormant season, ac&amp;jwhile they&#13;
can be set out in the f a f T ^ r winter,&#13;
spring planting is prefe%hlej\ writes&#13;
write*: J. £ . Jduhdell of New&gt; Mexico&#13;
(Mo.) station.&#13;
In trairspiautiug do not place the&#13;
trees too close together or where they&#13;
will obstruct the front view of the&#13;
house. Plant the shruba and ornamentals&#13;
in front of the 'trees, also&#13;
near the house, to soften the outlines,&#13;
und^ in the sharp angles made&#13;
by the walks or beds. To' prevent&#13;
shading of shrubs and ornamentals&#13;
they should not be planted too cldse&#13;
to the trees. When flowers are planted&#13;
they should be placed in front of&#13;
the shrubs to finish the background.&#13;
tti is not a good plan to cut up the&#13;
Jawn in front of the house by trees&#13;
or shrubs; a few small groups of&#13;
shrubs planted in the proper places&#13;
will break the monotonous outlines&#13;
of the lawn.&#13;
After planting the plants they should&#13;
receive good care and attention.&#13;
Plenty of water must be supplied to&#13;
them, either naturally or artificially.&#13;
The soil should never, be allowed to&#13;
become dry. The time to irrigate&#13;
Van-be'-determined fc# examining the&#13;
soil. If the soil around the plants&#13;
cracks open'too soon after Irrigating,&#13;
the cracks should be closed by fiilllng&#13;
with soil or tamping it down. This&#13;
should be done until the trees or&#13;
plants are established.&#13;
Pruning the trees and shrubs should&#13;
be practiced only when necessary.&#13;
Plants should be pruned ta give them&#13;
form, to remove extra growth and&#13;
dead branches, t h e natural form of&#13;
the trees, shrubs and ornamentals&#13;
should be preserved as much as possible.&#13;
Limbs removed should be cut&#13;
4©ff close to the trunk to Insure quick&#13;
healing of the wound.&#13;
EMM j....r*i&#13;
fr^AT ^ B r ^ l ^ N a l f ' K l L U Q f c&#13;
DOLLAR V * l t O I C T 18 A&#13;
N U L L I T Y ;&#13;
GOVERNMENT CASE LOST.&#13;
Judge Anderson Instructed the Jury&#13;
to Return a Vardjot of Not QuiUy&#13;
and Case Ends.&#13;
Judge Anderson decided to Instruct&#13;
the jury in the Standard Oil I2&amp;.000,&#13;
000 case to find- the company not&#13;
•guilty.&#13;
The decision of the court was an&#13;
nounced at the close of the long argil&#13;
ment by Assistant District Attorney&#13;
iVilkerson, and the jury was immediately&#13;
summoned and instructed to return&#13;
a verdict of not guilty. ~~~&#13;
This means that ail h u t two of the&#13;
pending Indictments against t h e Standard&#13;
Oil Co. of Indiana are void and&#13;
win be abandoned by t h e government.&#13;
The two cases not affected by the decision&#13;
are cases involving the shipment&#13;
of 1,915 carloads of oil from&#13;
Whiting, Ind\, to EvansvMe, Ind., via&#13;
Doltdn Junction, over the Chicago &amp;&#13;
Eastern Illinois railroad.&#13;
T h e r e is absolutely nothing on&#13;
which a conviction in this case could&#13;
stand, before any court in thht country,"&#13;
the court said in concluding his&#13;
charge to the Jurors. "The government&#13;
has failed to prove Its contention that&#13;
the 18-cent rate was the lawful rate&#13;
between Whiting and East St. Louis&#13;
a n d ' t h a t t h e ' d e f e n d a n t ' h a d wilfully&#13;
accepted a lower rate, and there is&#13;
nothing to do b*t ft&gt;r the Jury to bring&#13;
of^their o4*e&gt; the j 1 &amp;*4 »v,4}rnjght |&#13;
J r e - i o ^ ' o f add;-,&#13;
. ! - • » ^''martieumrK cover- j&#13;
ing.vtUe&gt;da'tocta: fidjritfijl. out by the !&#13;
court;; ajaff;/hegatC««wtpents ip, the ( hope of i n t f t t e t t g ^ u d f ^ A j i t i e r r o to&#13;
reverse-hIs.t*ectsion.&#13;
Tny-^rst'v'flfte of a r ^ m e * * was&#13;
against thQ-court's indicated, .decision ;&#13;
tba* the 18-cent freight -rate, under&#13;
which the indictment was drawn, could&#13;
not be.. ^established i&gt;y the". Illinois&#13;
classirleation. ^According to the gov- i&#13;
ernmenfs poiut of view, the published&#13;
rate on oil from Whiting, Ind., to East ;&#13;
St. Louis, was 18 cents. This was es- 1&#13;
lablfBttedby means tot* tariff. £&amp; 1« its&#13;
application to tlfe-flltntais classMicatfon i&#13;
Issued in 1899; In'1900 a tie* ITiiAois j&#13;
classification wap issifJJdTjan^ fjbe hi-;&#13;
terpretation of the court's oplmow is&#13;
that this invalidated the t&gt;i4-4&lt;atff»*i&#13;
Without the legal pu^jbjei) ?tt$3?he&#13;
oil company could not be prosecutes.&#13;
tosr&#13;
For WomeiivLydia E Ptakbam'sVefetableCoiiipeflAd&#13;
DSsinff tuxtHBHi&#13;
suffered f r o m&#13;
Noah, r y . - - " I wa* passing&#13;
the Change of Life ana goffer&#13;
hWMtocfaej.v nne,rarao&amp;m&#13;
well and fltrong, to&#13;
taatlcandttJTmy&#13;
hovaeworlc. and a&#13;
tauL-to too atoi&#13;
and&#13;
muc&#13;
tuna* Vefrtabte CompooSSa tfte&#13;
mooeaaM remedy for all klnda-&gt;«*&#13;
fenale kcoubiea, aaaV I f « l that («SJI never paOae it amwab»V -^Maa. Tjairp&#13;
T&amp;OLLAsnh JnToah, ^Ty.&#13;
TheChinaeof life }i ^ho Serlod ¢1 I woxnaxx'a&#13;
egleot of health at this&#13;
disease and pain.&#13;
Wometiey«ry5rbAre&lt;hOAiId^eiB«mbor&#13;
that thera ta no other remedy anowuto&#13;
caedicJne that will BO sitQoeaataUjrcacKar&#13;
women through this trvin* period aa&#13;
Lydia E. PlnKham'a VegetaDle Con&gt;.&#13;
pound, made frora native roots ana&#13;
herbs. • • » '&#13;
For SO yean it has been curing&#13;
women from the wont forma of female&#13;
ilia —inflammation, ulceration, displacements,&#13;
fibroid tumors, irregularities,&#13;
periodic pains,, backache, apd&#13;
nenroJMJ»T(^trauon.&#13;
tial l a f i a ? i ? 3 f i ^ R S ^ m , ^ i&#13;
Lynn) MPaMlEjnipoe 1» fr««V&#13;
&gt;»#»a»e»a»#»a»»»ee»»e»flS&#13;
A Sale and Sure&#13;
Coagb Cure.&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
Dees Ml cwrtata OsJSsJBi&#13;
Mwpldn^eralVaa&#13;
ux&#13;
1» , I " I I , •&#13;
LAWN ORNAMENT.&#13;
ORCHARD A N D GARDEN.&#13;
Tf possible don't take your seed potatoes&#13;
from a cellar in which there is&#13;
a furnace. Usually their vitality is&#13;
impaired.&#13;
When a thaw comes, see that the&#13;
grapevine trellis is put. into nice condition.&#13;
Straighten posts. Tighten and&#13;
fasten wires. Tie up vinos. Remove&#13;
and burn brush.&#13;
The most, obvious and the easiest&#13;
means of controlling the brown-tail&#13;
moth and some other insect enemies,&#13;
is the collection and destruction of the&#13;
winter nests after the leaves have&#13;
fallen. These webs are conspicuous&#13;
from October to April.&#13;
T H E HOG AND T H E COW.&#13;
How Half a Barrel Can&#13;
Use Of.&#13;
Be Made&#13;
A very nice ornamentation for the&#13;
lawn is shown in the drawing. I made&#13;
it by sawing an&#13;
o i l b a r r e l In&#13;
t w o a s s h o w n&#13;
and mounting it&#13;
on legs, writes a&#13;
correspondent in&#13;
Farm and Home.&#13;
I painted it in&#13;
nice shape and&#13;
set one-half of&#13;
the barrel on each side of the walk&#13;
and used them for growing flowers&#13;
in during the summer. They are very&#13;
pretty.&#13;
The Latter ts Necessary to the Profitable&#13;
Raising of the Former.&#13;
I have given up the idea nf trying&#13;
to grow hoss and dairy cows sepaarately.&#13;
If I am to raise hogs I have&#13;
settled down to the conviction that. I&#13;
must, have a cow or cows to help&#13;
raise food for the pigs, and if I am&#13;
going to keep cows for the purpose of&#13;
making butter F must keep hogs and&#13;
pigs to consume the milk.&#13;
I have a good herd of dairy cows&#13;
and a number of sows that produce&#13;
me litters every year. I have not.&#13;
paid mirch attention to raising fall&#13;
When the cow's udder is caked or&#13;
feverish, bathing it with her own&#13;
warm milk is good.&#13;
my pork and butter a long ways to&#13;
market, and not feel it so much as I&#13;
would to pay high prices for the feed&#13;
I give my hogs and my cows.&#13;
The cows are the only means that&#13;
I know of by which the roughage on&#13;
the farm can he made good feed for&#13;
the young pigs and the growing young&#13;
hogs. When the pastures get short&#13;
in late summer the hogs are already&#13;
hair grown and are gathering a larg*&#13;
part, of their own feed. The cow is&#13;
not then so much needed, but still the&#13;
skimmtlk helps out the ration of corn&#13;
that. I begin to feed as soon as I wish&#13;
to supplement the pasturage and skimmilk.&#13;
pigs, for my barns are not suited for 1 find,' too, that it pays to feed skimit;&#13;
but I raise several litters of spring! milk right through the fattening period,&#13;
a s the hogs make a better growth&#13;
on earn and milk and pasturage than&#13;
they do on corn alone or even on the&#13;
corn and pasturage. I have an opinion&#13;
that this good feed helps to keep the&#13;
hogs growing steadily from their coming&#13;
into the world till they go out of&#13;
it. The fact that milk ia so greatly&#13;
relished by hogs is a pretty good sign&#13;
that i t Is^p4,jgreat nuJrltiTa value to&#13;
thema vw&#13;
pigs and these need milk just at the&#13;
time the pastures are getting good&#13;
and spring feed is abundant.. I think&#13;
that, for this kind of a combination a&#13;
southern location is better than a&#13;
northern location.&#13;
I find, too, that livtng where I have&#13;
not railroad facilities 1 6 B help to this&#13;
kind of work, for labor is cheaper'than&#13;
elsewhere and all kinds of homeraised&#13;
feedn arp cheaper. I can haul a:&#13;
Exterminate the B*acJL*Hara9i&#13;
Kx-President Roosevelt.y'adtedShis&#13;
tribute to thousands p a i d ^ ' t W s T m m v&#13;
ory of Joseph Petroslni, the-N^w T o r i ;&#13;
Italian detective and arch foe of Black&#13;
Handel's, assassinated-.. in ' Palermo,&#13;
Sicily.&#13;
"I can't say anything," said Mr.&#13;
Roosevelt, "except to express..,my&#13;
deepest regrets, Petroslni was a great&#13;
man and a good man. I knew him&#13;
for years. He did not know the name&#13;
of fear. He was a man worth while.&#13;
I regret sincerely the death of such&#13;
a man,"&#13;
"Extermination of the Black Hand"&#13;
is the slogan now, not only of the&#13;
New York police department, to which&#13;
the Italian criminal class had always&#13;
been the gravest menace, but of the&#13;
police department of every large city&#13;
in the country.&#13;
A special detail of police is now&#13;
working under orders to corral every&#13;
Black Hand suspect in New York city.&#13;
The police will not wait to catch their&#13;
men rod-handed.&#13;
Tt. is expected that the funeral of&#13;
Petrosini in New York, the arrangements&#13;
for which are already under&#13;
way, will be a memorable occasion.&#13;
•Jlw&#13;
i&#13;
.- -w otter KsTcsflc&#13;
•r aafttt4e&lt;Ktaj drag.&#13;
Neahing of a poiatf oti* &lt;nT fcarm-&#13;
!• f u l ^ a r t c u r wt*ra&gt;Jajfcb^oomcure&#13;
. Aoughs t h a t sanhqi.be cured&#13;
by aJBjj&amp;other medicine.&#13;
I t mw saved thousands' from consumption.&#13;
It has saved.thousands of Uvea.&#13;
A 25c bottle contains 40 doses.&#13;
At all druggists', 25c„ 50c and $1.&#13;
D o n l aeeepl anything else.&#13;
Stop the Scrap.&#13;
Plans nre perfected for patrolling&#13;
Fonesca bay, the Pacific outlet for&#13;
Nicaragua, Salvador and Honduras,&#13;
and preventing President Zelayas from&#13;
sending Nlcaraguan troops to invade&#13;
Salvador should he attempt to do so.&#13;
Both the United States and Mexico&#13;
are determined that the peace treaty&#13;
to which both are parties shall not&#13;
be violated.&#13;
Interest was attached in official circles&#13;
to the denials of the presidents&#13;
of Nicaragua and Salvador of the&#13;
stories that hostilities between the&#13;
two countries had broken out, but it&#13;
was stated that such rumors played&#13;
only a part In a situation which, to&#13;
employ the expression of a high official,&#13;
had become very disagreeable.&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
Don Manuel Braganza, pretender to&#13;
the throne of Portugal, has renounced&#13;
all claim to the, throne o u | , ^ sympathy&#13;
with Kin*'Manual and will aid&#13;
in the regeneration of the nation.&#13;
Hirschel Hogg; confessed ' member&#13;
of the band of Tennessee nitfhtriders&#13;
that killed Capt. Quentin Rankin in&#13;
October, escaped from the' jail in&#13;
DreRden. Tonn., and has not been recaptured.&#13;
....-&#13;
Lieut.-Col. James H. R*&gt;ld.vTT. S. N.,&#13;
dived from the second story window&#13;
of the naval hospital In Washington&#13;
while the nurse was out of the room&#13;
and received injuries t h a t ^ r t U likely&#13;
cause .his death. He wmt. ill with :&#13;
tow. • ; , , '&#13;
TOWERS FISH BRAND&#13;
WATERPROOF «m»&#13;
O I U E D . , . u i /&#13;
CLOTHING win qrve you full value&#13;
for every dollar spent J&#13;
and Keep you dry in v&#13;
the wettest weather.&#13;
SUITS •SSS&#13;
SLICKERSy *3©o&#13;
POMMEL SUCKERS&#13;
SOU) EVEBYWtEPg&#13;
&lt;ATM09 rSU&#13;
A J . T O W E R CO. BOSTON,\5&amp;K*^&#13;
TOWER CAKAOIAN CO. UWTLO TO*O«TO,CAX.&#13;
Ibis Trade-mark&#13;
Eliminates All&#13;
Uncertainty&#13;
In the purckasrsf&#13;
point matatiaav&#13;
It is an ?l*wtoa»i&#13;
guarantee dMvt* t&#13;
fty arul quinty.&#13;
F o r y o u r own&#13;
p r o t e c t i o n , see&#13;
that it is on the side of&#13;
every keg of white lead&#13;
you buy.&#13;
umui LCtteswuT&#13;
UttTfMfr&#13;
/ -&#13;
to&#13;
tati tfc—MB per t*r» far mi..&#13;
t woodarfal grmm of tta« Motor? ,7&gt;«Mta*fmm j&#13;
16 tons of h»y par wcr*sndiOtoot Motui b*.|&#13;
luidm. It»lmptrpro*i.rrow».g*owal Catlttotey&#13;
landtnA wMkaltlooksfor th« nowm Ag»tc,*n&lt;1l&#13;
I no on. Grow* and flparlahM avwqrwli*!1*, on avsr? I&#13;
I farm la imnflA, CTmptiairtt ItramatajiDi*!&#13;
1 bottom l*ndt ot KcTPt* Biff aecd catalog- (no e* I&#13;
l*«nd lOo in itanpaaad H » | T O aampl* of tttUl&#13;
^ . ^ . , -fa^^ijoefupait,^haesraatwnixter.]&#13;
kt», C1&lt;TT*T», QraaMi, «to,, eta, ,aad oata&#13;
lioirfre*. Or Mndl4G *»d wowllladd a •ampta]&#13;
lfannaacdnoTftity n«r«ra«en by you bafortv&#13;
8AL2ER SEI0 CO.. B*x W. U T&gt;st««. Win.&#13;
K N O W N S I N C C r s 3 * A S R C L I A B L E&#13;
C&amp;CoR,C APSULES&#13;
SUPERIOR REMtOY, URINARY OlttHARfitSn&#13;
0RUf».,l«&gt;TS o" H&lt; M A t L o N H t " C C l P T n j S O '&#13;
H P i A N T f N &amp; f . 0 * » \ H » MHY STRR0'&gt;KIYN M v.&#13;
W. N. U * D I T R O I T , NO. 12, 190«.&#13;
A l t a i Nelaos left Benton Co., Ore-&#13;
H « M 1 ^ ***** *c*&gt; the great&#13;
C*iM&amp;m&gt;&amp;Xm . * &gt; % * • from hla . , - - _ _ , - - .&#13;
lefeett r! "I***** , * n ^ r aurprtaed to *«* nervoumuas. In order that everybody&#13;
ftrnT such'anIwi&amp;ar* Waten of rich *—»••*•«• «•«*-«• *- **«* « - —A"—^&#13;
virgin pralria atill almost unoccupied&#13;
tb% very &amp;e«xt of $orth America,&#13;
splendid crop* \&gt;f data, wheat, bar-&#13;
*»*•&amp;#* and, tiajh * *«**ld to the&#13;
/, fjtt lamlata jgMd* aaa, very eager for a&#13;
piece pj: taia ricb aqM» and I soon 1*&gt;&#13;
amted to taa Gooae L+kv cpuaiWi We&#13;
have Here a great str&lt;&#13;
deep.clay loan d* tl&#13;
a^foJl.neav^and&#13;
tlcularly well adapted- for U# T«-&#13;
tiqji of moisture aad pro^ctloa of&#13;
bright No. r haffd &lt; wadif, • Sad&#13;
t crops of oats, badeyr flax and paa%.&#13;
Jofce .c* jnfr tatfibor* had atfll&#13;
ajgaJM^eldi.• Wheat-yielded frfo-SO&#13;
t^Mmwm w^acfe; . yr# have ;$i&#13;
djaruCiW&lt;n here, • and I could nwjae&#13;
•tanfr American* *fta eaatefatr* wHb&#13;
neearW te^feo abe«d, who have done&#13;
bigvAlr^dy. For hoxB«teads one has&#13;
a^fffetper* west, but the peat prai.-&#13;
fy: &lt;t*f pa ftbught here for from $12.00&#13;
to f 19.00 per acre. .The climate ,rB&#13;
d»y aad'o/sttfthy. ,,Thte Ja the regular&#13;
Saskatchewan' fall weather2— frosty&#13;
il«ht^ antf fright, Butray days—ideal&#13;
ftfr threihtng; and haulrn^ out of&#13;
j^heatp ;Thetrpij8 are-di^sty, as'thousands&#13;
of wheat' teams are moving&#13;
tpwarda the elevators. .&#13;
i "The sight of it makes one stop and&#13;
WOnder what It will be in a^few years&#13;
vrfhett tW fmmeriee pfairies get under&#13;
c^rtivBtio'in" TIeavy -snowfall Jis the&#13;
ejtce^tjont here. ^m&gt;$" generally falls&#13;
i£. I^fectjniher. and gQes off in" March.&#13;
M mm0m^ gets yejy .«ai«V Jwi'lthe&#13;
•Hfesaik s i n Jarmm ds«tHso&gt;:y|ear&#13;
t a * ss}4 Wiaaatv*fch&lt;%~-iieiia.&lt;&gt;f&#13;
fcelf, and warm stables for his horses.&#13;
He need hot,'like some, be poking&#13;
about In the mod all winter attending&#13;
a few beasts for a livelihood."&#13;
INSTRUCTED.&#13;
' Doctor-rWhat are you aiding In that&#13;
t*fc? You'll catch your Snath.&#13;
* Patient—But, doctor, tfUfc't you tell&#13;
me to take the pills in water? u&#13;
CrOVEftWMCNT'CAftCY * C T OPENING&#13;
OP IRRIGATE* IL AND.&#13;
tfrf*J¥ «%v|Uta State of Wynning Will&#13;
100 Irrigated tftarma&#13;
•UM»4per aero at Cooper TLake, Wyo.,&#13;
at $6 per acre cask *nff*3 per acre&#13;
annually for ten years. iPree railroad i&#13;
fare,'steeping and dining.car accommodations&#13;
and FREE DEED to TWO&#13;
tOWN LOTS to aH applying BEFORE&#13;
MAY 1. Applications and particulars&#13;
furnished ay TALLMADQE-BUNTIN&#13;
LAND CO* Ageata. Railway Exchange,&#13;
Chicago. Agent* w&amp;a&amp;id.&#13;
Worse and stiorte.&#13;
"I tell you, mamma,*' cried Fa-eddle,&#13;
"I don't like that doctor's medicine."&#13;
"But this is liniment, my dear,"&#13;
coaxed his* mother.&#13;
"Well," replied Freddie, very doubtfully,&#13;
"isn't that rubbing it in?"—Harper's&#13;
Weekly. .&#13;
-*- —n¥-~&#13;
Every Woman WW fl*t&#13;
It you ***• sates to tai J i * Utixmr$,&#13;
"Waat a woman's&#13;
a* i*»\r!*,?JJna •o»«r»f*IHng ng-&#13;
Mother Gray Co.. I * Boy. « T.&#13;
It's not difficult to jodgc some mem&#13;
by their clothes—policemen.and letter&#13;
carriers, for example.&#13;
M ^ H vBB ^HVUC&#13;
Sore&#13;
O^a.w.tonSi&#13;
xnay have a chance to test the nsediuiae,&#13;
large trial bottles, valuable literature, History&#13;
of Epilepsy and testimonial*, will be&#13;
sent by mail abtolutely free to all who&#13;
write to the Dr. May Laboratory, 548&#13;
Pearl Street, New York City.&#13;
Like Producing Like.&#13;
. "How did that manager come out on&#13;
MB beauty show?"&#13;
"I think he made a handsome proflt."&#13;
"Brown'8 Bronchial Troches" relieve&#13;
Bronchitis, A s t h m a , Catarrh a n d Throat&#13;
Dlaeaseu. 2S cent* a box. Sample* aent free&#13;
by John I. B r o w n &amp; Son, Boston, Mass.&#13;
Bjr the time a girl gets old enough&#13;
to believe that men don't mean the&#13;
nice, thiuga they say, gb^Aa ao old&#13;
they don't say them any more.&#13;
P e t t t f s e y e 8 a l v * 1©0 Yeara O l d ,&#13;
relieves tired eyes, quickly cures eye uehea,&#13;
inflamed, spre, watery or ulcerated eye*.&#13;
All druggiat* or Howard Bro«.Buffttlo,N.Y.&#13;
What, la defeat? Notuing but education,&#13;
nothing but the. first iBtep to&#13;
something better—Wendell Phillipa.&#13;
That 11IMXATIVB. BaOXO fttJlMINII. Look&#13;
tbe 6ignmtur« o f E. W. § B O V k . Used tfa« Vf«&#13;
uvef uj Cure » CyOU in On« fiu. 'tielot&#13;
urld&#13;
Much of the chronic 1amcn&lt;am in horses is due to neglect.&#13;
See that your horse is not allowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's&#13;
Liniment on hand and apply at the first signs of stifjness.&#13;
It's wonderfully penetratingr—goes right to the spot^relievcs&#13;
the soreness — limbers up the Joints and makes the .muscles&#13;
elastic and pliant. ^ - Sloan's Liniment&#13;
will kill a spavin, curb or splint, reduce wind puffs and swollen&#13;
joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweeney,&#13;
founder and thrush. Price, 5 0 c and $1.00-&#13;
D r . E a r l S . S l o a n , - - B o s t o n , M J&#13;
Sloan's book on bbfaoa, cattle, afceop wad iMHiltiif •••&#13;
•&#13;
It love wasn't bUnd Cupid would&#13;
have a lot more work to do.&#13;
DODDS '&#13;
K I D N E Y&#13;
i, PILLS&#13;
\W:&#13;
'Ouara1!!&#13;
SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by&#13;
these Little Fills.&#13;
They also relieve Distress&#13;
from Dyspepsia, ladigestion&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Ealing. - A perfect rem*&#13;
e«ly lor Dliziness, Nau&lt;&#13;
« a ^ , Drowslaesa, B a d&#13;
Taste in the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain In tta« 4&#13;
S i d e , TORPID UVEIV^&#13;
tttae Bowela. Purely Vegetable. \&#13;
For DISTEMPER Pink Eye. Epizootic&#13;
Shipping Fever&#13;
&amp; Catarrhal Fever&#13;
B a r » « a n a M pcattt^ay 1* »*utlT&lt;, BO natter how bona* at any as« a n Infected or&#13;
L" Ll4taM.irt*aa «a u t tea«Be: act» on UM blood ana Uteaaii expels th«&#13;
DiatefBt aad Cholera ia&#13;
anmaa bateaa&#13;
thJeoat. Keep&#13;
DiateBipar, Cauaa*&#13;
apafdal avcatf wanted.&#13;
SPIWI MEDICAL C8., . % . ¾ ^ . ^ 6DSHEK, 1N0„ U. S. A.&#13;
SMALL F B I , SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine Musi Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
HEFUSE SUBSTITUTESa&#13;
These New Towns in the&#13;
Northwest All Need Men&#13;
Hundreds of new towns are springing up all over&#13;
the Pacific Northwest.&#13;
T h e big, easy fortunes being made from fruit,&#13;
farming and stock-raising, are making these towns&#13;
grow fast. They all need men who know trades—&#13;
they need you, whether you have money to invest&#13;
or not.&#13;
Never, in the history of America, has the man&#13;
who works with his hands had such a chance to&#13;
make money, as is offered in the west today.&#13;
You Are Losing Money Every&#13;
Day You Stay in the East&#13;
You would not stay another day in the worn-out East,&#13;
if you knew even half the trnth about the great Pacific&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Families, who went there penniless 5 years ago, are&#13;
spending this winter in California. They bought good&#13;
iand at low prices—paid for it gradually—today are&#13;
independent.&#13;
Opportunities are greater now than ever, because&#13;
the country is more developed.&#13;
Ask us on a postal to send you our free book, telling&#13;
you all about Oregon, Idaho and Washington. We'll&#13;
also tell you what it costs to go there.&#13;
E. L. LOMAX.C. P.&#13;
Omaha, Neb.&#13;
Yoa Ueed a Tonic&#13;
if yon fesi: languid and depressed&#13;
all the ttime. The best thing to&#13;
help satUrre build up the system is&#13;
DRJD.JAYNE'S&#13;
TONIC VERMIFUGE&#13;
This great: tonic is not a false stimulant&#13;
as many of the so-called ' 'spring&#13;
tonics." Jt is a natural strengthgiver.&#13;
IRoTiall run-down conditions&#13;
e£ tie health: it is an invaluable rem-&#13;
•drjj imparts new life and vigor and&#13;
builds np tthe&lt;rotire system.&#13;
Sold hg Allllaudiing Druggists in two&#13;
&gt;.iottkit50canJ35c&#13;
If&lt;»»»jOM«actmal&#13;
mglaltdllOy anjaainleddj etto lionttae nodf ing pu:&#13;
plea, including AUaUa. C l o w , e t c ,&#13;
MOM A. g^XTJa OTBSVfc?&#13;
•waa&#13;
320 ACRES&#13;
OF 160, A C R E S&#13;
We#tem&#13;
Caaadna&#13;
baa axfcfflcft t W&#13;
;r to 3 * ) a m * — 1 6 0 1 &amp; * » * » i W toi&#13;
be puichaicd at $3-00 per acre. Thcae jandgl&#13;
are in the gram-raising area, where mixed t n a i - f 1&#13;
is also canird on with unqaaiified success. A '&#13;
railway will shortly be built to Hadsoa Bay,brinf-}&#13;
ing the world's markets a thousand aules nearer;&#13;
these wheat-fields, where schools and ekureheai&#13;
are convenient, climate excellent, railways dose to)&#13;
all settlements, and local market* good.&#13;
"It would take time to assimilate the revelations&#13;
that u visit to the great exnpirerytflfto&#13;
the North of us unfolded at every turn.*—&#13;
Correspondence of d National Editor, vitto trtsiitd&#13;
Western C*n*dA in August, 19QS.&#13;
Lands may also be purchased from rashway and:&#13;
land companies at low pices and on easy teraW&#13;
For pamphlets, maps and information an ta&#13;
low railway rates, apply to Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or the&#13;
authorized Canadian Government Agent:&#13;
H. f. KciRireS. 171 Jeflema Avtaac. tataeV&#13;
MkkUaa; srC.JL LaUlitl. Sac* Ss*. Maria. Nkaw \&#13;
TOILET ANTISEPTIC&#13;
NOTHING L I K E I T F O «&#13;
THE TEETH ^ ¾ ^ ½ ^ ¾&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
$300 SHOES $350&#13;
ieat'thing In tfie vxorld to&#13;
cut the proper course /ord*thera&#13;
,to pursue.&#13;
You will reirpond very quickly to the&#13;
/Garfield Tea treatment, for this Natural&#13;
• JMtative corrects Constipation, purifiea dsW&#13;
tjkod, and benefita the entire system.&#13;
flame actors who claim to&gt;be weddel&#13;
to fiMdr.vftvf*iHiyr«QQJ» g»,\iD4a,for •&#13;
divorce.&#13;
TUtng* ..^Jri.ed,, aj^ ;«ohe.. « t | ^reat&#13;
tbij»«kv done ^nd^e.r^te$«p»:.\ ^&#13;
The Baaaoa I Make aad Ball Mew «eaJg $8.00&#13;
«V $8.00 Shoe* Than Any Other Kaaarfaetarer to *•?«?• J ftva t^wsaiwsae aaaatt «r«a« » « H&#13;
4 4 S a t y M r % f t «VgtesAl«ae%tsBeass\ e r f safsssassMel eaSeasaaaTtal aaatsaaa saesasakanla UM coutry.&#13;
*n^u?7trtanf U * &gt;«sa«n • « ss^nsajlafl&#13;
' • " ^ • ^ t T t h e b n r t skassaakan tetta anaT&#13;
UXeeal«si««rye«a«« earefaQy W. L Bang&#13;
s w a t a , fen •saMtaaa aartesstsia stay t t ^&#13;
-alu^ath^ser.i^wewteagwsaaaaay*&#13;
Jig/ afaf*otf of Taunt*ftk*8otu mat** _&#13;
&gt; nudUiarrtLo-qvWmrltQtk*****&#13;
Hh**e fW Mwger M«ai»»«n? oT t h « 1&#13;
Mass, R a y a , WawsMaijBl laaca au&#13;
UNIVIIIUrl I name and price atamped on bottom.&#13;
W.LJQUQUlVIe?&#13;
OZZS;^ ELECTROTYPES&#13;
Ian. rm. aaatu y«awil!a«taySfrnar psia»la* raot, .t biei tl.o4waaaut CDr.i(e aa by ,&#13;
DEFIUCE Cold Water Starch&#13;
makes laundry work a pleasure, 1€ oa. pkg. Kte.&#13;
yavtnfMraft ^Vfaasss»ea a aossaaugtar Byiea^&#13;
u OMI TB) i&#13;
boUle. [&#13;
?The airsatp liabU^JB UXv RT! alrtomobile&#13;
Income.&#13;
A HEART-BREAKING COUGH&#13;
is (Jatadful to auffer and despaiaing to hear. Why threaten the health of&#13;
your iWinga and die peace of your family when yea can obtain imm^^&#13;
relief torn Piso's Cure ? RemarVable reaults follow the first dose. Taken&#13;
retalstl/ it aoothea and heals the lacerated tissues, toaaens the clogging&#13;
poJrgra .end stops the eoo«h. ^ Pleasant to the taste and free from&#13;
opiates. Children enjoy takaag ft For throat aad bag diaaatea, no&#13;
aattej hew iar advanced.&#13;
n s &lt; y 3 CURB IS INCOMPARABLE&#13;
^v&#13;
Low Fares&#13;
To Montana&#13;
Crop figures for 1908&#13;
prove that M o n t a n a&#13;
is an excellent field for&#13;
profitable farming. Secure&#13;
a farm of your&#13;
own there now.&#13;
Fertile land at reasonable&#13;
prices. Homestead&#13;
lands are still plentiful&#13;
in Montana close to the&#13;
mew towns on the&#13;
Chicago&#13;
UBiauicBB &amp; Puget Sound&#13;
Railway&#13;
sLow settlers' fares to&#13;
Montana on March 23&#13;
aad 30» and April 6 , 1 3 ,&#13;
a s and 27.&#13;
Sao.50 from Chicago&#13;
to aiiies City, Forsyth,&#13;
Musselshell and Roundup;&#13;
S20.75 to Lavina;&#13;
$21.20 t o Harlowton;&#13;
^21.65 to Moore; ¢21.85&#13;
to Lewistown. Low&#13;
fares from and to other&#13;
points on these dates.&#13;
Complete information,&#13;
with new M o n t a n a&#13;
folder free.&#13;
F. A. MILLER&#13;
General Paaaanaer A g e n t&#13;
Chicago, Mllfiokea and St. Paul Ry.&#13;
C h i c a g o&#13;
leaaasbf. _&#13;
removing tartar from the teeth, beside*&#13;
all germs o i decay aad diiraat which&#13;
tooth preparation* cannot do. THE MOUTH wash disinfects the&#13;
and threat, purifies the breath, and kill* tfcejdana&#13;
which collect in the mouth, cangggg s o n Vsraat*'&#13;
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, aad a w e * avast**.'&#13;
T U a ? a T Y F C *^*n inflamed, bred, ache&#13;
U l a n a n i e n t ? *nd bum. may b e iustaaary,&#13;
relieved and strengthened by Paztme.&#13;
A A T 1 D D L I Paxtine will destroy aW ferau&#13;
U A I A l i n n that cause catarrh, sscal the ia-&#13;
Bammation and stop the dischafge. R it a atsra&#13;
remedy for u t e r i n e catarrsV.&#13;
Paxane is a harmless yet powerful&#13;
fiernwade.disinf eclant and deodonzer.&#13;
Usee! m bathing it destroys odon and&#13;
leaves the body antiseptkally cleaa-&#13;
FOR SALE AT DRUG S T O R C S . S O c&#13;
OR POSTPAID BY MAtL.&#13;
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!&#13;
THE PAXTON TOILET 0 0 «&#13;
The difference remember this—&#13;
it mar save yemr life. Cathattfca,&#13;
bud ahot and Carmen ball pills—te*&#13;
apooo doses af cathartic mediefnea&#13;
all depend oa irrftatfcai of the&#13;
until they 1 _'_&#13;
carets ntrrnfriliau *n&#13;
•0 they creep aad&#13;
This means a care aa4 aala^fannnsnV&#13;
Cascareis can you get I t o S g g S a S&#13;
natnrally. e l "• "&#13;
Caacarets—Ifc ^ , . ^ , ^ ^ ( meat. All draaviata. BInvest 1&#13;
to tbawork^millioo bc^w ai&#13;
toanare. Ckf&#13;
Uitm ACTIVE A8ENTS MIKE&#13;
$25 TO SIOO WEEILT •elllng the famoim tinrn tu&gt; typwwrllae Fli&#13;
tu*l. standard two-hand k*ftk*r*l,r\i\b£&#13;
V ^ * b ! e , *T»*»irlt»»r liTfr tiaia t t t r w l o a s&#13;
Ik** work hko 11» maohlni*. Coalda't be&#13;
as any prl«K KTrvybmiy *»n%s o»aV Blst&#13;
^HY mien, eiciunlvo territory. TTrtla&#13;
parttpnlarn t&lt;xl»y to « « » •&#13;
.1 ••.«&#13;
Pasnats&#13;
rmmotM&#13;
PAJcVatft'S' HAIJ BALSAM batotlflaa tba barr.&#13;
_ a lmcnri«nt frowth1. * m r Tall* to Seatora Gray&#13;
JLair to its Youthfal OtTor.&#13;
^and ai.no &gt;t a hsirlaU&#13;
•£3stS£.&#13;
T E X A S STATE&#13;
and 40y.&gt;ar&gt;, tin™ on tvilan.v: t h « » per cent lnt&#13;
••»t.; only 112.00 cash for M) ucrrs a t ^ f O ^ i V i&#13;
&lt;.™t«st opportunity; Kood aRrterrtlnmifc ^ ^&#13;
.1. .1. Snydftr, Soho.i l ^ n a I &gt; * M &lt; * l i&#13;
Austin, l ^ x . Rffnfpnco, Austin NaUooai&#13;
SI&#13;
•f&#13;
^ L&#13;
•»• u j UVKS&#13;
Wrtta&#13;
A(idr«RN V&#13;
GALL STONES&#13;
1TEY, R&#13;
T q e m p t O A ' t E j a f a J . *&#13;
C &lt; » E \ . D . 5,Ijanalna;,&#13;
If ufflrtcd whh&#13;
&lt;ture «v«s, uaa&#13;
^ . S * * : '&#13;
a&#13;
u W - - •.•**&amp;.. 4¾. ..,r/*' &gt;P* . * # * * • • •&#13;
^ • : ; . 4 ' .&#13;
•; . : : I '&#13;
^¾&#13;
i f * .&#13;
'V-&#13;
•X'J-; ^ ••. lu'.Tf. .*»» ' • ! • : * '&#13;
*&#13;
B*aifl9ta*PolRttrt. |&#13;
« $&#13;
* &amp; .&#13;
f©r a*le&#13;
Honte end cm o-half an re .of land in&#13;
tbe village of tfmckney. •*&#13;
f Mrs. Marj Haney.&#13;
A girl to learn'millinery at the parlors&#13;
of Miss ^illian Boyle, Pinckney.&#13;
"X good boat and two&#13;
a l o w teed. (i. W.&#13;
barbels&#13;
Hendee '&#13;
Have several Pair of Toulouse&#13;
Gfteae for sale. Telephone or oaii and&#13;
Me teem. T. Birkett. 12&#13;
&lt;f For Sale.&#13;
Full Blood Jersey bull to 5&#13;
old. Also bay of any kind.&#13;
11¾ M. La^ey&#13;
*or Sal %&#13;
-Good cow, (jocQiny in soon&#13;
of W. B. Darrow.&#13;
SOUTH 0 R I G 0 R 7 .&#13;
Mr. Beinor is entertaining his&#13;
daughter.&#13;
F r e a k Ovitt and wife atteiided&#13;
ohurch at Unadilla Sunday.&#13;
Miae Myrtle Parkinson won the&#13;
silver medal at the last contest&#13;
Mrs. 0 . L. Smith baa been&#13;
very ill but is better at this writing.&#13;
G. W. Bate** and wife are moving&#13;
on the Sprout farm at Anderson.&#13;
The meetings at the First B aptist&#13;
church have closed, with 28&#13;
conversions.&#13;
There was quite a number at&#13;
the last meeting of the LOTMM&#13;
and it is hoped there will be as&#13;
many more at the next meetin g&#13;
which is the 25th of March.&#13;
Frank Barker was hurt quite&#13;
badly while sawing wood for Mr&#13;
Judaou. Later: I t was found&#13;
that one arm was so badly injured&#13;
j that it had to bo amputated at the&#13;
elbow but they hope to save the&#13;
lnqnire j other arm although badly broken&#13;
at the ell&gt;ow.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Wilson of&#13;
Anderson called on Mrs. D. D .&#13;
Carr last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Will Buhl and daughter&#13;
Lillian visited at G. D. Blands&#13;
Monday and Tuesday.&#13;
H e n r y Smith of West Marion&#13;
visited Lis daughter Mrs. Will&#13;
Bland one day last week.&#13;
IOBOO Grange Banquet&#13;
JVilHlWS&#13;
ID * * !&#13;
Ff nmclot Statement&#13;
of&#13;
12&#13;
mos.&#13;
Don't forget the St. Patrick* P a r t y&#13;
a t the opera house Friday evening,&#13;
March 19. Music by Geigers Orchest&#13;
r a of J a c k s o n . Bill 75 .cents. Spectators&#13;
will be cbarged 10 eats-. ;&#13;
r o K njkiM.&#13;
•Second «rowtb, dry block wood.&#13;
9tf JL. Spears&#13;
"-f *i—eZ— —&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Six Poland China brood sows due in&#13;
April, James Spears,&#13;
9tf Dnadiila.&#13;
R. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct aucfjon sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for'past J&amp;vors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I remain&#13;
vours. R. GLUTTON.&#13;
warn SALB.&#13;
Farm of 80 acres, five .miles - south&#13;
West of Pinckney, known as the Dave&#13;
(jhalker farm. Stock and bay will go&#13;
with the farm if purchaser so desires.&#13;
Will go cheap, it bought at once. Inquire&#13;
of LuUin L. Pollok,&#13;
8tf .. Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
(•Ascription tats moata.&#13;
Farmers and&#13;
Horsemen&#13;
We Do&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
New Shoes 30c&#13;
Setting 121-2c&#13;
Calking and .,-&#13;
Setting&#13;
ART. FLINTOFF&#13;
Pettysviile, Mich.&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
The Grange Banquet last Friday&#13;
eveuiug was a grand sucoess.&#13;
Mre. ¥. Davis and two children&#13;
visited at B. W. Harforda over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Butler and&#13;
daughter Ella visited L. C. Gardner&#13;
and wife Sunday.&#13;
• T i m Ishama horse that was&#13;
very sick a few weeks ago is again&#13;
under the doctors care.&#13;
Grant Smith and L. C. Gardner&#13;
attended the Masonic banquet at&#13;
Stock bridge last Friday night.&#13;
Chas. Teachoot sold a fine horse&#13;
to Waterloo parties last week,&#13;
then bought one of Will Greening.&#13;
WE8TFUCTAM.&#13;
W. B. Gardner spent Sunday in&#13;
Chilson.&#13;
Sadie Harris has returned from&#13;
an extended visit in Detroit.&#13;
Ella and Bessie Murphy of&#13;
Jackson were home over Sunday.&#13;
Martha Murphy left last week&#13;
for Marine Oity where she has a&#13;
position in a millinery.&#13;
Mrs. Will Dunbar spent a few&#13;
days this week with her parents&#13;
Valentine Dinkel and wife in&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
I. J. Abbott and wife, V. G.&#13;
Dinkel and wife, Will Dunbar&#13;
and wife and 0 . W. W e b b and&#13;
wife were guesta at the home of&#13;
H. B. Gardner Thursday last.&#13;
Spring Time&#13;
^¥ is&#13;
AHDEBSOft.&#13;
Will Caskey and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Plainfield friends.&#13;
Miss Grace Pool • visited her&#13;
mother Mrs. Elmer Book on Sunday.&#13;
Fred Mackinder visited his&#13;
brother Richard near Howell last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bullis spent&#13;
Sunday at Benn Montagues at&#13;
Chubbs corners.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wilson,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barton and&#13;
Mrs. Julia Pangborn were entertained&#13;
at the home of James Hoff&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Pangborn gave a dinner to&#13;
the following ladies one day last&#13;
week: Mrs. Chas Bullis, Mrs.&#13;
Albert Wilson, Mrs. Eunice Crane&#13;
Mrs. R. G. Webb and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Mackinder.&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Paper Time&#13;
I am here with&#13;
a full hue of&#13;
Wall P a p p r&#13;
•a... See Our Samples&#13;
before purc&#13;
h a s i n g&#13;
this&#13;
been&#13;
J&#13;
door south of hotel.&#13;
NORTH PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. Etta Bland called on&#13;
Ed Farnam last Friday.&#13;
Misa Beulah Burgess visited&#13;
relatives at Gregory the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Wm. Chambers visited his&#13;
brother John of East Putnam&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Catherine Brogan visited&#13;
friends at Pinckney the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
A few of the friends and neighbors&#13;
of Mr, and Mrs. Fred Burgess&#13;
dined with them last Thursday.&#13;
C ^ i | a I Mr. and Mrs. V. G. Dinkel and&#13;
I l i n K P I Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Abbott visited&#13;
. L M I i n V I . | a ( H B Gardners in We«t Pot-&#13;
I nam last Thursday.&#13;
mrAsnuL&#13;
Hay balere are at work in&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. E d Cranna who has&#13;
sick, is much better.&#13;
The Unadilla Band will give a&#13;
concert at the hall March 24.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy May who has been&#13;
seriously ill, is gaming slowly.&#13;
A. J. Holmes and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday with her&#13;
parents, S. G. Palmer and wife.&#13;
The L A S of the M. E. Ohurch&#13;
met in the church parlors last&#13;
Wednesday. Dinner was served.&#13;
A number from Unadilla attended&#13;
the baud Concert given by the&#13;
North Lake baud last Friday eve.&#13;
W i r t Barnum and family and&#13;
Wm. Stowe and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
The local WCTU will meet with&#13;
Mrs. Lillian Burden Thursday p.&#13;
m. of this week. All members are&#13;
requested to be present.&#13;
PLAINFIELD.&#13;
Mr. Curtis iiuci family have move! to&#13;
Devil's lake.&#13;
The school children are having a vacation&#13;
thia week.&#13;
Lena Macbean is staying with Mrs.&#13;
Conk for a few weeks. #&#13;
The infant daughter of Lorents Pedersan&#13;
is very low with pneumonia.&#13;
A young son came to the home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Howard Clark Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Burt VanSyckle entertained her&#13;
brother from Philadelphia Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The district meeting of the WFMS. will&#13;
be held here April 21st and 22nd. Everybody&#13;
invited.&#13;
The Plainfield Theatrical Company have&#13;
given the drama, Oak Farm, with the beat&#13;
of success each time.&#13;
SOUTH I O S C O .&#13;
John Wright has been on the Bick list&#13;
the past week.&#13;
School closed here laBt Friday for the&#13;
spring vacation.&#13;
The LAS met with Mrs. Walter Miller&#13;
Wednesday last,&#13;
Hugh Ward transacted business in Fowlerville&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Bert Roberts, wife and family visited at&#13;
David Roberts' Sunday,&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Wattere ia visiting her&#13;
son in Jackson at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. N. Burley and family visited&#13;
at Wra. Caskey's Sunday.&#13;
John Roberts, wife and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with her parents.&#13;
The WCTU held a silver medal contest&#13;
at South Iosco church Tuesday evening.&#13;
Elva Caskey spent Saturday afternoon&#13;
with the Misses Beatrice and Katie Lamborn.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Kuhn has returned home after&#13;
spending the winter with Mrs. R. W.&#13;
Wilson.&#13;
Jennie Ward, Beatrice Lamhorn and&#13;
little Ella Butler were on the sick list the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Lorna and Berney Roberts spent las1&#13;
week with their grandparents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. T. Wainwright.&#13;
The proceeds of the donation at Ruttman&#13;
Brothers given for the benefit of Rev. Mc-&#13;
Cullum was about $100.&#13;
Bertha Harrington returned homeSatur.&#13;
day after spending the past week with her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Joe Roberts.&#13;
Grace Lamhorn returned home Tuesday&#13;
after spending some time with her sister&#13;
Mrs. .lessee Henry of Pinckney.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
The Ioaoo Grange held its 7th&#13;
Banqnet Friday evening Mar. 12,&#13;
M. P . Hall, loaoo.&#13;
The hall WM UUtily decorated with&#13;
gram, pink and orange bunting under the&#13;
supervision of l&amp;tn. Mary Parkw.&#13;
The table decoration* were the best eveand&#13;
each table held a vaae of carnations.&#13;
The Menu was prepared by Mrs. Mark&#13;
Allison aod it was the opinion of all that it&#13;
could not be improved upon in any particular.&#13;
While the guests were standing in&#13;
their places at the table, E. J . Titmua&#13;
offered prayer,&#13;
Mrs. R. C. Smith, our Grange Lecturer,&#13;
acted aa Toastini&amp;treM and gave the "Address&#13;
ul'Welcome." We were reminded&#13;
thai it WIIN the pioneer farmer who fought&#13;
and wim uur liberty uud spoke of the important&#13;
part they have played since. She&#13;
albu spokf oT llieir advancement and the&#13;
Grange has been one of the organisations&#13;
that have placed the farmer of today as&#13;
the man of business and student of science.&#13;
About SO gut'sta sat down to one of the&#13;
finest dinners ever birryed in Iosco, and&#13;
wtien the inner mtui was sntisiicd the program&#13;
commenced with a song by the Indies&#13;
trio eoujpobed of Mm. Alice Stowe, Mrs.&#13;
Mary Parker and Mis» (Jlcllit Stowe. The&#13;
toasiuiiatress introduced Mrs, Homer Smith&#13;
who gave the toast "Bruins," she spoke of&#13;
the great minda that have giveu to the&#13;
world so much iu literature, science, statesmanship&#13;
and art, and said there were&#13;
brains enough in every community to be of&#13;
help to their fellows it they only use them.&#13;
The toast i'Little things" was responded&#13;
to by Mr. J . O'Dell Jr. He said it was&#13;
the little things '"» life that, taken together,&#13;
made our great men; little acts of kindneBS&#13;
that make our great philanthropists; little&#13;
deeds of love ihttt make happy homes.&#13;
Mrs. J . O'Dell responded to the'toast&#13;
" C h a n t y . " She compared it to a garment&#13;
the fashion of which never changes, and ia&#13;
cut full enough to cover the unhappy and&#13;
unfortunate. Some people would not harm&#13;
a fly, but would pick up every piece of&#13;
scandal in the community. Charity is giving&#13;
kind words and deeds; and they need&#13;
not be wasted as there was an opportunity&#13;
to use them in every community, even in&#13;
every home. She thought it charity to&#13;
hold our tongues unless used for good, A&#13;
solo by Mrs. R. C. Smith followed and received&#13;
a hearty ensore.&#13;
The toast ; Critic" was responded to by&#13;
A. G. Btowe who gave the competent and&#13;
honest critic a great deal of praise, as it&#13;
tended to improve literature, government,&#13;
music and morals; hut he didn't have much&#13;
use for the so called critic who was neither&#13;
competent or honest, and whose sole purpose&#13;
was to injure others.&#13;
"The Future Man" by Mrs. E. J . Titmus,&#13;
said our forefathers courted with oxteams,&#13;
but today man must have an automobile,&#13;
and the future man would have a&#13;
flying machine. The future man would&#13;
have larger heads to accommodate the&#13;
brains, and small hands and feet. She&#13;
could not tell where the man would Ian 1&#13;
who was up in an air-ship when the&#13;
world came to an end.&#13;
"Advice" given by Mr. C. H. Hill, said&#13;
we could get good advice of all kinds ou&#13;
all subjects, but it was not policy to follow&#13;
all of it. The fathers advice was usualy&#13;
good, but the boy wanted to see the folly&#13;
for himself. Mothers advice was always&#13;
the best she could give, and should he&#13;
heeded, but the best advice of all was the&#13;
advice giveu by the lowly Nazarene, the&#13;
Christ.&#13;
State Lecturer, Miss Jennie Bueil, talked&#13;
on ''Outlooks." She spoke of the&#13;
Grange work and what it had accomplished&#13;
in the past, its present work and aims,&#13;
1 and the men and wnmeii who are being edi&#13;
ucatod and elevated by attending grange&#13;
meetings and exchanging views. The outlook&#13;
for the future was never brighter than&#13;
now for the Grange work.&#13;
After "listening: to the male quartet, by E.&#13;
J. Titmns, G. F. Peterson, C. i, Stowe&#13;
and E. M. Acker, which was tine and called&#13;
for an encore, the banquet closed after&#13;
spending one of the most enjoyable evening&#13;
ever held in Iosco.&#13;
V l r i * * * T r e « » u F * r s l l « p o r »&#13;
r o r t h * Y e a * B n d l n i \&#13;
M a r c h 6 , 1 9 0 9&#13;
To the rlonorable President afti&#13;
Common Coanoil of the Village ot&#13;
Pinckney. I hereby submit my report&#13;
of money received and diabaned&#13;
for tbe year commencing March «V&#13;
1908, and ending March 8,1909. r&#13;
of Hartland,&#13;
H. Placeway&#13;
Mrs. Melvin Burgess&#13;
visited her parents, W.&#13;
and wife, the past week&#13;
Friday evening of thia week, March&#13;
19, is the date of the play at the opera&#13;
house, "Champaigne and Oysters."&#13;
A card from Miss Kate Brown give8&#13;
the address of herself and mother as&#13;
Lajolla Ual., where they will remain&#13;
for one month.&#13;
Born Monday morning to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Geo, Loefler a girl. Mrs. L. is at&#13;
the home nt her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
J. Bowers, in thi* village.&#13;
Stockbridge citizens are bidding for&#13;
a creamery or cheese factory The&#13;
shutting off ot the milk «oinj&lt; to the&#13;
condensed factory makes the farmer&#13;
anxious to dispose ot his milk somewhere.&#13;
Bills are ont announcing an auction&#13;
at the former residence of Paul Bock&#13;
in this village on Saturday afternoon&#13;
of this week, Mar. 20. He will sell&#13;
the inenbators, brooders, eto. used by&#13;
the Michigan Hatchery Co. eyerything&#13;
being as good as new. Garden tools,&#13;
household articles and the usual small&#13;
articles told at an auction.&#13;
Mortgage Sale.&#13;
Default having been made In the cr&gt;ruUtion« of&#13;
two raorgajrefl, coverinRthe same land (whereby the&#13;
power of sal« therein contained has become operative)&#13;
made by AtUm Franola and Anna L. FrandB&#13;
hia wife, of Putnam, Livingston county, Mirhk'an,&#13;
to G. W. Teeplo of the same jilacfl, one of&#13;
Bain mortagPB beintf flatert December 59th, 1899&#13;
and recorded in the Office of Register of deeds&#13;
for the County of Livingston, Stat.a of Michigan&#13;
May 16, 1900, in Liber 79 of mortgages on page&#13;
B15 thereof, and the other dated June 4th, 1903&#13;
and recorded in nald ReRiateta office on the l,r&gt;th&#13;
doy of March, l!*0fl, in Liber »1 of MortgaRefi on&#13;
paRe 572 thereof; on which said mortages there ia&#13;
now claimed to bo dne and unpaid at thia date the&#13;
Bum of Two hundred fifty /our dollara and twenty&#13;
five com* ($254.2.5) and attorney f«ea, and no nuit&#13;
or proct'teing having been eommancod in law or&#13;
equity to recover the debts secured by said mort-&#13;
£fi"ps, or any part then^f.&#13;
.Now tharafore, nnder tha power of «ale contained&#13;
in aaid mortgages, notice ia hereby given that&#13;
on Monday, the Mth day of Jnnn, lf*&gt;9, at one&#13;
o'clock in tbe afternoon of said day, at the westerly&#13;
front door o the Court house in the village&#13;
of Howell in said County (that, hein^ the ptac^ of&#13;
holding the circuit court, for the County in which&#13;
the mortgaged premiww to be sold are situated)&#13;
and said mortgages will be forecloaed by sale at&#13;
pithllc. vendue, to the highest bidder of the premiaea&#13;
described in naid mortgages,, or so much&#13;
thereof HH may he necessary io satisfy the amount&#13;
due on said moagagfts with int«r«Rt. and legal coata&#13;
that, is to say; all that certain piece or paroel of&#13;
land ait.uar* in the. township of Pntnara, County&#13;
of Livingston and State of Michigan, T U : Three&#13;
acrm of land in the northwest, oorner of that p art&#13;
of the weat half of ths soathwsnt qaarter of aeotion&#13;
twenty fonr (21) lying gonth of the highway&#13;
running through said land and extending from&#13;
the center of u l d highway ionth to the center of&#13;
the creek and in width, ea*t and west, iraffleient to&#13;
make the threw acrea of lanfl. All in Town one (I)&#13;
North and Range ronr (4) aa*t, County of Living-&#13;
•ton and State of Miohlgan,&#13;
Dated March lMh, 1909.&#13;
E . A . A L S . STOW* O. W. T I I r v ,&#13;
t94 Attyt. for MorgafM Xbrtfaga*&#13;
Rwatrn&#13;
Oa hand Wwreh 8,1H08 15.7»&#13;
Max. 12,1908. tin, Graham oide-&#13;
5.08&#13;
r. 12,1&#13;
walk,&#13;
Mar, li, E x Bank&#13;
Apr. 1«, Ex. Bank&#13;
May SO, Fed lew Liotuo&#13;
Jane 8, Shaw Licence&#13;
16;P«dlen Fine&#13;
29, Fine&#13;
Aug. 10, G W Sykei. aldewalk&#13;
Aug. 81, B Lynch, aldewalk&#13;
Oct. ?. Fedlera Lioente&#13;
Oct. 16, B R Brown, aidawalk&#13;
Keb. 0,0U, Fudlera License&#13;
TIUUM, from Koll&#13;
ToUl reed.&#13;
Expenditures,&#13;
100.00&#13;
auo.es&#13;
8.00&#13;
8.00&#13;
6 00&#13;
1.0»&#13;
«.97&#13;
109&#13;
8.00&#13;
1.01&#13;
1.00&#13;
iwa.70&#13;
I180S.M&#13;
1807.78&#13;
159&#13;
160&#13;
161&#13;
162&#13;
163&#13;
164&#13;
165&#13;
166&#13;
167&#13;
16«&#13;
169&#13;
170&#13;
171&#13;
172&#13;
1&#13;
Balance ou Land March 11,1909&#13;
EXPENDITURES *&#13;
S G T e e p l e $ 3.95&#13;
Bert Roche 4.00&#13;
H F Sigler.... 10.00&#13;
Barney Lynch 1.60&#13;
R J Carr 26.00&#13;
F L Andrews..: 18.50&#13;
John Jeffreys 4,80&#13;
W A Carr 4.00&#13;
J C Dunn 4.00&#13;
J A Cadwell 8.67&#13;
J H Shultz 1.25&#13;
James Smith 5.50&#13;
W A Nixon 5.50&#13;
C V Van Winkle 4.00&#13;
C Henry 2.00&#13;
S Grimes 2.00&#13;
Chas. Kennedy .75&#13;
F A Sigler 42&#13;
C Kldert 1.50&#13;
F L Andrews 10.00 •&#13;
Murphy &amp; Dolan . . . . 1.73&#13;
W W Barnard 3.60&#13;
N P Mortenson 15.45&#13;
Matt Jeffreys 2.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 4.00&#13;
I B P Johnson.. m... 12.75&#13;
I S P Johnson L2.50&#13;
F A Sigler 4.30 .'V&#13;
Johu Mortenson 2 . 2 5 -&#13;
M Lavey 1.50&#13;
S G T e e p l e 2.20&#13;
E R Brown 1(1.50&#13;
E W Kennedy 15.00&#13;
A Monks 4.60&#13;
Lewis MonkB 2.30&#13;
1.11 Clark 3.30&#13;
Bert Roche 2.30&#13;
W A Nixon 3.20&#13;
H J Clark 2.30&#13;
Geo Reason 2.20&#13;
J C Dunn 2.20&#13;
R E Finch 3.20&#13;
Emma Burgess 8.20&#13;
Ernest White 2.40&#13;
W A Carr 10.00&#13;
Jackson A Cadwell.. 3.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 12.75&#13;
F A Sigler 50&#13;
F D Johnson 4 00&#13;
H D Mowers 4.00&#13;
D W Murta 10.82&#13;
Doubleday Bros Co,. 2.00&#13;
Adrian Lavey 5.25&#13;
John Mortenson..... .75&#13;
H M Williston 75&#13;
M Lavey 14.00&#13;
M Dolan 2.25&#13;
I S P Johnson 12.50&#13;
E R Brown 60.00&#13;
M Lavey 26.25&#13;
M Lavey 1.50&#13;
E H Byer 1.50&#13;
D H Mowers 6.75&#13;
Alfred Monks 2.50&#13;
Rwarthout &amp; Placeway 2.76&#13;
I S P Johnson 13.40 "&#13;
M Lavey 8.25&#13;
Minnie H Porter . . . . 32.64&#13;
Jake Bowers 3.00&#13;
Theo Lewis 7.50&#13;
C E Henry 1.50&#13;
F L Andrews 23.50&#13;
I S P Johnson ,. 12.50&#13;
L E Howlett 56.00&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co. 12.37&#13;
H D Mowers 4.50&#13;
Bernard Lavey 7.75&#13;
AdrianLavey 13.12&#13;
Leo Lavey 5.55&#13;
M Lavey 55.85&#13;
John White 1.75&#13;
E H Byer 2.25&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
21&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
27&#13;
28&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
32&#13;
33&#13;
34&#13;
35&#13;
36&#13;
37&#13;
38&#13;
3U&#13;
40&#13;
41&#13;
42&#13;
43&#13;
44&#13;
45&#13;
46&#13;
47&#13;
48&#13;
49&#13;
50&#13;
51&#13;
52&#13;
53&#13;
54&#13;
55&#13;
5«&#13;
57&#13;
58&#13;
59&#13;
60&#13;
61&#13;
62&#13;
63&#13;
64&#13;
65&#13;
66&#13;
67&#13;
68&#13;
m&#13;
70&#13;
71&#13;
72&#13;
73&#13;
74&#13;
75&#13;
76&#13;
77&#13;
78&#13;
79&#13;
8()&#13;
«1&#13;
«2&#13;
«3&#13;
84&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
-*#&#13;
. « » * • » • *&#13;
10.00&#13;
5.0»&#13;
14.»&#13;
30.TO&#13;
4.t)&#13;
12.75&#13;
4.80&#13;
NY. L. Lpm&#13;
T.Hfe*&#13;
&lt;n w^ jHHsefp .^»«...&#13;
1 S F J oneewe.......&#13;
E R Brown&#13;
James Smith . . . . . . . .&#13;
I S P Johnson&#13;
F A Sigler&#13;
M Lavey 19.99&#13;
Wm Butler 14.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 15.00&#13;
Jackson &amp; Cadwell .. 5.40&#13;
E W K e n n e d y . . . . . . » U , 8 6&#13;
H D M o w e r s . . . . . . . .&#13;
W H Place we/.'..,. 4,..&#13;
H D Mo were... , . t , . ,&#13;
F L Andrew*. .»&#13;
M Lavey. . . . , . , . • . * , . .&#13;
I S P J ohoetMl . . . . . .&#13;
G W Teepk&#13;
John Dinkel 7.06&#13;
W E Murphy 4.80&#13;
1 S P Johnson 15.08&#13;
H D Mowers 15.00&#13;
W A Carr 10.00&#13;
G W Reason 4.00&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co. 37.98&#13;
Gardner Lighting Co. 37.80&#13;
F D Johnson 9.19&#13;
John Dinkel 6.00&#13;
W H PUcew»y 16.76&#13;
I S P Johnson 1.00&#13;
A Monks 1.00&#13;
O W Teeple 203.8«&#13;
Taxes uncollected, 5.85&#13;
* A&#13;
1 LO ,\ •• . v . .&#13;
« ' ' ' M&gt; " «.•"••'•&#13;
Total, $1367.78&#13;
J. A. CADWSLL,&#13;
Treasurer.</text>
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                <text>March 18, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1909-03-18</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. n m . PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., T H U R S D A Y , MAR. 18. 1909. No. 11&#13;
• * L *&#13;
»b Baked Goods&#13;
We are now getting a fine line of Baked Goods from Jaokbon&#13;
Below find a list of Home of the article** we carry&#13;
Bread&#13;
Graham Bread&#13;
Buns&#13;
Cinnamon Rolls&#13;
Jelly Roll Cake&#13;
Angel Cake&#13;
Coolyes — ~&#13;
Fried Cakes&#13;
Swarthout &amp; Placeway&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
fin* "SftfMr" iftows the past&#13;
w*tk.&#13;
Okat, Webb of Bay City wan in&#13;
town one day last week.&#13;
H. R. Gillette and wife were in Detroit&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Miss Flora Culbane of Ann Arbor&#13;
visited her parents here the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chae. Doody of Lyndon&#13;
visited her parents here the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
E. N. Brotherton, undertaker of&#13;
Gregory was in town on business one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
S. U, Byer is moving his family&#13;
t t t h l D r o w n bouse which he recently&#13;
parthased, this week.&#13;
Walker Sbarland, who ha« been in&#13;
Detroit a couple of weeks, was in&#13;
town the last of last week.&#13;
Mrs. H. P. Smith and Mrs. J. I).&#13;
White spent Tuesday with Frank Al-&#13;
-tatand family in Hamburg.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle returned this&#13;
week from Detroit wbertj she has been&#13;
studying the styles in millinery.&#13;
A card from Norman Wilson, of&#13;
Kirksville, Mo., states that they have&#13;
been caring for a nine pound baby&#13;
girl since March 7.&#13;
Tuesday was a genuine March day&#13;
—wind, snow, sunshine and all. At&#13;
night it turned very &lt;*old and froze&#13;
hard. Wednesday was a finn day hut&#13;
the usual raw, March wind.&#13;
Do not forget that the Columbian&#13;
Dramatic Club are arranging to pat&#13;
the comedy, "Champagne and Oyatort"&#13;
on the stage at the opera hooae b a n&#13;
Friday evening, March 19. Tfce cart&#13;
is good and all wiM to dtUffctod&#13;
last week&#13;
error in the&#13;
- • * • • &lt; &gt; &amp; . . •&#13;
«t*.&#13;
'•u,,.-&#13;
U UM oooatil prottftiiAffi&#13;
wr, o f fjphdrmJM* *a erro&#13;
I AMI wfco moved the ac-&#13;
&gt;*f the bills. It should have&#13;
TCftd Mowers and Peters instead of&#13;
Sigler and Johnson. Mr. Siglor was&#13;
not present.&#13;
Clyde Darrow of Jackson visited his&#13;
parents here the past week.&#13;
Party at opera house Friday night.&#13;
See notice in "business pointers."&#13;
You aie especially invited to attend&#13;
the services at the M. K. church Sunday.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with friends in&#13;
Toledo.&#13;
Frank Robinson of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent last Wednesday with his cousin,&#13;
J. D. White.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Monks were&#13;
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Spears&#13;
Sunday last.&#13;
Edward Gal pin has taken the Geo.&#13;
Plintoff farm near Pettysville for the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Mrs, Wm. Fitsspatrick of Detroit,&#13;
has been a guest at the home of her&#13;
brother, Ed. Far nam.&#13;
The WCTU will meet Saturday&#13;
March 20 at 2:00 with Mrs. E. W.&#13;
Kennedy. Everyone invited.&#13;
There will be a shadow social at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Nash Friday&#13;
evening Mar, h 19. Ladies please&#13;
bring ?ake. Everybody invited.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Burt moved to&#13;
Novi, Oakland county, Monday, and&#13;
will make that place their home in&#13;
the future. We understand that they&#13;
have purchased a farm there, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Burt have been residents in&#13;
this village and vicinity and their&#13;
many Iriends ara sorry to have them&#13;
leave but, wish them success,&#13;
H. R Gear, a graduate of Cloary's&#13;
business college, has been engaged to&#13;
work in the Pinckney Exchange Bank&#13;
to take the place of Herbert Gillette&#13;
who has been hare for several years&#13;
and made many friends. Mr. Gillette&#13;
goes to Howell where he will have an&#13;
Mr.&#13;
and&#13;
We&#13;
re-&#13;
S o c i a l E v e n t s .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Sykes; Mr. Had&#13;
Mrs. John Tweple entertained the club&#13;
oi ladies and gentlemen at tbe home&#13;
of the laitm, Monday evening, March&#13;
8, which wau a vary pleasant affair.&#13;
Mrs. Ella Ja-jkuon entertained a&#13;
party of ladies and gentlemen at her&#13;
home Wednesday evening, Mar. 10.&#13;
Games was tbe urder of tbe evening&#13;
with social cbat and luncheon. A&#13;
pleasant time was spent.&#13;
Last Friday evening at the home of&#13;
Mrs. W. A Carr a large company of&#13;
ladies enjoyed a very pleasant even"&#13;
ing. The house was beautifully decorated&#13;
in red aud green. Dominoes&#13;
was the order of the evening, and a&#13;
dainty lunch of ice cream, cake and&#13;
coffee was served.&#13;
Mrs. John Cadwell and Mrs, Thos.&#13;
Read entertained about thirty ladies&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Cadwell, which&#13;
was tastily decorated in white and&#13;
green buntinur and beautiful hyacinths,&#13;
Tuesday afternoon, March 16.&#13;
Shamrock was tbe design used for&#13;
place cards, and tbe same was in&#13;
evidence in sandwiches and cakes that&#13;
were served with other refreshments.&#13;
The afternoon was spent with music&#13;
and game?, and the company spent a&#13;
very enjoyable afternoon.&#13;
V&#13;
^&#13;
mmmzmm^mmmmsmmzmmge.]&#13;
interest in the Parshall Mills.&#13;
Gear comes well recommended&#13;
will cnmiTifinofi work April 1.&#13;
understand that Mr, Gillette vvil&#13;
main dm inj? April,&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
New food* AT* rapidly&#13;
filling the tfcoc* and its&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
The best stock of Embroideries,&#13;
Laces, Ribbons,&#13;
Corsets, Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Hosiery and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Rcmcaibcr That, • k&#13;
Every Day Is Bargain Day&#13;
Farmers 9&#13;
Bring&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
Howeirs Busy Store&#13;
in your harnesses&#13;
and have them i&#13;
repaired, wased anil&#13;
oiled ready for your&#13;
spring work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can do that work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rips, e t c , in fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
U B W t | * • a • •&#13;
W. B. DARROW&#13;
Uivery Changed Hands.&#13;
Last week Percy Hwartbout and&#13;
Horace Saylea purchased the livery&#13;
outfit of Jaa. Wilson and took posession&#13;
Saturday night. Mr. SayleB of&#13;
the new firm has done considerable&#13;
driving for the liyery the past few&#13;
years and is well known by all patrons.&#13;
Mr. Wilcox b is conduoted the livery&#13;
here for many years and has made a&#13;
success ot it. He baa always been&#13;
genial and has won many friends&#13;
among the citizens here as well as&#13;
among the traveling public. We&#13;
understand that he will look after the&#13;
farm be recently purchased just north&#13;
of town.&#13;
Cong I Church Notes&#13;
Rev. Gates returned from tbe C. E,&#13;
convention held at Olivet Saturday&#13;
evening. He will give a report of&#13;
the meetings next Sunday night at&#13;
the regular hour, 6:45.&#13;
The sermons last Sunday were very&#13;
helpful and practical. The anthem at&#13;
the morning service wa^ exceptionally&#13;
fine and, as remarked by the pastor, it&#13;
was a sermon ot itself.&#13;
The Subject next Sunday morning&#13;
will be Resolving and Doing. Everybody&#13;
will be welcomed to all the services&#13;
of this church.&#13;
PUTNAM AHD HAKSTJXG FAltf-&#13;
EBS* 'TLTIB.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg Farm&#13;
ers club wi!l im.et Saturday .uarch 20,&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. E.&#13;
Swarthout. Everybody is invited to&#13;
attend, &amp;n&lt;.i to ha prepared to talk on&#13;
the question, 1&lt; Local Option a remedy&#13;
for the saloon evil? Please bring&#13;
lapboards and dishes.&#13;
PROGRAM:&#13;
liiHt. Solo, Florence Kice&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Duet,&#13;
Mai&#13;
Mary VanFleet&#13;
Fannie Swnrthout&#13;
Mr. Cameron&#13;
Fern Hendee&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Kennedy&#13;
F. H. Swarthout&#13;
Nellie Van Horn&#13;
Fred Grieve&#13;
Mr. Hendricks&#13;
Last Chance&#13;
Before Inventory&#13;
TO BUY GOODS AT&#13;
WHOLESALE PRICES&#13;
Saturday, Monday, Tuesday&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 20. 22, 23&#13;
•&lt;&gt;**. - i j&#13;
and&#13;
24 4'&#13;
Dress Goods at Cost&#13;
Underwear at Cost&#13;
Ginghams and Prints at Cost&#13;
Shoes and Rubbers at Cost&#13;
Furniture at Cost&#13;
Gent's Furnishings at Cost i &lt;&#13;
No Goods Charged Produce Taken&#13;
DO NOT FORGET WE SELL GROCERIES AT COST PRICES&#13;
5o&#13;
3c&#13;
7c&#13;
17c&#13;
13c&#13;
J A C K S O N &amp; C A D W E L L S&#13;
'Mi&#13;
25 pounds Sugar&#13;
8 bars of Soap&#13;
Best Corn&#13;
Coffee&#13;
4 lbs Crackers&#13;
$1.25&#13;
25c&#13;
13c&#13;
25c -&#13;
| Soda„&#13;
t Yeast&#13;
Peas&#13;
' 20c-Coffee&#13;
i Salmon&#13;
-•-*- POST CAR&#13;
Will Nash&#13;
Grace and Harold Grieve&#13;
Recitation, Majole Whitlock&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Inst. Solo, ,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Cornet Solo,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Washington's Birthday&#13;
S t . P a t r i c k ' s Day and&#13;
Regular Birthday. Also&#13;
a line of E a s t e r Cards.&#13;
: &lt; i f r * Dispatch Office&#13;
. ^ i ' •I f'AJ&#13;
"Sit.*'&#13;
D e m o c r a t i c C a u c u s .&#13;
The dsmocratio electors will meet&#13;
at the town hail in the village of&#13;
Pinckney on Satnrday, March 27, at&#13;
2 o'cloek p. m.t for the parpose tf&#13;
placing in nomination a ticket to be&#13;
voted on at the spring election to be&#13;
held Monaay, April 5, 1909, and for&#13;
transaction of any other business that&#13;
may come before the caucus.&#13;
Bv Order of Com.&#13;
T I M E IS T H E TEST rf :'..^ability in a. hi^h-speed mnchine like the cream separator.&#13;
N,i other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
every dav, winter and summer, it must not only do thorough work,&#13;
hut to bepcruianeotlv profitable, it mil»tbe durable.&#13;
| l ^ CREAMI&#13;
are built for lonjf service. A solid, law frame encloses entirely all&#13;
_the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger o( in-&#13;
"lurv. The parts arefew, simple and easy to sret at. Ballbearings&#13;
at nigh speed points, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wear&#13;
as well as insure tbe easiest operation. Such careful and thorough&#13;
construction is what enables the V. S. to better&#13;
STAND THE TEST I j. than anv other separator. You dont have to buy a j ^ w oat *vety ;&#13;
two. And remember : the U. S. does the cleanest .sklamilnff all i h&#13;
UiKiami*e the U. S. yourself and tee jits good point*. It is aold by&#13;
i*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
^x±£*Z*i t ' ^ t J - Y i J . ^ v - j&#13;
r_- i 14 rr* '( »...«"•'• . t • » v *&#13;
«*J i M i&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
§imhtitQ H&amp;jjattli&#13;
TMAMM L, AVDUWt, F u b .&#13;
NH&lt;9UnBY', MIGHIGAH&#13;
What t b t Mouth D«not%».&#13;
A certain philbaopber declares that&#13;
a woman 1B known by her mouth. Not&#13;
by the wordb that issue therefrom, hut&#13;
by the shape and color of the Jiys, and&#13;
th«t jUipu* *Ud d^wplee that gather about&#13;
ihlBittiporuuit feature. He 1« supported&#13;
In his theory by physiognomists, who&#13;
sill endeavor To impress us with the&#13;
fact that no woman with the small red-&#13;
Itfcped, "Cupid-how" mouth, so praised&#13;
in song and story, was ever intellectual&#13;
ar generous of heart; and it is consoling&#13;
to those whose mouths are not In&#13;
iccotdauce with the lines or beauty&#13;
'aid dwwh by the poets to be told that&#13;
i ''wide, Ktruight mouth, with strong&#13;
white teeth" denotes the woman of superior&#13;
intelligence, goodness of heart,&#13;
strength of mind and a thousand and&#13;
irne other sterling qualities, which we&#13;
jyl| like to think we possess, says the&#13;
New York Weekly. It is the fashion&#13;
*t present to hold the lips very slighty&#13;
apart. ; T h i s fs supposed'to give-that&#13;
nnocent, wistful, wonderful expression&#13;
which wag'tlffer" peculiar property of&#13;
the heroines of old-fashioned novels,&#13;
5ut which bicy.cle riding and kindred&#13;
•spodern amusements have caused to&#13;
vanish.&#13;
HE WENT&#13;
PAYS THE&#13;
- C -*+-&#13;
A YOUNO MAN'S BRIGHT FUTUHC&#13;
BLASTED BY A PRISON' '&#13;
SENTENOt.&#13;
STATS NBWS BRIEFS,&#13;
WAS SKILLED MECHANIC,&#13;
f_V&#13;
Secretary Straus does c o t believe In&#13;
wrenching the contract* labor law out&#13;
?f its legitimate function"trf protecting&#13;
American labor. He has recently admitted&#13;
to the United States a Canadian&#13;
girl who desired to enter a trainng&#13;
school for n'urses. BecaWe all the&#13;
?lrls who take the training course are&#13;
flowed a small compensation, she was&#13;
\t first denied admission, as a contract&#13;
laborer. The secretary remarks that&#13;
training schools for nurses are among&#13;
'he most humane of educational insti&#13;
'utions, and the fact that certain work&#13;
Is required as a part ol the training,&#13;
and certain compensation allowed for&#13;
It, does not make the student a contract&#13;
laborer. ,&#13;
Do you chew gum? Certainly not!&#13;
Why ask the unnecessary question?&#13;
But then, maybe you eat starch, which&#13;
a New York authority says is a grow^&#13;
Ing habit and one of the most deadly&#13;
of health destroyers. At all events,&#13;
young people are so nervous nowadays&#13;
they must chew something, and if not&#13;
gum, why then starch, which appeals&#13;
to vain girls who wish to be beautiful,&#13;
out it is a pernicious appetite when&#13;
once contracted, Like every such&#13;
habit, says the Boston Herald, it is the&#13;
result of a vacant mind. Feed the&#13;
mind with thoughts worth the thinking,&#13;
and girls and boys will not care to&#13;
be gum chewers or starch eaters.&#13;
It is always gratifying to meet a&#13;
person who is contented with his lot.&#13;
For-that reason it would be delightful&#13;
to make the acquaintance of the woman&#13;
who lately had the last word in a&#13;
brief suffragist controversy. The writer&#13;
of a suffragist communication in a&#13;
newspaper wrote, sadly, that, "woman&#13;
is nothing but a female relative of a&#13;
man; the man is the noun, the woman&#13;
Is the preposition." "Well, what,do I&#13;
care?" was the triumphant retort. "The&#13;
preposition governs the noun."&#13;
Among recently elected members to&#13;
Phi Beta Kappa, the society of picked&#13;
scholars, is a Harvard student named&#13;
Tien Tin Chan of Tientsin, China. Two&#13;
Chinese, Mr. Wen and Mr. Chen, graduate&#13;
this month from West Point, where&#13;
they have been, in a sense, guests of&#13;
the United States. The students who&#13;
are to come to America as beneficiaries&#13;
of the returned "Boxer indemnity"&#13;
fund will find that their countrymen&#13;
have set them a high standard in&#13;
American colleges.&#13;
•M i ; . ' i C T -&#13;
The Argentine government during&#13;
be J&amp;S4 ye»r has begun the developof&#13;
a new petroleum field at&#13;
Comodoro Rivadavia, on the Bay of&#13;
8t. George, east coast of Patagonia.&#13;
The first oil-bearing stratum was&#13;
- ' found at a depth of 1,770 feet, in a cretaceous&#13;
formation. The government&#13;
well yields 13 or 14 tons of oil per&#13;
day without pumping. The oil ia dark&#13;
brown and very heavy, and seems especially&#13;
adapted for fuel. ,&#13;
© • m a n explorers are making inferi.,,&#13;
eatfpg discoveries on the supposed site&#13;
jiipf ancient Jericho, near the Dead spa,&#13;
.'-tailing recently uncovered the city&#13;
j ^ ' * l f t , a structure built In three parts—&#13;
^"S-fock foundation, a body of rubble&#13;
and a top of clay bricks. The wall as&#13;
a whole was dome thirty feet in1 height,&#13;
*a«d &lt;a4though, like the wall that preceded&#13;
it, it might have fallen at the&#13;
iJOMMd cf Josbua'a-.trumrietsH k\. appears&#13;
^ H i a t afcuordinary assailant would have&#13;
jj^und It hard to pass&#13;
The Current Events and Happening*&#13;
That Have Been Noted About the&#13;
State Briefly Told.&#13;
William Miley, aged !J4, who was&#13;
sentenced to serve 15 years in the&#13;
Michigan state prison for robbing .the&#13;
postoflice at Hillsdale, is the soil of a&#13;
well-known Indianapolis famriy. u H e&#13;
is also the inventor of a' continuous&#13;
rail device for use on railroads and&#13;
interurban lines, which his family&#13;
values at $150,uUU. Since- he waa a&#13;
small boy, William Miley has em*&#13;
ployed his leisure hours working with&#13;
different sorts of mechanical devices.&#13;
He has patented a number of minor&#13;
inventions, but his continuous rail device&#13;
on which he obtained patent papers&#13;
one year ago last month, is the&#13;
most valuable. Mrs. Miley, the young&#13;
man's mother, stated that she was in&#13;
possession of a cigarmaking machine&#13;
which her sou completed recently,&#13;
and for which she intends* to ask patttUtij,&#13;
When seen at the home of her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Miley said that her&#13;
son had never been in trouble before.&#13;
She declared that he had always&#13;
been industrious, and that he&#13;
had no bad habits that she knew of.&#13;
Knowledge of his arrest in Michigan&#13;
came as a surprise. It is thought she&#13;
is sufficiently recovered to prevent&#13;
her condition being made worse on&#13;
account of the news of his sentence.&#13;
Miley is by trade a cigarmaker. He&#13;
worked for a number of years at that&#13;
trade.&#13;
Homer Giddiaga, of Hasting*, w i t&#13;
convicted.-ef selling liquor to Indiana.&#13;
He wiJ^he aeajLenceU-lat^r^ .&lt; ...&#13;
Zen(th Phillip*, a rural mail v e r i e r ,&#13;
of Kejsuj, *»a&gt; dj« * i the. $eault of being&#13;
kicked in the stomach by a horse.&#13;
O. Z. Ibe la u n d e r arte** In Hasting*,&#13;
charged with departing bU blind w,;te,&#13;
to whem he had been married but a&#13;
few weeks.&#13;
T h e Dickinson county board ot supervisors&#13;
has voted down t h e proposition&#13;
to submit the local option question&#13;
to the people.&#13;
E m m a Carpenter, the Port Austin&#13;
girl who mysteriously disappeared&#13;
from her1 home some weeks ago. baa&#13;
been located In Detroit&#13;
Happy over his release from Ionia&#13;
reformatory and with enough money&#13;
to tide him over a rainy day, Charlts&#13;
Alexander has returned to Flint.&#13;
Leo grots." sawmill at Sutton's Bay&#13;
was totally destroyed by Are causing&#13;
a loss of ¢3,000, with no insurance.&#13;
The large lumber yard waa saved only&#13;
by'"hard work.&#13;
RedfoYd is to have a private bank&#13;
with a capital of $20,000 arid a backing&#13;
among the stockholders of $150,-&#13;
000. Gov. Fred M. Warner it* one ot&#13;
the stockholders.&#13;
Arrangement* have been made for&#13;
having a detachment of.regulars camp&#13;
with the M. N. G. at Ludington, in August.&#13;
Battery A will go to ^parta,&#13;
Wis., for target practice.&#13;
Congreawnen Loud and Tpwnsend pi.&#13;
"chigan,- Fassett of New York and&#13;
itnbbr.ey of Washington were - the&#13;
speakers a t the eighth annual banquet^&#13;
of the .Adrian McKinley club.&#13;
i. Frank Shaarer is under arrest In&#13;
Flint, 'charged with deserting the United&#13;
States battleship Mmnesotas Shaarer&#13;
is said to have been punlsjaed for&#13;
desertion on a previous occasion.&#13;
A Carnegie medal and a substantial&#13;
purse Will be awarded Mary Armstrong,&#13;
heroine of the Haskell home*&#13;
fire in Battle Creek, if the plans o f&#13;
the' committee in charge carry.&#13;
*TCPED OUT.&#13;
•rinkfey, AHc, Swept fey Torsade art*&#13;
•' P i * to&lt;wHute p«ao4at«v&#13;
Wfateej* whlte»'«»d a r negroe* are&#13;
•a»db Dymovnatto and fir**Mricken&#13;
•rinlOey, Ark. Forty persoa* ajt» a *&#13;
rtfluily h u r t . * l x rolfeM** aiandwg&#13;
in the midst ot the ruins are all that&#13;
rtpkftin of t h e town where hundreds&#13;
of gftyf-stricken people are homeless.&#13;
Property valued at more than, a million&#13;
dollars has been destroyed. T h e&#13;
tornado struck witheut a moment's&#13;
warning. Its path was the width of&#13;
the town.&#13;
Two trains reached Brinkley shortly&#13;
alter daylight. One waB from Helena,&#13;
the other from Little Hock: The- relief&#13;
parties found the inhabitants almost&#13;
helpless. The shock of the disaster&#13;
had rendered them almost apathetic&#13;
and little had been done toward&#13;
relieving the suffering of the injured&#13;
or caring for the dead.&#13;
, In the negro section the destruction&#13;
was most, complete.&#13;
In the business section the scene is&#13;
desolate. The buildings have been&#13;
twisted about and tumbled over into&#13;
the street: •- • ,&#13;
' 'Huddled about the ruins of their&#13;
homes families ' were- standing In&#13;
groups clinging together In -terror^&#13;
while here and. there, a searcher was&#13;
groping about in q u e s t - o ! a mtssiug&#13;
member of the household. . The sAorm&#13;
swept on to Kerr, through B a u c n m&#13;
W plowed a path about&gt;sixty feejt wide,&#13;
leveling buildings and uprooting trees.&#13;
-Report* Xro-tt-southern and southeastern&#13;
Arkansas, say that a- hesjvy&#13;
windstorm passed over those sections&#13;
last night, doing considerable damage.&#13;
mm • M M M f M M n * £35ST&#13;
•**+-&#13;
Taftf Will Talk.&#13;
President.Taft'a'first cabinet meeting1&#13;
convened at 11 o'clock Tuesday.&#13;
All t h e members of the new cabinet&#13;
except Mr. Dickinson, who is to, be&#13;
sfeoprt«ry &lt;jf war, were present, Presi-&#13;
4«bt Taft determined not to* perjojtt&#13;
fhe membe'rs of Ais cabinet tc^UBews&#13;
(he business; k traiMcted. - - '&#13;
The Wet and Dry Fight.&#13;
The battle of the drys and wets in&#13;
Michigan Is on in earnest for the control&#13;
of the counties where the liquor&#13;
question will be submitted next&#13;
month. The counties irr which the&#13;
great fight will be pulled off a r e :&#13;
Allegan, Berrien, Calhoun, Charlevoix,&#13;
Dickinson, Jackson, Genesee,&#13;
Washteuaw, Eaton, Alcona, Benzie,&#13;
Branch, Clare. Emmet, Hillsdale",&#13;
Huron, Ionia, Iosco, Isabella, Kalkas&#13;
ka, Lapeer, Livingstone, Mecosia.&#13;
Monroe, Newaygo, Ottawu,. Sanilac&#13;
and Tuscola.&#13;
In many counties—in fact, practically&#13;
all of'them—the result is-going to&#13;
be very close, according to the best&#13;
information available, it is very hard&#13;
to obtain a definite line on the counties,&#13;
because both sides are claiming&#13;
victory by overwhelming figures,&#13;
Allegan was dry, but went wet two&#13;
years ago, and is very likely to remain&#13;
wet, the principal argument being&#13;
that feaugatuck, which is a big&#13;
summer resort center, openly violated&#13;
the law under tho dry regime and&#13;
conditions were worse than with the&#13;
saloons operating under a tax.&#13;
This same argument is being used&#13;
with effect in Berrien county, where&#13;
both Benton Harbor and St. Joseph&#13;
are resort towns. South Haven, which&#13;
is in Van Buren, supposedly dry, is&#13;
tho horrible example held, up.&#13;
The biggest fights of all are being&#13;
made in Jackson, Washtenaw and&#13;
Genesee. In the first and last of the&#13;
trio are big cities, Jackson and Flint,&#13;
and it is a warrior dry indeed who is&#13;
willing to stake much that prohibition&#13;
could over be enforced in eiiher of&#13;
these cities.&#13;
Refused Renewal of License.&#13;
Thirty Michigan branches and 2,."&gt;00&#13;
Michigan members, of whom upward&#13;
of 1,000 are residents of Detroit, are&#13;
affected by a decision of State Insurance&#13;
Commissioner James V. Barry&#13;
to refuse renewal of the license under&#13;
which the Catholic Knights and&#13;
Ladies of America fraternal insurance&#13;
society is doing business in Michigan.&#13;
Notice of the commissioner's ruling&#13;
has been forwarded to tho supreme&#13;
president, of the order, and any attempt&#13;
on its part to secure new business&#13;
will be expressly against his injunction.&#13;
The reason assigned by Commissioner&#13;
Barry in refusing to renew the&#13;
society's license is that as yet no&#13;
satisfactory explanation has been&#13;
made his department for the treatment&#13;
accorded Mrs. Catherine A. Tattan,&#13;
a widow of Detroit, formerly flrRt.&#13;
vice-president of branch No. 148.&#13;
/Flofld Fuller, who .was acquitted re i vf A c w i p e u p n M T W E « W T D I ? « rently of' the charge o£ attempting to ^ X - A ^ n a b IJICUXVI I r l t W 1 K 1 « &gt;&#13;
The Ice Harvest.&#13;
Some 500 men are employed cutting&#13;
&lt;ce overtime on Mullett lake, south of&#13;
this city. The ice is a foot to 18&#13;
inches thick. So anxious are the icemen&#13;
to get all they possibly can out&#13;
before the break-up comet? that the&#13;
Michigan Central gives the ice trains&#13;
the right of way over all others.&#13;
About 200 carloads a day are being&#13;
shipped to Bay City and points aoulh-&#13;
So well is the company co-operating&#13;
with the icmien that even passenger&#13;
trains are sidetracked so ns not. to&#13;
delay the ice trains.&#13;
Rut busy as they all are, the reports&#13;
tell that, al all points of delivery there&#13;
will " s u r e l y be a s h o r t a g e in t h e supply&#13;
for next s u m m e r . ' '&#13;
The n*w hoard of control of' the&#13;
Wlchlpan reformatory„-, appointed by&#13;
Gov. Warner, .elected Amos Mussejmrm&#13;
president of the bo.ird. The other&#13;
I'U'tnhi rs are Leor.;:nl Freeman and&#13;
Alfred R. Locke.&#13;
centl&#13;
kill, hi?; father, has passed the civil&#13;
^crvice examination.. for mail. driver&#13;
and will have a" route from Leroy.&#13;
Maurice Madigati, who was arrested&#13;
Thursday :&lt;m a warrant held by the&#13;
Buffalo police Charging wife desertion,&#13;
feft - "Flint Sunday for the New&#13;
York city. He,.was in-(Charge-,pf .a&#13;
Buffalo officer.&#13;
Two 14-year-old boys who applied for&#13;
shelter at the Ge'nessee county Jail&#13;
aave been returned to their parents.&#13;
They said that they had* run away&#13;
fr.om home because,they didn't, like&#13;
their school teacher.&#13;
' Adumea A. Russell, 33, a civil w,ar&#13;
vet«ran, and Mrs. Kate K. T^nbrook,&#13;
C£, were married recently at Kalamazoo.&#13;
This is the fourth venture for&#13;
Mr,, Russell,,while his bride has been&#13;
married three times. ^&#13;
The class of 1908 of the Big Rapids&#13;
Jligh school has presented a silver&#13;
cuptvalued at |5Q to the school, to bo&#13;
used as an incentive for oratorical contests'&#13;
aiaaong the students. The class&#13;
winning the cup will hold it for one&#13;
year.&#13;
Ira Moore, a Mancelona cobbler,&#13;
isn't the least excited about a "notification"&#13;
he has received, that he is&#13;
one of 160 heirs to the site of the city&#13;
of Providence, R. I. The woods are&#13;
full of great inheritance fakes just&#13;
now. . . K&#13;
Samuel H. Row, of Lansing, first&#13;
insurance commissioner of Michigan,&#13;
and prominent in state insurance&#13;
circles for many years, died Wednesday&#13;
morning, aged 69 years. His death&#13;
was due to paralysis, from which he&#13;
had suffered for several weeks.&#13;
After repeated threats to end his&#13;
life, Michael S'chelf, 83, of Grand Rap&#13;
ids, was found hanging in his wood&#13;
shed. ' The body was still warm, but&#13;
life was extinct. The old man's daughter&#13;
had recently moved into the house&#13;
with him to prevent, an attempt tc&#13;
take his life.&#13;
Indications point to an early open&#13;
ins of navigation at the Soo ship canals,&#13;
The ice on the river is not as&#13;
solid as in former years owing to the&#13;
mildness of the winter. The canal has&#13;
been* undergoing the usual repairs&#13;
while empty, and will be ready for&#13;
business as soon as needed.&#13;
Alexander Campbell, aged 71 years&#13;
of Alpena, was burned to death in a&#13;
fire which destroyed his home. He&#13;
was born in Ottawa, Canada, and came&#13;
to Alpena 46 years ago. He was a&#13;
member of the common council 24&#13;
years, and board of education eight&#13;
years. He leaves a widow and seven&#13;
children.&#13;
After lying for nearly an hour in a&#13;
drizzling rain with her face badly cut&#13;
and hip broken, Mrs. Mazella Pettis&#13;
one of the oldest residents In Lapeer,&#13;
crawled from the back walk leading&#13;
from her residence down into her eel&#13;
lar. Mrs. Pettis is 87 yeara of age,&#13;
and on that account she is in a very&#13;
precarious condition.&#13;
John and Edward Hicks, of Perry&#13;
waived examination on a charge ol&#13;
selling liquor without a license anri&#13;
were bound over to the circuit court&#13;
for trial. It is understood that an arrangement&#13;
exists to dispose of the&#13;
case as soon as possible, (hat thr&#13;
Hicks Rros. may dispose of their bus!&#13;
ness at Perry and leave thr&gt; county.&#13;
Mrs. Xeda William's, of Lnngford.&#13;
S, D., has secured a warrant for the&#13;
arrest of Earl G. Sherrard. 21, on a&#13;
charge of perjury. Sherrard, she saya.&#13;
iwnrc that Laura Williams, daughter&#13;
of the woman, was IS years old when&#13;
he secured a nparririco license last&#13;
e ffffllcf flVr' v Took In T&#13;
Andrew Carnegie, advocate of international&#13;
peace, has a plan. He suggests^&#13;
that Great Britain agree to defeud&#13;
the American coast along th?&#13;
Pacific, Including Hawaii and the&#13;
Philippines, while the United States&#13;
defends from, attack the British possessions&#13;
in the Atlantic, including the&#13;
islands in the south. This agreement&#13;
would terminate on five year?' notice.&#13;
D'1. Ira C. Landrith, of Nashville,&#13;
Tenn., secretary of the State Anti-Saloon&#13;
league, in discussing how Tennessee&#13;
wentv'dry," says it cost,the league&#13;
$30,000 to* win the fight. ''And," he&#13;
addst.'"wft4tr Tennessee, has done any&#13;
other s,t#te may dp. Even New York&#13;
caa easily regulate Us liquor problem&#13;
if it really cares to. It cost us $30,000&#13;
to do the ^ork, but It cost the liquor&#13;
interests millions and they lost."&#13;
December and May were wedded in&#13;
Santa Monica, Cal., in the perspns of&#13;
Miss Electa Hawkins, 21, and Varnum&#13;
Wescott, 83. Wescott Is an inmate of&#13;
the soldiers' home in Sawtelle and BO&#13;
is Mrs. Wescott's father. For some&#13;
time the aged veteran had courted the&#13;
pretty woman. Although nearly four&#13;
times the age of his bride, Wescott&#13;
is exceedingly active and enjoys robust&#13;
health.&#13;
The , Intermediate vya.yey . ,frujt&#13;
Growers' association has been organized&#13;
at Bellaire with $10,000 capital.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Market 1 f)c to ITic&#13;
h i g h e r t h a n la«t wrpk. W P quote &lt;lryfod&#13;
Ptoors, $,r); steers anil lietfers, 1,000&#13;
to 1.208. $3&lt;fr&gt;n.2'i; Bte^rs and heifers,&#13;
800 to 1,000, $4.r&gt;0&lt;S&gt;5; steers a n d heifers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700, $4.25(^4.65-,&#13;
choice fat cows, $4.2^((7) 4.r&gt;0; eood fat&#13;
cows, $3.7"); common cows'. $3&lt;§&gt;3.2S&gt;;&#13;
cfluners, $1.50(6:2; choice heavy' mill's,&#13;
$4.25^1.50-. fair to proort bolognas, nulls,&#13;
$3.75f?M; liR'ht, $3^1).1.25: milkers, larpe,&#13;
vouiif,', medium age, $40(?t50; common&#13;
milkers, $20^30,&#13;
Veal calves—Market 50c lower than&#13;
last w e e k ; best, $S(K8.25; others, $ 4 #&#13;
7.50; milch cows and s p r i n g e r s , prood&#13;
steady, common dull.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Market s t r o n g at&#13;
last week's prices: best lairths. $7.50(¾&#13;
7.60; fair to good lamhs, $6.25&lt;g)7.2d;&#13;
lig-ht to common lambs, $5.50(86; y e a r -&#13;
lings. $5.50(6)6.25; fair to good b u t c h e r&#13;
sheep, $4(¾ 5; culls and common, $2.50©&#13;
3.50.&#13;
H O K S — M a r k e t quality common. tOc&#13;
to 15c h i g h e r t h a n last week. R a n g e of&#13;
prices: Light to good butch era, $6.65®&#13;
6.75: piprs. $6®«.15; ll^ht y o r k e r s , $6.2K&#13;
tf»6.50; atasrs, 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo—Cattle—Market 10&lt;iM5o&#13;
higher ; best steer*, $6 25®6 75; best&#13;
1,200 to 1.300-lb s h i p p i n g steers, $5 85(H)&#13;
6 50; best 1,000 to 1,100-lh do. $5 «0®*;&#13;
best fat cows,$4@5; fair to good. $3 7fi&#13;
¢¢4- t r i m m e r s , $2 4 0 0 2 75; best fat&#13;
heifers, $5 25©5 7fi: b u t c h e r heffers,&#13;
800 to 900-lb, $4 25©fi: light fat helfem&#13;
$3 SO&lt;8&gt;4; best bulls, $4 50@6; bologna&#13;
bulla, $3 75@4 50.&#13;
HORK—Heavy. $7 ©7 10: yorkers,&#13;
$6 90(8)7; pigs, $6 70(5)6 75; r o u g h s ,&#13;
$5 90(9)6; stags. $4 25@R.&#13;
Kheep—The m a r k e t w a s active and&#13;
about 5c higher than S a t u r d a y ; top&#13;
lambs. $7 75fl&gt;7 80; farr to good, $7 40&#13;
filil 70; cull In.mbR, $6 7R©7 50; skin&#13;
culls, $5 50ffS56; yearlings $6 50(5)7;&#13;
wethers. $5 75(fi)fi 25; ewes, $5 25(3)5 75;&#13;
cull sheep. $3 50((1)4 50; best. voal8,!9(®&#13;
fl 25: medium to good, $7tf?S 75; heavy,&#13;
$4®5 50.&#13;
njarnaco lie&#13;
mon-ffY:*1- Tfic twice \fiv vf&lt;&#13;
Crnlh; Kte.&#13;
j Del roil.•• Whent---Prlops in tho De-&#13;
, iniit market, a year ago wore 07 Vic for&#13;
i No. 2 i i'd wheat, il.V ior No. 3 corn and&#13;
( :&gt;;. Up (*nr \-n 0 white oats.&#13;
No receipts a n d . Vo shirunents of&#13;
I whi at ii)i Thursrlfiv. Stocks are 324,S24&#13;
j in) a;-rainKt 29»,443 bn a ye.fr ago. '&#13;
i'ovn had a weak spell yewtcrday and&#13;
, rhiseil with a loss of Vic Receipts have&#13;
hern lrti'^e for several days,&#13;
l-ip.t,iis; n.vp Uftdcss and u n c h a n g e d tn&#13;
. !&gt;i [co There lulls been ho Ihrslpe^s In&#13;
| this line-for several days.&#13;
(lain closed with a drop of \^c and&#13;
not miirh business doing.&#13;
| Kecelnts of flour yesterday were 1,200&#13;
I bids. N'o shipments. ,,&#13;
Kyr. Is quiet and In fair '''demand. N(&gt;&#13;
f0T ; change in price. . .;, r&#13;
Chicago reporter! a decrease&#13;
'%&#13;
. waBiLApiQPfirty^onuerJowwI'noUi&#13;
. er. *t would not be 10 If the^pro;&#13;
'owner would j J . w a y . hjxa &amp; f&#13;
iw{9ter, and^theh j t e a | y leave c&#13;
&gt;thips to trim. &lt; H I p i e *ott»«-Qwn&#13;
,-qflt.ea fools hlnUeW I n «ne or the 1&#13;
*o( these things. , , T&#13;
J The skilled p A i f t t e i ^ t W cotoAii.&#13;
*nit?**ydpin$ «Be toOftlutoto^HbrJt&#13;
joompetltoei Vm ' e w i f e i e d V c o a s c I -&#13;
eotiou* -workman or contractor, an&amp;&#13;
the lncoilopeWtite^^ J o b i i e ^ e r a l l ^ y&#13;
w o r k l n ^ c h e a i n -I. KM t h | s t ^ t place,&#13;
^ ' h ^ t ^ q ^ i A i f i i * * hired, {hey&#13;
".do [not leave everything to him, a* »0&#13;
.many property-owners boast they] do.&#13;
• They interfere most ignorantly&amp;nd&#13;
rmo£t family. ,'^Fhey: lnaist s o m e t f a e s&#13;
on. using paJnt materials without In-&#13;
"Ve^Ugating whether they a r e good or&#13;
ipol O f pertAp» t n e r RiBlst o n . the&#13;
{p«ijrter'»iinTTyin» the ^rorfc——&#13;
mens mro&amp;nd my house a ttofrttr^he&#13;
wife Bays, and wkaA wtfe sayB goes—&#13;
at the cost of a lot of wasted painting&#13;
money. , L w . . i ***i-it.-i&lt;-'&#13;
If tfie painter stays' )$wj|^ a/f fcw&#13;
days to allow the paint to thowuShly&#13;
dry t h e otfner i a y s : , H ^haVl?0W^, *8&#13;
neglecting this work—guess i W a sidetracking&#13;
m e for Jones' work, ^i won't&#13;
stawut";"';:;;, ,,-,. ^1'1 ,.;!% ,:\&#13;
W h a t chance does a palmer have t o d o&#13;
good work for A m a n w h o i s eon^Unuatay&#13;
nagging at htm and otherwise handicapping&#13;
Wto (wlthoft^^ae^ninlg 1^1 of&#13;
course)? A poor job is the inevitable&#13;
result of such Interference.&#13;
Poor painting costs the homeowner&#13;
money—don't foTjget that, ft - m i | h t&#13;
pay yon to get the practical paint&#13;
book, painting apecrficitioas a n d ; i n -&#13;
strument for detecting p a l a t s adulterants,&#13;
which .National Le^d Co. a r e&#13;
offering u n d e r . t h e title « * ||MHJB&gt;&#13;
Owner's Painting Outfit M0L ' # , 4d&gt;&#13;
dress National Lead Co., 1½½ T H t i l T&#13;
Bldg., New York City. T s J i _&#13;
do not make paint (they leave" thaY~t6&#13;
the painter to do) but they make&#13;
pure white lead ("Dutch Boy Painter"&#13;
trademark kind), and they can tell&#13;
you how to save money by securing&#13;
durable painting.&#13;
CONSOLING.&#13;
Artist—Yes, ray art is my fortune.&#13;
Model (cheerily)-—Never mind. Poverty&#13;
is no crime.&#13;
CUTICURA CURED H I M .&#13;
the couplr. who have not t e r n « r m ! demand , , p n r u ' n a ««"™«e &gt;" &lt;'"&#13;
since tho wr-drlin^. ' Barley I? firm snd in pood demand * •&#13;
Eczema Came on Legs and Ankles-&#13;
Could Not W«tr Shoes Because&#13;
Of Bad Scaling *nd Itching.&#13;
"I have been successfully cured ot&#13;
dry eczema. I waa inspecting the removal&#13;
of noxious weeds from the edge&#13;
of a river and was constantly in the&#13;
dust from the weeds. At night I&#13;
cleansed my limbs but felt a prickly&#13;
sensation. I paid no attention to it.&#13;
for two years but I noticed a scum&#13;
on my legs like fish scales.. I did not&#13;
attend to it until i t , c a m e to be too&#13;
itchy and sore and began getting two&#13;
running sores. My ankles were all&#13;
sore and scabby and I could not wear&#13;
shoes. I had to use carpet and felt&#13;
slippers for weeks. I got a cako or&#13;
the Cuticura Soap and soja* Cutteum&#13;
Ointment, In less t h a n .Is*, 4**» I&#13;
could put on my boots a n d * * JflffetiMftA&#13;
three weeks I was free f r e ^ M N J M * '&#13;
founded itching. Capt. George r / B t t s s ,&#13;
Chief ot Police, Morris, Manitoba, Mar.&#13;
20, 1907, and Sept. 24, 1508," ,&#13;
Potter Drug a Clwm. Corp., Sol* Propt* Boitoo.&#13;
What Ailed Tdmmie&#13;
Totnmle was eating welftiiis. —R&#13;
mother cautioned h l o l . l A p e t&#13;
many, fearing they mmH&#13;
sick. Presently he cajtji^li,&#13;
on his stomach and a"ve1ry"&#13;
look In his face.&#13;
"Those t u t s have made you sick, 1&#13;
see. I just knew they would," said&#13;
the mother. i&#13;
"They haven't, either," whined Tonv&#13;
mle. "1 am not sick; it's' just my&#13;
pants are too tight,"—Deltheator.&#13;
The Grip of Sprlritf.'&#13;
Durirljr the last twerity years rmny of our&#13;
(MtizmslmVft been nttaeked in'the spring&#13;
months by grip. Home liftve 'had wrious or&#13;
slight att«ck» every year,or two* All knew&#13;
it to be a dan«erou8 disease.. If Lane's&#13;
Pleasant' Tablets (wMpri, tirv "xolrl "n.t; 2,T&#13;
rents ^1-)ox bv drugfri«t« and dealers) n.ra&#13;
tiken M+en tfte fir»t gyn\pk&gt;m9 aro, fplt,&#13;
there in hardly a .chnneo of the uwdauy Ret*&#13;
linK n foothold.. If you. ennnot get them&#13;
near hnnic, send 2fl eehta to Ofntor F.&#13;
Woodward, Le.Boy, N. Y. ..'SAmpUy.free.&#13;
iir , ' .;('.• *•: »-V n r 4 • »c&#13;
Tho dentist is invited to attend,&#13;
many a swell gathering.&#13;
- \&#13;
•*'*v-&gt;»v.,„&#13;
' - ' , 1 . ' ( • : &lt; • • -r^-,'&#13;
.'^lp**.&#13;
* • ' - , •&#13;
r&#13;
1 BOY NORTON&#13;
P ^ ' ^ x S P ^ f c ^ f f ' ^ ^ ? ^ ^ ^ 7 7 " ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^*^*^SSS™&gt;&#13;
They're ouri!&#13;
8 Y N « P « i a .&#13;
:n: " M&#13;
"Vanishing FleeU," a story of "-what&#13;
intent, ba»% happened." &lt;^uu lx» Waahinjfton&#13;
with the United Jtate* and Japan&#13;
n«3|(i«kCrOuy I«Uler. aecretary of the&#13;
BrlrteK •mbaMy. and Viae Norma Roberta,&#13;
cnsgf aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
Introduced aa lovers. Japan declare* war&#13;
amMajcea; the Phlltoplnee. .Guy HJHJer&#13;
starts for England. Norma Roberta&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida ooaat&#13;
H%waM4a-oaBt*jre4 by the 4»P*- AH port* are. tfaaJassaJapssajJ86-'* '*&#13;
*n«se beeomes eottwerful&#13;
before&#13;
"^Se"&#13;
fery of&#13;
Roberts&#13;
vloced ihM-United States. ha« powerful&#13;
a fleetfo AmericAr? watereaa a Canadian&#13;
protection agminit what the British suppose&#13;
is a terrible submarine flotilla- Htifier&#13;
Is sent with a message. Fleet mystertoustar&#13;
disappears. The kaiser is missing.&#13;
King Edwardj&gt;f England to confronted&#13;
by Admiral fievina of the United&#13;
Stale*. Tka.Dreadnaught. biggest of England,'&#13;
s warship*. 4« dlHcovered at an-impassable&#13;
point 1n the Thames; The story&#13;
now goeevback to a ttJSM.nett!. month*&#13;
- - - ^ —- «MXnventor&#13;
and cabinet,&#13;
produc-&#13;
&gt;n elec-&#13;
_ -vessels. A&#13;
of the mysbuilt.&#13;
The naystrue&#13;
levUatlort is solved,&#13;
evolves a great flying machine.&#13;
The cabinet plans a radloplaae&#13;
war against Japanese. The start for the&#13;
•bene of conflict with a large fleet of monster&#13;
airships is made with Norma in command.&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.—Continued.&#13;
"Number One will engage the cruiser&#13;
on the extreme right Two will attack&#13;
the battle ship on the port bow&#13;
of thf flagship. Three will take the&#13;
battleship on the extrette left,%'atf$ so&#13;
on, ending &lt;with the declaration that&#13;
the Norma, would often JJ^B engagement&#13;
by.' •IrUtJug the Tt*h«t -the hjad&#13;
of th»ui»tta«t&gt;r,(.ct^v; '&#13;
Fighting ^Jevifce tajtniad away from&#13;
hi8 signal box.when tfte lae^ confirmation&#13;
of his Instructions had been received&#13;
And looked at the girl in the&#13;
hood. At tbat«higk 'altitude the early&#13;
rays,.of the sufy were shiverJtng^he&#13;
gloo&amp;of the Interior through the glags&#13;
' porta-In the dome. As If In a glory&#13;
of silver she stood before him, outwauUy&#13;
earn aad emotionless; but in&#13;
the ealtaate pals* of her body, the expeetaat&#13;
waittaf of* her hands, and the&#13;
ateee&gt; eat f l a y of the dials before her,&#13;
s h e ww'ftie embodiment of sufficiency.&#13;
Feeling his look and waiting for hiB&#13;
command, she moved her head till her&#13;
face was' tamed full upon him, and in&#13;
her eyes shone the Are which through&#13;
all the ages has led valiant warriors&#13;
to fields of victory. The glory of&#13;
youth, the Inspiration of patriotism,&#13;
and the determination of fearleastress&#13;
were blended in their light and exultantly&#13;
waiting the battle call.&#13;
Accustomed as he was to the terrible&#13;
intoxication of fierce conflict, the&#13;
gray old admiral felt himself enthused&#13;
by this slip of a girl. He was a man&#13;
making the last fight of his life with&#13;
the incarnation of the Goddess of War&#13;
at his elbow and mutely cheering h i »&#13;
on to the charge. Every nerve wtthta&#13;
him strung itself in tensity, tfet matcles&#13;
of his body I s t s H i to contract&#13;
until bis baa* IMrtT tfcTmak between&#13;
tari flfcaihw rteifljail, Ms resolute&#13;
Hw t w f w m * a » a * « * 5 his short hair&#13;
awalw^ 4» kiif#lj 'as he leaped toward&#13;
*Wr; ^fkv« w a y to his excitement and&#13;
fairly shouted: "Now! Go to them!&#13;
Quick, hard and fast! At them!"&#13;
He jumped back to his point of observation,&#13;
and even as he did so the&#13;
great radioplano shivered with a surcharge&#13;
of energy, reeled drankenly&#13;
ffcroaji 4 * w r • * • * *fr t h e A c t i o n of&#13;
• i i ^ ' W u t r w J * 1 U ^ f . and in one&#13;
Open her tip wide.&#13;
They're o u n ! "&#13;
UOutaUe the &amp;iMiBa*ajr*wag torn t y&#13;
a whirlwk»»V at »aaiM»b«it» 8rcd in a&#13;
MM»«Mt^ic»' a^amo^ Uttwd mttbiM&#13;
ad?amaryi^wbiob w*» .lajlvinx; dbwswara)&lt;&#13;
unaa tbg Ita It Wag thettr lalt&#13;
h6p#- at H0tB&amp;ju&gt;&gt; Tlfey had 'tested&#13;
their guns repeatedly at' long range,&#13;
an]t preyed them ineffectual .aAmjst&#13;
an enenly that cojuld tr^vef*w^ft; a&#13;
speed beside which that of the awifteat&#13;
bird of prey wa* InHignincant.'-' They&#13;
ha4 watched thiMV.gtntnge uncatta*-&#13;
thiuga lift themselves to a prodigious&#13;
altitude with Incomparable eaee, carry&#13;
awajr-.and rejavenate a wounded oompaniea&#13;
which had bees struck by the&#13;
rtereat chance, turn toward each other&#13;
as if ih communication, whirl out in&#13;
long lines, betokening the perfection of&#13;
Cf n|rgl, had waited for a downpour of&#13;
'missiles; and then, when amazement&#13;
at this marvelous demonstration had&#13;
reached its climax, they had witnessed&#13;
the sudden swoop in their direction.&#13;
Now in hopeless impotence the men&#13;
on the deck ftf,the, doomj^i I^o lost&#13;
their heads and ran frantically to and&#13;
fro. Up to the very.laet, one or two&#13;
«f the.4iua crew* elev#ted.and firedrelevated&#13;
and fired—with methodical&#13;
precisian like men in a trance and&#13;
aetaated by hawrtonly.&#13;
The panic-stricken swallow vainly&#13;
winghvg .his way through the air in&#13;
wild endeavor to escape the talons' of&#13;
l a J t ^ y ^ o ^ e y ^ ^ a ^ ^ odt Wit o ^ w Ihey haanl&#13;
her can.. rHbldjrwtr 4Va&gt;a going to&#13;
strike!"&#13;
And then, even as they sought positibni&#13;
of aetitffity, the great nulloplane&#13;
felt a s*add*n?»harp cwieuifalon&#13;
of i m p e c ^ a * tbe top: ©t thfe flghttng&#13;
mast strttek tta bottotfe plete, crumpled&#13;
like a match, and Went eras&amp;lhg downwartf/&#13;
¢, debris 'or-twi»teO," useleas&#13;
steel. Even witbin the chamber there&#13;
penetrated to them the terrified&#13;
shieks a,nd despairing cries ti the men&#13;
Of Japan., ' * " ' j&#13;
Another quick smashing blow almost&#13;
threw those at the dynamoH from their&#13;
fe^t, more cries were.heard without,&#13;
aed tbe^t t ° r the. small part of a second&#13;
there waa sileace and immobility.&#13;
Even the storm of fire {rom, the. other&#13;
ships had ceased.&#13;
Norma alone seemed endowed with&#13;
power of movement, and sprang Quickly&#13;
from lever to lever and switch to&#13;
switch, issuing her battle cry. "The&#13;
dynamos! The dynamos!" she called.&#13;
"Full speed, and stand clear for fear&#13;
of accident! I've thrown the magnet&#13;
currents! Quick! all your power before&#13;
others can train a gun on us!"&#13;
Her voice was sharp and decisive, end&#13;
her words snapped like lashes, driving&#13;
them to action. "Steady, steady!''&#13;
With almost the instantaneouaaess&#13;
of its stop, the radioplane shivered and&#13;
throbbed with increased energy. The&#13;
dynamos hummed and roared, the&#13;
rar^Sw-WIe their prows' tWtha * ° ° D wT«*W~TO MORAL,&#13;
Scream of Shot and Shell Broke Into a Pandemonium.&#13;
-^•Wftr^/^^^11^^ at 8UCh&#13;
::^m-4fmjm;Hrf» of speed that the engineers&#13;
by the dynamos instinctively&#13;
threw themselves to the floor, the man&#13;
on the lookout'seized the bars before&#13;
him, gasping for breath, and the admiral,&#13;
startled, whirled toward the&#13;
figure in the hood, fearing that some&#13;
fatal accident had occurred.&#13;
There, erect, triumphant, and fierce,&#13;
stood the woman glorified who was&#13;
striking the first blow for her country's&#13;
honor and her father's exaltation.&#13;
She was fairly hurling the machine&#13;
through space, her hands grasping the&#13;
levers of descent and; her eyes on the&#13;
periscope which portrayed the position&#13;
of their helpless victims.&#13;
Bavins, in a fury of excitement,&#13;
shouted U s approval with storms of&#13;
oaths, completely swept out of himself&#13;
oy the fierceness of the assault "Good,&#13;
the darting hawk would have had&#13;
more chance than they before this onslaught.&#13;
This gigantic embodiment of&#13;
doom was leaping down upon them&#13;
with su*ch terrific velocity and at such&#13;
an angle of flight as to preclude all&#13;
possibility of defense. Irresistible,&#13;
implacable, and noiseless, it was&#13;
plunging for the final thrust. Its very&#13;
method of attack was so surprising&#13;
and so unexpected that, they were&#13;
awed with fear, helpless, benumbed,&#13;
despairing and conquered. They were&#13;
men done to death and suffering the&#13;
agonies of wounds before the blow had&#13;
fallen. It was all accomplished with&#13;
such rapidity that not even the most&#13;
terrified had time to rush to the rails&#13;
and throw himself into the sea. When&#13;
the instant of death seemed imminent,&#13;
they were paralyzed into inaction and&#13;
cowered together, waiting for the&#13;
shock of annihilation.&#13;
And their suspense, although of a&#13;
different nature, was scarcely more&#13;
keen and heartbreaking than that of&#13;
those in the radioplane which was&#13;
hurtling at them.&#13;
The admiral was still crouching like&#13;
a man prepared for a blow, when Norma&#13;
with quick energy tilted over another&#13;
lever and checked the descent.&#13;
Those within the shell felt, their hearts&#13;
come back to the normal and were&#13;
once more able to breathe freely. It&#13;
was like the application of a powerful&#13;
brake to a falling elevator, save that&#13;
there was no abrupt jar, no discordant&#13;
sound of steel on steel, and no shock&#13;
of friction.&#13;
Norma quivered like a race horse&#13;
under a cruel whip, then steadied&#13;
itself, seemed to gather its forces together,&#13;
gave one mighty lift, and began&#13;
to ascend. The frightened cries&#13;
from without subsided in stupefaction.&#13;
The fighting admiral with clenched&#13;
fists was running the length of the&#13;
radioplane, staring through the lower&#13;
ports, and hoarsely voicing his exultation,&#13;
hiB eyes flaming with the joy of&#13;
victory.&#13;
Out on the sluggish waves which&#13;
had now changed to a coldly gleaming&#13;
gray the other vessels of the Japanese&#13;
fleet witnessed the beginnings of&#13;
catastrophe. They had seen this incredibly&#13;
monstrous thing drop from&#13;
ether upon their flagship, crumple its&#13;
upper works like paper, attach itself&#13;
to the turrets, and then with phenomenal&#13;
power actually lift from t i e&#13;
ocean 20,000 tons of steel—a floating&#13;
fortress believed but an hour ago to be&#13;
invincible—and bear it away. Even&#13;
as they watched they saw this strange&#13;
god which had grasped the pride of&#13;
Japan in his clutch deliberately shaping&#13;
his flight higher and higher into&#13;
the great void of the heavens and&#13;
passing out of their world.&#13;
Of what use were guns against&#13;
these strange visitants, whose only&#13;
human mark was the flag of the despised&#13;
enemy? In hopeless screams of&#13;
terror their sirens awoke the echoes&#13;
with weird, despairing wails, and their&#13;
engines under full speed sent the&#13;
screws lashing through the water ia&#13;
a last desperate effort to escape kf&#13;
waves the superstitious,, sailers t e es&#13;
ancestors, and prostrated themselves&#13;
M r \i\$ in fpee^'tpieva** seizure&#13;
was Ineffectual.&#13;
3 •$*?*., * s , the- Mfi, f held f ^ k by the&#13;
Norma, was becoming a spejk agalntst&#13;
the disk of the moaning sky, a n t ^ i r&#13;
of those strange creatures made a&#13;
scarcely less abrupt descent upon the&#13;
Kasbima.VStacka and.masts -went&#13;
down with a crash as had those others.&#13;
The great wiagies* terror jticfeed&#13;
her up into the air before b,er enginea&#13;
could be stopped, ajaq,, with her scrtsw&#13;
beating the atmosphere like the flutteriug&#13;
Huts of a fish captured by a&#13;
marauding eagle, sailed off with her&#13;
Into the blue above.&#13;
Once moro they tripd the effect of&#13;
gunnery, when the Katori was threateuv4;'&#13;
but it was futile, and, reading&#13;
*heir doom, they w.aited their turn. It&#13;
was .not long, in coming; for s e w by&#13;
twos and threes they were t#rn train&#13;
the ocean and lifted ajgft. The colliers&#13;
were the last to'saccumb, and&#13;
their crews, realizing that the bulhi&#13;
alone would come in contact with the&#13;
implacable demon* above, ran screaming&#13;
below decks to continue their supplications&#13;
to the deaf gods who had&#13;
deserted them.&#13;
From the thick glass of his port the&#13;
admiral looked down upon his conquered&#13;
foemen and watched the precision&#13;
with which his orders were being&#13;
obeyed. Each time a victim was.&#13;
seized he shouted: "Three's done her&#13;
work!" or "Good boy, Seven! You've&#13;
got him!" and so on enumerating each&#13;
success.&#13;
Some movement on the deck of the&#13;
I to close at hand arrested his attention.&#13;
His brows came together again&#13;
In a fierce scowl. "Stand by the magnet&#13;
levers, Miss Norma," he commanded,&#13;
"because of these fellows below&#13;
mean to show the least resistance&#13;
whatever, we'll drop 'em!"&#13;
- She had been standing serenely in&#13;
her hood, her head thrown back, reveling&#13;
in the glories of triumph. When&#13;
the fate of the battle had hung upon&#13;
her performance, and when her own&#13;
life was threatened, she had thrown&#13;
herself body and soul into the fray,&#13;
wide eyed, unresistant, and without a&#13;
tremor; but now, at the thought of being&#13;
the executioner of perhaps a thousand&#13;
men, her face blanched, her&#13;
limbs trembled, and her hands forgot&#13;
their task and clasped together in imploration.&#13;
She was the woman again,&#13;
ready to plead for the lives of those&#13;
she had conquered.&#13;
• "My God! You wouldn't do that,&#13;
would you?" she said.&#13;
The old gladiator of the sea turned&#13;
upon her fiercely, "Do it? Do it? I'd&#13;
drop them to hell a3 quick as I would&#13;
to the bottom of the Pacific if they&#13;
show fight!" he responded. "We're&#13;
out here to teach a lesson, and they&#13;
deserve all that's coming to 'em! War&#13;
is no child's game," he concluded grimly,&#13;
"and the first ship that wants&#13;
trouble goes down like a thunderbolt,"&#13;
As if to emphasize his remark, he&#13;
sprang to the signal box and Issued&#13;
this sanguinary order to every radioplane&#13;
in the fleet, while Norma, faint&#13;
and sick at heart, shut her teeth and&#13;
with a look of inexpressible pain&#13;
turned back to her levers.&#13;
But she was spared this dreadful&#13;
work. The Japanese officers and men&#13;
had learned the absolute futility of resistance,&#13;
and doubted the efficacy of&#13;
appeal! Their one hope for life now&#13;
rested in tha humanity and leniency&#13;
of those who held them in thrall.&#13;
It took no long chain of reasoning&#13;
to conclude that an enemy who could&#13;
pluck them from the seas and without&#13;
visible effort, lift them more than a&#13;
mile high could as readily release has&#13;
hold and send them to destruction&#13;
with meteorlike speed. Even were it&#13;
possible to destroy those monsters&#13;
which clutched them, to do so would&#13;
be self-annihilation.&#13;
They were ignored, cut off from&#13;
those above, and divorced from the&#13;
waters beneath as if they were creatures&#13;
of no importance/to be treated&#13;
like mere troublesome insects, exterminated&#13;
or spared as their captor's&#13;
whim might dictate. The glory of an&#13;
easy conquest in the Philippines, the&#13;
boastings which had followed the subjugation&#13;
of Hawaii, the pomp and circumstance&#13;
of previous conquests—all&#13;
were obliterated, all erased fsom the&#13;
scroll of valorous deeds b^ an action&#13;
which had lasted less than an hour.&#13;
And now, like beaten legionaries&#13;
chained to the victor's car. they were&#13;
being carried away toward the rising&#13;
sun and an unknown fate.&#13;
(TO B E C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
Tf" ^^¾¾¾¾ ^ ¾&#13;
"RabBfcJoseph Jfcrauskopf, Onr eloquent&#13;
preacher^ said a Philadelphian,&#13;
"bflf s. aqpd rather than evty in the frequency&#13;
ef \ inrlcan e^vuape. He sees&#13;
in it a a l g n ?&amp;aL-A*** rl**n wives will&#13;
not endure the treatment that European&#13;
.wjvtju put up with. H«f,aeti8 in&#13;
it a yrojnlse that the married men of&#13;
the future will live better.&#13;
"Discussing the divorce question the&#13;
other day. he told me-tbajt'tKey'Wtlo&#13;
pereelved only evil in it ieminded&gt;bim,&#13;
In their illogical and confused viewpoint,&#13;
of a little boy with, whom he&#13;
oojce took a stroll.&#13;
"As they utrolled, they passed the&#13;
young girls of a neighboring boarding&#13;
school out on their daily walk. The&#13;
rjirls moved in military formation, two&#13;
by two. In front were the youngest, in&#13;
skirts to their knees. Next came the&#13;
older ones, in the order of their ages,&#13;
their skirts lengthening with their&#13;
years. And in the rear came the oldest&#13;
of all, the young ladles, whose&#13;
skirts hid even their boots.&#13;
"The little boy looked at the girls.&#13;
Then he frowned and said:&#13;
" W h y Is it that their legs grow&#13;
shorter as they grow bigger?"'&#13;
I N H E R I T E D K I D N E Y T R O U B L E .&#13;
Squelched Eccentric Poet&#13;
One day Charles Baudelaire, the eccentric&#13;
French poet, came to Maxino&#13;
du Camp's rooms with his hair dyed&#13;
green. Du Camp affected not to&#13;
notice it. Baudelalro did all he could&#13;
to direct attention to it. and finally, as&#13;
his friend persisted in not noticing&#13;
it, he hurst out: "Don't you see anything&#13;
strange about me to-day?" Du&#13;
Camp answered:. "Not at all; lots of&#13;
people have green hair." Baudelaire&#13;
At onoa, disgusted,&#13;
Could Feel U Constantly. Gaining&#13;
Ground as Time Paaeed.&#13;
Mrs. Frank fcoseooom, 512 W. Washington&#13;
St., Moscow, Idaho, says: "Kidney&#13;
trouble was hereditary,&#13;
and my&#13;
parents spent hundreds&#13;
of dollars trying&#13;
to cure me. * I&#13;
was nervous, my&#13;
eyesight had failed&#13;
noticeably, my circulation&#13;
was bad,&#13;
sleep fitful, heart&#13;
action Irregular, and my back so weak&#13;
and painful I could hardly stand it.&#13;
There was also an irregularity of the&#13;
kidney secretions and a cold always&#13;
made the whole trouble worse. I could&#13;
tell many other symptoms, too, but&#13;
shall only add that Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills made me free of all of them."&#13;
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
What He Lacked.&#13;
It Is related of a South American&#13;
general, who was extremely well&#13;
pleased with himself, that once, when&#13;
about to sally forth to a grand dance,&#13;
he surveyed htmself contentedly in the&#13;
mirror, and then soliloquized thus:&#13;
"Ah! Thou hast all—bvawecy,&#13;
wealth, position, good, looks. Ah, what&#13;
dost thou lack?"&#13;
Whereupon his orderly, who, unknown&#13;
to the general, was close at&#13;
hand, remarked:&#13;
"Sense, general, sense!"&#13;
STATS or Oaio CWY or TOLEDO. )&#13;
LLCAJ COUNTY. f •*•&#13;
FRANK J. CHE.NET makes oath that he Is »»101&#13;
partner of the flrin of F. J. C'MEMEY &lt;fc po., doing&#13;
business In th* City1 of'Toledo.* Co«»»ty and Stata&#13;
aforea^l. and that said firm will pay the sum oi&#13;
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for eaoh and every&#13;
! caso oi GOPAJUUJ ttiat.caanp^he.WU'fid, by the u*i ol&#13;
I HALL'S CATARRH CURB.&#13;
FKATiv J. CU5NKY. 1 Sworn to before me aad'Mbwrtbed tn.&amp;y presence,&#13;
UiU 6th day of December. A. I).. 1886.&#13;
i ~*~ i A. W. OLEASON,&#13;
' ^ t . f NOTABT PTOUC.&#13;
Halt s Catarrh Cure 1» taken Internally and *et*&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho&#13;
' system. 8eod for testimonials, frrc.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O&#13;
Hold by all Driunrtota. rise.&#13;
I Tafcc Hall'a Family Pills lor constloatlon.&#13;
\ Diplomacy.&#13;
"When a man has an argument with&#13;
his wife, and she proves thai he is is&#13;
' the wrong "&#13;
"Yes?"&#13;
"Should he own up to it?"&#13;
"Xn. That's bad business. He&#13;
should maintain he was right, and&#13;
then so out and buy her something&#13;
nice."—Cleveland Leader.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t to M o t h e r s ,&#13;
: Examine carefully every bottle sf&#13;
I CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that It&#13;
i Bears the&#13;
j Signature of&#13;
| In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
| The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
Hospitality.&#13;
"And did you enjoy your African&#13;
trip, major? How did -you Ilka. t s »&#13;
savages?"&#13;
"Oh, they were extremely&#13;
ed. They wanted to *eep rae'tlittstils*'-^&#13;
dinner "—London Opinion.&#13;
Just Shoot Twice.&#13;
"I thought you said this gun would&#13;
shoot a thousand yards?"&#13;
"It will."&#13;
"It won't. It only shoots 500 yarda."&#13;
"Well, it's a double-barreled g\ua/&#13;
ain't it?"&#13;
A Domewtlt? B y e R e m e d y&#13;
Compounded by Experienced Phyalc:&#13;
Conforms to Pure Food and Drug's&#13;
W i n s Friends Wherever Used. Ask&#13;
gists for Murine E y e R e m e d y&#13;
rlno in Your Eyea. You Will U k e&#13;
- i&#13;
k&#13;
' Some people would have tQ&#13;
1 overtime if they practiced halt&#13;
I they preach.&#13;
&lt;3wt,&#13;
PILKM CITKBD I X S TO 1 4 D A T S .&#13;
PA20 01NTMKNTtssrti»**ntA«l to eur* a&#13;
of Itching. Hllnd. BIMWIIM or Pi-otradiai&#13;
S to 14 day a or money refunded ~&#13;
*&#13;
Some people avoid popular eoi&#13;
{because they are food of music .-•• ,.*i.&#13;
''"IT&#13;
,J&#13;
KT&#13;
f&amp;&#13;
, i ?&#13;
•K&#13;
'CC"' " T -&#13;
? # •&#13;
tar?&#13;
A"v&#13;
V&#13;
:%&#13;
r&#13;
•to fiwkimt i^atch&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS db CO. PROPRIETOBS.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAtt. 18,1909.&#13;
I t i s r e p o r t e d t h a t - t h e ways and&#13;
m e a n s c o m m i t t e e h a s decided t h a t&#13;
t h e new tariff bill shall carry a&#13;
t a x on coffee, «ttd tea a n d a n i n -&#13;
creased t a x ' o n beer.&#13;
From Florida.&#13;
•v&#13;
If &gt;ou ntwi &amp; pill ttke D'a Witts Lit&#13;
tie Early Risers. Insist on theru;&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little !iv«r pills.&#13;
Bold by all dealers.&#13;
It Saved Ills Lag,&#13;
"All thought I'd losu my l e / " writes&#13;
J . A. Swenson, Water t w n , Wis. "Ten&#13;
years of Eczema that !•"• doctors could&#13;
act cure, bad at last laid rue up, Then&#13;
BnciJens ArnicA Salve cured it sound&#13;
and well.' lnfailable for skin eruptions,&#13;
Ecztna, Salt libeuui, Ho Is, Fever&#13;
Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts and&#13;
File*,. 25c at Sillers DruR Store.&#13;
You may not be a n y too well&#13;
off yourself, b u t think of how&#13;
rich you' h a v e helped to make&#13;
J o h n D . Rockefeller. E v e r y&#13;
cloud has a silver lining.&#13;
Tlmv i.. not H Iw-t't'r Salve than De-&#13;
Witts Cai-buli^ri Wndi Hazel Salve.&#13;
We hereby wain to ouhlic that we are&#13;
not responsible tor :"any injurious&#13;
effects caused tVuni worthless or poisonous&#13;
imitations or our DeWitts Uarboliied&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve, the original.&#13;
It is good for anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially ! shooting in t h e n i g h t a n d&#13;
Tallahassee, Flu.&#13;
March 7,1909.&#13;
P e a r H o m e F r i e n d s ,&#13;
1 call you "homp&#13;
friends" for a l t h o u g h home to me&#13;
now ie anywhere I h a u g my h a t&#13;
and 1 try to feel very much a t&#13;
home in each place yet t h e r e i s a&#13;
different feeling one has for t h e&#13;
bceues and friends of t h e childhood&#13;
home d a y s ; therefore, w h e r e&#13;
ever I roam you will alwhys be&#13;
"home friends."&#13;
Since my leaving D e t r o i t last&#13;
S e p t e m b e r my work has taken m e&#13;
to mauy places in Ohio, K e n t u c k y&#13;
Tennessee, N. Carolina, G e o r g i a&#13;
Alabama, a u d now for a m o u t h o r&#13;
so will be iu Florida.&#13;
1 am now in tue laud of s u n -&#13;
shine aud flowers where the mocking&#13;
bird sings in t h e trees, a u d&#13;
where the soil p r o d u c e s cottou&#13;
and tobacco fields n e a r Tallahassee.&#13;
T h e expense of k e e p i n g&#13;
these fields covered so they will&#13;
produce a thin, h i g h g r a d e leaf, i s&#13;
enormous. E e r e t h e negro s w a r m s&#13;
the streets, looks a t you from t h e&#13;
reed h u t s and cabins near t h e&#13;
railroads, a n d i s constantly a t&#13;
your side in the d i n n i n g rooms to&#13;
serve you according to h i s best&#13;
knowledge of polite form. I stayed&#13;
over n i g h t in Blakely, Georgia,&#13;
last week a n d in t h e m o r n i n g a&#13;
travelling mau asked at the b r e a k -&#13;
fast table w h e t h e r we heard t h e&#13;
had&#13;
good for piles. He stive you get&#13;
Witts. Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
Le j heard of the lynching. N o n e of&#13;
J us had. H e said a negro h a d stol-&#13;
. . i e n a m u l e . An officer arreBted&#13;
I t is fortunate indeed t h a t the j h i m &lt; H e resisted the officer a n d&#13;
thirty-five t h o u s a n d shoe factory s h o t ^ mounding h i m badly,&#13;
h a n d s a t L y n n , Massachusetts, T h e negro was jailed. Five m e n&#13;
ordered out on a stiko, a r e n o t ! , ,, r . nn u , , IA~„™™^&gt; a o ;/i&#13;
iv _ t e i i u *. J of the town so t h e ' d r u m m e r said,&#13;
t h e makers of r u b b e r boots a n d , . . . , . r r i&#13;
shoes this slushy s p r i n g weather. P l a u n e d to lyuch hlm' lheJ&#13;
_ ; sawed around the lock in the jail&#13;
Kills Would-lie Slayer. jdoor aud got him out. They c u t&#13;
A iLercile.s* IMU &lt;i«-ivr \&gt; Appendicit- 'his head open a n d d u g his b r a i n s&#13;
is with many victims. Hut Dr. Kings out, s t r u n g him t o a tree, t h e n&#13;
New Life Piil.-. kill it by prevention, shot his body fall of holes. All&#13;
They gently stimulate stomach, liver, 'this occured about midnight, just&#13;
and bowels, preventing that clogging a few yards from where I slept&#13;
L a s t e v e n i n g I read several selections&#13;
for some elite t o u r i s t s in&#13;
t h e spacious p a r l o r of t h i s beautiful&#13;
L e o n hotel. I did n o t d a r e&#13;
(rive t h e m a n y t h i n g s e n t i m e n t a l&#13;
because of a few native s o u t h e r n -&#13;
e r s in the g r o u p . T h e y asked me&#13;
to give s o m e t h i n g in t h e negro&#13;
dialect a n d I gave t h e m "Dafc&#13;
Fretful T i l d a Strong." . T h a t r e p -&#13;
resents an old colored w o m a n cousoling&#13;
her fretful, w o r r y i n g neighbor&#13;
by t e a c h i u g her to stroke t h e&#13;
porcupine of life the r i g h t way.&#13;
T h e r e is a good lesson iu it, if i t&#13;
does come t h r u t h e c h a n n e l of&#13;
negro blood.&#13;
T h e m o r e one travels t h e more&#13;
he realizes t h e sacredneas a u d&#13;
value of c o n t e n t m e n t with t h e&#13;
q u i e t home life s u r r o u n d e d by&#13;
vines of your o w n planting.&#13;
Therefore t h o you may b e enduring&#13;
the severities of *he cold winter&#13;
w e a t h e r i n Michigan, i t i s a&#13;
physical e n d u r a u c e t h a t i s easy in&#13;
comparison to t h e m e n t a l h e a t&#13;
a n d unrest and revenge t h a t makes&#13;
many lives miserable in t h e south.&#13;
T h e y tell some of the n o r t h e r n e r s&#13;
t h a t all t h e wealth we have iu t h e&#13;
n o r t h we got by c o m i n g down&#13;
here and stealing it from them,&#13;
devastating their homes a u d crippling&#13;
t h m for centuries t o come,&#13;
a n d as I have learned t h e conditions&#13;
in many homes a n d schools&#13;
w h e r e my work has t a k e n me I am&#13;
moved to sympathize w i t h their&#13;
feelings and ask for solutions to&#13;
the great problem t h a t confronts&#13;
t h e American people today, t h a t&#13;
of the race question.&#13;
Y o u r s most sincerely,&#13;
F r a n c Adel© B u r c h .&#13;
ADDHIQMJX10CUL&#13;
A motor track Go. will locate in&#13;
Ann Arbor and employ 600 hands.&#13;
The residence of the late Gov. Pin*&#13;
gitje a*o boon sold and will bo turned&#13;
into in Eastern Star temple.&#13;
A uood many have been paying&#13;
their subscription the past two weeks,&#13;
but there are a few more we should&#13;
hear from soon or we shall be obliged&#13;
to send out statements.&#13;
Nearly every village in this vicinity&#13;
voted dry at their chapter election last&#13;
week. This speaks well for the coming&#13;
local option question that is to&#13;
come in the several counties in1 April.&#13;
However, the friends of local option&#13;
do not want to trust too much until&#13;
after they have votei. Let eyeryone&#13;
gat out and vote.&#13;
ty hai loll therf&#13;
V liftoff^&#13;
uto.48 being%fcr*irtt» tfcator of*&#13;
KktMganU&#13;
govtmmeoi_ m&#13;
which £Mi to&#13;
oo&#13;
operations.&#13;
Robert UoFadden of Howell has a&#13;
Scotch colhe whioh has taken •«••»-&#13;
teen first p r i z e s twiee beating J .&#13;
Fierpoot Morgans $8,000 dog. I t has&#13;
been shown in New York, Philadelphia,&#13;
Toledo and Detroit a n i goei,&#13;
next to Cbicago,~Jaekson Citisen. , f&#13;
The department of agriculture b l i&#13;
issued a bulletin advocating the do&#13;
mesticationt of deer pn the farms showing&#13;
that it could be d.ne,.w^b little&#13;
expense, whiob*#C»W briegVvenison&#13;
within the raaob of everyone. Deer&#13;
are easily domesticated, and, unlike&#13;
many other wild animals, will breed&#13;
in captivity.—Republican. .&#13;
** ?*&gt;% • tf&#13;
D O N T P A V T W I C E \&#13;
V FOR T H E SAME ROOF. "&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofings are really&#13;
never paid for, because they neea painting or&#13;
coating every year or two. If you add to the cost of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting during the number of yeass in service,&#13;
you will readily understand why&#13;
J - M ASBESTOS ROOFING-;&#13;
which needs no coating—is the "cheapest-per-year Roofing.&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanently durable and resiflts fire.&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or cold can affect i t Costs&#13;
leas than elate, iron or shingles. Can be applied by anyone.&#13;
Aak for aamplea and prices-&#13;
H. W JCHNS-MANVIbUECo.&#13;
7&gt; J e f f e r s o n A v e . D e t r o ' t , Michigan.&#13;
•X F?,EG OFFER TO YOU&#13;
that inyitPs appendicitis, curing Constipation,&#13;
Biliosntss, Chills. Malaria,&#13;
Headache and Indigestion. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Siglers.&#13;
The Arkansas senate has passed&#13;
t h e state wide prohibition bill&#13;
b u t with an a m e n d m e n t attached&#13;
s u b m i t t i n g the question first t o&#13;
p o p u l a r vote on J u l y 14.&#13;
The Lurid Glow of Doim&#13;
was spen in the red f^ce, hands and&#13;
body of the little son of A, M. Adams,&#13;
of Henrietta, Fa. His awful plight&#13;
from eczema bad, for five years, defied&#13;
all remcd.es and haffied the .ioctsoundly.&#13;
I went t o t h e scene w h e r e&#13;
groups of white men a n d women&#13;
and black people were g a t h e r e d&#13;
about the pitiable object d a n g l i n g&#13;
from the t r e e — t h e white people&#13;
coming away, some of them l a u g h -&#13;
ing; the negros, no doubt, q u a k i n g&#13;
with fear a n d secret revenge.&#13;
I kept my m o u t h shut b u t d i d&#13;
some thinking. I t is not wise o r&#13;
seemingly helpful to express a n y&#13;
sentiment down here. Much of&#13;
" N o r t h e r n s e n t i m e n t " i s r e -&#13;
Near Death In Big Pond.&#13;
It was a thrilling experience to Mrs.&#13;
Ida Soper to face death. "For years a&#13;
severe lnng trouble gave me intense&#13;
suffering," she writes " a n d several&#13;
times nearly caused my death. All&#13;
remedies and doctors said I was incurable.&#13;
Then Dr. Kings New Discovery&#13;
brought quick relief and a&#13;
cure so permanent that I have not&#13;
been troubled in twelve years.' Mrs.&#13;
Soper lives in Big Pond, Pa. It works&#13;
wonders in Coughs and colds, sore&#13;
lungs, hemorrhages, la grippe, asthma&#13;
croup, hooping cough and all bronchial&#13;
affections. 50c and $1.00. Trial&#13;
battle free. Guaranteed by F. A.&#13;
Sijfler.&#13;
In order fo tell yoa more fully about the merits&#13;
of B. R S. P;unt we offer you free, our B . P . 5 .&#13;
P a i n t B u d g e t . This is a package of pa'nt&#13;
iitrrauiri: that \n;i wilt isnJ ul value whether you are&#13;
thinking of using paint now or later on.&#13;
One oi the booklets in the Budget tells how&#13;
to avoid pamt troubles, another is a handsome&#13;
iolder, showing how to test your paint before&#13;
buying. Still another is a booklet of color samples&#13;
ull, of in'ormation on estimating the quantity required, with special rules AM}&#13;
.&gt;ther information which will mean money in your pocket.&#13;
We offe this to you ' i w n order thai yo\: may " i n v e S - t l g a t e&#13;
B. P. S. before investing.'&#13;
THE PATTERSON-SARGENT CO.&#13;
GLNLRAL OFFICES AND FACTORY: CLEVELAND OHIO&#13;
Chicago New Yorh Boston Kansa.« City St. Paul Cincinnati&#13;
our&#13;
garded as "rotten s e n t i m e n t " by&#13;
these S o u t h e r n e r s who know t h e&#13;
tors, who said the poisoned blood had only way of h a n d l i n g the "nigger."&#13;
affected his Inngs and nothing r;onld ^ 0 y 0 l l 0 f the north I can safely&#13;
save him, "But" wnt&lt;w bis mother ] e x p r e 8 8 o n e t h o u g h t with which&#13;
"seven bottles of Electric Bitters com- -i, i V ,„. i.u„ c n _ M&#13;
, . , , . „ you will a g r e e — t h a t t h e so-conpletely&#13;
cured him. For eruptions, „ u . , , , . , , -L , eczema, Sa ult PRhLeu m, sores an,d a,l l sidered educated w.h ite man who&#13;
u\nnA n j ^ ^ n , , , n~A T?U *• does a deed like t h i s 1 have d e s -&#13;
Dlood Unorders and Kheunaatism&#13;
Electric Bitters ia Supreme. Only b r i b e d , is guilty of a crime far&#13;
ftOc. Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler. more atrocious and deserving of&#13;
— severer p u n i s h m e n t t h a n t h e ignorant&#13;
negro, who stole t h e mule&#13;
and animal-like resisted the officer&#13;
when taken captive.&#13;
Out in that: region of Infinite Li^ht,&#13;
W h e n the soul nf the black nmn is a*&#13;
pure as the white,&#13;
Out where the spirit thru sorrow made&#13;
wise,&#13;
XII Innperiresortw to deception and lies;&#13;
Out where the flesh run no limber control&#13;
The freedom nnd faith nf t h e G o d -&#13;
given soul.&#13;
W h o shall determine what fate m a y&#13;
hefall&#13;
J o h n and Peter and Robert :uid l'mil?&#13;
T h a t is t h e kind of s e n t i m e n t&#13;
The Sleeping Sickness.&#13;
The terrible sleeping sickness of&#13;
Ifcepical Afrieii la discussed at length&#13;
In* an article in Popular Mechanics.&#13;
disease, which long baffled sclen-&#13;
, Is spread by the tsetse fly, a&#13;
bloodsucking, dny flying Insect. On tho&#13;
^pprnarh of wither man or animal at a&#13;
liver crossing in the densest forest&#13;
tfce victim is soon" scented out. by the&#13;
Hy, if there Is one In the vicinity, ami&#13;
then, either Hilently or with a peevish&#13;
buzz, it makes straight for the most&#13;
•Ccessible spot and &lt;tfvea Its stab.&#13;
The usual course of the disease is&#13;
ftotn four to eight months. At the&#13;
qutaet there are headache, a feverish&#13;
CtOditou, lassitude and a correRpondteg&#13;
dlrtacllnation to work. The facial&#13;
MptQt Changes,and a previously happy&#13;
a M btonift&#13;
J Mtl«4 dull, heavy and aparhoth . , « . , , .. t u&#13;
Lntft^trein(• r in the tongue develops. , o n t o t t h e rottenness of such&#13;
•peech ' Is uncertain, and mumbling, t h o u g h t t h e r e m a y sometime&#13;
walk shuffling mid progressive weak- ; c o m e f h w t h f t t , w i l l r e v i v i f y&#13;
oess, drowsiness and oblivion to his n . , . . . ., .&#13;
•nffoondinjfs aifllct the sufferer. The : and regenerate t h e false mtellecthMt&#13;
itafe i» markod by axtrame ema Uftl pride of southern arintocracy&#13;
ciatlon and a com* it—twmii^ into and t h e blackman may have h i e&#13;
hand on t h e lever of t h e wine&#13;
press.&#13;
teent looking negro becomes t h C f t l l r o t t e n d o w n h e r e hnt&#13;
lull, apathetic. . „&#13;
aye Timber Bonds&#13;
9f Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company qf Ground Rapids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable serrri-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st.&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n a l $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 a n d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
Thttt bonda are dated March 4th, 1909, and mature at the rate of $50,000 each year, coraimnriog&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any iaterttt peri«d and carry tht pffcitafjl&#13;
of regiitration aa to principle.&#13;
T r u s t e e : T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . G r a n d R a p i d * . MichagMa. Michigan -Pacffic Lumber Co.&#13;
9/ Gra.nd Rapids Michigan.&#13;
Capitalisation. $1,500,000. P a r Value $10.00. Bonda. $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property teeming thin issue consists of 31,63a acre* of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, lorated an&#13;
the southweil shore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoiia aaat;-'&#13;
within itomilea of all important ports on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vaflr •&#13;
ceuver. Mr. J. P. Bray ton of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremost tiaaaaV&#13;
tzperta of the country has examined this tract of timber for us and reports a stand of mora Ittttt'&#13;
1,500,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than 20c per M ft. stumpage.&#13;
•J The present equipment compiises a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam Tug,&#13;
Rolling; Stock, ate, capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S )&#13;
CHAR. W. U K R N SRBKWAINO, MICH.&#13;
Pres,, Huron Bay I.umbrr Co.&#13;
y H. MOORR SBATTT.B, WASH.&#13;
Kx. Supt. Motivr rower, Chi., BUT. &amp; Q_. K. R.&#13;
W. T. COLHMAN, - 8BATTT.F, \VAIHII»QTO»&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska Investuent Co.&#13;
8. M. COCHRANE, CApiUlist, SBATTI.B. W A S H .&#13;
WM. L. CARPKNTHR. - - DBTBOIT. MtCH.&#13;
Of tbe firm of Stevenson. Carpenter &amp; Butzel.&#13;
CHAS. A PHBI,PS, . ORAWD B A M M , MtCB.&#13;
Timbrr Operator. Treas., Hackley-Phelps-Bonnell&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
W. P. McKXIGHT, GRAND R A P I M , Mxca.&#13;
Pres , White River Lamher Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B. B. CADWKTX, NRW TOBUI&#13;
Vice-President, Standard Screw Co.. Detroit.&#13;
C. T. MOORE, BBATTLC, WASJB.&#13;
Timber Krpert and Mill Operator.&#13;
Wo of for thoao bonda at p*r and aooruod Intarost to ytold t&gt;%.&#13;
&lt;H Privilege will be granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount ef stock of&#13;
the company. €(] Further information and prospectus showing photographs of the property furaiihedon request. E. B. Cadwell &amp; Co.,&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS&#13;
7 7 0 MN0MC0T MlfLOIIVa&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
f'i.'.-y^yf.'.Wi.^jp&#13;
^ ^ ¾&#13;
\ . * ; • * •&#13;
/•&#13;
^ - jS tmv tm^-&#13;
W&#13;
&amp;&#13;
#$w*&#13;
•I*'*,**''&#13;
PATENTS f HOCURCO A N D DtrENocif. *«alWJ&lt;|&#13;
dmwiur orphoto. for uxiwrt MttucKaud f re* wport I&#13;
Free advitx), how to obutin patents, trade marka, j&#13;
a&gt;py«1«b*«Uk, |M ALU C O U M T R i e r&#13;
Business &lt;m4ct wllk Washington sav*s tim*A&#13;
monty a/u^uften the patent.&#13;
Pitant wfd Irrfringaitunt Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or CO«M te ut *t&#13;
• I S Xtetfc Stnrt, «pp. UnraVS U M « ratart OaVw,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N . 0 . C.&#13;
CASNQW&#13;
This is juBt the time at je^r when&#13;
jou are most likely to have kidney or&#13;
bladder trouble, with rheaiuatiiui and&#13;
rheomatic p^pe t«un«4 by we».k kidneys.&#13;
Decays are daugeroub. Get De&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder pill*, and&#13;
be sure you jjnt what you auk for.&#13;
Tbey are the bests pills made for back&#13;
ache, weak back, urinary disorders,&#13;
iutiatnation of tiin l&gt;ladde,r, etu. J'liev&#13;
are antiseptic md net promptly, Sold&#13;
and reccom mended i&gt;y all dealers.&#13;
WANTED—Succi'hH Mngaaine requires&#13;
the servioefi of a man in Pinckney tu IcuJk&#13;
after expiring Bubueriutiuiib and to secure&#13;
new buainewj by means or' sjucial methods&#13;
TRAOE M A R K *&#13;
D C S I O N t&#13;
0O#*V*U^MTt) a%&amp;&#13;
Anroeeaenrlla* a i ketch .and daaertpticn may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
unusually effective, position pennanei t, _^&#13;
prefer one with experience, but woul 1 con- ! I0OII8 f o r 1 9 yettrrJ, httB o h l y&#13;
sider any applicant with yood natural j d r u g BtoreB tiud f o u r o f t h e u i&#13;
qualifications; salary ¢1.50 per day, with^ u o t He]\ ]\^noT ttt a l l , n o t e v e n t a k&#13;
Local Opt/on Notes.&#13;
Do not be afraid of the "empty"&#13;
stores after the saloons are driven&#13;
o^t of th» county. They will b e&#13;
taken in a few month's a n d good&#13;
legitimate business installed in&#13;
their places.&#13;
All the Livingston county papers&#13;
are contending that the local&#13;
option element is very stroug&#13;
throughout the county. Don't&#13;
let thia cool your ardor for the&#13;
cause, Bro. Voter, your vote must&#13;
be counted iu its favor April 5.&#13;
Van Buren county with no sago&#13;
do&#13;
FLASH&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Dirt&#13;
Hustler&#13;
commission option. Address, with references,&#13;
1(. C. Peacock. Room 102,&#13;
Magazine Bldg., New York.&#13;
Success&#13;
"~ " BT lof jewruji*patenu. aba rgMa,u innn t h&amp;e Co. recall flmcrkan. £*A"'w«*a^akkvllwy . IT&gt;.aaiKrftiAeaatt. rcAto -&#13;
Journal, Turns, $3 a&#13;
Sold by afl newsdealers.&#13;
Offloir&amp;Q V 8U Wash'lStoS; D. C?&#13;
= *&#13;
t^Beirf. for «1.00 per year.&#13;
ibecrfpe lor tfee Pliiekaer Diipatoit&#13;
*&#13;
[THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
, ; , • • , W I T H OJR W I T H O U T B O L T I N G A T T A C H M E N T .&#13;
i •§•-«* thoMt maehlrra with • This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
JO-inch Saw-and Shingle Car- -^sWiAjt^^m. *° 12,000 «hfocjes per day.&#13;
jaocr ready for cutting aalnolu ^^dSK£xSS8Sk C a r r i a 9 e 8 mii* t r o m selected&#13;
8 in. loot, a** 4 to. «10»,- '^^BHtf^^wT h a r d *ood- T r i c k '• toM&#13;
I P l l l l ITl.0%. ^aUfaW^BaWafl rolled rteel- Fot cutting shin-&#13;
*M*0*mj$+-mi - Z/P^O^T'lij gles requires 4 to 8 H. P. For&#13;
- - j ^ * ' T • ^ I j i ^ V L bo,tin9 6 to 8 H. P. Wetflht&#13;
IT IS A MONEY-MAKER Equipped with the bolting attachment it is a complete Bhingle outfit In iteelf. Can be adjusted&#13;
for auy desired taper or thickness. For cutting the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
) manufacture a high grade,low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net prices.&#13;
CIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
K n g l n e s , B o l l o r s , S a w M i l l M a c h i n e r y , E t c&#13;
iug out a government license;&#13;
while the sister County of Berrien&#13;
having 54 saloons, has also 40&#13;
UO YOU WANT TO (H&gt; TO cOL-1 drug stores.&#13;
Drunkenness has been decreased&#13;
more than 75 per cent in both&#13;
Clinton and Gratiot couuties,business&#13;
is better than before, and&#13;
men who opposed local option are&#13;
now supporting i t actively. I n&#13;
my judgement with t h e present&#13;
strict enforcement of the law continued,&#13;
the voters would bury a&#13;
proposition to return to the license&#13;
system. -Kelly 8. Searl.&#13;
The great cause of social crime&#13;
is drink. The great cause of poverty&#13;
is drink. When I hear of a&#13;
family broken up, I ask the cause&#13;
—drink. If I go to the gallows&#13;
and ask its victim the cause, t h e&#13;
answer—drink. Then I ask myself&#13;
in perfect wonderment, W H Y&#13;
DO NOT MEN PUT A 8TOP TO THIS&#13;
THING?—Archbishop Ireland.&#13;
L K ( r E ? If so we c a n h e l p y o u . W e&#13;
h a v e a l r e a d y p u t h u n d r e d * t h t o u g h college&#13;
by m e a n s of o u r plan. W r i t e today f o r&#13;
full in formation r e ^ a r d i n y o u r offer of a&#13;
free s c h o l a r s h i p in any school o r college.&#13;
A d d r e s s , R o b e r t J . Sherlock, 'J'J-31 Kant&#13;
U2nd Street, N e w Y o r k C i t y .&#13;
All the newt for $100 per year.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO., PUBS.&#13;
P L A S H is prepared tor the lian.lt, (all hands, noue excepted) to clean thoroughly&#13;
a n d Q u i c k e r than any other cleaner ur soap product on the market. F L A S H&#13;
iu different from other similar preparations iu that it contains uo acid or lye, a# it ig&#13;
not a soap, but is the result of a long period of i-umerous secret experiments combining&#13;
glycerine and other antiseptic healing oils iu conjunction with finely ground pumice&#13;
and a small percentage of chemically pure soap slock, very beneficial to the okin. xi,verything&#13;
in it is pure and healthful and guarautted not to injure ihe most delicate&#13;
hands. It is made to do w h a t s o a p c a n n o t d o »uil has become T H E D a m *&#13;
cleaner, for cleaning and preserving the hands o f a l l p c o p l K . * i n e.V«;ry c l a » »&#13;
and e v e r y p l a c e .&#13;
Prepared in a pasie form, it is applied with the fore tiugejs to the palm of the hand,&#13;
and by the addition of a little water produces a pleasing antiseptic scent*d lather that&#13;
cleanses the hands thoroughly. It.is put up in 12 ( uuce tin 1 i-xts, i;e\elled tdge to&#13;
prevent cuttiug the lingers.&#13;
ASK YOUR D E A L E R IOC kARGk CAN&#13;
J3ETTER THAN SOAP&#13;
an;&#13;
Does your back ache? Is your skin leathery and yellow?1&#13;
Is your urine murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten peraons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They don't always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before you feel it&#13;
That is why it la so necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. If&#13;
ything is wrong with your kidneys it should be attended to at onoe.&#13;
Don'»tt tt ake strong, draatio drugs. They are dangerous.&#13;
Yen will be perfectly safe and sure of a permanent cure by taktng&#13;
DR THACHERS LIVER £ BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing the caoae and&#13;
driving the inflammation and the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All Dealers Sell BOo. and tl.OO Bottles.&#13;
THACHER MEDICINE C O . , C h a t t a n o o g a , T e n n&#13;
C r a z y .&#13;
"We find the prisoner not gtiilty by&#13;
reason of Insanity.''&#13;
"But the plea w a s not that of insanity,"&#13;
remarked the court.&#13;
"That's just the point wo made," rejoined&#13;
tin- foreman. "We decided that&#13;
.»ny i n u n w h o d i d n ' t h a v e s e n s e eiioii;;h&#13;
fo know that an insanity plea was :!•&lt;•&#13;
;&gt;roper caper must be crazy."--IMiil::&#13;
'f'dnlua Ledger.&#13;
The t r o u b l e w i t h m a n y a m a n ' s [&gt;&lt;&#13;
t P M ' i t y is That i t n e e d s c o n s t a n t v l n d !&#13;
&lt;•"! ' i o n ' h i ' H ^ n N e w s&#13;
&amp;bc fturtmty gifrpatch&#13;
PUBLISHED KVJCBT THCKSDAY MOBMNU Bit.&#13;
S loacription Price $1 In Advance&#13;
Sutured at the Postomce at Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
%a second-class matter&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
F R A N K . L., A N D R E W S So C O&#13;
EDITORS ANO PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ME T H O n i S T EPISCOPAL CUUKUH.&#13;
Key. L&gt;. C. Littlejoha pastor. Services ever)&#13;
Sunday morning at tu:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer uieetingThurfcday&#13;
eveniajje. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. Miss MARY V A N F L K S T , Supt.&#13;
CONCiUKOAflONAL, CBUHUU.&#13;
' Kev. A. (i. Gates pastor. Serviceeveo&#13;
Sunday morning at lv&gt;:i0 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T:UC 6'cijck. Prayer uieetinjj 'I'hure&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of muru&#13;
iny service. Mrs. Grace Crotoot, Supt.,, J . A,&#13;
Cadwell Hoc.&#13;
WT. MA U l"5i 'J ATHUUlC OdU UOii.&#13;
O itev. -M, J. OomuierJorii, 1'aBtor. "iervi;eb&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at V:30o cluck&#13;
iugli mass with sermon at iu-.^0 a. m. Cateclusui&#13;
- t a :UU p. ui., vespersan be jd;clion at 7 :-iU i&gt;. re&#13;
I TT&#13;
tsOClLTIES;&#13;
THE HIGH GRADE LEHR PIANO IS USRD AND ENDOR8BD BY&#13;
The BtaiialCoBaemtery of Itete, Mew York ft%.&#13;
The Ptnnijlvanlt College of Music, Philadelphia.&#13;
Chicugo CiManrattry A Hlnsfcftw Sehoel of Opera, OtatHfJ*.&#13;
The PuaMo Conaamtort of Wuak, Pueblo, Colo.&#13;
ANO O T H I R LEADING 0 O N 8 E R V A T O R I I 4&#13;
• sweat yet brilliant and no&#13;
case, perfect adjnrtment and &lt;&#13;
place ft in the front rank of the 1&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano fot the home, where its&#13;
preaaaoo la a sign of culture and refinement&#13;
The 1VEHK PIANO la manufactured under atngnlarty fa^WltieooadlUoM which lenen&#13;
the ooat Of production, and it has achieved a brilliant snoceaa aa the most elegant instrument&#13;
In the, market at a satisfactory price, WRTTK FOB CATAIiOOUE AND PRICKS.&#13;
H. LEHR &amp; C O M P A N Y , M a n u r r e , - E a s t o n , Pa.&#13;
', adjustment durable workmanship&#13;
e best instruments made&#13;
werful tone, exquiarfca&#13;
workmanshil&#13;
K I L L T H S C O U G I&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
fPhe A. O. H. Soclsty of tuia place, meeti ever)&#13;
X third Sunday intue S'r. Mittuaw ilall.&#13;
John Tuoiusy anu M. i". K.ally, Ooanty Dtjlegatt^&#13;
i l\lili \V. &lt;J. 1'. U, meots the i-iymii s.±urliy 1 &lt;&#13;
WITH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
_,each month at-J;Jo p. m, at. tu&gt;j ho ua &lt; Jt t h e&#13;
members ijiveryono intereated in LeiUpuraiice la&#13;
cuaUiaity invited. Mra; *uen{ ^i^ler, L'ree. i l r s&#13;
Jennie Barton, Secretary.&#13;
he C. T. A. and li, society -if tnis place, u±« &lt;&#13;
sataruay evening in the Fr&#13;
John Donohuo, i resident. T hew Hail&#13;
eve/y third Sataruay Fr. Ai-.i&#13;
FOR O O U C H S&#13;
I U i ! ^ O L D S Trial Bottle ree&#13;
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.&#13;
PBICB&#13;
10c A «1JXL&#13;
G U A R A N T E E D S A T I S F A C T 0 B 1&#13;
O R M O N E Y R E F T J N D E D .&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEKb.&#13;
Meetevery Friday evening on or before tu;&#13;
I oi the moon at their h a i l i n the Swarthout bUl^&#13;
i Visiting brothers ,-\ro;or.liaiiyinvited.&#13;
K C, V. Van Winkle, s i r tiniiilitOiinin-dnd.i&#13;
h . P. -Mortan^on, - Record Keeper&#13;
F. u.Juckaon, - Finance Keeper&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.;'3, F A. A. i i . KOJJ'IIHT&#13;
Conimunicaiion Tuesday evening, on or bo: ir._-&#13;
theuill of the moon. ' P. U. Jackson, \\ . &gt;i&#13;
KDKR OF FASIKKN STAK raeetaeach month&#13;
the Friday evon:ng following th* rn^ula.&#13;
M. meeting, MB.^.NETTE VACUHN, \V. M.&#13;
O. L. Cirimea V. C&#13;
i n t h e&#13;
Kodol&#13;
Dyspepsia and Indigestion&#13;
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas on&#13;
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,&#13;
ftfib, ft little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet ovory la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at ^::10 p m.&#13;
Visiting -tisters cordially in&#13;
, Lady Com.&#13;
K. O. I . M. hall.&#13;
V l t e d . LlLA CoNlWAY&#13;
(TATK OF MICHl/lAN, thn prouate conrt t o r&#13;
ollowing thrt fibular F&#13;
aaici coiirt; held nt the probate office in the village I * -^-&#13;
of Howell in *aid county on the 16th 4:&gt;y of,I / { ~ E R 7 ) F ~ M T i b ^ y w7)01)MEx"Mee"t the&#13;
March A. n. 1909. Pre.ont: Hon. Arthur A., | ^ f l r s t Tnurriday evening of each Month&#13;
Montague, judge of Probate. tn the matter of | Maccabee hall,&#13;
the estate of ,&#13;
MAHOARKT ii. WESSON, deceafwd.&#13;
Milton L. Wasson having tiled in aaid court hts&#13;
petition praying that the adrainBtration of said&#13;
estate, be granted tn himaeli or to soma&#13;
other aiiitnhle peraon.&#13;
T) i^ ordered, that t h e 9th day of April&#13;
A D 1909, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probate office, be and ia hereby appointed&#13;
&lt;"or hearingsnid petition.&#13;
It ia further ordered that public notice&#13;
thereof be given by publication of a copy of this&#13;
order for 3 RucceeBive weeks previous to said day&#13;
K NIGHTS' ov THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L, Andrews F. „u, 1 BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
t l T A&#13;
l«l|Tptfta1.tlHiinTii" clip'Stivp&#13;
thtkt ftre'tound in a liealthy&#13;
¾tomach. Being a liquid, it ^t.itts&#13;
digestion at once.&#13;
Kodol not; only digests yonv food,&#13;
tint helps yon enjoy every mouthful&#13;
you eat.&#13;
You need a sufficient amount of&#13;
good, wholesomeLfood to maintain&#13;
strength and health.&#13;
1 Bfit, this food must, to, digested&#13;
thoroughly, otherwise the pains of&#13;
indigestion and dyspepsia are the&#13;
result.&#13;
' When your stomach cannot do its&#13;
ffork properly, take something to&#13;
helfe vour Rtoroach. Kodol is the&#13;
oiiliV thing that will give Ibsetoni-&#13;
Kit complete rest&#13;
Why? JBefe$u» Kodol does the&#13;
aamework as a strohg stomach, and&#13;
it in a ^ u r a i .way.,.,,. f u&#13;
So, don't ncglort your stomacli.&#13;
lHm't Ix'como a ohronic dyspeptic&#13;
Keep your stomae-h healthy and&#13;
strong by taking a little kodol.&#13;
You don't have to take Kodol all&#13;
the time. You only take it when&#13;
you need it.&#13;
Kodol is perfectly harmless.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Go to your rlnr,'(fist today and get a dollar&#13;
txitti*'. Tht&gt;n aftor you have used the&#13;
entire contents of the bottle If you can&#13;
honestly say that it has not done you any&#13;
pAjd, return the bottle to the druggistand&#13;
he will refund your money without question&#13;
ordelay. we will then pay thedrug-&#13;
H. F. 5'GLER M. O- 0 . L. StGLER M. D&#13;
DKS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPA fCH, a newsu Physiciau- .-ind sur^e.'nr.. All rails prompti&gt;&#13;
naper, printed nnd circulated in .»aid connty. attended to day a r u u ; h i . Oitice on Ntain -it teet&#13;
AHTHI-R A. MOVTAOITK, j Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
-! J. W. BIRD&#13;
.PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, rail at tile i'inckney D I S -&#13;
PATCH otn.ee. Auction Hills Free&#13;
Dt'xtfr Independant Phone&#13;
Arrangements made for sale by phone a&#13;
my expense. Oct 07&#13;
Address, D e x t e r , Michigan&#13;
KtSt. Dont healute, aJldriaMlsts know&#13;
that our gnarant** la Rood. This offer applies&#13;
to the l a m bottle only and to But one&#13;
In a family. The lartre hoUle cxmUina^i&#13;
times aa much n&lt;* the-flfty cent bottla&#13;
Kodol is p-vptirort • r t! o 1 ihorator-&#13;
| ica of K. U LioWitL &amp; Lo., L.'hica^fQk.&#13;
i l L DRUGGISTS&#13;
'ounty ol Livingston, •&#13;
At a seMinn of said court held at the Pro- j&#13;
bate office in the village of Unwell, in *&lt;aid '&#13;
county, on the l.Mli day of Niarch A. II. 1ft',9.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montague, .Fudge of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate of }&#13;
N o r m a L.. V a u g h n , m i n o r .&#13;
Nettie M. Vanghn h:i\ ing tlted in said court her I&#13;
petition praying tor * licence to *ell at private |&#13;
sale interest of aaid estate in refrain real eg- I&#13;
t»te therein iie«rril&gt;ed. I&#13;
It i« ordered that me ninth day of&#13;
Apri. \ . D. lSKr.t, at teu o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
:itml&lt;\ probate nfttce, be and ia hureby app&#13;
o i n t s for hearing said petition, ;tnd t.h.it all&#13;
peraons interested in aatd estate appear hefora&#13;
naid court, at eald tim&gt;» and plaoe, t &gt; show c.4use&#13;
why a licen.oe to sellthr interest of o&amp;iil estate&#13;
in i^aid r»ai estate should not be granted.&#13;
It in further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
ba (riven by publication ot a copy ot thix ordar&#13;
for three Bucoewaive week» previous to saul day of&#13;
bearing iu the Tinrkne-f l&gt;i^p«tph. ;i r&gt; &lt;rwpaper&#13;
P1 luted .inii i irt-'iiiaii^ ml. .,.,1 k ,j„...j. i -J.J&#13;
ARTHXJB A. WoNTAQUaa,&#13;
Jw4n 4V r nWw a V&#13;
M W. DAN1EL8,&#13;
" A , OKNKaAX AUCTIONF.EB.&#13;
titttiatacti^ n Ciuaranteed. For information&#13;
cavil at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
UngOry, Mich, r. f. d. 2. hyndilla phone&#13;
oganecnon. Auction bills and tin cap&#13;
lOniLgiied tree.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
HOTARf PUBLIC&#13;
WITH sat&#13;
ATDairATCHOF^FlCG,&#13;
Women Who Suffer&#13;
\iin Pi s arc the&#13;
Mother&#13;
the past&#13;
"Dr. Milt-' Ami&#13;
best pain rcmeily un eart1&#13;
and I have u.-ed them -'&#13;
seven vears."'&#13;
M I S S O R L E A N A SCTTI'.XKE,&#13;
Lnul, OklaV&#13;
Pain is simply nerve disturbance.&#13;
D e r a n g e m e n t s in a n y part of t h *&#13;
b o d y irritate t h e nerves centered&#13;
there. i&#13;
Dr. Miles' A n t i - P a i n P i l l s&#13;
stop pain and misery because t h e y&#13;
allay this irritation. W o m e n find&#13;
.great relief from periodical .suffering&#13;
by takin.tr D r . ' M i V s ' Anti-Pain&#13;
Pills on first niUica'c n -d pain Of&#13;
distress.&#13;
T h e f i r s t p a c k a g e w i l l b e n e f i t ; i f n o t ,&#13;
y o u r d r u g g i s t w i l l r e t u r n / o u r money.&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
S CENTS.&#13;
if your dealer don't handle&#13;
them aeud to us for a box as&#13;
a trial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this is the cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
MANUFACTURED B t&#13;
CHRISTUM BB0t, . tensor?, ft.&#13;
The Great Diarrhoea&#13;
and Dys&amp;ilery Remedy&#13;
Cures acute and chronic diarrhoea, dysentery,&#13;
cholera morbus,'4 summer tomplainl,"&#13;
Asiatic cholera, ami preve«ts the development&#13;
of typhoid fever. - Same 'wonderfnl&#13;
results obtained in all parts cfthewctkL&#13;
" WORKS LIKE MAGIC."&#13;
Price 3 6 e e n t s per b e t .&#13;
D o n t accept a «nb«titute—aao-ealled"|a\aA&#13;
asxoori.'*' IfyoiiMlrugirist haan't It and doaVt&#13;
care to get i t foe, you send direct to • v&#13;
THE ONTARIO CHEMCAw COMPAlft*&#13;
Oswego, N. Y., U. $. A. *&#13;
•0&#13;
• ilM»&#13;
%•&#13;
s&#13;
'rm •VM&#13;
jr-v.'?r.f. :v '*tf- ; / - - ; • « •&#13;
r U T&#13;
31&#13;
. &lt; - • • ! •&#13;
*..*'*&#13;
* ! * «&#13;
• ! • : , : * • • • •&#13;
•.r&#13;
LW &gt; • &gt;&#13;
...7.&#13;
E #&#13;
'£&#13;
?-^t%*:.&#13;
* $ .&#13;
'fc-%1&#13;
« SIP •WlWff HORTICULTURE&#13;
i O i p N T ftEAttfB&#13;
toow Injurious Coffee Really Was&#13;
Many persona go on drinking coffee&#13;
y e a r after year Without realizing that.&#13;
i t is the cause of many .obscure but&#13;
^erpj^tent, ailments.&#13;
^ *rtje. drug-r-caffeinr—in coffee and&#13;
fea, ,is very like uric acid and-is often&#13;
.the cause cf rheumatic attacks which,&#13;
Sfteft coffee Is used habitually, become&#13;
&gt;sh rente.&#13;
f .- A Washington lady said, recently:&#13;
"I &amp;m,aixty-i]ye and have had a good&#13;
deal of experience with coffee. I consider&#13;
It very injurious and the cause&#13;
of m a n x dj&amp;eases. I am sure it. causes&#13;
decay of teeth in children.&#13;
. "When I drank coffee I had sick&#13;
spells and *till did not realize lhat&#13;
coffee could be so harmful, till about&#13;
I ,ft. yP*r * * ° * h a d rheumatism in my&#13;
fc satins and fingers, got so nervous I&#13;
not sleep, and was all run down.&#13;
"At last, after finding that medicines&#13;
' m e no good, T decided to quit cofentirely&#13;
and try Postum. After&#13;
ft six monlhs I fully recovered&#13;
' h e a l t h beyond all expectations, can&#13;
sound and my rheumatism is all&#13;
M "There's a Reason."&#13;
Maine given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek. Mich. Bead the famous little&#13;
book, "The Road to Wcllville," in pkgs.&#13;
ttv»r m * ike nbovf letter? A a r w&#13;
m tr+m Mme to time. TMey&#13;
•e, thif, ami fall of k s n u t&#13;
( U s * W * as Attractive «• Po«sibl*&#13;
INDIVIDUALITY}&#13;
.j,,s .&#13;
Wanted Longer Sermons.&#13;
, It was a proud boast one clergyman&#13;
made to two or three others who were&#13;
h a v i n g a quiet chat in his study the&#13;
o t h e r night—namely, that he had actually&#13;
on one occasion been asked to&#13;
m a k e his service, both prayers and&#13;
sermon, a bit louder.&#13;
His brethren regarded him with superstitious&#13;
awe, and one asked, feebly:&#13;
. -"Where on earth was that'.'".&#13;
&gt; "Well, boys," was the t'ranjk. confession,&#13;
"it was with a goal where I acted&#13;
a s chaplain for a short time. The&#13;
Itoor beggars dreaded to leave the&#13;
church for their cells."&#13;
A Tabloid Fable.&#13;
A man once collided with an opportunity.&#13;
* -&#13;
**Why don*f you look where you? are&#13;
iSQing?" growled the man. — &gt;* •—&#13;
"Don't you recognize me?" asked the&#13;
opportunity, pleasantly.&#13;
• TOo^.a^.^dpirt &lt;iare to. You have&#13;
•troddei ©fll sty tsdrmV' replied t h e man&#13;
a s he limped away.&#13;
Moral: Don't believe the people&#13;
•who say they have neyer had a chanca&#13;
:—New York Times.&#13;
Proving His Caution.&#13;
Elder W. H. Underwood, chaplain&#13;
of the state senate; Was walking down&#13;
jlk, street at his homo at Clay Center recently&#13;
with a friend. Another friend,&#13;
with whom Underwood joked a good&#13;
.deal, met theni aud said: "Klder, I&#13;
thought you were careful of the company&#13;
you keep."&#13;
" l a m , " replied the chaplain, walking&#13;
l i g h t on. "I'm not going to stop."—&#13;
Kansas City Journal.&#13;
Alas, How True!&#13;
"I often wonder," remarked Mr.&#13;
StHbb, in solemn reflection, "if the last&#13;
tnan on earth will have the last, word." j&#13;
"Of course he will, John," laughed j&#13;
Mrs. Stubb. I&#13;
f ^Iftnt why are you so sure?"&#13;
"Because (he last, woman will give&#13;
It to him."&#13;
Trees are much like human Velngs&#13;
and each tree has an individuality all&#13;
its own, and muat be dealt with accordingly.&#13;
As in any other business,&#13;
one must have a liking for the work&#13;
and become acquainted with all of the&#13;
factors that enter into the problem.&#13;
Where one succeeds another faJJs^although&#13;
the environments of aaoja ilay&#13;
be the same: Success ' d o W notr depend&#13;
wholly on t h e kind of soil ifrr* the&#13;
location or the orchard; these .are&#13;
minor factors.&#13;
With a young orchard the first object,&#13;
after the trees are well set in&#13;
soil that has had at least two years'&#13;
preparation,'is'to* adopt stieh'method*&#13;
of cultivation and fertilization for the&#13;
land as shall give the tgee&amp;jpoajible^&#13;
healthy growth to tk«H treas. The few&#13;
years that intervene between the setting&#13;
and the bearing periods are the&#13;
most vital to the future productiven&#13;
e s s of the orchard. During this*, period&#13;
a judicious method of pruning&#13;
• teust be systematically followed in,&#13;
order to grow trees of the desired&#13;
shape.&#13;
No orchard will yield good returns&#13;
unless it receives good care and attention..&#13;
. .-... . . .&#13;
Clover is the apple tree!s best friend&#13;
and right hand supporter. It Is the&#13;
economical nitrogen . storage battery,&#13;
the most essential element for the production&#13;
of the tree.&#13;
In any case it is much better for&#13;
each individual orchardist to try his&#13;
own experiments to determine what&#13;
his own particular orchard needs in&#13;
the way of fertilizer than to go haphazard&#13;
and think that he must do just&#13;
as his neighbor or some one else does.&#13;
The fertilizers required on another&#13;
orchard might be entirely thrown&#13;
away on his own. A few years spent&#13;
in a careful, judicious, manner will be&#13;
the only way to reach a satisfying&#13;
solution of the fertilizing problem.&#13;
We writ assume that the belief is&#13;
prevalent ^haf it pays1 to cultivate and&#13;
spray whatever the other conditions&#13;
of the orctiard^Wrty be: s#Mn erdei ?o&#13;
make the fertilizer test one should&#13;
treat the trees of the whole orchard&#13;
alike as to all other conditions.! Th,ls&#13;
is the only way to make'a satisfactory&#13;
test and if it is not thoroughly and&#13;
accurately done the owner will be the&#13;
only loser and the experiment will be&#13;
a total failure. Ijt is one of the things&#13;
to be deplored that the average farmer&#13;
does not try to use his own individuality&#13;
in-his business, but is willing&#13;
to follow the same methods from year&#13;
to year that he has learned from those&#13;
who went before. These tail-end&#13;
methods are not successful and'never&#13;
will be.&#13;
The business methods of a decade&#13;
past could never succeed under the&#13;
present system. If not in business&#13;
why should they in farming? The&#13;
present generation has every opportunity&#13;
for advancing over the one just&#13;
passed.&#13;
HOIMK O R O U N M .&#13;
i»k. .&#13;
r&#13;
lav* • Lawn.&#13;
'J - * ' ) M»&#13;
id plantB surmunding&#13;
"analogous to the frame&#13;
iT&amp;&amp;&amp;****t1* a*raiged&#13;
* 4 ^ f o W t f s ^ * * * i £ ^ * * t n e \&#13;
and help to present a natur- l..^^o^N«dW|:afVO f A good Matty sell &lt;*«oneeded to be&#13;
, M't^tyjbest for trees and ornamentals,&#13;
- -.- -¾½¾ ivMtH#M&amp;*W•*"*%• M ^ ^ t o&#13;
Dealt with Intelligently. ] haul this kind of soil to aUrt the trees&#13;
in,i&lt; • . i&#13;
The 'Bise uf the hole to dig for the&#13;
trees depends on the size of the plant.&#13;
However, one rule cap be given: Be&#13;
sure and dig the hole; large enough to&#13;
accommodate all t h e roots without&#13;
crowding them.&#13;
, Before selecting your trees, take a&#13;
'drive thxdugh the neighborhood to see&#13;
^what. t r e e s and P ^ a t e * r e al*"e a d y&#13;
growing W t h : success in tfte yards of&#13;
your neighbors; also write to your&#13;
experiment station and get its list.&#13;
From the two sources you can make&#13;
a list of the ones that would suit your&#13;
si£e best.&#13;
In ordering trees do not select those&#13;
«fcat sure too large, because. it has&#13;
been found that the best success has&#13;
been secured -with smaller trees, especially&#13;
with conifers.'&#13;
All plants, to insure the best success,&#13;
should be transplant*!- 'during&#13;
the dormant season, ac&amp;jwhile they&#13;
can be set out in the f a f T ^ r winter,&#13;
spring planting is prefe%hlej\ writes&#13;
write*: J. £ . Jduhdell of New&gt; Mexico&#13;
(Mo.) station.&#13;
In trairspiautiug do not place the&#13;
trees too close together or where they&#13;
will obstruct the front view of the&#13;
house. Plant the shruba and ornamentals&#13;
in front of the 'trees, also&#13;
near the house, to soften the outlines,&#13;
und^ in the sharp angles made&#13;
by the walks or beds. To' prevent&#13;
shading of shrubs and ornamentals&#13;
they should not be planted too cldse&#13;
to the trees. When flowers are planted&#13;
they should be placed in front of&#13;
the shrubs to finish the background.&#13;
tti is not a good plan to cut up the&#13;
Jawn in front of the house by trees&#13;
or shrubs; a few small groups of&#13;
shrubs planted in the proper places&#13;
will break the monotonous outlines&#13;
of the lawn.&#13;
After planting the plants they should&#13;
receive good care and attention.&#13;
Plenty of water must be supplied to&#13;
them, either naturally or artificially.&#13;
The soil should never, be allowed to&#13;
become dry. The time to irrigate&#13;
Van-be'-determined fc# examining the&#13;
soil. If the soil around the plants&#13;
cracks open'too soon after Irrigating,&#13;
the cracks should be closed by fiilllng&#13;
with soil or tamping it down. This&#13;
should be done until the trees or&#13;
plants are established.&#13;
Pruning the trees and shrubs should&#13;
be practiced only when necessary.&#13;
Plants should be pruned ta give them&#13;
form, to remove extra growth and&#13;
dead branches, t h e natural form of&#13;
the trees, shrubs and ornamentals&#13;
should be preserved as much as possible.&#13;
Limbs removed should be cut&#13;
4©ff close to the trunk to Insure quick&#13;
healing of the wound.&#13;
EMM j....r*i&#13;
fr^AT ^ B r ^ l ^ N a l f ' K l L U Q f c&#13;
DOLLAR V * l t O I C T 18 A&#13;
N U L L I T Y ;&#13;
GOVERNMENT CASE LOST.&#13;
Judge Anderson Instructed the Jury&#13;
to Return a Vardjot of Not QuiUy&#13;
and Case Ends.&#13;
Judge Anderson decided to Instruct&#13;
the jury in the Standard Oil I2&amp;.000,&#13;
000 case to find- the company not&#13;
•guilty.&#13;
The decision of the court was an&#13;
nounced at the close of the long argil&#13;
ment by Assistant District Attorney&#13;
iVilkerson, and the jury was immediately&#13;
summoned and instructed to return&#13;
a verdict of not guilty. ~~~&#13;
This means that ail h u t two of the&#13;
pending Indictments against t h e Standard&#13;
Oil Co. of Indiana are void and&#13;
win be abandoned by t h e government.&#13;
The two cases not affected by the decision&#13;
are cases involving the shipment&#13;
of 1,915 carloads of oil from&#13;
Whiting, Ind\, to EvansvMe, Ind., via&#13;
Doltdn Junction, over the Chicago &amp;&#13;
Eastern Illinois railroad.&#13;
T h e r e is absolutely nothing on&#13;
which a conviction in this case could&#13;
stand, before any court in thht country,"&#13;
the court said in concluding his&#13;
charge to the Jurors. "The government&#13;
has failed to prove Its contention that&#13;
the 18-cent rate was the lawful rate&#13;
between Whiting and East St. Louis&#13;
a n d ' t h a t t h e ' d e f e n d a n t ' h a d wilfully&#13;
accepted a lower rate, and there is&#13;
nothing to do b*t ft&gt;r the Jury to bring&#13;
of^their o4*e&gt; the j 1 &amp;*4 »v,4}rnjght |&#13;
J r e - i o ^ ' o f add;-,&#13;
. ! - • » ^''martieumrK cover- j&#13;
ing.vtUe&gt;da'tocta: fidjritfijl. out by the !&#13;
court;; ajaff;/hegatC««wtpents ip, the ( hope of i n t f t t e t t g ^ u d f ^ A j i t i e r r o to&#13;
reverse-hIs.t*ectsion.&#13;
Tny-^rst'v'flfte of a r ^ m e * * was&#13;
against thQ-court's indicated, .decision ;&#13;
tba* the 18-cent freight -rate, under&#13;
which the indictment was drawn, could&#13;
not be.. ^established i&gt;y the". Illinois&#13;
classirleation. ^According to the gov- i&#13;
ernmenfs poiut of view, the published&#13;
rate on oil from Whiting, Ind., to East ;&#13;
St. Louis, was 18 cents. This was es- 1&#13;
lablfBttedby means tot* tariff. £&amp; 1« its&#13;
application to tlfe-flltntais classMicatfon i&#13;
Issued in 1899; In'1900 a tie* ITiiAois j&#13;
classification wap issifJJdTjan^ fjbe hi-;&#13;
terpretation of the court's oplmow is&#13;
that this invalidated the t&gt;i4-4&lt;atff»*i&#13;
Without the legal pu^jbjei) ?tt$3?he&#13;
oil company could not be prosecutes.&#13;
tosr&#13;
For WomeiivLydia E Ptakbam'sVefetableCoiiipeflAd&#13;
DSsinff tuxtHBHi&#13;
suffered f r o m&#13;
Noah, r y . - - " I wa* passing&#13;
the Change of Life ana goffer&#13;
hWMtocfaej.v nne,rarao&amp;m&#13;
well and fltrong, to&#13;
taatlcandttJTmy&#13;
hovaeworlc. and a&#13;
tauL-to too atoi&#13;
and&#13;
muc&#13;
tuna* Vefrtabte CompooSSa tfte&#13;
mooeaaM remedy for all klnda-&gt;«*&#13;
fenale kcoubiea, aaaV I f « l that («SJI never paOae it amwab»V -^Maa. Tjairp&#13;
T&amp;OLLAsnh JnToah, ^Ty.&#13;
TheChinaeof life }i ^ho Serlod ¢1 I woxnaxx'a&#13;
egleot of health at this&#13;
disease and pain.&#13;
Wometiey«ry5rbAre&lt;hOAiId^eiB«mbor&#13;
that thera ta no other remedy anowuto&#13;
caedicJne that will BO sitQoeaataUjrcacKar&#13;
women through this trvin* period aa&#13;
Lydia E. PlnKham'a VegetaDle Con&gt;.&#13;
pound, made frora native roots ana&#13;
herbs. • • » '&#13;
For SO yean it has been curing&#13;
women from the wont forma of female&#13;
ilia —inflammation, ulceration, displacements,&#13;
fibroid tumors, irregularities,&#13;
periodic pains,, backache, apd&#13;
nenroJMJ»T(^trauon.&#13;
tial l a f i a ? i ? 3 f i ^ R S ^ m , ^ i&#13;
Lynn) MPaMlEjnipoe 1» fr««V&#13;
&gt;»#»a»e»a»#»a»»»ee»»e»flS&#13;
A Sale and Sure&#13;
Coagb Cure.&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
Dees Ml cwrtata OsJSsJBi&#13;
Mwpldn^eralVaa&#13;
ux&#13;
1» , I " I I , •&#13;
LAWN ORNAMENT.&#13;
ORCHARD A N D GARDEN.&#13;
Tf possible don't take your seed potatoes&#13;
from a cellar in which there is&#13;
a furnace. Usually their vitality is&#13;
impaired.&#13;
When a thaw comes, see that the&#13;
grapevine trellis is put. into nice condition.&#13;
Straighten posts. Tighten and&#13;
fasten wires. Tie up vinos. Remove&#13;
and burn brush.&#13;
The most, obvious and the easiest&#13;
means of controlling the brown-tail&#13;
moth and some other insect enemies,&#13;
is the collection and destruction of the&#13;
winter nests after the leaves have&#13;
fallen. These webs are conspicuous&#13;
from October to April.&#13;
T H E HOG AND T H E COW.&#13;
How Half a Barrel Can&#13;
Use Of.&#13;
Be Made&#13;
A very nice ornamentation for the&#13;
lawn is shown in the drawing. I made&#13;
it by sawing an&#13;
o i l b a r r e l In&#13;
t w o a s s h o w n&#13;
and mounting it&#13;
on legs, writes a&#13;
correspondent in&#13;
Farm and Home.&#13;
I painted it in&#13;
nice shape and&#13;
set one-half of&#13;
the barrel on each side of the walk&#13;
and used them for growing flowers&#13;
in during the summer. They are very&#13;
pretty.&#13;
The Latter ts Necessary to the Profitable&#13;
Raising of the Former.&#13;
I have given up the idea nf trying&#13;
to grow hoss and dairy cows sepaarately.&#13;
If I am to raise hogs I have&#13;
settled down to the conviction that. I&#13;
must, have a cow or cows to help&#13;
raise food for the pigs, and if I am&#13;
going to keep cows for the purpose of&#13;
making butter F must keep hogs and&#13;
pigs to consume the milk.&#13;
I have a good herd of dairy cows&#13;
and a number of sows that produce&#13;
me litters every year. I have not.&#13;
paid mirch attention to raising fall&#13;
When the cow's udder is caked or&#13;
feverish, bathing it with her own&#13;
warm milk is good.&#13;
my pork and butter a long ways to&#13;
market, and not feel it so much as I&#13;
would to pay high prices for the feed&#13;
I give my hogs and my cows.&#13;
The cows are the only means that&#13;
I know of by which the roughage on&#13;
the farm can he made good feed for&#13;
the young pigs and the growing young&#13;
hogs. When the pastures get short&#13;
in late summer the hogs are already&#13;
hair grown and are gathering a larg*&#13;
part, of their own feed. The cow is&#13;
not then so much needed, but still the&#13;
skimmtlk helps out the ration of corn&#13;
that. I begin to feed as soon as I wish&#13;
to supplement the pasturage and skimmilk.&#13;
pigs, for my barns are not suited for 1 find,' too, that it pays to feed skimit;&#13;
but I raise several litters of spring! milk right through the fattening period,&#13;
a s the hogs make a better growth&#13;
on earn and milk and pasturage than&#13;
they do on corn alone or even on the&#13;
corn and pasturage. I have an opinion&#13;
that this good feed helps to keep the&#13;
hogs growing steadily from their coming&#13;
into the world till they go out of&#13;
it. The fact that milk ia so greatly&#13;
relished by hogs is a pretty good sign&#13;
that i t Is^p4,jgreat nuJrltiTa value to&#13;
thema vw&#13;
pigs and these need milk just at the&#13;
time the pastures are getting good&#13;
and spring feed is abundant.. I think&#13;
that, for this kind of a combination a&#13;
southern location is better than a&#13;
northern location.&#13;
I find, too, that livtng where I have&#13;
not railroad facilities 1 6 B help to this&#13;
kind of work, for labor is cheaper'than&#13;
elsewhere and all kinds of homeraised&#13;
feedn arp cheaper. I can haul a:&#13;
Exterminate the B*acJL*Hara9i&#13;
Kx-President Roosevelt.y'adtedShis&#13;
tribute to thousands p a i d ^ ' t W s T m m v&#13;
ory of Joseph Petroslni, the-N^w T o r i ;&#13;
Italian detective and arch foe of Black&#13;
Handel's, assassinated-.. in ' Palermo,&#13;
Sicily.&#13;
"I can't say anything," said Mr.&#13;
Roosevelt, "except to express..,my&#13;
deepest regrets, Petroslni was a great&#13;
man and a good man. I knew him&#13;
for years. He did not know the name&#13;
of fear. He was a man worth while.&#13;
I regret sincerely the death of such&#13;
a man,"&#13;
"Extermination of the Black Hand"&#13;
is the slogan now, not only of the&#13;
New York police department, to which&#13;
the Italian criminal class had always&#13;
been the gravest menace, but of the&#13;
police department of every large city&#13;
in the country.&#13;
A special detail of police is now&#13;
working under orders to corral every&#13;
Black Hand suspect in New York city.&#13;
The police will not wait to catch their&#13;
men rod-handed.&#13;
Tt. is expected that the funeral of&#13;
Petrosini in New York, the arrangements&#13;
for which are already under&#13;
way, will be a memorable occasion.&#13;
•Jlw&#13;
i&#13;
.- -w otter KsTcsflc&#13;
•r aafttt4e&lt;Ktaj drag.&#13;
Neahing of a poiatf oti* &lt;nT fcarm-&#13;
!• f u l ^ a r t c u r wt*ra&gt;Jajfcb^oomcure&#13;
. Aoughs t h a t sanhqi.be cured&#13;
by aJBjj&amp;other medicine.&#13;
I t mw saved thousands' from consumption.&#13;
It has saved.thousands of Uvea.&#13;
A 25c bottle contains 40 doses.&#13;
At all druggists', 25c„ 50c and $1.&#13;
D o n l aeeepl anything else.&#13;
Stop the Scrap.&#13;
Plans nre perfected for patrolling&#13;
Fonesca bay, the Pacific outlet for&#13;
Nicaragua, Salvador and Honduras,&#13;
and preventing President Zelayas from&#13;
sending Nlcaraguan troops to invade&#13;
Salvador should he attempt to do so.&#13;
Both the United States and Mexico&#13;
are determined that the peace treaty&#13;
to which both are parties shall not&#13;
be violated.&#13;
Interest was attached in official circles&#13;
to the denials of the presidents&#13;
of Nicaragua and Salvador of the&#13;
stories that hostilities between the&#13;
two countries had broken out, but it&#13;
was stated that such rumors played&#13;
only a part In a situation which, to&#13;
employ the expression of a high official,&#13;
had become very disagreeable.&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
Don Manuel Braganza, pretender to&#13;
the throne of Portugal, has renounced&#13;
all claim to the, throne o u | , ^ sympathy&#13;
with Kin*'Manual and will aid&#13;
in the regeneration of the nation.&#13;
Hirschel Hogg; confessed ' member&#13;
of the band of Tennessee nitfhtriders&#13;
that killed Capt. Quentin Rankin in&#13;
October, escaped from the' jail in&#13;
DreRden. Tonn., and has not been recaptured.&#13;
....-&#13;
Lieut.-Col. James H. R*&gt;ld.vTT. S. N.,&#13;
dived from the second story window&#13;
of the naval hospital In Washington&#13;
while the nurse was out of the room&#13;
and received injuries t h a t ^ r t U likely&#13;
cause .his death. He wmt. ill with :&#13;
tow. • ; , , '&#13;
TOWERS FISH BRAND&#13;
WATERPROOF «m»&#13;
O I U E D . , . u i /&#13;
CLOTHING win qrve you full value&#13;
for every dollar spent J&#13;
and Keep you dry in v&#13;
the wettest weather.&#13;
SUITS •SSS&#13;
SLICKERSy *3©o&#13;
POMMEL SUCKERS&#13;
SOU) EVEBYWtEPg&#13;
&lt;ATM09 rSU&#13;
A J . T O W E R CO. BOSTON,\5&amp;K*^&#13;
TOWER CAKAOIAN CO. UWTLO TO*O«TO,CAX.&#13;
Ibis Trade-mark&#13;
Eliminates All&#13;
Uncertainty&#13;
In the purckasrsf&#13;
point matatiaav&#13;
It is an ?l*wtoa»i&#13;
guarantee dMvt* t&#13;
fty arul quinty.&#13;
F o r y o u r own&#13;
p r o t e c t i o n , see&#13;
that it is on the side of&#13;
every keg of white lead&#13;
you buy.&#13;
umui LCtteswuT&#13;
UttTfMfr&#13;
/ -&#13;
to&#13;
tati tfc—MB per t*r» far mi..&#13;
t woodarfal grmm of tta« Motor? ,7&gt;«Mta*fmm j&#13;
16 tons of h»y par wcr*sndiOtoot Motui b*.|&#13;
luidm. It»lmptrpro*i.rrow».g*owal Catlttotey&#13;
landtnA wMkaltlooksfor th« nowm Ag»tc,*n&lt;1l&#13;
I no on. Grow* and flparlahM avwqrwli*!1*, on avsr? I&#13;
I farm la imnflA, CTmptiairtt ItramatajiDi*!&#13;
1 bottom l*ndt ot KcTPt* Biff aecd catalog- (no e* I&#13;
l*«nd lOo in itanpaaad H » | T O aampl* of tttUl&#13;
^ . ^ . , -fa^^ijoefupait,^haesraatwnixter.]&#13;
kt», C1&lt;TT*T», QraaMi, «to,, eta, ,aad oata&#13;
lioirfre*. Or Mndl4G *»d wowllladd a •ampta]&#13;
lfannaacdnoTftity n«r«ra«en by you bafortv&#13;
8AL2ER SEI0 CO.. B*x W. U T&gt;st««. Win.&#13;
K N O W N S I N C C r s 3 * A S R C L I A B L E&#13;
C&amp;CoR,C APSULES&#13;
SUPERIOR REMtOY, URINARY OlttHARfitSn&#13;
0RUf».,l«&gt;TS o" H&lt; M A t L o N H t " C C l P T n j S O '&#13;
H P i A N T f N &amp; f . 0 * » \ H » MHY STRR0'&gt;KIYN M v.&#13;
W. N. U * D I T R O I T , NO. 12, 190«.&#13;
A l t a i Nelaos left Benton Co., Ore-&#13;
H « M 1 ^ ***** *c*&gt; the great&#13;
C*iM&amp;m&gt;&amp;Xm . * &gt; % * • from hla . , - - _ _ , - - .&#13;
lefeett r! "I***** , * n ^ r aurprtaed to *«* nervoumuas. In order that everybody&#13;
ftrnT such'anIwi&amp;ar* Waten of rich *—»••*•«• «•«*-«• *- **«* « - —A"—^&#13;
virgin pralria atill almost unoccupied&#13;
tb% very &amp;e«xt of $orth America,&#13;
splendid crop* \&gt;f data, wheat, bar-&#13;
*»*•&amp;#* and, tiajh * *«**ld to the&#13;
/, fjtt lamlata jgMd* aaa, very eager for a&#13;
piece pj: taia ricb aqM» and I soon 1*&gt;&#13;
amted to taa Gooae L+kv cpuaiWi We&#13;
have Here a great str&lt;&#13;
deep.clay loan d* tl&#13;
a^foJl.neav^and&#13;
tlcularly well adapted- for U# T«-&#13;
tiqji of moisture aad pro^ctloa of&#13;
bright No. r haffd &lt; wadif, • Sad&#13;
t crops of oats, badeyr flax and paa%.&#13;
Jofce .c* jnfr tatfibor* had atfll&#13;
ajgaJM^eldi.• Wheat-yielded frfo-SO&#13;
t^Mmwm w^acfe; . yr# have ;$i&#13;
djaruCiW&lt;n here, • and I could nwjae&#13;
•tanfr American* *fta eaatefatr* wHb&#13;
neearW te^feo abe«d, who have done&#13;
bigvAlr^dy. For hoxB«teads one has&#13;
a^fffetper* west, but the peat prai.-&#13;
fy: &lt;t*f pa ftbught here for from $12.00&#13;
to f 19.00 per acre. .The climate ,rB&#13;
d»y aad'o/sttfthy. ,,Thte Ja the regular&#13;
Saskatchewan' fall weather2— frosty&#13;
il«ht^ antf fright, Butray days—ideal&#13;
ftfr threihtng; and haulrn^ out of&#13;
j^heatp ;Thetrpij8 are-di^sty, as'thousands&#13;
of wheat' teams are moving&#13;
tpwarda the elevators. .&#13;
i "The sight of it makes one stop and&#13;
WOnder what It will be in a^few years&#13;
vrfhett tW fmmeriee pfairies get under&#13;
c^rtivBtio'in" TIeavy -snowfall Jis the&#13;
ejtce^tjont here. ^m&gt;$" generally falls&#13;
i£. I^fectjniher. and gQes off in" March.&#13;
M mm0m^ gets yejy .«ai«V Jwi'lthe&#13;
•Hfesaik s i n Jarmm ds«tHso&gt;:y|ear&#13;
t a * ss}4 Wiaaatv*fch&lt;%~-iieiia.&lt;&gt;f&#13;
fcelf, and warm stables for his horses.&#13;
He need hot,'like some, be poking&#13;
about In the mod all winter attending&#13;
a few beasts for a livelihood."&#13;
INSTRUCTED.&#13;
' Doctor-rWhat are you aiding In that&#13;
t*fc? You'll catch your Snath.&#13;
* Patient—But, doctor, tfUfc't you tell&#13;
me to take the pills in water? u&#13;
CrOVEftWMCNT'CAftCY * C T OPENING&#13;
OP IRRIGATE* IL AND.&#13;
tfrf*J¥ «%v|Uta State of Wynning Will&#13;
100 Irrigated tftarma&#13;
•UM»4per aero at Cooper TLake, Wyo.,&#13;
at $6 per acre cask *nff*3 per acre&#13;
annually for ten years. iPree railroad i&#13;
fare,'steeping and dining.car accommodations&#13;
and FREE DEED to TWO&#13;
tOWN LOTS to aH applying BEFORE&#13;
MAY 1. Applications and particulars&#13;
furnished ay TALLMADQE-BUNTIN&#13;
LAND CO* Ageata. Railway Exchange,&#13;
Chicago. Agent* w&amp;a&amp;id.&#13;
Worse and stiorte.&#13;
"I tell you, mamma,*' cried Fa-eddle,&#13;
"I don't like that doctor's medicine."&#13;
"But this is liniment, my dear,"&#13;
coaxed his* mother.&#13;
"Well," replied Freddie, very doubtfully,&#13;
"isn't that rubbing it in?"—Harper's&#13;
Weekly. .&#13;
-*- —n¥-~&#13;
Every Woman WW fl*t&#13;
It you ***• sates to tai J i * Utixmr$,&#13;
"Waat a woman's&#13;
a* i*»\r!*,?JJna •o»«r»f*IHng ng-&#13;
Mother Gray Co.. I * Boy. « T.&#13;
It's not difficult to jodgc some mem&#13;
by their clothes—policemen.and letter&#13;
carriers, for example.&#13;
M ^ H vBB ^HVUC&#13;
Sore&#13;
O^a.w.tonSi&#13;
xnay have a chance to test the nsediuiae,&#13;
large trial bottles, valuable literature, History&#13;
of Epilepsy and testimonial*, will be&#13;
sent by mail abtolutely free to all who&#13;
write to the Dr. May Laboratory, 548&#13;
Pearl Street, New York City.&#13;
Like Producing Like.&#13;
. "How did that manager come out on&#13;
MB beauty show?"&#13;
"I think he made a handsome proflt."&#13;
"Brown'8 Bronchial Troches" relieve&#13;
Bronchitis, A s t h m a , Catarrh a n d Throat&#13;
Dlaeaseu. 2S cent* a box. Sample* aent free&#13;
by John I. B r o w n &amp; Son, Boston, Mass.&#13;
Bjr the time a girl gets old enough&#13;
to believe that men don't mean the&#13;
nice, thiuga they say, gb^Aa ao old&#13;
they don't say them any more.&#13;
P e t t t f s e y e 8 a l v * 1©0 Yeara O l d ,&#13;
relieves tired eyes, quickly cures eye uehea,&#13;
inflamed, spre, watery or ulcerated eye*.&#13;
All druggiat* or Howard Bro«.Buffttlo,N.Y.&#13;
What, la defeat? Notuing but education,&#13;
nothing but the. first iBtep to&#13;
something better—Wendell Phillipa.&#13;
That 11IMXATIVB. BaOXO fttJlMINII. Look&#13;
tbe 6ignmtur« o f E. W. § B O V k . Used tfa« Vf«&#13;
uvef uj Cure » CyOU in On« fiu. 'tielot&#13;
urld&#13;
Much of the chronic 1amcn&lt;am in horses is due to neglect.&#13;
See that your horse is not allowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's&#13;
Liniment on hand and apply at the first signs of stifjness.&#13;
It's wonderfully penetratingr—goes right to the spot^relievcs&#13;
the soreness — limbers up the Joints and makes the .muscles&#13;
elastic and pliant. ^ - Sloan's Liniment&#13;
will kill a spavin, curb or splint, reduce wind puffs and swollen&#13;
joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweeney,&#13;
founder and thrush. Price, 5 0 c and $1.00-&#13;
D r . E a r l S . S l o a n , - - B o s t o n , M J&#13;
Sloan's book on bbfaoa, cattle, afceop wad iMHiltiif •••&#13;
•&#13;
It love wasn't bUnd Cupid would&#13;
have a lot more work to do.&#13;
DODDS '&#13;
K I D N E Y&#13;
i, PILLS&#13;
\W:&#13;
'Ouara1!!&#13;
SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by&#13;
these Little Fills.&#13;
They also relieve Distress&#13;
from Dyspepsia, ladigestion&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Ealing. - A perfect rem*&#13;
e«ly lor Dliziness, Nau&lt;&#13;
« a ^ , Drowslaesa, B a d&#13;
Taste in the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain In tta« 4&#13;
S i d e , TORPID UVEIV^&#13;
tttae Bowela. Purely Vegetable. \&#13;
For DISTEMPER Pink Eye. Epizootic&#13;
Shipping Fever&#13;
&amp; Catarrhal Fever&#13;
B a r » « a n a M pcattt^ay 1* »*utlT&lt;, BO natter how bona* at any as« a n Infected or&#13;
L" Ll4taM.irt*aa «a u t tea«Be: act» on UM blood ana Uteaaii expels th«&#13;
DiatefBt aad Cholera ia&#13;
anmaa bateaa&#13;
thJeoat. Keep&#13;
DiateBipar, Cauaa*&#13;
apafdal avcatf wanted.&#13;
SPIWI MEDICAL C8., . % . ¾ ^ . ^ 6DSHEK, 1N0„ U. S. A.&#13;
SMALL F B I , SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine Musi Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
HEFUSE SUBSTITUTESa&#13;
These New Towns in the&#13;
Northwest All Need Men&#13;
Hundreds of new towns are springing up all over&#13;
the Pacific Northwest.&#13;
T h e big, easy fortunes being made from fruit,&#13;
farming and stock-raising, are making these towns&#13;
grow fast. They all need men who know trades—&#13;
they need you, whether you have money to invest&#13;
or not.&#13;
Never, in the history of America, has the man&#13;
who works with his hands had such a chance to&#13;
make money, as is offered in the west today.&#13;
You Are Losing Money Every&#13;
Day You Stay in the East&#13;
You would not stay another day in the worn-out East,&#13;
if you knew even half the trnth about the great Pacific&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
Families, who went there penniless 5 years ago, are&#13;
spending this winter in California. They bought good&#13;
iand at low prices—paid for it gradually—today are&#13;
independent.&#13;
Opportunities are greater now than ever, because&#13;
the country is more developed.&#13;
Ask us on a postal to send you our free book, telling&#13;
you all about Oregon, Idaho and Washington. We'll&#13;
also tell you what it costs to go there.&#13;
E. L. LOMAX.C. P.&#13;
Omaha, Neb.&#13;
Yoa Ueed a Tonic&#13;
if yon fesi: languid and depressed&#13;
all the ttime. The best thing to&#13;
help satUrre build up the system is&#13;
DRJD.JAYNE'S&#13;
TONIC VERMIFUGE&#13;
This great: tonic is not a false stimulant&#13;
as many of the so-called ' 'spring&#13;
tonics." Jt is a natural strengthgiver.&#13;
IRoTiall run-down conditions&#13;
e£ tie health: it is an invaluable rem-&#13;
•drjj imparts new life and vigor and&#13;
builds np tthe&lt;rotire system.&#13;
Sold hg Allllaudiing Druggists in two&#13;
&gt;.iottkit50canJ35c&#13;
If&lt;»»»jOM«actmal&#13;
mglaltdllOy anjaainleddj etto lionttae nodf ing pu:&#13;
plea, including AUaUa. C l o w , e t c ,&#13;
MOM A. g^XTJa OTBSVfc?&#13;
•waa&#13;
320 ACRES&#13;
OF 160, A C R E S&#13;
We#tem&#13;
Caaadna&#13;
baa axfcfflcft t W&#13;
;r to 3 * ) a m * — 1 6 0 1 &amp; * » * » i W toi&#13;
be puichaicd at $3-00 per acre. Thcae jandgl&#13;
are in the gram-raising area, where mixed t n a i - f 1&#13;
is also canird on with unqaaiified success. A '&#13;
railway will shortly be built to Hadsoa Bay,brinf-}&#13;
ing the world's markets a thousand aules nearer;&#13;
these wheat-fields, where schools and ekureheai&#13;
are convenient, climate excellent, railways dose to)&#13;
all settlements, and local market* good.&#13;
"It would take time to assimilate the revelations&#13;
that u visit to the great exnpirerytflfto&#13;
the North of us unfolded at every turn.*—&#13;
Correspondence of d National Editor, vitto trtsiitd&#13;
Western C*n*dA in August, 19QS.&#13;
Lands may also be purchased from rashway and:&#13;
land companies at low pices and on easy teraW&#13;
For pamphlets, maps and information an ta&#13;
low railway rates, apply to Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or the&#13;
authorized Canadian Government Agent:&#13;
H. f. KciRireS. 171 Jeflema Avtaac. tataeV&#13;
MkkUaa; srC.JL LaUlitl. Sac* Ss*. Maria. Nkaw \&#13;
TOILET ANTISEPTIC&#13;
NOTHING L I K E I T F O «&#13;
THE TEETH ^ ¾ ^ ½ ^ ¾&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
$300 SHOES $350&#13;
ieat'thing In tfie vxorld to&#13;
cut the proper course /ord*thera&#13;
,to pursue.&#13;
You will reirpond very quickly to the&#13;
/Garfield Tea treatment, for this Natural&#13;
• JMtative corrects Constipation, purifiea dsW&#13;
tjkod, and benefita the entire system.&#13;
flame actors who claim to&gt;be weddel&#13;
to fiMdr.vftvf*iHiyr«QQJ» g»,\iD4a,for •&#13;
divorce.&#13;
TUtng* ..^Jri.ed,, aj^ ;«ohe.. « t | ^reat&#13;
tbij»«kv done ^nd^e.r^te$«p»:.\ ^&#13;
The Baaaoa I Make aad Ball Mew «eaJg $8.00&#13;
«V $8.00 Shoe* Than Any Other Kaaarfaetarer to *•?«?• J ftva t^wsaiwsae aaaatt «r«a« » « H&#13;
4 4 S a t y M r % f t «VgtesAl«ae%tsBeass\ e r f safsssassMel eaSeasaaaTtal aaatsaaa saesasakanla UM coutry.&#13;
*n^u?7trtanf U * &gt;«sa«n • « ss^nsajlafl&#13;
' • " ^ • ^ t T t h e b n r t skassaakan tetta anaT&#13;
UXeeal«si««rye«a«« earefaQy W. L Bang&#13;
s w a t a , fen •saMtaaa aartesstsia stay t t ^&#13;
-alu^ath^ser.i^wewteagwsaaaaay*&#13;
Jig/ afaf*otf of Taunt*ftk*8otu mat** _&#13;
&gt; nudUiarrtLo-qvWmrltQtk*****&#13;
Hh**e fW Mwger M«ai»»«n? oT t h « 1&#13;
Mass, R a y a , WawsMaijBl laaca au&#13;
UNIVIIIUrl I name and price atamped on bottom.&#13;
W.LJQUQUlVIe?&#13;
OZZS;^ ELECTROTYPES&#13;
Ian. rm. aaatu y«awil!a«taySfrnar psia»la* raot, .t biei tl.o4waaaut CDr.i(e aa by ,&#13;
DEFIUCE Cold Water Starch&#13;
makes laundry work a pleasure, 1€ oa. pkg. Kte.&#13;
yavtnfMraft ^Vfaasss»ea a aossaaugtar Byiea^&#13;
u OMI TB) i&#13;
boUle. [&#13;
?The airsatp liabU^JB UXv RT! alrtomobile&#13;
Income.&#13;
A HEART-BREAKING COUGH&#13;
is (Jatadful to auffer and despaiaing to hear. Why threaten the health of&#13;
your iWinga and die peace of your family when yea can obtain imm^^&#13;
relief torn Piso's Cure ? RemarVable reaults follow the first dose. Taken&#13;
retalstl/ it aoothea and heals the lacerated tissues, toaaens the clogging&#13;
poJrgra .end stops the eoo«h. ^ Pleasant to the taste and free from&#13;
opiates. Children enjoy takaag ft For throat aad bag diaaatea, no&#13;
aattej hew iar advanced.&#13;
n s &lt; y 3 CURB IS INCOMPARABLE&#13;
^v&#13;
Low Fares&#13;
To Montana&#13;
Crop figures for 1908&#13;
prove that M o n t a n a&#13;
is an excellent field for&#13;
profitable farming. Secure&#13;
a farm of your&#13;
own there now.&#13;
Fertile land at reasonable&#13;
prices. Homestead&#13;
lands are still plentiful&#13;
in Montana close to the&#13;
mew towns on the&#13;
Chicago&#13;
UBiauicBB &amp; Puget Sound&#13;
Railway&#13;
sLow settlers' fares to&#13;
Montana on March 23&#13;
aad 30» and April 6 , 1 3 ,&#13;
a s and 27.&#13;
Sao.50 from Chicago&#13;
to aiiies City, Forsyth,&#13;
Musselshell and Roundup;&#13;
S20.75 to Lavina;&#13;
$21.20 t o Harlowton;&#13;
^21.65 to Moore; ¢21.85&#13;
to Lewistown. Low&#13;
fares from and to other&#13;
points on these dates.&#13;
Complete information,&#13;
with new M o n t a n a&#13;
folder free.&#13;
F. A. MILLER&#13;
General Paaaanaer A g e n t&#13;
Chicago, Mllfiokea and St. Paul Ry.&#13;
C h i c a g o&#13;
leaaasbf. _&#13;
removing tartar from the teeth, beside*&#13;
all germs o i decay aad diiraat which&#13;
tooth preparation* cannot do. THE MOUTH wash disinfects the&#13;
and threat, purifies the breath, and kill* tfcejdana&#13;
which collect in the mouth, cangggg s o n Vsraat*'&#13;
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, aad a w e * avast**.'&#13;
T U a ? a T Y F C *^*n inflamed, bred, ache&#13;
U l a n a n i e n t ? *nd bum. may b e iustaaary,&#13;
relieved and strengthened by Paztme.&#13;
A A T 1 D D L I Paxtine will destroy aW ferau&#13;
U A I A l i n n that cause catarrh, sscal the ia-&#13;
Bammation and stop the dischafge. R it a atsra&#13;
remedy for u t e r i n e catarrsV.&#13;
Paxane is a harmless yet powerful&#13;
fiernwade.disinf eclant and deodonzer.&#13;
Usee! m bathing it destroys odon and&#13;
leaves the body antiseptkally cleaa-&#13;
FOR SALE AT DRUG S T O R C S . S O c&#13;
OR POSTPAID BY MAtL.&#13;
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!&#13;
THE PAXTON TOILET 0 0 «&#13;
The difference remember this—&#13;
it mar save yemr life. Cathattfca,&#13;
bud ahot and Carmen ball pills—te*&#13;
apooo doses af cathartic mediefnea&#13;
all depend oa irrftatfcai of the&#13;
until they 1 _'_&#13;
carets ntrrnfriliau *n&#13;
•0 they creep aad&#13;
This means a care aa4 aala^fannnsnV&#13;
Cascareis can you get I t o S g g S a S&#13;
natnrally. e l "• "&#13;
Caacarets—Ifc ^ , . ^ , ^ ^ ( meat. All draaviata. BInvest 1&#13;
to tbawork^millioo bc^w ai&#13;
toanare. Ckf&#13;
Uitm ACTIVE A8ENTS MIKE&#13;
$25 TO SIOO WEEILT •elllng the famoim tinrn tu&gt; typwwrllae Fli&#13;
tu*l. standard two-hand k*ftk*r*l,r\i\b£&#13;
V ^ * b ! e , *T»*»irlt»»r liTfr tiaia t t t r w l o a s&#13;
Ik** work hko 11» maohlni*. Coalda't be&#13;
as any prl«K KTrvybmiy *»n%s o»aV Blst&#13;
^HY mien, eiciunlvo territory. TTrtla&#13;
parttpnlarn t&lt;xl»y to « « » •&#13;
.1 ••.«&#13;
Pasnats&#13;
rmmotM&#13;
PAJcVatft'S' HAIJ BALSAM batotlflaa tba barr.&#13;
_ a lmcnri«nt frowth1. * m r Tall* to Seatora Gray&#13;
JLair to its Youthfal OtTor.&#13;
^and ai.no &gt;t a hsirlaU&#13;
•£3stS£.&#13;
T E X A S STATE&#13;
and 40y.&gt;ar&gt;, tin™ on tvilan.v: t h « » per cent lnt&#13;
••»t.; only 112.00 cash for M) ucrrs a t ^ f O ^ i V i&#13;
&lt;.™t«st opportunity; Kood aRrterrtlnmifc ^ ^&#13;
.1. .1. Snydftr, Soho.i l ^ n a I &gt; * M &lt; * l i&#13;
Austin, l ^ x . Rffnfpnco, Austin NaUooai&#13;
SI&#13;
•f&#13;
^ L&#13;
•»• u j UVKS&#13;
Wrtta&#13;
A(idr«RN V&#13;
GALL STONES&#13;
1TEY, R&#13;
T q e m p t O A ' t E j a f a J . *&#13;
C &lt; » E \ . D . 5,Ijanalna;,&#13;
If ufflrtcd whh&#13;
&lt;ture «v«s, uaa&#13;
^ . S * * : '&#13;
a&#13;
u W - - •.•**&amp;.. 4¾. ..,r/*' &gt;P* . * # * * • • •&#13;
^ • : ; . 4 ' .&#13;
•; . : : I '&#13;
^¾&#13;
i f * .&#13;
'V-&#13;
•X'J-; ^ ••. lu'.Tf. .*»» ' • ! • : * '&#13;
*&#13;
B*aifl9ta*PolRttrt. |&#13;
« $&#13;
* &amp; .&#13;
f©r a*le&#13;
Honte end cm o-half an re .of land in&#13;
tbe village of tfmckney. •*&#13;
f Mrs. Marj Haney.&#13;
A girl to learn'millinery at the parlors&#13;
of Miss ^illian Boyle, Pinckney.&#13;
"X good boat and two&#13;
a l o w teed. (i. W.&#13;
barbels&#13;
Hendee '&#13;
Have several Pair of Toulouse&#13;
Gfteae for sale. Telephone or oaii and&#13;
Me teem. T. Birkett. 12&#13;
&lt;f For Sale.&#13;
Full Blood Jersey bull to 5&#13;
old. Also bay of any kind.&#13;
11¾ M. La^ey&#13;
*or Sal %&#13;
-Good cow, (jocQiny in soon&#13;
of W. B. Darrow.&#13;
SOUTH 0 R I G 0 R 7 .&#13;
Mr. Beinor is entertaining his&#13;
daughter.&#13;
F r e a k Ovitt and wife atteiided&#13;
ohurch at Unadilla Sunday.&#13;
Miae Myrtle Parkinson won the&#13;
silver medal at the last contest&#13;
Mrs. 0 . L. Smith baa been&#13;
very ill but is better at this writing.&#13;
G. W. Bate** and wife are moving&#13;
on the Sprout farm at Anderson.&#13;
The meetings at the First B aptist&#13;
church have closed, with 28&#13;
conversions.&#13;
There was quite a number at&#13;
the last meeting of the LOTMM&#13;
and it is hoped there will be as&#13;
many more at the next meetin g&#13;
which is the 25th of March.&#13;
Frank Barker was hurt quite&#13;
badly while sawing wood for Mr&#13;
Judaou. Later: I t was found&#13;
that one arm was so badly injured&#13;
j that it had to bo amputated at the&#13;
elbow but they hope to save the&#13;
lnqnire j other arm although badly broken&#13;
at the ell&gt;ow.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Wilson of&#13;
Anderson called on Mrs. D. D .&#13;
Carr last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Will Buhl and daughter&#13;
Lillian visited at G. D. Blands&#13;
Monday and Tuesday.&#13;
H e n r y Smith of West Marion&#13;
visited Lis daughter Mrs. Will&#13;
Bland one day last week.&#13;
IOBOO Grange Banquet&#13;
JVilHlWS&#13;
ID * * !&#13;
Ff nmclot Statement&#13;
of&#13;
12&#13;
mos.&#13;
Don't forget the St. Patrick* P a r t y&#13;
a t the opera house Friday evening,&#13;
March 19. Music by Geigers Orchest&#13;
r a of J a c k s o n . Bill 75 .cents. Spectators&#13;
will be cbarged 10 eats-. ;&#13;
r o K njkiM.&#13;
•Second «rowtb, dry block wood.&#13;
9tf JL. Spears&#13;
"-f *i—eZ— —&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Six Poland China brood sows due in&#13;
April, James Spears,&#13;
9tf Dnadiila.&#13;
R. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct aucfjon sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for'past J&amp;vors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I remain&#13;
vours. R. GLUTTON.&#13;
warn SALB.&#13;
Farm of 80 acres, five .miles - south&#13;
West of Pinckney, known as the Dave&#13;
(jhalker farm. Stock and bay will go&#13;
with the farm if purchaser so desires.&#13;
Will go cheap, it bought at once. Inquire&#13;
of LuUin L. Pollok,&#13;
8tf .. Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
(•Ascription tats moata.&#13;
Farmers and&#13;
Horsemen&#13;
We Do&#13;
HORSE-SHOEING&#13;
New Shoes 30c&#13;
Setting 121-2c&#13;
Calking and .,-&#13;
Setting&#13;
ART. FLINTOFF&#13;
Pettysviile, Mich.&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
The Grange Banquet last Friday&#13;
eveuiug was a grand sucoess.&#13;
Mre. ¥. Davis and two children&#13;
visited at B. W. Harforda over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Butler and&#13;
daughter Ella visited L. C. Gardner&#13;
and wife Sunday.&#13;
• T i m Ishama horse that was&#13;
very sick a few weeks ago is again&#13;
under the doctors care.&#13;
Grant Smith and L. C. Gardner&#13;
attended the Masonic banquet at&#13;
Stock bridge last Friday night.&#13;
Chas. Teachoot sold a fine horse&#13;
to Waterloo parties last week,&#13;
then bought one of Will Greening.&#13;
WE8TFUCTAM.&#13;
W. B. Gardner spent Sunday in&#13;
Chilson.&#13;
Sadie Harris has returned from&#13;
an extended visit in Detroit.&#13;
Ella and Bessie Murphy of&#13;
Jackson were home over Sunday.&#13;
Martha Murphy left last week&#13;
for Marine Oity where she has a&#13;
position in a millinery.&#13;
Mrs. Will Dunbar spent a few&#13;
days this week with her parents&#13;
Valentine Dinkel and wife in&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
I. J. Abbott and wife, V. G.&#13;
Dinkel and wife, Will Dunbar&#13;
and wife and 0 . W. W e b b and&#13;
wife were guesta at the home of&#13;
H. B. Gardner Thursday last.&#13;
Spring Time&#13;
^¥ is&#13;
AHDEBSOft.&#13;
Will Caskey and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Plainfield friends.&#13;
Miss Grace Pool • visited her&#13;
mother Mrs. Elmer Book on Sunday.&#13;
Fred Mackinder visited his&#13;
brother Richard near Howell last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bullis spent&#13;
Sunday at Benn Montagues at&#13;
Chubbs corners.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wilson,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barton and&#13;
Mrs. Julia Pangborn were entertained&#13;
at the home of James Hoff&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Pangborn gave a dinner to&#13;
the following ladies one day last&#13;
week: Mrs. Chas Bullis, Mrs.&#13;
Albert Wilson, Mrs. Eunice Crane&#13;
Mrs. R. G. Webb and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Mackinder.&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Paper Time&#13;
I am here with&#13;
a full hue of&#13;
Wall P a p p r&#13;
•a... See Our Samples&#13;
before purc&#13;
h a s i n g&#13;
this&#13;
been&#13;
J&#13;
door south of hotel.&#13;
NORTH PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. Etta Bland called on&#13;
Ed Farnam last Friday.&#13;
Misa Beulah Burgess visited&#13;
relatives at Gregory the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Wm. Chambers visited his&#13;
brother John of East Putnam&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Catherine Brogan visited&#13;
friends at Pinckney the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
A few of the friends and neighbors&#13;
of Mr, and Mrs. Fred Burgess&#13;
dined with them last Thursday.&#13;
C ^ i | a I Mr. and Mrs. V. G. Dinkel and&#13;
I l i n K P I Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Abbott visited&#13;
. L M I i n V I . | a ( H B Gardners in We«t Pot-&#13;
I nam last Thursday.&#13;
mrAsnuL&#13;
Hay balere are at work in&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. E d Cranna who has&#13;
sick, is much better.&#13;
The Unadilla Band will give a&#13;
concert at the hall March 24.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy May who has been&#13;
seriously ill, is gaming slowly.&#13;
A. J. Holmes and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday with her&#13;
parents, S. G. Palmer and wife.&#13;
The L A S of the M. E. Ohurch&#13;
met in the church parlors last&#13;
Wednesday. Dinner was served.&#13;
A number from Unadilla attended&#13;
the baud Concert given by the&#13;
North Lake baud last Friday eve.&#13;
W i r t Barnum and family and&#13;
Wm. Stowe and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
The local WCTU will meet with&#13;
Mrs. Lillian Burden Thursday p.&#13;
m. of this week. All members are&#13;
requested to be present.&#13;
PLAINFIELD.&#13;
Mr. Curtis iiuci family have move! to&#13;
Devil's lake.&#13;
The school children are having a vacation&#13;
thia week.&#13;
Lena Macbean is staying with Mrs.&#13;
Conk for a few weeks. #&#13;
The infant daughter of Lorents Pedersan&#13;
is very low with pneumonia.&#13;
A young son came to the home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Howard Clark Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Burt VanSyckle entertained her&#13;
brother from Philadelphia Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The district meeting of the WFMS. will&#13;
be held here April 21st and 22nd. Everybody&#13;
invited.&#13;
The Plainfield Theatrical Company have&#13;
given the drama, Oak Farm, with the beat&#13;
of success each time.&#13;
SOUTH I O S C O .&#13;
John Wright has been on the Bick list&#13;
the past week.&#13;
School closed here laBt Friday for the&#13;
spring vacation.&#13;
The LAS met with Mrs. Walter Miller&#13;
Wednesday last,&#13;
Hugh Ward transacted business in Fowlerville&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Bert Roberts, wife and family visited at&#13;
David Roberts' Sunday,&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Wattere ia visiting her&#13;
son in Jackson at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. N. Burley and family visited&#13;
at Wra. Caskey's Sunday.&#13;
John Roberts, wife and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with her parents.&#13;
The WCTU held a silver medal contest&#13;
at South Iosco church Tuesday evening.&#13;
Elva Caskey spent Saturday afternoon&#13;
with the Misses Beatrice and Katie Lamborn.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Kuhn has returned home after&#13;
spending the winter with Mrs. R. W.&#13;
Wilson.&#13;
Jennie Ward, Beatrice Lamhorn and&#13;
little Ella Butler were on the sick list the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Lorna and Berney Roberts spent las1&#13;
week with their grandparents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. T. Wainwright.&#13;
The proceeds of the donation at Ruttman&#13;
Brothers given for the benefit of Rev. Mc-&#13;
Cullum was about $100.&#13;
Bertha Harrington returned homeSatur.&#13;
day after spending the past week with her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Joe Roberts.&#13;
Grace Lamhorn returned home Tuesday&#13;
after spending some time with her sister&#13;
Mrs. .lessee Henry of Pinckney.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
The Ioaoo Grange held its 7th&#13;
Banqnet Friday evening Mar. 12,&#13;
M. P . Hall, loaoo.&#13;
The hall WM UUtily decorated with&#13;
gram, pink and orange bunting under the&#13;
supervision of l&amp;tn. Mary Parkw.&#13;
The table decoration* were the best eveand&#13;
each table held a vaae of carnations.&#13;
The Menu was prepared by Mrs. Mark&#13;
Allison aod it was the opinion of all that it&#13;
could not be improved upon in any particular.&#13;
While the guests were standing in&#13;
their places at the table, E. J . Titmua&#13;
offered prayer,&#13;
Mrs. R. C. Smith, our Grange Lecturer,&#13;
acted aa Toastini&amp;treM and gave the "Address&#13;
ul'Welcome." We were reminded&#13;
thai it WIIN the pioneer farmer who fought&#13;
and wim uur liberty uud spoke of the important&#13;
part they have played since. She&#13;
albu spokf oT llieir advancement and the&#13;
Grange has been one of the organisations&#13;
that have placed the farmer of today as&#13;
the man of business and student of science.&#13;
About SO gut'sta sat down to one of the&#13;
finest dinners ever birryed in Iosco, and&#13;
wtien the inner mtui was sntisiicd the program&#13;
commenced with a song by the Indies&#13;
trio eoujpobed of Mm. Alice Stowe, Mrs.&#13;
Mary Parker and Mis» (Jlcllit Stowe. The&#13;
toasiuiiatress introduced Mrs, Homer Smith&#13;
who gave the toast "Bruins," she spoke of&#13;
the great minda that have giveu to the&#13;
world so much iu literature, science, statesmanship&#13;
and art, and said there were&#13;
brains enough in every community to be of&#13;
help to their fellows it they only use them.&#13;
The toast i'Little things" was responded&#13;
to by Mr. J . O'Dell Jr. He said it was&#13;
the little things '"» life that, taken together,&#13;
made our great men; little acts of kindneBS&#13;
that make our great philanthropists; little&#13;
deeds of love ihttt make happy homes.&#13;
Mrs. J . O'Dell responded to the'toast&#13;
" C h a n t y . " She compared it to a garment&#13;
the fashion of which never changes, and ia&#13;
cut full enough to cover the unhappy and&#13;
unfortunate. Some people would not harm&#13;
a fly, but would pick up every piece of&#13;
scandal in the community. Charity is giving&#13;
kind words and deeds; and they need&#13;
not be wasted as there was an opportunity&#13;
to use them in every community, even in&#13;
every home. She thought it charity to&#13;
hold our tongues unless used for good, A&#13;
solo by Mrs. R. C. Smith followed and received&#13;
a hearty ensore.&#13;
The toast ; Critic" was responded to by&#13;
A. G. Btowe who gave the competent and&#13;
honest critic a great deal of praise, as it&#13;
tended to improve literature, government,&#13;
music and morals; hut he didn't have much&#13;
use for the so called critic who was neither&#13;
competent or honest, and whose sole purpose&#13;
was to injure others.&#13;
"The Future Man" by Mrs. E. J . Titmus,&#13;
said our forefathers courted with oxteams,&#13;
but today man must have an automobile,&#13;
and the future man would have a&#13;
flying machine. The future man would&#13;
have larger heads to accommodate the&#13;
brains, and small hands and feet. She&#13;
could not tell where the man would Ian 1&#13;
who was up in an air-ship when the&#13;
world came to an end.&#13;
"Advice" given by Mr. C. H. Hill, said&#13;
we could get good advice of all kinds ou&#13;
all subjects, but it was not policy to follow&#13;
all of it. The fathers advice was usualy&#13;
good, but the boy wanted to see the folly&#13;
for himself. Mothers advice was always&#13;
the best she could give, and should he&#13;
heeded, but the best advice of all was the&#13;
advice giveu by the lowly Nazarene, the&#13;
Christ.&#13;
State Lecturer, Miss Jennie Bueil, talked&#13;
on ''Outlooks." She spoke of the&#13;
Grange work and what it had accomplished&#13;
in the past, its present work and aims,&#13;
1 and the men and wnmeii who are being edi&#13;
ucatod and elevated by attending grange&#13;
meetings and exchanging views. The outlook&#13;
for the future was never brighter than&#13;
now for the Grange work.&#13;
After "listening: to the male quartet, by E.&#13;
J. Titmns, G. F. Peterson, C. i, Stowe&#13;
and E. M. Acker, which was tine and called&#13;
for an encore, the banquet closed after&#13;
spending one of the most enjoyable evening&#13;
ever held in Iosco.&#13;
V l r i * * * T r e « » u F * r s l l « p o r »&#13;
r o r t h * Y e a * B n d l n i \&#13;
M a r c h 6 , 1 9 0 9&#13;
To the rlonorable President afti&#13;
Common Coanoil of the Village ot&#13;
Pinckney. I hereby submit my report&#13;
of money received and diabaned&#13;
for tbe year commencing March «V&#13;
1908, and ending March 8,1909. r&#13;
of Hartland,&#13;
H. Placeway&#13;
Mrs. Melvin Burgess&#13;
visited her parents, W.&#13;
and wife, the past week&#13;
Friday evening of thia week, March&#13;
19, is the date of the play at the opera&#13;
house, "Champaigne and Oysters."&#13;
A card from Miss Kate Brown give8&#13;
the address of herself and mother as&#13;
Lajolla Ual., where they will remain&#13;
for one month.&#13;
Born Monday morning to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Geo, Loefler a girl. Mrs. L. is at&#13;
the home nt her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
J. Bowers, in thi* village.&#13;
Stockbridge citizens are bidding for&#13;
a creamery or cheese factory The&#13;
shutting off ot the milk «oinj&lt; to the&#13;
condensed factory makes the farmer&#13;
anxious to dispose ot his milk somewhere.&#13;
Bills are ont announcing an auction&#13;
at the former residence of Paul Bock&#13;
in this village on Saturday afternoon&#13;
of this week, Mar. 20. He will sell&#13;
the inenbators, brooders, eto. used by&#13;
the Michigan Hatchery Co. eyerything&#13;
being as good as new. Garden tools,&#13;
household articles and the usual small&#13;
articles told at an auction.&#13;
Mortgage Sale.&#13;
Default having been made In the cr&gt;ruUtion« of&#13;
two raorgajrefl, coverinRthe same land (whereby the&#13;
power of sal« therein contained has become operative)&#13;
made by AtUm Franola and Anna L. FrandB&#13;
hia wife, of Putnam, Livingston county, Mirhk'an,&#13;
to G. W. Teeplo of the same jilacfl, one of&#13;
Bain mortagPB beintf flatert December 59th, 1899&#13;
and recorded in the Office of Register of deeds&#13;
for the County of Livingston, Stat.a of Michigan&#13;
May 16, 1900, in Liber 79 of mortgages on page&#13;
B15 thereof, and the other dated June 4th, 1903&#13;
and recorded in nald ReRiateta office on the l,r&gt;th&#13;
doy of March, l!*0fl, in Liber »1 of MortgaRefi on&#13;
paRe 572 thereof; on which said mortages there ia&#13;
now claimed to bo dne and unpaid at thia date the&#13;
Bum of Two hundred fifty /our dollara and twenty&#13;
five com* ($254.2.5) and attorney f«ea, and no nuit&#13;
or proct'teing having been eommancod in law or&#13;
equity to recover the debts secured by said mort-&#13;
£fi"ps, or any part then^f.&#13;
.Now tharafore, nnder tha power of «ale contained&#13;
in aaid mortgages, notice ia hereby given that&#13;
on Monday, the Mth day of Jnnn, lf*&gt;9, at one&#13;
o'clock in tbe afternoon of said day, at the westerly&#13;
front door o the Court house in the village&#13;
of Howell in said County (that, hein^ the ptac^ of&#13;
holding the circuit court, for the County in which&#13;
the mortgaged premiww to be sold are situated)&#13;
and said mortgages will be forecloaed by sale at&#13;
pithllc. vendue, to the highest bidder of the premiaea&#13;
described in naid mortgages,, or so much&#13;
thereof HH may he necessary io satisfy the amount&#13;
due on said moagagfts with int«r«Rt. and legal coata&#13;
that, is to say; all that certain piece or paroel of&#13;
land ait.uar* in the. township of Pntnara, County&#13;
of Livingston and State of Michigan, T U : Three&#13;
acrm of land in the northwest, oorner of that p art&#13;
of the weat half of ths soathwsnt qaarter of aeotion&#13;
twenty fonr (21) lying gonth of the highway&#13;
running through said land and extending from&#13;
the center of u l d highway ionth to the center of&#13;
the creek and in width, ea*t and west, iraffleient to&#13;
make the threw acrea of lanfl. All in Town one (I)&#13;
North and Range ronr (4) aa*t, County of Living-&#13;
•ton and State of Miohlgan,&#13;
Dated March lMh, 1909.&#13;
E . A . A L S . STOW* O. W. T I I r v ,&#13;
t94 Attyt. for MorgafM Xbrtfaga*&#13;
Rwatrn&#13;
Oa hand Wwreh 8,1H08 15.7»&#13;
Max. 12,1908. tin, Graham oide-&#13;
5.08&#13;
r. 12,1&#13;
walk,&#13;
Mar, li, E x Bank&#13;
Apr. 1«, Ex. Bank&#13;
May SO, Fed lew Liotuo&#13;
Jane 8, Shaw Licence&#13;
16;P«dlen Fine&#13;
29, Fine&#13;
Aug. 10, G W Sykei. aldewalk&#13;
Aug. 81, B Lynch, aldewalk&#13;
Oct. ?. Fedlera Lioente&#13;
Oct. 16, B R Brown, aidawalk&#13;
Keb. 0,0U, Fudlera License&#13;
TIUUM, from Koll&#13;
ToUl reed.&#13;
Expenditures,&#13;
100.00&#13;
auo.es&#13;
8.00&#13;
8.00&#13;
6 00&#13;
1.0»&#13;
«.97&#13;
109&#13;
8.00&#13;
1.01&#13;
1.00&#13;
iwa.70&#13;
I180S.M&#13;
1807.78&#13;
159&#13;
160&#13;
161&#13;
162&#13;
163&#13;
164&#13;
165&#13;
166&#13;
167&#13;
16«&#13;
169&#13;
170&#13;
171&#13;
172&#13;
1&#13;
Balance ou Land March 11,1909&#13;
EXPENDITURES *&#13;
S G T e e p l e $ 3.95&#13;
Bert Roche 4.00&#13;
H F Sigler.... 10.00&#13;
Barney Lynch 1.60&#13;
R J Carr 26.00&#13;
F L Andrews..: 18.50&#13;
John Jeffreys 4,80&#13;
W A Carr 4.00&#13;
J C Dunn 4.00&#13;
J A Cadwell 8.67&#13;
J H Shultz 1.25&#13;
James Smith 5.50&#13;
W A Nixon 5.50&#13;
C V Van Winkle 4.00&#13;
C Henry 2.00&#13;
S Grimes 2.00&#13;
Chas. Kennedy .75&#13;
F A Sigler 42&#13;
C Kldert 1.50&#13;
F L Andrews 10.00 •&#13;
Murphy &amp; Dolan . . . . 1.73&#13;
W W Barnard 3.60&#13;
N P Mortenson 15.45&#13;
Matt Jeffreys 2.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 4.00&#13;
I B P Johnson.. m... 12.75&#13;
I S P Johnson L2.50&#13;
F A Sigler 4.30 .'V&#13;
Johu Mortenson 2 . 2 5 -&#13;
M Lavey 1.50&#13;
S G T e e p l e 2.20&#13;
E R Brown 1(1.50&#13;
E W Kennedy 15.00&#13;
A Monks 4.60&#13;
Lewis MonkB 2.30&#13;
1.11 Clark 3.30&#13;
Bert Roche 2.30&#13;
W A Nixon 3.20&#13;
H J Clark 2.30&#13;
Geo Reason 2.20&#13;
J C Dunn 2.20&#13;
R E Finch 3.20&#13;
Emma Burgess 8.20&#13;
Ernest White 2.40&#13;
W A Carr 10.00&#13;
Jackson A Cadwell.. 3.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 12.75&#13;
F A Sigler 50&#13;
F D Johnson 4 00&#13;
H D Mowers 4.00&#13;
D W Murta 10.82&#13;
Doubleday Bros Co,. 2.00&#13;
Adrian Lavey 5.25&#13;
John Mortenson..... .75&#13;
H M Williston 75&#13;
M Lavey 14.00&#13;
M Dolan 2.25&#13;
I S P Johnson 12.50&#13;
E R Brown 60.00&#13;
M Lavey 26.25&#13;
M Lavey 1.50&#13;
E H Byer 1.50&#13;
D H Mowers 6.75&#13;
Alfred Monks 2.50&#13;
Rwarthout &amp; Placeway 2.76&#13;
I S P Johnson 13.40 "&#13;
M Lavey 8.25&#13;
Minnie H Porter . . . . 32.64&#13;
Jake Bowers 3.00&#13;
Theo Lewis 7.50&#13;
C E Henry 1.50&#13;
F L Andrews 23.50&#13;
I S P Johnson ,. 12.50&#13;
L E Howlett 56.00&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co. 12.37&#13;
H D Mowers 4.50&#13;
Bernard Lavey 7.75&#13;
AdrianLavey 13.12&#13;
Leo Lavey 5.55&#13;
M Lavey 55.85&#13;
John White 1.75&#13;
E H Byer 2.25&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
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1 S F J oneewe.......&#13;
E R Brown&#13;
James Smith . . . . . . . .&#13;
I S P Johnson&#13;
F A Sigler&#13;
M Lavey 19.99&#13;
Wm Butler 14.00&#13;
I S P Johnson 15.00&#13;
Jackson &amp; Cadwell .. 5.40&#13;
E W K e n n e d y . . . . . . » U , 8 6&#13;
H D M o w e r s . . . . . . . .&#13;
W H Place we/.'..,. 4,..&#13;
H D Mo were... , . t , . ,&#13;
F L Andrew*. .»&#13;
M Lavey. . . . , . , . • . * , . .&#13;
I S P J ohoetMl . . . . . .&#13;
G W Teepk&#13;
John Dinkel 7.06&#13;
W E Murphy 4.80&#13;
1 S P Johnson 15.08&#13;
H D Mowers 15.00&#13;
W A Carr 10.00&#13;
G W Reason 4.00&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co. 37.98&#13;
Gardner Lighting Co. 37.80&#13;
F D Johnson 9.19&#13;
John Dinkel 6.00&#13;
W H PUcew»y 16.76&#13;
I S P Johnson 1.00&#13;
A Monks 1.00&#13;
O W Teeple 203.8«&#13;
Taxes uncollected, 5.85&#13;
* A&#13;
1 LO ,\ •• . v . .&#13;
« ' ' ' M&gt; " «.•"••'•&#13;
Total, $1367.78&#13;
J. A. CADWSLL,&#13;
Treasurer.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch March 25, 1909</text>
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                <text>March 25, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. XX 711. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICE., THURSDAY, APR. 1. 1909. No 1 3&#13;
Having sold one-half interest&#13;
in our grocery business&#13;
we desire all owing us on&#13;
account to please call and&#13;
settle at once. -&#13;
Swarthout &amp; Placeway&#13;
L.OCAL. NEWS.&#13;
no joke&#13;
do not&#13;
This is April 1, 1909, and&#13;
either.&#13;
Vacation this week—you&#13;
need to be told.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harford ot Iosco&#13;
visited at W. E. Tuppers one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Briflbtonifes ate arranging for their&#13;
eecond annual borne coming to be beld&#13;
this coming summer,&#13;
All the college students are home&#13;
this week tor the spring vacation.&#13;
Amos Clinton and ^ercy Hincbe/&#13;
returned home from St. Louis, Mo.,&#13;
the past week, having finished a&#13;
course in a Wa'climiking school.&#13;
U. E. Baugbn has the pUt of tbe&#13;
Bluffs out and is advertising to sell&#13;
or rent lots for cottages. Mr. B. has&#13;
one of tbe most pleasant places on the&#13;
string of lakes.&#13;
The Maccabee Dramatic Club of&#13;
Ann Arbor, are visiting ber parents&#13;
and other friends uere this week.&#13;
The weather tbe past week begins&#13;
to make the cottagers sit up and take&#13;
*ctice that the resort season will soon&#13;
be here.&#13;
Erwin Monks and friend David Mc&#13;
Donn*l, o! Hadley, are spending the&#13;
vacation here. Mr. Monks is -&gt;upt. of&#13;
the Hadley schools.&#13;
The Ladies ot tbe M. E. Church will&#13;
serve dinner and suppei at tbe opera&#13;
bouse, lownmeetinur day, Monday&#13;
April 5. Everybody invited.&#13;
The opera bouse was crowded Sun&#13;
day to listen to the address on temperby&#13;
R9v. Fr. Spurline He &lt;-poke for&#13;
nearly two hoars and beld bis audience&#13;
interested.&#13;
Said the governor of North Carolina&#13;
to the govenor of South Carolina: 'It's&#13;
a long while between drinks." "And&#13;
the longe,- the better" spoke up the&#13;
governor of Kansas.&#13;
With nearly every building and&#13;
residence in the village now occupied&#13;
and a croamery to tie located here we&#13;
look for ane ot the beat years that&#13;
Pinckney has ever seen.&#13;
The following are the prices to be&#13;
paid for milk the coming six months&#13;
by the factories at Howell aud Jackson.&#13;
April, 1909, $1.20 July, 1909, $ .90&#13;
May 85 August 1 00&#13;
June .80 Sept. 1.10&#13;
Gregory will produce "Lady Darrel'&#13;
Mrs. Omlle Tapper and children of a t the opera house here on April 15,&#13;
1909, for the benefit of St. Marys&#13;
church.&#13;
Will Have A Creamery.&#13;
O n e T o B e Uocated Here&#13;
Within A P e w W e e k s .&#13;
As mentioned in tbe DUPATCH last&#13;
week, tbis place bad a chance to get a&#13;
creamery and tbe business men and&#13;
farmers took tbe matter up in earnest&#13;
tbe last of last week and Mr. Day returned&#13;
Saturday to Flint and will&#13;
purchase the necessary machinery at&#13;
once and proceed to install it. Ho&#13;
has put in several plant** and will superintend&#13;
the work himself and says&#13;
if nothing happens be will be ready&#13;
to take milk inside of four weeks.&#13;
He has purchased the old creamery&#13;
building now occupied by Percy&#13;
Swarthout as a residence and undertaking&#13;
parlors, and will put help in&#13;
immediaely to put it in stupe for&#13;
tbe machinery. He went to Chicago&#13;
tbe first of the week to make arrangements&#13;
tor tbe immediate shipment ot&#13;
the machinery for the plant,&#13;
It is too late for Mr. Day to get up&#13;
any ice for thia season and unless he&#13;
can make satisfactory arrangements at&#13;
reasonable prices, be will put in an&#13;
ice plant.&#13;
01 cour se while the creamery will&#13;
not employ many bands, the people of&#13;
this vicinity are to be congratulated&#13;
as it will bring in many farmers every&#13;
day with their milk or cream and help&#13;
enliven hp the town as well as distribute&#13;
much money in the vicinity.&#13;
Now E v e r y b o d y Vote.&#13;
/ •&#13;
u\ for Business * • * '&#13;
1,000 Rolls of Wall Paper 1.000!&#13;
5c per Double Roll&#13;
Border not guaranteed&#13;
F a r m e r s and Stockmen&#13;
Excelsior Insect and Lice Destroyer&#13;
Guaranteed and Positive in results&#13;
Or No Pay. ::&#13;
F. A . SIGLBR&#13;
\&#13;
Everyone invited.&#13;
The ladies of the Uong'l society will&#13;
bold their annual lown meeting dinner&#13;
and supper at ttij Maccabee ball, Monday&#13;
April 5. All are requested to be&#13;
present and furnish refreshments.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Sigler, Sec.&#13;
Miss Cecil McKim, teacher in the&#13;
schools at Sturgis, is tbe cruest of Misa&#13;
Andrews and other friends here this&#13;
week. She filled a vacancy here in&#13;
the schools one year ago, but has since&#13;
been teaching in Sturgis.&#13;
A fine case of borseahoes may be&#13;
seen at tbe Teeple Hardware Co.'s&#13;
store. They were made bv H. Knickerbocker,&#13;
the new blacksmith in K. R,&#13;
Browns old stand. The shoes show&#13;
good workmanship and speak for&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Mesdames Daniel Richards and W.&#13;
H. Placeway t?ave a party to sevtral&#13;
of tbe ladies Friday afternoon at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Plact.way. The usual&#13;
number was present and a pleasant&#13;
afternoon was spent, with dominoes,&#13;
visit and social chat.&#13;
The Ladies of the North Hamburg&#13;
church will serve a ehi-han pie dinner&#13;
at, tb° home of Willard Hendricks on&#13;
town meeting day, and invite all on&#13;
their way to Hamburg to st»p and&#13;
have dinner which wilt be served from&#13;
11 o'clock until alt are served.&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
New goods a r e rapidly&#13;
filling t h e store aud its&#13;
worth yonr time to give&#13;
ua a look when in Howell&#13;
T h e best stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, R i b -&#13;
bons, Corsets, H a n d k e r -&#13;
chiefs, Hosiery a n d Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
R e m e m b e r T h a t .. , —&#13;
every Day 1B Bargain Day&#13;
Farmers j&#13;
B r i n g in y o n r harnesses&#13;
a n d have them&#13;
repaired, wased anil&#13;
oiled ready for y o n r&#13;
spring work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can d o t h a t work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
The tickets are nominated and you&#13;
have only to make your choice, do&#13;
your duty and tnen accept the consequences.&#13;
Remember that if you do&#13;
not get out and vote you " have no kick&#13;
coming" no matter which way it goes.&#13;
There never was a time in tbe history&#13;
of tbe township when good men were&#13;
needed as officers than now.&#13;
One of tbe questions that is to be&#13;
voted on is Local Option and it is becoming&#13;
so that a county is sized up&#13;
somewhat by big concerns as to how it&#13;
stands on the liquor question. Let us&#13;
see that old Livingston stands for tbe&#13;
right and that is the borne instead of&#13;
•tbe saloon.&#13;
Do not let any late reports from the&#13;
l;quor dealeis turn you from the right,&#13;
Tbey have perjured themselves many&#13;
time? during the recent fight and will&#13;
not hesitate to do so again to gain&#13;
their ends. Let everyone turn out&#13;
and deal the t.-affic such a death blow&#13;
that the dealers in the stuff will feel&#13;
they are "down and out1' for good.&#13;
Shall the manufacture and sale of&#13;
Liquors and the Liquor traffic be prohibited&#13;
within Livingston County.&#13;
[X] YES&#13;
DEMOCRAT&#13;
Supervisor, James M. Harris&#13;
Clerk, Roger J . Carr&#13;
Trewi., Bert Roche&#13;
Hy. Com., Casper Vollmer&#13;
Overseer of H'y, Rollin G. Webb&#13;
Member B of R, Edward Sprout&#13;
Constable, Erwin Kennedy&#13;
Constable, Edward Spears&#13;
Constable, Bert VanBkricum&#13;
Constable, .Tames Docking&#13;
Miss Mary Collins will speak in the |&#13;
Cong 1 church Sunday morning April I&#13;
11, on Home Mission-*, j&#13;
i&#13;
A Big Surprise.&#13;
A big surprise in numbers as well&#13;
as to surprise, was perpertrated ubon&#13;
Mr. pni Mrs, John White and family&#13;
by their friends and neighbors Saturday&#13;
evening last when about 90 went&#13;
to their home scuth of town and made&#13;
them a farewell surprise.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs White have been on&#13;
the Mrs. Ella Jackson farm lor several&#13;
years and have made many warm&#13;
friend8 as the attendance at this party&#13;
went to show. Mr. White will move&#13;
to Iosco tbe cominor week, where tbey&#13;
will work a farm. Their many friends&#13;
here are sorry to liav^ them leave the&#13;
neighborhood, and made them this&#13;
farewell surprise, leaving them the&#13;
best wishes and three fine pieces of&#13;
silverware as a memento.&#13;
YOUR wm%i&#13;
Is earnestly desired&#13;
at my Millinery&#13;
Opening : :&#13;
8atMaif, April 3rd&#13;
YoK will find&#13;
NEW&#13;
NOBBY&#13;
PRACTICAL&#13;
UP-TO-DATE&#13;
• MILLINERY&#13;
Lillian H, Boyle&#13;
Post Office Black&#13;
You are cordially&#13;
invited to attend a&#13;
Spring and Easter Millinery Opening&#13;
Friday and Saturday&#13;
April 2 and 3, 1909&#13;
We have a flue line of L a d i e s ' a n d Children's t r i m m e d and ready&#13;
to*wear hats. We will be pleased t o show yon our goods if y o u d o&#13;
not wish to buy. Our prices are ri$ht and our styles&#13;
are up-to-date.&#13;
I Have a Ffrst Class Trimmer, she having trimmed in the&#13;
East the past year-&#13;
REMEMBER THE DATE APRIL 2 AND 3, 1909&#13;
Mrs. IV!. Ei. Kuhit*&#13;
Gre$opy» Mich.&#13;
RKPTTRIilCAN&#13;
Supervisor,&#13;
Clerk,&#13;
Treas.,&#13;
0Hy. Com.,&#13;
Overseer,&#13;
Justice,&#13;
Fred M. Grieve&#13;
John C. Dinkel&#13;
Cha». t»» Campbell&#13;
Wales Leland&#13;
Darid H. Mowers&#13;
Member B of D, Ruben E. Finch&#13;
Constables, J. 8. Mortenaon&#13;
J Ames Bell&#13;
Fred Fish&#13;
Fred Bowman&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rips, etc., in fact&#13;
make t h e shoe as&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN new. ,: ::&#13;
Howell's Busy Store W . B. D A R R O W&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST of durability in a high-speed machine like the cream separator.&#13;
No other machine a fanner uses ban a harder teat. Run twice&#13;
•vary day, winter and summer, it must not only do ttorough wcrfc,-&#13;
but to be permanently profitable, it must b« durable. U.S. CRCAM&#13;
are built for long service. A solid, low frame encloses eattreJy all&#13;
the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger ot injury.&#13;
The parta a re few, aimple and easy to get at. Ballbearing:*&#13;
at high speed points, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wear&#13;
- • - ' * - Aion. Such careful and thor-&#13;
Bills are oat announcing an Easter&#13;
Party at the opera house here Thursday&#13;
evening April 15. Geitfers or*&#13;
cbeatra.&#13;
Mrs. L. B. White died at her hotna&#13;
in West Putnam Monday nicht. The&#13;
funrra' will v? ..t-"1!••! at U.J home&#13;
IfcVflday afternoon at 2 o'clock.&#13;
well as operatic&#13;
^7/:&#13;
ough construction ia what enables the TJ. 3. to better STAND T H E TEST TT~ than aay other separator. You don* ha** to buy a new one e w y T e i r o r&#13;
two. And remember: the TJ. 8. does the cleanest — •*•- •*—•&#13;
Bzamina the TJ. 8. yourself and tee fta good pomta. It is sold by&#13;
all the time.&#13;
ardware •V*&#13;
at* .-3^&#13;
?&gt;»*•&#13;
" »..' ~J.«&#13;
"^^r^jjafcs '4^"~&lt; kr *^*te4WaW&#13;
gmthtieg jlispatcfi&#13;
r&amp;AJrx L. Ayua»wp, l*u*.&#13;
UUAJl&#13;
Tho Fir»t Man Strarijgif&#13;
":The first perbon whomV % ^m &gt;&#13;
meet* in landing from ship, boaVjOr&#13;
railway cur in a gr«at city4B a, eahxwun,&#13;
aljf the treatment he receives from&#13;
that pera«Q *«»er»Uy Axes b.ia notion&#13;
of the city «ud HB peopfc^4uTd comxoenly&#13;
calls for Imprecations and denunciations,&#13;
aaya the New Orleans&#13;
Picayune. Of course, It 1B not the ca»e&#13;
with guesta who are expected and a r e&#13;
specially met by frleada, but it la the&#13;
r a t i of every stranger, who wants to&#13;
get to a hotel or other destination and&#13;
does not know the way and would hire&#13;
a cab. It is true there are laws regulating&#13;
the charges for hauling passengers,&#13;
but the strangers are Ignorant&#13;
of these laws and as they are not&#13;
posted in plain view of the passenger,&#13;
as is required, he becomes the victim&#13;
of any rascal into whose hands he may&#13;
fall. There ought to be frequent Inspection&#13;
of cabB to see if the law let&#13;
complied whh, and all failures ahoukt&#13;
be severely punished. U is ...reported&#13;
that many shameful extortions were&#13;
practiced on straogej-s to the recent&#13;
carnival; they are whenever there is a&#13;
great influx of visitors. A thing like&#13;
this gives a city a bad name, as even&#13;
the most liberal people are enraged at&#13;
being swindled, and when they are&#13;
swindled the first moment they set foot&#13;
in a strange city, they visit on it theii&#13;
indignation and condemnation.&#13;
COLOREQ COOK TELL8 8TQRY&#13;
ABOUT DISPOSAL OF&#13;
FOOD.&#13;
CRUEL PUNISHMENT USED&#13;
Keeping Company.&#13;
Suddenly the music stops. Each cavalier&#13;
pilots his lady to her seat, keeping&#13;
#n arm attentively about her waist&#13;
and prepared dutifully to maintain the&#13;
posture till the band strikes up again.&#13;
Thereupon Hefty eharges through the&#13;
crowd, breathing out thre&amp;tenlngs and&#13;
slaughter. Luckily, the disappearance&#13;
of his rival precludes a "mix-up," but&#13;
there is fire in his eye as he face3&#13;
Nellie and b l u r t s ^ S a y , ain't you the&#13;
frosty article?" Her ruse has succeeded.&#13;
The lad's rage is a sort of proposal,&#13;
the debutante's blush a sort of&#13;
acceptance. He her steady, she his&#13;
lady friend, the two have shipped&#13;
aboard that pretty, rose-tinted galleon,&#13;
a short-term love-affair. Until further&#13;
notice, the world may take cognisance&#13;
that Hefty and Nellie are "keeping&#13;
company," writes R. L. Hartt, in his&#13;
character sketches in the Atlantic. Let&#13;
other suitors stand aloofr With Hefty&#13;
she dances the rest of the evening,&#13;
"off" Hefty she consumes raspberry&#13;
icecream soda M tbe&lt; cut-price drug&#13;
store during the intermission, and it is&#13;
Hefty who sees her home, receiving, in&#13;
all innocence, a good-night kiss.&#13;
Are there no public libraries, no Carnegies&#13;
in Australia? For w h a t do you&#13;
suppose is the very choicest novelty&#13;
for an Australian? Nothing more nor&#13;
less than "a literary lounge," a book&#13;
arcade, "where everybody Is welcome."&#13;
Plenty of chairs, the reading of a million&#13;
books on the shelves, string band&#13;
playing in the afternoon and evening,&#13;
and light refreshments on hand! The&#13;
idea may well tickle the bookworm&#13;
who browses in small, stuffy bookshops&#13;
or is absorbed into the British museum,&#13;
but it sounds queer to all who possess&#13;
Carnegie libraries galore; while as to&#13;
the Boston citizen, he simply pities&#13;
anybody who hasn't a card to "his&#13;
public library." However, "light refreshments"&#13;
and a "string band!" That&#13;
does savor of money-getting attractions&#13;
for the surging crowd's, who must&#13;
always be TSntfertatnefr * • # * white in&#13;
the pursuit of mental pabulum. A "literary&#13;
lounge" Bounds fetching, and is&#13;
original.&#13;
8tori«« Btfom th« Qrand Jury Rua&#13;
From Food! to Puniahmant af th«&#13;
Ruto Breaking Convicts.&#13;
The grand jury investigating t h e&#13;
Armstrong wardenahlp of ihe Michigan&#13;
state prison Friday morning divided&#13;
its time among the doings in&#13;
the warden's residence, the halt ttd&#13;
which the saate board of corrections&#13;
and charities brought him in his punishment&#13;
of prisoners and the workings&#13;
of the s t a t e pardoa board.&#13;
Ex-Convict Peter Lamarind, Convict&#13;
Benjamin and Convict Smith, all of&#13;
whom worked in the prison residence,&#13;
testified that boxes were packed with&#13;
chickens, eggs, extract of beef, canned'&#13;
goods, bottled delicacies and other&#13;
fancy groceries bought from Carlton&#13;
&amp; Windt and shipped to Armstrong's&#13;
daughter after she took up her residence&#13;
in South Bend.&#13;
Smith is the colored cook of the&#13;
prison household. He said:&#13;
"The old njan came out to m e after&#13;
this affair had blown up and said:&#13;
'Well, Smith, they've got me falling.&#13;
I'm going to fall hard. But I'm a ——&#13;
if I'll drag anybody down with me.'&#13;
"The Saturday night the old man&#13;
was arrested he and his wife walked&#13;
the floor all night. Mrs. Armstrong&#13;
drank nine cups of clear black coffee&#13;
so fast that I began to think I'd need&#13;
a bicycle to get "em to her quick&#13;
enough. One day a little while after&#13;
that she came out into the kitchen&#13;
and danced a regular barn dance, best&#13;
hoedown I've ever seen since I came&#13;
from the south. She had heard nomc&#13;
good or other."&#13;
"The missus is the one with the&#13;
brains in that family. She knows&#13;
more in a minute than Armstrong&#13;
will all his life."&#13;
Dr. Dayton Parker, member of the&#13;
state board of corrections and charities,&#13;
was asked about the irvestigation&#13;
made by the board into methods&#13;
of punishment imposed at the prison&#13;
and the subsequent order abolishing&#13;
the cruelest form of it.&#13;
"When we were considering the&#13;
plans which Armstrong had framed up&#13;
and asked an appropriation of $200,000&#13;
for the new cell block and other improvements,"&#13;
said Dr. Parker, "we&#13;
struck on the head which finally developed&#13;
our order for the abolition of&#13;
the so-called stringing up punishment."&#13;
"'Let's see your punishment cells,'&#13;
we said to the warden.&#13;
"'They are filled today,' he replied.&#13;
" ' S o much the better, that's just&#13;
when we want to see them.'&#13;
" 'Then you will have to see the&#13;
deputy warden,' he said.&#13;
"We did, and found that Armstrong&#13;
had ordered men handcuffed with their&#13;
hands manacled behind them and then&#13;
strung up with chains to the sides or&#13;
doors of their cells. The little doctor,&#13;
Dr, Pray, told us that he had to stand&#13;
over the men and watch to see that&#13;
they were not punished past the limit&#13;
of human endurance.&#13;
"We called Armstrong in. and he&#13;
defended (he procedure, He said he&#13;
considered it conducive to discipline.&#13;
We pointed out that solitary confinement&#13;
or a good spanking would do&#13;
more; that this sort of thing was&#13;
cruel, and further that it defeated the&#13;
very end he aimed al—it made each&#13;
convict in punishment think he was a&#13;
martyr, and encouraged him to hold&#13;
out as long as possible. Then we ordered&#13;
the warden to discontinue it."&#13;
"Did you hear that, he got the idea&#13;
for it f ^ m the Detroit house of correction?^&#13;
Dr. Parker was asked.&#13;
"Well, he claimed that, but I hardly&#13;
think the claim correct. We never&#13;
investigated the house of correction&#13;
on that point. We trust Supt. McDonnell.&#13;
I think he just shoves a man&#13;
into a dark cell and leaves him there&#13;
to think it over."&#13;
Opponents of vivisection are not&#13;
likely to find serious fault with the I&#13;
phase in which it presented itself at. J&#13;
Hubbardston, Mass.,-the other day. A&#13;
five-year-old girl, who had lost eight!&#13;
inches of skin by scalding, lay at the j&#13;
point of death, and surgeons cut a sec- j&#13;
tion of cuticle from a pig and grafted I&#13;
it. upon the wound. Was not that bet- j&#13;
ter than cutting skin from human be- j&#13;
ingR? The outcome of the case is uncertain,&#13;
but it would have been equally&#13;
uncertain if the contribution of cuticle&#13;
had been made by schoolmates of the&#13;
unfortunate girl.&#13;
The bureau of statistics of the department&#13;
of commerce and labor reports&#13;
that the returns at the close of&#13;
1908 indicated a notable improvement. \&#13;
in business, with normal conditions ac- j&#13;
tually shown in many cases. The situation&#13;
has continued to improve since, I&#13;
And it will not be materially affected&#13;
by the little flurry in the stock market,&#13;
although a good deal of water may b«&#13;
wqteezed out of some swollen s»cur1-&#13;
ttot.&#13;
The 8pring Elections.&#13;
There is absolutely no general interest&#13;
in the approaching spring election,&#13;
and if it. were not for the local&#13;
option fights in a number of the counties,&#13;
the vote would probably be the&#13;
smallest cast in ihe state in many&#13;
years. There is no discussion on the&#13;
state ticket at the capital. In the counties&#13;
where the liquor question Is to&#13;
be voted on, there is naturally a&#13;
great, deal of interest, hut it is confined&#13;
to the one proposition.&#13;
Some of the incidents in the liquor&#13;
fights are laughable. In many of the&#13;
counties the Anti-Saloon league distributed&#13;
cards offering a reward of&#13;
$50 for any evidence which would lead&#13;
to the conviction of any person offering&#13;
money for a vote "against local&#13;
option." This the liquor people have&#13;
bettered by putting out a card making&#13;
the same offer in rugard to a bribe&#13;
"for or against" local option.&#13;
Mark S. Simonton, a. wealthy farmer&#13;
of Leroy, Mich., who was reported&#13;
to have committed Htiicide by drowning&#13;
himself in the river at Leroy, was&#13;
picked up by the Kalamazoo police in&#13;
a confused condition, unable to give&#13;
any account of his wanderings.&#13;
William Wurzbnrger, a wealthy&#13;
blacksmith of Grand Traverse county,&#13;
chose jail to paying a $50 fine for&#13;
catching trout out of season. He&#13;
made arrangements for the trnnBao&#13;
tiou of his busincRs affairs before&#13;
going to ja&lt;&#13;
STATE NEWS BRIEFS,&#13;
, ^ f - * r - f i : 11&#13;
Benjamin Unnlnger, of Klog»l«y, I*&#13;
locked up on a chain* of selling itaf&#13;
eased meat.&#13;
jN-Jtfea, buptness men *T« organ^iifU&#13;
an ajtseociajfton for the extensive, raJaiAg&#13;
fit grape*.&#13;
JFred. Church, 20, waa, drowned U&#13;
the mill .pond here ..wjusn the canvas,&#13;
boat In which he wjw rowing capslxed.&#13;
Howard Coaklinl the 5-year^d boy&#13;
who waa bitten b&gt; a mad dog in Kindefhook&#13;
last week, has been taken to&#13;
Ann Arbor for treatment.&#13;
John Cook, aged 76, haa bee&gt; committed&#13;
to the Kalamazoo asylum,&#13;
being the sixth Barry county resident&#13;
adjudged insane in six weeks.&#13;
The Wesleyan Methodista of Hastings&#13;
will build a $3,000 church. They&#13;
intend, it is said, to make this place&#13;
the headquarters for their sect.&#13;
Rep. M. Livy Agenu ia reported aa&#13;
being Improved, he b*lng able to&#13;
recognise membenj of hl» family for&#13;
the first time since being taken ill.&#13;
Henry Rettke, employed by a lumber&#13;
company at l^oomls, dropped dead&#13;
while working near a circular saw.&#13;
Heart failure was the cause. He was&#13;
28 years old.&#13;
Two prominent Menominee women&#13;
are ill of ptomaine poisoning, said to&#13;
have resulted from eating diseased&#13;
veal. The two peddlers who sold the&#13;
meat are under arrest.&#13;
James Leary, 73, deaf and partly&#13;
blind, was robbed of $15 while feeding&#13;
his sheep at his farm near Morrison&#13;
lake. He was attacked from behind,&#13;
thrown down and beaten.&#13;
"""There" is a movement by the students&#13;
from the upper peninsula to enlist&#13;
IT. of M. students in the movement&#13;
to teach the foreign element so&#13;
prevalent in northern Michigan the&#13;
English language,"&#13;
The largest fish said to have been&#13;
caught in Newaygo lakes is a muskalonge&#13;
captured by Bert Mercer, of&#13;
Xewaygo. The fish was 45 inches long&#13;
and weighed 24½ pounds. It was&#13;
taken from Pickerel lake.&#13;
An interurban transportation line&#13;
with automobiles instead of trolley&#13;
cars Is assured for the.cities of Marquette,&#13;
Ishpeming and NTetgaunee aa&#13;
the result of the organization of the&#13;
Marquette County Traction} Co.;&#13;
Mrs. James J. Doucks. of Manistique,&#13;
was acquitted of the charge, of&#13;
giving her husband poisoned liquor,&#13;
but Edward Cruson, with whom the&#13;
woman is said to have eloped, was&#13;
held to the circuit court for t r i a l&#13;
According to figure* compiled by&#13;
the Michigan Central railway, ttte&#13;
damages to, badges, &lt; r^ile, spitoes and&#13;
otheR equipment, because ot,rthe dripping&#13;
of brine from' refrigerator cars,&#13;
amounted to $145,000 in o n e ' y e a r . i , !&#13;
The Salvation Army jubilee W e t i n&#13;
at Stone's theater in FlJiat&gt; eNttH&#13;
a large crowd...of r&lt;»prs^itanve\&#13;
zens who contributed, oyer $1,500, to&#13;
assist the Army membefs^IH' carrying,&#13;
o n r t b e charitaWaUAa&lt;*3HW»itti they'&#13;
have started. ••&lt;•&gt; ••&gt; &gt;&#13;
iMrs..ArthuriCoek and ha»^-days-old&#13;
baby were carried from the burning&#13;
house In Rockwood by her husband&#13;
amt neighbors, just a s ' t t t e roof tell&#13;
int. All the contents o f - t h e house&#13;
were burned with a loss of $1,500, and&#13;
no insurance&#13;
The Infant son of Mrs. Myron Butler,&#13;
of Standish, died Sunday morning&#13;
at 1 a; m., and at 1 p. m. the house&#13;
burned to the ground. Mr, Rutler&#13;
carried the dead body of his child out&#13;
of the burning house over to one of&#13;
the neighbor's.&#13;
The 6-year-old son of John Metzger,&#13;
Ionia, accidentally fell into a kettle of&#13;
boiling sap, head foremost. The father&#13;
quickly pulled him out, but he was&#13;
immersed long enough so that his&#13;
face and body were terribly burned&#13;
and he soon died.&#13;
Covered with mire and mud from&#13;
having been rooted around by hogs,&#13;
the body of Jacob Cameron, 64, was&#13;
found in the pigsty of his farm near&#13;
Grand Rapids Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
Heart, disease is supposed to have&#13;
been the cause of death.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Sopher and three&#13;
daughters were seriously burned in a&#13;
fire which totally destroyed their&#13;
home at. Rapid City. One of the children&#13;
had the hair hurned from her&#13;
head. A physician holds slight hopes&#13;
for the mother's recovery.&#13;
While working in tr^e new Grand&#13;
Trunk locomotive shops in Battle&#13;
Creek, A. P. McCollum, a coppersmith,&#13;
was killed, when a runaway car hit a&#13;
locomotive, causing it to move ahead,&#13;
and crush McCollnm's head between&#13;
the cowcatcher and a cement, wall.&#13;
Ida Keith, the 12-year-old girl who&#13;
has been held at, the Detention hospital&#13;
several days, will probably be&#13;
sent, to the Children's home. Officers&#13;
have been unahle to locate her parents,&#13;
who came to Crand Rapids from&#13;
Rattle Creek last week and deserted&#13;
the child.&#13;
Mrs. Harriet Cale dropped dead in&#13;
a Pontiac street car from an attack of&#13;
heart disease. She was walking on&#13;
Oakland avenue when seized, and h«r&#13;
cries brought, assistance. She was assisted&#13;
upon a car which stopped at a&#13;
physician's office, hut she died before&#13;
the doctor reached her.&#13;
New York dienatehes say detectives&#13;
have been detailed to search for&#13;
Latora S. Baker, formerly cashier of&#13;
the Northern National bank of Big&#13;
Rnpids, who has been legally dead for&#13;
in years. The search is said to have&#13;
been made at the Instance of Frank&#13;
Chiekering, of Grand Rapids, who has&#13;
extensive lumber interests In Michigan.&#13;
Chiekering says Baker is alive&#13;
and for several months has been associated&#13;
with a firm of Wall straet&#13;
brokers under the alias of Kaber La&#13;
Torat, his real name with the l e t t e n&#13;
tran*poi*d.&#13;
NOW THE FATHER OF THE WO&#13;
MAN HA8 DECIDED TO HELP&#13;
IN DEFENSE.&#13;
KIDNAPERS IN PA. JAIL&#13;
.I0YLE15&#13;
A H D E -h~&#13;
•&gt;\&#13;
Latest Reports About tha Boyis Woman&#13;
and Her Connection With thy&#13;
Whit I a Cas«.&#13;
James H. Boyle and Heten Boyle,&#13;
alias Faulkner, was indicted by the&#13;
county grand Jury in Cleveland Thursday,&#13;
charged with blackmail. The&#13;
charge is based on the payment ot th€&#13;
$10,000 ranaom by James P. Wbltla&#13;
for the recovery of his son, kidnaped&#13;
by them.&#13;
Willie Whitla late Wednesday afternoon&#13;
identified the two suspects as&#13;
"Mr. and Mrs. Jones," who took him&#13;
from school in Sharon a week ago and&#13;
kept him a prisoner in the Granger&#13;
house, a first-class rooming house in&#13;
Cleveland, until ransomed.&#13;
Mrs. Boyle, who was the "nurse" in&#13;
the Whitla kidnaping case, WRB formerly&#13;
Miss Anna McDermott, aged 22,&#13;
of Chicago. William McDermott, a&#13;
retired member of the Chicago fire 4epartment,&#13;
is her. father.&#13;
When shown a full description of&#13;
the woman he broke down and declared&#13;
that it was his daughter. He&#13;
and his family had been hoping&#13;
against hope that there had been some&#13;
mistake in the identification., Mr. Mc-&#13;
Dermott's story of his daughaer's life&#13;
is; that of a wayward girl.&#13;
Anna, according to her father, was,&#13;
as a child, one of the prettiest, one ot&#13;
the- brightest, in the ueighborhcod.&#13;
She was given every possible advantage&#13;
of education and careful moral&#13;
training, but as she approached womanhood"&#13;
-»he fy»H into company of&#13;
which the old fireman did not approve.&#13;
Quarrels were frequent, and about&#13;
three years ago Anna eloped. Since&#13;
that time her history has been a blank&#13;
to her Chicago kin. Even the name&#13;
of the man with whom she cast her&#13;
fortunes was unknown to them. They&#13;
carefully read from day to day the&#13;
story of the kidnaping of Willie Whitla,&#13;
of his return to his parents, and&#13;
the arrest of the "Boylesi" but vthey,&#13;
never dreamed .of connecting "Mrs.'&#13;
Boyle" with^ winsome, headstrvongf Anna,&#13;
w,ho haft, degfceted-. her home to&#13;
follow, unknqwp.jmthB. "*&#13;
Boyle'. and 'Anna, his wife, ar% now&#13;
in Jail in Pennsylvania, awaiting ar-&#13;
' {tftojLfUjd iriaL, William McDer-&#13;
&gt; Mhevwoman's father, has re*&#13;
tracted his declaration that he would&#13;
not assist t$e ghl, a n d o n his arrival&#13;
in Pittsburgh, isysald^f'rteve retailed&#13;
an attorney to look *fter tB«xc"as«.&#13;
McDtMnotf' did not,ge.t a change ttt&#13;
see (Sirg. Boyle* as, the woman had&#13;
been-tajten to Mercer, Pa,, before, £e&#13;
couHT visit her. *Slace the departure&#13;
of the prisoner it has beep learned&#13;
that her hodden*removal was dttff to&#13;
a fear on t h e ' p a r t of the detectives&#13;
connected with the case that McDermott&#13;
would institute habeas corpus&#13;
proceedings to secure the Release of&#13;
the girl he believes is his daughter.&#13;
Reports from Mexcer are $ a t Miss.&#13;
Boyle idmltted to a correspondent&#13;
that site waa Anna McDermott and&#13;
that her father was jVHHam McDermott,&#13;
q£ Chicago.&#13;
According to the correspondent the&#13;
young woman, when told that her&#13;
father was in Pittsburg and had retained&#13;
a lawyer to look after her interests,&#13;
said:&#13;
"I'm tired and sick of the whole&#13;
business. There is no use denying it&#13;
any longer. I am Anna McDermott&#13;
and my father is William McDermott,&#13;
of Chicago.&#13;
"I have told many lies lately, but&#13;
now I will tell you the truth. Yes,&#13;
he is my father."&#13;
"My early education," continued&#13;
Mrs. Boyle, "was received in the public&#13;
schools and later I was sent, to a&#13;
convent in Wisconsin. What was its&#13;
name? Well that is not necessary.&#13;
My mother has been dead for several&#13;
years. I really am Mrs. Boyle. WTe&#13;
were married three years ago. No,&#13;
we have no children, but I am very&#13;
fond of little ones.&#13;
"Afraid to stand trial? No. When&#13;
I go on the stand and tell my story&#13;
it will throw an entirely different, light&#13;
on the kidnaping episode. Until then&#13;
I would ask the public to withhold&#13;
its judgment. I want you to correct&#13;
one thing for me. In no way am I&#13;
related to the Whitlas or Buhls in&#13;
Sharon.&#13;
"I mean to stand by my husband&#13;
through this affair. T do not know&#13;
what his connection with the whole&#13;
dreadful thing is, but I am sure he&#13;
was not the instigator of the kidnaping&#13;
plot. I will not say whether ho&#13;
had any knowledge or not."&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
President Taft has ordered United&#13;
States marines hnck nn the warships,&#13;
from which they were removed by&#13;
ex-Pre*iderit Roosevelt.&#13;
George Alexander was elected mayor&#13;
of Los Angeles In the recall election,&#13;
caused by opposition to alleged&#13;
llrl-iifting on the part of Arthur C.&#13;
Harper as mayor.&#13;
More than 10,000 aliens arrived in&#13;
New York. Most of them hy nightfall&#13;
had passed the federal authorities and&#13;
w^re on their way to the northwest,&#13;
where many will make their future&#13;
homes.&#13;
stfXKS* TRIBE. -¾&#13;
fndians Open War in Oklahoma aoo&#13;
'' v "jcirrWhitirr. •"- l&#13;
!PL a p i t c h e d battle a t ' H r W ^ y&#13;
Ground, Oklahoma, Saturday night by-,&#13;
tween a posse of five officers and&#13;
twenty Creek Indians' of t h e Sna**'&#13;
clan, Officers Edward Qaum, of Cht&gt;--&#13;
cotah, and Herman Odom. of Checorty&#13;
tah, were killed: and P r a n k 8wlft. of^&#13;
MuBkegee, fatally wounded. .&#13;
, Frank Jomffi and William Carr, oth-&amp;&#13;
er1 members of the posse, escaped^&#13;
without injury and fled to the settlements&#13;
w h e r e - t h e ' n e w s of the battle&#13;
was IffeabQned to tfheiitt Odgm, of&#13;
MclBtQsa.gouAty, J-'JL* . - " •'&#13;
Swift dragged himself from the&#13;
scane of thf battle a n d was lajfr&#13;
picked up by Williafl Qarr, oae-.oY&#13;
the escaping officers, ami taken to&#13;
Pierce, a station one mHe away. Frank&#13;
Jones, another of the posse who £scapsd,&#13;
boarded a train at Pierce and&#13;
went to Checotah, bearing some details&#13;
of the battle.&#13;
The officers, having heard that t h e ,&#13;
Indtfss and negroes were again peaoe-'t&#13;
able after the battle of Thursday:&#13;
morning, approached the cabin of&#13;
Harjo, near Hickory Ground, without&#13;
fear, As they were entering the&#13;
chief's yard 20 gunB were leveled&#13;
upon them b y - a s many men in thehouse&#13;
and around the corners.&#13;
Odom and Baum fell doad and Swift&#13;
was seriously w_ounded. Jones ran a&#13;
few yards and hid himself in a clump&#13;
of trees until the Indians disappeared.&#13;
Then he hurried to Pierce.&#13;
Within,,30 minutes after the report&#13;
of the battle reached Checotah a hundred&#13;
men were armed. Every available&#13;
gun and practically all the ammunition&#13;
in town were taken. In an&#13;
hour 50 men were marching toward&#13;
Hickory Ground.&#13;
A dispatch from Checotah says that&#13;
the Snake Indians have been purchasing&#13;
rifles and ammunition for a month&#13;
and that they a-re supplied with poWdelr&#13;
and lead enough to last them two&#13;
days. Harjo, who has so often within&#13;
the past two years expressed his displeasure&#13;
at the restraints of law and&#13;
has often called his men into council&#13;
on that account, ia believed to have&#13;
determined to make a firm stand in&#13;
behalf of his ideas of liberty.&#13;
His band have been outlaws for&#13;
years. It required the services of United&#13;
States officers and the threat of&#13;
a call for the state militia t6 quell&#13;
his band last fall during a session of&#13;
the council at Hickory Ground.&#13;
FLASHES FROM THE WIRES&#13;
Almost any day now in the vicinity&#13;
of Jellalabad, Afghanistan, one is apt&#13;
to: see bodies rwmstllng through the&#13;
air. A plot was discovered against the&#13;
life of the arrieer and 1,200 men alleged&#13;
to have been concerned in it&#13;
were arrested. Now they are being&#13;
used rn target practice by the ameer's&#13;
artillery, replacing shells.&#13;
Hunt Tilford Dickenson, a 9-yearold&#13;
boy of Augusta, Ga., who was left&#13;
$4,000,000 by: Ms ancle, has not been&#13;
told of his good fortune. "I shall keep&#13;
the news from him as long as possible/'&#13;
says his father. "I am afraid it&#13;
would spoil him. I don't want the boy&#13;
to grow up with' the idea that he Is&#13;
rich and doesn't have to work."&#13;
THE MARKETS. K&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Extra dryfed steers&#13;
and heifers, \ !i.r&gt;0@ri,7f&gt;; steers and&#13;
heifers, 1,000 to l.iJOO,' 56.26@f&gt;.75;&#13;
steers and heifers. 80« to 1,0*0, $*.76©&#13;
r».25; steers and heifers that are fat,&#13;
500 to 700, $4.25@4.75: choice fat cow*,&#13;
$4.50; good fat cows, $4(??4.2B; common&#13;
fOffH, |3@3.50; cannecs, |t.76@2; choice&#13;
heavy hulls, S4.50; falv to good bolognas,&#13;
bulls. &gt;4®4.26; Btock bulls, 13.50&#13;
@3.75; choice feeding steers* 800 to&#13;
1,000, 14.50; fair feeding steers, 800 to&#13;
1,000, $4.2&amp;; choice Blockers, BOO to 700.&#13;
*4@4.2fi; fair stocker*. *00 to 700. I&amp;50&#13;
©4; stock heifers. |2@3,50; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, $40®50;&#13;
common milkers, |20@S0.&#13;
Veal calves—Market steady at last&#13;
week's opening; best. $7.!50@8; others,.&#13;
$4©7; milch cows and springers steady.&#13;
Sheep and lamb*—Market 10c to 15c&#13;
higher than last week; best lambs,&#13;
$7.75&lt;g&gt;7.85; fair to *ootf lambs. 17©&#13;
7.&amp;0; light to common lambs. 1606.50;&#13;
vparlings, $6¢¢6.50; fair to good sheep,&#13;
f5@ft.!)0; culls and common. $3@4.&#13;
Hogs—Market strong at last week's&#13;
closing prices. Range of prices: Light&#13;
to Rood butcher*, $6,80(3&gt;fi.fl0; pigs, $6©&#13;
6.75; light yorkers, $6,25 0)6,60; Btags,&#13;
1-3 off.&#13;
Eatot Buffalo—Cattle—Market 10®&#13;
15c lower; export steers, $6 25©6 75;&#13;
best 1,200 to 1,300-lb shipping steers,&#13;
5 90(ffi6 40; he*t 1,000 to 1,100-lb do,&#13;
fi.70©6; best fat cows, $4 50©6 28:&#13;
fair to good, $4©4 2R; trimmers, $fc 60&#13;
@2 80; beat fat heifers, $5 25@5 75;&#13;
light fat heifers, $3 75&lt;fi)4: best bulls,&#13;
4 50@5; bologna bulls, $4@4 2B. Thero&#13;
was a little better demand here today&#13;
for the fresh cows and springers, and&#13;
with but few on the market they sol*&#13;
about $2 per head higher: best cows,&#13;
$40^55; medium, $35@45; common,&#13;
$ 2 F « m . . .. •&#13;
HORS—Market steady; heavy. $7 34;&#13;
yorkerft. 17 15® 7 25; pigs, $6 75.&#13;
Sheep—Market active; best tambi^&#13;
S8 25&lt;S)8 30; culls, $7®7 50; yearHnxs,&#13;
R R0SJ7 25: wethers. 6@6 50; ewei,&#13;
$5 75©« 25; closed slow. •*••«• ,&#13;
Calves—$4 50©9 75. ^&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
Detroit.—Wheat—Cash No. I red,.&#13;
$1.25; May opened with n drop al \L&amp;&#13;
at $1.21¾ and advanced to $1.22: July&#13;
opened at $1.06¾. advanced to $1,06½.&#13;
and closed at $1.06: September opened&#13;
at $1.00%, advanced to $1.01 and closed&#13;
nt $1.00¾ ; No. a rod, $1.22; No. 1 whlt«s&#13;
11.25.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, f.7c; No.&#13;
2 cars at. 68c.&#13;
Oats—Cash No. 3 white,&#13;
55 I* r; May. 5"-&gt;iC&#13;
Hye—Cash No. 2, 83c.&#13;
Beans—Ca«h, $2.3S; May,&#13;
C%ivfrseed—Prime spot.&#13;
3 yellow,&#13;
1 enr at&#13;
$2.40.&#13;
,"i t i t l e s at. $5.40; March and April, $5,40; Octoher.&#13;
100 IXIKH at 15.90; sample. 24 bn^n at&#13;
$5,10, 20 nt $5, 10 at $4.75; sample&#13;
Hlfllk«\ 60 huffs at $7.25.&#13;
Timothy seed—Vrlme spot, 100 hajijs&#13;
at $1.65.&#13;
Barley—(Joed pamples. $1.45fl&gt;$1.50'&#13;
per rwt.&#13;
V&gt;ed—Tn 10n-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $28; course middlings. $29; fine&#13;
middling"". $31; cracked corn and&#13;
coarse cornmcal, $27; cotn and oat&#13;
chop; $28 p«r ton.&#13;
Flour—Best Michigan patent, §«.1*:&#13;
ordinary patent, $5.75; straight, $5.«5;&#13;
e'ear, $5.t0 per bM. i» w#od\ jobbing&#13;
vV&#13;
•4 mw+xw****.- , ^ v . &gt; - , , - . - — - « - • •&#13;
^&#13;
ii I, ; B I ^ ^ M I I I —&#13;
7vfr&#13;
'**•?&amp;&#13;
SERIAL&#13;
STORY&#13;
1VANISHING&#13;
FIFFTS&#13;
SOY NORTON&#13;
IU.U3TUTED BY A. WBO, J hi I Itf]&#13;
Pollt* offloem forwarded appeal!&#13;
from tUt -oJmiuber~or pojamei^f t o&#13;
WMhaagtesg* b u V l * * l*T*rniB«fit, a»-&#13;
•were* tnat there jufajpo altera**!?*,&#13;
pacauM it the secret waa known&#13;
tnrougUbat &gt;tn#&lt;! U&amp;tod State! , the&#13;
(tfiancaajfot Ha leakage aanpaa. ike&#13;
llnea would laa augin^nted. All Bound&#13;
traffic stopped, and from the great&#13;
union depot no departing trains rumbled.&#13;
Within an hour it -waa known&#13;
that a cordon of soldiers surrounded&#13;
the city, and that all traffic or com-&#13;
1 munlcatlon with the outside world&#13;
was interdicted. Seattle had b«en isolated.&#13;
Thus it was that the presence of.the&#13;
captured fleet and the method of its&#13;
taking were unknown to the'country&#13;
at large. Seattle extended all consistent&#13;
courtesies to the vanquished;&#13;
but it afforded little balm.&#13;
And thus it was that for many days,&#13;
imprisoned, powerless, and lost, with&#13;
crippled tops, crushed * tacks and under&#13;
the white flag of surrender, the&#13;
dower of Japanese prowess floated on&#13;
an Inland. sea in sullen mourning,&#13;
while the gasping world shuddered in&#13;
contemplation of its fate.&#13;
S Y N O P 8 I 8 .&#13;
"Vanishing Fleets," a story of "what&#13;
might have bapp«ne&lt;V opeiuj tn Wa«blogton&#13;
with the united States and Japan&#13;
near' war: Guy Htllter, necretary of the&#13;
British embassy, and Miss Norma Roberts,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
Introduced as lovers. Japan declares war&#13;
and takes the Philippines. Guy Hllller&#13;
start* for England. Norma Roberts&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. Ail ports&#13;
are closed. Tokyo learns of missing Japanese&#13;
fleet and whole world becomes convinced&#13;
that United States has powerful&#13;
war agency. England decides to send&#13;
a fleet to American waters as a Canadian&#13;
protection against what the British suppose&#13;
is a terrible submarine flotilla. Hllller&#13;
Is sent with a message. Fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears. The kaiser is missing.&#13;
King Edward of England is confronted&#13;
by Admiral Be vine of the United&#13;
States. The Dreadnaught, biggest of England's&#13;
warskips, is discovered at an impassable&#13;
poilt in the Thames. The story&#13;
now goes back to a time many months*&#13;
before the war breaks out, and Inventor&#13;
Roberts visits the president and cabinet,&#13;
telling of and exhibiting a metal production.&#13;
This overcomes friction when electrified&#13;
and is to be applied to vessels. A&#13;
city for the manufacture of the mysterious&#13;
discovery is built. The mystery&#13;
of true levitatlon la solved.&#13;
Roberts evolves a great, flying machine.&#13;
The cabinet plans a radloplane&#13;
war against Japanese. The start for the&#13;
scene of conflict with a large fleet of monster&#13;
airships la made with Norma in command.&#13;
The Japanese fleet, believing Nippon&#13;
supreme, suddenly discerns the radioplane&#13;
fleet. After maneuvering the airships&#13;
deseend, and by use of strong mugnets&#13;
lift the airships, one by one, from&#13;
the Bea. The trip to the west coast of&#13;
America is then commenced. Because of&#13;
a partially disabled radloplane, one of&#13;
the warships is dropped into the sea after&#13;
the men are transferred to another.&#13;
The vessels are deposited in a mountain&#13;
lake in the United States to await peacvt&#13;
CHAPTER XIX—Continued.&#13;
"Men," he said, "I take no credit for&#13;
the result, and I'm big enough so to&#13;
report to Washington. This battle&#13;
brought out three heroes. Brockton,&#13;
Jenkins and above all this little girl,&#13;
Norma Roberts." His "God bless her!"&#13;
was lost In the tumult. They were men&#13;
intoxicated with the wine of victory.&#13;
They yelled themselves hoarse. They&#13;
patted one another on the back, hurled&#13;
their caps into the air, and finally&#13;
formed escorts of honor to conduct the&#13;
men and officers of the fleet to their&#13;
cabins, asking over and over for details&#13;
of the fight.&#13;
And even as those tired fighters&#13;
went to rest, in a city across the continent&#13;
newsboys were crying their&#13;
extras through the streets, and the&#13;
citlaens of a great city were asking&#13;
ortb another how the night had worked&#13;
its miracle. A lounging patrolman&#13;
In Ravenna park, which bordered on&#13;
Lake Washington, had sleepily rubbed&#13;
his eyes as the svm was tinting the&#13;
everlasting snows of the Olympics,&#13;
and had conae to a sudden stop, leaning&#13;
against a tree and wondering if&#13;
he was still asleep; hut with his&#13;
knuckles he could not obliterate the&#13;
floatfas vision before him. He convinced&#13;
himself by a lusty hail: "Hello,&#13;
out there! What are you doing? Get&#13;
off that lake!" and hack to him there&#13;
volleyed a storm of objurgations in an&#13;
unknown tongue. Not until he had&#13;
called a fellow officer and rowed a&#13;
boat round those fallen monarchs of&#13;
the deep did he learn that they were&#13;
captive to his 'country, and then,&#13;
elated with the news, he hastened to&#13;
impart it.&#13;
But this was not the only surprise&#13;
for Seattle. For* some clays preceding&#13;
troops had been pouring Into the port,&#13;
and it had been the general belief that&#13;
they were being mobilized preparatory&#13;
to embarkation for the Philippines or&#13;
Ttplll Oh this morning, however,&#13;
tfetra waa an exodus. Nearly all the&#13;
troops had disappeared In the night.&#13;
Likewise there were strange happenings&#13;
in the telegraph offices. When&#13;
men went to consign messages they&#13;
were met with the Intelligence that&#13;
t h * wires were in charge of military&#13;
operators, that nothing could be received&#13;
for any point beyond the borders&#13;
of the United States, and that&#13;
all messages without exception would&#13;
be censored before transmission. The&#13;
newspapers fumed and roared, until&#13;
they learned that, all incoming news&#13;
would pass uninterruptedly; but that&#13;
for purposes known only to the government&#13;
the story of the presence of&#13;
the Japanese fleet would he closely&#13;
guarded for the time being. For once&#13;
the Post-Intelligence, the Times' and&#13;
Star united in attacking the. administration.&#13;
'&#13;
&gt; « : r - . "&#13;
C H A P T E R X X .&#13;
What Befell the Emperor.&#13;
Like a lonely rock that has withstood&#13;
the fury of a storm and the battering&#13;
of the seas to emerge a.galn&#13;
into sunlight, the president felt his&#13;
time of justification approaching. His&#13;
hour of triumph was at hand, and his&#13;
prayers were being answered; but the&#13;
ta^k was not yet done.&#13;
The unqualified victory over the&#13;
Japanese fleet made the outcome of&#13;
telegra£h_ communication, and the peuarttrre&#13;
from the'key'Vas also under&#13;
COTST of darkness. Again there was a&#13;
resemblaaoe to the Japanose affair,&#13;
in that the appearance of the radioplanes&#13;
created surprise and consternation&#13;
on the warships. Hero, however,&#13;
the similarity ended The Anglo-&#13;
Saxon mind knows no such thing as&#13;
surrender whdn once ft la stirred to&#13;
tho depths of Its'stubbornness. It can&#13;
read oply two answers to the riddle&#13;
of conflict—victory or death—as has&#13;
been attested by many a hard-fought&#13;
battle on land and sea.&#13;
The armada of Great Britain had&#13;
sailed with apprehensions, being fully&#13;
cognisant that it was invading a territory&#13;
of mystery and danger, and the&#13;
vigilance of its watch, therefore, was&#13;
never relaxed. The consternation&#13;
caused: by the first sight of the aerial&#13;
fleet was immediately followed by a&#13;
hurried clearing of the decks for action,&#13;
. although defeat in a battle&#13;
against such overpowering odds waa a&#13;
foregone conclusion. No gun was&#13;
fired, however, and all stood expectantly&#13;
awaiting a declaration of Intent&#13;
from the monsters of the air which&#13;
had come upon them lu the full glare&#13;
of the afternoon sun.&#13;
With slow and stately majesty the&#13;
rad lop lanes . approached, each flying&#13;
the flag of the United States and beneath&#13;
it the emblem of truce. The&#13;
Dreadnought, answering sluggishly&#13;
to the swell and hurling great cascades&#13;
of water from its bow, was In the&#13;
heart of the formation, and in its ponderous&#13;
might seemed fearless of anything&#13;
afloat. Toward it the foremost&#13;
radloplane directed its course, drop-&#13;
The W i r e s Were in Charge of M i l i t a r y Operators.&#13;
the war a certainty; hence it. was with&#13;
patience that the administration&#13;
waited for the next move in the far&#13;
east, which must of necessity come&#13;
China. There was no doubt that she&#13;
would assist her ally. At first this&#13;
seemed an imminent action; but. several&#13;
days passed bringing through the&#13;
secret service no news save that her&#13;
fleet, huge and well manned, was&#13;
making preparations to sail. The&#13;
president, knowing that for the accomplishment&#13;
of his purpose oriental&#13;
power must bo broken, indulged in the&#13;
fervent, hopo that the attack might&#13;
come soon.&#13;
There was less trouble Internally,&#13;
as the people were beginning to have&#13;
faith in the administration, though&#13;
they were speculating ag to what&#13;
course of procedure was being followed.&#13;
It was while affairs were in&#13;
this condition that the sailing of the&#13;
British fleet was duly announced&#13;
through secret, channels of information.&#13;
The coterie saw before it the&#13;
necessity of either abandoning the&#13;
hope of teaching China a drastic lesson&#13;
and announcing its Secret, to the world&#13;
or meeting tho Rritish squadrons and&#13;
holding them hostage in the interest&#13;
of peace. Thoy chose the latter alternative,&#13;
and thereby was caused the&#13;
strangest, chapter in the history of war.&#13;
Like that other sally outward to the&#13;
western seas, this one was timely. It&#13;
was made when the British fleet might&#13;
Le met beyond the reach' of wireless&#13;
ping steadily down until full abreast&#13;
and on a level with the great fighting&#13;
tops, while the officers of the battle&#13;
ship watched with amazement its&#13;
splendid control. Npt till then was&#13;
there a visible display of life aboard&#13;
it. A port opened and into the blackness&#13;
of its frame Bevins emerged,&#13;
while directly behind him stood the&#13;
scientist, who had recovered, and was&#13;
to witness the first full demonstration&#13;
of the power he had evolved. On the&#13;
bridge of the battle ship the British&#13;
admiral stood, surrounded by staff officers.&#13;
"Good afternoon, admiral," the&#13;
American hailed. "Glad to see you.&#13;
How do you like the looks of us?"&#13;
Across Fields' face flitted a half&#13;
smile. "We are very well indeed, Admiral&#13;
Bevins; but can't say we are&#13;
particularly glad to see you, of sure&#13;
that we like you until we know more.&#13;
Clever invention that. Must have&#13;
been conceived by an Englishman."&#13;
Behind the United States officer n&#13;
withered little figure became imbued&#13;
with a sudden frenzy of passion&#13;
that threatened to interject an unpleasant,&#13;
remark; bm i'evins checked&#13;
him with a laugh and grew serious&#13;
again.&#13;
"Admiral," he said, "my country&#13;
isn't at war with yours. You understand&#13;
that."&#13;
Fields looked relieved, and lost&#13;
somewhat of his air of set defiance.&#13;
At the head ojf his men he'erossedjo&#13;
,tht end of the bridge where ho nnr^fct&#13;
be nearer thefts* jaddreaalng him. Ifce&#13;
nervous straiiTot, tejo situatjop waa fcelag&#13;
rapidly dfcoiaiaied. "Frankly, I'm&#13;
gl*4&gt;- to. be reaaaured," ,he , replied.&#13;
"There-are a rot*f sWags, We'd rather&#13;
know,*'" :f . ' - • . ;&#13;
"And which \ shall he glad to sixplain&#13;
if you and* a dozen of your immediate&#13;
subordinates will come aboard&#13;
aa my guests."&#13;
The Invitation waa Immediately accepted;&#13;
but it was a trying interview&#13;
for the Britons. Tho machine on&#13;
which they were received was the&#13;
Roberts, which waa the latest production&#13;
of the plant on the key. It&#13;
was larger than Its predecessors, und&#13;
Jjad been made tho most pretentious.&#13;
It was elegantly appointed. Amidships&#13;
it contained a drawing room on&#13;
which the most careful workmanship&#13;
had been lavished. The guests gathered&#13;
round a huge mahogany table,&#13;
whose polished tup reflected the light&#13;
from the, colored ports of the dome,&#13;
and were served with refreshments before&#13;
Bevins recurred to the object of&#13;
his visit. He drew from his pocket&#13;
an official packet and laid it open befor&#13;
him.&#13;
"Gentlemen," he began, "of cou.se&#13;
ywu are Interested in all that you have&#13;
seen, and in the attitude of the United&#13;
States. What I shall read to wou are&#13;
my orders. I have come out here to&#13;
meet you for the purpose, fln»t of all,&#13;
that you may bear them."&#13;
The Roberts had ascended to an altitude&#13;
above the others of the American&#13;
fleet, and was resting in mid air.&#13;
It was very still, the light hum of a&#13;
small dynamo from behind the partitions&#13;
being the only disturber of silence.&#13;
He opened the document und&#13;
read:&#13;
"You are instructed to intercept the&#13;
British fleet and assure its ofiicers of&#13;
the good will of the United States toward&#13;
his majesty, King Edward VII.,&#13;
and all his subjects. You are to explain&#13;
to them that the United States is&#13;
compelled, In pursuance of its adopted&#13;
policy formulated at the commencement&#13;
of the war with Japan, to maintain&#13;
the secret of its power until such&#13;
time as It is deemed expedient to announce&#13;
it to the world. You will then&#13;
endeavor to induce the British fleet&#13;
to surrender itself into your hands as&#13;
guests of this country, assuring those&#13;
in command that all damages accruing&#13;
will be repaired by the United&#13;
States. You are to use all due caution&#13;
to avoid injury to life, property, or&#13;
pride, and to transport the entire fleet&#13;
to the waters of Chesapeake bay, after&#13;
which for a brief period the officers&#13;
and men of Great Britain will be entertained&#13;
by the United States."&#13;
Bevins stopped and looked into the&#13;
faces confronting him, which expressed&#13;
a variety of emotions, running&#13;
the gamut from stolidity to wonder,&#13;
and from compliance to indignation.&#13;
The British admiral's visage was a&#13;
frowning one. "Your country asks&#13;
too much!" he said, almost explosively.&#13;
"And really it volunteers no explanation&#13;
of its acts or intentions."&#13;
Some of his companions nodded their&#13;
heads in approval. "We can't accept."&#13;
Bevins reopened the parchment. "I&#13;
must then read you the concluding&#13;
clause," he said, and began:&#13;
"It is strongly desired that there be&#13;
no clash at arms; but in any e&gt;ent&#13;
you are to return with the fleet."&#13;
There was brief silence in t^e room,&#13;
which was broken by Fieljs, who&#13;
jumped to his feet. Bevins sose, and&#13;
the other officers did likewise. The&#13;
situation threatened unhappy conclusions;&#13;
but Bevins held up a restraining&#13;
hand and went, on:&#13;
"Here! Before you underestimate&#13;
the force of this last clause, let me&#13;
give you a demonstration of what we&#13;
can do and how difficult it would be&#13;
for you to offer any defense or effective&#13;
resistance whatever."&#13;
He turned to a speaking tube, gave&#13;
a curt order and requested his visitors&#13;
to look through the transparent&#13;
ports, which were suddenly opened beneath&#13;
their feet. The Roberts swept&#13;
up into the air to such a prodigious&#13;
height that, the internal pressure&#13;
against her shell became terrific. Sha&#13;
was at such an altitude that no mortal&#13;
being could^have withstood the Arain,&#13;
In great circles she descended, until&#13;
the water again became visible, then&#13;
the vessels upon it, and last of all&#13;
the crests of the waves. Now she&#13;
swooped lower, and then at a speed ot&#13;
nearly 600 miles an hour whipped a&#13;
straight line close above the tops of&#13;
the fighting masts, slowed down, and&#13;
whirled in and out, about and above&#13;
the British ships as easily as would a&#13;
swallow in playful flight. On the&#13;
decks of the vessels men stared in&#13;
wide-eyed amazement, at this demon&#13;
of the air, at first, fearing that control&#13;
had been lost and the lives of those&#13;
aboard wore in jeopardy. Then at the&#13;
splendid exhibition of speed and handling&#13;
they were dumbfounded. The&#13;
Roberts then rose in one quick lift&#13;
until it was above the plane of altitude&#13;
assumed by the Other machines, poised&#13;
fur a moment, and came to a stop. In&#13;
all this time no one had spoken a&#13;
word. Now they turned to the American,&#13;
rmloosing their convulsive&#13;
clutches from the seats and liberated&#13;
from the spell.&#13;
tTfll BE CONTINUED.*&#13;
T W O Y E A R * O F 'FREEDOM.&#13;
No Kidney Trouble at Alf i l W U s i A&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Johnson, 710 Wee 6t„ Columbia,&#13;
Mo., says: "I was in misery&#13;
with kitlne&amp;troub^,&#13;
and final J&gt;| bad t o undergo&#13;
an operation.&#13;
I did not rally well,&#13;
and began to suffer&#13;
smothering spells aajl&#13;
dropsy. My left aide&#13;
was badly swollen&#13;
and the action ot t h e&#13;
kidneys much disordered.&#13;
My doctors&#13;
said I would have to be tapped, but I&#13;
began using Doan's Kidney PUta id*&#13;
stead, and the swelling subsided and&#13;
the kidneys began to act properly.&#13;
Now my health fa flue." (Statement&#13;
made Aug. 1, 1906, and confirmed 4&gt;V&#13;
Mrs. Johnson Nev. 16, 1908.) '• ''&#13;
Sold by aH dealers. W cents a .box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. —&#13;
F R E E D O M .&#13;
Son—Say, dad; when is the freedom&#13;
of the city given to a man?&#13;
Pater—When his wife goes to the&#13;
country for the summer.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We affer One Hundred Dollars Reward tor say&#13;
eaae or Catarrh Ui*t cannot ba cured by Hairs&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY * CO.. Toted*. O.&#13;
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney&#13;
for the laat ll yean, and believe him perteeUy honorable&#13;
In all bualneaa transactions and financially&#13;
able to carry out any obligations made by hie Ana.&#13;
WALDI.NO. KJKNAN 6 MAHVIN. Wholesale Druggtou. Toledo. O.&#13;
Hall'a Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surface* -of ttm&#13;
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents par&#13;
bottle. Sold by all Dnsnists.&#13;
Take Hall's Family PUls tor constipation.&#13;
Taking No Chances.&#13;
"You always speak kindly to your&#13;
wife?" said the prying friend.&#13;
"Always," answered Mr. Meekton.&#13;
MI never think of giving Henrietta »&#13;
harsh word."&#13;
"Because you believe in ruling by&#13;
gentleness?"&#13;
"No. Because self-preservation fa&#13;
the first law of nature."&#13;
Safe and Sure.&#13;
Among the medicines tliat are recommended&#13;
and endorsed by physicians and&#13;
nurses is Kemp's Balsam, the best cough&#13;
cure. For many years it has been regarded&#13;
by doctors aa the medicine most: likely&#13;
to cure cougha, and it has a strong hold&#13;
on the e6teem of all well-informed people.&#13;
When Kemp's Balsam cannot cure a cough&#13;
we hlull be at a loan to know what wul.&#13;
At druggists' and dealers', 25c.&#13;
Kentucky May Grow Turkish Tobacco.&#13;
Turkish cigarette manufacturers&#13;
want Kentucky to grow Turkish tobacco,&#13;
imports of which have grown&#13;
from $25,000 to $4,000,000 in only 12&#13;
years.&#13;
Pettit'a Eye Salve First Sold in 1807&#13;
100 years ago, sales increase yearly, wonderful&#13;
remedy; cured millions weak eyes. All&#13;
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Just the Thing.&#13;
. "How is the little bootblack getting&#13;
on whom you started?"&#13;
"He? Why, he's a shining success."&#13;
ONLY ONK "BROMO QUININE."&#13;
ThM Is I, AX ATI V« BHOMO V' IN INK. T.oolc for&#13;
rh&lt;&gt; siKiinTo™ nf K. \V. (iltoVK. Vsv&gt;d tho World&#13;
j uvur to Ouro a Cold In Oneliav. iSc.&#13;
j if duty would use a megaphone&#13;
I moro of us mi^ht hear the call.&#13;
If yon suffer from Pits, Falling Sickness.&#13;
Spasms or have children or friends that &lt;lo .so,&#13;
my New Discovery-will rcliev^thcTn.atifi all you&#13;
are askeil to do i* wend for a FREE Bottle of&#13;
Dr. May's Eptleptlcide Cure.&#13;
It haR cured thousands where everything el«c&#13;
failed. Sont fri-P -with directions. Expreaa&#13;
Prepaid. Onaranteed by May Medical laboratory,&#13;
under the National Food and Drutra&#13;
Act, Jnne 30th. 1906. Guaranty No. 18971.&#13;
Please give AGE itmt full address.&#13;
DR. W. H. MAI .&#13;
I 5 4 8 Paarl Street, New York City.&#13;
Do You Feel&#13;
Down?&#13;
Run&#13;
If so, you are an easy victim of&#13;
disease. You can avoid danger&#13;
if you build up your system with&#13;
the natural strength-giver—&#13;
DR.D.JAYNES&#13;
TONIC VERMIFUGE&#13;
which helps your body do its own&#13;
building np. It puts the wholr digestive&#13;
system in a perfect condition.&#13;
Regulates the stomach, imparts new&#13;
vigor and health to the tissues.&#13;
Your Druggist has it.&#13;
Ttoo sizes, 50c and 35c&#13;
-^t.i&#13;
•H.&#13;
&lt;1 ..«*.,&#13;
mm&#13;
'.(wry &gt; - •&#13;
«••» W M «•**»»&#13;
Ik* fincknrg fwpa^h /Loca/ (fyyf/o/? Aofee.&#13;
„ " T k f»wat t h o u g h t of o a r oouu»&#13;
F. L. A N D K E W S A fin . . , . ^ , . . ^ ^ I t r y is pledger! t o s o b r i e t y a n d u n -&#13;
rrrunriroriiiHiiig hobtility t o ttfkloou&#13;
jcoutroi."- R e v . J a m e s M. Cltjry.&#13;
' I t a b o u k i n o t b e J o r g o t t e u t h a t&#13;
' " M « k e $ L e beet of t h e fire^.j S o u t h C a r o l i i i a l a k e s itu p l a c e iu&#13;
p r e a ^ u ^ " saya.tlie W i s e M a o ; b u t j t h e c o l u m n of p r o h i b i t u m s t a t e s&#13;
auppobo u o o n e ^ivua y o u a ptvu- j J u l y 1 b y t h e l a w r e c e n t l y pttaaed.&#13;
e u t " ' T h i e i H t h o l a a t i»aue of t h e D I S -&#13;
P A T C H b e f o r e t h e b a t t l e for local&#13;
*. L. A N D R E W S &amp; C O . fNOHKiLTOHtt,&#13;
T H U K S D A X , A i J i i J, 1909.&#13;
T V&#13;
•mm&#13;
This is+u*rtrtfiH timn of year wh«n&#13;
you are ruo.'sfc• Jikniy ID liavn kiduoy or&#13;
bladder trouble, with thtuiuiatism ar.d&#13;
o p t i o n will bo f o u g h t a n d w o n o r&#13;
lost. N o w it i« t h e t i m e t h a t \Avm^&#13;
atou ' o u ' j t y w a u t 8 e v e r y m a n&#13;
rheumatic pains caused bv weak kid- 'u j Y - , L , ^ 1 , t&#13;
1 - t o d o hia d u t y . O t h e r a t a t e a a r e&#13;
w i n n i n g v i c t o r i e s e v e r y d a y i n t h e&#13;
fight a n d would n o t r e t u r n t o t h e&#13;
neys. Delays are dftiij^rrjuK. Get &lt;)e&#13;
Witts Kidney and Uhdfar Pills, and&#13;
bo-sure you s e t wb^t you,: ask tor. ,&#13;
They are the Vest pUls made for back pk«UH*d l i q u o r traffic f o r t w i c e&#13;
ache, weak back, f l l l , t r y disorders, t h e r e v e n u e . L e t t h i a c o u n t y&#13;
inflamatiry ot'.the.bladdei, »tL-. They ! w i t h - t h e o t h e r a a l r e a d y d r y , h e l p&#13;
ate antiseptic arid act promptly. Sold j p u t M i c h i g a n t o t h e g o o d .&#13;
and recommended t'V all, dealers. u . r -,. ,. .u , -, ^&#13;
J o i x I n d i a n a c o u n t i e a will h o l d&#13;
. j local o p t i o n e l e c t i o n s t h i s week,&#13;
Bills h a v e been i n t r o d u c e d i n ;fo u r o t h e r s n e x t week a n d s e v e r a l&#13;
t h e l e g i s l a t u r e to release t h e p u b - ^ o t h e r s in A p r i l . O n e of t h e l u r g -&#13;
lic schools of t h e s t a t e from t h e j e a t b r e w e r y o w u e r a in t h e a t a t e ia&#13;
g r i p of t h e t e x t b o o k ti ust. j q u o t e d aa a a y i u g t h a t if t h e ' d r y a '&#13;
. . ..1 . . '... [ m a k e a c l e a n Bweep t h i s w e e k , i t&#13;
If you need a pill take DeWitts Lit- j will b e . n o u s e t o o p p o s e t h e m a n y&#13;
tie Early Kisjrs. Insist: on them,&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little liver pills.&#13;
Sold by all dealers.&#13;
f u r t h e r .&#13;
T h e d e f e a t of t h e effort to r e -&#13;
p e a l t h e c o u n t y local o p t i o n l a w&#13;
"~ i in I n d i a n a g r e a t l y h e a r t e u a t h e&#13;
Tf D e t r o i t w a n t e w o r l d w i d e a d - j t e m p e r a n c e p e o p l e . T h e l i q u o r&#13;
v e r t i s i n g , let it b e t h e first A m e r i - m e u 8 p e n t H m i n t o f m c m e y t o&#13;
can city t o nmui-jipnlly o w n a n d e l e ( ; t a l e g i s l a t u r e t h a t w o u l d&#13;
o p e r a t e i t s s t r e e t c a r s y s t e m . ; k n o c k o u t t h e c o u n t y o p t i o n law,&#13;
- ' • b u t h a v e failed, a n d n o w t h e s t a t e&#13;
W i n s t o n C h u r c h i l l s a y s t h e , is g o i n g d r y a s fast as t h e c o u u t i e s&#13;
African l i o n s a r e a s c o w a r d l y a s c m vote.&#13;
o u r c o y o t e s . E v i d e n t l y t h e y ' v e ; T h e city c o u n c i l of J a c k s o n , , i u&#13;
h e a r d w h o ' s c o m i n g t h e i r way. | t h e h o p e to h e a d off local o p t i o n&#13;
-- - - • ' •-- ' i n t h e c o u n t y , a d o p t e d o n T u e s d a y&#13;
There is not a better Salve than De- b y a v o t e of 10 to 5, a n o r d i n a n c e&#13;
Witts rarbolizad Witch Hazel salve, r e d u c i n g t h e n u m b e r of s a l o o n s i n&#13;
We hereby warn the public that we | t h e city from e i g h t y to t h i r t y t w o ,&#13;
are not responsible for ;,r&gt;y injurious l o r o n e t o 700 p o p u l a t i o n ; i m p o s -&#13;
eflects caused !, on, u .. ^ , &gt;s or pois- !. R c i f c ] i c e D g e o( 3500 [u H d d i -&#13;
).• Witts Cas- t- . .1 i • r 1&#13;
. . tion to t h e s t a t e license, a n d p r o -&#13;
t/' I Sa've, the oritnf ! . , A. . A.&#13;
. 1 vines s o m e o t h e r r e g u l a t i o n s s u p -&#13;
t is especially F^sed to b e s t r m ^ e n t . I h e o r d i&#13;
01)011 s ltli it&#13;
bolized V\ Men&#13;
nal. It is L&#13;
salve i&gt; neede&#13;
iol)s or mi 11&#13;
hi)!&#13;
^0()(1 for pi I -. He MIMS \ .m&#13;
Witty.• - Sold bv all dealers.'&#13;
uet De m i n c e W f l s d r a f t e d by t h e b r e w e r s&#13;
.( i a t t o r n e y s , a n d w a s f a t h e r e d by a&#13;
_ — • « — « « • . so-called ' B u s i n e s s M e n s A l l i a n c e '&#13;
T! • j . i i 11 1 -I i t o h e a d off local o p t i o n .&#13;
I t is disclosed t h a t t h e s u r p l u s *&#13;
of «6,000 o f t'hti i u h u g u r a l c o m - , " T h e p r i n c i p l e of p r o h i b i t i o n&#13;
niittee h a s b e e n t u r n e d o v e r t o 8 e e m s t o m o t h e o n l &gt; ' 8 K f e a n d c e r "&#13;
t h e N a t i o n a l C o m m i t t e e for u s e in t n i n r o m e d y for t h e evils of i n -&#13;
b r i n g i n g a b o u t a c h a n g e i n t h e , t e m p e r a n c e . T h i s o p i n i o n h a s&#13;
d a t e of i n a u g u r a t i o n . I t could b e e 1 1 s t r e n g t h e n e d b y t h e h a r d&#13;
n o t b e b e t t e r e x p e n d e d , l a b o r of m o r e t h a n t w e n t y y e a r s&#13;
in t h e t e m p e r a n c e c a u s e . " — P a t h -&#13;
., . ^ v . or Mathew.&#13;
&gt;wt pf Over Niagara&#13;
This terrible calamity often h a p p e n \ " T h » C a t h o l i c c h u r c h is a b s o -&#13;
hecause a caicSess boatman ignores ; lutely a n d i r r e v o c a b l y o p p o s e d to&#13;
the rivers warnings—-Krowincr ripnles d r u n k e n n e s s a n d to d r u n k a r d&#13;
and faster curr^m — Natures warnings m a k i n g . I n vain we b o a s t of civare&#13;
kind. Thai dull pain or ache in ; ilization a n d l i b e r t y if we d o n o t&#13;
the hack \varn-y mi that the kidneys i ! i U O r t o e x t e r m i n a t e i n t e m p e r -&#13;
need attention il you would escape R n c G i T h e claim of s a l o o n k e e p e r s&#13;
fatal m a l a d u - s - . ) , o , &gt; y , diabetes ^' to treedam lu theic t m m c i s r h o&#13;
Bnehts. disease. Take Klectric lutterfi . 1 - . , v . -,&#13;
' , , . n ,, claim t o s p r e a d d i s e a s e , sin a n d&#13;
at. once and see bacKai.-he fly and a l l , . , , » , « . T &gt; i&#13;
, , t• 1 ' ilAli. p a u p e n s m . - - A r c h b i s h o p I r e a n d .&#13;
your best feelings return. "Alter * * *&#13;
lon^ suffering from weak kidney- and ! T h e late R e v . F a t h e r T h o m a s&#13;
lame back, one $1 bottle wholly cured S c u l l y , of C a m b r i d g e , M a s s , s a y s :&#13;
me," writes &lt;J. R, Ulankenshtp, ot Helk " T h e r e is n o e n e m y t h a t I k n o w&#13;
Tenn. Only 50c at F. A. Sillers. of t h a t in o u r d a y is m o r e d e t r i -&#13;
J! —. . m e n t a l to p e a c e , p r o s p e r i t y , in-&#13;
T h e W a s h i n g t o n d i b p a t c h e t s a y d u s t r i a l s u c c e s s , p o l i t i c a l f r e e d o m ,&#13;
t h a t t h e M i c h i g a n c o n g r e s s m e n , civil a n d religon.s l i b e r t y t h a n t h e&#13;
twhiel l forepep olsise t.p u t t i n g i ron or e o n ,Ba l o o n . "&#13;
Heart Failure&#13;
Of the many de;iihs from heart&#13;
failure very t&gt;w rc;]!i/c in advance&#13;
the seriousness of their condition.&#13;
When the heart show- ;i weakness,&#13;
such ^ pnlnii itiim, Miort brt-ath,&#13;
pain in ciic-t and ir. side, it needs&#13;
attention inst as r.-,::c?i .is other&#13;
Ori&gt;;;ns do when thev fad to rlo their&#13;
Work well. I-or ;,•-, \- condition of&#13;
heart tronhlr \o;i ,-;r, ;-&lt;•'.y on&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy.&#13;
It will sir. I,; Mien and regulate the&#13;
rTeart action, and crab', ii to overcome&#13;
the strain upon its weakened&#13;
condition.&#13;
"1 hrn) l i r i c l trnuh'". Mv :;rm tndueerl&#13;
m r to tr\ l&gt;\\ Aii!,:;' l | i ; r t fii'm-&#13;
»»fly. I tun;. 1 a ali foa;' hnfllc:-, for A&#13;
cnmplft.f&#13;
M i;. in al i bni I lc&#13;
(•, 1 r . • . "&#13;
JklKS. XI. K. MARVIN", M:iriun, Tnd&#13;
T h e firat b o t t l * will benefit; If nnt,&#13;
y o u r d r u g g l t t wHl return y o u r m o n e y .&#13;
•ibierilMfior tfc« PtatfoMr tKtpateli&#13;
FROM "MTCIITOAN f'MHOLir&#13;
"\?ote FOU th.i s a l o o n if y o u&#13;
w a n t f u t u r e s/euerationa to b e&#13;
s h r i v e l e d , b l o o d l e s s , p r e m a t u r e l y&#13;
d e c a y e d c r e a t u r e s .&#13;
" V o t e FOK t h e saloon if y o u d e s i r e&#13;
to ex. n t i una 11 y pi/ice b e f o r e t h e e y e s&#13;
of c h i l d r e n a t e m p t a t i o n t h a t l e a d s&#13;
to o t h e r influences.&#13;
"Vote. AGAINST t h e saloon if y o u&#13;
wish t o b u i l d u p of g i a n t , h e a l t h y&#13;
m a n h o o d a n d g l o r i o u s w o m a n h o o d&#13;
to adrl welfare to o u r c o u n t r y ,&#13;
for t h e saloon q u - i x d i o s t h e n o b l e&#13;
m a n h o o d of i t s - b o c r y a n d b u r n s&#13;
o u t t h e t r u e w o m a n h o o d of i t s&#13;
v i c t i m s&#13;
" A l l t h e pio^-p. n l y that can&#13;
c o m e to thin c{ii!i:!; i will n o t .save&#13;
it from t h e fn' • ;' e n t i o y s of tlie&#13;
p a s t if it c o n t i n u e - t o h* d t h e&#13;
world in a p cord for d r i n k&#13;
whi(d) is sad to o &lt; ^ t e m p l a t e .&#13;
I "&gt;&#13;
Best&#13;
Paint for&#13;
Your Home&#13;
Paint your h o m e with&#13;
material selected as carefully&#13;
as the lumber, hardware&#13;
or furnishings. T o insure the&#13;
greatest durability and beauty and&#13;
to best resist rain and shine, ask&#13;
your painter to use&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
HOUSE PAINT (New Era)&#13;
It costs less because it takes less and lasts longer.&#13;
jj Let us show you the latest fashionable color&#13;
combinations for house painting.&#13;
If it's a surface t o be painted, enameled, stained,&#13;
varnished o r finished in a n y w a y , there's&#13;
an A c m e Quality Kind t o fit t h e purpose.&#13;
J. C. Dinkel&#13;
P I n c k n e y , M i c h i g a n&#13;
THE KIND,&#13;
" &amp; &amp;&#13;
First Mortgage Timber Bonds&#13;
&lt;&amp; Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company &amp; Grand R&amp;pids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable semi-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st,&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n s t $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 e . n d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
ThMt bondt arc dated March 4 th, 1909, aod mature at the rate of $50,000 each year, commencing&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any intercit perisd aod carry the priviltgt&#13;
mi registration at to principle.&#13;
T r u . t . e : T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . G r t x n d B &amp; p f d * . M i c h i g a n . Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co. of Grivnd Ra.pids Michigan.&#13;
C a p i t a l i z a t i o n . $ 1 , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . P a r V a l u a $ 1 0 . 0 0 . B o n d * . $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property teeming this isiue consists of 31,632 acres of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located on&#13;
tht touthwest ihore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoria aod&#13;
within 110 mile* of all important ports on Pu^e t Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vancouver.&#13;
Mr. J. P. Brayton of Grand Rapid*, Mich., and Chicago, on* of the foremost timber&#13;
experts of the country hat examined this tract of timber for ua and reportt a aland of more than&#13;
1,500,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of honcis is for less than 20c per M ft. ttumpage.&#13;
m\ The present equipment eompiisea a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam T u g ,&#13;
Rolling Stock, etc., capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S .&#13;
CHAfl W. U K K N fiFRF.WAtJft;, MiCH&#13;
Pres,, Huron Bay I.umbrr Co.&#13;
J. H. MOORR, SFATTt.n, W A S H .&#13;
K I . Stjpta Motive Pnwrr, Chi., Bnr. &amp; y H. R.&#13;
W. T. COLHMAN, - S P A T T I K . W A » H i » o t o a&#13;
Trea^urrr Nebraska Investment Co.&#13;
8. M. COCHRANE, Capitalist, . ' . S E A T T L F , W A S R .&#13;
WM. 1.. CARPKXTKR - - - Di-TRnrr, ^rtcn.&#13;
Of the firm of stei'&lt;-ii:,on, Carpenter *V Uutzel.&#13;
CHAs. A PHHT.rs, . CRA»I&gt; a*«n«, Mrcm.&#13;
Timber Operator. Trea«., Backlcy-Phelpa-BonneU&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
W. K. MrKNlCITT. G R A N D R A P I D S . Micai.&#13;
Fres , White k i v e r Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B . B. CADWflTX. N R W TOUK&#13;
vic«sPrcsident, Standard Screw Co., Detroit.&#13;
C. T. MOORK •K.a.TTLK, W A * H .&#13;
Timber K i p e r t nnd Mill Operator.&#13;
W o o f f e r t h a s e b o n d s a t p a r a n d a c o r u e s d lnt(tre&gt;!it t o y i e l d 6%.&#13;
C Pritrilege w ; n he granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount of stock of&#13;
the company. «!J Further information and prospectus showing photographs of the property furnished on request.&#13;
&gt;f) Cadwell&#13;
INVESTMENT KANKER3&#13;
&amp; £Ti 7 7 0 PB^°BSCnT BUILMW1&#13;
L O . s DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
:M :*ry.-*£ MEMBERRS ZNiJEWWH YROSRaKS STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
S e e O U P Pine b i n e of Eiaster P ) s r Cir*Js&#13;
•&#13;
Up Before The B a r .&#13;
JH. H. iirowu, an ^ 0 f ^ ^ « pf Pitts-&#13;
Hold, Vt., writes. " M(e have used D r .&#13;
Kingb N e w Lift) pills tor yeaia and&#13;
b a d tueai «ueb a |&lt;ood Ituutty modi&#13;
01 lie we wouldn't be without t h e m . "&#13;
F o r Chills, Constipation, Hiliousuesfc.&#13;
or Sick headache they work w6n'ieri&gt;.&#13;
25o at F+A, Hitlers.&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
E X P E R I E N C E&#13;
T R A D C M A R K *&#13;
DESMANS&#13;
CoPVRtSHTS 4 c&#13;
Anyone tending; a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain oar opinion free whether an&#13;
Invention !• probabnr pAUfflt*bie,_Cpmmnaloa-&#13;
(tons Btrlctljr &lt;wnMeni^ HANDWSf t » Patents&#13;
sent free, oldest agency to* aecuiMaaatama.&#13;
Patents taken through Mann • CD. tttcaire&#13;
tpteial notice, without charge, la tfis&gt; Scientific American. A. handsomely Illustrated weakly. Largest &lt;£*»&#13;
MUNII |ra^»*^T6wTort[&#13;
Branch Shoe. &amp;lTBt.Waabm«t&lt;ifi.!XO. .&#13;
••I'd itatker Die, Doctor,&#13;
th-rj b a r e my i e e t cut ofl,' said M. L.&#13;
B I U K L W D of Princeville, 111. But you'll&#13;
die from ffsnirreoe' (wbice had eaten&#13;
away wight toe*) it you d o n ' t " attid all&#13;
doctors. Instead be aasd Buck lent*&#13;
Arnica Salve till wholly cured. I t s&#13;
'jure* of EuHmd, Fever fcorea, boilb,&#13;
burn* and Pilea aslouod the world.&#13;
25c at F. A. S k i e r s .&#13;
STATU ut MICHIGAN, Ownty of Liviugoiuu&#13;
an.&#13;
Frobatw-Courtfur naid county, tluitxta of&#13;
WJI. (iHitasow, deceased,&#13;
The ouderedpued Having L&gt;ceu appointed, by&#13;
Judge of Probate ol bald county, uuwwiBaluttora on&#13;
claime in the matter ol Baldebtate, and lour month*&#13;
(mm tbe i»tb day of March, A. 1». 1WW, having&#13;
been allowed by aald Judge of Probate 10 ail per-&#13;
•una holding claims against said estate in which to&#13;
present their clalfub to uo for examination and&#13;
adjustment.&#13;
Notice is hereby jftrou that ww wilt meet on (ho&#13;
•4Jth day of May, A. V. 1«W, and on the Viet&#13;
day of July a. U. 1009, at ten o'clock H.UI. of each&#13;
day at the etore of J. L. Kiuby, in he township&#13;
of Hamburg, in a&amp;id county to receive and e r&#13;
amine such cJaimM.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich. March «uth, A . V. 1UU».&#13;
H. SI. Ineal )&#13;
&gt; CouiminslonerB on Claium&#13;
Wm. Blades ) 114&#13;
• M * .&#13;
THE WEATHER TEST PROVES&#13;
B. P. S. THE BEST.&#13;
A n y paint l o o k s well w h e n&#13;
'.irst aj-plied. T h e proof of&#13;
quality lies in the way t h e&#13;
paint lasts t h r o u g h freezing,&#13;
t h a w i n g , hail, ram, a n d the&#13;
blistering heat of s u m m e r .&#13;
B. P. S. STANDS THE TEST.&#13;
The best of materials, carefully&#13;
mixed and thoroughly&#13;
ground, make B. P. S. aweatberrcaisttag&#13;
paint that, when properly applied, will not wash&#13;
ofl, chalk, crack nor peel when the weather gets at it.&#13;
BUY THE BEST - XT PAYS.&#13;
Ask. your dealer to send us a postal for our B. P. S. Paint Budget—a&#13;
of paint Information.&#13;
THE PATTERSONSARGENT CO.&#13;
GENERAL OFFICES AND FACTORY: CLEVELAND, OHIO.&#13;
-» Chicago New York Boston Kansas City St. Paul Cincinnati&#13;
packagt&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHIN6LE MACHINE&#13;
W I T H O R W I T H O U T B O L T I N G A T T A C H M E N T .&#13;
The cut shews machine wrta » This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
20 Inch Saw and Shingle Cir* ^ . ^ S a J s M s s ^ ^ to 12.000 shingles per day.&#13;
rlage, ready for cutting shingle* ^^^B^E^^^9/Jk Carriages made from selected&#13;
18 In. long, and 4 In. wide. ^ I H B I ^ V ^ ^ B ^ I ^ h a r d w o o d ' T r t c k '* *oll&lt;&gt;&#13;
P r i c e $ 7 5 . 0 0 . • a ^ ^ S ^ f f ^ a J I rol)ed 8 , e e h F o r cutting sMn*&#13;
with 36 Inch Bolting Ssw anfl B M a ^ a ^ ^ r ^ ^ f t ^ 9'es r e ( *u , r M 4 , 0 • M- p* F o r&#13;
Boltlnc Carriage. ^ ! f 3 ^ ^ bolting 6 t | 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
P r i c e $ 2 5 . 0 0 extra* W ^ 550 lbs. IT IS A MONEY-MAKER- Equipped with the bolting attachment it is a complete shingle outfit in itself. Can be adj&#13;
listed for nny desired taper or thickness. For cutting the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
in ami 1 ac 11\ i o a h i gh grade,low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net jrices.&#13;
_ v,v CIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
; v § COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
i N i b r C n g l n a a , B o l l * &gt; r s , 8 a w M i l l M a c h i n e r y , E t o .&#13;
»&#13;
, THE HIGH GRADE&#13;
LEHR PIANO M U S E P A N D E N D O R 8 E D B Y&#13;
Th* Grand Contsratorj &lt;&gt;&lt; Mwtfc, New York Ctj;&#13;
The Penntytvanka C « J M » of MusJa, PhiUdeloMs,&#13;
Chicugo CoMerratary * Ninths* School of OpsfsV&#13;
The Pueblo Consul wiai) ol Mwte, Pueblo, Colo.&#13;
AND OTHER LEADING OON8ERVATOR1B*&#13;
• sweet yet brilliant and powerful tone, exquisite&#13;
case, perfect adjustment and durable workmanship&#13;
place ft in the front rank of the best instruments made&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano foi the borne, where its&#13;
presence Is asign of culture and refinement.&#13;
The LEHR PIANO in manufactured under Btngulartf ftwNjIiniWMllll i which I&#13;
the cost of production, and it has achieved a Proliant&#13;
in the market at a satisfactory price. WHITE FOB OAXAiVOQtTE&#13;
H.'LEHR A COMPANY, Manufrs,&#13;
m aa the most elegant Instrument ^ ^ ^ A N B P R I C K S .&#13;
Easton, Pa.&#13;
Eat What&#13;
You want of the food you need&#13;
Kodol will digest it.&#13;
Good Words from "Old&#13;
tloya"&#13;
The iollywiDK lottery were received&#13;
at this office the ya»t week and while&#13;
ODO ol theox was really "n&lt;K tor publication"&#13;
we take the liberty to uo 30 aa&#13;
it may do whdt we have tryed to bring&#13;
about several timet* in the uaet and&#13;
t h a t ib to have those of o u r readers&#13;
who a r e in other btates, write us l e t -&#13;
tera deaetiptive and^otherwise of their&#13;
towns, etc. W e have written many&#13;
peruonal letters asking for this to be&#13;
done but even they do not bring r e -&#13;
sults.&#13;
Mow, friendb, you bee just how eagerly&#13;
your letters are read by the "old&#13;
boyn a a d Kirls" and we hope that you&#13;
will r e m e m b e r utt with a n occasional&#13;
letter.&#13;
Jackson, Neb., March 'i0, '0»&#13;
Brother AudrewH,&#13;
Say—why don't you arrange&#13;
to have more letters from the far distant&#13;
•Old Boys and Girls'?&#13;
I certainly did enjoy reading those tw°&#13;
good ones from J euiiie Haze aud Franc&#13;
Jfturcli. They were not aloue well written&#13;
but interesting^—extremely so.&#13;
Everything running well with the western&#13;
Kearneys. 1 just received phone from&#13;
[Jefferson, S. Dak., ihut my mother,&#13;
and sister Kate Brown, mid poaaibly Sister&#13;
Maggie Melviu, were coming over to see&#13;
UH tonight. You can imagine we are all&#13;
happy. Winter Kate came out from&#13;
Wyoming, to see Mother while she is here.&#13;
Mother is singing "Michigan, my Michigan"&#13;
very strenuously just now, and fear&#13;
that the homing instinct will be too strong&#13;
for her, to resist, after warm weather arrives.&#13;
With regards to the family, and all of&#13;
the good old friends in the good old town.&#13;
Yours faithfully,&#13;
Ed. T. Kearney.&#13;
She fiackaca fupatca.&#13;
i»y*uiaiiai&gt;*T«»x THOaanATt MOJtaia^ BY&#13;
SatwcrlpUoB rTlca $1 In AQvanes&#13;
Satsrod at tb« Poolunlca at Plucajuiy, MiublgBJ-&#13;
*a aocoud-claaa matujr&#13;
AdverdaiJijc rata* uiad« ajauwn uu application.&#13;
F R A N r U . . A N D R E W 9 &lt;Sfc C O&#13;
kiMTr&gt;aa **n paopwrroas.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MjfiTHOUlHT Jii'lJiCOi'Ai. OitUUCH.&#13;
Kev. !&gt;,(;. Littlejona paalor. £&gt;«rvict»«&gt;yurj,&#13;
tiimday murmur at 10:3u, and avtsry buutiaj&#13;
evening at 7 :UU i/clock. Frayet meaUunTiiuit&#13;
day ovouiuiib. ^iiaday actioolat ciuae ot tuuri,&#13;
in^Bwrvice. JdJ«u» i t * a r VaaJf^aaT, buyt.&#13;
CAUISliitKOATIUNAL OUUttUU.&#13;
J Hev. A. U. Ualaa paaSor. oarvtcc evwi&#13;
Buuday luoruin^ at 1U:4U aud ttrvxy ouuU»}&#13;
vvealnK at 7:Ut'o'ciock. rTayet UAO«UU^ 'I Uui&#13;
day evening", ,-auuday acuool at uluae vt IUOJ&#13;
liijaasrvlui. JUm, Ur*u&gt; Ccvtuut, ftuyL,. J. A.&#13;
Cadwsii bsc.&#13;
K I L L T H . C O u d i H&#13;
AND CURS THB LUNGS&#13;
W I T H Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
FOR CSKSa18 « « * -&#13;
AND A U THROAT ARD L U M T R 0 U 1 U S .&#13;
PUOK&#13;
lorrw&#13;
GTJAKAVTBKD SATZOVAOXOKS&#13;
o a M O N E Y BEgTjyrap. |&#13;
ST. aAJiy'to'JAi'iiOUiO UtfUrXCtL.&#13;
itev. M. J. Coiuiuayford, 1'aatur. vi«rviu«&lt;.&#13;
•vary Suuday. iiuw luaaa »ii:SOu'aiH.»&#13;
hiKkWIUM witiiwjrmou at W-ttia. m. Cakvcbica&#13;
»ta:UJp. m.,y«Nti&gt;«rsaM- ba &gt; xiictlou at '&lt;' ;&lt;io u-'&#13;
BUGItTJES;&#13;
rrUw A. O. H.bociaiy olttiia place, mpeu ovot&#13;
1 third Sunday iutb« Kr. MjUtUtjw litUl.&#13;
Jaiui'lhiuuiMy tum 1A.. 1'. Kaily. Couuty I*oiu»»t«_c&#13;
fl^ttii W. U. 1'. U. lumsUt tn« aoaoud batuniay ui.&#13;
^eouh uioutU at i ;&amp;/ y. ux. at tuo Uuma* ui ibe&#13;
laainhtim ifivuryunu uxutxomtad ia u»uipcrauuo i*&#13;
cuadiaiiy iuviUHi. Mrs, U » l rtiglur, i'reo. MIB&#13;
Jtmuits ii&amp;xlou, bticioiary.&#13;
'i^hv V. T. A- aud U. oociowy ot thJ.B plaoo, ut •&#13;
M. uvety third oaioruay uvuuiag ia lUo t • . M.-&#13;
UuW i i t t U . JUUU DwUOUliu, i'rtJKlUBUi,&#13;
Dear Mr, Editor:&#13;
Benzonia, Mich.,&#13;
Mar. 26, 1909.&#13;
Herein I ha- ' you a little&#13;
of the needful to pay for your good little&#13;
paper that comes as a regular weekly visitor&#13;
to my home. It keeps me BO well informed&#13;
of the 'happenings' in the locality&#13;
where 1 passed some of the best and happiest&#13;
years of my life that it has become&#13;
quite an indispensible messenger. The&#13;
! two letters from old acquaintances, now in&#13;
J Dixie land, which were recently published&#13;
( in the Dispatch, were a real literary treat&#13;
and to me, worth the price of the paper for&#13;
a year.&#13;
Wishing you Huccess in gathering the&#13;
I gleanings from truth as you paea along&#13;
life's highway,&#13;
I am&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
G. M. Sprout.&#13;
Getting His Own Back.&#13;
"Ttio idrafl't? has a tongue eighteen&#13;
Inches long." said Mrs. Talkmore.&#13;
"And knows how to hold it, too,"&#13;
prowled Mr Talkmore, who had had a&#13;
long curtain lecture th« night before.—&#13;
London Answers.&#13;
Y o u need a sufficient a m o u n t of&#13;
food wholesome, food and more t h a n&#13;
t h i s you need t o fully dipest it.&#13;
Else you c a n ' t pain s t r e n g t h , nor&#13;
C»n you s t r e n g t h e n your s t o m a c h if&#13;
I t is weak.&#13;
You m u s t e a t in order to live and&#13;
m a i n t a i n s t r e n g t h .&#13;
You m u s t n o t diet, because t h e&#13;
body requires t h a t you e a t a sufficient&#13;
a m o u n t of food regularly.&#13;
B u t t h i s food m u s t be digested,&#13;
and it m u s t be digested thoroughly.&#13;
When t h e •stomach c a n ' t do it,&#13;
you m u s t t a k e s o m e t h i n g t h a t will&#13;
belp t h e s t o m a c h .&#13;
' T h e proper way to do Is t o e a t&#13;
wfyat you w a n t , a n d let Kodol dige'fci&#13;
t h e food.&#13;
N o t h i n g olat c a n d o t h i s . W h e n&#13;
t h e stomach ia w e a k t t needs help;&#13;
you m u s t h e l p i t tiy giving H rest,&#13;
and Kodol will do t h a t ,&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
G o t o your ilruirin-t tsvny. a n d&#13;
purchase a dollar bottlr, :,ml iC you&#13;
can h o n e s t l y say, t h a t you did not&#13;
receive any benefits from it, after&#13;
u s i n g t h e e n t i r e bottle, t h e d r u g -&#13;
gist will refund your money t o you&#13;
w i t h o u t q u e s t i o n or delay.&#13;
We will pay t h e d r u g g i s t t h e p r i e s&#13;
of t h e bottle purchased by you.&#13;
T h i s offer applies t o t h e l a r g e&#13;
b o t t l e only a n d t o b u t one. to a&#13;
family.&#13;
We could n o t afford t o m a k e s u c h&#13;
an offer, unless we positively k n e w&#13;
w h a t Kodol will do for you.&#13;
I t would b a n k r u p t us.&#13;
T h e dollar b o t t l e contains 2¾ t i n *&#13;
as much as the fifty cent bottle.&#13;
Kodol is m a d e a t t h e laboratories&#13;
of E . C. D e W l t t &amp; Co., Chicago.&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS&#13;
QTATE OF MICHIGAN, the pfooate court for&#13;
l J the county of Livingston At A seasioa of&#13;
laid court., helri af the probate office in the village&#13;
of Ho-wfiU in B&amp;id county on the lfith day of&#13;
March A. n. 1900. Present: Hon. Arthur A.&#13;
Montague,judge of ProhaUv In tho matter o f&#13;
the eBtate of&#13;
M^ROARKT ii. WESSON, dotcaspd.&#13;
Milton L. Wasfton htwinsf filed in said court, hia&#13;
petition prayinc that the adminstration of aald&#13;
estate, he granted to hinieoh or to some&#13;
other suitable person.&#13;
It ia ordered, that tho Mh day of April&#13;
A D 1909, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probate ofree. be and ia harefcy appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition.&#13;
It is further orderod that public notic*&#13;
thereof bo Riven by publication of a copy of this&#13;
order for % sneceaaive weeks previous to said day&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPATCH., a newspaper,&#13;
printed and circulated in aaid connty.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MOVTARM,&#13;
t 13 .fudge of Probate&#13;
STATK ov MICHIGAN, The Probate Court for tha&#13;
County of Livinfrston,&#13;
At a s e ^ o u of snid court held at the Probate&#13;
offlr*T i n the village of Howell, in said&#13;
. county, on the lMh d»y of March A. I&gt;. 190A.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montajrne, .Tndtjft of&#13;
Probate, Tn the matter of the estate of&#13;
N o r m a E . V a u g h n , m i n o r .&#13;
Nettie M. Vaughn having filed in said court her&#13;
petition praying for a license to sell at private&#13;
aale interest of *aid estate in certain real estate&#13;
therein describe.&#13;
It ia ordered that ( t i e ninth day of&#13;
April, A. D. 1«1S, at ten o'clock l a t h e forenoon,&#13;
at said probate offloe, b« and i* hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition, and that all&#13;
paraona interested in said estate appear before&#13;
aaid court, at *aid time and phif*, to show cause&#13;
why a license to eeUthe inearest of said estate&#13;
In said real estate should not be granted.&#13;
It ia funher ordar*d, that flubtlc notice, thereof&#13;
b* frWen by publication of a copy ot this order&#13;
for three successive weeks jnv\ u&lt;;\* ;.&lt; &gt;&amp;id day of&#13;
haaring in th« Pincknay Diapatcb, a o«vap«p«r&#13;
printed and drculalad in aald couaty. 1 4 1&#13;
AXTKVm A. MQXIABUW.&#13;
KSiGJITttOi!' AiA^OAiiiiKb.&#13;
SltMHevtiry t'riuAj evouiiig uu oi i w . ^ n , . - . .&#13;
ui thtt IUOUJU at cUeii' uaillu tUo awariuuui , .^,&#13;
Vlaitlug brotlittra art c uruiaily iuviteu.&#13;
C, V. VaiiWlaJtle, oir ivuitcki ^uu^.. uu&#13;
JSi. P. Jhortdu»ou, - Kacurd KiMiier&#13;
i \ li, Jacluou, - l-'uinuwa iLwuer&#13;
LWinguton Lodjje, No.TS, F &amp;. A. JM., i^^u^&#13;
Couuuunicatiuu Tuesday bvenuia.onor boiuiv&#13;
theluli of tht; iiioou. F. ti. Jtuikaou, W . .»J&#13;
0HOBB OF EA8TEK2i dTAitmeetaeach uionu&#13;
the Friday eveainj/ tollowing tu« tuguiui i&#13;
A A.M. meeting, SLtLajAierxit VAUHUM, W'. M.&#13;
/~\rUJ£K OF MODfiUM WOODMEN MMt the&#13;
Vj/flm Thursday evwiiug oteaoh Month ID the&#13;
Maonahae nail. c. L.Urlmett V. O&#13;
T ADIES OF TiiK MACCABfiKS. Maat every Is&#13;
JU and 3rd Saturday of each month at a :80 p m.&#13;
KTO. T. M. hail. Viaitin* alatera cordially i n&#13;
Tited. hihx CoNiway, Lady Coin.&#13;
KNIGHTS o* i u h LOYAL OUAKD&#13;
t . L. AudrewaP. Al,&#13;
^ .&#13;
Murt^ugD Kale.&#13;
Uef»uti hayiug b««u uiade ia th« conditiona o t&#13;
iwo utortiiiiKW coveriugthti tuuae Jund (wbvnby the&#13;
power of aalts therein contained has become operative)&#13;
made by Adam Franula and AnnaL. iTraai;&#13;
i» hit* wife, of Putuaui, Llvingaton county, Mlebr&#13;
i&lt;. »11, to O. W. Teeule of the aaxce places, outs o f&#13;
baid uiurtageu being dated l^troeaiber S»th, 1889&#13;
and recorded iu the Otace of Ke^inler of deeds&#13;
for th« County of LivtuK»tou, 8 u t e of Michigan&#13;
May lo, 1W)0, iu Liber 7» ot Hiorm*K«i on pag*&#13;
615 thereof, aud the other dated June 4tb, 1KU8&#13;
and recorded in aald Begiatera uincu on the 15th&#13;
day of March, liftW. iu Liber 91 of Mortgages on&#13;
page 57« thereof; on which aald mortagea there ta&#13;
now claimed to be due and unpaid at thia date the&#13;
sum of Two hundred fifty /our dollare and twenty&#13;
live centu (tliWiiio) and atturney fete, and no suit&#13;
or proceeding Laving bten coartuenced in law or&#13;
equity to recover the i!ebt&amp; secured by said mortj4a"&#13;
es, or an&gt; part thereof.&#13;
Sow therefore, uuder the power of aale contain&#13;
ediuuald lnortgbge*, not ice ie hereby giveu that&#13;
on Monday, the 14th day of June, 1W9, at one&#13;
o'clock iu :he afternoon of said day, at the westerly&#13;
front door of the Court house in the village&#13;
of Howell in Haid County (that being the place ol&#13;
holding the uuuult court.for the Uouuty iu which&#13;
the mortgaged premise* to be sold are eituated&#13;
and «aid mortgagee will be foreclosed by sale at&#13;
public vendue to the highest bidder of the premises&#13;
described in said mortgagee, or BO much&#13;
thereof aa may be necessary to satisfy the amount&#13;
due on said mortgages with interest and legalcoeta&#13;
that iB to say; all tbat certain piece or parcel of&#13;
land situate in the towroahip of Putnam, County&#13;
of Livingston and state oi Michigan, viz: Three&#13;
acres of land in the northwest corner of that part&#13;
of the west half of the soathweet quarter of aee&gt;&#13;
tioa twenty four (24) lying aonth ot the highway&#13;
running through said land and eiteotUng from&#13;
the center of said highway south to the center oi&#13;
the creek and in width, eaet and west, sufficient to&#13;
make the three acres of land. All in Town Que (1)&#13;
ISorth and Range four (4) eaat, County of Livingflton&#13;
and State of Michigan,&#13;
Dated to arch 16th, 1909.&#13;
E. A. &amp; h. E. STOWE G. W. TKB»UK,&#13;
124 Attys. for Mortgagee Mortgagee&#13;
BUbllNfcbb CARDS.&#13;
H. F.8IGLER M. u- C, L, SIGLER M. I&#13;
^ DRS. aiuLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
rhyeiciaup am u . u«. All caiiB promptl)&#13;
attended to day „r . ^ m . Office on Main street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich&#13;
J. W. B I R D&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATlbFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, call at tue Pinckney Dm-&#13;
TATCU uttice. Auction Bilia Free&#13;
Dexter Independant Phone&#13;
Arrangement njaiie tor bale by phone a&#13;
my expense. Oct 0?&#13;
Address, Dexter,/Michigan&#13;
JCi^ (tKNERAL AUCTION F.KR.&#13;
SatiBtactica Guaranteed. For infornifition&#13;
call ai DISPATCH Office or uddres*&#13;
(Gregory, Midi, r. f. d. 2. Lymlilla plione&#13;
connection. Aia-tiou bills .ami tin cup&#13;
turniahei tree&#13;
FRANK I ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WtTM an&#13;
n p r cr&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous C. B. CIGAR.&#13;
The best possible value&#13;
for die money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
5 CENTS.&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
themaeod to us for a box as&#13;
atrial. Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this is the cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
' MANUFACTUBBD BY&#13;
CHMSTMAR BBtSSa, • VsMfsdtrf. H.&#13;
Does yottr back ache? Ia your akin leathery and yellow™&#13;
Is your uriae murky T These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine ont of ten persons h*ve kidney&#13;
trouble. They dost always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The kidneys have few nerve*. They are aUinw a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before, you feel it.&#13;
That is why it is so necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. If&#13;
anything is wrong with yonr kidneys it should be att—dad to at once.&#13;
Don't take strong, drastic drugs. They are dangerous,&#13;
Ton will be perfectly fwfb and sure of * permanent core by taking&#13;
DP THACHERS LIVER &amp; BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
I This great home remedy cures kidney trouble hy removing the 0W and&#13;
, driving the inflammation and the disease out of the affected oxgamv&#13;
A l l D e a l e r s Sell 5 0 c , a n d f t . 0 0 B o t t l e s .&#13;
THACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga,Tenm&#13;
D6NT&#13;
^ FOR THE S i&#13;
^ ^ ¾ ^ .. - ^ ^ - .&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofings are xe?.\\\.&#13;
never paid for, because they need painting 6x _&#13;
coatincc every year or two. If you add to the cost of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting during tho number of your.- in service,&#13;
you will readily understand why&#13;
J - M A S B E S T O S R O O F I N G&#13;
which needs no coating—is tho 'vhoaprst-rn'r year1 ' '-O'^r.e&#13;
I t will not rot or rust, is permanently durable anri V--/M - ••;••*•&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or cold can aflVn-t , r.&#13;
less than slate, iron or shingles. Can be :u&gt;plie,' by a r . y w&#13;
A.**Vc f o r H a m p l u s a n d n«*icrt:.«-s.&#13;
H W. J O H N S - M A N V l b U E Co.&#13;
7 2 J c f f e r a o n A v e . D e t r o i t , Michigan&#13;
i&#13;
'o.srs&#13;
w&#13;
NAKAH'S MAN&#13;
By EDGAR&#13;
.. ., .. . # * •&#13;
ki Que^oyafit fi*i«? wbe». t t e ttfrtt^&#13;
fial l*n&lt;l vbftomers .were ftjrjmbtlznfc&#13;
tn|l people ot.^«1 wwterii-»j&gt;&lt;l midtfejMjrffee&#13;
Ixy t&amp;p. tralnload wtth. bnws&#13;
«ap«t(b\«n8 fr&amp;e lager beer, Cornelius&#13;
^?aia*M*s Vmoonlciii&amp;l conthractor/'&#13;
«rttttou.t with a cw*wd uT "tii: bVa" to&#13;
ne^r the birth of "Royal Capital," aad&#13;
&gt; k * P J » t In the w e n t ,&#13;
^ l ^ f y , Waai), Ilag^pqle and a natiY©&#13;
Calais snlrt sleeves, seated on a log.&#13;
tty tbtiee Jberald3 oJT commercial enterprise&#13;
thp engineer, wa a enabled to&#13;
k s t o * where; to Btop his train.&#13;
.Wi»e&gt; ^ m ^ a s a r y was unloaded, and&#13;
*Jhft "jiappaers began distributing maps&#13;
of RoyaJ Capital, so the citizens* might&#13;
not lose their way. These exhibits&#13;
Ifl4i€fite4 witk.*ht*awj»ii&gt; dibUuetlveneas&#13;
wftere the division shops, round houses,&#13;
iwJpa depot, lederal building, 'hotels,&#13;
cotton gins, mills, saloons and Othe^f&#13;
aHftiHaries to metropolitan development&#13;
were to be located, and all that&#13;
wa? necessary for the straw-hatted subjects&#13;
to do was to buy the lots and&#13;
fill in the vacant places with stores&#13;
and dwellings.&#13;
The sale went briskly on, accompani&#13;
e d by inspiring music by the. band,&#13;
and kegged enthusiasm over in a tent,&#13;
which flowed like water from the&#13;
spring.&#13;
Everybody felt happy, social and&#13;
generous. Lots were purchased all&#13;
around the "federal building," the&#13;
"Try &gt;Chtf*0an, Aw," Said" fctrfnly,&#13;
,/•'••'.• . surfiifc'^'Vrr* ••&gt;«•: .•&#13;
^Merchant's exejutige" arid clear dofrA.&#13;
"ArTinj?(on aveouy'l to the "anion de*&#13;
r o t "&#13;
When Oorrfey woke up irfHbis tent&#13;
nefXt morning he found hiinselt flighted&#13;
with the cares of a prof&amp;rft owner,&#13;
*&gt;ul relieved of the necesstfer of keepi&#13;
n g his hand an his paefcatbook. Under&#13;
fhe combined encouragement of&#13;
the commissary tent and "A Hot Time&#13;
In t h e Old Town," by the Dutch band,&#13;
* e had swapped twelve hundred good&#13;
American dollars for a 27-acre tract&#13;
of soft-stone, which the auctioneer&#13;
had told him could be. tgrraced and&#13;
turned into de-lightful, homelike lots.&#13;
"Tv/ilve hundred dollars wuth av&#13;
rocks," he murmured; "vjat will Narah&#13;
say to thot?"&#13;
IHe had a fow dollars left and derided.&#13;
,4jO. wait, and see what would&#13;
tm tho end of the circus. Frame&#13;
(buildings were erected with feverish,,&#13;
haste along, the boulevards, and flaring&#13;
canvak sign* *tnrtcb'ed - across the&#13;
streets."&#13;
^ Casual visitors lit. and fte-v/ nnray&#13;
after a .brief sojourn. The brass band&#13;
and free commissary had, departed&#13;
atanjr with, the boomers' and the real&#13;
•lattaatlon was mournfully apparent.&#13;
There dida't setfrn to be the ghost of&#13;
a reason for a town where "Royal&#13;
Capital" was trying to stand. The lot&#13;
-owners, however, were game. They&#13;
organized a commercial club, issued&#13;
air castle literature and invited capital&#13;
to come and get richer on the&#13;
"ma?Oiificent resource-*." The fact&#13;
that the commercial club was expressing&#13;
its hope rather than its&#13;
knowledge was clear as moonshine&#13;
t o the sage gentleman of means who&#13;
received the invitations.&#13;
One day a unique traveler alighted&#13;
o n the small platform and handed his&#13;
grips to the landlord of the "Continental&#13;
hotel." He looked like he might&#13;
ke a walking proclamation for some&#13;
liafterdashor, and didn't seem to be a&#13;
tiopeful prospect. Within half an hour&#13;
tho news went around town that "Ar&#13;
ilhnr Van Zandt. of West Virginia" was&#13;
registered at the Continental, and that&#13;
h e lisped in his talk.&#13;
In the morning the ienderfoot put&#13;
on some heavy boots and walked out&#13;
Jo the "suburban residence districts1&#13;
When he returned in town he hunted&#13;
sjt|&gt; some of the owners and in a timid&#13;
mutt of '.vav wanfed to know whwt he&#13;
\ * r •&#13;
could secure a few acres of their&#13;
rocky blutta at, exyioiniug that he was&#13;
a slate pea/3*! luaa^factqrer ta»a,em a 11&#13;
way, and tfot he fancied the stone&#13;
would make fair pencils. He wanted&#13;
the privilege: to prospect a little flratr&#13;
and determine whether the rock wfta&#13;
really aoapatohe.&#13;
There didn't seem to be much In it,&#13;
and nobody shot* off -any firework**&#13;
over the Ride's; proposition. They let1&#13;
him dig his holes, and several parties&#13;
let their h*l&lt;ffngg ' o t "eligible residence&#13;
lots," tjie .Circulars Hald—rock&#13;
hills, in fact, pass over to the slate&#13;
pencil man at $5 ac* acre. Some sold&#13;
to him for less. Insider of a week he&#13;
had acquired enough "soapstone" to&#13;
make slate pencils for all the children&#13;
in the world the next hundred&#13;
years. ^ ,&#13;
When Corney learned the high-collared&#13;
baberdasher'B sign had been boring&#13;
holes, on Killkeany Heights his&#13;
blue eyes blazed wrathfully.&#13;
"If that puddin' headed jude thinks&#13;
he's1 goln' ter git them lota fer his&#13;
shlate pincil facthry he's a bigger fool&#13;
thin km looks, which be puttin' it&#13;
sthrong as I know how." said Corney.&#13;
He studiously avoided the mild-looking&#13;
Btranger, as being a man beyond&#13;
his contempt. He resolved if Van&#13;
Zandt come around with a flve^dollaran-&#13;
acre proposition "fer them superbs&#13;
ter tell 'im plain wat I tink av *im."&#13;
But one bright morning Corney saw&#13;
the slate pencil man making for him,&#13;
"Good morning Mr.—aw—"&#13;
"Try Cadogan, aw," said Corney,&#13;
surlily.&#13;
"Yes, Cadogan—certainly. Deuced&#13;
funny how I should—aw—forget such&#13;
an easy name."&#13;
"Not so viry funny; there be min&#13;
wot says 'aw/ win there's nothin' ter&#13;
'aw' about. Thot's funnier."&#13;
The natty tenderfoot smiled sweetly.&#13;
He was evidently not overly sensitive.&#13;
"Unfortunate habit of mine," he&#13;
said, goodhumoredly. "You will—aw&#13;
—excuse me—please pahdon me,*&#13;
"Wot's yer game?" remarkedxCorney,&#13;
abruptly.&#13;
"I wanted to speak to you about&#13;
Killkenny—aw—Highlands."&#13;
"Thim's Killkenny Heights—risidence&#13;
lots."&#13;
"Yes, a beautiful name. I've been&#13;
out there. The view is—aw—chawming.&#13;
Such a vast reach of country—&#13;
so gently rolling like the sea! And&#13;
such superb air and sky, and the sunsets—&#13;
on my life I never witnessed&#13;
such sunsets!"&#13;
Corney looked at him ra amazement&#13;
and gravely shook bis head. !&#13;
"I guess they be," he said, dubiously.&#13;
"I think th' sun be settin' ivery&#13;
day. Th' surveyor got tin o' my dollars&#13;
ter put all them things on th'&#13;
map, but I reckon he's left 'em out."&#13;
"Do you wish to part with your residence&#13;
property out there, Mr.&#13;
wgiia?" ,, i i&#13;
Cad- A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE&#13;
&gt; • * _ i i • •» • • • &gt; • • »&#13;
ttand tbe*^~s*l&lt;|Jft« slate&#13;
_ 4 ut you &lt; W t git iij»} »oTffve&#13;
i pei^'iCicost'iaWMi *•«•©* 3 * H v e Mndred."&#13;
^&#13;
"Indeed. I'm afraid you were&#13;
-schMMHP rwit'thot, but'i&#13;
can't go' haa»"ttfr 4**iafee good wld&#13;
Narah." ' ^ - ••&#13;
peadP feerT^rtjp^flir h^i&#13;
u l M b f , | i t e m.msf&amp;t buaiaeaJL "that&#13;
yoa want to get tank what x«* paid?"&#13;
i"yjp, an" tWp some. Nargli's Din&#13;
wrltin' me thot r needn't coom back&#13;
shy of six thousand. She won't inlsa&#13;
me, she says. Tnere'8 a tolne "lot of&#13;
saymin ter pick oreV out there.'.'&#13;
Van Zandt started and looked keenly&#13;
al the Irishman. " - . . ,&#13;
'"wnaV'do yoii Want for your 27&#13;
acres?", he asked,.slowly.&#13;
"Th,' only thiug thot'll save me fr'm&#13;
bein' a. grass widerer," said Corney,&#13;
"Li $6,(M)0." .&#13;
"I'll take it."&#13;
Corney's blue eyes popped open&#13;
wide. The slate pencil man suddenly&#13;
became an object ot real, interest.&#13;
"Does yez mane fhot?"&#13;
• "Indeed I do, and I will write you a&#13;
check soon as you sign the deed."&#13;
"Thin I wants ter say ter yez thot&#13;
I'm downright sorry I called y e i a&#13;
jude. Yez be th' whiteAt mon I've&#13;
sthruck in this miserable coyote cunthry."&#13;
With the acquirement of Killkenny&#13;
Heights, Van Zandt concluded his&#13;
dealings at Royal Capital, and the&#13;
cat jumped out of the bag. He was&#13;
the representative of a large concern,&#13;
and had been sent west to secure new&#13;
fields. The rock around Royal Capital&#13;
was specially adapted for the purpose,&#13;
and its purchase for an almost&#13;
nominal consideration meant a fortune&#13;
to the big company, which soon&#13;
established works out there, and gave&#13;
employment to so many men that&#13;
Royal Capital forgave the job put up&#13;
on it by the smooth visitor from West&#13;
Virginia.&#13;
Corney and Van Zandt returned east&#13;
on the same train, and while enjoying&#13;
their pipe and cigarette; -respectively,&#13;
one afternoon, Van Zandt asked a&#13;
question which had long been puz-&#13;
.zling hfin; ,&#13;
"Coifney, how was it that you were&#13;
the only man out there who knew it&#13;
was,cement rock?"&#13;
"Bliss'yer soul," said Narah's man;&#13;
'Tnever dreamt it till yez told me."&#13;
"But you said 'there's a fine lot of&#13;
cement to pick over out there.' "&#13;
Corney smoked reflectively for a&#13;
few moments, then his moonface broke&#13;
into a broad grin.&#13;
"Yez didn't quite cotch me waning,"'&#13;
he said. "Narah, my wife thot is, lives&#13;
on th' coast of Jersey. I knowed If I&#13;
didn't git backrIt Wouldn't quite break&#13;
her heart, because there's a foine lot&#13;
o' saymin ter pick from out there."&#13;
"Seamen?"&#13;
"YiB, sayntin, I says."&#13;
!/Corney," said Van Zandt, arte*&#13;
some silent meditation, "If any professor&#13;
of language ever offers to smooth&#13;
out that brogue of yours, you brain&#13;
him on the spot. You need it to do&#13;
business with."&#13;
Of Painting Requirements Will Save&#13;
' Huqti Expense.&#13;
,j •&#13;
When one sees the surface of a&#13;
house or other ,buikHug. scaling, or&#13;
peeling* or spotted or blistered, or&#13;
showing other symptoms of paint "disease,"&#13;
it Is evident that a* poor painter&#13;
has been on the Job, and that poor&#13;
paint was used—or possibly that a&#13;
good painter had been dominated by&#13;
a property-otyner who knew nothing&#13;
about paint&#13;
It is an easy matter to be Informed&#13;
on paint and painting. A complete&#13;
painting guide, including a book of&#13;
color schemes, eltb«ex for exterior or&#13;
interior—specifications for all kinds&#13;
of painrTug,—and an instrument for&#13;
detecting adulteration in paint material,&#13;
with directions for using it,&#13;
may be had free by writing National&#13;
Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Bldg.,&#13;
New York City, and asking for Houseowner's&#13;
Painting Outfit &gt;f6. 49.&#13;
Then, every houseowner should&#13;
make it, a point to get only wellknown&#13;
reliable brands in buying his&#13;
materiaJs. Pure white lead is especially&#13;
important* or the paint will&#13;
not prove satisfactory. The famous&#13;
"Dutch Boy Painter" trademark ot&#13;
National Lead Company, the largest&#13;
makers of pure white lead, is an absolute&#13;
guarantee of the purity and&#13;
quality of the white lead sold under&#13;
it. ;Tkat trademark is a safeguard&#13;
against paint trouble.&#13;
W DOCTORS&#13;
The Alternative.&#13;
"If the window had been eight feet&#13;
from the ground," pouted the young&#13;
wife, "instead of eight stories, I'd have&#13;
thrown myself out when you quarreled&#13;
with me. Then you'd have had to be sweet&#13;
to me when you picked me up. A lot&#13;
of wives attempt suicide, they say, just&#13;
to be petted whfen they* come to."&#13;
"Yes," said he, "but sometimes they&#13;
don't come to, remember."&#13;
Glass windows were first introduced&#13;
into England In the eighth century.&#13;
RINGING IN ANOTHER VICTIM.&#13;
"Here is your rins, Ilnrold. I love another."&#13;
"Give me his name and address."&#13;
"Why? Do you wish to kill him?"&#13;
"Kill him! No; I want to sell him, the ring."&#13;
Stops Colds In an Hour.&#13;
You will be glad to know Lane's Pleasant&#13;
Tablets (laxative) will stop in an hour a&#13;
cold that could not be warded otf by anything&#13;
else. They will always break up a&#13;
cold almost immediately. Druggists and&#13;
dealers pell them at 25 eta. a box. Orator&#13;
F. Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y. Sample free.&#13;
The Eternal Marathon.&#13;
"Man," declared the old-fashioned&#13;
preacher, "Is a worm."&#13;
"And," said a man who had been&#13;
married three times and who was occupying&#13;
a small space in a rear pew,&#13;
"woman Is the early bird."&#13;
P I L E S CUHED I N O TO 14 DATS.&#13;
PAZO 0!^irMMNTi8go»r»nteed to euro anr Q U I&#13;
uf ltrhtnff, Blind. BU&amp;dtafr or Pro trading PiJoa In&#13;
«t«&gt; Uda7BoraiaQ.tr refunded. &amp;V«.&#13;
^ L J • •' ) ! &gt; ' '»&#13;
I t s easy for a man's wife to dress&#13;
well if his creditors can afford it.&#13;
F w t Ache—TJ»« Allen's Foot-£a&gt;«&#13;
OrrrSOOOOteMlmorjImli. KefusultaitatinDit SentTfor&#13;
tret trial packoce. A- H. Oliatted, Le lioj, N. Y.&#13;
A man talks about love as though&#13;
he felt ashamed of the conversation.&#13;
Mrt. W i n d o w ' s Soothing- Syrap*&#13;
For children Uething. iofUai th* gurai, r«dae«t b&gt;&#13;
llftmmMloa,aJlayip«iiL, carta wind coUo. asoabottl*.&#13;
Your orthography Is twisted, Alonzo.&#13;
A woman is not a padded cell.&#13;
DODDS&#13;
K I D N E Y&#13;
/, PILLS&#13;
' . l v . .&#13;
.KIDNEY&#13;
[5 "Guara*1&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
CARTER'S Positively cured by&#13;
t h e s e Little Pills.&#13;
•jpMg ^ ^ ^ They also rolicve Dis-&#13;
^ ^ H I ^ H T l F tteasfrom Dynpepnla, Int&#13;
a 1 1 1 P l l d location and Too Hearty&#13;
• • I I I P R Eating- A perfect rem-&#13;
WM K I L L « &gt; « R«a, Drowsiness, B a d&#13;
^^k^JM Tasteln the Mouth, Coat-&#13;
| ^ ^ k B l i ^ B ed Torjfpie, Pain in tha&#13;
r ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ * I b i d e , TORPID LIVER.&#13;
Thejr rcgnlate the Bowel*. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-ftmile Signature&#13;
LvdJaEPinkhaii. etable&#13;
Compound Carta Her.&#13;
^UiiBAtittc, 9onn.-r*« *»•;&#13;
I suffered untold agony from '&#13;
troubles, causjnff backache,&#13;
tiegj dlstlrwa and nervous pr&lt;&#13;
Hon. It waj Impoasiblfl lor BL ^&#13;
walk1 ttpatairj&#13;
without stoppjjif&#13;
oajthe way. I&#13;
trtei three oiflerent&#13;
doctors and&#13;
each toid me something&#13;
different I&#13;
jeceived no benefit&#13;
from any of them,&#13;
bat seemed to suffer&#13;
more. The last&#13;
4octor said nothing&#13;
would restore.&#13;
taking tydi* E. pinSLn'g V e g e ^ S&#13;
Compound U&gt; see what it would do.&#13;
and I am restored to my natural&#13;
health."—Mrs. ETTA DONOVAN, BOX S9&amp;, Wilflmantic, Cons.&#13;
The sucoess of Lydia E. Plnkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, made from roots&#13;
ana herbs, Is unparalleled. It may be&#13;
used with perfect confidence fcy women&#13;
who suffer from displacements, infiamniation,&#13;
ulceration- fibroid tumors, Irregularities;&#13;
periodic pains, backache,&#13;
bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion,&#13;
dizziness, or nervous prostration.&#13;
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham*s&#13;
Vegetable Compound has been the&#13;
standard remedy for female ills, and&#13;
suffering women owe it to themselves&#13;
to at least give this medicine a trial.&#13;
Proof is abundant that it has cured&#13;
thousands of others, and why should it&#13;
not cure you?&#13;
T -&#13;
TriE 0JEANE5T j 2 £ ^ THE MOST&#13;
m UCHTEST v5*I£ CONFOBIABUE&#13;
iPOMMft&#13;
SUCKER X and&#13;
cheapest in the&#13;
eno because it&#13;
wears longed&#13;
tmrf GARMENT&#13;
GWUtAMTEED&#13;
L A-J.TowawRmCop.nteo«eTr? i.ui*L&#13;
UMAM Co. tmrrto Tbaowra, CMMMC&#13;
45 to 50 Bu* of Wheat Per Acre&#13;
hare been grown on farm lands in&#13;
WESTERN CANADA&#13;
Much lew would b*&#13;
Mtwfactecy. The p a -&#13;
erai average it above&#13;
twenty babel*.&#13;
"Allare knid in their&#13;
praiie* of the great&#13;
cropt and that woa«&#13;
derfut country ."—irtrjtct&#13;
from correspondence Nation* . EditoHtt&#13;
Association of August, 1908.&#13;
It it now pomblc to secure a homestead of 160&#13;
acres tree and another 160 acres at $3.00 per acre.&#13;
HundresV have paid the cost of their farms (3&#13;
purchased) and then had a balance of from $10.00&#13;
to $12.00 per acre from one crop. x Wheat, bartey,&#13;
oats, flax—all do well. Mixed farming is a great&#13;
niccess and dairying is highly profitable. Excel*&#13;
l:nt climate, splendid schools and churches, railways&#13;
bring most every district within easy reach&#13;
of market. Railway and land companies haw&#13;
lands for sale at low prices and on easy terms.&#13;
"Last Beat West" pnmphleta and ra«ps sent&#13;
free. For these and information a i to hoy*&#13;
to secure lowest railway rates, apply to&#13;
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or the authorized Canadian Government&#13;
Agent:&#13;
H. V. McINrTES, 17* Jertoson Artnaa. Detrafl.&#13;
Mk&amp;ttao; or C. A. LAUI2EB. Sanll Ste. Maria. Mica,&#13;
M k&#13;
This Trade-mark&#13;
Eliminates All&#13;
Uncertainly&#13;
in the purchase of&#13;
paint materials.&#13;
It is an absolute&#13;
guarantee of purity&#13;
and quality.&#13;
For your own&#13;
protection, see&#13;
it is on the side of&#13;
eterr keg of white lead&#13;
you buy.&#13;
IWM inaqy wswaaj, aasr ran&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 14, 190».&#13;
DISTEMPER For r t f A m n i f f n n n Pink Eye. Epizootic&#13;
Shipping Fever&#13;
e» Catarrhal Fever&#13;
f^arorntrand po*ltlT'»prevnnttT«. no reattor how hnrMtttanrwttr* \.ntr«*t*l or&#13;
"wjpoimrf." Liquid. g\**n on th* tnnsrn*; a-cta nn the Blood and Oland*) exr*l» th*&#13;
r&gt;ol»nnoua«r«rmi from tlie body, riirrnntrtenywr in Dogn *nd 8ta««p and (holnra la&#13;
Pntntry. I&gt;n«&gt;«t»olltTi(r live utock rnrnarty. Ciire* La (Trlpr* amonjr human h«lnn&#13;
and UaflnnK.lrln«Tr»medy. SOrandSl a bottln, SftanilSinartoMin. Oitthlaout. Krop&#13;
it. tJiow tnyrmrrfnimriat.'vhnwltliritltforyou. Kr«a Booklat, " DUtamper, C&amp;ua«a&#13;
and C»ir*a." 8»&gt;«olal agrnt* wanted.&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. 8 ^ ^ / , ^ ^ : ^ GOSHEN, IND.. U. S. A.&#13;
. WIZARD OIL t. in •&gt; II—•^wr*-—1! i n i • • • • • •&#13;
GREAT roR&#13;
PAIN&#13;
... . ,»• l .... : * • ' &amp; • • # * &gt;&#13;
- • « * , • »&#13;
5 3 S S K&#13;
A CONSn&amp;TfldN -&#13;
REMEDY FREE&#13;
v ' • ' . ' -v&#13;
There i s o o action of your d*tfy life&#13;
of greater Importance than to s e e that&#13;
yoor burets- w » n . a%ey should m o r e&#13;
at (Jea4 o n c e a d a y aaturally, and b y&#13;
that i s m e a q t Without a n y fcsjp. If&#13;
they do no* m o v e « t l e a s t c n c e a d a y&#13;
yotf c a n consider yourself constipated&#13;
and it Is time y o u did'eoKethlng a b o u t&#13;
YOQ will be glad t o know there i s a&#13;
w a y out « f fcfce dia«nlty.v l4eniMl 1M&amp;&#13;
derdale, an o l d soldier a t Qdinoy, 111.,&#13;
KImer McMUlan, of Speed, Mo., J£rs.&#13;
Jftitaban, of Stonewall, Miss., juid&#13;
many others w e r e a s y o u are now.&#13;
But o n e day they a w o k e l b t h e fact&#13;
that Or. Caldwell's Sgrup g e n s i A . j r a s&#13;
curing their friends, s o th&gt;y bpufffct it&#13;
too and it cured them. To-day. t h e y&#13;
a r e loud in praise of i t .&#13;
What Dr. CaMtwellw Bym* Pepsuaokt&#13;
for them It ahould do for you. Sorely&#13;
your constipation la no w o t s * than &lt;ft*tr*.&#13;
on* of wbom&gt;ka4 It afaca 'CL I t &lt;Mdkr»&lt;&#13;
ipslna for you to realise that salts are1 « •&#13;
t u t temporary good, « * * ***** yea' waist&#13;
1» a permanent cure; that.purgative tablets,&#13;
cathartic pilla and such violent&#13;
thing* make a areat ahow o f d o l n r aomathlng.&#13;
but do nothing that la lastta* • Dr.&#13;
Caldwell's B^rup Peperfft t»T a adenUflo&#13;
preparation, a laxative-tonic, a mlW syrupy&#13;
liquid thttt contains ingredients that&#13;
not only cure t h e constipation, but ^ona&#13;
tne intestinal muscles *o that they learn&#13;
again to work without helpi A bottle can&#13;
be bought of any druagiat for the email&#13;
prioa of 50 cents, and there is a dollar&#13;
Blae for families who have already found&#13;
out its wonderful value In stomach, liver&#13;
and bowel troubles, in old or young.&#13;
- Send your name and address to the doctor&#13;
and a free trial bottle will be sent you&#13;
s o that yuu.can teat it, before&#13;
buying*.&#13;
If there IB anything about&#13;
your ailment that you don't&#13;
understand, or if you want&#13;
any medical advice, write&#13;
to the doctor, and he will&#13;
answer you fully. There is&#13;
no charge for this service.&#13;
I The uddress is Dr. W. B.&#13;
Caldwell. 201 Caldwell bids.,&#13;
I.Monticello. m&#13;
BUSINESS FIRST.&#13;
"Here is a little present for you—a&#13;
superb $5,000 n e c k l a c e — "&#13;
"Oh! H o w n i o e o f y o u ! "&#13;
."—that I will let1 you have for ' $ l r&#13;
000." j i&#13;
HUMOR BURNED AND ITCHEQ.&#13;
Eczema on Hand, Arms, 1*6* « n d&#13;
Face—It W a s Something Terrible.&#13;
Complete Cure by Cuticura. ,&#13;
"About fifteen or e i g h t e e n y e a r s&#13;
ago eczema developed on top of m y&#13;
hand. It burned and Itched BO much&#13;
that I w a s compelled to show it to a&#13;
doctor. H e pronounced It ringworm.&#13;
AJter trying h i * different remedies thja&#13;
dlffpase"increased and went up my&#13;
a r m s and to m y legs and finally on my&#13;
face. T h e burning w a s something&#13;
terrible. I w e n t to another doctor V h o&#13;
had t h e reputation of being t h e best&#13;
in town. H e told mevit w a s eczema.&#13;
H i s medicine checked; the advance of&#13;
the disease, b u t no further. I finally&#13;
concluded t o t r y t h e T^utlciira "Remedies&#13;
and found relief in t h e first trial.&#13;
I continued until I w a s completely&#13;
cured from t h e disease, and I have&#13;
not been troubled since. C. Burkhart,&#13;
236 W. Market St., Chambersburg, Pa.,&#13;
Sept. 19, 1908."&#13;
Potter Drug A Chem. Corp., Sole Prop*., Bettatu&#13;
Playing 'Poaaum.&#13;
"How do y o a h 'poBsum taste, sub?"&#13;
asked the solicitous waiter.&#13;
"Well," responded the patron w h o&#13;
had ordered t h e article, "it. tastes pretty&#13;
good, but it isn't 'possum."&#13;
"No, sub.," rejoined the waiter; "an"&#13;
dat's a sign it's genuine. De genuine&#13;
'possum is a great pretender, sun; y a s ,&#13;
sun."—Philadelphia Ledger.&#13;
M«ny Womerj Praise This Remedy.&#13;
D ? \ £ o u h a v f P»*n" *n the back, Urinary.&#13;
Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a&#13;
certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's&#13;
1 ¾ ^ ^ Mother Gray's AUSTRALIAN&#13;
LEAP. It is a safe and never-failing regulator.&#13;
At all DiMgriats o f h y maitlocti,&#13;
Sample package FREE. Address, The&#13;
Mother Gray Co., Le R o y , ^ L T.&#13;
* A woman Is a l w a y s m o r e economical&#13;
than a m a n . W h e r e a s man will&#13;
manufacture a lie oiit 6f the whole&#13;
cloth a woman will u s e t h e remnants.&#13;
R e d , W e a k , W e a r y , W a t e r y E T * W&#13;
Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Comnpunded&#13;
by Experienced Physicians. Murine&#13;
Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain.&#13;
Wrltft Murine E y e Remedjr Co., Chicago,&#13;
Car illustrated E y e Book. At Druggists.&#13;
A good singer c a n always make&#13;
women' cry by singing "Home, S w e e t&#13;
Home,'" So m a n y people long for a&#13;
horn***, and s o f e w have o n e .&#13;
Your workimr power depends spon your&#13;
health! Uarielci Tea corrects disorders of&#13;
liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels; overcomes&#13;
constipation, purifies the b l o o d -&#13;
brings good health.&#13;
Many a tax dodger would no doubt&#13;
hold up his hands in horror if any o n e&#13;
w a s t o call hifla A -taltf-~bat what-else&#13;
is h e ? ^-"&#13;
It a^SsSj^SBBBJ • SBJI ^SjSS^SBBBBjPBBBBBaSSa -SB^&#13;
And i t o u t&#13;
l o a f l i n e to&#13;
PRIZE BtlR&amp;UR SIIPES&#13;
REAL BOX COHSTRIGTGR&#13;
A N D P O U C B FORCE OF L O t&#13;
ANGELES IN PEAR A N D TREMBLING,&#13;
A ^ R g B J HIM,&#13;
Los Angeles, Cal.—Did y o u ever&#13;
steal a boa constrictor? Well,'there's&#13;
a m a n in L o s Angeles did. Carried&#13;
it right tout of another man's house&#13;
and sold it. Four and a half feet&#13;
of it there w a s , all alive and wriggly.&#13;
S o L o s Angeles claims t o have t h e&#13;
prise thief of t h e United States.&#13;
T h i s w a s a real boa constrictor,&#13;
too, not o n e of t h e kind you s e e&#13;
after 3 a. m. a s the schooners slip&#13;
uneasily across t h e bar. Its genuinen&#13;
e s s i s vouched for by no less a person&#13;
than William Leroy, its owner;&#13;
Sylvester White, i t s abductor, a n d&#13;
9 »&#13;
The Policeman Speedily Retreated.&#13;
four stalwart members of the L o s&#13;
Angeles police force.&#13;
The other afternoon the chief of police&#13;
received a m e s s a g e from Vit&gt;alia,&#13;
a suburb. N o w Visalia has a marshal,&#13;
but it is a timid Bort of marshal&#13;
on occasions, one of them being&#13;
when malefactors of great snakes lock&#13;
themselves up in their houses and&#13;
say: "Come get me and snaky."&#13;
So the marshal of Visalia telephoned&#13;
to the chief of police of L o s&#13;
Angeles and t h e chief of police of&#13;
Los Angeles sent four tried and true&#13;
members df t h e force to bring back&#13;
the snake thief dead or alive.&#13;
There w a s a hurried consultation, p f&#13;
bluecoafs outside t h e \VJfetfte residence&#13;
which resulted in an attack in force,&#13;
the biggest m a n leading and the&#13;
other 'three bringing up the rear in&#13;
single file, ready to right abdat face&#13;
at the first hiss.&#13;
Policeman No. 1 knocked on the&#13;
door. Nothing happened out of the&#13;
ordinary. W h i t e came to t h e door&#13;
and asked what w a s 'wanted... He&#13;
asked it, but he addressed four members&#13;
of the L o s Angeles force, who&#13;
had speedily retreated to the roadway.&#13;
"Did you steal a snake?" w a s the&#13;
question.&#13;
"Sure, I stole a shake, a four-foot&#13;
one, or larger,!' w a s the answar.&#13;
There w a s ft %tgh o* relief Tsjien the&#13;
thief added that h e had sold the snake&#13;
and did not have it with him.&#13;
Then the policemen were at home.&#13;
White w a s arrested and brought to&#13;
Los Angeles, where h e awaits t h e&#13;
pleasure of the court.&#13;
HEARS CRY OF DYING PRIiND.&#13;
Hartford Insurance Man Has an Unusual&#13;
Experience.&#13;
Hartford, Conn.—Though nobody&#13;
ever accused William A. Moore, first&#13;
vice-president of the Phoenix Mutual&#13;
Life Insurance Company, of beifcg a&#13;
spiritualist or a member of any of&#13;
those kindred cnlts, nevertheless Mr.&#13;
Moore's former incredulity is staggering&#13;
under a remarkable psychological&#13;
vision and a weird conversation which&#13;
he thinks he had at. the moment that&#13;
his friend Richard P. Romaine, president&#13;
and general manager of the Windsor&#13;
Locks Paper Company, died recently.&#13;
Mr. Moore is vainly seeking&#13;
an explanation of the marvelous phenomenon.&#13;
Just before closing time Mr. Moore,&#13;
having signed h i s mail, w a s dozing on&#13;
a couch in his private office, when he&#13;
was suddenly aware of a familiar&#13;
voice calling appealfngly: "Will!&#13;
Will!" • -,&#13;
"Who is it?" he asked.&#13;
"It's I, Romaine," cfcrne t h e reply, in&#13;
short accents. Bewildered, Mr. Moore&#13;
shook himself together and searched&#13;
his office, and then, bursting open the&#13;
door into the main office, had the telephone&#13;
operator hurry a call to the&#13;
Romaine home. When he asked for&#13;
Mrs. Romaine h e w a s told tHiit sho&#13;
could not answer just then, and ho&#13;
inquired how Mr. Romaine was getting&#13;
along.&#13;
"He died about : t w o minute* ago,"&#13;
replied t h e maid. And now Mr. Moore&#13;
w a n t s .an explanation a » t o how his life&#13;
Wag irtendXtatWWtfcaMtf w i t h h » "&#13;
H Q&gt;r moment of death.&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
AVefctabk Preparation fa^s&#13;
*imi1at!ftg «te Food and ftejjuta&#13;
tingrtK StoisactB and Bowels of&#13;
i M A N ' l ' i ( H I L U H I . N&#13;
Prouwlps DigciHon.Chwrfui&#13;
ness and Rest Contains neither&#13;
Opium .Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C&#13;
a*?* sou BrSAm/Eimam*&#13;
A&amp;Smmm *&#13;
/kdUlhSmMs-&#13;
Amuc Stud -&#13;
ftcMtrmimt -&#13;
ftkrm S-4 -&#13;
Cfmrfittl Smymr&#13;
Winkfymm ftrnvir&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConslipa&#13;
(ion. S o u r Stomach.Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Feverishn&#13;
e s s and L O S S O F S L E E P&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY.&#13;
N E W Y O R K .&#13;
The KiM You Have&#13;
AJways Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A t c s n i o n t h i o l d&#13;
^Guaranteed u n d e r t h e F o o d 3 ¾&#13;
Exact Copy o f Wrapper.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA VMS eKrrau* O M n u t r , MSW TOMB •ITT.&#13;
WLDOrjGLAS&#13;
tsaMI w^mj mmtm fsT Is* MsssM a« 99WW WH&#13;
If I M M Am m hm « n a h % . L,%&#13;
m9 m*0*i 9f Ja*rt»§UmU*m&#13;
AarfMa*W£a***r Wmting thmm tmg\&#13;
M w , B « y S W M M I I , M I H W P N&#13;
roratebralMsi&#13;
m 7S yriossHwia— «a&gt;:&#13;
rSf ' - - " '&#13;
W.L.HIMUa.lsfj&#13;
CAUTION!&#13;
Salts and Castor&#13;
OitoTnly .m akes bowels flptp^&#13;
cause it irritates and sweats&#13;
like poking finger m your eye. The best&#13;
Bowel Medicine it CascarHm-&#13;
Every Salts and Castor OO user sfcoaai&#13;
get a box of CASCARETS and try&#13;
them just once. Youli see. • *&#13;
Caacarets—10c box—week's treatment.&#13;
All drusKlsts. Bigxeftt fceUer in tb»&#13;
world— million boxtut a month.&#13;
Your Last Chance to&#13;
Get • t • Land&#13;
Cheap&#13;
lies in Idaho. Good land at such prices will soon&#13;
he gone forever. Fine farm tracts can be had&#13;
now at low prices, on easy terms. By the time&#13;
your last payment is made the land will have&#13;
doubled in value, at least.&#13;
New towns—needing trades — are growing up&#13;
fast in the wonderful Snake River country. Men&#13;
who went there poor a few years ago are now&#13;
well to do.&#13;
Own An Idaho Farm&#13;
Idaho's variety of resources is unsurpassed anywhere&#13;
in the world — money is made easily and&#13;
quickly in farming, in fruit, stock and dairying.&#13;
Alfalfa alone is making hundreds rich.&#13;
Save money, that might otherwise be spent in&#13;
tickets and hotel bills, by going direct to Idaho&#13;
and buying a farm now. Write today for our&#13;
free booklet.&#13;
E. L.LOMAX.C.P. A.f&#13;
Omaha. Nab.&#13;
11,500 *&lt;£p CIDER ffriU for t'nt Catalog. DaacriU*&#13;
•Ail Ulu*tr»t« oux lia* of th*&#13;
CIDER. PREf$ES&#13;
BuUt In rite* 10 to&#13;
400 btmif pat d»r&#13;
Hand or p«w«r.&#13;
rr*«*M for »11&#13;
««V&#13;
•a*. «T»rjrtJ|Ujt fac ib* Old«t(&#13;
»n&lt;i TtMSM-iMktr. V*.&#13;
can itow you bow 11,600&#13;
etaw sreflt e»n b* mJA'^'&#13;
ttstisuc ytcsa ava ca.&#13;
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— " • » • • - - — • * - — - SEED OATS t •ts.&#13;
hPerSalser1! Cttalot pace 1x9. |&#13;
I LarreftyroiMrs of seed oau, wheat, barivr.l&#13;
I sptM^raJpotatoe*, cra&amp;sea and clovers and I&#13;
tada aeadrcajhe world. Big catalog free :or.|&#13;
saaa lOo itrStamp* and reoeive uunple&#13;
BiUion Dollar Grass, yielding lOtons of bmjI&#13;
p4ti&amp;re.e*ts, spelts, barter, etc.easilr wort* I&#13;
IS tO. 00 of an/ man's money to g et a stsrt witsv. f&#13;
sail catalorfx«e. Or, seneVl4o and we *d4 a]&#13;
•ample farm seed novelty never seen before I&#13;
]b»Joa. SAL2tRSEE»C0.&lt;luW,laCtmt&lt;SlB.&#13;
K N O W N S I N C C 1836ASRELIABLE&#13;
„ — &gt; &gt; a v l * Q . T R A D E M A H H&#13;
PLAMTENS B L A C K&#13;
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SUPERIOR REMEDY. 'URINARV0ISCHARGE-:&#13;
'jRJliCISTS OR «v MAIL .». RECEIPT or 5 f&#13;
P A R K E R ' S&#13;
HAIR B A L 8&#13;
.. s bnrajiaat&#13;
Never Valla t o B&#13;
JSa4» to i t s Ton&#13;
Cam esalp elaetaM&#13;
JOp,—dHJOet&#13;
I WI8H I HAD A GIRL&#13;
The eubUaeer paid lie.SM for thla e o n c - I f • »he Mt e t&#13;
1*0». Complete copy by mail for MTeateetjunpe. To flat*&#13;
pereon in each town Mndtnff items for a y big; be&#13;
list of aontr* I make an offer enabJtas each to ( e t&#13;
BBoaic free for I month*. P.C.MefBaa, S,&#13;
BLOODHOUNDS* 1°?$??% • a r - i&#13;
hoands, lrlih Wolfhnonds Reaicterrd. 8ta*rp _&#13;
eatalne;. R o o k w o o d K e n n e l s , L « x i n e t o e t , K y . &gt;&#13;
I DEFIINCE Gold Watar Stares&#13;
' "•• ; eaakea laundry work a pleasure. 16 ox. pas?. iSav DEFIANCE Gold Witar Starch GALL SI0NE5&#13;
(cakes laundry work a pleasure. 1« os. pkg. 100. Address C. COYKY, R. b . *, UutsiasT.'Mieh.&#13;
•r my U T M l W8S1SS. J - _ . — -&#13;
wnitsurfifen^iwe: I ^ee^sTuleiThompiwi'sEiftlfalir&#13;
VISIT LINCOLN'S SPRINGFIELD&#13;
WHILE EN ROUTE BETWEEN&#13;
CHICAGO AND ST. LOUIS&#13;
No traveller passing through the State Capital of Illinois should fail to&#13;
Stop off and view at laast some of the objects of interest in that historic&#13;
city. For a quarter of a century Sprwgfield was the home of Abraham Lincoln, and there&#13;
are yet to be seen many things associate! with the life of the "Great Emancipator."&#13;
You can arrange to visit Springfield for two hours between trains by arranging with&#13;
agents of "The Only Way." Practically no loss of time on your journey.&#13;
VISIT THE LINCOLN MONUMENT&#13;
THE STATE HOUSE&#13;
THE LINCOLN HOME&#13;
THE TEMPLE OF JUSTICE&#13;
G O I N G S O U T H Y o u « " ^ v e on the "PRAIRIE STATE EXPRESS" early in the afternoon and depart on "THE&#13;
•- — ALTON LIMITED" two hours later—thus giving you time to visit the principal points of interest.&#13;
G O I N G N O R T H Y o u ^ 1 ^ o n " T H E A L T O N LIMn^rr* at noon and depart on the "PRAIRIE STATE&#13;
• EXPRESS" in the afternoon—thus Jiving you over two hours in Springfield.&#13;
THE CHICAGO fir ALTON is "THE ONLY WAY" tlUMt enables you to do this. By any other route,&#13;
(f you see Springfield, you must take a tvhole day for it*&#13;
TOLEDO, ST. LOUIS &amp; WESTERN&#13;
CHICAGO &amp; ALTON&#13;
THE LINCOLN HISTORICAL ROUTE&#13;
ABRAHAM LINCOLN SPENT HIS&#13;
Illinois, on the Clover Leaf, 126 miles from St. Louis; 328 miles&#13;
from Toledo.&#13;
Illinois, on the Alton, 188 miles from Chicago: 301 miles from&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
Illinois, on the Alton, 185 miles from Chicago; 99 miles from St. Louts;&#13;
298 miles from Kansas City.&#13;
CHILDHOOD AT LERNA&#13;
BOYHOOD AT PETERSBURG&#13;
MANHOOD AT SPRINGFIELD&#13;
Thus the CLOVER LEAF-ALTON becomes the Lincoln Historical Route&#13;
Write for descrintiv; GEO. I. CHARLTON, General Passenger Agent, CHICAGO&#13;
* . . " &gt; .&#13;
. 1 * - '&#13;
&gt;3&#13;
, • I . &gt; . 1 .&#13;
| Iliioonng Difr Cormpon^enh&#13;
OTfABIIXA.&#13;
• M M Nt*noy May IN ' g a i n i n g&#13;
slowly. *»•&#13;
Roy P a r r m e r ridets in a fine new&#13;
carriage nowadays.&#13;
B e r n i c e HarriB of Chelsea waa&#13;
home over S u n d a y :&#13;
Otis W e b b purchased a fine&#13;
horse'of loaco .parties laat week.&#13;
Mrs. S c r i p t u r e will soou occupy&#13;
h e r house vacated by .Mr. Godley.&#13;
Wui. Marshall and family s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y at H e r m H u d s o n s of No.&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mr. Godley and family are prep&#13;
a r i n g to move iuto rooms over&#13;
t h e shop.&#13;
Mrs. Stevenson a n d sou L e w i s&#13;
of N o r t h L a k e spent S u n d a y at&#13;
J a n e t Webbs.&#13;
T h e Missionary Society of t h e&#13;
P r e s b y . c h u r c h met with Mrs.&#13;
I r v i n g Pickell last Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs, Nettie Hadley aged 50 yrs.&#13;
formerly of Uuadilla, died at her&#13;
h o m e in G l e n h a m , S. Dak., M a r c h&#13;
15th.&#13;
T h e P r e s b y . society will hold a&#13;
maple S u g a r social at the » hall&#13;
F r i d a y evening, Apr. 11. E v e r y -&#13;
one welcome.&#13;
Mrs. E m m e t t H a d l e y gave a&#13;
p a r t y in honor of d a u g h t e r D o r o -&#13;
t h y s 5th b i r t h d a y last S a t u r d a y&#13;
afteruc»on to a merry company of&#13;
little folks. T h e y all wished t h a t&#13;
D o r o t h y s b i r t h d a y might come&#13;
oftener. '&#13;
4 Business Pointers. k&#13;
f&#13;
TO BBJWT.&#13;
The pren-i^15 now oncupied by&#13;
Hiram Pierce on the Dexter and&#13;
Pinckney road, locally knosvn as the&#13;
Lipscomb place. Low rent to right&#13;
party. T. BIRKETT. tlG&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Hooee and lot on Uoadilla St&#13;
t 13 Mrs. M. Kuen&#13;
For Hale&#13;
House and one-half an-e of land in&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Haney.&#13;
F3R %klM.&#13;
Second growth, dry block wood.&#13;
9tl L. Spears&#13;
FOR KALE&#13;
Six Poland China brood HOWS due in&#13;
April. .lames Spears,&#13;
9tf Unadilla.&#13;
K, CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction pales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you tor past favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I remain&#13;
vours. R CLIHTTON.&#13;
Square Deal&#13;
Hatchery&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
P u r e Bred S. C. Brown L e g h o r n&#13;
Chicks, one day old&#13;
10 cents Bach&#13;
P u r e bred B a r r e d P l y m o u t h ]&#13;
Rock Chicks, one day old&#13;
10 cents Bach&#13;
C. Albert Frost&#13;
S O U T H G R E G O R Y .&#13;
S p r i u - is h e r e — w h o i» ready.&#13;
Mr. Oouk is a »««w clerk at Bam&#13;
Oentone.&#13;
E l d e r Vime a t t e n d e d c h u r c h&#13;
here 8 u n d a y .&#13;
Fr&amp;uk Ovitt and wife s p e n t&#13;
8 u u d a y at L . R. Williama'.&#13;
I d a Batett hat* been vieitiug iu&#13;
Detroit for a few dayn b u t ia back&#13;
to Mr. Marah'H again.&#13;
T h e band goes to S t o c k b r i d ^ e&#13;
W e d n e s d a y evening of thi« week.&#13;
Mr. P a r k i n s o n is having; great&#13;
success as a teacher.&#13;
T h e Uuadilla Cornet Band had&#13;
their concert at Uuadilla last&#13;
Wednesday eveuiug. T h e crowd&#13;
WBB not very large owing to t h e&#13;
bad roads, b u t t h e b a u d did very&#13;
nicely.&#13;
T h e people h e r e took t h e i r play&#13;
to Stockbridge a n d everyone reports&#13;
a flue time. E v e r y p a r t was&#13;
well taken. T h e y go to Plaiufield&#13;
this week T h u r s d a y night, a n d a&#13;
full house is wanted. You will be&#13;
sorry if you miss itdocon&#13;
N O R T H P U T N A M .&#13;
Win. W h i t e is u n d e r the&#13;
tors care.&#13;
Mrs. William Bland called&#13;
Mrs. Carr Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. F a r r i n g t o n visited her&#13;
d a u g h t e r Mrs. Geo. Blaua S u n -&#13;
day.&#13;
William Allen baled hay and&#13;
straw in this vicinity the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Mrs. Nina G a r d n e r visited her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Geo. Younglove&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
V. G. Dinbel r e t u r n e d from Detroit&#13;
M o n d a y where he has been&#13;
spending a few days.&#13;
Miss L u l u A b b o t t has r e t u r n e d&#13;
from Howell where she has been&#13;
t a k i n g medical treatment.&#13;
T h e MisBes Veronica Brogan&#13;
and Eva D o c k i n g are home from&#13;
the P. H . S. for their vacation.&#13;
Miss Grace Pool, who has been&#13;
helping Mrs. Geo. Younglove for&#13;
the past few months, has r e t u r n e d&#13;
to her home on account of sickness.&#13;
T h e Misses Mildred K u h n of&#13;
Gregory, Clare L e d w i d g e of A n derson,&#13;
Ella Mae Farley of Marion&#13;
and Bernice H a r t of Howell visited&#13;
at Chris B r o g a n s Sunday.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Gladys Fisk visited relatives in&#13;
Ypsilanti the past week.&#13;
Bert Hicks transacted business&#13;
in P i n g r e e S a t u r d a y last.&#13;
F r e d Fish and wife were visiting&#13;
friends and relatives in Plainfield&#13;
this week.&#13;
H e n r y E d d y moved to his newly&#13;
purchased farm near W h i t m o r e&#13;
L a k e Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Orin Fisk and children of&#13;
Chilsou spent the past week at&#13;
William Fisks.&#13;
Mrs. H e r b e r t Schoenhals and&#13;
children of Chelsea were guests at&#13;
R. W. L a k e s S a t u r d a y a n d S u n -&#13;
day.&#13;
A n u m b e r from here attended&#13;
the surprise at J o h n W h i t e s Saturday&#13;
night. All reported a fine&#13;
time.&#13;
Words To Frcem The Soul.&#13;
"Yonr son has consumption. His&#13;
case in hopeless." These appalling&#13;
words were spoken to G^o. E Bievens&#13;
a leading merchant, ot Springfield, N&#13;
C, by two expert, doctors—one a lung&#13;
specialist. Then was shown the nonderfnl&#13;
power of Dr. Kings New his&#13;
covery. "After three weeks ine"&#13;
writes Mr, Hlevens, "he was an wHl HS&#13;
ever. I would not. ta!.e all the monf-.y&#13;
in the world tor what it. did to mv&#13;
boy." Infailatde for Coughs nnd&#13;
cold*, I'S the safest surest, cure of I'H-&gt;&#13;
perate LuOff diseases on earth. 50c&#13;
and $1 at F. A. Siglers, Guarantee&#13;
satisfaction. Trial bottle free.&#13;
IOfOO.&#13;
Nelson Book and family have&#13;
moved to t h e corners.&#13;
J e s s i e C a r t e r of G r a s s L a k e&#13;
was in town F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y .&#13;
A large crowd atteuded t h e silver&#13;
medal contest at the c h u r c h&#13;
F r i d a y evening.&#13;
^Miss Alice W r i g h t of M o r r i o e&#13;
has been vitjitiug at E . W. A c k e r s&#13;
and other Iosco friends.&#13;
T h e Misses Hazel Stowe and&#13;
G l a d y s G o r t o n are home from Y p -&#13;
silanti for a weeks vacation.&#13;
F . C. P e t e r s o n has not been&#13;
very well since he r e t u r n e d from&#13;
California. H e prefers Michigan&#13;
to California.&#13;
WEST punr AII&#13;
Wales L e l a u d is moving on his&#13;
farm this week.&#13;
Will D u n b a r was in D e t r o i t on&#13;
business last; week.&#13;
Joie H a r r i s of D u n d e e is h o m e&#13;
for a short vacation.&#13;
Will Colon will work C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle's farm this year.&#13;
M a e K e n n e d y visited friends iu&#13;
IStockbridge Monday and Tuesday.&#13;
J o h u D i u k e l and wife of P i n c k -&#13;
ney spent S u n d a y at Mrs. W m .&#13;
G a r d n e r s .&#13;
Mrs. V. G. Diukel of Anderson&#13;
visited her d a u g h t e r Mrs. Will&#13;
D u n b a r one day last week.&#13;
Mrs. A m a n d a W h i t e died at her&#13;
home here Monday night after an&#13;
illness of m a n y months. S h e is&#13;
survived by six sons and four&#13;
d a u g h t e r s . F u n e r a l T h u r s d a y at&#13;
2 p. m. at t h e residence.&#13;
ADDITI01AL LOCAL.&#13;
Geo. Green is making some changes&#13;
on the interior of his residence.&#13;
GaleO. Johnson ot Detroit visited&#13;
bis parents at this place over Sunday.&#13;
Don't torget the dinner at the opera&#13;
house, Monday April 5, by the M. E.&#13;
society.&#13;
Mrs. John Rane of Whitmore Lake&#13;
spent the first of the week with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
The Misses Florence snd Helen Reason&#13;
are visiting; their sistar Mrs. John&#13;
Itane at Whitmore Lake,&#13;
Miss Ruth May of Stockbridge and&#13;
gentleman friend from Chicago, were&#13;
guests of J . A. Cadwell and family&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Burkley Isham, nee Miss Mabel&#13;
Fish, was voted the most popular&#13;
lady at Plainfield last week at a series&#13;
of entertainments and awarded a fine&#13;
gold ring. She had 2,300 votes.&#13;
Tho.s. Burchiel and wife, who have&#13;
been spending the winter with their&#13;
sons and other relatives in Canada,&#13;
returned to their home here Tuesday.&#13;
We are glad to *ee them back among&#13;
as again.&#13;
On account of the serious Win ess of&#13;
Rev. Gates' father, there will be no&#13;
preaching in Cong'l church next Sunday,&#13;
but there will be Sunday school&#13;
at the usual hour. C. E. meeting at&#13;
at 6:45. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mrs. ?. D. Johnson tod SOD Harvey,&#13;
are viaiting b#r daughter Mrs. T. &lt;).&#13;
Gnu I ot New Baltimore tor a few&#13;
davb.&#13;
Mrs. Ohas. Ran* of Whitmore Lake&#13;
iu at the Sanatorium here, taking&#13;
treatment. w"he is sported aa doing&#13;
nicely.&#13;
In March the legislature passed a&#13;
bill that makes the nshertsen sit up&#13;
aud lake notice, especially of the ones&#13;
who voted "yea" on the bill. This&#13;
was one that prohibits the catching of&#13;
any bass less than one foot iu length&#13;
and limits the number which may be&#13;
caught in any one day to 10. The&#13;
closed season is fixed at from Feb. 1 to&#13;
June 15.&#13;
Bills were issued this week tor an&#13;
auction saie on the farm of C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle south and west of thid village&#13;
on Saturday April b\ commencing at&#13;
10 o'clock with lunch at noon. He&#13;
lias rented bis farm and has this stock&#13;
more than they can care tor. There&#13;
are 4 horses. 35 cattle aud 87 sheep,&#13;
besides home household goods and a&#13;
few tools. The cat:le are all grade&#13;
Herefords but two. See bills.&#13;
Fr. Cassidy on the Evils&#13;
of the Drink Traffic&#13;
Iu Fall River, Mass., Sunday evening,&#13;
'29th ult., Chancellor Cassidy, of that diocebe&#13;
preached on the evil of tlw drink traffic&#13;
as at present conducted in Fall River,&#13;
and urged an audience of men who packed&#13;
the cathedral to the doors, including even&#13;
the sanctuary; to vote, Decembers, in favor&#13;
of obliterating the liquor business iu&#13;
that city. His auditors were deeply stirred&#13;
aa lie pleaded.&#13;
"The money of the saloon is tainted&#13;
money, tainted with crime, tainted with&#13;
sin, tainted with corruption, yes, covered&#13;
with the blood of ioimoratl souls," he said.&#13;
"There are many meu in this city engaged&#13;
in the saloon busiuess who are nauseated&#13;
with its evils. They are bound hand and&#13;
foot but they cannot break away from it,&#13;
though willing to give all they possess for&#13;
the opportunity of making an honest living.&#13;
"Among the enemies of the saloOo in&#13;
this city are the men whose shop doors are&#13;
closed on Suuday while others are allowed&#13;
to be open, but the most powerful of its&#13;
foes are the home, the family, tlxe&#13;
child. If you could hear the prayers that&#13;
are going up to God from little children&#13;
the next ten days for the abolition of the&#13;
saloon and asking to be rescued fn a the&#13;
great curse of liquor; if you could hear&#13;
them pleading with Christ, if a little one&#13;
would take you by the hand, look into&#13;
your face and say'-Won't you help me&#13;
just a little?" where is the man who would&#13;
turn away?&#13;
"Won't you help these little one* by&#13;
your votes? There is coming a day either&#13;
of salvation or damnation for the children.&#13;
What will you men do? Here, in&#13;
the name of Jesus Christ, whose humble&#13;
Shepherd I am, with all my heart, with all&#13;
soul, for the little ones who cannot talk to&#13;
yon themselves, I implore you not to bind&#13;
the saloon evil to their necks again." —&#13;
Michigan Catholic.&#13;
M. £. Church Hotes.&#13;
The usual u o r n m g §*rvioc was well&#13;
Attended and the Sunday school report&#13;
showed 88 preaent and a collection of&#13;
1213&#13;
Do not Forget the prayer meeting&#13;
thib evening with the iniaaion etnd-y&#13;
following.&#13;
North Hamburg Literary&#13;
Club.&#13;
The North Hamburg Literary Club&#13;
Dint at the N. H. church Friday evening&#13;
Mar. 26. it wab a pleasani evening&#13;
and a few were out, but not being&#13;
a quorum, the election of officers was&#13;
postponed until the next meeting. A&#13;
tine time was enjoyed by eve^you^&#13;
present and the time was welt spent.&#13;
The meeting fiually adjourned unti!&#13;
further notice.&#13;
I shall offer for sale on Mondaytownuieeting&#13;
day at the first door&#13;
west of the hotel, a quantity ol household&#13;
goods and other articles too numerous&#13;
to mention.&#13;
R. Clinton.&#13;
The Porter Clothing Co. of Howelj&#13;
will be at the Hotel Tuomey in Pinckney,&#13;
Monday next, April 5, with a full&#13;
line of Clothing, suits, etc. You are&#13;
cordially invited to call and inspect&#13;
the same on the above date.&#13;
Silver Medal Contest.&#13;
The Young People of Gregory will&#13;
hold a contest next Saturday eveninc&#13;
Apiil 3 at the Pinckney opera hou.»e.&#13;
Program&#13;
Wong, Male Chorus, Messrs. Uates&#13;
Littlejohn, Swartlmnt, Tapper. Robinson,&#13;
Lilley, Grieve.&#13;
Prayer&#13;
Male Chorus&#13;
Contestant?, 1, 2, 3.&#13;
MiBS Lola Moran&#13;
Contestants, 4, h, 8&#13;
Miss Viola Peters&#13;
Contestants, 7, S, 9&#13;
Mrs. Littlejohn&#13;
Gregory Clans&#13;
Presentation of Medal&#13;
Benediction&#13;
Admission, 10 cents&#13;
See O n r&#13;
Special Line&#13;
of&#13;
and&#13;
BIRTHDAY&#13;
Postcards&#13;
Song,&#13;
Bolo,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Song,&#13;
Notice.&#13;
is hereby given to the qualified elecora&#13;
of the township of Putnam, county&#13;
of Livingston, state of Michigan, that&#13;
at the next ensuing annual township&#13;
meeting to ba held at the Town Hall.&#13;
Pinckney within said township, on.&#13;
Monday, the 5th day of April, 1909, a.&#13;
proposition to prohibit the inanfactur*&#13;
and sale of intoxicating liquors within&#13;
the said county of Livingston in accordance&#13;
with act Xo. 207, public acta&#13;
of 1889, and acts amendatory thereof&#13;
and supplemontiaiv thereto, /ill be&#13;
submitted to the (jtialitied vote's of&#13;
said township in accordance with a&#13;
resolution of the board of supervisors&#13;
of said county relating thereto. tU'&#13;
lota will be provided reading -a&#13;
follows:&#13;
Shall t h e manufacture of Liquors&#13;
a n d the L i q u o r Traffic be&#13;
p r o h i b i t e d within the c o u n t y :&#13;
• Y E S&#13;
Shall the manufacture of Liquors&#13;
a n d t h e L i q u o r Traffic be&#13;
p r o h i b i t e d within the c o u n t y :&#13;
DNO&#13;
Dated this 24th day of March, 1909.&#13;
W. T. MORAN, Two. clerk.&#13;
Election Notice.&#13;
Tharc will be a meeting of the electors&#13;
of the township ot Putnam for&#13;
the purpose of Electing officers for the&#13;
ensuing year ot 19()9, on April 5, 1909&#13;
at the town hall.&#13;
Dated:—March 23, 1909.&#13;
W.T. MORAN,&#13;
Tp. Clerk.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
There wiU be a meeting of the&#13;
Board of Registration at the Town&#13;
hall in the village of Pinckney on Saturday&#13;
April 3rd, 1909, for the purpose&#13;
of registering all persons who have&#13;
the necesfiarj qualifications.&#13;
Dated:— llarch 22, 1909.&#13;
W, T. MORAN,&#13;
Tp. Clerk .&#13;
11 you are ^oing to IIAVH an auottii&#13;
remember that we can print ynnr KpX"&#13;
on short notice. We IMVH already&#13;
issued several&#13;
at the&#13;
Dispatch Office, Pinckney&#13;
2v£uLles&#13;
W o u l d it not pay yon to&#13;
r a i s e a good spun of&#13;
m u l e s ? : : ; . : .&#13;
We have a aqnarely built&#13;
J a c k , bred from imported&#13;
Spanish stock; ^ood head&#13;
and e a r s ; lar^n hone and&#13;
feet; plenty of action.&#13;
R e a d y f o r s^rvi™ at,&#13;
Q l e n n b r o o k Stock F a r m .&#13;
F. A. GLENN, Manager.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 01, 1909</text>
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                  <text>Newspaper</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="37155">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40422">
              <text>VOL. XXVII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, APR. 8. 1909. No 14&#13;
ia&#13;
We Desire To Call&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
T o the fact that Business is still&#13;
carried on at Swarthout &amp; Placeway's&#13;
old stand, and :. :: ::&#13;
A S h a r e of Your Patronage is&#13;
Solicited.&#13;
E. BURGESS &amp; CO.&#13;
bOCAL, N E W S .&#13;
C. P. Syktss was in Grand Rapids the&#13;
iirst of the week.&#13;
F. L. Andrews made a hurried business&#13;
trip to Detroit the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Pearl An It man has opened a&#13;
millinery and novelty store in the&#13;
basement ol the opera house.&#13;
Eugene Smith and wife of Cavenftutfh&#13;
Lake were the quests of friends&#13;
in this vicinity the last of last week.&#13;
Samuel Lyons and wife of Hartland&#13;
were guests ot J as. Henry and wife&#13;
and other friends ea*t of town the&#13;
past week&#13;
Mrs. Villa "Richards is now clerking&#13;
in the post office having secured the&#13;
position vacated by the resignation of&#13;
Mrs. Emma Burgess.&#13;
The many friends of Hiram Smith,&#13;
H. Knickerbock r was in Howell&#13;
the first of the kveek on business.&#13;
The popular florist, J. A. Brown, of&#13;
Howell, hu s an adv. in this issue.&#13;
The W. C. T. U. will meet next Saturday&#13;
at 2:30 p. rn. with Mrs. J, A.&#13;
Cad well.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy of Lo« Angeles&#13;
visited Miss Kate Brown at LaJolla,&#13;
Gal., last week.&#13;
The April shower Tuesday nitjbt&#13;
made the grass look green, but the&#13;
wind Wednesday blew almost all the&#13;
grass off the earth.&#13;
Percy Swarthout has moved his&#13;
undertaking parlors into the store&#13;
just north of F. A. Siglers drug store,&#13;
formerly occupied by R. G. Siglers&#13;
ice cream parlors&#13;
1 OMTTVAJkl. |&#13;
Amanda Robinson was Lorn in&#13;
the township of Dexter, Washtenaw&#13;
Co., June 23rd, 1859, and passe i to her&#13;
reward at her home \u Putnam tuwu-&#13;
Hhip, Mar. 29, 1909.&#13;
In 1859 sue wan married to Lowrey&#13;
B. White who died in 1904. She spent&#13;
fifty years in Putnam and was loved&#13;
by all who Knew her as she was very&#13;
forgetful ot self in her desire to holo&#13;
others, und her devotion to her family&#13;
was very marked.&#13;
There are left to mourn their loss,&#13;
ten children, nineteen grandchildren&#13;
j and two sisters.&#13;
She bad been a great sufferer for&#13;
about two years but died believing&#13;
and trusting that in the f»r«at beyond,&#13;
all is weli.&#13;
The funeral was held at the residence&#13;
in West Putnam Thursday Apr.&#13;
1, Rev. D. C. Littlejohn officiating.&#13;
Happy the spirit released from its clay,&#13;
Happy the Kjiirit that goes bounding i&#13;
away,&#13;
Singing as upward it springe from the&#13;
tomb,&#13;
Victory, Victory, Jesus hns come. *%&#13;
CASS OF THANKS.&#13;
We wish to thank the friends and&#13;
neighbors who so kindly assisted us&#13;
during the illness, death and burial of&#13;
our dear mother, Mrs. Amanda White&#13;
We especially desire to thank the&#13;
choir for their music and the pastor&#13;
for his kind words.&#13;
THE FAMILY.&#13;
Baster Tea.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Burgess has purchased&#13;
a half interest in the&#13;
whose home is just east ot this place, Placeway grocery and commenced&#13;
will be pleased to learn that he has then* April 1, The new firm will be&#13;
received the highest honors of his known as E. Burgess &amp; Co.&#13;
The 2nd division of the ladies of&#13;
the M. E. Church, ot which Mrs. Leal&#13;
Sigler is Captain, will hald an Easter&#13;
tea at the home of Dr. H. F. Sigler&#13;
Swarthout &amp; j Wednesday April 14.&#13;
The following musica&#13;
will be given.&#13;
program&#13;
cla9S at the U. of M., having been&#13;
cbo3en as Senior Lit, Class Day orator.&#13;
H. G, Brig^s and wife, Mrs. C. N,&#13;
Plimpton of this place and Mrs.&#13;
Clarissa Kirk of Bowel!, returned&#13;
from Florida Saturday last. Like the&#13;
early spring birds, they are going to&#13;
try to smile and look pleasant nven if&#13;
they do get cold feet. They enjoyed&#13;
their winter in the sunny MMUII, bu&gt;,&#13;
•»&gt;':ai"e triad to ^et into thi^ir hnmn state&#13;
and town onci &lt;V^P\&#13;
Having d e c i d e d to l e a v e&#13;
t o w n . E. R, B r o w n w i l l s e l l at&#13;
public a u c t i o n , at h i s r e s i -&#13;
d e n c e in t h i s v i l l a g e , on S a t -&#13;
u r d a y afternoon* April 17, at&#13;
1 o ' c l o c k s h a r p , his h o u s e h o l d&#13;
g o o d s and o t h e r p e r s o n a l&#13;
p r o p e r t y . T h i s s a l e will b e&#13;
h e l d r e g a r d l e s s of t h e w e a t h -&#13;
e r . R e a d a u c t i o n b i l l s f o r&#13;
p a r t i c u l a r s and r e m e m b e r&#13;
t h e d a t e .&#13;
Mis* Lucille McCluskey was pleas*&#13;
antly surprised at her home Saturday&#13;
evening. Music and progressive peanuts&#13;
were greatly enjoyed by all closing&#13;
with a birthday supper. The&#13;
seventeen lighted tapers announced&#13;
her last milestone.&#13;
The Ladies Aid Societies of both the&#13;
Cong'l and M. E Churches each realized&#13;
a goodly sum of money for dinners&#13;
and suppers town meeting day.&#13;
Both societies took in a little over $30&#13;
each. Many thanks are due the&#13;
people who patronized them.&#13;
Thesilv-r medal contest at. the&#13;
opera house last Friday evening was&#13;
not larccly attended tint the enter&#13;
tainmenl w;is good. Therm v e.e&#13;
eight, contestants and each did exceptionally&#13;
well. Only one, however,&#13;
could secure the medal and tdat was&#13;
awarded to Beal Daniels, who won by&#13;
just, a few points.&#13;
Inst, l)uet,&#13;
Inst. Solo,&#13;
Vocal Solo,&#13;
Inst. Duet,&#13;
Inst. Solo,&#13;
Vocal Solo,&#13;
Inst. Solo,&#13;
Song,&#13;
Vocal Duet,&#13;
Inst. Solo,&#13;
Vocal Solo.&#13;
I Ruth Frost,&#13;
\ Harold Grieve&#13;
Carmen I,eland&#13;
Mrs. Littlejohn&#13;
J Gladys Brown&#13;
I Mae Teeple&#13;
Kitsey Allison&#13;
Viola Peters&#13;
Norma Vaughn&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
| Harold Grieve&#13;
\ (Trace Grieve&#13;
Ruth FroBt&#13;
I.ohi. Moran&#13;
Male ('horns&#13;
BOWMAN'S ! Farmers,&#13;
New floods are rapidly&#13;
rilling the store Htid its&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
ns a look when in Howell&#13;
The best stock of Embroideries,&#13;
Laces, Ribbons,&#13;
Corsets, Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Hosiery and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Remember Tlh~* —&#13;
E v e r y D a y i&amp; Bargain Day&#13;
Bring in your harnesses&#13;
and have them&#13;
repaired, washed and&#13;
oiled ready for your&#13;
spring work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can do t h a t work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
Out for- Business&#13;
1000 Rolls of Wall Paper 1&#13;
5c per Double Roll&#13;
B o r d e r nol &amp;u«aranteed&#13;
Farmers and Stockmen&#13;
Excelsior Insect and Lice Destroyer&#13;
Guaranteed and Positive in results&#13;
Or No Pay. :: ::&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
.¾¾&#13;
?*-*'-&#13;
» -**&amp;,&#13;
SATURDAY SPFiCIAbS&#13;
300 yds. Dress Ginghams (light paterns only)&#13;
Regular price 12£c Saturday's Special H£c&#13;
5 pieces only Apron Gingham Saturday pre. *Hc&#13;
14c all Linen Crash, Saturday's prico l i e&#13;
3^-inch Brown Sheeting, extra value,&#13;
Saturday's price ^.¾&#13;
Yd, wide Black Taffeta Silk, cheap at «1.00,&#13;
Saturday's price per yd. b\Sc&#13;
U&#13;
KjXnlJ&#13;
I&#13;
Our Grocery Specials&#13;
Yeast per package 3c&#13;
S Bars Soap for 25c&#13;
Extra Rice per lb. fie&#13;
Sweet Chocolate per pkg. (&gt;c&#13;
x&amp;:&#13;
-• T-?,&#13;
\'. if?** •*«&#13;
'•• V *r;, /"&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rips, etc., iu fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN new. ,: ;: ::&#13;
Howell's Busy Store W. B. DARR0W&#13;
Song,&#13;
Everyone one invited to come and;&#13;
en icy a trood time. !&#13;
A t Work On T h e Cream-j&#13;
ery.&#13;
Earl Hay, the C^amory nnn, ihere&#13;
and has commenced the changing&#13;
ot the building over fcr the Creambry&#13;
and will hu.st.le matters as fast as posj&#13;
sible. He has ordered his machioer y&#13;
from Chicago and hopes to have it ini&#13;
stalled within a few weeks at the most&#13;
and b« ready to receive either rream&#13;
or milk.&#13;
Ho wants several routes established&#13;
soon and everyone desiring to haul&#13;
milk and cream shou'd nail on him&#13;
immediately for in format ion.&#13;
R e c e i v e d His Appointment.&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
E. R Brown wss home a Brain Sun- \&#13;
day and Monti iy. He has received his t&#13;
appointment and is now one of Uncle&#13;
Sams regular civil service men. When&#13;
Mr. Brown decided to leave his work&#13;
h e r e a n d t a k e n p t . b e study ot civil!&#13;
service, be wunt into it with the &gt;aine|&#13;
vim that made him a success as a&#13;
i&#13;
blacksmith and that "vim" has cairied&#13;
him to nn appointment within six&#13;
months after he was taken as a "sut&gt;."&#13;
He has made his .u-ranwements to!&#13;
move to the city as the notice in.&#13;
c !"mn w li !;. A-. |&#13;
New Goods Arriving Daily&#13;
Watch Our S p a c e For Bargains&#13;
All Goods Sold For Cash&#13;
Highest Market Price Paid&#13;
For Butter and Eggs&#13;
:^fe&#13;
t «• «:: \j&#13;
# • • •&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST of durability in a hitrh-spe«l machine like the cream separator.&#13;
No other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
everyday, winter and summer, it must not only do thorough work,&#13;
hut to be"permanently profitable, it most be durable. U ^&gt; CREAM&#13;
. ¾ . SEPARATORS are built for 1,,-msj service. A soliii, ,ow frame ene'rwes entirely aM&#13;
the operating parts, protecting tnem from i!irt ru:d danger 01 injury.&#13;
The parts are few, simple and easy to get at. Ball bear ings&#13;
nt high spcrd points, combined with automatic oilin.se, reduce wear&#13;
as well as insure the easiest operation. Siich careful r.nd thorough&#13;
construction is what enables the U. S. to bettrr STAND THE TEST ~ than any other separator. You don't have to boy a new one every ytTtfdt&#13;
two. And remember: the U. S. does t h e cleanest .skinning all the time.&#13;
Kxamine the U. S- yourself and see its good point*. It is sold by Teeple Hardware&#13;
I :.*&#13;
*t.'\&#13;
W&#13;
feM \&#13;
ijSrii&#13;
.•*»•-•—•&lt; •?* ,.- i ,-.1.&#13;
* ? % • •&#13;
1 1 ^&#13;
TBMMM. L. Ajrossrwi, i\ifc.&#13;
» i&#13;
MHCXNBY, - MICHIGAN&#13;
w — a a a a — g ; 1 - m u — a — — *&#13;
mcJ-1 Wvll Bsatowcd.&#13;
Among the lusi acts of congress was&#13;
the voting of a medal of honor to Miaa&#13;
Helen 1. McGanu ol New York for her&#13;
heroism In the General Slocum disaster&#13;
of June 16, 1904, when she saved&#13;
nine children from a terrible death.&#13;
Medals of honor are thus granted more&#13;
commonly to men, and In most cases&#13;
for conspicuous gallantry on the field&#13;
of battle. There is an organisation&#13;
called the Medal of Honor Legion, and&#13;
|t 1B composed of officers and enlisted&#13;
men or the army and navy of the United&#13;
States who have been decorated in&#13;
the manner indicated. At the present&#13;
time the legion has more than 450&#13;
members. The conferring of these&#13;
medals was authorized by a resolution&#13;
adopted by congress in 1862, in the&#13;
early part of the civil war. The list of&#13;
Ciedal of honor men is given a conspicuous&#13;
place in the official Army&#13;
Register. The grunting of a similur&#13;
niedal to Miss McCann is recognition&#13;
of bravery quite as commendable as&#13;
that of soldiers and sailors in action.&#13;
She worked fearlessly, herself in imminent&#13;
peril, in rescuing others. What&#13;
deed of valor could surpass that in&#13;
merit ?&#13;
DESPICABLE PLOT&#13;
T H E BODY OF HAROLD MOON 1«&#13;
FOUND IN T H R E A D&#13;
LAKE.&#13;
FOIL EASY MONEY PLOT.&#13;
Heartless Scoundrel Attempted to Extort&#13;
Money From the Grief Stricken&#13;
Parents, But Failed.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
Wealthy Englishmen have provided&#13;
the funds necessary to open a radium&#13;
institute in London, where for a long&#13;
time the London hospital has been&#13;
devoting especial attention to the&#13;
treatment of disease by radium.&#13;
Striking results have been attained,&#13;
and although Sir Frederick Treves,&#13;
the famous surgeon, "begged his medical&#13;
friends'to be cautious as to the&#13;
way they spoke of permanent cures,"&#13;
he recently declared that many affec- i you surely will fail to get him alive.&#13;
The mystery surrounding the disappearance&#13;
of Harold Moon, the 10-yearold&#13;
son of Mr. and Mrs. Luman N.&#13;
Moon, five weeks ago, was solved Saturday&#13;
morning when the body of the&#13;
missing lad was found in Thread lake.&#13;
In order to facilitate the search which&#13;
had been in progress at the lake for&#13;
several days, the sluices were removed&#13;
from the dam "and the water&#13;
was lowered to a depth of two or&#13;
three feet.&#13;
The discovery of the body was made&#13;
by Bert Robson, one of the members&#13;
of the searching party, who was in&#13;
the boat alone. Hi1 immediately notified&#13;
the other searchers, and after&#13;
the inanimate little form had been&#13;
taken from the shallow water, it was&#13;
placed in an undertaker's wagon and&#13;
conveyed to the morgue.&#13;
While the search was being made&#13;
Luman X. Moon, the father, had been&#13;
lured to Delavan, Wisconsin, by a&#13;
scoundrel who professed to be a "kidnaper&#13;
holding tlie boy for ransom,&#13;
whose blackmail letter follows:&#13;
"Mr. and Mrs, Lyman Moon, these&#13;
few lines tell you in brief how ycu&#13;
can get your boy Harold returned to&#13;
his home before the, week is at the&#13;
end. The toy will be In the vicinity&#13;
of this town the rest of the week,&#13;
and I do this at his request as he Is&#13;
tired of this life and wants to come&#13;
home. If you don't comply with this,&#13;
you will not see him soon. This&#13;
needs no reply, and if you tell any&#13;
person or make any attempt at arrest&#13;
tions of the -skin, including birthmarks,&#13;
together with tumors, cancers&#13;
and certain types of ulcers, have been&#13;
removed by radium, "and have not returned."&#13;
The remedy is applied from&#13;
a flat surface, p n e of the instruments&#13;
in use, which is about as large as a&#13;
postage-stamp, and contains 90 milligrams—&#13;
about one and one-third grains&#13;
—of radium, cost eighteen hundred&#13;
dollars—a statement that throws an&#13;
interesting light on the commercial&#13;
Tfttee of this extraordinary substance.&#13;
Happily, it Is added that the new institute,&#13;
which is designed for both curative&#13;
and research purposes, will treat&#13;
the poor as well as the rich, and the&#13;
needy will not have to pay.&#13;
It has long been known that red-hot&#13;
stoves were not always safe if left&#13;
Without a guardian when prowlers&#13;
were around, hut the burglar in Los&#13;
Angelea who picked tip a boa constrictor&#13;
and departed with it for parts unknown&#13;
made the stove lifter look like&#13;
an amateur pilferer. Well may the&#13;
householder ask what is safe if he&#13;
can't go to bed and leave his favorite&#13;
boa constrictor basking In front of the&#13;
fc«arth, says the Chicago Daily News.&#13;
If the poor boa must be locked in the&#13;
•ate along with the family diamonds&#13;
and bargain mining stock, its rest will&#13;
be broken and it will suffer all the diseases&#13;
we get from not having enough&#13;
fresh air. Still, that might he preferable&#13;
to waking up and finding it in a&#13;
"This is what you arc to do. On&#13;
next Friday night at 8:X0 or 9 o'clock,&#13;
you fix Ht so you can get here at 7:30&#13;
p. m. that night. At a time stated by&#13;
yourself go to a street called Walward&#13;
avenue to a place with a small&#13;
cannon in the center. It is across&#13;
from the Hotel Delavan. Put $500 in&#13;
the mouth and ,return to Hotel Delavan&#13;
and inside of an hour vour hoy&#13;
will he there O. K. It is all off if&#13;
you fail to do ae asked. Dictated by&#13;
your son."&#13;
Mr. Moon at once left for Delavan.&#13;
On his arrival in Chicago he consulted&#13;
with a detective agency, telling&#13;
his story and showing the anonymous&#13;
letter he had received. Then, accompanied&#13;
by Detective Charlesworth, he&#13;
hurried to the Wisconsin city. Instead&#13;
of leaving the money in the cannon&#13;
as directed in the letter, Mr.&#13;
Moon prepared the following note:&#13;
"I know not who you are, but if&#13;
you have the boy write the names of&#13;
his brothers and sisters, the name of&#13;
a book received at his last birthday&#13;
and who he sleeps with when at&#13;
home, I will produce the $500 and no&#13;
questions asked."&#13;
This was placed in the cannon&#13;
mouth and City Marshal Fleming and&#13;
Detective Charlesworth stationed&#13;
themselves where they could watch&#13;
unseen. About 8:30 o'clock a large&#13;
man darted up to the cannon, seized&#13;
the letter and vanished into the darkness.&#13;
Acting on the orders of Mr. Moon,&#13;
the officers made no attempt to follow&#13;
him, as the frenzied father feared&#13;
such action might be discovered and&#13;
result in harm to the boy.&#13;
The officers got a good look at the&#13;
man, however, and are confident of&#13;
his identity.&#13;
What charge may be brought&#13;
against him is now being debated by&#13;
the authorities&#13;
strange household, ,vhorc the e » W n , | ^ J o r t ^ ^ 0 ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
be charged with abduction. What to&#13;
do in the case is a puzzle to the authdid&#13;
not agree with it. The only way&#13;
out that we can see is for the boa to&#13;
train Itself up to be a watchdog.&#13;
Friends and admirers of the Ameri-&#13;
Indian will be glad to know that&#13;
tie* Carlisle school is making a systematic&#13;
effort to foster and develop native&#13;
Indian art, as manifested in drawing,&#13;
decoration, silverwork and basket and&#13;
blanket design. The head of the department&#13;
is an fndian woman of great&#13;
cultivation and ample education,&#13;
trained in the best schools of the east.&#13;
Two of the most promising pupils have&#13;
received scholarships, which enable&#13;
them to study at the School of Industrial&#13;
Art. in Philadelphia. The effort&#13;
at Carlisle is not, to graft, the art of&#13;
the white man upon that of the Indian,&#13;
* but to preserve the primitive art. native&#13;
to the red man—an art. that was&#13;
• t o p i c , sincere and direct, and had&#13;
Other admirable qualities,&#13;
orities.&#13;
Immediately after receiving the&#13;
•lews of the finding of his son's body&#13;
Mr, Moon left for home.&#13;
A Tariff Petition.&#13;
Plotted with the red marks of iron&#13;
ore from the fingers of 5,000 miners, a&#13;
monster petition hearing, in all, the&#13;
names of 8,000 people protesting&#13;
against the proposed Payne bill, placing&#13;
Iron ore on the free list, has been&#13;
taken to Washington by Dr. William&#13;
McRurney, a prominent tipper Michigan&#13;
physician of Stambaugh, and presented&#13;
to the Michigan senators and&#13;
congressmen. The petition, which is&#13;
over 400 feet long, is the result of a&#13;
recent mass meeting held at Stambaugh&#13;
to protest, against the passage&#13;
of the iron ore clause.&#13;
President. Taft went "into office with&#13;
• tfe« record of the world's greatest, traveler.&#13;
A tabulated statement, of the&#13;
distance he has traveled since 1900&#13;
fiSea the total at. more than 202,000&#13;
* | l e g . These .travels have not been&#13;
fir pleasure or curiosity. In every&#13;
«ase they have boon in the public interest,&#13;
and they have also served to&#13;
fnake Mr. Taft a familiar personality&#13;
in foreign lands, and help to explain&#13;
;-his popularity abroad and the strong&#13;
confidence felt In his capacity to&#13;
: » trerigthen international amity.&#13;
Want an Explanation.&#13;
Good Roads Commissioner Earle&#13;
has by a resolution of the house been&#13;
cited to appear before that, body next&#13;
Tuesday night and explain why his&#13;
biennial report, due in February, is&#13;
not yet. received. Earle has been explaining&#13;
it's the fault of the printers,&#13;
but, the legislators want to see the report,&#13;
before they appropriate the half&#13;
million dollars asked for good roads,&#13;
or any part, of it, for the next two&#13;
fiscal years.&#13;
The will of the late Mary Robinson,&#13;
which was originally written in "Chinese,&#13;
and later translated into English,&#13;
was filed in the probate court, at&#13;
Marshall. Miss Robinson was a former&#13;
resident of this county and had&#13;
spent many years afi a missionary to&#13;
China.&#13;
The J. B. Arney Novelty Co., one&#13;
of Port Huron's new industries, has&#13;
commenced operations.&#13;
At a recent meeting of the business&#13;
men it was decided to hold a ten-day&#13;
Chautauqua In Cadillac, beginning&#13;
July 13.&#13;
An epidemic of meumonia is prevailing&#13;
in Crisp, about nine miles&#13;
north of Holland, and 34 cases have&#13;
already been reported.&#13;
The £salg Co., of Detroit, has been&#13;
awarded the contract for furnishing&#13;
1250 worth of shrubbery to beautify&#13;
the city parks of Marshall.&#13;
D. D. Aitken goes on record as being&#13;
the first open-air speaker of the&#13;
season in Flint. He addressed a large&#13;
crowd in favor of local option.&#13;
William Schlenka was sentenced to&#13;
from 10 to 20 years in Jackson prison&#13;
at Lansing for a criminal attack on&#13;
his daughter, Matilda, aged 16 years.&#13;
The state military board awarded&#13;
the contract for the new M. N. G. armory&#13;
to be constructed at Saginaw to&#13;
J. B. Kerns &amp; Son, his bid being $22,-&#13;
278.&#13;
George E. Northrup, a former minister&#13;
and later a printer and proofreader&#13;
on a Standish weekly paper,&#13;
is dead ut the Bay county poorhouse,&#13;
aged 80 vears.&#13;
The Dunkley Co., of Kalamaloo,&#13;
which was forced into bankruptcy&#13;
through the failure of the fruit crop,&#13;
has been reorganized, and will reopen&#13;
its six canning factories. j&#13;
In the past mouth only one person&#13;
has been arrested in Cadillac for&#13;
drunkenness. This condition some&#13;
people attribute to the strict enforcement&#13;
of the local option law.&#13;
• Miss" Alice Baker, of Kalamazoo,&#13;
was given a headache powder by a&#13;
physician and immediately became unconscious,&#13;
remaining in that state for&#13;
three days despite all efforts to rouse&#13;
her.&#13;
The recent mad dog scare ut Menominee,&#13;
during which nine persons&#13;
were bitten, is over, and the mayor&#13;
and council have authorized the removal&#13;
of the muzzles from the canines.&#13;
' '&#13;
Dr, Harry L. Canright, of this city,&#13;
for the past 18 years a missionary to&#13;
China, and who has built two schools&#13;
and hospitals in that country, will&#13;
return with hhs family in 1910 and reside&#13;
in Battle Creek.&#13;
Samuel Decker, of Muskegon&#13;
Heights, and his sister, Mrs. James&#13;
Redoye, of Newark, N. J., were reunited&#13;
Wednesday after a separation&#13;
of 52 years. They were parted by the&#13;
death of their parents.&#13;
John Hays Hammond, the. famous&#13;
mining engineer, in an address to a&#13;
large number of IJ. of M. students,&#13;
urged them to get Into the political&#13;
game and do all in their power for&#13;
better civic fOveAment.&#13;
Frank Kctfpiej^wski &gt;. atld , sister^&#13;
Wlodyslawa,'of Menominee, are in jail&#13;
in Holyoke, Mass.. charged with the&#13;
larceny of $3,100 from Anton Barodnuk,&#13;
another Pole, with whom they&#13;
had started for the old country.&#13;
George Herbert told the Menominee&#13;
police that he had been carrying on a&#13;
wholesale system of burglary, and&#13;
gave the names of nearly a dozen&#13;
houses and stores which he had&#13;
broken into in the past few weeks,&#13;
John Kemp, 55, a Bancroft farmer,&#13;
died of shock, caused hy the excitement&#13;
of a runaway accident. He was&#13;
thrown out of the wagon when the&#13;
team ran away, "but physicians say&#13;
that heart failure was the cause of&#13;
death.&#13;
The coroner's Jury in the case of&#13;
Alexander McCollom, who was killed&#13;
by a locomotive in the local Grand&#13;
Trunk shops at Battle Creek, returned&#13;
a verdict blaming the railroad company&#13;
for not properly protecting its&#13;
employes.&#13;
Falling on a slippery sidewalk, Mrs.&#13;
Caroline Laity, an old resident of Ishpeming,&#13;
fractured her right forearm.&#13;
The accident was peculiar in that it&#13;
was the third mishap of exactly similar&#13;
nature that Mrs. Laity has experienced.&#13;
Floyd LaKh, 20, formerly of Camden,&#13;
met. a violent death at Janesville,&#13;
Wis., according to word received by&#13;
relatives. He was working for u railroad&#13;
and the body was found I j the&#13;
yards with the head severed and one&#13;
arm cut off.&#13;
Two steel .splinters, which had been&#13;
driven into the eyeball of Edward&#13;
Hartman, of Kalmazoo, were removed&#13;
by the use of a large magnet, having&#13;
a pulling power of 400 pounds to the&#13;
square inch, and the sight of the eye&#13;
will be saved.&#13;
Charles Ecklund, 60 years old. Hick&#13;
and mentally weakened, is wandering&#13;
about, somewhere in the woods oi&#13;
Menominee county, and searchers are&#13;
fearful that he will die before they&#13;
can locate him. He has been sick&#13;
more than two years.&#13;
Samuel Hohorn asked the Grand&#13;
Rapids police Thursday to aid him ip&#13;
a search for his daughter, Eliza, IS.&#13;
He says the girl left, him several days&#13;
ago and, while he hears from her by&#13;
note almost, daily, she refuses to reveal&#13;
her whereabouts.&#13;
Instructors representing nearly&#13;
every county in the state, about 1,500&#13;
in all, attended the forty-fourth annual&#13;
meeting of the Michigan Schoolmasters'&#13;
club at. Ann Arbor, it being&#13;
the largest convention of the kind in&#13;
the history nf the state.&#13;
Because the secretary-treasurer of&#13;
the local ladies' auxiliary of the Port.&#13;
Huron B. R. T. forgot to file her annual&#13;
report with the state insurance&#13;
commissioner, the organization was&#13;
liable to action on the part of the&#13;
fdate body. The report was filed recently,&#13;
nearly six months lute.&#13;
THAT OLD SURPLUS&#13;
IS&#13;
G O V E R N M E N T MAY CALL FOR A&#13;
M A T T E R OF T W E N T Y - E I G H T&#13;
M I L L I O N 8 .&#13;
STATES WHICH OWE SOME&#13;
Mr. Murdock'a Bill That Tw«nty-«ix&#13;
States Repay Money Divided Among&#13;
Them From Surplus of 1836.&#13;
The publication of the fact of the&#13;
Introduction by Rep. Murdock, of Kansas,&#13;
of a bill to call on the 26 states&#13;
to repay to the government 128,000,-&#13;
000 distributed during Jackson's administration&#13;
was followed immediately&#13;
with a flood*of telegrams to members,&#13;
senators and others for more&#13;
light on the subject.&#13;
"I introduced that bill two years&#13;
ago," said Mr. Murdock late today,&#13;
"and no one paid any attention to&#13;
It. Evidently the public mind is in a&#13;
state now to_ consider the nation's&#13;
finances. I shall do everything in&#13;
my power to pr^ss the bill for passage."&#13;
In 1836 there was a surplus in the&#13;
federal treasury of 138,000,000, due&#13;
largely to the sale of public land in&#13;
the central west. Congress authorized&#13;
the distribution of this money among&#13;
the states, on their promising to repay&#13;
it on demand of the secretary&#13;
of the treasury. After $2S,000,000 had&#13;
been distributed, congress passed another&#13;
law postponing payment of the&#13;
final installment, and incorporating as&#13;
a "joker," a proviso that the money&#13;
distributed should be subject to the&#13;
demand of congress instead of the&#13;
secretary of the treasury. The&#13;
amounts in round figures deposited&#13;
with 1!6 states was as follows:&#13;
Maine. $950,000; Maryland, $5)56,000;&#13;
New Hampshire, $060,000; Vermont.&#13;
$669,000; Massachusetts, $1.:J3K.000;&#13;
Connecticut. $765,000; Rhode Island,&#13;
aSL',000; New York. $4,015,000; P m n -&#13;
$2.S'6S,000; New Jerxev,&#13;
Ohio. $2,007,000; Indima,&#13;
Illinois. $47N,0O&lt;&gt;; Michigan,&#13;
Virginia. $2,199,000: North&#13;
$1,444,000; South Carolina&#13;
Georgia, $1,051.0()0: Alabama.&#13;
$669,000; Louisiana, $478,000;&#13;
Mississippi. $3S2.000; Tennessee. $1,-&#13;
434,000; Kentucky. $1,434,000: Missouri,&#13;
$382,000; Arkansas, $2S7,000;&#13;
Delaware, $287,000.&#13;
sylvania,&#13;
STGo.OflO;&#13;
IR60.0C0;&#13;
$287,000;&#13;
Carolina,&#13;
$1,051,000&#13;
FLAS*{E&amp;F$6*f THE WIRE&#13;
The wojnen suffrage bill passed the&#13;
senate at Madison, Wis. If the ta^lis&#13;
ratified by a vote of the people. Wom&#13;
a n suffrage would become operative.&#13;
T h e measure now goes to t h e assembly.&#13;
Eight workmen were killed and eight&#13;
others were injured by an explofUA&#13;
of several hundred pounds of dynamite&#13;
at Indian Crejek, near ChilUcotfce».&#13;
0., where the Norfolk &amp; Western ral£&#13;
road is double, tracking.&#13;
Murmuring a prayer for her sort*&#13;
Mrs. Mary Farmer was flu letJy led to*&#13;
t h e electric chair In' Auburn, N. Y.,&#13;
prison shortly after Q o'clock Monday&#13;
morning and executed for the murder&#13;
of Mrs. Sarah' Brennan in Brownvilltj&#13;
last April. S&#13;
Rep. McCall, of Massachubetta, ha*&#13;
introduced a resolution requesting the&#13;
president to open negotiations with&#13;
the various nations.of t h r globe look-&#13;
In* to an agreement *for the neutralization&#13;
of the Philippine islands, and for&#13;
the recognization of their independence&#13;
whenever it is granted by the&#13;
United States.&#13;
— , c&#13;
: • •- t t ' &lt;•• • -&#13;
Military Prison Burned.&#13;
The military prison .at Fort Leaven-&#13;
Worth, a $200,000 building, was destroyed&#13;
by Are late Wednesday night.&#13;
Eight hundred prisoners, "most of&#13;
t h e m desperate men, shrieked and&#13;
tore at the steel bars of their cells as&#13;
t h e glare of the flames lighted the interior.&#13;
All were gotten out safely and&#13;
not one escaped. The fire started in&#13;
some rubbish carelessly left lying in&#13;
the carpenter shop. The blaze was&#13;
spectacular and the fort lire department&#13;
was unable to check it because&#13;
of lack of water. The city department&#13;
was rushed to the scene, but for tho&#13;
suine reason was powerless.&#13;
Millions Lost by Fire.&#13;
That fire which burned steadily for&#13;
six and one-half hours and covered 68&#13;
acres before it was got under control,&#13;
caused a loss of over $:i,000.000&#13;
J in Fort Worth, Texas, Saturday night.&#13;
A patient whose identity is unknown&#13;
perished in Walker's Sanitarium, and&#13;
three men were electrocuted and their&#13;
bodies burned to cinders in the Sawyer&#13;
Electric plant. Herbert Stacy&#13;
was fatally burned in an endeavor to&#13;
save his dwelling and a fireman fell&#13;
from a housetop und was killed.&#13;
Dallas had three large fires Saturday&#13;
afternoon and evening. A total&#13;
of about 75 dwelling houses, it is estimated,&#13;
were destroyed with most&#13;
of their contents. Whole blocks were&#13;
swept clean in some places, and parts&#13;
of blocks saved in others. Several&#13;
hundred persons are homeless, but&#13;
are being cared for by friends andneighbors.&#13;
Sugar Trust Called.&#13;
Reassessments of duties amounting&#13;
/o a total increase of $1,239,000 on&#13;
sugar Imported by the American&#13;
Sugar Refining Co. at the refinery of&#13;
Havemeyer &amp; Elder, between December,&#13;
1901, and November, 1907, have&#13;
been ordered by Collector Loeb, of&#13;
the- -port of New York.&#13;
Of this amount, it was announced&#13;
about $100,000 has been paid to the&#13;
government by the American Sugar&#13;
Refining Co.&#13;
Mr. Loeb ordered the reliquidation&#13;
of the duties on the ground of fraud.&#13;
The imposition of the increased assessments&#13;
is a result of the trial of&#13;
the case of the government against&#13;
the American Sugar Co., in which the&#13;
government was awarded $134,000.&#13;
Ex-United States Attorney Stimson&#13;
and Assistant District Attorney Denison,&#13;
who prosecuted the case, have&#13;
been retained by the department of&#13;
justice as special counsel to carry on&#13;
further litigation of a similar nature.&#13;
In addition to the assessment of&#13;
$1,239,000 the government also claims&#13;
t h a t it has been defrauded of about&#13;
$500,000 in duties on sugar weighed at&#13;
the refinery of Havemeyer &amp; Elder,&#13;
in Brooklyn, and also of $500,000 in&#13;
duties on sugar weighed at the Jei&gt;&#13;
sey City refinery prior to 1901.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Kaiser Stirs Up Things.&#13;
It is now definitely known, despite&#13;
semi-official denials from Berlin, that&#13;
Germany delivered a distiuct ultimatum&#13;
to Russia on March 25, summoning&#13;
her to recognize Austria's annexation&#13;
of Bosnia and Herzegovina&#13;
forthwith or military operations would&#13;
begin against her immediately. Thus&#13;
by a single stroke, Germany made&#13;
pence for the moment in the Balkans&#13;
and also changed the whole face of&#13;
European politics.&#13;
The rage of Russia is matched hy&#13;
the alarm of England. Nowhere has&#13;
Germany's masterstroke created so&#13;
much uneasiness among all thinking&#13;
classes as in Great Britain. Germany&#13;
held a pistol to Russia's head yesterday;&#13;
she might do the same with&#13;
equal success against England tomorrow,&#13;
with the present government in&#13;
power. But even the conglomerate&#13;
elements of present. British rule begin&#13;
to see the writing on the wall.&#13;
Elusive Crazy Snake.&#13;
Crazy Snake is still at. large. Everything&#13;
is quiet and there are no new&#13;
developments in the recent Indian uprising.&#13;
Col. Roy Hoffman, in command&#13;
of the state militia, sent, a communication&#13;
to Gov. Haskell in Guthrie,&#13;
suggesting that a reward be offered&#13;
for the capture of the missing chief,&#13;
and urging the usele.3&amp;nesjr"of further&#13;
efforts to effect his capture with soldiers.&#13;
Col. Hoffman will disband his&#13;
command Sunday unless otherwise&#13;
ordered hy the governor.&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — C a t t l e — E x t r a drvfert steers&#13;
a n d heifers, $6 505*6; steerw and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200, iS^fl 40; stt'ers and&#13;
heifers. SOOto 1,000, »4 7S"#* h: s t e n t s&#13;
a n d heifers, t h a t a r e fat, ROOta 700,&#13;
?4ffM 75; choice fat cows, $4 50® 4 75;&#13;
Rood fat oows, $4(5*4 25; common cow*,-&#13;
$3&lt;TrS, 50: canners, $1 75(»2; choice&#13;
heavy bulla, $4 50@4 60; fair to good&#13;
bolognas, bull?, f 4 &lt;fr 4 25; stock bulls,&#13;
$3fcr3 75; choice feeding steers, 800 10&#13;
1,000, $4 50@4 70; fair feeding steers,.&#13;
S00 to 1,000, $4&amp;4 25; choice stockers,&#13;
500 to 700, $3 r»0fa&gt;4; fair mockers, 500&#13;
to 700, $3 50 (ft 4; stock heifers, $2 50&lt;®&#13;
3; milkers, large, young, medium ago,&#13;
$40frt)50; common milker*, $20(5)30.&#13;
Veal calves—Marked 25c to 35c higher&#13;
thnn last T h u r s d a y ; best, $7 75(¾&#13;
8 25; others. $4&lt;n&gt;7; milch cows and&#13;
s p r i n g e r s , steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Market steady&#13;
w i t h W e d n e s d a y , . 10c to 15c h i g h e r&#13;
t h a n last T h u r s d a y ; best lambs, $7 75&#13;
(ftifi 15; fair to good lambs, $7 25©&#13;
7 50; light to common lambs, $6 50©)&#13;
7 15; yearlings, IfltSw; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $4 50(3 5 50; culls and common,&#13;
$2 50(55)3.&#13;
Hogs—Market, good g r a d e s 15c to&#13;
20c higher than last T h u r s d a y . R a n g *&#13;
of prices; Light to good butchers, S6 90&#13;
ftp 7; pigs, $6fofi 25; light y o r k e r s $6 50-&#13;
@6 75; stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo—Cattle—Market IOIJJ&#13;
15c lower; export steers, $6 25@6 75&#13;
b e s t 1.200 to 1,300-lb shipping steers',&#13;
5 90(5&gt;fi 40; best 1,000 to 1,100-lb do&#13;
5 70©6; best fat cows, $4 50@5 25:&#13;
fair to good, $4@4 25; trimmers, $2 «0&#13;
(ff)2 R0: best fnt heifers. $5 25®5 75;&#13;
light fat heifers, $3 75@4: best hulls,&#13;
4 50(J?)5; bologna bulls, $4@4 25. There&#13;
was a little b e t t e r demand here today&#13;
for the fresh cows and s p r i n g e r s , and'&#13;
with but few on the m a r k e t thev sold&#13;
about $2 per head higher; hest cows.&#13;
$40tf«5R; medium, $35 ©.45; common.&#13;
SfI5 fa&gt;33.&#13;
Hogs—.Market steady; heavy. $7 30;&#13;
y o r k e r s , $7 15 &lt;W7 25; pigs, Sfi*7!i.&#13;
Sheep—Market active; best J u m h s ,&#13;
$S 25@&gt;R 30; culls, $7@7 50; y e a r l i n g *&#13;
R 50ffl7 25; wethers, fi®6 50; eweu&#13;
IR T5©6 25: closed slow.&#13;
C a l v e s — $ 4 50 0 9 7S.&#13;
President. Frost, of Rerea college.&#13;
Lexington. Ky., has invited President&#13;
Taft to be at. the Lincoln farm May&#13;
ofl to take part in the memorial ser&#13;
vices and plant, a tree in honor of&#13;
Lincoln. President Taft, has the matter&#13;
under consideration.&#13;
The prospective establishment of&#13;
complete commercial freedom In districts&#13;
of Congo heretofore exploited by&#13;
certain companies is indicated in advices&#13;
to the state department. This exclusive&#13;
exploitation IR regarded, at&#13;
Brussels as one of the worst abuses&#13;
In the Congo rearion.&#13;
Oraln. TAc.&#13;
VTHE'AT—Cash No. 2 red, $1 30; May&#13;
opened at $1 2fi and advano*d,to $1 27;&#13;
J u l y opened l-4c higher at SI Ofl 1-4&#13;
and advanced to $1 03 1-2; September&#13;
opened at $1 02 and held steady; No.&#13;
?. ret], t l 27; No. 1 white. Si .10.&#13;
CORN—Cash No, 3. «8 i-4e; No. ?,&#13;
yellow, R9 l-4c.&#13;
OATS—Cash No. 3 white, 57 l-4c hid;&#13;
snmnlo, 1 car nt 5fi 3-tc.&#13;
UYlv—Cash No. 2. S4c bid.&#13;
HEANS—Cash, $2 35 hid; MAY, *4! 41&#13;
hid.&#13;
i n ^ V K R S K K D Primp spot, 75 bags&#13;
nt *f&gt; 50; April. 85 50; October. 200 h.'Us&#13;
at ffi 15; snmple, -10 hn^s ;.f S"&gt; ?.:. 20&#13;
:if *.r, 15. 15 nt $. 11 at !M 75, 5 M&#13;
$4 50; prime nlaike, 10 hag* at $S; sumpie&#13;
nlslke. 7 b a r s at $7 25.5 nt ffi HO.'&#13;
TIMOTHY S E E D — P r i m e spot. 100&#13;
Virtus .nt $1 65.&#13;
HARTLEY—Good samples, $1 4 5 ^ 1 50&#13;
per cwt. &gt;&#13;
KEEP—-In 100-lh. sneks. lobbing&#13;
lotH: Rrnn, $2R; coarse mldddllnga. $20;&#13;
fine middlings. $31: cracked corn a n d ;&#13;
c o a r s e cornmeal, $27; corn ad oa.t chop,&#13;
$25 per ton.&#13;
FTXyPB*—Best Mteht#*n'T9ftt*nt, $ « ! • ; . '&#13;
o r d i n a r y patent, $5 76; s t r a i g h t , $5 $6;&#13;
'.•&lt;«•• $5 «0 per bbl. in wood, Jobbing:&#13;
t- \*&#13;
SERIAL&#13;
STORY&#13;
e c&#13;
(VANISHING&#13;
FLEETS r&#13;
RQY&#13;
B y&#13;
NORTON&#13;
ILLUSTRATED BY A. WEU. zsm Ooj»jrri**«. UOT. tjr Tfea A M U « U U 4 SuMd./ U^r.,~f&#13;
SYNOP81S.&#13;
ence of the radioplanes would be re-1 tact. In alarm he checked the speed&#13;
"Vanishing Fleets," a story of "'what&#13;
"mltfht have happened," opens in Washington&#13;
with the United States and Japq.n&#13;
noar war. Guy Hillier, secretary of the&#13;
British embassy, and Miss Norma Roberts,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberts, are&#13;
Introduced as lovers. Japan declares war&#13;
und takes the Philippines. Guy Hillier&#13;
staxta for England. Norma Roberta&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. All ports&#13;
-are closed. Tokyo learns of missing Japanese&#13;
fleet and whole world becomes convinced&#13;
that United States has powerful&#13;
war agency. England decides to Bend&#13;
a fleet to American waters as a Canadian&#13;
protection againBt what the British supge.&#13;
Fleet m&gt;&#13;
teriously disappears. The kaiser is misspose&#13;
Is a terrible submarine flotilla.&#13;
Her Is sent with a message&#13;
Ing. King Edward of England Is con&#13;
fronted by Admiral Bevins of the United&#13;
States. The Dreadnaught, biggest of England's&#13;
warships, is discovered at an impassable&#13;
point in the Thames. The story&#13;
now goes back to a time many months&#13;
before the war breaks out, and Inventor&#13;
Roberts visits the president and cabinet,&#13;
telling of and exhibiting a metal production.&#13;
This overcomes friction when electrified&#13;
and is to be applied to vessels.&#13;
Roberts evolves a great flying machine.&#13;
The cabinet plans a radioplane war&#13;
against Japanese. The start is made for&#13;
the scene of conflict. The Japanese fleet,&#13;
believing Nippon supreme, suddenly discerns&#13;
the radioplane fleet. After maneuvering&#13;
the airships descend, and by -use&#13;
of strong magnets lift the warships, one&#13;
•by one, from the sea. The vessels are&#13;
deposited In a mountain lake in the&#13;
United States to await peace. The British&#13;
fleet accepts American hospitality and&#13;
is conveyed to the United States by the&#13;
wingless terrors.&#13;
C H A P T E R XX—Continued.&#13;
"Admiral, do you think there ia any&#13;
gunnery that can hurt us, anything&#13;
that can overtake us, or that If we&#13;
wish to we may not master the&#13;
world?" he aaked in a voice of extreme&#13;
quiet.&#13;
Fields shrugged his shoulders hopelessly,&#13;
made a grimace, and looked at&#13;
hla fellows. "Gentlemen," he said in&#13;
a dry tone, "it seems to me that we&#13;
should without any delay accept the&#13;
hospitality which the United States&#13;
has extended BO courteously."&#13;
The others appreciated the grim&#13;
humor of the situation, and in like&#13;
vein acquiesced. The surprise which&#13;
they had undergone was nothing&#13;
compared to that with which, as the&#13;
*lay waned; they witnessed the lifting&#13;
of their craft from the waters. With&#13;
the utmost care the task was accomplished,&#13;
and everything made ready&#13;
for the westward journey. Only one&#13;
mishap occurred beyond the necessary&#13;
damage to the ships, and that was not&#13;
discovered until the following day. A&#13;
sailor of the Dreadnought, maddened&#13;
by the spectacle he had witnessed,&#13;
had unleashed a life raft unobserved&#13;
and thrown himself and it into the&#13;
water by the use of its tackle at some&#13;
hour of darkness when the vessels&#13;
were traveling at slow speed and&#13;
close to the surface of the waves, Bevins&#13;
grieved more over this incident&#13;
than any other; for he had set his&#13;
heart upon a bloodless victory.&#13;
Thus it was that on the following&#13;
&lt;lay there rested in the Chesapeake a&#13;
fleet whose fires were banked, whose&#13;
men were prohibited from shore&#13;
leave and whose chief officers were&#13;
guests In the principal hotels of New&#13;
York and Washington under pledge of&#13;
secrecy. But in this they might take&#13;
heart; although some slight damage&#13;
had been inflicted on the vessels, in no&#13;
Instance did the flag come down, and&#13;
from each staff floated the union jack&#13;
unsullied. Communication between&#13;
ships and shores was interdicted; so&#13;
even the inhabitants of the borders&#13;
could do no more than look and guess&#13;
as to how the fleet, had sailed In without&#13;
attracting attention or meeting&#13;
with rebuff.&#13;
Another report came from Chins&#13;
that the fleet of the dragon was still&#13;
under waiting orders; hence there was&#13;
nothing for the administration to do&#13;
but mark time, which it did with poor&#13;
grace. Within a few days, however,&#13;
a more disturbing report came from&#13;
Europe by way of Canada, the usual&#13;
source of communication. It was to&#13;
the effect that the kaiser, learning of&#13;
the disappearance of the British fleet,&#13;
and belfeving it destroyed, was showing&#13;
quick signs of aggression. Vainly&#13;
the administration hoped that his&#13;
belligerent Intentions might be over-&#13;
««timated; but the passage of days&#13;
proved that he might be a menace to&#13;
t h e general plan.&#13;
It was hourly expected that thopresqulred&#13;
In the west to meet the Chinese.&#13;
In view gf thto necessity, It was de»&#13;
elded to (Msptrtch Brockton and Jenkins&#13;
to Berll*^#a-a mlsston oT dtptom&#13;
a o y t f T|i(*y were $&gt;pd««3 to,visit the&#13;
kaiatr^aWniuMj l ^ i n g i l t a time and&#13;
plac# v f i y e f f e y |$&gt;ul6J?escape observation,&#13;
Induce1 the emperor and his&#13;
chancellor to get aboard the radioplane,&#13;
and then, after It had' been&#13;
demonstrated that Germany would be&#13;
powerless in the event of war, to deliver&#13;
messages announcing that the&#13;
Uplted States purposed to gain what&#13;
support she could for a world's peace&#13;
voluntarily, but would compel It If&#13;
need "be. r&#13;
Jenkins was familiar with the German&#13;
capital, having been naval attache&#13;
there for a number of years. It&#13;
was he who evolved t h e details. The&#13;
American ambassador was unaware of&#13;
his country's defense until Informed&#13;
on the night of the arrival, and was&#13;
speedily enlisted, in' the enterprise.&#13;
Through him the kaiser granted the&#13;
interview, which led to his visiting&#13;
the radioplane which had been brought&#13;
to rest beyond the outskirts of the&#13;
city.&#13;
Brockton's task proved a most difficult&#13;
one; for the emperor, a man of&#13;
science and interested in all engines&#13;
of warfare, insisted on being conveyed&#13;
not only to the plant on the key, but&#13;
across Chesapeake bay, where he&#13;
might look down upon the British&#13;
fleet. The night was Ideal for the&#13;
purpose, Nature seeming to lend herself&#13;
in behalf of peace. The Norma,&#13;
now fully fitted and comfortable, was&#13;
utilized for the mission. Like all&#13;
others of the American fleet, Hhe carried&#13;
provisions sufficient to enable&#13;
her to pass many times round the&#13;
world in case of emergency.&#13;
The kaiser marveled at the display&#13;
of ingenuity, and was told all but the&#13;
secret, without which no one could&#13;
cast the radioactive metal. He was&#13;
even permitted to handle the steering&#13;
leverB and direct her flight for a time,&#13;
and entered into this with the enthusiasm&#13;
of a boy. He would have&#13;
driven her through the air at a speed&#13;
which would have heated her interior&#13;
had he not been cautioned, and relinquished&#13;
his place in the hood only&#13;
when the shores of the western continent&#13;
were reached and loomed darkly&#13;
far below.&#13;
It had not been Brockton's intention&#13;
to show him over the plant on the&#13;
key; but the sovereign Insisted that&#13;
he permitted to alight, it being his&#13;
first visit to America, which he had&#13;
always longed to make, but had never&#13;
anticipated. He was permitted to&#13;
traverse the great machine shops and&#13;
view the working of the blast furnace,&#13;
and also to gaze at the formidable fleet&#13;
of monsters that rested Idly along the&#13;
beach. Muffled in his great coat to&#13;
avoid recognition, he was strictly incognito,&#13;
and met neither the Inventor,&#13;
"the assistant," nor Bevins, who&#13;
many hours before had retired to their&#13;
rest.&#13;
His mood of curiosity had given&#13;
way to^one of thoughtfulness when the&#13;
Norma again took him aboard and&#13;
started northward. He sat silently in&#13;
the central chamber of the radioplane,&#13;
taking no part in the conversation between&#13;
the chancellor and Brockton,&#13;
until the machine hovered over the&#13;
waters of the Chesapeake, on the&#13;
bosom of which, at anchor, rested the&#13;
British fleet, and then discussed the&#13;
possibilities of crossing the continent&#13;
to Lake Washington.&#13;
Brockton was compelled to enter a&#13;
protest, explaining that inasmuch as&#13;
the element of time for his return&#13;
must enter into their calculations,&#13;
they had only a small margin. The&#13;
kaiser remembered that he was in a&#13;
machine which annihilated space; but&#13;
that in traveling from the west to the&#13;
east the difference in the rising hour&#13;
of the sun meant much in maintaining&#13;
secrecy; so he reluctantly relinquished&#13;
the idea.&#13;
"But it will not trouble you, will it,&#13;
to carry me across the cordon which&#13;
has been established between your&#13;
country and Canada on the homeward&#13;
flight?" he asked, and to this Brockton&#13;
assented.&#13;
They turned to the north, and at a&#13;
high altitude saw far below them the&#13;
constant glow of searchlights dotting&#13;
out in streamers of white the boundary&#13;
line between the two countries. As&#13;
fas as the eye could reach to the east&#13;
and the west the watch was being&#13;
maintained unceasingly. The kaiser&#13;
recovered hia good humor, laughed,&#13;
and then, having nothing more to view&#13;
below, returned to the hood, where he&#13;
again asked to manipulate the machine.&#13;
Jenkins was not. pleased by the&#13;
recklessness with which his august&#13;
guest experimented with the levers&#13;
and switches; but feared to remonstrate,&#13;
though uttering an occasional&#13;
word of caution. Suddenly, as if confused,&#13;
the kaiser opened three&#13;
switches at once. The machine gave&#13;
a mighty lurch, and failed to obey tho&#13;
expert hand that was instantly reached&#13;
forward to control it. The needle&#13;
showing the direction took a swift&#13;
leap and pointed to the northwest.&#13;
The kaiser stepped back frc*a the&#13;
hood, while Jenkins vainly strove to&#13;
bring the Norma back into htt eastward&#13;
course. Rapidly he pulled the&#13;
switches to and fro; but no answering&#13;
^park showed that they were in coaof&#13;
the radiopUser and called to Brockton,&#13;
who, frightened by the erratic&#13;
movements of the craft, had entered&#13;
t h e hood.'&#13;
"I have to report, sir," Jenkins said,&#13;
"that the steering currents of the&#13;
radioplane axe out of order, and that&#13;
we, can no longer direct her course.&#13;
She is now heading nor-norwest."&#13;
Brockton's brows came together in&#13;
a scowl. Nothing hut the presence of&#13;
his majesty prevented an explosion.&#13;
"What do you suggest?" he asked,&#13;
sharply.,&#13;
"That we come to land and make&#13;
an examination and whatever repairs&#13;
are necessary, sir."&#13;
"Very well. Do so at once!" **•&#13;
Within a few minutes the Norma&#13;
had found a lower level and her&#13;
searchlights were bringing Into view&#13;
the ground beneath. They were traveling&#13;
slowly over the primeval forest&#13;
in far upper Canada. A spot came to&#13;
view where there were no trees, and&#13;
into this, like a crippled bird, the&#13;
Norma came to a stop and rested.&#13;
The emperor watched the first attempts&#13;
to define the difficulty with&#13;
anxiety, and then, yielding to his desire&#13;
for a Hlght of the open, asked and&#13;
obtained the unclosing of the port,&#13;
through which he sauntered Into the&#13;
night. Without observing what was&#13;
around him, he stood leaning against&#13;
the shell of the radioplane, thinking&#13;
with annoyance of the difficulties of&#13;
state which might accrue if his absence&#13;
extended over a day. He was&#13;
aroused by the sounds of hammering&#13;
and rending within, and re-entered the&#13;
craft, which was now flooded with a&#13;
blinding glare of radiance brought into&#13;
life by the ceaselessly turning dynamos.&#13;
On their knees, with uniforms cast&#13;
aside, and recklessly tearing away the&#13;
carefully wrought woodwork of the&#13;
paneled side, were the admiral and the&#13;
engineer, while back of them the distracted&#13;
chancellor of the empire held&#13;
"Your majesty," t h e chancellor aalfl,&#13;
"they have found the break, a n i *ay&#13;
that with the tools at command It will&#13;
remjjre several days perhaps to repair&#13;
it'. Admiral Bevins expresses his&#13;
r l g r e t s aixd—" i .f&#13;
&gt;"Gott i n himniel!" burst from the&#13;
. e n | « a i r ' i lip*, «&amp;d wHh a gesture of&#13;
hopelessness he waved his subject&#13;
away and began a n agitated march&#13;
backward and forward, while the chancellor&#13;
returned to render what assistance&#13;
he could.&#13;
'tiott in Himmel!" Burst from the&#13;
Emperor's Lips.&#13;
a short crowbar in his hands and&#13;
displayed muscular arms which had&#13;
been bared to the elbow.&#13;
"I am sorry, your majesty," apologized&#13;
the admiral, looking up from&#13;
his work, "but I am afraid that a&#13;
confused handling of the levers has exposed&#13;
a weakness. A cross current, a&#13;
burned insulation and a bad connection&#13;
have fused our wires somewhere,&#13;
and we may be delayed for a short&#13;
time."&#13;
"How long?"&#13;
"I cannot say. Aside from the delay,&#13;
there need be no apprehension,&#13;
because we have abundant food. We&#13;
shall have to uncover the damaged&#13;
section before we can estimate the&#13;
length of our stay."&#13;
Fairly gritting his teeth in rage, the&#13;
kaiser turned on his heel and strode&#13;
out into the open air again. What a&#13;
fool he had been to Intrust himself to&#13;
a strange mechanism which at. best&#13;
was treacherous! A day's delay would&#13;
not mean much; but what if they were&#13;
detained for many? The waning moon&#13;
had risen, and in Its light he marched&#13;
up and down a stretch of turf with&#13;
military precision, until his anger began&#13;
to disappear and his natural philosophy&#13;
to afford relaxation. He be&#13;
came conscious of the beauties of the&#13;
night and the wilderness, and as time&#13;
went on was engrossed in contemplating&#13;
them.&#13;
Only the moon and he seemed in&#13;
possession of this cleft in the forest,&#13;
this grass-carpeted glade in the center&#13;
of whose breadth a hurrying brook&#13;
threw strange ribbons of light upward.&#13;
Bordering this asylum of the wilderness&#13;
were the illimitable shadows&#13;
cast by lofty spruce, fir and hemlock&#13;
trees, which thrust, their slender&#13;
plumes like curious observers high&#13;
above the denser growths of scrubby&#13;
birch and jack pine. Here and there&#13;
were splotches of light where the&#13;
moon found ragged openings, making&#13;
of the woods a royal robe spotted&#13;
without, regularity. It was a world of&#13;
enchantment, mysterious in its stillness,&#13;
mystic in its beauty and alluring&#13;
in its stateliness. Cares of state were,,&#13;
forgotten, and he was yielding to It?,&#13;
spell when a voice at his elbow speaking&#13;
in his native tongue interrupted&#13;
his aisditaUaaa,&#13;
C H A P T E R X X I .&#13;
His Majesty's Visit.&#13;
In the heart of t h e woods, untrodden&#13;
before by man, the sound of the hammer&#13;
awoke the German emperor after&#13;
bis hours of anxious study. By choice&#13;
he had declined to sleep In the radioplane,&#13;
and rolled himself in his blankets&#13;
on an open spot of turf. The cares&#13;
of the day were upon hit* again with&#13;
all their perplexities. The sun had not&#13;
risen, and the cool breath of the morning&#13;
came to his lungs with invigorating&#13;
freshness, while a bird of the far&#13;
north was beginning a thin piping to&#13;
its mate, and a camp robber, brilliantly&#13;
impertinent, hopped round his&#13;
woodland couch and gazed unabashed&#13;
at royalty.&#13;
He threw aside the blankets which&#13;
had been tightly rolled round him,&#13;
walked to the brook, whose song had&#13;
lulled him in his dreams of the night,&#13;
and bathed his hands and face in the&#13;
icy water. A great trout, disturbed&#13;
by t h e intrusion, sped swiftly away&#13;
from a rock and disappeared in a&#13;
dark pool with a final sweep of its&#13;
tall. The emperor dried his face on&#13;
his handkerchief and walked slowly&#13;
across the glade to the Norma, which&#13;
he entered curiously.&#13;
There they all were as on the night&#13;
before, tired, work-worn and anxious,&#13;
the chancellor still with his sleeves&#13;
rolled up, the rear admiral stripped to&#13;
his undershirt and the engineer peering&#13;
through his glasses at the tangles&#13;
of wire. On the night before the&#13;
kaiser had stormed and threatened,&#13;
had mumbled angry soliloquies, and&#13;
sworn mighty oaths to the unheeding&#13;
woods. Now at the sight of these&#13;
faces before him he understood to the&#13;
full that these, his hosts, must have&#13;
labored throughout the night trying&#13;
to undo the accident which perhaps his&#13;
own hands had wrought. It softened&#13;
his mood.&#13;
They saluted him, and Brockton rose&#13;
stiffly to his feet, wiped his hands on&#13;
his trousers, and repaired to the rear&#13;
of the radioplane, from which he&#13;
apologetically returned with breakfast&#13;
for his guest. The emperor ate with&#13;
an appetite which was made keen by&#13;
the balsamy night air in which he had&#13;
slept, and then began wishing that&#13;
he, too, might take part in this manual&#13;
-toil. Almost involuntarily he assisted&#13;
the fat old chancellor, who was prying&#13;
loose another board with a crowbar;&#13;
but he felt that he was in the&#13;
way, and after lounging round the&#13;
craft for a time decided that he would&#13;
have another look at the brook. It&#13;
was swarming with trout, and, half&#13;
ashamed of his zest, he returned to&#13;
PE-Ry-NA r o r Cnunpe l a thm Stomach of Bis Yaais*&#13;
btajudLn*.&#13;
" I was troubled with cramps in tha&#13;
stomach for six years. I triad many&#13;
kirtda of medicine, also was treated&#13;
by three doctors.&#13;
"They said that I had nervous dyspepsia.&#13;
I took the medicina for two&#13;
years, then I gat sick again and gave&#13;
up all hopes of getting cured.&#13;
" I saw a testimonial of a man whose&#13;
case was similar to mine, being cured&#13;
by Peruna, so thought 1 would give it&#13;
a trial. I procured a bottle at once,&#13;
and commenced taking it.&#13;
" i have taken nineteen bottles, and&#13;
am entirely cured. I believe Peruna&#13;
is all that is claimed for i t . " — M r s . J .&#13;
C. Jamison, 61 Marchant S t . , Watson'&#13;
ville, Cal.&#13;
• D U T I F U L 8 0 N .&#13;
'You young scamp! I've caught&#13;
you smoking my cigars!"&#13;
"Yes, pa—er—er—you see I heard&#13;
ma say that you were smokin' yourself&#13;
to death and er—I'm try"in' to save&#13;
your life!"&#13;
C H I L D A T E CUTICURA O I N T M E N T .&#13;
8pread Whole Box of It on Crackers&#13;
—Not the Least Injury Resulted.&#13;
Cuticura Thus Proven Pure and Sweet.&#13;
A New York friend of Cuticura&#13;
writes:&#13;
"My three year old son and heir,&#13;
after being put to bed on a trip across&#13;
the Atlantic, investigated the stateroom&#13;
and located a box of g r a h a m&#13;
crackers and a box of Cuticura OimV&#13;
ment. When a search was made for&#13;
the box, it was found empty and the&#13;
kid admitted that he had eaten the&#13;
contents of the entire box spread on&#13;
the crackers. It cured him of a bad&#13;
cold and I don't know what else."&#13;
No more conclusive evidence could&#13;
be offered that every ingredient of Cuticura&#13;
Ointment is absolutely pure,&#13;
sweet and harmless. If it may be&#13;
safely eaten by a young child, none but&#13;
the most beneficial results can be expected&#13;
to attend its application -to&#13;
pected to attend its application to eras!&#13;
the tenderest skin or youngest infajit.&#13;
Potter Drag Jt Cbem. Corp., Sole I'rups.,&#13;
An Eye for Business.&#13;
White—Why are you so anxious to&#13;
lend that friend a dollar whenever ho&#13;
asks it? He only spends the money In&#13;
drinks and cigars.&#13;
Black—Oh, he always pays it back!&#13;
White—But there must be some&#13;
the Norma, and, like a bov preparing ; o t n e r r*a*on f o r y o u r r e a d y K«ierosity,&#13;
to play truant, furtively * secured a B l a c k - W e l l , there is. He always&#13;
line, and attached it to a fly which he&#13;
had in his pocket book.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
W H I T E DEER WAS STONE DEAF.&#13;
spends half of the money on me.—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
Deafness Cannot Be Cured&#13;
by local applications, as tbry eancot rrach the dtoeascd&#13;
portton of UIP car. There la only one way to&#13;
cure draffi WB, and that to by •oojtltittionai rvmedlt*,&#13;
Deafnesa Is caused by an inflamed condition ot OM&#13;
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. W h a flsO&#13;
tube Is In turned you have a rumblinx sound «r BSn&#13;
perfect hearing, and when It la entirely clrxrd,&#13;
nesa Is the result, and unlc** the tntUmmatlon &lt;&#13;
taken out and thla tub** restored to Its normal&#13;
tlon, hearing will bo drstroyod forever; nine atSSI&#13;
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which ts notbtnt&#13;
but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.'&#13;
We will clve One Hundred Dollars for any c&amp;M ol&#13;
h o r s e m a n , t o l d i n c i d e n t a l l y Of a r e - i Deafness (rw&lt;s*&lt;i by catarrh) that cr.nnot he cure*&#13;
by Hall'a Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &lt;fc CO.. Toledo, Q&#13;
Sold h r DrucrsMa. 7So.&#13;
Take Halt's Family n i l s for constipation.&#13;
Remarkable Animal Encountered by&#13;
Hunters in the Woods of Maine.&#13;
Speaking of blindness, deafness and&#13;
dumbness among, cats and dogs, Dr.&#13;
H. D. Gill, veterinary surgeon and&#13;
markable wild animal, a deer, that&#13;
was once encountered by two friends&#13;
of his who were hunting near Moosehead&#13;
lake in Maine.&#13;
Out with a guide, the hunters came&#13;
to a spot, from which they could see&#13;
within shooting distance four deer&#13;
grazing, one of the four being white,&#13;
an albino. The hunters fired and shot&#13;
two of th* deer of natural color, the&#13;
third one at. the report of the guns&#13;
springing away to safety, while the&#13;
white deer remained stock still.&#13;
The wind was toward the hunters&#13;
and they had not been heard or&#13;
scented, and apparently the white deer&#13;
had not heard the guns. But In a mo-&#13;
Hope Springs Eternal.&#13;
He was addressing a crowd one Sunday&#13;
morning on the quay at Newcastle.&#13;
"I can safely say that no man ever&#13;
attempted to bribe me, gentlemen,'*&#13;
said the speaker.&#13;
"Don't, be down-hearted, old chap,&#13;
your luck may change," shouted a&#13;
in the crowd.—Tit-Bits.&#13;
No Wonder She's Cross.&#13;
The wo nun who has a thousand petty&#13;
cares and annoyances while she suffers&#13;
with headarhc or side ache must not be&#13;
blamed if she cannot always be angelicalment&#13;
it turned its head and then it ly amiable. What she needs is thoughtfulbounded&#13;
away after the other surviv- | n p s s t m m hpr family and such a simple&#13;
ing deer.&#13;
It seemed clear to guide and hunters&#13;
that the white deer was atone&#13;
deaf.&#13;
Juvenile Logic.&#13;
Marie is a very bright kindergarten&#13;
pupil. She same home to her parents&#13;
the other day and told them that the&#13;
kindergarten teacher had said she will&#13;
grow up to be a very nice looking&#13;
young lady if she is a good girl, but&#13;
will grow up to be a very ugly woman&#13;
if she is a naughty girl. *Tg that&#13;
true, m a m m a ? " asked Marie, and sb«&#13;
was informed that if the teacher said&#13;
so it was true. Marie sat still for&#13;
a while pondering seriously. "But,&#13;
iiiamma," fhe suddenly burst forth&#13;
again, "why was the kindergarten&#13;
teacher so naughty when she was a&#13;
little girl?"&#13;
j and natural remedy as Lane's Family Medi&#13;
ieine, the herb tea that makes weak wom-&#13;
; en strong and well. Sold bv druggist* and&#13;
j dealers, 25c.&#13;
Questionable- .&#13;
"Has slve a sense of humor?"&#13;
' I can't tell."&#13;
"Why not?"&#13;
"Because she looked serious when&#13;
she told me she admired your singing."&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
Examine oarefally every bottle ot&#13;
CASTORIA a safe a n d sore remedy for&#13;
infants and children, aad see that It&#13;
Bears t h e&#13;
Signature of&lt;&#13;
In Use For Over 3 d t e a m . "&#13;
The Kind Yon Have Always&#13;
VUUtUVH, SHU Set) U i t t t I t&#13;
• . «&#13;
Sadness in Memory.&#13;
Tennyson: Sorrow's crown of&#13;
re v u remembering happier thing*.&#13;
! Honor is but the reflection of a&#13;
; man's own actions shining bright in&#13;
| the face of all about him, and from&#13;
1 thence rebounding upon himself.—Mer*&#13;
! riam.&#13;
~7~&#13;
l o t f forinmt f i»pat&#13;
F. C. A N D R E W S &amp; CO. PNOPWKTONS&#13;
THURSDAY', APK 8, 1909.&#13;
T h e h o u s e , by 50 to 42, h a s&#13;
k i l l e d t h e bill a l l o w i n g r a i l r o a d&#13;
c o n d u c t o r s to collect n p u u a l t y of&#13;
10 ctmta on cash fatvtj.&#13;
This !ss just tliu tiiun o! year whrti&#13;
you are most likp'y to rav^ uidm-ty ov&#13;
bladder t r o u b l e wiMi rbmunntisiu ai d&#13;
itoeumatiu pains loused by weak kid&#13;
neys. Delays ar« d a n ^ ' r o u s . (;bt On&#13;
Witts Kidney aud Bladder PilU, mid&#13;
be .sure you ^ei what you ask tar.&#13;
They HJH tiie lie^r pi'N rnHijp fur lia&lt;;k&#13;
ache, weak back, ; t m i y di&gt;i&gt;rders,&#13;
infiauiatiuu of Hie bladder, tic. They&#13;
are autiseptie and act promptly. Sold&#13;
and recommended by all dealers.&#13;
T h e s e n a t e last week p a s s e d a&#13;
bill r e q u i r i n g t e l e p h o n e a n d t e l e -&#13;
g r a p h c o m p a n i e s to p a y t h e s a m e&#13;
r a t e of taxes as o t h e r k i n d s of&#13;
p r o p e r t y , i n s t e a d of a special tax.&#13;
J u d g e M a g o o n , u n t i l r e c e n t l y&#13;
G o v e n o r of C u b a , h a s u o hesitat&#13;
i o n in d e c l a r i n g t h a t t h e C u b a n s&#13;
a r e c a p a b l e of s e l f - g o v e r n m e n t ,&#13;
a n d t h a t t h e g r e a t m a j o r i t y a r e&#13;
p e a c e - l o v i n g , s o b e r , i n d u s t r i o u s ,&#13;
l a w a b i J i n g c i t i z e n s , i n s p i r e d by&#13;
t h e love of family a n d of c o u n t r y .&#13;
There is not a better Salve than Ue&#13;
Witts Carbolized Witch Hazel salve.&#13;
We hereby warn the public that we&#13;
are not responsible for any injurious&#13;
eflects caused from wort h'ess or poisonous&#13;
imitations of our OeWitts Carbolized&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve, the original.&#13;
It is pood for anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially&#13;
Rood tor piles. He sure vou get De&#13;
Witts. Sold by all dealer*.&#13;
An emergency military supply&#13;
depot is soon to be established on&#13;
Corregidor Island, at the entrance&#13;
to Manilla Bay, ami an appropria&#13;
tion of $250,000 is available for&#13;
the erection of quartermaster,&#13;
commissary and medical storehouses&#13;
and other buildings to be&#13;
included in the depot. This is an&#13;
excellent site from a military&#13;
standpoint, as its remoteness from&#13;
the mainland imparts to it the&#13;
necessary quality of protection in&#13;
time of war.&#13;
Swept Over Niagara&#13;
This terrible calamity often happens&#13;
because a careless boatman ignores&#13;
the rivers warnings—growing ripnles&#13;
and faster current—Natures warnings&#13;
are kind. That dull pain or ache in&#13;
the back warns you that the kidneys&#13;
need attention if you would escape&#13;
fatal maladies—Dropsy, diabetes or&#13;
Bright.s disease. Take Electric Bitters&#13;
at. once and see backache fly and all&#13;
your best feelings r e t u r n . "After&#13;
long suffering from weak kidney- and&#13;
lame back, one $1 bottle wholly cured&#13;
me," wr.tes J. R, B l a n k e n ^ i p , ot ttelk&#13;
T e n n . Only 50c at, P. A. Siglers.&#13;
T h e a n t h i a c i t e m i n e r s c o n v e n -&#13;
t i o n h a s a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n a s k -&#13;
i n g P r e s i d e n t Taft to a p p o i n t a&#13;
c o m m i s s i o n to a r b i t r a t e differences.&#13;
T h e resolution l o o k s t o arb&#13;
i t r a t i o n at a final s o l u t i o n , if t h e&#13;
m e n e n d t h e i r e m p l o y e i R c a n n o t&#13;
a g r e e , a n d s u c h a c o m m i s s i o n&#13;
w o u l d b e s i m i l a r to t h e o n e a p -&#13;
p o i n t e d by P r e s . P o o s e v e l t in&#13;
1902.&#13;
IA Nightmare Yankee i&#13;
[Copyright, l'J"h, by Am^ric^n i'ross Ax.-t &gt;&#13;
o i n t i i . ; . . ]&#13;
Bill Mo;i, h.-un, priwitv iii iVmi.-/;&#13;
vnnirt iitf'a:.tr\, •'Srapcd I'l'i.-otirr . :&#13;
War, sto&lt;»t ;ir the cd^e of a wood In .1,&#13;
tag at. n house HtnnJiiivc fti iho ton;.&#13;
of a plantation. Bill's stomach wait&#13;
s empty us a baversar U at the end of&#13;
•&gt;.Jwe weeks' campaign, ami In: was&#13;
j wondering ii lie dure «o to the hoUBi*&#13;
aud ask for soiutlhiuK to eat. Would&#13;
; be ruibiT starve ur ruu the risk of go&#13;
Lutf back 10 liiat frighttill prison pen?&#13;
| Then he looked lilumeir over. He bud&#13;
no head covering whatever, and the&#13;
Lam time his hair had oeeu combed&#13;
| wtuj before tbe tight in wbleh he hat!&#13;
been ruptured three uiouLks ugoue.&#13;
Half a leg of his trousers was wishing&#13;
as well as the right sleeve ut hla coat&#13;
j u i d a part of the left sleeve. Aa to&#13;
j tlie coot's skirt, It huu# In rag fes&#13;
J toons. One old rubber shoe and a bit&#13;
of blanket constituted bib foot cover-&#13;
, ing. It was not danger uloue that&#13;
' caused him to hesitate, it was pride.&#13;
However, hunger conquered both&#13;
pride aud prudence, and he went to&#13;
tbe house. Passing through u liower&#13;
garden, he suddenly cuuie- upon a girl&#13;
uiakiug up a, bouquet. On seeing Bill&#13;
she dropped u pair of big scissors, giving&#13;
a slight scream at the same time.&#13;
Bill's hand naturally went up to his&#13;
j head; but, not finding any hat there&#13;
; to doff deferentially, he attempted to&#13;
; propitiate the girl with uu admiring&#13;
! Bmlle. It produced an effect similar&#13;
• to that of a dirty faced grinning skel-&#13;
| eton. The girl shrank buck.&#13;
! "Don't be afraid of me," pleaded BUI.&#13;
( "I'm harmless, quite harmless." H e&#13;
i paused a moment to arrest the ravage&#13;
I of a graybai'k. "I might as well own&#13;
up that I'm an escaped prisoner ot&#13;
war."&#13;
"A Yankee!"&#13;
"Yes, a Yankee, but not a dangerous&#13;
one just now unless for vermin, and&#13;
I'd be ever so obliged If you'd give me&#13;
a bit of corn pone or something to&#13;
keep me from starving."&#13;
Bill's tone was sad, and by tnl*&#13;
time the girl began to take Ju the pitiful&#13;
situation. She was very young and&#13;
her sympathies easily touched. She&#13;
Bttxxl for a moment thinking, then&#13;
said:&#13;
"We're all loyal to the south up at&#13;
the house, and if you go there we'd&#13;
have to give you up. Get under that&#13;
j rosebush, where you will not be seen,&#13;
j and I'll bring you something."&#13;
| Bill gave her a grateful look, which,&#13;
j though grewsome, didn't frighten her&#13;
! so much this time. She went toward&#13;
j the house, and he crawled under the&#13;
bush. Presently she came back with&#13;
some scraps she had gathered from&#13;
the breakfast table rolled In a napkin,&#13;
s^ive them to Bill and told him he'd&#13;
better be off. Bill, In bis gratitude&#13;
forgetting himself, advanced to clasp&#13;
her hand, but she darted back with a&#13;
bit of a shriek, then, seeing that she&#13;
had hurt his feelings, said:&#13;
"It Isn't you I'm afraid of; it's the&#13;
vermin."&#13;
Well, Bill backed away from her so&#13;
as not to show the remains of his protruding&#13;
shirt tail and went on his way.&#13;
When the war ended Bill got a commission&#13;
In the regular army. During&#13;
the administration of President Grant&#13;
he was on duty In Washington, which&#13;
meant that he lounged most of the&#13;
flay and attended social functions in&#13;
the evening. It was not long before&#13;
be married the daughter of a southern&#13;
congressman, and a very happy match&#13;
he made.&#13;
One morning na kissed his wife and&#13;
went to his office In the war department,&#13;
as usual. About 11 o'clock Mrs.&#13;
! Meaeham was Informed by a maid that&#13;
j there was a tramp at the door who&#13;
! insisted on seeing the lady of the&#13;
house. "But I wouldn't advise you to&#13;
go down; he's the worst lookin' beast&#13;
I ever saw." Mrs. Meaeham sent the&#13;
! maid back to tell the man that she&#13;
; was busy, mid the maid returned with&#13;
the Information that the man was&#13;
j bound to see the lady, and If she&#13;
! didn't come down he would go up. If&#13;
! there had been telephones In those&#13;
' flays Mrs. Meaeham would have called&#13;
I the police. But telephones had not yet&#13;
! been invented, and there was no man&#13;
In the house. Mrs. Meaeham finally&#13;
determined to go down. There In the&#13;
hall stood the tramp. H e wore no hat&#13;
on his uncombed hair, but little more&#13;
J than half of his clothing was available,&#13;
one foot, was incased In a piece&#13;
of blanket, the other In n rubber shoe.&#13;
Mrs. Meaeham's terror was somewhat&#13;
l mollified by seeing one or two brass&#13;
buttons on his coat.&#13;
| "My busbnnd Is In the war depart&#13;
;ment," she gasped. "Go to him. He'll&#13;
provide for you and see that you arc&#13;
taken en re of by the government."&#13;
1 The man suddenly put his hand to&#13;
Bis hair and clinched something.&#13;
' T o r heaven's sake," cried the lady,&#13;
"don't bring vermin into this house!&#13;
Q-o nway! fall on Major Meaeham.&#13;
: He'll attend to your r.-ise."&#13;
"It's hard lines," whined the tramp,&#13;
"when a man enn't get a crust in his&#13;
own house."&#13;
"Good gracious, ma'am," exclaimed&#13;
the maid, "he's mad!"&#13;
! The tramp looked at Mrs. Meaeham&#13;
and smiled, n horrible grin which,&#13;
joneo .seen, would never be forgotten.&#13;
"Don't you remember the YTankee you&#13;
j fed one day In the flower garden down&#13;
In DIxfe?"&#13;
j Yes, Mrs. Meaeham remembered him.&#13;
,5he had never forgotten him.&#13;
! "Oh, heavens," nbe walled, "have I&#13;
married that horrible nightmare of a&#13;
Fankec? tVhy didn't von tell me?"&#13;
"Tell you! HOW V. I;1&lt;1 T have ever&#13;
irot you If I had':"&#13;
Major Meaeham did not kiss his&#13;
, ivife again till he had had a Turkish&#13;
fcath. ELBERT T. BENTLBT.&#13;
.,, - ; , &lt; B * " "&#13;
•yi.&#13;
1»&#13;
Paint&#13;
Your Own&#13;
Carriage&#13;
You can do it yourself and at little&#13;
expense. It's easy to give it a beautiful,&#13;
hard, brilliant, varnish-gloss finish&#13;
in black or rich, appropriate colors.&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
CARRIAGE PAINT (Neal's)&#13;
is made especially to give to buggies, carriages and&#13;
vehicles of all kinds a tough, durable, glossy finish that will&#13;
look well and wear well. An ideal finish for settees, flower&#13;
stands, porch furniture, garden tools, and all surfaces that must&#13;
withstand exposure and hard usage. Ready to brush on and&#13;
the label tells how.&#13;
If it's a surface to be painted, enameled, stained, varnished, o r finished In&#13;
a n y w a y there's an A c m e Quality Kind t o fit the purpose.&#13;
C. DINKEL T&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIGAN&#13;
THE&#13;
~^m®*m-$&amp;&#13;
First Mortgage Timber Bonds&#13;
qf,Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company qf Grand Ra.pids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable semi-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st.&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n a l $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 t v n d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
These bonds sre dated March 4th, 1909, and mature at the rate of $50,000 each year, commeneiof&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any interest period and carry the privilege&#13;
o! registration aa to principle.&#13;
T r u o t o o i T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . G r &amp; n d R * p i d « . M i c h i g a n . Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co.&#13;
of Ground R a p i d s M i c h i g a n .&#13;
C a p i t a l i z a t i o n . $ 1 , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . P a r V a l u o $ 1 0 . 0 0 . B o n d * . $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property securing this i^sue consists of 5,1,632 acres of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located on&#13;
the southwest shore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoria and&#13;
within iso miles of all important ports on Pu^et Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vancouver.&#13;
Mr. J. P. Bray ton of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremost timber&#13;
experts of the country has examined this tract of timber for us and reports s stand of mors than&#13;
t , )00,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than 20c per M ft. stum page.&#13;
SJ The present equipment comprises a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam T a g ,&#13;
Rolling Stock, e t c , capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S 1&#13;
CHAS W. LtKHN SEBEWAINO, MICH.&#13;
fres., Huron Bay Lumber Co.&#13;
JL H. MOORR, SBATTT.R, WASH.&#13;
Ex. Supt. Motivr Power, Chi., BUT. &amp; Q. R. R.&#13;
W. T. COI.HMAN, SRATTLK, WAIHIWOTOW&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska Investment Co.&#13;
S. M. COCHRANE, Capitalist, S « A T T L « , WASH.&#13;
WM. L. CARPKNTRR. DRT*otT, MtCH.&#13;
Of the firm of Stevenson, Carpenter &amp; Butzel.&#13;
CIIAS. A. PHRLPS, . . GRAITT) K i K M , MrC*.&#13;
Timbrr Operator. Treas., Haekley-Phelpt-Bonnell&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
w . P. M C K N I G H T . O«AWD RAPID*, MICX.&#13;
Prea., White River Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B. B. CADWRLL, N K W TOSUK&#13;
Vice-President, Standard Screw Co., Detroit.&#13;
c T. MOORK, iBATTi.*, waaa.&#13;
Timber Expert and Mill Operator.&#13;
W* offer th«*« bonds at p*e and aocruod interest to yield 6%.&#13;
*7 Privilege will be granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount ef stock s&gt;f&#13;
the company. % Further information and prospectus shewing photographs of tbe property furnished an request. E. B. Cadwell &amp; Co., 7 7 0 HWOMCOT BUrLDtm&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
S e e OUP Pine bine of Eiaster Post Cards&#13;
Up Before The Bar.&#13;
N , fl, Brown, an attorpe^, of Pittafield,&#13;
Vt., writ**, u W e have ubed Dr.&#13;
Kings New Life pills tor yeaiu and&#13;
find Cbena «ueb a Rood family mndi&#13;
c ne we wouldn't be without ineru."&#13;
For Unills, Constipation, Bilknsnesb j&#13;
or Sick betidachu tbtiy work wou-lerb&#13;
25c at h\ A. .Sifc:enj.&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
"I'd Bather Dip, Doctor,&#13;
tb*n bave my faat OJ»t ofl,' laid B(1VL.&#13;
Bingham of PrAleeyiUe, Jll. B a t j^u'll'&#13;
die from gftDKrene.(wbice bad eaten&#13;
away eight toes) it yon don't" said all&#13;
doctors. Instead bo used Bucjtjena&#13;
Arnica Salve till wholly cared. Its&#13;
•jureM of E&lt;.z«tna, Fevwr bores, body,&#13;
burna acd Pilea astound • lh« woild.&#13;
25c at F. A. biftlerb.&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
DCVIQNS&#13;
CorrRioHTS A c&#13;
Anyone sending • sketch and description may&#13;
^alckly .-ineortaln our opiutuu fr«w whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Communicatsieonnt&#13;
s fsrterei.c tOlyl dceosntf iadreannticayl . foHrA NsDeBcOuOtlKn gopna tPeanttean. t*&#13;
Patents taken through Munu &amp; Co. receive&#13;
wycciaX notice, without charge, Lu tho Scientific Jlmericati. A handsomely llhutrated weekly, l a r g e s t cb&gt;&#13;
eolation of any «denUflo Journal. Terms, 98 a&#13;
year; four months, SL Sold by all newsdealers. h U N N &amp; C o ^ " ^ ^ New York&#13;
Branch OfDoe, (Oft If BU Washington, D . 0, .&#13;
STATK of MICHIGAN, Couaty of LivlnKuu&gt;n&#13;
88.&#13;
l'rubate Court tor said county. Katute of&#13;
W x . GKii&gt;toO&gt;. decvabeii,&#13;
The uudereJpund navlug i&gt;teu upuulutvd, by&#13;
Judge of Probate oi tsald county, LuaiwIbaUmeta on&#13;
claims in the matter ot bald emate, and four mouths&#13;
from t b e IWth day ot HarcLi, A. u . 1U0U, having&#13;
beeu allowed by said J uug« of JPrc bate t o all persona&#13;
holding claim* against said eetate in wbicb to&#13;
present their claims t o as for examination and&#13;
adjubtuueut.&#13;
Notice 1B hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
iiOth day of May, A. I&gt;. 1900, and on the 2let&#13;
day of J uljr A. u. 19CW, at ten o'clock ii. in. of each&#13;
day at the etore of J. L. Kleby, iu he township&#13;
ot Hamburg, i u said county to receive and e x -&#13;
amine SUcb clttilllB.&#13;
Datetl: Howell, Mich. March ^Uth, A. I&gt;. IWJ.&#13;
H. M. lueal 1&#13;
&gt; CouiiuiiiHionertt on Clairue&#13;
Wiu. Bladta ) t 14&#13;
WHEN YOU PAINT&#13;
your h o m e y o u e x p e c t results that a r e&#13;
pleasing to t h e eye. A house not painted&#13;
uniformly is far from pleasing. Tt i s hard&#13;
for e v e n a good painter to m a k e a close m a t c h w h e n h e runs short.&#13;
E. P. S. Paint shades are absolutely uniform—the aane&#13;
five years from n o w as t h e y are today, s o t h a t w h e t h e r y o u re-paint&#13;
©r build an addition y o u c a n secure w i t h B. P . S. a perfect match t o&#13;
t h e s h a d e o n your house.&#13;
A s k your dealer for our B . P. S . Paint&#13;
Budget and g e t acquainted w i t h our list of shades.&#13;
Y o u cannot fail t o find w h a t y o u will like&#13;
FOR SALE BY GEO. W. REASON&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
WITH OR W I T H O U T BOLTING A T T A C H M E N T .&#13;
The cut show* machine with » This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
20 inch Saw and Shingle Car- iaa^tfcJaWas^kfc. t o &gt;2&lt;000 shingles per day.&#13;
rlage, ready (or cutting ahinglea ^ p a a e J H ^ H ^ ^ ^ B H l Carriages made from selected&#13;
18 In. long, and 4 In. wide. ^^Bt^t^^^^^k h t r d *00** T r , c k ** &gt;olld&#13;
P r i c e 175.OO. ^W^BBf^^^ka rolled steel. For cutting shin-&#13;
With 36 inch Bolting Saw antf awsassBssflB^P^^L^ »'** "4"'™* 4 to 6 H. P. For&#13;
Bolllnc Carriage, ^ W ^ ^ * » ^"'"^ 6 !• 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
! Price $2B.OO&gt;eIxTtrA &lt;I, S A mMO^ NEY-MAKB50E |bRl. - Equipped with the bolting attachment it is a complete- ahingle outfit in itself. Can be adjusted&#13;
for any desired taper or thickness. For cutting the round log into ahingle lengths, we&#13;
manufacture a high grade,low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net prices.&#13;
CIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
E n g i n e * * , aWolle&gt;r», S a w M i l l M a c h i n e r y , E t c .&#13;
. THE MICH GRADE&#13;
LEHR PIANO&#13;
18 USED AND ENDOR8EO BY&#13;
It* ttrtad Coiuaratora si Matte, New York (**&#13;
The Penntftranlt College of Music, Philadelphia.&#13;
Chleufto Ooasemrtofy * Hbuhtw Softool of Optra, i&#13;
The Pueblo Consei »at»y ot Mafia, Pueblo, Cola,&#13;
AND OTHER LEADING CON8IRVATORIIS&#13;
A sw»ety«tbrilliant and powerful tone, exquisite&#13;
aae, perfect adjustment and durable workmanship&#13;
place ft in the front rank of the best instruments made&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano foi the home, where ita&#13;
pxeseooe to a sign of cottars and refinement.&#13;
.tw»e Tootamt foifF pHrTodf urcTtiIoNnO, alnndn iint ihiaiisn aicilh iere1d i iaii fblarii lalilannutu slnaoilote sftsJ aOsW thaeii BmHoHaitM elllellgiiainn tw ilnilis tlir ument&#13;
in fee market at a satisfactory price. WRITE FOR CAXALOeUE I b m PRICES.&#13;
H.*LEHR A COMPANY, Manufrs, • Easton, Pa-&#13;
Kodol&#13;
For Dyspepsia and Indigestion&#13;
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas on&#13;
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,&#13;
etc., a little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly&#13;
Kodol supplies t h e same di: ,r-1 Ive&#13;
Juices t h a t are found in a In i it by&#13;
fctomach. Beinp a liquid, it starts&#13;
digestion at once.&#13;
Kodol not only digests your food,&#13;
but helps you erijoy every mouthful&#13;
you eat.&#13;
You need a sufficient amount of&#13;
pood, wholesome food to maintain&#13;
strength a.nd health.&#13;
But, this focxi must be digested&#13;
thorouRiily, otherwise the pains of&#13;
indigestion and dyspepsia are the result. .&#13;
- When your stomach cannot do its&#13;
$ork properly, take something to&#13;
ijelp your stomach. Kodol i s tlie&#13;
anly t h i n e t h a t will give the stomach&#13;
complete rest*&#13;
r W h y ? Because Kodol does tho&#13;
aWtiewerk as anrt rorar fttomaOb, and&#13;
does it in a natural way,&#13;
Po, don't nopioct your stomacli&#13;
Don't Income a chronic dyspeptic&#13;
Keep your stomach limithv and&#13;
strong by taking a little Kodol.&#13;
You don't have to take Kodol all&#13;
the time. You only take i t when&#13;
you need it,&#13;
Kodol Is perfectly harmless.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Go to your druggist, todnv and prt. a dollar&#13;
lx)ttU\ Then aft^r you havoused the&#13;
rntirf? contents of the bottle if you can&#13;
honestly say that it has not drtneyou any&#13;
pood, return the bottle to the druggist and&#13;
ho wtll.r*fund yovir money without duet*&#13;
tlon or delay, we will then pay tbe arugglst.&#13;
Don't hesitate, all druggists know&#13;
that our guarantee is good. This offer applies&#13;
to the large bottle only and to but one&#13;
in a family. The large bottle contains2¾&#13;
ti:..rn tu, much as the Ofty cent bott.,.&#13;
Kodol Is prepared nfc the laboratories&#13;
oi E. C. DeWitt &amp; Co., Chicago.&#13;
Motel&#13;
proprietor of one of the largmt&#13;
hotelsi In New York, speaking of the&#13;
ubee made by uonpaying custumer« of&#13;
fain house, aald to a rural nuent a few&#13;
days ago: "We have a large number of&#13;
patrons from whom we never -iroUect&#13;
a cent, altnou^h we have no such&#13;
thing an u. free list. They come here&#13;
iu the morning, pick up a eustoff paper,&#13;
whieh tbey read, keepiuK uu eye&#13;
opeu for another, which they grab as&#13;
Boon as it Is dropped. After reading&#13;
awhile tney stand at the ticker, often&#13;
giving loug lectures to their fellows on&#13;
financial conditions and stock pus.si&#13;
bilities. The overcout becomes burden&#13;
aome, uud it is taken tu the check&#13;
rouiu, "where Its ownur knows it will&#13;
he pcrfectiy naie. Then, if they can&#13;
(ear IheiuseU'es from the ticker, Ici&#13;
I ens are wnnvu &lt;i)i our stationery&#13;
'J hey ilc not use "tir telephones be-&#13;
(roi-c \vc eluirLre an extra Ti cents for&#13;
the call, but they carry heme mulches,&#13;
loothpieks. blank cards ami blotters&#13;
and use up 11M* snap in our lavatories.&#13;
They also take generous nibbles of&#13;
the cheese ami crackers in the cafe.&#13;
The si rankest part of all is this- that&#13;
the majority of this class are well to&#13;
do and highly respectable, and ou that&#13;
account we do not shut thexu out."&#13;
New York Tribune.&#13;
$bt fiiuluug Dispatch&#13;
f Q * u s j u u &gt; j v a a T T U U » 0 p * x i i u i u o a « mr&#13;
b^DacrlpUun Prlc* »1 iu Advauc*.&#13;
SuMied at it)« l*ustohtc« at fiuckxtov, MIUUISAL&#13;
as second-class lualtur&#13;
AvivUTUJSLax rates iuadt&gt; knuwn uo aiiplivatiuu.&#13;
FRANK L.. ANDREWS 6o CO&#13;
t U T ' l t U * * u KMCM'HlfcTOKa.&#13;
If you need a pill take DeWitts Little&#13;
Early Risirs. Insist on them,&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little liver pills.&#13;
So'd by all dealers.&#13;
ILL DRUGGISTS&#13;
Advantage of Red Hair.&#13;
An eastern editor is wasting time&#13;
and space showing that red haired&#13;
girls need no pity. Of course they&#13;
don't. Men admire their hair aud&#13;
women envy it. The blond and the&#13;
brunette have a bit the better of the&#13;
flame colored girl in a variety of colors&#13;
they can use. There the superiority&#13;
ends, for given the proper hue,&#13;
the one that seta off her crown of red&#13;
to the best advantage, the bricktop has&#13;
her sisters "beaten to a frazzle," in the&#13;
Booaeveltlan language An artistic&#13;
red haired girl Is the most Btriking&#13;
and Impressive picture that femininity&#13;
makes.&#13;
It's the boy with the carroty locks&#13;
who deserves sympathy and doesn't&#13;
get it. Hed hair usually goes with a&#13;
sensitive disposition, aud the horrors&#13;
of the life that a bricktop leads at&#13;
school and play need a Dante of childhood&#13;
to set forth. He is the target of&#13;
all the wit and satire the schoolboy&#13;
mind can conjure up, the butt of the&#13;
Jokee. Even sympathetic girls get a&#13;
Roman amphitheater crust over their&#13;
kind hearts. If they don't indulge in&#13;
these scarifying personalities they&#13;
laugh at them.—Cleveland Leader.&#13;
A Public Benefactor.&#13;
Borne years a.uo Mr. Henn \\V],&#13;
Levy, the noied public benel'ai tcr. w.\&#13;
visiting the London hospital, and. ^ c&#13;
ing men in rod llanuel dressing ^ou Mrhe&#13;
asked Mr. Sydney Holland v, !,•&#13;
they were so dressed. Mr. llofT.dui&#13;
told him that they wore prepared t\ .&#13;
operation, but owing to I lie favt tu i&#13;
there was only one operating theater&#13;
it was doubtful whether there would&#13;
be time to do all the operations. The&#13;
cruelty of preparing men for operations&#13;
with all the anxiety involved othe&#13;
patient and then having to postpone&#13;
them appealed to Mr. Levy, and&#13;
he at once drew a check for £1:1.(HHI.&#13;
which he was told would build live&#13;
theaters, and ultimately increased the&#13;
amount to £15,000.—London Bystander&#13;
Delicate Women&#13;
".From a thin, nervous wreck,&#13;
inferable and wretched, I am now&#13;
enjoyinp splendid health, and it is&#13;
.ill traceable to Dr. Miles' Nervine**&#13;
MRS. MAUD B. OPLINGER,&#13;
Philadelphia, Penna.&#13;
As a rule women understand the&#13;
nature of their delicate organism,&#13;
but overlook the wonderful influence&#13;
their nervous system has upon thsir&#13;
potior a 1 health. They do not realize&#13;
that nearly all their ills are directly&#13;
tracenble to the nervous system.&#13;
Thousands of women have regained&#13;
their health atid vipor by the use of&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine.&#13;
Tt restores strength to the entire&#13;
nervous system.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit; if not,&#13;
your druggist will return your money.&#13;
STATE OF M i n i l G \ N . thf&gt; prooate conrt f nr&#13;
trip countv of yvlns;«f(-&gt;n At a f u s i o n of&#13;
said c o u r t held at the probate offlrfl in the village&#13;
of Rowall i n «ald rnnntv on thr&gt; 2nd d s y of&#13;
April A. D. 1009. Present: Hon. Arthur A.&#13;
Montague, judge of Frnhnt»\ (n the matter of&#13;
the estate of&#13;
DAXIHT. S. LAKKIN, dereasAd.&#13;
Mnrtha Larktn havinsj filed In Raid couTt hrr&#13;
petition praytn2 that the admlnstration oi said&#13;
efltstc, he granted to Wm. J. Larkln or to Nome&#13;
oilirr suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered, Ihst the *&gt;th day of April&#13;
A T&gt; UVtt, *t ten o'clock in the forenoon, *t&#13;
said probate offce. he and i» hereby appointed !&#13;
for hearing«Aid petition. |&#13;
Tt I* further ordered that public notioe j&#13;
'hereof b-&gt; ?-v.^n H- -i&gt;v-' -,0,,1 of « r-.-r of t h i s&#13;
ord«r for '.s succt'e^oe wt^kti ^levioue 10 svm 11 day I&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney IMSPATCH, a newspaper,&#13;
printed snd circulated in said county.&#13;
AHTHVtR A. MONTAODK,&#13;
t lft Judge of Probate&#13;
GHURCHtb.&#13;
MJCTMUDlbT KlJ lbUOi'Ai^ O U U H C H .&#13;
H e v . U . C , JLiiiiojuLa piuiioi-. oerviceu wvtr.v&#13;
Sauuday IUMUUIK t*i 10:00, cud e v e r / &amp;uuu»i&#13;
tsveuiug a t 1 iDUu'cloua, l't&lt;»&gt;er iabt»UagTUurt,-&#13;
day OVOLIIUKB. 55'iuduy 00:001 aliuune of moriiin^&#13;
sttrvice. i l i o a AIAKS V ANi-'x-i-ai', 6upt.&#13;
4 AOJSlirilfiliAriUNAb U d L U o a .&#13;
\J liev. A. G. Uau» paoioi. oervic»«vei..&#13;
Suuoay juoruiu^; * i ia:J^ i.na evury buuatii&#13;
O*»UULUK »1 7:0C 0 c i j e a . L'uty** uioauuy, 'I'huiL&#13;
day ovMiiiiig . ."r&gt;uudtty bcuo^u ie. clouw ui uiurL&#13;
inK » « v k . » . Mxa. uiiacc Crwijut, ~upl„ J . A,&#13;
CaUvruU b e e .&#13;
b'l. i l A t t i f b ' j . i l ' a i i i j l u o n u .wO'u.&#13;
tiev. M. J. Uuuiuiariuiu, 1 Aoior. 'jorvi'^ci&#13;
evtiry buuday. Luw amsa ai&lt;:ii/i&gt;U"U&#13;
tngli uituje v¥itiiberuiuu ai lU'.iOa. ui. Caivciikei-&#13;
••l j;IA) p. UJ., vcBpuibdu-- be ... . a i u u m ' o - l O t i . i .&#13;
SOCILTlto;&#13;
nyko A. U. H. boclety or tuia plitce, iue*fi» »ver;&#13;
X t k i r d buuilay luma Kr. MaiLuaw i l a l l .&#13;
J u i m T u o m e y aiiu M. T. K.wUy, .uuaiy Utiiugaitb&#13;
K I L L T H I COUGH&#13;
AND CURE THK LUNGS&#13;
WITH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
FORCSKSa18™-&#13;
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TNOUSLES.'&#13;
PBICB&#13;
OT/ABAKTXXD BATISPAOTOBYl&#13;
OB. M O N E Y BEFTJNDED.&#13;
fi \Ha W. ^. T. U. Lueulu liic btiuuud at* turd ay o l&#13;
X*)M^u moiitii nl-4:d)b p. oi, ai u u UUUIUJ u i t h e&#13;
iiMUiibara ttveiyuu-j inu;restoU i u Leiuporauco La&#13;
couUiaUy iuvilou. Mrs, Uial .sigl»r, i i t a . ills.&#13;
Jeuulu Burton, Secitu&amp;ry.&#13;
I^Ue C. T. A . uud U. owcioty J I ltii» p l a c b , u».&#13;
uvexy thiru atitmaay eveuUig i u luo t ' i . Mai&#13;
hew H a l l . Joiiu DuuoUuu, 1 itj.iueuL.&#13;
KN I G i i T b O F llAUCAUiii^b.&#13;
Motftuvery Friday e v e n i n g ou vu ueiui'«aii.&#13;
01 tiitt Luoou a i i l i e i r hall 111 iiio aiVaituout, 0 ..,&#13;
Viuitiug bxulUeru arecordiail&gt; ia^ileU.&#13;
C, V. VauWinkle, s n ii-uirti o u u i u » Q u t ,&#13;
i\. 1J. itturtdUBou, - KbWJrd K w p e r&#13;
t \ Li. Juckbon, - Iiuttuco Keeper&#13;
Livlngeton Lodge, No.7G, F 4 . A . M. Kegulfei&#13;
Couuiiuuictition 'i ueaday evemug, on or tielort&#13;
thutull of the moon. b\ G. Jackson. V\ . M&#13;
0aL)£K OF KAbTEKK S T A i i meets each mouw.&#13;
the Friday evening followiitg the regular 1 .&#13;
A. A. M. meeting, MiuJNk,TTU Y A U U U N , W. M.&#13;
O mER OF A1UDBKN WOODilKN Aleet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each 2aooth i u tht-&#13;
Maccabee nali. C. L.Grimeb V. O&#13;
LA O I E B O F T H E MACUABEKa. Meat every iu&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at '4 :!}0 p i u .&#13;
JLO. T. M. hall. Visiting slaters cordially iu&#13;
vited, L I L A L'ONIWAY, Lady Coin.&#13;
K NIGHTS UK THK LOYAL GUAKD&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M, 1&#13;
Mortgage hale.&#13;
Default having been uiade iu the conditiono of&#13;
two uinrt^iiues wjveriugthe nameliind{whereby the&#13;
}H&gt;wer &lt;&gt;t &amp;d\e ihereiu contained baa become operative)&#13;
made by Adam Francis sad A s n a L . Franc-&#13;
is hit* wife, of 1'utuuni, Livitigaton county, Micait-&#13;
an, to G. W, Teeple of the s u a e place, one o f&#13;
aaid uiortagee heiu^ dated Oecember 3Wh, 1899&#13;
and recorded iu the Office ot -Kegiiiter of deeds&#13;
for the; County of Livingston, State o t Michigan&#13;
May lu, l'Jta), iu Liber 7U of niortgayea on page&#13;
515 thereof, aud the other rf«ted J u n e 4th, ]W«&#13;
und recorded iu eaid Kegietere uttlce ou t b e 15th&#13;
day of March, 1!XW. iu Liber «1 of Mortgages o n&#13;
page 57a thereof; ou wldch said uaortages there Is&#13;
uow claiiued to be due and uupald at this date ttta*&#13;
bum of Two huudred fifty /our dollars and t l&#13;
live ttiitb ( f2n4 V,'J) and atloiuey fete, and OS&#13;
or proceeding having bten couiuieneed in&#13;
equity to recover the debts secured by bind&#13;
j^uues, or auj part thereof.&#13;
Kow therelore, uuder the power of aale contain&#13;
ed iu said mortgage!-, uotiie ie hereby given that&#13;
ou Mouday, the 14th day of June, 1W9, at OM&#13;
o'clock iu the afternoon ot'suidday, at the weatei^&#13;
ly trout door of the Court liouee in the village&#13;
of Howerl iu waid County Uhat being the plsca Of&#13;
holding the cifcult court fur the County In which&#13;
the m o r t g a g e d pitniiees to be bold are tituated&#13;
and said uiortgagea will be foreclosed by sale a t&#13;
public vendue to the highest bidder of the premiteu&#13;
described iu said mortguges, or s o moeh&#13;
thereof ad luay be ntceeaury to Batiely the amount&#13;
due on said mortgages with interest and legal coats&#13;
that is to Bay; all that certain piece or parcel of&#13;
land situate in the to^nxh'p of Putnam, County&#13;
of Livinueton ami Mate •&gt;} ^fielJigan, viz: ThrM&#13;
acres of laud iu ih^ nortlivw-st comer of that part&#13;
of the west half of th-a -out I.west quarter of section&#13;
twenty four u'-O h^u'-i south ot the highway&#13;
ruunin^ through .-;u&gt;i'land and extending from&#13;
the censer of said highway south to the center of&#13;
the creek and in width, east and weet, sufficient t o&#13;
make tho threw acres of land. All in Town one ( I )&#13;
North and Itiiuge four (4) east, County of Living*&#13;
ston and Mate of Michigan,&#13;
Dated &gt; arch 1Mb, 190».&#13;
E. A. &amp; L. E. STOWE G. W. T E K P L K ,&#13;
t LM A t t y s . tor Mortgagee Mortgagee&#13;
BUStN£SS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.SIGLEft V . D - C. L. S1GLE.R M. L&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
PbyeiciaLt. a n ^ jur&gt;euiit&lt;. A l t caliu piouij.Oy&#13;
attended t o d a y ^ i i i g h t . (Uiiee o n Main s h e e t&#13;
P i o c k n e v , M i t b .&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For irifonnatinu, oall at uie i'iuckncy DISPATCH&#13;
uthce. Auction Bills Free&#13;
Dexter Independant Phone&#13;
Arranyemtut^ made for sale by plume ;i&#13;
my expense. Oot uV&#13;
Address, Dexter, /Wichlgai^&#13;
E,1 \S.J&gt;AN1KLS,&#13;
§ GKNKRAI, AUCTIONPKK.&#13;
S a t i s l » c . : u n d u t t r a u l e e d . F o r i n f o i i n : i -&#13;
t i o u call a\ I)1.&gt;1'AT('H Oth'ce o r a d d r e s s&#13;
C i i e g o r y , M i t i i . r. f. d . 2. J^ymliiht p l u m e&#13;
C o i i u e c t i o n . A u c t i o n l i ! N ,'uni t i n u i p&#13;
l u i D I ^ I U t rrcp.&#13;
v FR/..NK L AM DREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
r « T C , n Cf-f c&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke WtU be delighted&#13;
with the famous&#13;
C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
S CENTS.&#13;
tf your dealer don't handle&#13;
them tend to us for a box as&#13;
atrial. Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this is tiie cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
* MA1IWAC1TOBD MP&#13;
GHRISmiBBO^rWiMW^Pa.&#13;
Does your back ache? Is your sktn leathery and yellow.&#13;
Is your urine murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten persona have kidney&#13;
trouble. They don't always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The Kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before yon reel it&#13;
That is why it is so necessary to notice the sHghtest Irregularity. If&#13;
anything is wrong with yow kidneys it should be BttafjatA 10 at coot*&#13;
Dona take strong, drastio drag*. They are dangerotav&#13;
Ton will be perfectly safe and sure of a rwrraanent cure by taking&#13;
DR.THACHERS LIVER £ BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing the CKBBe and&#13;
Artving fog jr-flamTnutiftn anfl t&gt;ir dinnaao ont of thn affirrtftrl r-j; Ann,&#13;
All D e a l e r s Sell 6 0 o , a n d S l . 0 0 B o t t l e s . THACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga,Tenn.&#13;
DONT P A V&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofin^a are roailv '-*.-&#13;
r,,-rrr paid for, because they need paint:n;r or&#13;
coating every year err two. If you add to the COST, of tb&#13;
rocfinps thact&gt;st of painting1 durine the nurr.Vr &lt;:•'! ,vt'&gt;; - :.i&#13;
vice, vou will readily understand why&#13;
J-M ASBESTOS R O O F I N G -&#13;
w-hich needs no coating—is the ''cheapest-rot yc;j- "Rmf-&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanently durable HTV! :"&gt;!.-• -&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, hear, or cold can atV;-.-•. u&#13;
less than slate, iron or shingles. Cm he applied h.. .^ o:n*.&#13;
A s k for* s a m p l e s a n d p»-ic«."-&gt;».&#13;
H W &lt;!OHNS-MANVIL»L*ECo.&#13;
7 2 d c f t c r s o n A v e . D e t r o i t , vj I c ' i l ^ a n&#13;
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MAN OR BEAST? 1&#13;
By JELLJS PARKER BUTLER&#13;
•7ZZTZZZZZZTZZZZZZZZTrTTTZTZZXZZTS:ZTT.ZZrZTTJf^r)&#13;
(Copyright, by Daily Hlury Pub. Cu.)&#13;
It was half a a hour before the performance&#13;
in the big tent, but the molingerie&#13;
t e a t was begimiiug to fill. T h e&#13;
fa«oJlae torches were blaziug fiercely&#13;
apd adding their fuiueu to the ouugimt&#13;
«Ai(Oal odor», and t h e aruixu* or t h e&#13;
damp pine tutwdust under foot aided in&#13;
creating that distinctly circus scent&#13;
•that is the inceuse of bliss to the noae&#13;
of the small boy.&#13;
The venderu of peanuts and pink&#13;
and white "iemo" were buay at their&#13;
stands near where t h e rough-hided&#13;
elephants and shop-worn camels were&#13;
chained to stakes around t h e centerpole,&#13;
and through an opening at t h e&#13;
far end of the tent could be seen t h e&#13;
tiers of blue plank seats in t h e b i g tent&#13;
beyond, and one or two blue-jacketed&#13;
men hastily raking sawdust in the two&#13;
big rings.&#13;
A stream of eager sightseers pressed&#13;
around t h e circle of cages, crowding&#13;
close to t h e guard-ropes, ejaculating&#13;
with wonder a t sight of the gnu or&#13;
eagerly glancing ahead In vain endeavor&#13;
to see t h e hippopotamus with&#13;
his cave-like mouth. Those who had&#13;
caaes or umbrellas slyly poked the&#13;
animals,-keeping one eye on the sleepy&#13;
watchmen.&#13;
It was t h e real circus, t h e only ten&#13;
combined greatest shows on earth, and&#13;
i t fcad actually come t o Yarnaby in all&#13;
its glory with i t s cages and fluttering&#13;
banners, i t s four champion bands and&#13;
lightning ticket-sellers. It was the real&#13;
circus, from the wonderful beasts that&#13;
appeared on t h e show-bills and nowhere&#13;
else, to the poles and posts and&#13;
Beats, painted that shade of blue that&#13;
fs seen on circus-poles and posts and&#13;
seats and is seeu there only.&#13;
All Yarnaby county that had not attended&#13;
t h e morning performance&#13;
Crowded the tent that evening, and of&#13;
all the animals t h e lions were viewed&#13;
with the greatest awe. The monarchs&#13;
of the animal kingdom lay at the back&#13;
X&#13;
• v • • *&#13;
"He'a H y p n e r t i i i n ' the L i o n . "&#13;
^•f itheir cage blinking sleepily and&#13;
igttncing now and then at t h e curious&#13;
Jkjoes of t h e crowd n-itli lazy indifference.&#13;
When, from sheer weariness, the&#13;
Uohcss yawned and showed her white&#13;
teeth, the crowd before (he cage fell&#13;
back precipitately aiul Mio women&#13;
uttered little cries of terror. The lionesse&#13;
let her head drop comfortably between&#13;
her paws and slaneod at her&#13;
mate.&#13;
"What do you think of that?" she&#13;
.asked.&#13;
The Hon sniffed contemptuously.&#13;
"They weary me," he said; "to tell&#13;
t h e truth, everything wearies me now.&#13;
I'd like to go back to the jungle. Do&#13;
you remember the day T killed Ino&#13;
wild ox, fioon after I met you?"&#13;
"Indeed I do,'" said the lioness; "I&#13;
can see you still erawlmg slowly neare&#13;
r while you held him spell-bound&#13;
with your eyes until yon sprang upon&#13;
his back and bore him down."&#13;
The lion raised bis head and swayed&#13;
his tall stealthily, as he had in his&#13;
free days, and then laid hi.s head on&#13;
his paw and ga^ed through the bars&#13;
of the cage.&#13;
, "Yes!" he said. ' Y e s ! 1 would give&#13;
all this comfort and regular diet for&#13;
&lt;Ma day of the old bunt. Just to&#13;
~%s&gt; free and to hypnotize an antelope&#13;
CTfl shaggy ox as I stole upon it, to&#13;
« a t it quiver with fear, wishing to fly,&#13;
tield nerveless by the power of my&#13;
Do you remember the day I hypid&#13;
a m a n ? "&#13;
*3adeed I d o ! " said his wife, proud&#13;
| p , **«e was an Englishman."&#13;
"Yes," said the lion, "a mighty hunt-&#13;
#r. It was the full of the moon, at. the&#13;
antelope pool. He was hunting me."&#13;
JHe chuckled grimly. "Do you re memfjor,&#13;
It wan our firstborn's birthday.&#13;
.We ate the Englishman for dinner that.&#13;
night. It was little Leo's first taste of&#13;
man."&#13;
"I can se« It very plainly," said the&#13;
H o n — : "but I should hate to have&#13;
soavt a m a n with a guu now,&#13;
dear. Klght years of butcher's meat&#13;
have dulled your eye*. I fear you&#13;
could not hypnotise a rabbit now."&#13;
The lion raised his head and hltt&#13;
brow contracted, l i e gazed over the&#13;
heads of the crowd into the jungle of&#13;
hie youth. The lioness bad hurt his&#13;
pride.&#13;
At that moment Silas and Sally&#13;
stood before t h e ostrich cages. Silas&#13;
was in his Sunday clothes, a n d on&#13;
his breast glowed a scarlet tie, and&#13;
Sally clung to his arm with both hands&#13;
only loosening her grip from time t o&#13;
time to take a bite uf t h e brick of&#13;
popcorn she carried.&#13;
She glanced a t the crowd ahead of&#13;
them.&#13;
"What are we coudn" t o now, S i ? "&#13;
she asked.&#13;
"That's the lions," said Silas. "Ever&#13;
seen a n y ? " ;&#13;
She tightened her grip on hla ariu&#13;
and giggled nervously.&#13;
"No, I ain't," she said, "Ain't you&#13;
frightened of them?"&#13;
"Who?—me?" asked Silas, contemptuously.&#13;
"No, I .ain't scared.&#13;
They're safe enough; they's stout iron&#13;
bars to his cage. There's a feller gits&#13;
in his cage and makes him act. We'll&#13;
see him in the big tent. I seen it on&#13;
the show bills."&#13;
"Ain't you makin' fun of me, S i ? "&#13;
she asked. "My sakes! I wouldn't git&#13;
in that cage fer nawfhin'."&#13;
"Pshaw! it's easy wnen you know&#13;
how to do it," said Silas. "He does it&#13;
with his eye. Hypnertizes 'em."&#13;
"What's t h a t ? " she asked. "How&#13;
kin anybody hypnertize a lion, Si?"&#13;
"Well, he jlst looks him plum in the&#13;
eye, steady. I read all about it once.&#13;
When he looks hard enough the lion's&#13;
got ter do what he wants him ter do."&#13;
"Ain't that funny, n o w ! " giggled&#13;
Sally. "I bet you couldn't do it."&#13;
"I bet I kin," he boasted; "I got a&#13;
mighty steady eye."&#13;
They had edged their way up to the&#13;
lion's cage, and as the lion lowered&#13;
his gaze it fell on t h e scarlet of&#13;
Silas* tie.&#13;
"Well, my dear," said t h e Hon, "I&#13;
may be getting stout, but I'll show you&#13;
my eye has lost none of its cunning.&#13;
See that man with t h e red spot on&#13;
his breast? I will hold him spellbound&#13;
as I did the ox and the Englishman&#13;
until you a r e convinced."&#13;
The lion arose and walked to t h e&#13;
front of the cage, his eyes fastened on&#13;
Silas' face.&#13;
Sally screamed and drew back in&#13;
terror, but Silas laughed.&#13;
"Don't be scared," he said; "jlst&#13;
hang onto me. I'll show you I kin&#13;
hypnertize him."&#13;
"What you goin' ter make him do?"&#13;
asked Sally, tremulously.&#13;
"I'm a-goin' t e r make him go back&#13;
an' lay down," said Silas. He braced&#13;
his feet firmly and gazed straight Into&#13;
the lion's eyes, repeating Blowly under&#13;
his breath: "Go an' lay down! Go a n '&#13;
lay down!" and the lion leaned his&#13;
nose against a bar and glared at&#13;
Silas.&#13;
The crowd edged close to Silas.&#13;
"What's he doin'?" they asked in&#13;
whispers.&#13;
Sally giggled.&#13;
"Pie's hypnertizin' the lion," she&#13;
whispered, proudly, and t h e word&#13;
passed from one to another, and all&#13;
stood eagerly watching Silas and t h e&#13;
Hon by trims.&#13;
The pupils of-the lion's eyes contracted&#13;
and expanded. Flashes of yellow&#13;
fire flew from them. His tail&#13;
swung slowly to and fro, coiling and&#13;
uncoiling like an angry serpent.&#13;
Silas wrinkled bis brow and frowned&#13;
steadily nt the lion. He clenched his&#13;
fists and drew every muscle tense. He&#13;
breathed quickly, and dug his toes into&#13;
the insoles of his boots, and tried t o&#13;
concentrate his whole being into the&#13;
words: "Go aa'- ray floWn," that ran&#13;
through h i s brain, r.nd t h e minutes&#13;
slipped by.&#13;
The crowd wearied and passed on,&#13;
but Silas ajud the lion stood motion&#13;
less.&#13;
The ,lion swung his tall more rapidly,&#13;
and his uostrllrt quivered with ex&#13;
cltement, and Silas set b i s teeth on&#13;
his tongue and lowered bis eyelids&#13;
until his eyes gleamed narrow and&#13;
snakedlke.&#13;
The lioness raised her khaki colored&#13;
head and gazed on t h e affair with interest,&#13;
and Sally glanced proudly a t&#13;
Silas" face aud then anxiously a t the&#13;
emptying tent.&#13;
Silas grew warm and uncomfortable&#13;
and shifted bis weight from foot t o&#13;
foot. T h e veins swelled into great&#13;
cords on his neck and hands, and he&#13;
threw his chin upward and beat, bis&#13;
head forward. "Go an' lay down:" he&#13;
almost hissed, but t h e lion swung&#13;
his tail aud gazed steadily with unwinking&#13;
eyes.&#13;
In the- big tent the band began playing.&#13;
Sally and Silas were left alone&#13;
with t h e lioness and h e r mate. Silas&#13;
longed to turn and fly, but the reputation&#13;
of his eye waa at stake. T h e&#13;
lion too was weary. H e seldom stood&#13;
so long, for he had grown fat in captivity.&#13;
A burst of applause In t h e big tent&#13;
told that t h e "grand triumphal entry&#13;
aud pageant of all nations" had begun,&#13;
and Sally pulled gently at Silas' arm.&#13;
The lioness stretched herself and&#13;
yawned.&#13;
"Well, dear," she said, "I admii youi&#13;
eye has lost none of its cunning. Coma&#13;
and He down now, or you will be too&#13;
tired t o sleep to-night."&#13;
The lion gave Silas a parting glance,&#13;
turned slowly and lay down beside his&#13;
mate, and Silas straightened his&#13;
cramped back and wiped his hot face.&#13;
"You done it, didn't you?" said Sally.&#13;
"Hurry on, or we won't git no seats in&#13;
the big tent."&#13;
Reports Seeing Leprechaun.&#13;
A real live Leprechaun, one of the&#13;
little folk, is reported to l a v e made&#13;
his appearance at Newport, Tipperary,&#13;
where people a r e credulous. A&#13;
well-known resident of t h a district,&#13;
whilst on his way home with a creel&#13;
of peat, was startled at the appearance&#13;
of a diminutive man. H e was dressed&#13;
in tightly-fitting pants, coat of brown,&#13;
white shoes, grey stockings, and a&#13;
brown cap, set off by a red tassel. Ap&#13;
parently years are telling even on the&#13;
Leprechaun, for he walked with a&#13;
limp. T h e gentleman who saw the&#13;
mannikin was so anxious to capture&#13;
him that he forgot that to lose sight&#13;
of him even for an instant is fatal to&#13;
one's chances of getting the pot of&#13;
fairy gold. The man stopped to pick&#13;
up a missle with which to 'level" the&#13;
Leprechaun, as he expressed it. When&#13;
ho looked up t h e cuto little fairy had&#13;
vanished.&#13;
Recent Electric Railroad Mileage.&#13;
The new electric railroad mileage&#13;
built in 1908 in the United States, Canada&#13;
and Mexico was 1,258 miles, computed&#13;
as single tra£k&gt; road. New York&#13;
state takes the lead in mileage with&#13;
184 miles, closely followed by Ohio&#13;
with 171 miles. Pennsylvania is accredited&#13;
with 114 miles, Texas with 91,&#13;
and Illinois with .84, while Wisconsin,&#13;
Colorado and Indiana come close together,&#13;
having 73, 68 and 66 miles, respectively.&#13;
Cod Liver Oil for Plants.&#13;
A woman who own': two splendidlooking&#13;
rubber plants which keep&#13;
green and vigorous though their&#13;
'rabitat is an apartment, says that she&#13;
^tributes their good health entirely&#13;
to an occasional dose of cod liver oil&#13;
She has found a large spoonful of this&#13;
,'nedicim;, from time to time, better&#13;
than any of the fertilizers usually advised,&#13;
and not more expensive.&#13;
Fragrance for Sick Room.&#13;
A delightful fragrance that is not&#13;
oppressive can be given a sick room&#13;
by putting a little cologne in a saucer&#13;
and setting fire to it.&#13;
INSTRUMENT FOUND ITS SOUL&#13;
•x-&#13;
The Story of a Violin That Was&#13;
Wrecked in a Fire.&#13;
After t h e Lucky Baldwin theater&#13;
and hotel fire in San Francisco years&#13;
ago there were nine feet of water in&#13;
the basement, where the instruments&#13;
of the orchestra were stored. When a&#13;
little of it had been pumped out, August&#13;
Hinrichs, leader of the orchestra,&#13;
hired a man to swim in and get out his&#13;
famous AmatI violin.&#13;
It was wrecked—water soaked,&#13;
warped, twisted and broken up into&#13;
68 pieces. The hot water had soaked&#13;
out. all t h e old glue, and every piece&#13;
had fallen away from its neighbor, besides&#13;
a good many patches of wood&#13;
put in when repairs had been done. To&#13;
all appearance the thing was smashed&#13;
beyond recall.&#13;
Nevertheless, Herman Muller, a&#13;
local violin repairer, who knew and&#13;
loved the old fiddle, took It in hand.&#13;
Twice he carefully joined t h e timedarkened&#13;
pieces of wood. Twice he&#13;
decided that the AmatI would not do.&#13;
So once more he soaked the 68 bite&#13;
of wood apart. Then h e carefully&#13;
modeled out of clay an arch such a?&#13;
he remembered that of t h e old Amati&#13;
to have had, and for nine weks kept&#13;
the bits of wood bound to it until they&#13;
had gained the proper shape.&#13;
Once more he put the bits of wood&#13;
together. Then for five weeks more&#13;
he patiently varnished tfhd polished&#13;
the more than 200-year-old fiddle until&#13;
it. shone. Then Hinrichs once more&#13;
drew his how across t h e vibrating&#13;
strings, and the violin spoke. It sang.&#13;
wept, bubbled with life and joy.&#13;
The AmatI had found Its soul.&#13;
Dog's Good Sense Saved I t&#13;
In t h e big flood which recently pervaded&#13;
t h e Almond Valley, near Perth,&#13;
Scotland, a plowman suddenly remembered&#13;
that he had left a dog In a&#13;
Bhed. He hurried to its rescue and&#13;
was gratified to find that t h e dog had&#13;
shown t h e sense to get Into a washing-&#13;
tub, and waa comfortably flofttl&amp;f&#13;
a bout 4c ita a r k -&#13;
•&lt;-' 4&#13;
6IRL HOBO POSES AS&#13;
MAW SEVERAL YEARS&#13;
A R R E 8 T I P FOR T H E F T A N D 8CX&#13;
REVEALED—WORKED AT MANY&#13;
J088, BUT NEVER 8U8PECTED.&#13;
St. Louis.—To t h e perspicuity of a&#13;
detective of the East St. Louis police&#13;
department, t h e sex of Mabel Davis,&#13;
who h a s been working several years&#13;
at J a m e s Davis, waa discovered a t the&#13;
JCaat St. Loulb police station the other&#13;
day. She, with her "pal," Del Brown,&#13;
was arrested on a charge of stealing&#13;
from some of t h e boarders a t Hal's&#13;
boarding hou e.&#13;
She was taken to Belleville where&#13;
Sheriff Cashel provided h e r with female&#13;
garments, although she declared&#13;
that she did not expect to wear them.&#13;
With hands calloused and hardened&#13;
aud a frame indicative of the ordinary&#13;
She W a s Arrested w i t h H e r " P a l , "&#13;
Del Brown, f o r Robbery.&#13;
laborer, Mabel looked like a husky&#13;
man. It was t h e finely molded neck&#13;
which attracted the detective to the&#13;
girl. He thought Mabel's neck looked&#13;
too soft aud delicate for a man, even&#13;
if he was dressed in common clothes.&#13;
Grabbing Mabel by the shoulder, he&#13;
asked her what she meant by posing&#13;
as a man. Then, like a woman, Mabel&#13;
broke down and cried, and finally admitted&#13;
she was a woman. „&#13;
For a year Mabel has been a hobo&#13;
and a common laborer. She was born&#13;
and reared in Waverly, N. Y., and she&#13;
says that she has worked behind the&#13;
plow ever since she has been able to&#13;
handle the reins.&#13;
A year ago the people with whom&#13;
she lived died, she said, and left her&#13;
alone in the world. She decided to&#13;
go west, and a s she had no money, she&#13;
adopted male attire. Mabel said she&#13;
worked her way and part of the time&#13;
"bummed it." She told the police that&#13;
she could ride the bumpers with the&#13;
facility of the educated hobo.&#13;
On her trips with hob'os she got into&#13;
the habit of smoking cigarettes, and&#13;
now rolls them with the facility of a&#13;
man. She also learned to chew tobacco.&#13;
Six months ago she got a&#13;
job in St. Louis with a wrecking company&#13;
and helped to tear down old&#13;
buildings.&#13;
She worked at this for a month and&#13;
then came to the East side as a dishwasher&#13;
and assistant cook at a grading&#13;
camp. She then got a job at a&#13;
boarding house, and in dull times&#13;
usorl to shovel with the section hands.&#13;
All of this time, she says, no one suspected&#13;
that she waa a girl.&#13;
S E L L S H I S W I F E F O R $20.&#13;
Husband Deeds Young Mother w i t h&#13;
Babe to Man of Fifty.&#13;
New Westminster, Mo.—The assistance&#13;
of 'Chief of City Police Mcintosh&#13;
and Detective Rradshaw was sought&#13;
by a man named Barker, a resident of&#13;
Sapporton, who claimed that he was&#13;
not getting satisfaction out of an extraordinary&#13;
bargain into which he had&#13;
entered with an individual named Gerard,&#13;
who had, on payment, of $20 cash,&#13;
ceded all his interests in his wife, a&#13;
comely young woman of 1.9, to Barker,&#13;
who is past 40.&#13;
The woman was in the maternity&#13;
cottage a t Royal Columbian hospital&#13;
when the transfer waa made. Gerard&#13;
left, the city for the south shortly after&#13;
leeeiving tho $20.&#13;
The sale of the woman became public&#13;
property when Barker went to the&#13;
hospital to claim her while s h e waa&#13;
still too weak to leave the institution,&#13;
having a baby to care for. The man&#13;
insisted on her taking up h e r abode&#13;
with him, but she insisted on delay.&#13;
Unable to persuade her to accompany&#13;
him, Barker went to the police for&#13;
help and told the story of the deal. He&#13;
commented that all the woman's&#13;
clothes and personal effects had been&#13;
thrown into the bargain for the $20,&#13;
and that these were then at his real&#13;
dence.&#13;
While all the parties concerned In&#13;
this deal a r e whites, the woman is&#13;
related by marriage to a number oJ&#13;
Chinese in this city,&#13;
May Wtens&amp;wriftty ovaccfra*&#13;
5\stosvuvJ\WwfcVtu\y tau$i&amp;\a\&#13;
rooty \M 4TQ&amp;\U% $\ypiiw&amp; wifa&#13;
wub&amp;\«&amp; wWra^ivK&amp; ore tooasufe&#13;
prefer ^rta,oa&amp;Ti^Ytvit| $ M H %&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
FIG SYRUP CO. .SOLD aVAU-LBAPIMO PftUOCIST* _&#13;
ORK»ixcomy*-acQULAi) Mice 50+PtR aoTTufi&#13;
True friendship can afford true&#13;
knowledge. A want of discernment&#13;
cannot be an ingredient in it.—Thoreau.&#13;
Try atoriae By» Remedy&#13;
For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes.&#13;
Compounded by Experienced Physlciana.&#13;
Conform* to the Pure Food and Drugu&#13;
Law. Murine Doean't Smart. Soothes Eyo&#13;
Pain. Try Murine for Your Eyes.&#13;
Remember you have once been&#13;
young, and never forget you may one&#13;
day be old.—Plggott.&#13;
Wise people uae Hamlins Wizard Oi]&#13;
to stop pain because they know it always&#13;
makes good. Foolish people try experiments.&#13;
Ask your druKgiflta about it.&#13;
Giving money will have no value&#13;
except we first give ourselves.—Murray.&#13;
P I L E S CURED I N 8 TO 14 DATS.&#13;
i'A^O OIJNTMHNT18guaranteed to curti.uujr caw&#13;
of lU-hlnR, Blind. B1B*X)1DK or Protruding Vila* ia&#13;
ti to 11 day9or money refunded. 6Uo.&#13;
Women like t o talk of the days&#13;
they were Bingle and had a good time.&#13;
AUen's Foot-Eiue, u P o w d e r&#13;
fc'or swollen, sweating fuet. Gives instant relief. Thii&#13;
original powdor tor inn fuel. 26c at all DruggUta.&#13;
From the blackmailer's viewpoint,&#13;
keeping secrets is a paying business.&#13;
Mra. Wlnalow'a Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children UethlQK, softens theKiima, reduce* tonamuiftUvw,&#13;
allay» pain, curanwtad collu. 25cabotUs.&#13;
The best thin* to do when you catch&#13;
a caM is to let go of it.&#13;
7£ DODDS '&lt;,&#13;
| K I D N E Y |&#13;
&amp;. PILLS .-^&#13;
[5 "Guar***&#13;
TOILET ANTISEPTIC&#13;
NOTHING LIKE IT FOR&#13;
T U P T F C T U P " ^ " * e x c e k a n v dentifrice&#13;
I H t I b b I f l in cleansing, whitening and&#13;
amoving tartar from the teeth, bc&amp;idea destroying&#13;
all germa of decay and disease which ordinary&#13;
tooth preparation a cannot do.&#13;
T U a T U n i I T U ^axtine used as a mouth-&#13;
I l i b I f l U U I H waih disinfects the mouth&#13;
and throat, purifici the breath, and kills the germs&#13;
which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat,&#13;
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sick new.&#13;
T U P P V P Q when inflamed, tired, ache&#13;
I l i b b I b O and burn, may be instantly&#13;
Rheved and strengthened by Paxtine.&#13;
A l W l P Q U Paxtine will destroy the germs&#13;
V A I A f l l i n that cause catarrh, heal the in-&#13;
Bammanoa and atop the discharge. It ta a aura&#13;
remedy for uterine catarrh.&#13;
Paxtine it a harm leas yet powerful&#13;
agrracide.diwirWlant and deodorizer.&#13;
Us«d ia bathing it destroys odors and&#13;
leave* the body antiteptically dean.&#13;
FOR BALE AT DRUQ aTORta.BOc.&#13;
on FoaTPAio a t MALL.&#13;
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!&#13;
THE PAXTOH TOILET OO. BOSTON. M A M . Worms "Caacareta are certainly fine. I jrave a friend&#13;
one when the doctor waa treating him for cancer&#13;
of the stomach. The next morning he paaaed&#13;
four pieces of a tape worm. He then got a box&#13;
aad la three day* ne paaaed a tapeworm 48 f—t&#13;
lone. It was Mr. Matt Free*, of MiUeraburg,&#13;
Dauphin Co., Pa. I am quite a worker for Caacareta.&#13;
I ttae then myself and And them beneficial&#13;
for moat any disease caused by impure blood."&#13;
Chsa. B. Condon, I^ewiiton, Pa., (Mifflin Co.)&#13;
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good.&#13;
Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gr1p«h&#13;
We, 230.38D. Never sold rabnlk. The«eno»&#13;
ts* ta^ktstesnpedC C C. (Hsaraatatd to&#13;
lacyomrnjanay bank, J e t&#13;
.i&#13;
asasssp •'J-.LL--—'&gt;•;,wi;o.# vm.i- is m sssss^sasapsss&#13;
»&#13;
TO FEED SUES&#13;
POVERTY STRICKEN BRAHMINS&#13;
GIVE MILK TO DEADLY COBRAS&#13;
WHICH THEY WORSHIP.&#13;
THE 'CRACKING OF PAINT.&#13;
LET CHILDREN GO HUNGRY&#13;
Missionary Talis of Halr-Rsislng Experience&#13;
with Reptile In the Jungle&#13;
District of India—Blows Serpent's&#13;
Head Off.&#13;
Seattle, Wash. - I n an address on religious&#13;
work in India, Rev. N. P. Nielsen,&#13;
who has been living for 16 years&#13;
in Pooua, Bombay, as an independent&#13;
missionary in one ol the. jungle dis&#13;
tricts, said that 30,00(^ persons "were&#13;
killed there every year by cobras,&#13;
which they worship fanatically. The&#13;
Brahmins of Poona, Bombay presidency,&#13;
are retarded in their approach&#13;
to civilization by their constant veneration&#13;
for the reptiles, uud even when&#13;
Christianized cannot bring themselves&#13;
to kill one of them.&#13;
"The animal and reptile worship-of&#13;
India is startling," said Rev. Mr. Nielsen.&#13;
"In every living thing, through&#13;
the doctrine of reincarnation and the&#13;
worship of ancestors, the Brahmins&#13;
see a forefather, and to kill a cobra&#13;
with them is to kill a grandmother.&#13;
They safeguard the lives of these venomous&#13;
creatures with jealous care.&#13;
"1 have known many of them, in&#13;
the bitterest dregs of biting poverty,&#13;
to starve their babies in order to feed&#13;
milk to these deadliest of enemies,&#13;
which might strike them down a&#13;
moment after having their fill. To&#13;
convert the Brahmins to Christianity&#13;
means to remove in some degree this&#13;
reptile worship, but they are long in&#13;
the teachings of Christ before they&#13;
will consent to kill a cobra.&#13;
"Escapes from the deadly bite of the&#13;
cobra are common to the jungle missionary,&#13;
and one experience of mine&#13;
will suffice as a type of a long list&#13;
•luring the 1G years I was circuit riding&#13;
among these people.&#13;
I started out on my Dicycle late one&#13;
afternoon from Poona, for the purpose&#13;
of reaching an outlying district that&#13;
night. I carried with me a rifle and&#13;
"I Saw the Slimy Length of One of&#13;
These Pests About Me."&#13;
some provisions. Darkness overtook&#13;
me when 40 miles out, and I saw there&#13;
was nothing for it but to lie on the&#13;
ground and sleep.&#13;
"Something oppressed me when 1&#13;
awoke early in the morning, and when&#13;
I tried to get my breath the life was&#13;
nearly choked out of me. I had long&#13;
before learned the habits of the cobra,&#13;
and instinctively shuddered as through&#13;
half-closed lids I saw the slimy length&#13;
of one of these pests about me. Its&#13;
tail was coiled half way about my&#13;
neck, its head at my ankle, ready at&#13;
an instant's alarm to kill me as I lay.&#13;
"A movement would have been&#13;
death. Scarcely daring to breathe, I&#13;
grew cold from the roots of my hair&#13;
to the soles of my feet. The delicately&#13;
poised nature of the snake must&#13;
have caught my Involuntary shudder,&#13;
for within the n«xt moment or two&#13;
I felt fhe coils sTOwly relax about my&#13;
neck and the long sinuous body begin&#13;
to take up its length. The fine haad&#13;
was HftcrT~from my ankle, and aa it&#13;
slowly reache4 t h e srepuhd at my feet,&#13;
raised Itself and stole aoft}y fcway.&#13;
"I dared not make any motion until&#13;
It was twenty or thirty feet away.&#13;
Quickly, swinging my rifle into position.&#13;
I flrtd and blew off its head.&#13;
This %as no{. an easy,shot at that distance,&#13;
but I'have been regarded as a&#13;
fairly good m'arksniftri, and my fife deponded&#13;
on a steady w»rve. The anako&#13;
measured eight feet and six inches in&#13;
length."&#13;
Property Owners Can 8 a v s Money&#13;
Ay Learning the Cause.&#13;
Do you know whjftt is wrong wfcen&#13;
paint peels, o r cracks, or otherwise&#13;
necessitates premature re-painting?&#13;
Well, sometimes it hasn't been&#13;
properly applied—the surface being&#13;
damp or there being too much turpentine&#13;
or too much drier.&#13;
But, nine times out of ten, t h e&#13;
trouble is caused by adulterated&#13;
white lead.&#13;
To avoid all uuch trouble, every&#13;
houseowner should know in a general&#13;
way, when a surface is in proper condition&#13;
to receive paint, what kind of&#13;
primer and finishing coats different&#13;
surfaces require, and how to avoid&#13;
adulteration in materials.&#13;
A complete painting guide, including&#13;
a book of color schemes, specifications&#13;
for all kinds of painting work,&#13;
and an instrument for detecting adulterations&#13;
in painting materials, with&#13;
directions for using it, can be had&#13;
free by writing National Lead Company,&#13;
1902 Trinity Bldg., New York,&#13;
and asking for Hauseowner's Painting&#13;
Outfit No. 49.&#13;
This company, the largest makers&#13;
of pure white lead, invite tests, by&#13;
means of the blowpipe (included In&#13;
outfit), or in any other way, of the&#13;
purity of the white lead sold under&#13;
their famous "Dutch Boy Painter"&#13;
trademark. That trademark on a k e g&#13;
of white lead is in itself an absolute&#13;
guarantee of purity and quality.&#13;
The secret or success.&#13;
The motto of success was given in&#13;
this tale, told at a banquet:&#13;
A Swede among the miners in the&#13;
west was noted for always strikfug&#13;
pay dirt. His fellows thought that&#13;
there must be some secret to the unusual&#13;
success of the Swede and questioned&#13;
him as to how he always succeeded&#13;
in finding the spot where the&#13;
gold cropped out.&#13;
"Veil, Ay don't know ef Ay can tell&#13;
anytang 'bout dat," answered Ole. "Ay&#13;
only know dat Ay yust keep on diggin'.&#13;
"-—Milwaukee Free Press.&#13;
A Modern Miracle.&#13;
"I caused the dumb to speak today."&#13;
"How was that?"&#13;
"I was stopped in the Btreet by a&#13;
beggar with an 'I Am Deaf and Dumb'&#13;
placard on his breast, and when I expressed&#13;
the opinion that he was an impostor&#13;
he immediately recovered his&#13;
speech and in vigorous Anglo-Saxon&#13;
requested me to go to—er—the place&#13;
that the new theology tells us doesn't&#13;
exist, and mind my .own business and&#13;
ae'd mind his!"&#13;
The First Word.&#13;
"That is what I call an ideal marriage,"&#13;
Hardy declared to his wife as&#13;
they were walking homeward after an&#13;
evening at the Carrolls'. "Actually,&#13;
I believe both think absolutely alike."&#13;
"Yes, they are certainly charming,"&#13;
assented Mrs. Hardy; "but about&#13;
thinking, Joe, if you will notice, she&#13;
generally thinks first."—Youth's Com&#13;
panion.&#13;
Value of Aspirations.&#13;
An aspiration is a joy forever, a&#13;
possession as solid as a landed estate,&#13;
a fortune which we c a n ) never exhaust&#13;
and which gives us, year by&#13;
year, a revenue of pleasurable activity.&#13;
To have many of these is to be&#13;
spiritually rich.—R. L. Stevenson.&#13;
Gen.&#13;
The Plain Facts.&#13;
"Then you were not one of&#13;
Washington's body servants?"&#13;
" "No, sir. I'll tell you de trufe, sir.&#13;
I was jest one of his field hands."—&#13;
Kansas City Journal.&#13;
SISTER'S TRICK&#13;
But It All Came Out Right.&#13;
MUST BELIEVE IT.&#13;
Every Reader Will Concede the T r u t h&#13;
of This Statement.&#13;
One who suffers with backache o r&#13;
any form of kidney trouble wants a&#13;
lasting cure, not&#13;
merely a temporary&#13;
benefit. Profit by&#13;
the example o l&#13;
Rev. J. M. Suffleld,&#13;
Of 2179 8. 8th St.,&#13;
Lincoln, Nebr., who&#13;
confirms a report&#13;
of bis cure after&#13;
several years. "I&#13;
told in a statement&#13;
made for publication&#13;
in 1900 how&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills&#13;
had relieved m e&#13;
after other remedies&#13;
had failed,"&#13;
said Rev. Suffleld. "I have no hesitation&#13;
in confirming that statement now.&#13;
I have used Doan's Kidney Pills a t&#13;
various times and they have never&#13;
failed me."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Fostei-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
!*&#13;
You Are In Danger F**ff you let that cold run on. Neglected&#13;
colds cause incurable diseases.&#13;
Don't risk your health.&#13;
Keep a bottle oi&#13;
DR-DJAYNE'S&#13;
EXPECTORANT&#13;
in your home. It's the safest, rarest&#13;
and quickest remedy for colds ever&#13;
compounded. For Coughs, Bronchitis,&#13;
Pleurisy, Inflammation of the&#13;
Langs, in fact, all diseases caused&#13;
by neglected colds. It has no equal.&#13;
Recommended and sold by druggists&#13;
everywhere.&#13;
The* dxchoitit*. $1.00, 50c. 25c&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
Finance and Fashions.&#13;
Howell—I thought you didn't like the&#13;
way the tailor made that check suit&#13;
and that you were going to make him&#13;
take it back.&#13;
Powell—I tried to, but I found that&#13;
protested checks didn't go with him.—&#13;
Bohemian.&#13;
For Colds and Grip.&#13;
Lane'b Pleasant Tablets (laxative) cure&#13;
colds in an hour and are the bent treatment&#13;
for ^rip. Do not -wait a minute when&#13;
you feel a cold coming on, but get a box&#13;
of these tablets and save jjuffmnj,' and expense.&#13;
They are sold by drujzpists and&#13;
dealers at 25 cents a box. Orator F.&#13;
Woodward. Le Hoy, X. Y. Sample free.&#13;
Their Ins and Outs.&#13;
Mrs. Plumpton (with fashion paper)&#13;
—Oh, Paul, this is indeed good news!&#13;
Thank, thank heaven, hips are coming&#13;
in again!&#13;
Mr. Plumpton—In? You mean bursting&#13;
out, don't you?—Puck.&#13;
This Will Interest Mothers.&#13;
Mother Gruy's Sweet Powders for Children,&#13;
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in&#13;
Children's Home, N e w York, cure Constipation,&#13;
Feverishness, Teething Disorders,&#13;
Stomach Troubles and Destroy Worms;&#13;
30,000 testimonials of euros. All druggists,&#13;
2k:. Sample F R E E . Address Allen S. Olnv&#13;
sted, Le Roy. N. Y.&#13;
At the Butcher's.&#13;
"Is this meat dear?"&#13;
"No, ma'am, sheep!"&#13;
Dyspepsia and constipation are avoidable&#13;
miseries—bake Garfield T«a, Nature's lierb&#13;
laxative.&#13;
Samson was the first actor on record&#13;
to bring down the house.&#13;
ONLY ONE "RROMO QTTININK."&#13;
That is T.AXATIVK UUOMO ylTlNlNK. Ivoo* for&#13;
tho ^nature ,,f K W. &lt;JItoVK. I'SMI tbo World&#13;
ofer toCurem Luld in One Day, 25c.&#13;
It sometimes happens that a distant&#13;
• elation is too close.&#13;
Tney regulate the Bowels&#13;
P o s i t i v e l y c a r e d by&#13;
t h e s e Little P i l l s .&#13;
They also relieve Distress&#13;
from Dy apepala, Indigeatkm&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Kiwtiuf. A perfect remedy&#13;
lor Dizzlnetib, Nau-&#13;
&gt;*«**, Drowbiuetsu, B a d&#13;
Taate in the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain in the&#13;
S i d e , TOKPID LIVER,&#13;
Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
Western C a m * U»&#13;
"TheLastBistWttT&#13;
The government oi&#13;
Canada now give*&#13;
to every actual sstw&#13;
tier 1 0 0 a w e * at&#13;
*ffc«at-4rcmjh»jf&#13;
l a n d frmm A8d a n&#13;
additional 160 acres,&#13;
at |3.00 an acre. The 3QSMW* Contented&#13;
American ecttlera snaking their b o n e s SB&#13;
W e s t e r n C a n a d a is the best evidence of&#13;
the superiority of that country. They are*&#13;
becoming rich, growing from 23 to $s&gt;&#13;
bushels wheat to the acre; 60 to 110 boaaV&#13;
sis oats and 45 to 60 bushels barley, bsv&#13;
sides having splendid herds of cattle raised&#13;
on the prairie grass. Dairying is a n i m -&#13;
portant industry. *&#13;
The crop of IMS still keeps Western Canada&#13;
in the lead. The world will soon look to it a *&#13;
its lood-produccr.&#13;
' 'The thing which most impressed as waa taa&#13;
magnitude of ibe toon try that in ayaiJahW fo£&#13;
auni'iiHarul ppuurryyuuisbccbb-."" — SvUUmm&#13;
ComnvntUtkx, num. JUitertst&#13;
Low railway rates, good schools and churches*&#13;
markets coavenicut, price* the highest, cUmat*&#13;
pcrfect.&#13;
Lands are for Nile by Railway and Land Coov*&#13;
panics. Descriptive pamphlet*asd maps aent fre*.1&#13;
*"or railway rate* and other lnfonaatlun apply to-&#13;
Buperiniendexit of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or&#13;
the authorised Cauadlau UuvenuiMmt agent:&#13;
K. ?. rlcUlTCS. 171 asfttnss A&#13;
Kfcbisssj ar C. A. UUHZI. task Maris. Hssa*&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. VI&#13;
SUCKERS wear well&#13;
and they keep you&#13;
dry while you are&#13;
wearing them&#13;
E V E R Y W H E R E&#13;
GummED MTEmoor.&#13;
CATALOG FFE£&#13;
A. J.TfcfWER CO. BOSTON. USA.&#13;
70WCT CAMAJXAM Co. L W ™ , TORONTO. CAM.&#13;
For 16c. • Ererybody loveeearUeatregetaMeaj&#13;
'and brilliant Bower*. Therefore, to"&#13;
gain you aa a customer we offer;&#13;
1000 kernels Fir* Onion Seed.&#13;
100« " Rich Carrot Seed.&#13;
1009 " Celery. 100 Parsley.&#13;
1000 " Juicy Radish Seed.&#13;
15C0 M Buttery Lettuce Seed.&#13;
WOO M Tender Turnip Seed.'&#13;
1500 " Sweet Rutabaga S'd.&#13;
100 " Melons, 1W Tomato.&#13;
1200 " BrfllUmtflawsrtajaaasaU rIn all 10,000 kernels of warranted&#13;
northern grown seed* well worth&#13;
SI.00 of any nin't money (including&#13;
Big Catalog) all poctpaid for bat tS6&#13;
iutitnuips.&#13;
Aud t f yon send 10« we add a pack-&#13;
BioofEarlleKtr'eeyO'DaygweatC'ora.^&#13;
Big Plant, Tool and Sawd Catalog&#13;
free to Intending buyers. Writ* for&#13;
une ttxHy.&#13;
THE JOHN A. 5ALZE* SEES CO.&#13;
LaCROSSE, WIS. W&#13;
!!! DO YOU LIKE PAIN!! t&#13;
Then why suffer it when&#13;
RHEUMATOIDS&#13;
•will positiTely C U R E any case of&#13;
RHEUMATISM.&#13;
Th'.B is a remedy which sets on the Ktdneys,&#13;
ohn.InatiDK the URIC acid. Has cured Thousands,&#13;
will cure you. One Dollar a Box, by mail, postpaid.&#13;
If you Buffer write at once.&#13;
THE THY-MEN-TOLE CO., 685 Osbern sUf., Cfmltwi, 0.&#13;
This Trademark&#13;
Eliminates A l&#13;
Uncertainty&#13;
in the purchase of rint materials.&#13;
is an absolute&#13;
r a n t e e of purand&#13;
quality.&#13;
F o r y o u r own&#13;
p r o t e c t i o n , see&#13;
that iHs on the side of&#13;
every keg of white lead&#13;
you buy.&#13;
tlTtOtUKsl&#13;
1t02 TraH| Isswag, •** rat&#13;
GALLSTONES SiS^a—&#13;
Address C. COVEY.&#13;
Will tell of aca&#13;
Jj{&lt; i&gt;. A, Laaalos;.&#13;
DEFIANCE STARCH «**«towor«wuaa.*&#13;
mAPLEINE&#13;
Marches clothes nlcssC&#13;
W. N. U.f D E T R O I T , NO. 15, 1909.&#13;
A flavoring that is used the same an lemoc&#13;
or vanilla- By &lt;U.sM&gt;lvii&gt;t? frninulaled sutfar&#13;
in water and adding Muyleine, adelictouearrap&#13;
U made and u nyrup hotter than maple&#13;
Maple!ne 1 s sold by grocrs. 11 not send 35c for&#13;
2o*. bot. and recipe book. irrtmufg.C*., M*aUW.&#13;
Your Last Chance to&#13;
Get •III! Land&#13;
Cheap&#13;
How a sister played a trick that&#13;
brought rosy health to a coffee, fiend is&#13;
an interesting tale:&#13;
"I was a coffee fiend—a trembling,&#13;
nervous, physical wreck, yet elinping&#13;
to the poison that, stole away my '&gt;&#13;
strength. I mocked at Postum and&#13;
would have none of it.&#13;
"One day my sister substituted a .&#13;
cup of Postum piping hot for my morning&#13;
cup of coffee but did not tell me&#13;
what it was. I noticed the richness of j&#13;
it and remarked that the coffee tasted !&#13;
fine but my sister did not. tell me !&#13;
I was drinking Postum for fear I might&#13;
not take any more.&#13;
"She kept, the secret and kept giving&#13;
me Postum instead of coffee until&#13;
I grew stronger, more tireless, got. a j&#13;
better color in my sallow cheeks and j&#13;
a clearness to my eyes, then she told {&#13;
me of the health-giving, nerve- j&#13;
strengthening life-saver she had given •&#13;
me in place of my morning coffee, i&#13;
From that time I became a disciple of&#13;
Postum and no words can do justice&#13;
in telling the goo&lt;I this cereal drink&#13;
did me. I will not. try- to tell it, for&#13;
only after having used it can one be&#13;
convlnc«»d of its merits." ''&#13;
Ton days' trial ah6ws Post urn's power&#13;
to rehuild what coffee has destroyed.&#13;
'There's a Reason." 1&#13;
Look in pke*. for the famous little :&#13;
book, "The Road to Wellvllle."&#13;
; l i Bvr* read tit* above letter* A aeiv&#13;
lies in Idaho. Good land at such prices will soon&#13;
be gone forever. Fine farm tracts can be had&#13;
now at low prices, on easy terms. By the time&#13;
your last payment is made the land will have&#13;
doubled in value, at least.&#13;
New towns—needing trades — are growing upfast&#13;
in the wonderful Snake River country. Men&#13;
who went there poor a few years ago are now&#13;
well to do.&#13;
Own An Idaho Farm&#13;
Idaho's variety of resources is unsurpassed anywhere&#13;
in the world — money is made easily and&#13;
quickly in farming, in fruit, stock and dairying.&#13;
Alfalfa alone is making hundreds rich.&#13;
Save money, that might otherwise be spent in&#13;
tickets and hotel bills, by going direct to Idaho&#13;
and buying a farm n o w . Write t o d a y for our&#13;
free booklet.&#13;
E. L. LOMAX. C. P. A.,&#13;
Omaha. Neb*&#13;
Centralia,' IH^ltoee""£&amp;&amp;. tfwl&amp;ii&#13;
U e a r s a f e , h a s a twa-heeMrSd-'AlbhKr^-sse a p p e a r s f r o m tl'ma Vo"tlaie.'~TsVT&#13;
pig. It Is bch'Iees nnd doing well are sea nine, true, acd full of soman&#13;
Interest. 1&#13;
WORTH&#13;
MOUNTAINS&#13;
OFJiOLD&#13;
During Change of Life,&#13;
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay&#13;
Graniteville, Vt. — " I was passing&#13;
through the Changeof Life and suffered&#13;
from nervousness&#13;
andother annoying&#13;
symptoms, and I&#13;
can truly say that&#13;
LydiaE.Hnkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound&#13;
has proved&#13;
worth mountains&#13;
of gold to me, as it&#13;
restored my health&#13;
and strength. I&#13;
never forget to tell&#13;
my friends what&#13;
Ly diaE. Pinkham' s&#13;
Vegetable Compound has done for me&#13;
during this trying period. Complete&#13;
restoration to health means so much&#13;
to me that for the sake of other suffering&#13;
women I am willing to make my&#13;
trouble public so you may publish&#13;
this letter."—Mns. CILAS. IIAKCLAY.&#13;
lt.F.D.,Graniteville, Vt.&#13;
2STo other medicine for woman's ills&#13;
has received such wide-spread and unqualified&#13;
endorsement. !No other medicine&#13;
we know of has such a record&#13;
of cures of female ills as has Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
For more than 3D years it has been&#13;
curing female complaints such as&#13;
inflammation, ulceration, local weaknesses,&#13;
flbroid tumors, irregularities,&#13;
periodic pains, backache, indigestion&#13;
and nervous prostration, and it is&#13;
unequalled for carrying women safely&#13;
through the period'of change of life.&#13;
It costs but little to try Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and, :&#13;
as Mrs. Barclay says, it is "worth mountains&#13;
of gold A to suffering women,&#13;
PUTNAM F A D E L E S S D Y E *&#13;
ttfc^W*^4 b r ' ^ ^ ^ ^ • J S L S f t ? ^ 4 &lt; ^ »««*««*•• ealsftsillssrs. Tfca? t » In MM «tt«r bstts* tam any t i W cva. YcuSucss*&#13;
. 1 ,&#13;
FOR PINK EYE DISTLMPE*&#13;
CATARRHAL FSVKK&#13;
AND ALL NOSE&#13;
AMD THROAT DtSASEff&#13;
Carrn tlip sirk and act* a s a preventive for other*. Liquid flflven on&#13;
:hf»ton$rur. Safe for briKHl mares and all others. Best kidney resiedv; 60&#13;
cents arid #1.00 11 bottle ; f6,(X&gt;n.nd llft.00 thfe cloteri. Sold by all drnnriata&#13;
and hort»e (foods houses, or uent express paid, by tho manufacturers,&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO* Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA&#13;
1."&#13;
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S O U T H G R E G O R Y .&#13;
A n o t h e r beautiful day.&#13;
T h e Baptiat miuibter a n d wife&#13;
have goue to visit her parents.&#13;
H e u r y Bowman a n d wife of A n -&#13;
derson were in town S a t u r d a y&#13;
night.&#13;
R u t h Whitehead commenced&#13;
h e r work for M r s . Reim Mapes&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Nellie Bowman a n d B e u -&#13;
lah Bates called on R u t h Whitehead&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
T h e H i v e of thi« place entert&#13;
a i n e d Pinckney aud Plaiufield'&#13;
hivetj last Tuesday, a t which all&#13;
h a d a good time. I t is h o p e d to&#13;
have t h e chance e n t e r t a i n i n g t h e m&#13;
a g a i u sometime.&#13;
A&#13;
• Business Pointers. ii&#13;
For Rent&#13;
40 acres one mile west of Pinckney.&#13;
Good house and barns.&#13;
H.O.Brifws.&#13;
W 1 H T I D .&#13;
A Black Minorca Rooster, Leave&#13;
word at this office.&#13;
- Milk&#13;
at the I&#13;
&gt;&#13;
I am&#13;
toes.&#13;
WAHTBO.&#13;
and cream haul.&#13;
'reamery building.&#13;
E&#13;
flOTICB.&#13;
in the market for&#13;
arl&#13;
wt&#13;
T.&#13;
Inquire&#13;
Day.&#13;
lite pota-&#13;
Read.&#13;
TO umnr.&#13;
The premises now occupied by&#13;
.Hiram Pierce on the Dexter and&#13;
Pinckney road, locally known as the&#13;
Lipscomb place. Low rent to right&#13;
party. T. BIRKETT. t l 6&#13;
For Sale&#13;
House and one-half a^ve of land in&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Maiy Haney.&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
M. R. Foster is home from E a t&#13;
on Rapids.&#13;
Mrs. A. W. Messenger visited&#13;
Mrs. A. G. Stowe Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Milford Mileiu visited&#13;
friends in Gregory last week.&#13;
Mrs. E d Booth entertained h e r&#13;
mother, Mis. Orauge Backus Sunday.&#13;
R. I r e l a n d of Oaldeuia, Oal.,&#13;
visited A. W. Messenger a n d wife&#13;
over Sunday. Mr. I r e l a n d is looking&#13;
for a farm.&#13;
Mrs. E l m e r H u t s o n is visiting at&#13;
the home of F . C. a n d G, F . P e t -&#13;
erson. Mrs. Huteou expects to go&#13;
to h e r new home a t E a t o n RapidB&#13;
t h i s week.&#13;
E u g e n e Acker a n d wife visited&#13;
their mother, Mrs. M. D r a p e r last&#13;
Wednesday a n d T h u r s d a y a u d a t -&#13;
tended a farewell surprise given&#13;
t h e i r uucle S. H . Muusell a n d&#13;
wife Wednesday evening.&#13;
Democrats won a large part of&#13;
the ticket Monday.&#13;
M r . a n d Mrs. 0 . E . Sweet&#13;
caring for a new bady boy.&#13;
Mrs. E l m e r Hutson left&#13;
day for her new homo in&#13;
Rapids.&#13;
T h e remains of M r s .&#13;
G r a n t of L a n s i n g were placed in&#13;
t h e Mapes Cemetery last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. G. was well known in Iosco,&#13;
being t h e daughter of Mr. a u d&#13;
Mrs. B u r t Wilhelm.&#13;
Mr. and M r s F . C. Peterson,&#13;
who have returned from spending&#13;
the winter in California, were surprised&#13;
last Friday evening by a&#13;
company of their friends and&#13;
neighbors who just d r o p p e d in to&#13;
welcome their return. Chas. H i l l&#13;
in behalf of the company presented&#13;
each with B token of esteem,&#13;
after which a bountiful supper&#13;
was served and a general good&#13;
time enjoyed by all.&#13;
Miss V i r e n e MoGee of Gregory&#13;
s p e n t T h u r s d a y at D a r w i n HatU'a&#13;
Mrs. J o h n G a r d n e r a n d son&#13;
P e r c y , transacted business in&#13;
Howell last T h u r s d a y .&#13;
Mrs. Will S h e h a n a n d M r s . E d .&#13;
R e y n o l d s were pleasant callers iu&#13;
t h i s vicinity S a t u r d a y .&#13;
Mr. a u d M r s . J o h n Ledwedge,&#13;
of Dexter, visited at Chris. B r o -&#13;
gan's S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y .&#13;
are&#13;
Tues-&#13;
E a t o n&#13;
H e n r y&#13;
K. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sale&gt; as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for pa&lt;-t favors,&#13;
aad soliciting your patronage, I re-&#13;
D vours. R. (/LINTON.&#13;
•V&#13;
W o u l d it not pay you to&#13;
r a i s e a good span of&#13;
'&lt;• mules? : : : - : :&#13;
,, We have a squarely built&#13;
J a c k , bred from imported&#13;
' S p a n i s h stock; good head&#13;
a n d ears; large bone and&#13;
feet; plenty of action.&#13;
R e a d y f o r service at&#13;
Glennbrook Stock F a r m .&#13;
F. A. GLENN, Manager.&#13;
A' - —&#13;
Square Deal&#13;
Hatchery&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
* P a r e Bred Sickle C o m b Brown&#13;
% Leghorn Baby Chicks,&#13;
1 to 10 days&#13;
10 cents Bach&#13;
PLADflTELD.&#13;
Unadilla is completely d r y .&#13;
W m . Watters is away s h e a r i n g&#13;
s h e e p .&#13;
L O T M M meeting W e d n e s d a y&#13;
afternoon Apr. 14.&#13;
M r . a n d Mrs. J a s . W a l k e r s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y at B e r t Van Syckels.&#13;
E d g a r Sayles of Stockbridge&#13;
visited relatives here last week.&#13;
Unadilla Band gave a concert&#13;
at t h e Maccabee Hall h e r e Wednesday&#13;
eve.&#13;
C. A. Mapes is moving to his&#13;
new home recently purchased of&#13;
Geo. Phillips.&#13;
J o h n Longuecker of t h e M.A.C.&#13;
has been spending vacation with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
A class of Gregory L . T. L . ' B&#13;
held a medal contest here one eve&#13;
n i n g last week. H a r l o w Munsell&#13;
won t h e medal.&#13;
*4f- '*iMl&gt;f '' '"^W**1&#13;
:¾&#13;
"?i?&gt;*5. rP o r e bred B a r r e d P l y m o u t h Rock&#13;
b a b y Chicki, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
-10 ctnts Bach&#13;
• * . , • , «&#13;
C. Albert Frost&#13;
NORTH PUTNAM.&#13;
F r e d Burgess and family spent&#13;
last T h u r s d a y in Howell.&#13;
M iss E d n a Abbott is at homo&#13;
this week having a vacation.&#13;
Miss Hazel Bruff of Cohoctah&#13;
is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Bland.&#13;
Wm. White drew several loads&#13;
of baled straw to Anderson last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
F r e d Wylio is a* t h e P i n c k n e y&#13;
S a n i t a r i u m taking t r e a t m e n t for&#13;
rheumatism.&#13;
F r a n k F a r r i n g t o n is h o m e from&#13;
business college visiting h i s mother&#13;
and sister here.&#13;
Mesdames Geo. a n d Wm. Bland&#13;
and I . J. Abbott called on&#13;
Mrs. Carr last Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Will B a h l a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
Lillian of Gregory visited t h e&#13;
formers parent*, Mr, a n d M r s .&#13;
Geo. Bland a few days last week.&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Mies Maude W a r d is home for&#13;
her E a s t e r vacation.&#13;
Wm. Caskey h a s beeu h e l p i n g&#13;
his son-in-law, N. Burley, move&#13;
t h e past week.&#13;
Mr. and M r s . B e r t R o b e r t s and&#13;
family visited at T r u m a n Waiuw&#13;
r i g h t s Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. L . T. L a m b o r n a u d&#13;
d a u g h t e r K a t h r y u visited M r s .&#13;
W a l t e r Miller Monday last.&#13;
Miss E l v a Caskey entertained&#13;
her cousin Miss Mabel Caskey of&#13;
Plaiufield t h e last of t h e week.&#13;
J* Graf von -i»&#13;
Bl umen - Schloss.&#13;
JI-*».» » , » , . « • » . . « » » • » . « . , » . , » « « . , . - « , , , , , « « , , » , , ^ ^ . ^&#13;
[Copyright, iyo«, by Arnericun l'resa Association.]&#13;
Did I ever tell you how I was honored&#13;
by an invitation from the emperor&#13;
and empress and was thereby made a&#13;
part of Berlin society? No? Well, I'll&#13;
tell you now.&#13;
While iu Vienna 1 was invited to a&#13;
•tate bull at the palace. My partner&#13;
/or the cotillon was a young German,&#13;
Graf von Blunien-Schloss. He was&#13;
handsome, refined and of a noble bear&#13;
lug. His social position was of the&#13;
very best not only from his personal&#13;
ity, but because he represented one of&#13;
the oldest families of Prussia. I was&#13;
an untitled American whose father hud&#13;
been a pork packer and whose hus&#13;
band was a manufacturer of shoes.&#13;
Nevertheless Graf vou Blumen-Sehlofls&#13;
treated me with as much attention as&#13;
If I had been a duchess. When with&#13;
me no attraction elsewhere could induce&#13;
him to desist from listening to&#13;
what I had to aay to him or to suspend&#13;
for a moment hia attentive gaze upon&#13;
my face. True, 1 was then young and&#13;
had some good looks, but I knew it&#13;
was not I who held his attention, but a&#13;
courtesy inherited from a long line of&#13;
nobles. Besides, when he was with&#13;
#&gt;thor women he was apparently quite&#13;
as much wrapped In them.&#13;
He wore an army uniform and on&#13;
his breast several decorations. I did&#13;
not know what they represented, but&#13;
I understood that one of them had&#13;
been bestowed upon him for bravery&#13;
in battle. I think I should have fallen&#13;
in love with him If I had been single&#13;
and given an opportunity. But I did&#13;
not sec him nj?ain while in Vienna, and&#13;
shortly afterward we left for America.&#13;
Two or three years after this, while&#13;
in Philadelphia, stopping at one of the&#13;
finest lintels in that city, on entering&#13;
an elevator one evening to go up to&#13;
my rooms I was ushered in by a man&#13;
wearing the hotel uniform. There was&#13;
something about him that was fapiliar&#13;
to me. The uniform of a servant seemed&#13;
to resolve itself Into that of an&#13;
army officer. I heard the strains of&#13;
dance misic and was whirling in the&#13;
german cotillon. I raised my glance&#13;
to the servant's face. Could I believe&#13;
It? He was the Graf von Blumen-&#13;
Schloss.&#13;
His flaming face told me that it was&#13;
Indeed he and that, he knew me, but he&#13;
made no other sign of recognition.&#13;
Nor did I. The elevator door toward&#13;
which he waved his hand stood open.&#13;
I entered and was lifted to the fifth&#13;
Btory. I could not bear to run the&#13;
risk of continually meeting my previous&#13;
cotillon partner reduced to a&#13;
servant, and the next morning I left&#13;
the hotel.&#13;
Throe years after that my husband&#13;
gave up business, and we again went&#13;
abroad. Being wealthy and abundantly&#13;
able to keep up a position in any&#13;
foreign city, we desired especially to&#13;
spend a winter In Berlin, but on arriving&#13;
there my husband, who is an impatient,&#13;
independent, thorough Amer&#13;
lean, gave offense to our minister, and&#13;
there was a deadlock upon our entering&#13;
society. We "were about to give&#13;
the matter up and go elsewhere when&#13;
something occurred to change our reso&#13;
lution. An invitation enme one morn&#13;
lng to attend a ball to be given by&#13;
Graf and Gramn von Blumen-Schlosa.&#13;
It was evident, first, that the graf had&#13;
resumed his original position in the&#13;
world and. second, that he knew I was&#13;
In Berlin. I assumed that he must&#13;
have seen me, though I had not seep&#13;
him. We mad* inquiries and learatfc&#13;
that he had married a wealthy and&#13;
refined Amerlcanjpdx and^ hMjK£?ntly&#13;
been appointed an aid-de-camp to&#13;
the emperor.&#13;
We went to the ball an* were very&#13;
graciously received by the graffln, who&#13;
gave UH a reason for Inviting us that&#13;
we were her fellow countrymen. My&#13;
meeting with her husband In his own&#13;
home was naturally constrained. He&#13;
made no mention of having met me In&#13;
America, but asked me if he had not&#13;
met me in Europe. I told him that he&#13;
had been my partner at a state ball In&#13;
Vienna. Then he appeared to remember.&#13;
He may have been sincere In&#13;
not giving evidence of recollecting just&#13;
where he had tirst seen me.&#13;
Later a n ' Invitation came to dine&#13;
with the emperor and empress, which,&#13;
of course, wus Inspired by his aid-decamp,&#13;
the Von Blumen Schlosses being&#13;
of the dinner party. After this&#13;
we were welcome everywhere.&#13;
Never did either Von Blumen&#13;
Bchlosa or his wife make the slightest&#13;
allusion to his havlug been in America.&#13;
I as well Ignored having met him&#13;
in hotel livery. What inspired hia&#13;
kindness to me I do not know. It&#13;
may have been intended to keep me&#13;
silent on his pust or It might have&#13;
been a token of gratitude for my failure&#13;
to recognize him while in a menial&#13;
position. Indeed, he might have been&#13;
Influenced by both of these causes.&#13;
In time I came upon his story. Soon&#13;
after 1 had danced with Iilm In Vienna&#13;
financial reverses deprived him of his&#13;
fortune. Like many an Europiau aristocrat&#13;
In the same circumstances, he&#13;
went to America aud became a servant.&#13;
From the hotel he &gt;veut to serve&#13;
a gentleman as chauffeur aud while&#13;
acting in that capacity won the heart&#13;
of his daughter. Learning who he&#13;
was, she had married him with her&#13;
father's consent and set him up again&#13;
as a Von Blumeu-Sehloss. After the&#13;
marriage the husband came into another&#13;
fortune. All that was known In&#13;
Europe about his having been in&#13;
America was that he had married&#13;
there.&#13;
he ?.ro I here to get a&#13;
a etaiidestine manner?&#13;
cf means he could not&#13;
have ^-o'ne fur matrimonial purposes&#13;
1n ::uv oilier wav&#13;
YT n-:::s.\ r H O L T .&#13;
Query l&gt;iil&#13;
rich wife in&#13;
Oviri'.: to tael&#13;
Houss Like Steamship Bridge.&#13;
An extraordinary looking dwelling ito&#13;
lie seen al Algarta. near Bilbao, in&#13;
the north of Saain, and is ealled "('as ;&#13;
Bareo," or "house boat," l"&gt;ing built L&#13;
resemble a steamship's bridge. It was&#13;
probably creeled by a retired sea captain&#13;
wiio felt like a lish out of watet&#13;
until he had provided for himself the&#13;
same environment to which he had&#13;
been used during his active career at&#13;
lea. One can imagine the old gentle&#13;
man taking his evening walk to and&#13;
fro along the lofty bridge, scanning the&#13;
surrounding country with a sailor's&#13;
eye and half Inclined now and then to&#13;
ring for "more speed" or to send an&#13;
order down the tube to the steersman.&#13;
—Wide World Magazine.&#13;
Words To Freeze The Soul.&#13;
"Your son ba* consumption. His&#13;
case is hopeless." These appalling&#13;
words were spoken to Geo. E. Blevena&#13;
a leading mercbant ot Springfield, N.&#13;
C, by two expert doctors—one a lung&#13;
specialist. Then was shown the wonderful&#13;
power of Dr. Kings New Discovery.&#13;
"After three weeks use"&#13;
writes Mr. Blevens, "he was as well as&#13;
ever, I would not taLe all the money&#13;
in the world for what it did to my&#13;
bo?.11 Infailable for Coughs and&#13;
colds, its the safest surest cure of desperate&#13;
Lung diseases on earth. 50c&#13;
and $1 at F. A. Sillers. Guarantee&#13;
satisfaction. Trial bottle free.&#13;
Township Election.&#13;
Mbnday was a tine day for the annual&#13;
election altbougb there WM not&#13;
as large a vote pulled aa usual, there&#13;
being only 291 votes cast and the&#13;
usual number is 315 to 320.&#13;
Nearly every voter voted on the&#13;
local option question there being 281&#13;
oabt, 200 ior and 81 against, (firing a&#13;
majority of 119 for local option.&#13;
The same number voted on the&#13;
(3ounty road matter, 74 voting for&#13;
and 207 against the measure.&#13;
In the township every democrat waa&#13;
elected with the exception of highway&#13;
commissioner, Unas. L Campbell being&#13;
elected on the republican ticket. This&#13;
ieaves the officers in the township for&#13;
the coming year as follows:&#13;
^uperviaor, J tunes M. Harris&#13;
Clerk, KogerJT.Can&#13;
Treas,, Bert Roche&#13;
Hy. Com., r Chas. L. Campbell&#13;
Overoeer ot H'y, Rolliu G. Webb&#13;
Member B ot K, Edward Wprout&#13;
Conntable, Erwin Kennedy&#13;
Constable, Edward Speans&#13;
Constable, Bert VanBlaricum&#13;
CouBtublH, James Docking&#13;
Local option in this county won out&#13;
with a majority of 1,269 or more. Out&#13;
oi the 27 counties votinar on the que*&#13;
tion 19 went dry. Washtenaw went&#13;
wet by a large majority while the dry*&#13;
win Jackson oy 133.&#13;
Cong I Church Notes&#13;
Miss Mary Collins will not speak on.&#13;
Home Missions next Sunday as announced.&#13;
And it is thou«bt best to&#13;
havb the Easter exercises at 10:30.&#13;
Sunday school will follow at the usual&#13;
hour. All that take part in the program&#13;
tor Easter, will please meet at&#13;
the church Friday after school.&#13;
Prayer meeting Thursiay evening&#13;
as usual.&#13;
M. £. Church Notes.&#13;
See O u r&#13;
Special Line&#13;
of&#13;
and&#13;
BIRTHDAY&#13;
Postcards&#13;
at t h e&#13;
Dispatch Office, Pinckney&#13;
There was an excellent attendance&#13;
Sunday at both morning and evening&#13;
seivioes. The pastor of the Coni?'!&#13;
church being absent the congregation&#13;
from there united with us we hope to&#13;
the benefit of both societies.&#13;
There was just an even 100 at Sunday&#13;
school and the collection amounted&#13;
to $2.00.&#13;
Next Sunday being Easter, we shall&#13;
depart from the n^ual program and&#13;
have a regular Easter sermon instead&#13;
with special music, quartets, soloa,&#13;
class songs, in place of the regular&#13;
music. Childrens day comes close ai&#13;
hand and it was thought that two&#13;
proyrams or entertainments was too&#13;
much, besides Easter is two impressive&#13;
a time for entertainments.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. society took&#13;
in over $30 by their dinner supper&#13;
and ice cream Monday. They could&#13;
have sold several more gallons of&#13;
cream if they bad made it. The&#13;
weather man came to their aid with&#13;
the warmest day of the season.&#13;
F. G. Jackson was in Detroit this&#13;
week on business.&#13;
The autos have been getting out&#13;
the past week although the roads are&#13;
not as good as they might be.&#13;
If you are going to have an auction&#13;
remember that, we can print, your bills&#13;
on short notice. We have already&#13;
issued several&#13;
Flowers For Easter&#13;
We will have in&#13;
Bloom for Easter&#13;
the following&#13;
Easter Lillies&#13;
Azaleas&#13;
Hyacinths&#13;
Cinerarias&#13;
Callas&#13;
also&#13;
Roses&#13;
Carnations&#13;
and all kinds of Gift flowers&#13;
Floral Work for Weldings md Fontrals&#13;
A Specialty&#13;
J, l BROWN. Florist&#13;
HOWELL, mcmeiN</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 08, 1909</text>
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                <text>April 08, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1909-04-08</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="9728">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. X X 711. P I N C K N E Y , L I V I N G S T O N CO.,MICH., T B U E S D A Y , A P E . 15. 1909. NO. 1 *&#13;
Our Ice Cream Parlor&#13;
Will be Open April 15th&#13;
We albso have on hand&#13;
a general line of&#13;
Groceries, Baked Goods, Confectionery, Etc.&#13;
M a r k e t P r i c e P a i d f o r t i u t t e r a n d B 3 £ s&#13;
G i v e u s a c a l l W e w i l l t r y t o p l e a s e y o u&#13;
E. BURGESS &amp; CO.&#13;
W i n d D i d M u c h D a m a g e .&#13;
At. we went To JJIHHS labt week we&#13;
mentioned the fact that ibe wind had&#13;
been blowing a. gale and tbiugs were&#13;
moving in general. We however had&#13;
no idea that it was doing as mu-h as&#13;
it did throughout the state, aud even&#13;
in our own county.&#13;
Roofs were torn off, buildings&#13;
crushed and many out buildings&#13;
blow over, as well as fences. In Oceola&#13;
township, a young man, Ray Miller,&#13;
WHS killed outright and Lis brother&#13;
badly injured by being struck by a'&#13;
Hying timber while driving past a&#13;
shed that was destroyed. !&#13;
At Fowlerville, a man v/dn driving&#13;
with a plattorm on his wagon when&#13;
the wind caught it, tipped it over aud&#13;
held him fast under it—his shoulder&#13;
was broken.&#13;
Throughout the state there was&#13;
thousands of dollars worth oi property&#13;
destroyed and several liven.&#13;
LOCAbNEWS.&#13;
Local on all pages. j&#13;
The Creamery Co. have an adv. this1;&#13;
week. i&#13;
lluy Teeple was in Howell on busi- j&#13;
ness Friday. i&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews was in riow-j&#13;
ell Friday last.&#13;
Do not ioiyet the play and party at&#13;
the opera house tonight.&#13;
Mesdames John Teeple and Nettie&#13;
Vaughn were, in Howell Friday last.&#13;
The pi ty billed for tonight at the&#13;
:&gt;pera housn promises to be a good&#13;
one.&#13;
Mrs. F. L. (iillette of Ferry was the&#13;
k/uest of her son, Herbert Gillette and&#13;
wife over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Su&lt;ie Kennedy of NiRjjara&#13;
Falls is spending a tew weeks with&#13;
her parents, Win, Kennedy and wile&#13;
li^re&#13;
The birds did not sin^ much tliej&#13;
last of last week, Those wl;o return*,d&#13;
from the south -tayed by the fire. Coal&#13;
tires were in L'leit demand.&#13;
Hiram K . S n i t h ha.^ been secured&#13;
as the chief speaker tor the commencement&#13;
exercises oi the Laingshivu: high&#13;
schoo'. Mr. Sinito is getting to be a&#13;
popular platlrriv speaker.&#13;
A letter received from Miss Franc&#13;
Hutch, irives i;er ;uk'i e.-s as Atlanta,&#13;
(ia,, care r l lie AUnnta Lyceum&#13;
Bureau. Mis&gt; Hurch was then on her&#13;
wny to attend the Klorala Chautauqua.&#13;
H a v i n g d e c i d e d t o l e a v e&#13;
t o w n . E. R. B r o w n w i l l s e l l a t&#13;
p u b l i c a u c t i o n , a t h i s r e s i -&#13;
d e n c e In t h i s v i l l a g e , o n S a t -&#13;
u r d a y a f t e r n o o n , A p r i l 1 7 , a t&#13;
1 o ' c l o c k s h a r p , h i s h o u s e h o l d&#13;
g o o d s a n d o t h e r p e r s o n a l&#13;
p r o p e r t y . T h i s s a l e w i l l b e&#13;
h e l d r e g a r d l e s s of t h e w e a t h -&#13;
e r . R e a d a u c t i o n b i l l s f o r&#13;
p a r t i c u l a r s a n d r e m e m b e r&#13;
t h e d a t e .&#13;
The rain and snow was just the j&#13;
thing for larmers.&#13;
Quite a heavy fall of snow Tuesday&#13;
—but did not stay long however.&#13;
House cleaning time is with us. Do&#13;
not allow the stoye to be taken down&#13;
yet however—you may need it.&#13;
Martin Clinton and friend, Mr.&#13;
Seitz,'jf Ann Ai bor are the guests ol&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. Clinton this week.&#13;
Chas. Van Orden and wife ot Web-1&#13;
beryille were the guests of Perry j&#13;
Blunt and wile over Sunday and Mon. )&#13;
day. i&#13;
Raymond Sigler and family of Ann j&#13;
Arbor are spending the vacation week&#13;
with his parents here. Mr. Sigler&#13;
graduates from the dental department&#13;
ot the U, of M. ;n June.&#13;
Bulletin No. 253 from the Agricultural&#13;
college is out and treats on the&#13;
care of the orchard. II you want the&#13;
bulletin, send you address to the secretary&#13;
ot the college at Kast Lansing.&#13;
Mrs Geo. Reason of Detroit was the&#13;
guest ol her parents, F, A. Sigler and&#13;
wife a couple of days last week. Her&#13;
sons, Ralph and Rex, who have been&#13;
spending a veek here returned with&#13;
her.&#13;
The Mutual Telephone exchaoge I&#13;
here is now in cdarge of the Misses j&#13;
Laura, Alice and Cathrine Hoff. I&#13;
While they keep the office open d iy :&#13;
and night they have not given up&#13;
their plea.sant home on West Main St, [&#13;
Key. G W. Mylne of Lainarsburg j&#13;
received a cablegram from Glasgow, i&#13;
Scotland, April 6, announcing the I&#13;
death of his father at the family borne j&#13;
m that eny after a few days illness, at&#13;
the age of 83. tfev. Mylne will return I&#13;
to Scotland about May 1.&#13;
\JR&gt;\ Monday t vening, about 35!&#13;
friends o! M ^-, Kits^y Allison wont, to'&#13;
her home jusi north of o w n Tnd i^ave i&#13;
her t\ pleasant surprise in honor &gt;,t \&#13;
her 14fh biiibday. A very (-leasiint j&#13;
o\enintf \\ ;v-- -pent and ;ifter spending j&#13;
a tfi'v hours in &lt;james, the company j&#13;
departed, wishing that, her 15th birth- j&#13;
day might, b ; as bright, as her 14th. j&#13;
W h y N o t I n P i n c k n e y ?&#13;
• — . -&#13;
In many ot our sister towns they&#13;
are organizing automobile clubs lor i&#13;
mutual help in purchasing supplies,;&#13;
learning roads, etc. }&#13;
Now there are ten or a dozen cars&#13;
owned in JrMnckney and vicinity and&#13;
would it not pay to organize here?&gt;&#13;
We do not necessarily need a uclub&#13;
house" as soma have at a distance&#13;
from town, but would meet once in a&#13;
while and talk over matters pertaining&#13;
to the handling ot machines and&#13;
"swap" experiences.&#13;
If you are interested let us hear&#13;
from you through the DISPATCH.&#13;
The Creamery.&#13;
Mr. Day ol the Michigan Creamery&#13;
Co., has been busy the past week getting&#13;
the building in shape for his ra ichinery.&#13;
The weather this week,&#13;
however, has held up the work of putting&#13;
in some of the cement and delay-&#13;
; ed them nearly two days.&#13;
j The engine and boiler have arnved,&#13;
j are being set and it will be but a short&#13;
J time now before the wheels will begin&#13;
to go 'round. Already farmers are&#13;
becoming interested in the routes and&#13;
several have been laid out.&#13;
BOWMAN'S ! Farmers.&#13;
New goodR an* rapidly&#13;
filling t h e Btore and its&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
na a look when in Howell&#13;
T h e best stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, R i b -&#13;
bons, Corsets, H a n d k e r -&#13;
chiefs, Hosiery and N o t -&#13;
ions shown in town.&#13;
Rcjnember That —&#13;
Every Day is Bargain Day&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
B r i n g in your harnesses&#13;
a u d have them&#13;
repaired, washed and&#13;
oiled ready for your&#13;
s p r i n g work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I cau d o t h a t work in&#13;
a w o r k m a n l i k e manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane can sew on patches,&#13;
rij&gt;e, etc., in fact&#13;
make t h e shoe as&#13;
new. .: :: ::&#13;
Howell's Busy Store W . B. DARROVV&#13;
Mrs, E. G. Curtis of Toledo, Ohio,1,&#13;
is visiting her cousin, Mrs. P. W. Con- j&#13;
iway this week.&#13;
The youngsters of this village and]&#13;
vicinity are having a tussle with&#13;
whooping cough.&#13;
Willis Tupper will work «n the&#13;
Creamery this Reason. Be has not decided&#13;
to move to town for the present.&#13;
The officer? at Howell are after the&#13;
drunks in great shape since the vote&#13;
on local option. Already several&#13;
have been arrested and some paid tines&#13;
while one is serving 30 days i". the&#13;
county jail.&#13;
Miss Grace Pool o! Anderson expects&#13;
to undergo an operation for ap&#13;
pendicitis at the Pinckney Sanitarium&#13;
the first of next ^veek. Her many&#13;
friends are hoping that sha may he&#13;
restored to perfect health.&#13;
The receiver for the Chelsea Savings&#13;
Bank hasten! the savings depositors&#13;
sixty per cant and the commercial de&#13;
poaitors forty, since the bank broke&#13;
over a year ago. They did not, expect&#13;
25 per cent, so most, of them are feeding&#13;
good. The entire amount paid&#13;
out to depositors by the receiver&#13;
practically within a year of taking&#13;
hold amounts tn over half a million&#13;
dollars.&#13;
Grant H. Dunning will sell his per&#13;
sonal property at auction on th« C&#13;
Dunning farm, section 15, Hamburg,&#13;
half way between Pinckney and&#13;
Brighton, on Tuesday, Apr I 20, cimuiencing&#13;
at one o'clock sharp. He has&#13;
3 h :SPS, 25 heai of cattle, Dnrock&#13;
.ler-ey Hogs, 2 sows five weeks old&#13;
nius ov s"Ho Orn°r'1 ^r^am - narator&#13;
I and a tun l»*t or iarm loois, an nearly&#13;
aew. See bills.&#13;
K&#13;
uu&#13;
TT If Oilr Wall Paper&#13;
Looks Pretty&#13;
5&gt;~-&#13;
here, how much h a n d s o m e r it will look on your walls with yoi&#13;
f u r n i t u r e and carpet. Come a u d bee if you t h i n k our sprinj&#13;
p a t t e r n s are pretty&#13;
if You Don't Think S o&#13;
you will indeed be hard to please. Kveryune to whom we have shown the mi&#13;
thus far has been delighted with them. They are so novel and artistic iti denign&#13;
tlmt they eotnttiiirid admiration at the first glance. They are&#13;
P r e t t y P a p e r s P o p u l a r l y P r i c e d&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
S A T U R D A Y SPFiCIAL»S&#13;
300 yds. Dress G i n g h a m s ( l i g h t p a t e n i s o n l y )&#13;
R e g u l a r price 12£e S a t u r d a y ' s Special 7c&#13;
25c W h i t e Goods, S a t u r d a y s mark down price l**c&#13;
12c L i n e n Crash, S a t u r d a y ' s price at 9^c&#13;
Bleached S h e e t i n g , extra value,&#13;
S a t u r d a y ' s price 7c&#13;
E x t r a value in Men's Overalls 47c&#13;
O n e lot Mens.oOc Caps S a t u r d a y s price to close 29c&#13;
7 Pieces only Wool Dress Goods, r e g u l a r&#13;
50e value, S a t u r d a y s price -38c&#13;
OUP Grocery S p e c i a l s&#13;
Yeast per package 3o&#13;
"Extra Rice per lb. fie&#13;
•22c Coffee 1.8c&#13;
15c Coffee i:$u&#13;
4 pkgs Mince Meat for 2f&gt;c&#13;
Soda 5c&#13;
W a t c h Our S p a c e For Bargains&#13;
New Goods Arriving Daily&#13;
Highest Market Price Paid&#13;
For Butter and Eggs&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST of durability in a hiRri-spred machine like the cream separator.&#13;
Kn other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
every day. winter and summer, it must not only do thorough worV,&#13;
but to be"permanently profitable, it must be durable. U.S. C R« A M&#13;
are built for InnR service. A solid, low f rmr.r encloses entirely nil&#13;
the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger of in-&#13;
Jury. The pnrts arc tew, simple and easy to ^ct at. Ball bearir 4x&#13;
•t hiifhspctil point*, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wciir&#13;
• s well as insure tlie ersiest operation. S'ich eart'ul and thorough&#13;
construction is -what enables the 1". S. to better STAND THE TEST than any other separator. You don't have to buy K now one every ye»r or&#13;
two. And remember, the V. S. does the cleanest skimming all the Unit..&#13;
Examine the I". S. yourself und see its good points. It is sold by&#13;
Teeple H a r d w a r e Co.&#13;
fitukqeg Jjfispatcl]&#13;
WtUMW L . AJTMUSWS, * u f c .&#13;
MIOHIOAW&#13;
Fama Deforr»d„,&#13;
John LaFarjje,, for many*$earB *%1«-&#13;
iratpd mural painter, when he received&#13;
i m«dal of honor from the Architect&#13;
.liral league of New York, a few weeks&#13;
igo, accepted it "with some' reticence&#13;
»f thanks," as he said in a spirit of&#13;
pleasantry, as coming rather late. His&#13;
rears of work were almost pant, he&#13;
s&gt;aid, and recognition now was usetesa&#13;
"as a help to live, although had it been&#13;
accorded earlier it would have&#13;
Htnoothed a very toilsome road. A few&#13;
days previous to this presentation,&#13;
when Mr. W. P. Frith, member of the&#13;
Royal Academy, attained his ninetieth&#13;
birthday, it was noted that pictures he&#13;
had cold in his early days for u hundred&#13;
dollars afterward brought more&#13;
than a^m^O-rrof which, of course, ha received&#13;
nothing. Another academician,&#13;
remarking on this fact, observed that&#13;
fame sometimes yields little practical&#13;
benefit to the one w*o wins it, to his&#13;
family, or to comrades he would gladly&#13;
aid. Millet's "Angelus" was sold by&#13;
the painter for $200, but after Millet&#13;
became famous it changed hands six&#13;
times, always at an advance, and was&#13;
finally bought by an American for&#13;
$160,000. Yet its value, as a work of&#13;
art, was fixed when it left the easel.&#13;
Sp the academician suggested that in&#13;
similar eases a percentage of the advanced&#13;
price should be paid to the&#13;
artist's heirs, or if there were none, be&#13;
used by the state to purchase the productions&#13;
of living painters. Anomalies&#13;
of the "Angelus" variety are not confined&#13;
to any class of artists. Authors,&#13;
composers, inventors and all who exercise&#13;
creative gifts are subject to the&#13;
experience shared by the painters, nor&#13;
is it easy to name a practicable remedy.&#13;
All the more keenly, it may be,&#13;
pays the Youth's Companion, one feels&#13;
"the pity of it" that fame, or the rewards&#13;
of fame, should come too late to&#13;
help a genius to live; and one wishes&#13;
that, before expending vast sums for&#13;
"old masters," prospective purchasers&#13;
would try to satisfy themselves that no&#13;
new master is striving—and starving—&#13;
within easy reach.&#13;
An important step toward stopping&#13;
the waste of the fuel resources of the&#13;
country has been taken by the United&#13;
BtateB geological survey in its tests of&#13;
the coals of the Rocky mountain region&#13;
at the government plant in Denver,&#13;
Col. At that plant the purpose has&#13;
been to determine what coals of this&#13;
region are capable of making coke&#13;
that can be used by the great metallurgy&#13;
Interests of the west. Of 37&#13;
coals tested, the government experts&#13;
succeeded in producing good coke from&#13;
all but three, though a number of&#13;
these coals had never been known to&#13;
be capable of making coke. These results,&#13;
which will prove of much Importance&#13;
to the west in the next few&#13;
years, were obtained by following out&#13;
a carefully prepared treatment of the&#13;
coals. Each of the coals was washed&#13;
1n order to get rid of the ash, sulphur&#13;
and other impurities which prevent&#13;
the making of coke that is of any use&#13;
in metallurgical work. The washing&#13;
tests not only prepared these coals so&#13;
that, they made good coke, but also&#13;
demonstrated the fact that many coals&#13;
of the west which have too much ash&#13;
and sulphur to bft used economically&#13;
under a steam boiler may be rendered&#13;
of commercial value through such&#13;
treatment.&#13;
Women of wealth and fashion in&#13;
New York are now personally lobbying&#13;
for the support of legislative bills in&#13;
which they are interested. Whatever&#13;
may be individual opinion on tftiR departure&#13;
from established convention&#13;
there is no doubt conditions are changing&#13;
and that t h e period of transition&#13;
now unmistakably upon us is bound to&#13;
bring forth results leading to a marked&#13;
readjustment. Whether that readjustment&#13;
will be for the better or the&#13;
worse remains to be seen, but hope is&#13;
given by the fact that important movements&#13;
of the present are In the main&#13;
rnarully and socially progressive. At&#13;
least the good sense of the public may&#13;
be relied upon to check excesses in the&#13;
way of reforms.&#13;
The ancient g:old cup from which&#13;
King Edward drank to the health of&#13;
the city of Berlin has been engraved&#13;
with an inscription recording the dates&#13;
and the circumstances of the reception&#13;
and placed in the strong room of the&#13;
Rathaus, to be kept as a memento. Edward&#13;
VII. was the first foreign ruler&#13;
who has visited that municipal palace&#13;
on its own behalf, and this ancient ctip&#13;
is to be treasured aa the symbol of a&#13;
^ew era in the history •# r.rlk .&#13;
BRUTAL THREAT&#13;
BY SNEAK WRITER&#13;
H U M A N HYENAS STILL AT WORK&#13;
TO WRING MONEY FROM&#13;
T H E MOONS.&#13;
DASTARDLY LETTER OUT.&#13;
Cruel Wretch Makes Threats That&#13;
Wifs and Daughter Will B« KMr«d&#13;
Unless Money la Given.&#13;
Not conttjut with rending the heart&#13;
of human Moon, father of the drowned&#13;
boy Harold, for whom a country-wide&#13;
search was made, by decoying him to&#13;
Delavan, Wis., through a letter pur*&#13;
porting to show that the lad had been&#13;
kidnaped *nd would be returned for&#13;
$500, the inhuman money-seeker has&#13;
written a second letter, threatening to&#13;
kill his wife and daughter. Most cruel&#13;
of all, the writer attempts to make&#13;
the father believe that the lad was&#13;
hurled into Thread pond and drowned&#13;
after he had failed to place the money&#13;
demanded for his son's ransom in the&#13;
mouth of the obi park cannon in Delavan.&#13;
From the absurdity of trying to&#13;
make the family believe the boy was&#13;
the victim of his supposed captors—&#13;
as the body showed it had been in the&#13;
water a long time and the little skates&#13;
were on Harold's feet—it was at first&#13;
believed the second letter was a hoax&#13;
and that some feeble or evil-minded&#13;
person had sent it to annoy Mr. Moon&#13;
and gratify a morbid tendency. However,&#13;
on the advice of the police, the&#13;
letter was forwarded to ihe Pinkerton&#13;
detectives in Chicago, whence the letter&#13;
came. The first one was from&#13;
Delavan, Wis.&#13;
Mr. Moon and the Flint police are&#13;
of the opinion that the letter, which is&#13;
apparently in the same handwriting&#13;
aa the first one, was sent by the same&#13;
vampire. Like the earlier missive, it&#13;
was written in pencil and there was&#13;
no signature. At the bottom of the&#13;
sheet was a skull and cross-bones,&#13;
rudely drawn. While a demand is&#13;
made for $3,000, with a penalty of&#13;
death of Mrs. Moon and her daughter&#13;
Marian, aged 17, no method of delivering&#13;
the ransom is suggested.&#13;
The second letter from the blackmailer,&#13;
as if to make the wound deeper,&#13;
arrived j-ust before the funeral service&#13;
over the body of Harold. Lester&#13;
Moon, the ]6-year-oU! brother of Harold,&#13;
after the funeral told Sheriff&#13;
Parkhurst of the threatening letter,&#13;
but the family and officers succeeded&#13;
in keeping the matter temporarily&#13;
quiet.&#13;
The Chicago Pinkerton detective&#13;
who is working on the Moon case in&#13;
Delavan, and who believes he recognized&#13;
the man when ho was prowling&#13;
about the park in the vicinity of the&#13;
cannon, is one who aided in ferriting&#13;
out the disappearance of the Cudahy&#13;
boy, who was kidnaped a few years&#13;
ago by Pat Crowe.&#13;
Mr. Moon has placed the rase entirely&#13;
in the hands of the Pinkertons&#13;
and is awaiting developments. In the&#13;
meantime he is taking good care to&#13;
guard the members of his family from&#13;
harm. - • •&#13;
A Freak Election.&#13;
Joseph Sadoni, living with his "12&#13;
apostles" in White River township,&#13;
and one of the most peculiar religious&#13;
fanatics in the county, was elected&#13;
school inspector of the township after&#13;
one of the hardest contests ever&#13;
fought out there. His majority was&#13;
13.&#13;
A. J. Gladstone ("Unkisaed") Dowie,&#13;
son of the former "prophet," John&#13;
Alexander Dowie, of the Zionist movement&#13;
of a few years ago, is shown to&#13;
have been defeated for township clerk&#13;
of Montague township on latest returns.&#13;
He ran on the independent&#13;
ticket. Clerk Paul Kling, who was defeated&#13;
for renomination at the regular&#13;
township caucus, ran on the slips and&#13;
won from a field of three regularly&#13;
nominated competitors.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
Alva Caawall, an old resident of&#13;
Berlin township, was found dead la&#13;
his home in that place.&#13;
Rumor has it that a grand jury may&#13;
be called to investigate alleged graft&#13;
in the recent sale of a gravel pit in&#13;
Menominee county. ,&#13;
Kdward, King, 45, was found near the&#13;
Urand Rapids depot with a dislocated&#13;
hip, and unable to tell where he was&#13;
from or how he came by ihe injury.&#13;
After Illness of two weeks, Mrs,&#13;
Edward Weber, of Menominee, is dead&#13;
of tuberculosis. This is the fifth death&#13;
from tuberculosis in the last five days.&#13;
Moses Taylor, for 29 years crier of&#13;
the supreme court, and the oldeBt employe&#13;
of the s t a t e of Michigan, has&#13;
resigned his position. Mr. Taylor is&#13;
92.&#13;
Charles Klmmerle, of CassOpolls,&#13;
one-time candidate for governor, was&#13;
defeated at the recent election for&#13;
supervisor, an office which he has held&#13;
for 22 years.&#13;
Maurice Ostlund, a Mellen township&#13;
farmer, shot the largest wildcat ever&#13;
seen there. The animal measured&#13;
nearly six feet from the nose to the&#13;
tip of its tail.&#13;
Farmers near Keystone have formed&#13;
an organization to keep fishermen and&#13;
hunters, who they say kill their stock&#13;
and do other damage, from trespassing&#13;
on the farms.&#13;
Grand Rapids property owners&#13;
whose holdings are in the down tow'n&#13;
district, are kicking over the increased&#13;
assessments, which have been boosted&#13;
»2,000,000 in the past year.&#13;
The fraternities at the U. of M. have&#13;
adopted resolutions making the antitreat&#13;
rule a law among their members,&#13;
and every man In the university&#13;
will be asked to observe It.&#13;
Louis Walker, of Port Huron, who&#13;
pleaded guilty to a serious charge&#13;
brought by his 15-year-old daughter,&#13;
has been sentenced to from 4 to 10&#13;
years in the state reformatory.&#13;
'A. Lansing barter, alleged to have&#13;
thrown a defenseless collie into a pack&#13;
of bulldogs, just to see the right, was&#13;
sentenced to pay a fine and costs of&#13;
$29 50, or spend 20 days in jail.&#13;
It is believed that Florence Smith,&#13;
THE SENATE&#13;
WILL DO THINGS&#13;
T H E T A f t t t F BILL HAS PASSED&#13;
T H E HOUSE AND GOES&#13;
TO 8 E N A T E .&#13;
FORDNEYS LAST HOPE.&#13;
Some of the Special Features of the&#13;
BUI That Will Be of Interest to the&#13;
People.&#13;
The house of representatives has&#13;
passed the Payne tariff bill, 217 to&#13;
161. Rep. Austin (Tex.) was the only&#13;
Republican to vote against it and four&#13;
Democrats — all from Louisiana —&#13;
Broussard, Estopiual, Pujo and Wick*&#13;
Hffe, voted for it. Democrat Leader&#13;
Champ Clark tried to obtalu a recommittal,&#13;
with Instructions, but failed.&#13;
The Republicans cheered, lustily and&#13;
danced up and down in the aisles.&#13;
The bill now goes to the senate.&#13;
Rep. Fordney (Mich.) won a hard&#13;
fought battle when he succeeded in&#13;
keeping rough lumber off the free&#13;
list with a- $1 duty. The vote on this*&#13;
schedule was 200 to 181 and the only&#13;
Michigan member to vote ugaiust it&#13;
was' Rep. Hamilton.&#13;
Fordney started his fight March 15&#13;
with only six supporters. The general&#13;
reason for members supporting&#13;
him was that ¢2,000,000 revenue would&#13;
be lost and the Canadian lumbermen&#13;
be the only gainers. A fight will be&#13;
made in the senate to raise the duty&#13;
to $1.50 or $2.&#13;
Hides remain on the free list and&#13;
the increased duty on gloves and&#13;
stockings remains.&#13;
The members seemed to consider&#13;
the putting of oil on the free list&#13;
a slap at the Standard Oil. Co. and&#13;
only 4G opposed it. Speaker Cannon&#13;
was one and Rep. Young (Mich.) another.&#13;
Tea is left on the free list, and the&#13;
countervailing duty taken off coffee.&#13;
— . . L I T T L f f p A S T R O&#13;
Ctrfled A board ^ tylip on- Refusal to&#13;
Leave Martinique. ''&#13;
Clpriano Castro, ex-pfertdent of V e £e »««iV—K*M^i«aoialaiouely r ex&#13;
pejjed Fxlday jiight _from t h e Island&#13;
of Martinique by the French govern-&#13;
H*9*tr HflT&gt;rot«iV&lt;LJt Uw l a s t against&#13;
his expulsion, but his protest* were&#13;
in vuin. He waa placed on board t h e&#13;
French line steamship Versailles,&#13;
bound for St. Nasaire. -&#13;
Official notice a/aa a*rved on Castro&#13;
in the arornttoir o f the decision&#13;
of the French government that ii&lt;*&#13;
mpst leave A a island within nine&#13;
hour* -fr«n*} tk«* receipt of luch aotipe&#13;
and that th« commissary of police&#13;
at Fort de France had been&#13;
charged with, the execution of the or-&#13;
4»i*r The ex-president was furibua&#13;
wit^ indignation and atroVe throughout&#13;
rthe Otfi §o find'sdUe excuse that&#13;
would be satisfactory to the colonial&#13;
government, whereby he would not becompelled&#13;
to obey the order and t o&#13;
thla end lata f n ^ e day he summoned&#13;
a lawyer and physician to certify that&#13;
he was unable to leave the country.&#13;
The governor of Martinique and t h e&#13;
public prosecutor, however, refused&#13;
aft extension of time and about '5&#13;
o'clock .tfeq commissary of police, accompanied&#13;
by a large force of gendarmes,&#13;
proceeded to the hotel where&#13;
Castro was stopping, to remove him,&#13;
forcibly If necessary, to ihe steamer.&#13;
At half past 8 o'clock a force of&#13;
gendarmes went to Castro's room and&#13;
he was placed on a mattress, he refusing&#13;
t o put on his clothes, and carried&#13;
on a stretcher to the steamer, a&#13;
distance of more than a mile. A&#13;
thousand or more of th6 population&#13;
had assembled by this time and a&#13;
great deal of sympathy was expressed&#13;
for Castro. He complained of great&#13;
suffering and every movement of the&#13;
stretcher seemed to give him further&#13;
pain.&#13;
The Versailles sailed at I) o'clock&#13;
and measures have been taken to&#13;
keep a careful watch on Castro during&#13;
the voyage. The colonial government&#13;
intends to put down any sympathetic&#13;
demonstration that may .be made on&#13;
shore.&#13;
To the free list were added everthe&#13;
Nijjys girl who,!$. said to have f green seedlings, clover and nut oil,&#13;
taken morphine o v e r ^ j l W p n o i n t m e n t which is used in making varnish. The&#13;
in a love affair, cvuinot "recdv'er. She j so-called "joker" in the cotton cloth&#13;
is at the home of a sister in South schedule which it was claimed would&#13;
Bend.&#13;
Through the efforts of Rev, James |&#13;
increase the duty of the Dingley bill&#13;
several hundred per cent was corrected,&#13;
the proviso for the method of&#13;
counting threads in the cloth being&#13;
made the .same as in the present law,&#13;
The internal revenue law was al$o&#13;
amended so that raisers of tobaocty&#13;
will not have to pay a manufacturers'&#13;
license in order to dispose of, their&#13;
leaf tohaqeq. There were several&#13;
technical change* Jn the steel sched^&#13;
ule, principally downward, and lace&#13;
curtain and netting machines were included&#13;
in Uie proviso which permits&#13;
the entry free of duty of lace ma-&#13;
Frank Lyl« Is Dead.&#13;
Frank W. Lyle, under indictment&#13;
for wrecking the Lyle-Gage private&#13;
bank at Dowagiac, who was found&#13;
dead Wednesday at his rooms in Chicago&#13;
was not a suicide, in spite of the&#13;
broadcast report to that effect, if what&#13;
a physician who made an examination,&#13;
says is true. The doctor summoned&#13;
immediately on the finding of the body&#13;
asserted that death was due to a complication&#13;
of diseases, including erysipelas.&#13;
Lyle had been living with a&#13;
former Michigan woman, It is said,&#13;
and when his body was found, it was&#13;
reported that the woman had taken&#13;
poison with him, to carry out. a supposed&#13;
death pact. This report proved&#13;
to be untrue and was found on the woman's&#13;
recent. Illness.&#13;
Lyle, since his indictment, had been&#13;
out on $13,000 bonds.&#13;
Victims of Wind Storm.&#13;
The blowing down in yesterday's&#13;
gale of a fire wall in Mitchell Bros.'&#13;
planing mill at. Jennings, instantly&#13;
crushed out the lives of a man and a&#13;
boy and injured another boy so that&#13;
he died shortly after. The dead are&#13;
John Torrey, aged 35; Charles Jacob-4&#13;
son, aged 16. and Bernard Carlson,&#13;
aged 15. Both Torrey and Jacobson&#13;
wer? killed instantly. Their bodies&#13;
were almost unrecognizable. Young&#13;
Carlson was so badly crushed about,&#13;
the face that, his death occurred in&#13;
about an hour.&#13;
A fourth person, young Oscar Nordstrom,&#13;
sustained injuries which were&#13;
not severe.&#13;
Zwemcr, one of the faculty, in raising&#13;
the necessary funds, Hope college will&#13;
have a new dormitory with a capacity&#13;
of 20 rooms. The building is to cost&#13;
$6,000.&#13;
Barber Moore, and George Barton,&#13;
alleged yeggmen, escaped from tho&#13;
Greenville jail by dynamiting the floor&#13;
of their cell, The drill used on the&#13;
cement floor was made of an old umbrella&#13;
handle.&#13;
The circuit cpurt case of Barry county&#13;
against Bert Jacques for the sale j chinery prior to May U 1910.&#13;
of "near beers," which was quashed&#13;
some time ago, has been ordered put&#13;
back on the calendar by a decision of&#13;
the supreme court.&#13;
Charles Featherstone, of Grant, died&#13;
in Hutterworth hospital as the result&#13;
of having been-struck in the eye by&#13;
a splinter whUe he was chopping wood,&#13;
A blood vessel was ruptured when the&#13;
sli*w struck,the. optic.&#13;
The price of potatoes jumped from&#13;
80 cents to $1 per bushel in Cadillac&#13;
in one day, and are now selling in&#13;
carload lots at that price. This is&#13;
the highest that the tubers have been&#13;
in that city in six years.&#13;
True to his promise that he would,&#13;
if elected, help Walter HalneB, a Menominee&#13;
cripple, to get an education,&#13;
Michael Sullivan, who becomes city&#13;
treasurer for a second term, presented&#13;
Haines with a check for $100.&#13;
Though he pleaded that ho had&#13;
given the liquor to a sick friend who&#13;
needed it badly, Edward McGlynn, a&#13;
well known farmer of Barry county,&#13;
was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 for&#13;
violating the local option laws.&#13;
W7hile returning from Muskegon on&#13;
a Pere Marquette train, Harold Shaw,&#13;
14, of Big Rapids, sustained injuries&#13;
that, will disfigure him for life. A&#13;
transom broke over his head and falling&#13;
glass cut several severe gashes in&#13;
his face.&#13;
Senator Ming has introduced a bill&#13;
at the suggestion of the superinten^&#13;
dent of public instruction, permitting&#13;
the state to accept a surety bond in&gt;&#13;
stead of a personal bond from the&#13;
treasurer of the state hoard of public&#13;
instruction.&#13;
Deputy Sheriff Daniel Miller, of&#13;
WToodland, entered a livery barn office&#13;
in Hastings, and seating himself in a&#13;
chair, remarked on how comfortable&#13;
it was. An instant later he died of&#13;
heart disease. A widow and several&#13;
children survive.&#13;
John Holman, one of the saloonlst?&#13;
who will he forced out. of business in&#13;
Battle Creek, May 1, is having his&#13;
full share of hard luck. His six chil&#13;
dren are seriously ill of scarlet fever&#13;
One of them, R 5-year-old girl, Is said&#13;
to be near death.&#13;
Thomas Tynan, a former Niles boy&#13;
has been appointed warden of th¥&#13;
Colorado state penitentiary by Gov&#13;
Shafroth. Mr. Tynan Went to Pueblo&#13;
Col., about four years fcgo anrKhaf&#13;
since been connected with, a mercan&#13;
tile establishment.&#13;
LITTLEJOKfcRS.&#13;
ii11 &gt; » • • • •&#13;
Those Said To Be In The Payne Tariff&#13;
BUI Pointed Out.&#13;
The intricacies of the Payne tariff&#13;
bill and the complications which may&#13;
result from its enactment into law,&#13;
are illustrated by the hide and leather&#13;
schedules. ^,,1,1^ connection with the&#13;
maximum and "minimum provisions of&#13;
the new bill a peculiar situation is&#13;
presented. The bill places hidjes on&#13;
the free list, with a retaliatory provision&#13;
for a duty of 20 per cent ad&#13;
valorem on hides coming from countries&#13;
which do not give the United&#13;
States the benefit of the mosfcfavored&#13;
nation clause. The duty on sole&#13;
leather, as now in the bill, is 5 per&#13;
cent.ad valorem. The maximum dnty&#13;
provided for sole leather is 20 per&#13;
cent of the duty in addition, which&#13;
makes it 6 per cent ad valorem. It&#13;
is contended that the inequality between&#13;
the maximum duties on hides&#13;
and sole leather is so great that it&#13;
will seriously affect the American tanners.&#13;
It waR pointed out that Venezuela,&#13;
for instance, would find it to&#13;
its advantage to have the maximum&#13;
rates of duty in the Payne bill apply&#13;
against its products, in order to encourage&#13;
its tanning industry. While&#13;
its hides would not find as large a&#13;
market on account of the 20 per cent&#13;
duty, factories for tanning the hides&#13;
and exporting the sole leather to the&#13;
U. S. would have an advantage over&#13;
the American manufacturers, whose&#13;
hides wou'd cost more on account of&#13;
the maximum duty, without a similar&#13;
increase in the amount, of protection&#13;
on sole leather.&#13;
Opposes Specific Taxes.&#13;
A special committee representing&#13;
the board of supervisors and the city&#13;
council of Sault Ste. Marie has decided&#13;
to oppose the specific tax law,&#13;
the country members outvoting the&#13;
city members, who favored retaining&#13;
the present law. Representative N.&#13;
L. Field and Senator Fowle will be&#13;
urged to work for the repeal of the&#13;
law.&#13;
The law provides for a specific tax&#13;
of one pei' cent on the capital stock&#13;
of power companies instead of the&#13;
usual taxes on property. The Michigan-&#13;
Lake Superior Power Co. pays&#13;
only $5,000 a year on its plant, which&#13;
cost about $7,000,000.&#13;
The company is in process of reorganization,&#13;
and the city members&#13;
believe the law should stand until the&#13;
concern gets on its feet. It is claimed&#13;
the repeal of the law will hinder&#13;
financing the company,&#13;
Mrs. James Colwell, of Ionia, was&#13;
smothered by coal gas. She was 73&#13;
years of age.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Gov. Warner has Issued a proclam&#13;
ation designating Friday, April 30, at&#13;
Arbor day, and urges that every per&#13;
son in the state plant a tree on that&#13;
day. Teachers in district schools arr&#13;
asked to hold appropriate exercises&#13;
on that day, In accordance to the re&#13;
quest made by the Rpecla! Country&#13;
Life commission, appointed by President&#13;
Roosevelt.&#13;
Awaiting An Heir.&#13;
The birth of an heir to the throne&#13;
of Holland Is confidently expected&#13;
this week, and if all goes well the outburst&#13;
of popular enthusiasm will be&#13;
such as has seldom been witnessed&#13;
among the placid Dutch. There has&#13;
been no royal birth in the Nether-&#13;
'ands since that of Queen Wilhelmina&#13;
herself, 27 years ago. Thrice before,&#13;
since the marriage of "Little Wilhelmina,"&#13;
as the Hollanders affectionately&#13;
call the queen, have the&#13;
hopes of the country been raised,&#13;
only to be dashed.&#13;
The constant fear of the Dutch hea&#13;
been that the house of Orange would&#13;
die out with s childless sovereign,&#13;
and that Holland would paRS under&#13;
the rule of a German prince, and&#13;
would thereby possibly become a German&#13;
vassal state. This partly accounts&#13;
for the extraordinary eagerness&#13;
with which the event Is awaited in&#13;
every town and village In the Netherlands.&#13;
, D e t r o i t . — C a t t l e — E x t r a dry-(e&lt;l s t o e r s&#13;
'and h e i f e r s , $5.50; s t e m s a n d Ucifors,&#13;
1,0(10 to t.200 Iris, $5,2'5"&lt;R)Ti.60; s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s . *00 to 1,000 lbs, $5(8)5.40; s t e e r s&#13;
a n d h e i f e r s t h a t a r e fat. 500 to 700 lbs,&#13;
$5; c h o i c e fat c o w s . $4.60; g o o d f a t&#13;
r o w s , $4; c o m m o n OOWK, $3&lt;fJ3.2f&gt;; d i n -&#13;
n e r s , $L75f/il!; c h o i c e h e a v y b u l l s , $46$&#13;
4.25; f a i r to good b o l o g n a s , b u l l s , $4;&#13;
s t o c k h u l l s , $8.75; c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s ,&#13;
800 to 1,000 lbs, $4..10(614.75: f a i r feedi&#13;
n g s t e e r s . 800 to 1,000 Ihs. $4 ¢0 4.25:&#13;
c h o i c e B l o c k e r s , r&gt;00 to 700 lbs, $4.25fl&gt;&#13;
4..10: f a i r s t o c k e r s 500 to 700 lbs, $4;&#13;
s l o c k h e i f e r s , $3.50; m i l k e r s , l a r g e ,&#13;
y o u n g , m e d i u m a g e , $40(0)55; c o m m o n&#13;
m i l k e r s , $25@35.&#13;
V e a l c a l v e s — M a r k e t s t e a d y , w i t h&#13;
W e d n e s d a y ; 25c h i g h e r t h a n l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y ; b e s t , $ 8 ® 8 . 7 5 ; o t h e r s , J4«#&#13;
7.50.&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t s t e a d y ,&#13;
w i t h W e d n e s d a y . 15c l o w e r t h a n last.&#13;
T h u r s d a y . B e s t l a m b s , $7.75(5)8.10; f a i r&#13;
tn g o o d l a m b s . $7(fi;7.50; l i g h t to c o m -&#13;
m o n l a m b s , $6.50 (ri&gt;7; y e a r l i n g s , $6 (ft)&#13;
6.75; f a i r to p o o d s h e e p , $5.50 (tj)6; c u l l s&#13;
a n d c o m m o n , $3.50©4; c l i p s , $G(fi?G.S5.&#13;
Hogs-—-Market. 15e t o 25c h i g h e r&#13;
t h a n l a s t T h u r s d a y . R a n g e of p r i c e s :&#13;
LlH-ht. to Koorl bu t e l l e r s , $7.15 (ft 7.25;&#13;
pffts $6 016.40-, l i p h t y o r k e r s , $6.00¾¾&#13;
6.75; s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t B u f f a l o . — C a t t l e — M a r k e t d u l l&#13;
a n d 2 5 ^ 5 0 c l o w e r ; b e s t e x p o r t s t e e r * ,&#13;
$6(8)6.50; b e s t 1.200 t o 1.300-lh s h l p -&#13;
pinK « t e e r n r $5,50©6; b e s t 1,000 to 1,100-&#13;
lh s h i p p i n g s t e e r s , $5.4 0(^)5.60; b e s t fat.&#13;
c o w s , $4.PiO(f05: f a i r t o Rood, $3.75(g)4;&#13;
t r i m m e r s , $2.50(g)2.7R; bent f a t h e i f e r s ,&#13;
$5|j&gt;ft.R0; lltflu h e i f e r s , $3.75@4; b e s t&#13;
h u l l s , $4.50(¾ 4.75; b o l o g n a b u l l s . $3.75&#13;
(9)4. T h e m a r k e t w a s f a i r on t h e b e s t&#13;
c o w s , b u t s l o w on t h e c o m m o n k i n d s ;&#13;
h e s t c o w s . $4O(f?&gt;50; m e d i u m , $30fi)40:&#13;
c o m m o n , $25@30.&#13;
H O K S — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; h e a v y , *7.300)&#13;
7.40; y o r k e r s , $7.15&lt;g)7.30; p l * s , $6.60©&#13;
6.70; c l o s e d s t e a d y .&#13;
S h e e p — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; b e s t l a m b s ,&#13;
$8.40@S.60; f a i r t o * o o d *S^&gt;8.25; c u l l s ,&#13;
!&#13;
7(S7.75; y e a r l i n g s , | 7 ® i 7.40; w e t h e r s ,&#13;
«.fift(R56.7f); e w e s , $ 5 . 7 8 ^ 6 . 2 8 ;&#13;
w e a k ; p r o s p e r t R l o w e r ,&#13;
C a l v e s — S t e a d y ; b e s t . $9.50;&#13;
to Kflod", $7(Qi!&gt;; h e a v jy . $4.55(0 (g)n.&#13;
titers.&#13;
:M$i»*&#13;
m e 4 U a&#13;
Robbers who blew up the safe In&#13;
the- Ualon-vrne&gt;'postafliee secured about&#13;
TOO pennies for their trouble.&#13;
G r a i n , Ktr.&#13;
D e t r o i t . — W h e a l — C a s h No. « red&#13;
11.35; M a y o p e n e d a t $1.33 a n d ruled*&#13;
s t e a d y : J u l y o p e n e d a t $1.13. a d v a n c e d&#13;
to $1.14 a n d d e c l i n e d t o $1.V3; S e p t e m -&#13;
b e r o p e n e d a t $1.05¼ a n d n d v a n c e d t o&#13;
J 1.06¾ ; No, 3 red, $1.32; No. i w h i t e .&#13;
1.35.&#13;
C o r n — C a s h No. 3, d8%f; No. 3 y e l -&#13;
low. 2 c a r s a t 6flc; No. 2 w h i t e 1 ' r « r&#13;
a t 58c.&#13;
O a t s — C a s h No. 3 w h i t e . R7»fcc.&#13;
H v e — C a s h No. 2, S&amp;r.&#13;
R e a n a — C a s h . $2.36; M a y , $2.42 bid.&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d - ^ - P r i m e s p o t , 50 basrs a t&#13;
$5.60. O c t o b e r , 100 bajrs a t Jfi.50; s a m -&#13;
ple, 40 baa-a a t $5.25. 15 a t $5.10. 25 a t&#13;
$5. 10 a t $4.75; s a m p l e , a l a l k e , R basrs a t&#13;
$7. 5 a t $6.&#13;
T i m o t h y s s e d — P r i m e s p o t , 60 b a e s&#13;
a t $1.65.&#13;
F e e d — T n 100-lb s a c k s , j o b b l n r l o t s :&#13;
B r a n , $28; c o a r s e m i d d l i n g s , $29; fine&#13;
mlddllnsfs. $X0; c r a e k e d c o r n i i n d c o a r s e&#13;
c o r n m « a l , $29; c o r n a n d o a t c h o p , $27&#13;
p e r tori.&#13;
F l o u r — B f t s t M i c h i g a n p a t e n t . $6.2^- o r d l n a n f j ^ e n t , i t ; straight, $&amp;.BO; A&amp;rrwtr*9iit"hVl ift w»od, Job bin*&#13;
• * » * • • .• r" j - • - , ;&#13;
•aa«t.4jL&gt;J.j&#13;
VANISHING&#13;
FLEETS t&#13;
B y&#13;
ROY NORTON&#13;
IIXUSTKATED BY A. WEIL&#13;
&lt;fc|^H^»,&#13;
3 Y N O P 8 I S .&#13;
"Van'laliln* Fleets." a story of "what&#13;
Alight have happened," opens In Washington&#13;
with the United States and J a p a n&#13;
near war. Guy Hilllur, secretary of the&#13;
British embassy, and .Mlsa Norma Roberts,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberts, are&#13;
lntix&gt;duced a s lovers. Japan declares war&#13;
and takes the Philippines. Guy Hillier&#13;
starts for England. Norma Roberts&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. All ports&#13;
a r e closed. Tokyo learns of missing J a p -&#13;
anese fleet and whole world becomes convinced&#13;
that United States has powerful&#13;
war agency. England decides to »«nd&#13;
a fleet to American waters as a Canadian&#13;
protection against what the British suppose&#13;
is a terrible submarine flotilla. Hllltcr&#13;
is sent with a message. Fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears. The kaiser is missing.&#13;
King Edward of England is confronted&#13;
by Admiral Bevins of the United&#13;
States. The Dreadnaught, biggest of England's&#13;
warships, is discovered at an Impassable&#13;
point in the Thames. The story&#13;
now goes back to a time many months&#13;
before the war breaks out, and Inventor&#13;
Roberta visits the president and cabinet,&#13;
telling of and exhibiting a metal production.&#13;
This overcomes friction when electrified&#13;
and is to be applied to vessels.&#13;
Roberts evolves a great ttylng machine.&#13;
The cabinet plans a radioplane war&#13;
against Japanese. The start is made for&#13;
the scene of conflict. The Japanese fleet,&#13;
believing Nippon supreme, suddenly discerns&#13;
the radioplane fleet. After maneuvering&#13;
the airships descend, and by use&#13;
of strong magnets lift the warships, one&#13;
by one, from the sea. The vessels are&#13;
deposited in a mountain lake In the&#13;
United States to await peace. The British&#13;
fleet accepts American hospitality and&#13;
is conveyed to the United States by the&#13;
wingless terrors. To show the kaiser&#13;
their wonderful invention, that ruler Is&#13;
taken on a long trip—his first visit to&#13;
America—thus accounting for his mysterious&#13;
disappearance from Berlin. The&#13;
radioplane breaks down.&#13;
CHAPTER XXI.-—Continued.&#13;
It was noon before the workers saw&#13;
him again. They came out of the dark&#13;
hull for a cold luncheon, and were&#13;
joined by the emperor, who sat silently&#13;
through the meal. Again they resumed&#13;
work, and this time it was&#13;
dusk when they emerged. There before&#13;
them was a camp fire, and studiously&#13;
broiling trout, caught with and&#13;
prepared by his own hands, was the&#13;
kaiser. On huge pieces of birch bark&#13;
"before the coals he had spread his&#13;
catch, and with a boy's jubilation&#13;
laughed at their surprise. His&#13;
national philosophy had conquered,&#13;
and the sovereign had become a democrat&#13;
in truth. As a boy he recounted&#13;
his adventures of the day, and as a&#13;
tired boy he went to rest. The next&#13;
day was given up to the rifle, and&#13;
hunting such as he had never dreamed&#13;
of having was before him. Indeed, he&#13;
had turned camp hunter, and with&#13;
success. So ended the second day, and&#13;
so passed many others.&#13;
And each day brought him nearer to&#13;
thoso round him, each night brought&#13;
him better rest, and every hour added&#13;
to the broadening of his serenity. He&#13;
was now merely a man among men,&#13;
playing his part in his own way, enjoying&#13;
it, and finding the worries of&#13;
empire dropping away in this spot&#13;
where all hia crown of rulership"&#13;
availed him nothing. What was the&#13;
need to fret when his hands were&#13;
tied? Why not dismiss it all from&#13;
his mind? The great federation would&#13;
pass on and on long after his bones&#13;
had gone to dust. Here in these Canadian&#13;
woods, which he had never&#13;
dared hope to invade, was life such as&#13;
he had dreamed of, freedom such as&#13;
he had never known, and absence of&#13;
all formality. Here were men who&#13;
were learning to love him for himself,&#13;
and for whom he was forming an af-&#13;
Itctlon that would last him to tho end.&#13;
.^4. Strange as it seemed, the cloud&#13;
Which had disturbed him on the night&#13;
of the accident had taken another&#13;
form. Then it had been because he&#13;
was to be detained for an indefinite&#13;
time. Now it wan because the detention&#13;
was to be so short, and he saw&#13;
with regret that the time for his departure&#13;
was nearly at. hand. He foresaw&#13;
the reluctance with which he&#13;
would enter that craft of tho air and&#13;
hear its metal door close him in for&#13;
homeward flight, but as a prison door&#13;
shutting him out forever from the forests&#13;
nnd hills, the pools and brooks,&#13;
which he had learned to love. Only&#13;
now and then, as he tramped beside&#13;
eome stream or followed some game&#13;
trail cut through the- fallal* leaves by&#13;
countless caribou, he would^smlfe ironically&#13;
at the amazement and alarm&#13;
which muit^have b*en Ac#usjad. .fiy hia&#13;
•bMBCt, not only In his own e m p i r e '&#13;
but In rtBjU«it«frifit«teHJ»wtef&lt;»&#13;
those who had- caused his disappearance.&#13;
... L &lt; y &lt; i.* {*« *. i v . *&#13;
And in both surmises he was correct;&#13;
but the diitreas in ttjig American&#13;
teputdJ^ J^ai p^rtkps tne n j | | t keen.&#13;
MfcJslncJ Hie b a n n i n g of hletilitles&#13;
had the president ami bis .associates&#13;
tflleredosuek. grave 'BpptabetiBlon*1 as&#13;
when it became known to a certainty&#13;
that Brockton's endeavor hud met&#13;
with accident or disaster.&#13;
On the first day when the expedition&#13;
failed to return from its voyage of&#13;
conciliation no undue alarm was occasioned,&#13;
it being considered entirely&#13;
possible that it had been compelled to&#13;
return directly to the key to avoid&#13;
observation. Another 24 hours of&#13;
silence caused comment; but again it&#13;
was regarded as tenable that a barrier&#13;
in the first quest had required a second&#13;
trip. The third day passed with&#13;
anxious expectations but no news.&#13;
The fourth, however, was a memorable&#13;
one;' fur then it became known to&#13;
the entire civilized wurld that the&#13;
heads of a nation had beau abducted,&#13;
and the situation in Washington grew&#13;
almost unbearable.&#13;
In response to an urgent message to&#13;
the plant, "Old Bill" Roberts, Norma,&#13;
and Bevins appeared on the fifth&#13;
night, utilizing the new radioplane fur&#13;
their visit. The gravity of the consultation&#13;
which followed was intense;&#13;
but the faith of the inventor lu bis&#13;
work afforded some measure of relief.&#13;
"It would be almost impossible," he&#13;
asserted, "for anything worse to befall&#13;
them than delay. They may have&#13;
been cast away in the air or on the&#13;
land by an accident to their steering&#13;
armada mfgnThfiVf *alled?'&lt;XB case It&#13;
had not, the secret-would be given out&#13;
and search begun actively ''for the&#13;
missing Norma and h e r distinguished&#13;
passengers; but ra any event British&#13;
support would iiave been ajtsuwd.&#13;
Bevins, foreseeing the difficulty of&#13;
his task, asked and obtained" permission&#13;
to Invite the British admiral to&#13;
accompany him, t h e whsdom of which&#13;
was evidenced. Favored by the difference&#13;
In time, the speedy Roberts&#13;
on that very night crossed the Atlantic&#13;
and deposited letters to secret&#13;
sendee agents in London, Instructing&#13;
them to obtain positive knowledge of&#13;
where the king might be found t i e&#13;
following evejUn^ On bur return she&#13;
conveyed Fields and the Dreadnought&#13;
to the, key, preparatory to the xncr&#13;
meutous journey.&#13;
That tllght which was again to disturb&#13;
the thrones or Europe was accomplished&#13;
without incident, but not&#13;
without difficulty. The Roberts&#13;
swouped down from the heights of&#13;
air, untenanted save by her, to find&#13;
spread between the earth and sky a&#13;
blanket of fog, thick aud Impenetrable.&#13;
Into it she slowly dropped,&#13;
groplug this way aud that over the unsuspecting&#13;
city, whose sounds came&#13;
up to her but gave no hint as to&#13;
locality. Aimlessly she wandered here&#13;
aud there in the murk, taking desperate&#13;
chances in her quest. Suddenly&#13;
something loomed directly below the&#13;
open port, from which Bevins was&#13;
leaning and peering down, and only a&#13;
quick change of course avoided a collision.&#13;
Fields joined him, and identified&#13;
the dome of Saint Paul's. It&#13;
was a narrow escape, but enabled&#13;
them to set their course and gain the&#13;
He Had Turned Camp Hunter.&#13;
gear, which would require flight, in&#13;
straight lines. Nothing but a blow&#13;
such as was sustained by Seventeen&#13;
in battle could even temporarily stop&#13;
both dynamos; hence it is improbable&#13;
that they lost their lives."&#13;
Step by step he reasoned out the&#13;
course which would be pursued, and at&#13;
last gave it as his opinion that the&#13;
Norma had come to ground in Canadian&#13;
woods. He suggested searching&#13;
expeditions, even though it entailed&#13;
the exposure of the secret, the abandonment&#13;
of the Oriental campaign,&#13;
and the opportunity to establish permanent&#13;
peace. The president alone&#13;
stood steadfast for the latter hope,&#13;
and was quick to offer a new plan. It&#13;
was that the people of Great Britain&#13;
themselves should have a conclusive&#13;
and final demonstration, and, yielding&#13;
to his arguments, it was agreed upon.&#13;
The project was no less daring than&#13;
those which had been executed before.&#13;
The Dreadnought was to be deposited&#13;
in the Thames under rover of darkness,&#13;
and in an apparently impossible&#13;
position, where the people of London&#13;
might look upon it as nn ohject lesson.&#13;
Immediately afterwards the king&#13;
and his most, powerful officials were&#13;
to be shown the working of the radioplane,&#13;
that they might be in a position&#13;
to advance measures for peace and&#13;
disarmament, fortifying their arguments&#13;
by their own poaervationg&gt; , The&#13;
utxnoat • secrecy war- to- be maintained,&#13;
because i n j £ e meantime the Chines*&#13;
deserted greens of Saint James' Park,&#13;
where Bevins was lowered by ropes&#13;
to the earth.&#13;
He stood for a moment while the&#13;
bulk of the radioplane and the Dreadnought&#13;
which she was carrying rose&#13;
into the air and disappeared from&#13;
view. He felt, alone in an unfriendly&#13;
city, but set his teeth and stumbled&#13;
out to a street, where he enlisted the&#13;
services of a constable and a hansom,&#13;
and was conveyed to the Cecil, whose&#13;
lighted doors stared out upon the fog&#13;
washed courtyard leading from the&#13;
Strand. His message of the previous&#13;
night had met with instant response,&#13;
and no one would have suspected that&#13;
the two men who lounged in the hotel&#13;
entrance in seeming idle conversation,&#13;
smoking and watching passersby, were&#13;
important agents in the hands of fate.&#13;
As nonchalantly as they had met they&#13;
parted, one returning within doors,&#13;
and the other sauntering baek to the&#13;
waiting hansom which was to convey&#13;
the admiral to the hippodrome and a&#13;
daring audience with the king.&#13;
The fog deadened bells of the ancient&#13;
city marked only an hour's time&#13;
before he had emerged .and returned&#13;
to the park entrance, where the wondering&#13;
driver was dismissed, shaking&#13;
his head and marveling at the idiosyncrasies&#13;
of the Americans, who seemed&#13;
never to have a resonable destination.&#13;
Once more the grim old admiral&#13;
Ifrtp^I tnrough t h e paths to hts rendezvous&#13;
and gave the whistled signal&#13;
t o his waiting craft, witter* during nts&#13;
absence had released Its burden near&#13;
Westminster bridge and above Qlackfrlars,&#13;
where her position would, be&#13;
both acceBsilfte and impressive to iha&#13;
peopTb on the* following jaornlnf.&#13;
lijf into trie air for o*stfbrt distance,&#13;
then down again in hovering silence,&#13;
ttier Roberts went, and,4*nde4iher coiamundec&#13;
in the garden behind Buckingham.&#13;
The fog was no lunger an enemy;&#13;
for now she remained motionless&#13;
only a tew feet above the roof which&#13;
had sheltered so many kings and&#13;
queens. This nearness aided the quick&#13;
visit of ^th#. .British officer to his sov&#13;
Of elga. when called, and prevented d,elay&#13;
when the monarch and his companions&#13;
appeared for their Journey.&#13;
The log, bad become an ally.&#13;
Those, who sit upon England's&#13;
ihroue -may never show surprise -so&#13;
runs tradition—but o n s this night an&#13;
expression of astonishment burst from&#13;
one of her sovereigns as he entered&#13;
the yawning portal of the strange machine,&#13;
Up to that moment neither he&#13;
nor his companions had entertained a&#13;
belief that the ^American engine of&#13;
destruction could be other than some&#13;
powerful, speedy, and invincible sub-&#13;
'marine. Now in the cloak of fog and&#13;
darkness, within sound of the roar of&#13;
traffic past his palace gates, in the&#13;
midst of his own garden, he found a&#13;
formidable monster with undreamedof&#13;
might.&#13;
With his companions he was ushered&#13;
through a shadowy companionway&#13;
without hearing the stealthy closing of&#13;
the port through which he came. Nor&#13;
was he aware as he entered the brilliantly&#13;
lighted drawing, room amidships,&#13;
that already he had been lifted&#13;
into the light of stars and was flying&#13;
through space over the Atlantic ocean&#13;
at a speed of 600 miles an hour. It&#13;
was inoomprehenaible that before his&#13;
first questions had been answered the&#13;
ribbon of the channel had been passed&#13;
and Ireland had lost itself in the&#13;
eastern horizon. Gravely interested&#13;
and steadily courteous, he inspected&#13;
the radioplane under the guidance of&#13;
the inventor and his daughter, who&#13;
made known to him its capabilities,&#13;
and it was his own suggestion that&#13;
the trip might be extended to the&#13;
Chesapeake, where the fleet of the&#13;
Lion was moored. For once the first&#13;
lord of the admiralty showed eagerness,&#13;
and was visibly pleased when&#13;
Bevins said there could be no objection&#13;
to the king^s desire.&#13;
Between the inventor and the king,&#13;
as they sped westward, there was established&#13;
a friendship. Gruff and&#13;
querulous "Old Bill" Roberta, democratic&#13;
to the core, and respecting men&#13;
only for their real worth, found in&#13;
this quiet, self-contained guest one&#13;
whom he could Admire. And to the&#13;
monarch the scientist was the most&#13;
interesting man he had ever met, considering&#13;
that his past achievements&#13;
had gained world-wide fame, to be&#13;
capped with the surprising creation&#13;
of this aerial masterpiece. From time&#13;
to time he glanced at the stately&#13;
American girl, who sat silently beside&#13;
the prime minister. He found himself&#13;
puaBled by the brooding wistfulness&#13;
of her eyes and speculating as&#13;
to what yearning had mirrored lt9&#13;
sadness In their depths.&#13;
Not until Bevins had recounted the&#13;
tale of the western battle did the king&#13;
realize that on occasion the supple&#13;
hands of the girl might become things&#13;
of steel, and that within her was a&#13;
soul of flame. She begged permission&#13;
to retire before the admiral had fairly&#13;
begun his story, and was not there tc&#13;
hear that stern old veteran of the&#13;
seas conclude with the trenchant&#13;
statement: "It was not I, your majes^&#13;
ty, who won the battle that day; it&#13;
was that slip of a girl who led the&#13;
cohorffe of the Eagle down upon&#13;
them. It was she who clasped the&#13;
flag in her arms when the battle was&#13;
done."&#13;
The men in the room leaned forward&#13;
in silence when Bevins ended. They&#13;
had been carried away into the realm&#13;
of imagination to picture the stirring&#13;
clash of mighty arms and valorous&#13;
deeds. Before anyone could speak an&#13;
officer appeared at the door.&#13;
"I have to report that we are above&#13;
the Chesapeake, sir," he said to his&#13;
superior.&#13;
It was the breaking of reverie, the&#13;
sharp call from the past to the present,&#13;
and the king rose expectantly&#13;
The lights of the Roberts flashed out&#13;
and left them in darkness. The port!&#13;
below opened, and they grouped them&#13;
selves round them, with night glasses&#13;
tendered by their host.&#13;
(TO B E CONTINUED.)&#13;
Where Water Means Life.&#13;
As illustrating the scarcity of water&#13;
in some parts of Australia and the&#13;
high value set upon it, I would draw&#13;
attention to the case of three Afghans&#13;
who were murdered in West Australia.&#13;
Water was scarce, and yet these&#13;
three orientals washed themselves in&#13;
a road-hole—the sole source of supply—&#13;
adjoining a selector's homestead.&#13;
In a fury he shot the three of them,&#13;
and at his subsequent trial the .jury&#13;
unanimously acquitted him.—The&#13;
Wide World Magazine.&#13;
H A R D * H I P 8 OP A R M Y , L I F E . ~&#13;
J&gt;&#13;
Left Thousands of Veterans with Kidney&#13;
Trouble.&#13;
The experience of David W. Martin,,&#13;
a retired merchant of Bolivar, Mo., is&#13;
* * ' _ . * * A l u s V like tiiou-&#13;
'^ earfds of others.&#13;
Mr. Martin' says:&#13;
~I thin* f b a * j&#13;
had kidney disease&#13;
ever since t n e&#13;
war. During an eng&#13;
a g e m e n t my;&#13;
horse fell o n me,&#13;
straining my back ,&#13;
and injuring thq&#13;
I have been told F tiad a&#13;
I had Intense pain&#13;
in the back, headaches end dizsy'&#13;
spells, and t h e action of the bladder&#13;
very irregular. -About three years ago&#13;
I tried Doan's Kidney Pills «nd inside&#13;
of a comparatively short time was entirely&#13;
rid of kidney trouble." ;&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
kidneys,&#13;
floating kidney&#13;
NOT A HERMIT OF ROMANCE&#13;
Man's Reasons for Living in Solitude,&#13;
Though Excellent, Somewhat Sur-&#13;
* prised Young Lady.&#13;
The beautiful young lady stood a t&#13;
the mouth of the cave in the mountain&#13;
and addressed the rugged and&#13;
long-haired hermit.&#13;
"So you are a real, live hermit! I&#13;
have never seen a real hermit before,&#13;
although I have read all about you&#13;
many times. I suppose you had a very&#13;
sad love affair In your youth and the&#13;
loss of your beautiful sweetheart&#13;
drove you to this wilderness to live&#13;
alone. Was she so very beautiful?&#13;
You have tomato cans filled with money&#13;
hid In the ground, haven't you?"&#13;
"Not at all, not at all." Interrupted&#13;
the hermit. "I have no money buried&#13;
—it is all in four per cent, government&#13;
bonds. My first love affair was altogether&#13;
too successful, and that's t h e&#13;
real reason I'm here. You didn't see&#13;
a square-built, red-headed woman on&#13;
the trail looking for a husband, did&#13;
you? It's about time I moved again,&#13;
anyhow, since so many people are&#13;
coming here. 'Tain't safe to stay."—&#13;
Puck.&#13;
T O T A L LOSS OF HAIR&#13;
Seemed imminent—Scalp Was Very&#13;
Scaly and Hair Came Out by HandfuIs—&#13;
Scalp Now Clear and&#13;
New Hair Grown by Cuticura.&#13;
"About two years ago I was troubled&#13;
with my head being scaly. Shortly&#13;
after that I had an attack of typhoid&#13;
fever and I was out of the hospital&#13;
possibly two months when I first noticed&#13;
the loss of hair, my scalp being&#13;
still scaly. I started to use dandruff&#13;
cures to no effect whatever. I had&#13;
actually lost hope of saving any hair&#13;
at all. I could brush it off my coat&#13;
by the handful. I was afraid to comb&#13;
It. But after using two cakes of Cuticura&#13;
Soap and nearly a box of Cuticura&#13;
Ointment, the change was surprising.&#13;
My scalp is now clear and&#13;
healthy as could be and my hair thicker&#13;
than ever, whereas I had my mind&#13;
made up to be bald. W. F. Steese, 5812&#13;
Broad St., Pittsburg, Penn., May 7 and&#13;
21, 1908."&#13;
Potter Drag &amp; Chora. Corp., Sole Props., Bostoa.&#13;
ASKING SMALL FAVOR.&#13;
Give Mother. Earth a Rest.&#13;
In India there are certain days when&#13;
it is unlawful to plow. Mother Earth&#13;
is supposed t o sleep six days in every&#13;
month, and on such days aha refuaea&#13;
to be disturbed In few • i u r t e r . .&#13;
'Papa, mamma says that if you're&#13;
too lazy to do anything else, will you&#13;
please sit near t h e clothes closet and&#13;
blow the smoke in, so as to kill the&#13;
moths!"&#13;
Artificial Wants.&#13;
Many a one, for the sake of finery&#13;
on the back, has gone with a hungry&#13;
belly and half-starved their families.&#13;
"Silk and satin, scarlet and velvets,"&#13;
as Poor Richard says, "put out the&#13;
kitchen fire." These are not the necessaries&#13;
of life; they can scarcely be&#13;
called the conveniences; and yet only&#13;
because they look pretty, how many&#13;
want to have them! The artificial&#13;
wants of mankind -thus become more&#13;
numerous than the natural; and as&#13;
Poor Dick says: "For one poor person,&#13;
there are a hundred indtl*lifc**-*tflS!ijamln&#13;
Franklin.&#13;
If there 1« nothing the matter with&#13;
the baby to-day its mother' .ca.fi worry&#13;
because there may be. to-morrow.&#13;
Tn case of accident, exit a, wminils,&#13;
I burns, scalds, s-prains, bruises, etc., nn:h-&#13;
\ m&lt; will so quickly take away ;i!l pain&#13;
i ami soreness as 11 anil ins Wizard Oil.&#13;
i&#13;
! Tho trouble with men who aiv a]]&#13;
riP-;ht otherwise is their pcmch.int l\ir&#13;
boasting of it.&#13;
Mm. Wlnilow'ii S o o t h i n g S y r u p .&#13;
WircTiltOxftD teething, softens the Kunm, rmiiif.nn ft»&#13;
rt*mmo»t:a&amp;, allays pain, cure* wind coliu. 2.V &amp; ix; ttla&#13;
The man who la full, usually car*i«%&#13;
a pocket.which t* empty..&#13;
- ' " ^&#13;
. - f r ^ * ' ^ M* .• ***L+'.ir*.. .*1vfh/U. &gt;ft - V *&#13;
$he § fadnmj J} wjra Uh&#13;
F. L. ANDKfcWS &amp; CO. PHOPNttTOHiv&#13;
—:ST 1&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , AFH. 15, i m&#13;
I Q Bpite of t h e tariff w a r t h e r e&#13;
a r o m a n y n i g n s of r e t u r n i n g p r o s -&#13;
p e r i t y . T b e T r e a s u r y r e g e i p t b in&#13;
M a r c h w e r e 88,761,0()0 l a r g e r t h a n&#13;
t h e r e c e i p t s i n M a r c h , 1 9 0 8 , a n d&#13;
t h e g r o s s r e c e i p t s in t h e N e w&#13;
Y o r k Poatoffice i n M a r c h w e r e&#13;
n e a r l y $800,000 l a r g e r t h a n t h e&#13;
g r o s s r e c e i p t s for M a r c h I . K K&#13;
This is j u s t tliH ti/ij« of year wlinn&#13;
you lire most likf'y to have ^uiiiHy or&#13;
bladdor trouble, w''!i rheumatism a i d&#13;
rheumatic pains ;•;,!,MM} by weak kid&#13;
neys, Delays are,dangerous, (jet ')e&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder Pills, and&#13;
be sure yon irer what you a^k tor.&#13;
They ;; ie tiie hest [ill Is made, tor ^ack&#13;
aehe, vv^j." '&lt; kirk, p n m t v di-iirder.-,&#13;
ir.rl i Mia' MM- i'( "li.' Ida'ide:, tr,'. Thev&#13;
are aiiti-ejuir H.nd .ict promptly. Sold&#13;
and rfceommr.nderi ( y nil dealers.&#13;
T h e i e p o r t of t h e s p e c i a l c o m -&#13;
m i t t e e a p p o i n t e d b y t h e n a t i o n a l&#13;
Oivil S e r v i c e R e f o r m L e a g u e t o&#13;
i n v e s t i g a t e t h e p o l i t i c a l a c t i v i t y of&#13;
t h e F e d e r a l officeholders, r e c e n t l y ! p*J2ce and "making a park for t h e " v i l&#13;
m a d e p u b l i c , c l e a r s M r . R o o n e v e l t | | a ^ B . This would be a tine tbingr for&#13;
of t h e a l l e g a t i o n s m a d e d u r i n g t h e • the town and especially tine, for the&#13;
l a s t c a m p a i g n t o t h e effect t h a t h e home coining days. Now if the own-&#13;
A D D T T I O F A l tftCAL.&#13;
A New York woman lived to be 112&#13;
uatorb biio bad a doctor. She is now&#13;
dead.&#13;
A man in Jersey kept the samo cook&#13;
for fitly years, la this another way of&#13;
announciDK a gulden weddiug anniversary?&#13;
This ottic« has been kept busy&#13;
the past week printing nearly everything&#13;
from 1 sitfu card to 1000 28-page&#13;
booklets.&#13;
Friday, April 30 has been appointed&#13;
as Arbor Day and everyone is requested&#13;
to plant a tree. IF you havn't a&#13;
place to plant oue, plaut it on the&#13;
road.&#13;
There is a call for telephone directories&#13;
since the change in the telephone&#13;
uffic . The new girls do not know all&#13;
numbers and rings. They a r e "catching&#13;
on ' in g»od shape however.&#13;
One man in Cohoctah stopped the&#13;
Republican last week. Said he uould&#13;
not take a local option paper. Wondei&#13;
[f h« will Jive in a local option&#13;
county.---Republican. If. the friends&#13;
of lora I option were as faithful to&#13;
their cause as this man, we know of&#13;
seyeral papers that, would have to suspend&#13;
publication.&#13;
Some of the "old boys'1 of Brighton&#13;
both in and out of t h e village are talk&#13;
ing u p tbe matter of purchasing a&#13;
c o e r c e d c e r t a i n F e d e r a l officeholde&#13;
r s i n t o t h e Riipport of M r . T a f t&#13;
f o r t h e r e p u b l i c a n n o m i n a t i o n .&#13;
There is not a better S3 .live than De&#13;
Witt-- Carkilized Witch Hazel salve.&#13;
We hereby warn the public that we&#13;
are not responsible for any injurious&#13;
ers of tbe land would only dedicate it&#13;
to the village for that purpose it&#13;
Would be an everlasting monument to&#13;
them and a joy to all. A good t h i n g&#13;
also for other villages. (?) I&#13;
/&#13;
Tbe government postal authorities&#13;
have caused to be posted in every&#13;
effects caused from wnrth'esa or pois- j postofflce in t h e country a circular to&#13;
onous imitations of our DeWitts Oar- t h e P u b H c ' D r « i f l * everyone to use&#13;
bolized Witch Hazel Salve, the oriR i~ envelopes with a return card printed&#13;
nal. I r i s good for a n y t h m g when a&#13;
t t i e r e o n - Every buaine.s man, farmer&#13;
salve is needed, hut it is especially o r P e r s o n o f a n * occupation should&#13;
good for piles. He sure vnn get D e . ^ v e h l 9 D a i » 9 a n d a d d r e s s l ) n n t e d o n&#13;
Witts. Sold by. all dealers.&#13;
Mr. T a f t h a s been P r e s i d e n t&#13;
j u s t o n e m o n t h a n d in t h a t t i m e&#13;
h a s h a d , p r o b a b l y , a s few t r o u b l e s&#13;
a s a n y P r e s i d e n t for H like p e r i o d ,&#13;
b u t t h e t i m e is a p p r o a c h i n g a n d&#13;
n o t far off, w h e n t h e c r i t i c a l p e r -&#13;
his envelopes, thus insuring its return&#13;
to the sender if any mistake is&#13;
made in the address. You can obtain&#13;
them at tbe DISPATCH office, nicely&#13;
printed, for 50 cents per 150.&#13;
Wiiliamston, in Inghnra Co , voted&#13;
dry this spring and now that Fowlervilie&#13;
is on the dry list, saloon keepers&#13;
are making tracks for Webberville&#13;
iotl of hi s a dmi n i s t r a t i o n will h a v e and intend to make that town a place&#13;
b e e n r e a c h e d a n d w h i c h will d e - \ where thirst may be quenched. Tbe&#13;
c i d e w h e t h e r h e is t o b e s u p p o r t - farmers ol Leroy township however&#13;
e d b y a u n i t e d p a r t y o r w h e t h e r j have spoken and declare they will&#13;
t h e h i s t o r y of t h e H a r r i s o n a d - :&#13;
g j 7 e Webberville the "go by" and&#13;
m i n i s t r a t i o n is t o r e p e a t itself. j take their farm products to a d«-y&#13;
Of course the ladies all d e . l a r e&#13;
Swept Ovf r Niagara&#13;
; town.&#13;
: against trading in a wet town. Prob-&#13;
This terrible calHmit.v often happens : a b ( y t Q 0 ••village dads" of that, town&#13;
because a careh-s boatman ignores :&#13;
w m take notice and set down on some&#13;
the rivers warnings—growing ripnles if not all of the licenses.&#13;
and faster c u r r e n t — N a t u r e s warnings ;&#13;
are kind. That dull pain or ache in&#13;
the back warns yon that the kidneys&#13;
need attention if yon would escape&#13;
fjstal maladies—Drop-v. diabetes or&#13;
Brights disease. Take Electric Bitters&#13;
a t once and see backache fly and all&#13;
FLINT, Mich., April 9.—That the&#13;
recent local option victory in Genesee&#13;
county was due to the efforts of a&#13;
priest, Rev. Fr. Luby, of Mt. Morris is&#13;
tbe opinion of many people in this&#13;
city. Fr. Luby, regarded as one of&#13;
your best feelings return. uAfter tbe . a, blest s, tudents o,f. ,e conomics and&#13;
i - - f w - * i . A , ; social prob ems in Michigan, and aclong&#13;
suffering from weak kidney- and . . . . *&#13;
lame back, one $1 bottle wholly cured&#13;
me," writes J . R, Blankensbip, ot Balk&#13;
T e n n . Only 50c at F. A. Siglers.&#13;
Same Old Style oT Cooking.&#13;
Professor Snaggs—Strange there's&#13;
been no Improvement made in cooking&#13;
In the last 2.000 years. Now, down at&#13;
my boarding house this morning I h;ul&#13;
ft steak broiled in the regular Pom&#13;
pelian style. Boggs—Porapeiian style?&#13;
H o w do.you mean? Professor Sna££s&#13;
—Why, scorched to a cinder on one&#13;
ftlde and covered with ashes on the&#13;
Other.—Exchange&#13;
cording to his own statement, was in&#13;
the campaign "heart and soul."&#13;
In a recent interview Fr. Luby said&#13;
that when he learned that the assessed&#13;
valuation of Mt. Morris had decreased&#13;
from $800,000 to $600,000 in the nine&#13;
years he lias been in charge of the&#13;
(lathe.lie church there, he began to in-&#13;
(juire as to the rouse, and finding it&#13;
was liquor, determined to do all in his&#13;
power to stamp out the saloons. He&#13;
also said that 22 membe.s of his flock&#13;
had lo&gt;t their farms in that time and&#13;
every nno of them could trace his misfortune&#13;
to liquor—Evening News.&#13;
Will Enforce T h e b a w.&#13;
The people have decided the qaesa&#13;
Vading merchant ot Springfield, N. tion of Local Option by a large ma-&#13;
C. by two expert, doctors—one a long jority and W. E. Kobb and William&#13;
specialist. Then was shown the won- iStoddartl sav they stand ready to carderful&#13;
power of Mr. K i r y s New Dis ry out the will of the people. T h e&#13;
covery. ''After three weeks use" proposition has been fairly before the&#13;
writes Mr. Rhvens, "he was an well as ; people and it. has been fairly and&#13;
e\er. \ w.-uld not ta'.e all the money 'squamiy decided, hut the officer* bowin&#13;
the world for what it, did to my ever ask that those, who worked and&#13;
boy.1' rnfai 1 Htile for (loughs anti voter] for Local Option, continue, to&#13;
C0ld~, its the -Htest. surest cure fit rles- do their part ui rrp'.rting violn'ions of&#13;
perate Limi.1 diseases on earth. 50c the law and in Riving evidence when&#13;
and SI at. F. A. Siglers. O u a r a n t e e they have knowledge of .llegat sales&#13;
aatisfaction. Trial bottle free. ot liquor.—Tidings. • i&#13;
Words To Freeze The Soul.&#13;
"Your son has consumption. Hi.-&#13;
ca-e i&gt; hopeless." These appalling&#13;
words were spoken to (leo. E Blevens&#13;
Make the&#13;
Home Bright&#13;
3&#13;
•s&#13;
H&#13;
\ ,7&#13;
• • ' . /&#13;
3C2R&#13;
Worn, shabby floors, marred, scratched&#13;
woodwork, dingy, scuffed furniture can all&#13;
be refinished and made to look like new. You can'do it&#13;
yourself at a trifling cost.&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
VARNO-LAC&#13;
stains and varnishes at one operation, imparting&#13;
to all kinds of surfaces the elegant&#13;
effect and durable, lustrous surface of&#13;
beautifully finished oak, mahogany,&#13;
walnut, or other expensive woods.&#13;
If i t ' s a s u r f a c e t o b e p a i n t e d ,&#13;
enameled, stained, varnished, or&#13;
finished in a n y w a y there's&#13;
an A c m e Quality Kind t o&#13;
i l l t h e p u r p o s e .&#13;
•£tta^,;r'»^ti. ' &gt;&#13;
First Mortgage Timber&#13;
qf Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company tf G r a n d Rapids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable semi-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st a n d Sept. 1st. 6%&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n a l $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 e m d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
T h t t t bondi are dated March 4th, 1909, and mature at the r a n of $50,000 each year, commeuciof&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any interest period and carry the privilen&#13;
of registration as to principle.&#13;
T r t M t c e : T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . Grtwrvd R a p i d * . M i c h i g a n . Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co.&#13;
of Gra.nd Reipids Michigan.&#13;
C a p i t a l i z a t i o n . $ 1 , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . P a r V a l u a $ 1 0 . 0 0 . B o n d * . $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property securing this issue consists of 31,632 acres of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located on&#13;
tht southwest shore ot the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoria and&#13;
within 110 mdes of all important ports on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vancouver.&#13;
Mr. J. P. Brayton of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremost timber&#13;
txperts of the country has examined this tract of timber for us and reports a stand of mora than&#13;
1,500,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than 20c per M ft. atumpage.&#13;
2 The present equipment campuses a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam Tuf,&#13;
Rolling Stock, etc., capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S &gt;&#13;
CHAR. W. LIKEN SKBKWAXNO, Mien&#13;
Pre*., Huron Bay Lumber Co.&#13;
J. H. MOORR RPATTr.K, W A R H .&#13;
Hx. Snpt. Motivr power, Chi., Bur. &amp; y. K. R.&#13;
W. T. COLEMAN, BKATTIK. WAimwfiTost&#13;
Treasurer N&gt;hraska Investment Co.&#13;
S. M. COCTIRANR, Capitalist, . SEATTLE, WASH,&#13;
WM. L CVRPKN-TKR, - . DFTHOIT, MICH.&#13;
Of the hrm of Stevenson, Carpenter &amp; Butzcl.&#13;
CHAS. A. PHRLPS, . . . GB4TO »AKO«, UtCM.&#13;
Timber Operator. Tre**., Hackley-Fheltw-Bonnell&#13;
Co , Grand kapids, Mich.&#13;
W. F. MeKNICTTT, ORAOTJ Rxproa, Micm.&#13;
I'res., White River Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
H. B. CADWKLL, N K W TOM&#13;
Vice-President, Standard Screw Co., Detroit.&#13;
C T. MOORK ••ATTIg, V7AMM.&#13;
Timber Hipert and Mill Operator.&#13;
W * o f f e r ***••• bensU at par and accrued interest to ytold 6%.&#13;
tJPnvilesre will he granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount of stock of&#13;
the company, f Further mforroatioa and prospectus showing photographs of the property furnished E. B. Cadwell b Co., on request&#13;
7 7 0 PMOBSCOT MHLDIM&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS MEMBERS N EW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
L&#13;
S e e Our Pine Line of Post Cards&#13;
', ' i^M &gt;•"!" f ""'I'!&#13;
•M&#13;
"!T^3S^"n*W"»"'&lt;"«"«»"&#13;
Up Before The liar.&#13;
N . H. Browo, »n attorney, ot lJitt«-&#13;
field, Vt., writ™. " W e have uttwd Dr.&#13;
Kin«« New Litti pills t o * years a n d money." WSttad of putting $25 or&#13;
find tham such tt K&amp;d i&amp;iily medi- W tfito fruits a n d dresses, t h e claps&#13;
c u e wa wouldn't u*.rwiU*»«t iLe'Yn/&gt;S| wiH tjradnaie i» cheaper clotueaor t h e&#13;
For Cfiills, fJunstipation, BUu.u^ti^sh&#13;
or Hick hwddnclin they work wonder*..&#13;
25c Ht F. A., d r i e r s .&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
The frrftdnatfli of t h e Millington&#13;
Hiqb btbool baye adopted a novel&#13;
mariner ol speeding tbair "graduation&#13;
'ATENTS&#13;
TRADt M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A c .&#13;
Anyone e n d i n g a s k e t c h mid description may&#13;
quickly i^ccrtuln o«r opinion free whether an&#13;
baVeiiriiiTi is probably patuutHble. Cornmuritc*-&#13;
tloaa»ttaUyeoiittdentlaL HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
•entfree. oldest agency for i*cu ring piuenta.&#13;
through Muuu &amp; C&#13;
wyecial notice, without chance, In tbo&#13;
Patents taken tn rough A Cu. r««4y« Scientific American. A handsomely tlhutratad weekly. Ijuveat otruolatiou&#13;
of any (scientific Journal- TeruiB,f3 a&#13;
year; four months, Si. Bold by ail newadealera. MUNN Ito *»&gt;*&gt;&gt;**&gt; New Yak&#13;
Branch Offlo«, 625 IT Bt_ WaobUiKturi. D. OL&#13;
bust "Sunday clothes" and spend t b e&#13;
money in a trip to NtaKara' Palltj.&#13;
This in a sensible change and one tboy&#13;
will nnver regret.&#13;
O v e r a n d U n d e r .&#13;
&gt;*'Ai'ri)ir i s f a i r l y g o i n g c r a z y o v e r&#13;
h i s n e w n u M o r "&#13;
" T l n n ' s st r:. n::e l£v»»rv t i m e I'vv&#13;
s e e : . \:'r.:&gt; h e (,,i* lieeri tf&lt;»lng c r u i Y UN&#13;
"i&gt;d Kather Die, Djt;t*ir,&#13;
tb-in bav« my feet cut oS," said M. L.&#13;
Bin«liam of i'rinceville, 111. But you'll&#13;
die from Kanmrenu (wbice bad eaten&#13;
away eight toes) it you don't" said all&#13;
doctors. Instead be ubed liucklens&#13;
Arnica Salve till wholly cured. I t s&#13;
rureH of Eizema, Fever sores, boil*,&#13;
bums aud Pitas astound the world.&#13;
25c nt F. A. Hi^lera.&#13;
The Man With the Brush&#13;
Will a d d dollars t o t h e value of y o u r f a r m b y&#13;
a d d i n g t o t h e a p p e a r a n c e of y o u r buildings: A&#13;
n e a t l y p a i n t e d h o u s e a n d b a r n g i v e t h a t pros&#13;
p e r o u s look t h a t y o u w a n t y o u r farm t o hear.&#13;
Y o u r family, also, will b e r i c h e r in t h e c o n -&#13;
t M - j ^ r a ^ n ^ - ' D tented feeling t h a t goes with p l e a s a n t h o m e&#13;
1 w B ' / - &gt; ' " ' . ) ¾ ^ s u r r o u n d i n g s .&#13;
^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ . ^ A c o a t Of p a i n t is a powerful a g e n t for&#13;
i m p r o v e m e n t , a n d t h e best i n v e s t m e n t y o u c a n&#13;
m a k e will b e a few d a y s or p a i n t e r s ' time, u s i n g B . P . S. P a i n t .&#13;
W e h a v e a few copies ot t h e B. P . S. P a i n t B u d g e t , a n assortm&#13;
e n t of l i t e r a t u r e on p a i n t s and p a i n t i n g t h a t c a n n o t fail t o save y o u&#13;
:noney on v o u r p a i n t i n g biUs_ C o m e in and call for one t o d a y .&#13;
FOR SALE BY GEO. W. REASON&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINCLE MACHINE&#13;
WITH OR WITHOUT BOLTING ATTACHMENT.&#13;
The cut shows machine with » This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
20 Inch Saw and Shingle Car* da^JflfxAflBfe^a. *° l 2 ' 0 0 0 »hlnfl'e« Per &lt;**»•&#13;
riage, ready (or cutting shingle* ^ ^ ^ ^ B f t S f l E ^ f l H l Carriafle8 m , d * ^rom tweeted&#13;
18 in. long, and 4 In. wide. ^•BBBtP^^I^^M^ h a r d wood' ^ r , c k '* , 0 , i o&#13;
P r i c e $ 7 5 . 0 0 . n E ^ ^ ^ ^ M ^ s ! rol,8&lt;t s t e e '' F o r c u t t , n 8 , h i n "&#13;
With 36 Inch Bolting Saw and W&amp;i^^g0&amp;^QM g l e s r e 4u , r *s * *o 6 H, P. For&#13;
Boltinr Carriage, ^ 1 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ bolting 6 t t 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
P r i c e $ 2 5 . 0 0 eIxTtr ft IS A 1M4O-N^ EY-MAK550E lbRs. - Equipped with the bolting attachment it in a complete shingle outfit is itself. Can be adjunU'd&#13;
for nny desired taper or thicknens. For cutting the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
"in.inuiacturo a hifrh grade.low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net prices.&#13;
GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mill Machinery, Etc.&#13;
What About Drug Store&#13;
Saloon*.&#13;
. THE HIGH GRADE&#13;
LEHR PIANO&#13;
18 USED AND ENDOR8EO BY&#13;
The Cfiwi Coiim uliff at Mctk, Htm Ywfc f%.&#13;
The Penntrlvtntt CeHege ol ttutie, PMt«d«4pMt.&#13;
Chlcugo OtMSfMrtsfr • Htnshni Sekeol of OpsnvOMMI*.&#13;
The PutMt OofiMrratsry of Unto, Pueblo, Colt.&#13;
AND OTHIR {.lAMnQ OOM6IRVATORIW&#13;
AnreetyetbrflliAnt tad powerfol tone, erqtdjtfte&#13;
caee, perflMt adjustment and durable workmanabip&#13;
place it In the front rank of the beet instruments made&#13;
to-day. It is the ideal piano foi the home, Where its&#13;
presence is a sign of culture and refinement.&#13;
The LEHR PIANO is manufactured under stngnlartr fttfOftAieoomllUuita which l w&#13;
the cost Of production, and it has achieved ft brilliant success as the most elegant instrument&#13;
in the market at a satisfactory price. WRITE FOB GAXAlAKHJE AND PRICES.&#13;
H. LEHR A COMPANY, Manufrs, - Easton, Pa.&#13;
M a n y s a l o o n k e e p e r s i n t h e&#13;
c o u n t i e s w h e r e loostl o p t i o n c a m -&#13;
p a i g n s c a r r i e d c o n t e n d t h a t t h e y&#13;
will o p e n a d r u g s t o r e f o r t h e g a l e&#13;
of i n t o x i c a t i n g l i q u o r a . T h e y s a y&#13;
t h e y c a n sell juBt a a m u c h o r e v e n&#13;
m o r e l i q u o r i n a d r u g s t o r e e a l o o n&#13;
t h a n i n t h e o r d i n a r y l i c e n s e d Haloon.&#13;
I f t h i s ia t r u e w e w o n d e r&#13;
w h y t h e y h a v e n o t d o n e i t a n d&#13;
s a v e d t h e $ 5 0 0 t a x t h e y w e r e c o m -&#13;
p e l l e d t o p a y i n t o t h e p u b l i c t r e a s -&#13;
u r y . T h e !ocal o p t i o n l a w d o j s&#13;
n o t s u s p e n d t h e o p e r a t i o n of t h e&#13;
p r e s e n t l a w g o v e r n i n g d r u g s t o r e s&#13;
b u t i t d o e s a d d s o m e very d r a s t i c&#13;
r e q u i r e m e n t s .&#13;
E v e r y d r u g g i s t i n a local o p t i o n&#13;
c o u n t y m u s t file a s w o r n s t a t e -&#13;
m e n t o n M o n d a y of e a c h w e e k&#13;
w i t h t h e P r o b e c u t i n g A t t o r n e y of&#13;
t h e c o u n t y s h o w i n g t h e n a m e a n d&#13;
a d d r e s s of e v e r y p e r s o n p u r c h a s -&#13;
i n g l i q u o r i n h i a d r u g s t o r e d u r -&#13;
t h e p r o c e e d i n g w e e k ; t h e k i n d a n d&#13;
q u a l i t y of l i q u o r , t h e d a t e of p u r -&#13;
c h a s i n g t h e s a m e a n d t h e o b j e c t&#13;
for w h i c h e a c h p u r c h a s e w a s m a d e .&#13;
T h e law r e q u i r e s t h a t t h e d r u g -&#13;
g i s t s h a l l Bell s u c h l i q u o r for m e d -&#13;
i c i n a l , m e c h a n i c a l o r a a e r a r n e n t a l&#13;
p u r p o s e s o n l y , a n d t h a t h e m u s t&#13;
sell f o r t h e s e p u r p o s e s i n g o o d&#13;
faith. A m a n w h o p u r c h a s e s l i q -&#13;
u o r from a d r u g g i s t r e p e a t e d l y ,&#13;
s t a t i n g e a c h t i m e t h a t i t i s f o r&#13;
m e d i c i n a l p u r p o s e s r a i s e s t h e&#13;
q u e s t i o n w h e t h e r h e is p u r c h a s i n g&#13;
it i n g o o d f a i t h f o r m e d i c i n a l p u r -&#13;
p o s e s o r n o t . t i n d e r s u c h c i r c u m -&#13;
s t a n c e s t h e d r u g g i s t sells h i m&#13;
i i q u o r a t h i s p e r i l . O n t h e p r o s -&#13;
e c u t i o n of a d r u g g i s t f o r s e l l i n g&#13;
l i q u o r c o n t r a r y t o law t h e s w o r n&#13;
s t a t e m e n t s w h i c h h e h a s filed w i t h&#13;
t h e P r o s e c u t i n g a t t o r n e y m a y b e&#13;
i n t r o d u c e d i n e v i d e n c e a n d t h e&#13;
j u r y c a n look t h e m o v e r a n d find&#13;
w h e t h e r r e p e a t e d s a l e s m a d e t o&#13;
o n e m a n w e r e n o t sufficient e v i -&#13;
d e n c e t o h e d r u g g i s t t h a t t h e&#13;
m a n was n o t s e l l i n g t o s u c h a p e r -&#13;
son in g o o d f a i t h , a n d if t h e y d o&#13;
so find t h e n t h e y m u s t c o n v i c t t h e&#13;
d r u g g i s t a n d h e m u s t p a y t h e p e n -&#13;
a l t y . A n h o n e s t d r u g g i s t h a s&#13;
n o t h i n g t o fear from t h i s law a u d&#13;
is g l a d of i t s p r o v i s i o n s b u t i t i s&#13;
a t e r r o r t o evil d o e r s . W i t h a n&#13;
h o u e s t a n d efficient P r o s e c u t i n g&#13;
A t t o r n e y t h e r e i s n o reason t o&#13;
fear d r u g s t o r e s a l o o n s i n local&#13;
o p t i o n c o u n t i e s .&#13;
If yon n«f(i ;t pin take l M V i t t s Lttlift&#13;
Enrly Risn-s. insist on ihpni,&#13;
gentle, «asy, pieman! Little Hv&gt;r pills&#13;
Sold by all dealers.&#13;
She Pttfkmjj gispaUh&#13;
rumaeuax* * V B » I I H U J U D A Y M O B B U M •*»&#13;
tt i t o c r l u U o a Frlce ( 1 i n A d v a n c e .&#13;
&amp;ut*r«a at tn« FoatotnceatPlacfcu«»y, MiuAi^at&#13;
an aocuud-class matter&#13;
Aii»«xUoLnu ralettKuule known on sj&gt;plit«Uuii.&#13;
F R A N K L A N D R E W S So C O&#13;
ttUTOM »NO PKOPMItTOIM.&#13;
CMURCHtb.&#13;
Mt i T U O i U b T UFLSOOFAL UJ1UKCH.&#13;
Kov. O. C, Liulejoha puslor. b«rvk«M5 o v u&#13;
buuiiay m u i m u g * l U&gt;:ik/, ami every s u u u b j&#13;
eveuiug a t i':uoo'i;lock, J'rajei ujeeUutfTtiurtiajr&#13;
tiYefllUKO. 3'illdity euLuui al cluse ot LUUTU&#13;
iu^aervice. Mieb AIAKV V A N F L K E I , bupi.&#13;
,* O-NUttbitiAriO-NAt, C U U U C t l .&#13;
V.1 K»v. A. l i . GaM» yaBlor. flervltt: t v o i .&#13;
ouuuekjr UiOiuiui »1 i0:du i U J every buntlaj&#13;
eveuiaK at 7:0C o'ci'jcu.. L'I»JBI motnuj^'l'buii&#13;
a»y e v e n i n g - . auuUiiji- acaool m ciuau o l u±oZL&#13;
.L.^«ervlce. MIB. Utwoe Crutuui, au^t,, J . A Oui^eii sec.&#13;
O 4 e v . AL J . Luuiuieriwru, 1 naior. -sdrvl.t.&#13;
jverjf bunOay. LOW waoo H L &lt; : ^ U u&gt;-u&#13;
xiguuatia witliMumouiU. l U ' . ^ a . i u . C a i t x u i e .&#13;
i J :UUp. LU,, vetperaaii. be JOILIKJU »L \ ; o u p . . .&#13;
.- WITH&#13;
::'l'A&#13;
KILLTH.COUQ1&#13;
MD C U R B TMS LUN*&#13;
Dr. King!&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
AND ALL THROAT MO LUM TWHJ&#13;
GX7AJULNTKED 0ATX81U&#13;
O E M O N E Y &amp; E 7 U H D J Q X&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
fV\hm A. O. Jd. Suciuly o i iiiia yitcv, UJO«L« uvtu&#13;
X tuird Siuirta/ int&lt;Ue r'r. ^tatiuuvv xlaii.&#13;
Juuu Tuuiutty MttU Ji. 1 . Kwliy, (juuuty iJkjiu^uu .-&#13;
• U ^ W. C X. U. uitem lUu tMcuud Saturday m&#13;
JLcuta tuuutn W i : ^ o p . m. at LUB liuuttu o i i u i&#13;
UMUILMJ» Jlivuryoau Luuirtwietl m wujperauuw ie&#13;
^uaiiiaily iaviteu. Jtre; Leal rtijjlwr, rvL't&gt;. &gt;li^&#13;
Jt-iiUio bttJtun, secretary.&#13;
1U«&lt; L'. X. A-aiiU H, 6uwiB4.j m tlilb ijiouo , u. o&#13;
tjvety ttiira a»turu*y evuuiug i u l u e l u . J A J .&#13;
new l i a i i . Joilil iiuaoLu*), i reaiucui.&#13;
A\Jdut)ievurv U'rluay evuiung uu u i uoi^i« a &gt; .&#13;
J I Lae muuu at;li«ir Uaiilxi tue owai'LuuuL ulur&#13;
Viuinug brutUum arecoriiiaiiy t u v u t a .&#13;
C, V. VanWiiiile, a n JiuuiLi UUUJII euac .&#13;
is. i'. x o n i u b u n , - lituoxd K.eei)(ri&#13;
b\ Li. Juckbon, - Fiuiiuce Jiwjpor&#13;
LiviugBtunLodge,No.T4 J,ir A. A , M. Ke^a;*:&#13;
CuuiiuuDkutjun Tuvudsy tiveoiiiK, on ur Loloit&#13;
IHO I ull ot liie luoon. b\ G. Jatik»uu„ S\ . ) ,&#13;
OHDKH OF liAbTiiKJS ^TAK iut«ta eacti uiuuu&#13;
the Friday evening following tti&lt;s teyuiar I&#13;
A A. M. rueetiuif, AlKj.j«tmi V A U U U N , \\'1 M.&#13;
On . Eli OF .UUiJiiltN WOOU.MliN Meet tht.&#13;
iirat'i'uureday evening oi each Mouth in Un&#13;
ilaccul&gt;«o nail. C L.tjrimea V. C&#13;
LADIES O K T H E MACCABEKS. M«jdt over;- 1 =&#13;
and drd Saturday ot each Uiontli at ^:3U p u,.&#13;
K. O. X. M. hall. Visiting slaters cordially ]i&#13;
vited, L I U I ' O S I W A Y , Lady t o r n .&#13;
K N i G l i T a OF THh. LOYAL GL'AKU&#13;
F. L. Aadrevre F. M ,&#13;
Mortgage Sale. -f&#13;
UetiuU haviug been u i a d e i n tUe conditions o f&#13;
two uiurt^aveH ouveriugthe Datoeiand (whereby the&#13;
power uf Hale therein contained has become Operative;&#13;
mude by Ad»w Francie and A n n a L , ITraBcis&#13;
liie wifij of Futuani, Llvingutoucounty, Mich-&#13;
L a n , ti&gt; (/. \V.'i'teple of the wore place, o n e o f&#13;
said inuitageB being dated Decenatmr afth, 18B&#13;
aud recorded in the Office of Ketfiater of deeds,&#13;
tor the County oi' Livluyutnu, State o f Michigan&#13;
May Ui, l'JOO, iu Liber 79 of niortuajjC" o n page&#13;
5]."&gt; if cieof, and the other dated June 4tb, 1908,&#13;
aud rei-orded in »aid Kegirftt-id oltlce on t h e 15th&#13;
day of Maii-h, JUUD iu Liber Ui of Mortgagee o n .&#13;
lid.^ fi'iV theuof; o u whklt sBidmortagw ther« Is&#13;
now e'aimed to be d u e aud unpaid at this date t h e&#13;
BUIII o f Two hundred fifty /our dollars and twenty&#13;
Ave cents (t'&gt;u4\b) and aKomey fe«e, and n o unit&#13;
or procktding having Wen commenced in l a w or&#13;
equity to recover the tlebta secured by aaid tnort-&#13;
^'u"e.s, or an} jnirt thereof."&#13;
N(j\v therefore, under the power of Hale contain&#13;
ed iu aaid moi t^jtgeH, uotice IB hereby given that&#13;
ou Monday, the !4tu day of June, HHJ9, at o n e&#13;
o'clock in :he aftermion of said day, ut the weet«rly&#13;
trout dour of the Court houte in t h e village&#13;
of Howell iu aaid County (that l&gt;einj»Ihe placa o f&#13;
holdiuj,' the circuit court fur the County iu which&#13;
the mortgaged pieniiees to l,e sold u i e situated&#13;
andtiitid mortgages will he foiedoeed by sale at&#13;
public v n u l u e to the highest bidder of the premisea&#13;
described in said niortjjJifice. or eo much&#13;
ttiere»&gt;f as may he ntceeaury &lt;&gt; eaunty the amount&#13;
due o n s;iid luortnagea with it;tne.»t jnd legalcoeta&#13;
that ia to s a j ; all that certain pii'ie nt jiarce! of&#13;
land Bitiiute iu the t o v n s h ' p of I'utinini, County&#13;
of Liviuv^tnn and • i:it«- "t &gt;Jlch,Kiiii, vi/.: 1 hree&#13;
aereri ot land in i in' tmri !r.v. -i i .ireer of that part&#13;
of the we^t half ot ill.'.-&lt;&gt;I.T; we^t quarter of section&#13;
twenty four (vlo l.vii.i: a:&lt;mh nt ttie tiij'hway&#13;
ruiiniDg through s i i . ;,md JII&lt;I extendinj; from&#13;
the center of taid hi^lauty eouth to the center of&#13;
the creek and in v&gt;idih eat&gt;t and weft, Mitlit'ient t o&#13;
make the three acree of land. AlMn Town one (1)&#13;
North ami Ihin^e tour (1) ea.-d, &lt; uunty ut Livingston&#13;
and at ate of Michinau,&#13;
Dated ' arch 1-'tti, 1'&gt;)'.».&#13;
K. A. A. 1 . E. ^'T WE i j . \\\ TKKPLK,&#13;
M .\lt_vK. i' r Mi.'i tr agee Mortgagee&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H . F . S ' G L t R M , D - C. L. b l G L E R M . ,&#13;
uh .DRS.SIGLER&amp;S1GLER,&#13;
. nyt-Krianr- uiiu .;ur,,f»!ih. A I I can* ^lutup:;&#13;
attended today or niS'hi. ou; &lt;eor' .V IMH H&lt; . i^-.&#13;
rinckney, Mich.&#13;
J. W . B 1 R D&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, call tit uie Pinckney l)i.--&#13;
i'ATCii ortjee. Auction Hills Fret-&#13;
Dexter Independatit Phone&#13;
Arrangements made for sale by plume .&#13;
my e.xjiense. (&gt;vi o',&#13;
Address, Dexter, (&gt;\ietiuiatt&#13;
I? W.DAN IK PS,&#13;
fjJi GFNKHAI. A C l ' T l o M ' K H .&#13;
Saiistactii ii linarfinteeii. For iiUntnifttion&#13;
call al l)[.&lt;rATei! &lt; &gt;t!ice or u i d n ^&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. Ii. Pyo !&gt;!! i ;»•,,,,,e&#13;
connection, Auction SdlN a nil tin &gt;i;;&#13;
hirnislu'! irti&gt;.&#13;
L t\:-\ .&gt; ;V i_, .\ ;- L&gt; .\ \\. VV &gt;i&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC S K A L&#13;
W«TH SfM.&#13;
' * n. M Ch~r- r ?&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous C. B. CIGAR.&#13;
The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
5 CENTS&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
them send to us for a box as&#13;
atrial. Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We ^an convince you&#13;
that tills is the cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
* MANUPAcnntBD BT&#13;
CHRISTUM BBOl, • Wetttarf, H.&#13;
Better Not Get&#13;
Dy&#13;
If you can help it, Kodol&#13;
effectually helping Nature* so&#13;
But don't trifle with Indigestion.&#13;
prevents&#13;
m&#13;
Dyspepsia, by&#13;
re Indigestion.&#13;
A rjjpat. many prviplo ^."ho hnv^&#13;
trtfled with indiKf•avion, have been&#13;
•OtTy for it—when nervous or&#13;
-&lt;v*toM»lr dyspepsia resulted, and&#13;
t h t ? havo not. been able to euro it.&#13;
Ti'se Kodol and prevent I r v i n g&#13;
"Dyspopsia.&#13;
Everyone i s subject, to inrli^e:;;-&#13;
tion. Stomaeb dcMangemont. follows&#13;
Ktomaeb abuse, just na naturally&#13;
and just as surely a s u sound and&#13;
bealthy stomach results upon t h e&#13;
'akinK of Kodol.&#13;
When you eTiierfenre sourness&#13;
r»f stomaeh, holrhine: of pas and&#13;
nntisentiiiR fluid, Moated sensation,&#13;
pnawinc: pain in t h e pit of t h e&#13;
stomach, heart burn (so-called),&#13;
diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or&#13;
chronic tired feeling—3fou need Kodol.&#13;
And then t h e quicker you take&#13;
Kodol—the better. E a t what you&#13;
w a n t let Koflol digest it.&#13;
Ordinary pepsin "dyspepsia tablets,"&#13;
physics, etc., aro not likely&#13;
to be of much benefit t o you, i n&#13;
Uigoatlvo ailments. Pepsin U only&#13;
a p.?'-rtal rlisnsNTr—tvnJ physics are&#13;
not. dip^sters ot. al\.&#13;
Kodol is a perfect digester. If&#13;
you could see Kodol dljesting every&#13;
p:Tticl.^ of food, of .'ill kinds, in t h e&#13;
glnss iest-tuhes in our laboratories,&#13;
you would know this just a s well&#13;
a s we do.&#13;
Nature and Kodol will always&#13;
cure a. sick stomach—but. in order&#13;
to he cured, the stomach must. rest.&#13;
That is what Kodol does—rests t h e&#13;
stomach, while the stomach seta&#13;
well. Just as simple a s A, B, C.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
f3o t o jronr rlrnpfrtst t o d a y and f ^ t a dollar&#13;
bottle. Then after r m i have visr4 t b «&#13;
entire c o n t e n t s o f t h e b o t t l e if y o u cam&#13;
h o n e s t l y any, that i t h a s n o t d o n e y o u a n y&#13;
pood, return t h e bottl e t o t h e drufwifl* a o d&#13;
he will refund y o u * m o n e y w i t h o u t qnea&gt;&#13;
t l o n or d e l a y . We will t h e n p a y t h e drn*"&#13;
BHt f o r t h e bottle. D o n ' t h e s i t a t e , a f t&#13;
drupsrinta k n o w t h a t o n r j r u a r a n t e * i* trood.&#13;
T h i s offer a p p l i e s t o tho larpe bottle o n l y&#13;
a n d t o but one in a f o n i i l v . The l a r s e bott&#13;
l e c o n t a i n * 2¾ t i m e * a s m u c h a s t h e fifty&#13;
eont Lwttfc.&#13;
Kodol fa prepared a t t h e labor*-&#13;
tori eg of E.C.DeWitt &lt;fe Co.. Chicago.&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS&#13;
Nervous Headache&#13;
"T know frotu i'\]icrici:Cc iliat&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain PilU will&#13;
relieve severe cases ot headache&#13;
quickly." MRS. G E O . S. H E N R Y ,&#13;
Sullivan, Wash.&#13;
In many persons the least excitement,&#13;
exertion or irritation causes&#13;
headache. They cannot attend&#13;
church, theatre, piaces of amusement,&#13;
travel, or mingle in a crowd&#13;
without MiiTcring an attack of headache.&#13;
The nerves of the brain a r e&#13;
easily excited, and this irritable convlition&#13;
causes pain. Such person!&#13;
should take&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
before starting out, or on the first&#13;
indication of an attack. They&#13;
invariably relieve all such misery.&#13;
The first package will benefit; If not,&#13;
your druggist will return your money.&#13;
STATE OP M i r i l K t \ \ \ thf&gt; i»nM»»tp court f o r&#13;
the nmntv of T. if in-* ton At. .1 *Ksslrm of&#13;
*Riri court hrM at tli^ probate office in thp villas^&#13;
of Howell in Raid rminfy on thp 2ml i ^ y of&#13;
A)iril A. T&gt; 19W. Pro*ent: Hon. Arthur A.&#13;
J Motuftsriie, jn"is:*» of Trobato. tn the matter of&#13;
I I he wtfttP of&#13;
I DAViri. S. 1.VKKIN, rice oas^it.&#13;
j Martha I.drkln having tilwl tn *Mrl co'.rt h^r&#13;
I (letitbui praytnc that t h e ndraititration of s&amp;iil&#13;
I ''Stato, lx&gt; crtintPd to U'ro.J. I.arkin or to .^omp&#13;
other snifable wereou.&#13;
II i? onlPre^, that ;h^ -^Mh &lt;):vy of April&#13;
A P 10(H), at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at.&#13;
»ftlrt probate oft'ee. be nnd in berehr appointed&#13;
for b»&gt;arinv; said petition.&#13;
It is further orderpJ th»* public noiicp&#13;
• hpTeof be siren by pubUcstion of a nviv of thin&#13;
ordorfir •' . u , . • • . • • &gt; . . - ^ - , ••» ,,,.- ; . . - .1,,1 dav&#13;
Oi feMWlag, In the rincfenvy t-lSfATCUi, « newsf&#13;
p t C i printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
A B T U C R A. MONTAOCK,&#13;
t 1* Judge o( Probata&#13;
Does your back ache ? Is your skin leathery and yeHowr&#13;
Is your uriue murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten persona haye kidney&#13;
trouble. They dont always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced befbre yem Ifeel it.&#13;
That is why it is BO necessary to notice the slightest irregularity. If&#13;
anything is wrong with yoor kidneys it should be •tteadod to «t&gt; once.&#13;
Don't take strong, dr&amp;stio drngs. They are dangerous.&#13;
Yon will be perfectly Rafe and sure of a permanent cure by takfng&#13;
DR THACHERS LIVER &amp; BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cnrwi kidney trouble by removing the oaose sad&#13;
I driving toe inflammation and the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All D e a l e r s Sell 8 0 c a n d f l . O O C o t t l e * . THACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga, Term.&#13;
DONT PAV Tv/mm&#13;
* FOR THE SAME&#13;
Iron, t i n and most prepared roofing are :&#13;
vev-^r ;&gt;o?"rf for, because they need paint^-&#13;
coating even,7 year or two. If you add to the c;&#13;
roofings 1he cost of paintmp; during1 tho numh..v of _•&#13;
vice, you %vill readily understand why&#13;
J-M A S B E S T O S ROOFING&#13;
which needs no coating—is the 'vheac.est-ner y e a r "&#13;
It, will not rot or rust, is permanent!.-- utirahle a^&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, bear or cold can aTf.&#13;
less than slate, iron or shingles, t a n be an; lied i&gt;&#13;
A s k f o r 5 - i i i t f i p S e : - . Cir»ct p r i . : o ^ .&#13;
H W JOHNS-MANVIbbECo.&#13;
7 2 J c f f r . r a o r i A v e . D e t r o i t , &gt;1 ir'-i :,^a n&#13;
- U . V .&#13;
r: !-4&#13;
J • - "&#13;
' 1&#13;
. _.&#13;
c&#13;
,'•&#13;
- J L - .&#13;
- - •&#13;
"\(&#13;
' /&#13;
•J L&#13;
^.--M:&#13;
, ^ ¾ j&#13;
M&#13;
* » , ! • »&#13;
• ^if i - . — • . , *&#13;
b,v&#13;
t&#13;
:M:-&#13;
I&#13;
v&#13;
GEN. BOOTH ON EIGHTIETH&#13;
BIRTHDAY STARTS NEW PLAN&#13;
Veteran Founder of Salvation Army Launches&#13;
Scbemt for "University of Humanity" lit the&#13;
United-States-All the World Celebrates&#13;
Anniversary of His Birth.&#13;
New York.—Gen, \$lllam Kooth,&#13;
founder and commander-in-chief of the&#13;
Salvation Army, -celebrated his eightieth&#13;
birthday on Saturday. April 10,&#13;
an* the event was made the occasion&#13;
ol rejoicing all over the civilized&#13;
•^orld. The Army itself held big meetings&#13;
in every, city and town where it&#13;
Is established, and these were participated&#13;
tn by hundreds of thousands of&#13;
other citizens who were glad to do&#13;
honor to the distinguished phllantropist&#13;
(Jen. Booth himself presided over&#13;
several monster mass meetings in&#13;
London. Hia advanced age and tho&#13;
fact that he was operated on recently&#13;
for rataract did not deter him from&#13;
taking part in the celebrations held by&#13;
his devoted Boldiers.&#13;
University of Humanity Launched.&#13;
ID America the day wa.-3 marked&#13;
-especially by the launching of another&#13;
of Gen. IJooth'a original schemes for&#13;
Social reform in the United States&#13;
At every post of the army was announced&#13;
the beginning of work to&#13;
found ft University of Humanity, a&#13;
great institute for the training of&#13;
workers in social service. Tho university&#13;
will be divided between New&#13;
York and Chicago, and it is expected&#13;
to begin with a fund of $1,000,000. The&#13;
gathering of this fund fa the work&#13;
that the army now enters upon in&#13;
commemoration of its famous leader's&#13;
complelion of- his eightieth year.&#13;
A s a niucu-needed stone in the «re:if&#13;
hrganiza;tTonal structure that William&#13;
l^oolh nils been building during the&#13;
past 47 years, this idea of a school&#13;
Coir the systematic training of his&#13;
workers has been In his mind for sevor*&#13;
l .years. On his last visit to the&#13;
Halted States the general made his&#13;
ftfst tentative announcement of the&#13;
l»lan. Since (hen he hns worked out&#13;
many of the details and he has Just&#13;
consented to the beginning of preliminary&#13;
work in. this country where&#13;
the need for trained workers has been&#13;
especially great.&#13;
No other religious organizalion in&#13;
the world's history has branched out&#13;
into so many departments of philanihopic&#13;
effort and ahsnrhed them ns&#13;
part of Us religious duties.&#13;
Need of Trained Workers.&#13;
The scheme for a l"niver.-.i'.y oT Hu-&#13;
-njajifty grew naiuraliy out. of the development&#13;
of the 20 other departments.&#13;
With a Held as wide a.s the&#13;
world itself the work of the Salvation&#13;
Army is only limited by the number&#13;
&lt;of workers that can be secured and&#13;
Its effectiveness, by the understanding&#13;
And earnestness of these workers. As&#13;
uplift work has grown from local efforts&#13;
to help a few into a great Inclusive&#13;
movement which must miss&#13;
none, the problems of organisation&#13;
have grown greater. Charity has become&#13;
a science and Its application an&#13;
art requiring the highest development&#13;
of personal qualities of insight and&#13;
altruism. There is thus pressing need&#13;
for workers of quite exceptional qualification.&#13;
These qualifications must&#13;
first of all be Inherent and must then&#13;
be developed by experience and special&#13;
training.&#13;
This is the new work planned by&#13;
Gen. Booth. Thoso women, for Instanco,&#13;
who are to go among the&#13;
slums of the big cities must not only&#13;
have the desire to help but must know&#13;
how real helpfulness can best be secured.&#13;
They must understand by a&#13;
study of practical sociology something&#13;
of the social forceB that create&#13;
this poverty and crime and wretchedness.&#13;
They must understand the danger&#13;
of the unwise charity that merely&#13;
increases dependence and understand&#13;
the value of better living conditions&#13;
in raising the moral couteige of those&#13;
to whom fate has been unkind. They&#13;
must be able not only to correct home&#13;
conditions themselves but to impart&#13;
their knowledge and to inspire with&#13;
a desire for betterment.&#13;
Value of the Organization.&#13;
This will be hut a small part of the&#13;
university's training in social service&#13;
aa planned by the patriarchal evangelist,&#13;
but It serves to show of what&#13;
value such an organization will be.&#13;
Of the general's plan for the university&#13;
he himself said recently: "1&#13;
want to train men and women to tteal&#13;
with misfortune. 1 want them instructed&#13;
to combat with the weaknesses&#13;
and Rins of the drunkard, the&#13;
criminal, the pauper and the would-be&#13;
suicide."&#13;
At 80 years of age the head of the&#13;
Salvation Army, after more than half a&#13;
century of almost unceasing activity.&#13;
is as vigorous and untiring as at any&#13;
lime in his career. The inexhaustiblo&#13;
vitality and intellectual and physical [&#13;
activity of this social reformer, philan- j&#13;
thvnpist. preacher, author and traveler&#13;
are marvelous. At fourscore he is&#13;
traveling many thousands of miles&#13;
over the world every year, controlling&#13;
trie destinies of his more than 7,000 ;&#13;
ronis of Salvation soldiery with their&#13;
18,000 commissioned officers, distributed&#13;
among every civilized country,&#13;
preaching constantly to vast audiences&#13;
and doing an amount of Mtetarjr wdrk&#13;
that would "toe"* faetcr to majMP-ra&#13;
professional author with DO otter occupation.&#13;
WtHlam-Booth waa born on April&#13;
10, 1829, in Nottingham, England, and&#13;
was trained for ttwr Methodist ministry&#13;
which he entered and became one&#13;
of the strongest evangelistic forces in&#13;
that ohuteh. He grew dtoaatisned,&#13;
however, at reaching only those with&#13;
some ittligiuus training and conviction.&#13;
He tell that t h e n wove 'thousands&#13;
whose seed waa tar greater and&#13;
ho- gravitated to the East end of Loodon&#13;
where wretchedness ol all kinds&#13;
was tho rule.&#13;
In a disused burial ground ou Mile&#13;
End road he pitched an old tent and&#13;
the first Salvationist mooting waa&#13;
held In that tent In 1861. The fiery&#13;
eloquence ol the earnest young&#13;
preacher caught the attention of a&#13;
crowd or poor WhitecU*p«l*ri **&lt;* b**&#13;
fore that first meeting was over he&#13;
had made several conversions,, a performance&#13;
that he has been repeating&#13;
throughout the world for 47 year*.&#13;
, This first meeting resulted in th/s&#13;
formation of the Christian mission,&#13;
from which it waa the evangelist's&#13;
custom to uend^hls converts to the existing&#13;
churches of the locality, but&#13;
finding that they were not walcomeU&#13;
and were 4a danger of slipping bacji&#13;
from sheer want of comradeship and&#13;
oversight, be set about forming societies&#13;
«f the converted. These be&#13;
found to he a potent agency for bring&#13;
lug ha more, as the heedless East&#13;
ender could be Impressed by tho&#13;
words of a former "pal" when he&#13;
would not listen to a minister. So&#13;
waa created the central Idea of the&#13;
Salvation Army.&#13;
The need of organization becomes&#13;
apparent, but several methods were&#13;
tried with little success before Gen.&#13;
Booth hit upon the military Idea and&#13;
named his organisation the Salvation&#13;
Army. From that time on the movement&#13;
grew amazingly and it has continued&#13;
to grow without ceasing to&#13;
this day.&#13;
Spread Over the Werld.&#13;
The movement began spreading to&#13;
other countries of the world in 1881&#13;
when it first readied the United&#13;
States through the influence of a silkweaver&#13;
who" had emigrated from Coventry,&#13;
England, bringing with him the&#13;
Salvation Army idea and a strong desire&#13;
to continue in the work. It&#13;
reached Australia in the same year&#13;
through a milk dealer from Stepney,&#13;
and soon afterwards the first Canadian&#13;
corps was organized in a similar&#13;
fashion.&#13;
Five years later, in 1886, the general&#13;
made the first of many visits to&#13;
the American branches of the army&#13;
and he has seen them grow from a&#13;
few small corps into a veritable army&#13;
of tremendous influence and unsurpassed&#13;
efficiency. His first great&#13;
world-tour was made in 1891, when he&#13;
visited South Africa, Australia and&#13;
India. Since then he has visited the&#13;
United States, Canada, Australia, New&#13;
Zealand and India four times, South&#13;
Africa twice and Japan and the Holy&#13;
Land each once.&#13;
During all these travels the actual&#13;
executive responsibility for the government&#13;
of the army has never been&#13;
lifted from his shoulders. Even on&#13;
shipboard he is an indefatigable work&#13;
er, planning and writing through the&#13;
days.*'&#13;
Gen. Booth Honored.&#13;
One of the most remarkable of the&#13;
many tributes paid to the general by&#13;
the great of the worM was that of the&#13;
mikado of Japan during the visit to&#13;
that country. The mikado personally&#13;
received the general wlth/"great&#13;
warmth and he was accorded [remarkable&#13;
ovations In Yokohama, Tokyo,&#13;
Sendai and Kyoto, a circumstance of&#13;
strange import when It is realized&#13;
that Japan is not a Christian country.&#13;
Another interesting distinction given&#13;
Gen. Booth was tho conferring on him&#13;
of the degree of doctor of civil law by&#13;
Oxford university. The significance&#13;
of this honor will he better understood&#13;
when it is stated those who received&#13;
university honors with him at&#13;
the time were Prince Arthur of Connaught,&#13;
the prime minister of England,&#13;
the lord chancellor, the speaker,&#13;
Sir E. Grey, the archbishop of&#13;
Armagh, Sir Evelyn Wood, the American&#13;
ambassador, Mark Twain and&#13;
Rudyard Kipling.&#13;
As a writer Gen. Booth is remarkable,&#13;
both as a stylist, as a thinker&#13;
and as a producer. He lias written in&#13;
all 21 volumes, besides innumerable&#13;
articles for the army publications.&#13;
His best-known book is "In Darkest&#13;
England and the Way Out," In which&#13;
he outlined his scheme for social reform&#13;
by means of colonization. "The&#13;
Training of Children," "Love, Marriage&#13;
and the Home." and his books&#13;
on reform are among the others of&#13;
the general's best-known literary productions.&#13;
Of hrs creed the general has written&#13;
very beautifully. He says:&#13;
'The simplicity of our creed has&#13;
been, as I believe it will remain, one&#13;
of the principal helps to our unity.&#13;
We stnnd for the old truths. The&#13;
faith which enn be Interpreted In&#13;
terms of duty, of unselfishness, of&#13;
purity, of love to God and man. is the&#13;
only faith we really care about. Whatever&#13;
may be the case with the select&#13;
minority, the consciousness of sin.&#13;
the force of evil habit and the consciousness&#13;
of Rin and the influence of&#13;
passion, are all vivid realities with&#13;
tho--great masses of ...the. ponujatlan,.&#13;
To "them we bring the promise of da*&#13;
liverance by Jesus Christ"&#13;
FUR TIMBER'PORBCr&#13;
TO Eff HIS dwl 6DGS&#13;
CALIFORNIA tyArfliutk • R » &lt; M E A T&#13;
P R I V A T I O N * ON AN* O V E&#13;
T R I P - 4 N A4.A9KA.&#13;
Barlrngame, Cal.—A lonely overlaad&#13;
trip occupying 56 days through the&#13;
wilds of Alaska in winter, over a trail&#13;
of his own making, during which time&#13;
his provisions gave out and he had to&#13;
Xill his dogs for,food, was the experience&#13;
of J. W. Felder of this city&#13;
who bus just reached here from the&#13;
north.&#13;
Felder is a former local business&#13;
man and a charter member of the San&#13;
Mateo lodge of Elks- He went to&#13;
Alaska last spring in the interests of&#13;
a fur trading company controlled by&#13;
Burlingame capital. The headquarters&#13;
of the company are on the Kusbokwln&#13;
river, near Mount McKinley.&#13;
. lu November it was necessary for&#13;
Felder to make a requisition lor, sup-&#13;
He Had to K i l l His Dogs for Food.&#13;
plies, and as there are no mails out in&#13;
winter, and a letter could not reach&#13;
here before July, he decided, against&#13;
the advice of the miners, to strike out&#13;
alone and make his way overland to&#13;
Seward, 600 miles distant.&#13;
Felder took two dogs and a sleigh&#13;
provisioned for 30 days. Traveling on&#13;
snowshoes, he set otit November 18,&#13;
about sir weeks before the beginning&#13;
of the Alaska winter. He made hiB&#13;
own trail, and built his own bridges,&#13;
sometimes making but three miles a&#13;
day. His best day's work was 30&#13;
miles. He reached Seward January&#13;
24, having been 66 days on the way.&#13;
His provisions had given out some&#13;
days before and he had to kill his dogs&#13;
for food. Near Seward Felder ran&#13;
across three grizzled miners who had&#13;
plenty of moose meat along, and he&#13;
lost no time in changing to a better&#13;
diet.&#13;
ONLY ONE BATH IN HIS LIFE.&#13;
Statement of Michigan Man Shocks&#13;
and Startles His Fellow Church&#13;
Members.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—William Peterson,&#13;
a miller of this city, shocked and&#13;
startled the cultured members of a&#13;
class in applied Christianity in a meeting&#13;
in the First Universalist church by&#13;
interrupting a speaker on "home sanitation"&#13;
to remark that it was balderdash,&#13;
that he had never taken but&#13;
one bath in his life, and that was when&#13;
ho had the itch. Peterson is about&#13;
5,7 years old.&#13;
A representative of the state hoard&#13;
of health was reading a paper when&#13;
Peterson nearly broke up the session&#13;
by hia remark.&#13;
"My folks lived in three rooms in&#13;
the old country," said Peterson, "and&#13;
lived on rye bread and beer. A friend&#13;
of mine asked me to take a bath not&#13;
long ago in a 'rlgamole' they had put&#13;
in a church, but I told him that I had&#13;
never taken but one bath in my life&#13;
and that was when I had the Itch.&#13;
He said it would put the blood in circulation&#13;
and make me feel fine. Well,&#13;
I have a better scheme than that for&#13;
putting the blood In circulation."&#13;
Here Peterson gave his audience a&#13;
practical demonstration In his gymnastics.&#13;
The next speaker changed tho&#13;
subject to • the ventilation of schoolrooms.&#13;
Where the Women Propose.&#13;
Away off in the strange land of New&#13;
Guinea It is leap year all the time in&#13;
ore important sense, for out. there all&#13;
the proposals of marriage are made by&#13;
the women. It Is considered beneath&#13;
the dignity of the male Inhabitants of&#13;
New Guinea to even notice a woman,&#13;
and consequently the women perforce&#13;
must notioe the men, and must start&#13;
any idea of weddings, etc. So when&#13;
the island belle of New Guinea becomes&#13;
in love she promptly sends a&#13;
piece of string to the sister of the&#13;
lucky man. If he has no sister, she&#13;
sends It to his mother, or anyhow to&#13;
Bome female relative. This,, because&#13;
the man And his male relative*, •are^&#13;
assumed to be above taking any. steps&#13;
toward acquiring a wife.&#13;
A CUM„Fgl|,C|TS.&#13;
Xba ..Treatment 1«., \o. , Accomplish&#13;
What Bolcrjoc H a l Sown struggling&#13;
to Attain for Centuries.&#13;
^The Intense Interest hat5 has been manifcrfsed&#13;
throughout thltoouutfry by the wonderful&#13;
cures that are' b«iug«i accomplished&#13;
daily "by epireptiuide -still -continue*.. It is&#13;
really tmrpxi&amp;ing the vast number of people&#13;
who have already been cured of fits&#13;
and nervousness. In order that everybody&#13;
may have a chance to test the medicine,&#13;
large trial bottles, valuably literature, History&#13;
of Epilepsy and testimonial*, wilf be&#13;
eent by null absolutely free to all who&#13;
write to the Dr. May Laboratory, Wa"&#13;
Pearl Street, New York City.&#13;
WHY, OF COURSE.&#13;
"Oh, Willie! You're going to fall!"&#13;
"Naw, I ain't! I'm tryin' a new fancy&#13;
style of skatin'—dat's all."&#13;
His Record.&#13;
"Colonel," asked the beautiful girl,&#13;
"did you ever ride a horse 90 miles In&#13;
three days?"&#13;
"No," replied the veteran of two&#13;
wars, "but I once ran 20 miles In about&#13;
30 minutes, which I think was going&#13;
some, considering the fact that^i© underbrush&#13;
was thick and I was in so&#13;
much of a hurry that I forgot to throw&#13;
away a knapsack that weighed nearly&#13;
50 pounds.''&#13;
I m p o r t a n t to M o t h e r * .&#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 /^jy ssv^i^. /r.&#13;
Signature ^ C^SJ/^JT^CXM&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought.&#13;
A Sure Sign.&#13;
"How did you know that dowdylooklug&#13;
girl was a scientific student?&#13;
Did you hear her talK.&#13;
"Not that; knew her by her wireless&#13;
collars."&#13;
Seasoning.&#13;
"He swore she was the salt of his&#13;
life." j&#13;
"And now that they are wed?"&#13;
"She's the pepper."&#13;
A Domestic Eye Remedy&#13;
Compounded by Experienced Physicians.&#13;
Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Laws.&#13;
Wins Frtohds Wherever Used. Ask Druggists&#13;
for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine&#13;
in Tour Eyes. You Will Like Murine.&#13;
. y -&#13;
The only true secret of assisting the&#13;
poor is to make them agents in bettering&#13;
their own condition.—George&#13;
Eliot,&#13;
To have more of Health and more of&#13;
Life, take Garfield Tea! Thin Natural laxative&#13;
regulates liver, kidneyH, stomach and&#13;
bowel*, corrects constipation, purities the&#13;
blood and eradicates disease.&#13;
The man who separates people from&#13;
their coin will be remembered a long&#13;
time after the undertaker plants him.&#13;
DODDS !%&#13;
KIDNEYS&#13;
KlDNEV&#13;
You Need a Tonic&#13;
if you feel languid and depressed&#13;
all the time. The best thing to&#13;
help nature build up the system is&#13;
DR.D.JAYNE'S&#13;
TONIC VERMIFUGE&#13;
This great tonic is not a false stimulant&#13;
as many of the so-called ' 'spring&#13;
tonics." It is a natural strengthgiT*&#13;
r. For all run-down conditions&#13;
of the health it is an invaluable remedy;&#13;
imparts new life and vigor and&#13;
builds up the entire system. &lt;&#13;
Sold by Ml Leading Druggistt In two&#13;
tize bottles, 50c and 35c&#13;
3ILLI0NSGRASS • Cost J BOe—We D« acra far «««d. m&#13;
Icwt wonderful gnm* cttth* t*T\inyy',y\p\&lt;\iT\iz fr&#13;
to III t&gt;m(« &lt;&gt;f liny per nrro mid Into of pu- :.nr»&lt; Nidi-*, itntmpiy k'ro»-»,(n*&gt;wK.(r»"»'»i Cut it. tiKiny 1&#13;
mil I n 4 *M*'kn 11 lonk» for thw mn«ter Burton. »n«l 1&#13;
I &lt;.1 (in. ilrown.viHl tioutinhpn rvprywhpr*. on rvrr&gt; I&#13;
I '\rm In A merle*. I hp*p»Hrltrt; In turUnfux t' c J&#13;
.fottrtm Utid« rtf T*yi&gt;t. Hi(T H « t f"»t«lo#ftv« o r l&#13;
end (OO I" «t»ttip« »TKl rKM"lTe.««m|)lo.i* U|li-&#13;
'onrinrfnl (fr»««.»1pf&gt;6f Hp«lt«, th» t v t f * ! Wond»&gt;f\&#13;
"lirlcY .0»t».OtoTBni,Orm«w».«»tc..«t&lt;*. ,»nd r»r«-&#13;
I' iic f r w . Or wmrf 1 4 0 &amp;r)d «« will »&lt;M a Rampial&#13;
I r»rm M*A rm»fi?t? M w r M*n by yon b*forw.&#13;
|4AkJEC Itm&amp;k,-••aaW. U Crnun. Wt*.&#13;
iali Hat&#13;
t 1&#13;
. . • . . . . * • * . tf-A,.&#13;
BABY&#13;
HEALTHY; FREE&#13;
No child xmn -b$ wqty and strong&#13;
unteas its ^M»w«)g zMBfe r«gokwbr&#13;
every day a| the$ sam#!&gt; houvi ttuoh&#13;
regularity promdtW 'good* Health. One&#13;
passage la absolutely neoeaaary, #bile&#13;
two are not too many.&#13;
There is one remedy that is especially&#13;
adapted to the need»4»I children,&#13;
a&amp;d .which thousands of American&#13;
mothers are uttln^ lo-tiay, and that is&#13;
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup fepaln, the great&#13;
herb laxative compound. Its gentle&#13;
action, so free from gn;jins, Us tonic&#13;
effects, and its perfect purity, vouched&#13;
for to the United States Government,&#13;
makes It jxa Ideal children's laxative&#13;
tonic.&#13;
Mr* M. irXJa*h, - o f {»V«ftb,&gt;&gt;OsUa.« J s a n&#13;
oW-tlme friend of tlds) yfondtrful child's&#13;
remedy and'She Bays she equld scarcely&#13;
keep house without it. S h e became a c -&#13;
quainted with It through Dr. Caldwell's&#13;
offer of a frse trial bottle, w h i c h she&#13;
found so elTectW/p o » her baby that she now&#13;
a l w a y s ktiepa t% in t h e house, Mrs. K. L.&#13;
Stout, of Louisville, K y „ also first u*ed It&#13;
in u free sample," then bought it of her&#13;
druggist at The 'regular price, which is&#13;
only 60 cents or | 1 a bottle. It gave her&#13;
little girl a splendid appetite and a vigorous&#13;
stomach. Where Dr. Caldwell's Syrup&#13;
Pepain once finds its w a y into the home&#13;
it m a k e s a life-long friend. T h e y soon&#13;
discard salts, pills and powders.&#13;
Those w h o n a v e never yet used Dr.&#13;
Caldwell's Syrup P e p s i n should begin t o&#13;
d » * o , . f o r they are ; missing a valuable&#13;
household friend, i d order to acquaint&#13;
you with Its merits at no expense to yourself&#13;
the doctor will send y o u a free test&#13;
bottle on receipt of n a m e and. address. I t&#13;
has been justly called the nation's safeguard&#13;
to health in the cure of constipation,&#13;
dyspepsia, heartburn, liver trouble,&#13;
wick headache, sour s t o m a c h and similar&#13;
digestive aliments.&#13;
If there is anything about&#13;
your ailment that y o u don't&#13;
understand, or if y o u want&#13;
a n y medical advice, write&#13;
to the doctor, and he will&#13;
a n s w e r you fully. There is&#13;
no charge for this service.&#13;
The address is Dr. W. B.&#13;
Caldwell, 201 Caldwell bldg.,&#13;
Mouticello. 111.&#13;
FAIRLY WARNED.&#13;
"See here, kid, If I c.-vor catches you&#13;
cryln' like dat big booby here, I'll disown&#13;
you and cut you off without a&#13;
penny. See!"&#13;
Couldn't Convince the Judge.&#13;
'1 have heard of the soul kiss and&#13;
kisses of other kinds, but I never heard&#13;
of a man biting his wife as an evidence&#13;
of his affection for her," remarked Justice&#13;
O'Neill of Daltlmore, Md., when&#13;
George Phoebus, aged 27, of East Baltimore&#13;
street, endeavored to explain&#13;
the biting of his wife, for which offense&#13;
she had him arrested. Mrs.&#13;
Phoebus said her husband deliberately&#13;
bit her on the cheek, and, though&#13;
the pain was excruciating, he said that&#13;
It was a "love bite." The Justice fined&#13;
him five dollars and gave him ten days&#13;
In jail.&#13;
There la morn Catarrh In this section of the count cy&#13;
than all otber disease* pot together, and until the test&#13;
lay .years, vf»,supposed to be Incurabi*. For a urea',&#13;
mahy years doctors pronounced it a local disease and&#13;
prescribed local remedies, and by constantly (slUng&#13;
to euro with local treatment, pronounced a wearable.&#13;
Science has proven Catarrh to be a. constitutional disease,&#13;
and thentsrt asqulrest«e«stttutlooal treatment.&#13;
*a troli.', Tonoo, onftfoi*5 cw*^*s»sX s^tla£rs iJfM&amp;sJR^H, MQanaj ca2re o¾n&#13;
the market. It BL taken internally in doses troro 19&#13;
drops,to a te£s*Mriftl5Ji ictslflrSttJjrsais* biood&#13;
and TnUoMtf suifaeea ot tas system. -They «Oer one&#13;
hundrss) ssilswibr s«y «sj* ft tafli to &lt;*•*, Send&#13;
for circulars and testlracmtoJa.&#13;
fAidodwrebssr: nrFi. iJB. sCisHtEs,N aEaYa *- •C O^.. .T-^ole do. Oht&gt;o..&#13;
Moral" and Manner*.&#13;
The witness had been arraigned for&#13;
perjury.&#13;
"Your honor," he complained, "this&#13;
is most unjust. I never could permit&#13;
an absurd devotion to truth to Interfere&#13;
with the fact that I am a gentleman."&#13;
This was construed roughly as a&#13;
riloa of guilty.&#13;
Don't Be Misled.&#13;
Many a life has been cut short b y a&#13;
rough that was n o t believed to be serious.&#13;
Many a backache And Ktdeache follcnvR a&#13;
coughing spell. Many a night is passed in&#13;
restlesMiepfl cauned "by coughing: Many a&#13;
cough "cure" that never cures ia tried. D o&#13;
not be misled. If y o u coagh, take the o l d&#13;
reliable Kftrop'a Balsam, t h e best cougk,&#13;
cure. A t druggists' and dealers', 25c.&#13;
S e e m e d R e a e e n a b l e .&#13;
F i r s t Citizen ( e x c i t e d l y ) — C a n y o u&#13;
tell m e w h e r e , t h e fire i « ?&#13;
S e c o n d C i t i z e n ( c a l m l y ) — I t h i n k It&#13;
B o a t , b e t h e a c h o o l h o u s e . T h e r e a r e a&#13;
) 9 t o f b e y s d a n c i n g a n d y e l l i n g g l e e -&#13;
ftefly j u s t a r o u n d t h e c o r n e r .&#13;
U s * Allan's Foot-Ess*.&#13;
It la the only cure for Swollen, Smarting.&#13;
Tired, Achinsr, Hot. Sweating F»xH,&#13;
Corns and Bunion*. Aak for Allen's FooLEauc,&#13;
a powder t o he s h a k e n Into t h e&#13;
shoer. Cures while you walk. At all Drugjcists&#13;
and Shoe Stores, 25c. Don't accept&#13;
anv substitute. Sample sent F R E E . A d -&#13;
rire«R, Allen 8. Olmated. LaRoy, N. T.&#13;
The Only Audience.&#13;
J'Does anybody read real poetry nowaday*?"&#13;
,&#13;
"I presume the publishers glance at&#13;
it before sending it back."&#13;
Pettit'i Eye Salve for 25c&#13;
relieves tired, overworked eyes, stops e y e&#13;
sen**, conjflsted* inrlnined or soroeyea. All&#13;
dfUflfciBts or HoXvnrd Bros., Buffalo, N . Y .&#13;
The half of the world that get*&#13;
along is n«ah&gt; tsvomdenrtuist why ttst&#13;
BED BFtLY PUCE&#13;
:M»SLEEP .-.+.,+^. -¾&#13;
EVEN AT DINNER TABLE JERSEYITE&#13;
FEELS AN INTENSE DESIRE&#13;
TO DOZE OFF.&#13;
FAILS AS BED DEMONSTRATOR&#13;
Amazing Behavior of Paul Zubach Attract!&#13;
Attention Because H«&#13;
DFopped into Slumber While&#13;
Riding Bicycle.&#13;
Passaic, N. J.—Standing, bitting oi&#13;
waftadng, Paul Zubach, formerly an officer&#13;
in the Hungarian army, now of&#13;
this city, feel a an Intense deair* to&#13;
sleep. But nature strikes a balance,&#13;
for it is utterly impossible for him to&#13;
sleep when he is lyin? in bed. Not&#13;
even the pleasure of a home-made&#13;
goulash can arouse him unless it is&#13;
served in bed, and be has had to give&#13;
up his favorite noodle soup; because&#13;
when a man is flat on his back he can't&#13;
eat soup except with a straw. The&#13;
last time Paul.tried to eat at the table&#13;
it was for his loved noodles. He took&#13;
the precaution to set the alarm clock&#13;
so it would go off just as the meal was&#13;
placed before him. But it was uo use.&#13;
He dozed off again as he was swallowing&#13;
a delicately drowned noodle itt the&#13;
shape of the letter "S." His wife shut&#13;
Off the alarm, Bafd: "I ought to have&#13;
known 'S' meant sleep," and got Paul&#13;
to bed. He awoke with a start and&#13;
moaned that be had had a terrible&#13;
nightmare.&#13;
"What was it?'* asked his wife anxiously,&#13;
i&#13;
"I dreamed I was In a delicatessen&#13;
shop, with my hands tied, starving to&#13;
death," he wailed.&#13;
Since then he has given up all attempts&#13;
at pleasures of the table and&#13;
sets his alarm every morning when he&#13;
pets up, so that he will wake up in&#13;
time to go to bed.&#13;
But eating is only one of the sleeper&#13;
s problems. He has had to give up&#13;
his job in the rubber works, where he&#13;
put soles on sandals. Making "sneakers,"&#13;
of course, is a quiet job and the&#13;
silence aggravated his complaint. Now&#13;
he wants a place that he can fill lying&#13;
The Policeman Found Him Sleeping&#13;
in the Road.&#13;
down. He tried to be a show window&#13;
demonstrator of the comforts of a folding&#13;
bed, but the drawback to that, work&#13;
was that he had to hop up every two&#13;
minutes to show how quickly the bed&#13;
could bo slapped upright and converted&#13;
into a beautiful curio cabinet.&#13;
After a few days he got so that he went&#13;
to sleep the instant that he jumped up,&#13;
and the proprietor of the store found&#13;
him standing in the window snoring at&#13;
the crowd outside instead of smiling&#13;
at, them, as demonstrators always do&#13;
when about 1o demonstrate.&#13;
His neighbors say his trouble began&#13;
with the opera. Mrs. Zabach is&#13;
fond of music and once persuaded her&#13;
husband to take her to hear "Parsifal,"&#13;
though that doesn't prove she is fond&#13;
of music.&#13;
This curious case was brought to the&#13;
attention of the doctors and police of&#13;
Passaic by the mishap that befell Paul&#13;
the other day when he tried bicycle&#13;
riding as a stimulant. Leaving his&#13;
home In Passaic he wheeled northwest,&#13;
straight toward the region where&#13;
Rip Van Winkle slept for 20 years,&#13;
dozing as he pedaled. But. Haverstraw&#13;
was too much for him. He went&#13;
soundly to sleep there and fell off his&#13;
wheel. He didn't wake up, for nobody&#13;
can lie perfectly level in Haverstraw&#13;
on account of the hills.&#13;
The policeman of that town found&#13;
him sleeping in the road and sent&#13;
word to the Passaic police, who had&#13;
been informed of Paul's disappearance&#13;
by his wife. She went to Haverstraw&#13;
and brought him home. I&gt;. Armstrong&#13;
of Passaic says It fa a queer case, but&#13;
b* ttoeatt't think it U permanent&#13;
. N P NEf^p J O TAKR CHAKCavS&#13;
ii | » i &lt;&#13;
There l e a $ur*&gt; Way. of Knowing Good&#13;
Paint Material,&#13;
There is really 90 n«ed whatever for&#13;
any property owner to take chances in&#13;
tHe selection oi,.bi* paint materials.&#13;
It doessVi coat a cent to learn how to&#13;
be on the safe side. Certainly every&#13;
property owner baa enough at stake to&#13;
find this out.&#13;
A complete painting guide, known as&#13;
Houaeowner's Painting Outfit No. 4»,&#13;
can he had free by writing National&#13;
Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Building,&#13;
New York. This company is the largest&#13;
maker of pure white lead In the world.&#13;
Ita Dutch Boy Painter trademark&#13;
is famous as a guarantee of purity and&#13;
quality. The outfit Includes a book&#13;
of tolor schemes, for either Interior or&#13;
exterior painting, a book of specifications,&#13;
and a simple little Instrument,&#13;
^rith directiona for testing the -purity !&#13;
of paint materials.&#13;
WISE TO NIAGARA.&#13;
Teacher-—Johnny, can you tell me&#13;
the most remarkable thing about Niagara&#13;
Falls?&#13;
Johnny—Yessum; the price they&#13;
soak you for everything without going&#13;
to jail.&#13;
Proper Food Put Him Right.&#13;
The food experience of a physician&#13;
In his own case when worn and weak&#13;
from sickness and when needing nourishment,&#13;
the worst way is valuable:&#13;
"An attack of gTip, so severe it came&#13;
near making an end of me, left my&#13;
stomach in such condition I could not&#13;
retain any ordinary food. I knew of&#13;
course that I must have food nourishment&#13;
or I could never recover.&#13;
"1 began to take four tablespoonfuls&#13;
of Grape-Nuts and cream three times a&#13;
day and for 2 weeks this was almost&#13;
my only food; it tasted so delicious&#13;
that I enjoyed It immensely and my&#13;
stomach handled it perfectly from the&#13;
first mouthful. It was so nourishing I&#13;
was quickly built, back to normal&#13;
health and strength.&#13;
"Grape-Nuts is of great value as&#13;
food to sustain life during serious attacks&#13;
in which the stomach is so deranged&#13;
it cannot digest and assimilate&#13;
other foods.&#13;
"I am convinced that were Grape-&#13;
Nuts more widely used by physicians,&#13;
It would Bare many lives that are otherwise&#13;
lost from lack of nourishment."&#13;
Absolutely the most perfect food in&#13;
the world. Trial of Grape-Nuts 10 days&#13;
proves. "Them's a Reason."&#13;
I,ook m pkg. for the lfttlo book, "The&#13;
Road to Welhrtlle."&#13;
LIrer r e a d t h e abAve l e t t e r f A&#13;
a s * • » * * • * • f-ssm H a s * U tlipy, T M y&#13;
to tercet. , MM4 t e l l e f&#13;
AFTER Western Canadt&#13;
MQftB B l « CROPS III I&#13;
Her Answer.&#13;
An Atchison girl had a proposal of&#13;
marriage Sunday night and asked a&#13;
week to think it over. She went to all&#13;
of her married sisters. One,, who used&#13;
to be a belle, had three children, did all&#13;
her own work and hadn't been to the&#13;
theater or out riding since she was&#13;
married. Another, whose husband was&#13;
a promising young man at the time&#13;
she wad married, was supporting&#13;
Mm; • Af -'thirds didn't dare say&#13;
her life was her own when her husband&#13;
was around, and a fourth was divorced.&#13;
After visiting them and hearing&#13;
their woes, the heroine of this little&#13;
tale went home, got pen, ink and&#13;
paper and wrote an answer to the&#13;
young man. You may think it was refusing&#13;
him, but it wasn't. She said&#13;
she could be ready in a month.—Atchison&#13;
Globe.&#13;
Caught on the Rebound.&#13;
The old man was lecturing his more&#13;
or less wayward Bon on the evils of&#13;
getting up late In the morning.&#13;
"Remember," he said, "that it was&#13;
the early bird that caught the worm."&#13;
"But how about the worm, dad?"&#13;
queried the youth, who thought he had&#13;
his sire up in the air. "Where did his&#13;
reward for getting up early come in?"&#13;
"I am informed," replied the old&#13;
man, gravely, "that the worm was on&#13;
his way home—hadn't been in bed at&#13;
all."&#13;
And there being nothing more to&#13;
say, the young man said nothing.&#13;
First Aid.&#13;
The nance of a Louisville girl has&#13;
been spending the winter in Florida&#13;
in connection with his father's business&#13;
interests in that quarter.&#13;
"Marie," said the girl to a friend tha&#13;
other day, "Walter has just sent mo&#13;
the dearest, little alligator from Flor&#13;
Ida!"&#13;
"Dear me!" rejoined Marie, with affected&#13;
enthusiasm. "And how shall&#13;
you keep him?"&#13;
"I'm not quite certain," was the reply,&#13;
"but I've put him in Florida water&#13;
till I can hear further from Walter."&#13;
SICK DOCTOR&#13;
TENYEARS&#13;
Cured by Lydia E. PinkbaitfsVe^&#13;
tabteCompound&#13;
MjLttTOJT.K J.—I feel that LydiaE.&#13;
Plakham's Vegetable Compound baa&#13;
given me new life.&#13;
I suffered for ten&#13;
years with aerioua&#13;
female troubles, inflammation,&#13;
ulceration,&#13;
indigestion.&#13;
aexTouaneae, and&#13;
could not sleep.&#13;
Doctors gave me&#13;
Tift as they a«id my&#13;
t r o u b l e s were&#13;
chronic. I was in&#13;
despair, and did not&#13;
care whether I lived&#13;
or died, when I read abont Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; so I&#13;
began to take it, and am well again and&#13;
relieved of all my suffering.,r— Mrs.&#13;
GEOBOE JORDY, BOX 40, Mariton, N J.&#13;
Lydia £* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
made from native roots and&#13;
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful&#13;
drugs, and to-day holds the record&#13;
for the largest number of actual cures&#13;
of female diseases we know of, and&#13;
thousandsof voluntary testimonialsare&#13;
on file in the Pinkham laboratory at&#13;
Lynn, Mass., from women who nave&#13;
been cured.from almost every form of&#13;
female complaints, inflammation, ulceration,&#13;
displacements,fibroid tumors,&#13;
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,&#13;
indigestion and nervous prostration.&#13;
Every suffering woman owes it to herself&#13;
to give Lydia E. Pinkham'B Vegetable&#13;
Compound a trial&#13;
If you would like special advice&#13;
about your case write aconfidemtial&#13;
letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at&#13;
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,&#13;
and always helpful*&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
A n o t h e r 60,000&#13;
tiers from t h e&#13;
States, ftfcr*&#13;
tricta&#13;
$:&#13;
oflawlto&#13;
t i e r * — 1&#13;
homestead aod 160 as $3At prr&#13;
"A vast rich country and a&#13;
porous people"—Extract film&#13;
*&gt;/ a National £JU*r. « 4 » » visit&#13;
C»inula, j» Amjnut, / p u f . s w 0»&#13;
M a n y h a v e paid t h e entire&#13;
faniM a n d h a d a b a l a n c e o f&#13;
¢20.00 per acre a s a result o f 1&#13;
Spring w h e a t , winter w h e a t , &lt;&#13;
flax a n d p e a s are t h e priacspelt&#13;
t h e w i l d g z a s s e s bring t o perbctJftQ 1&#13;
best cattle t h a t h a v e C W bee©s4WI»&#13;
the C h i c a g o market. - * • * ,&#13;
S p l e n d i d climate, a c a ^ f r - a a d i s s f s y w i i a&#13;
in all localities. R a i l w a y s t o u c h nsoat o f&#13;
the settled districts, wuad p r i c e s ^fc)? producer&#13;
are a l w a y s g o o d . L a m J i ( B f ^ f c N 0 1 * P ° T ^&#13;
c h a s e d horn r a i l w a y a n d kKm^cmAptli&#13;
For pamphlets,&#13;
Ksrdlaa low rsirwsr&#13;
tendent ofImmls;rs*J&#13;
the authorised Canariiaa&#13;
H. V. HcIlll£S. 171&#13;
r C A . LAOlltt.&#13;
Tne Beaton X Make and Sell More Ken's $ 8 . 0 0&#13;
lb $ 3 . 6 0 Ittoealhaa Any Other Msnufaetrtrer&#13;
fa bseasas I gt*s tte ««srtr ts« sssrtt of tha i&#13;
ciaeTsti srsMlssMns of tralsaa&#13;
SBSSBsakarsi&amp; tha coaatry.&#13;
tbsssWctloaoftaalttSbm tor sack part a* aha (&#13;
aafl a**rr detail of tbs BAktu ta every aasartneat, s»&#13;
loo**!I •iter bbyy tthhee bbeesstt aabbao esMae&#13;
If X eouid tha&#13;
w yon how carekfuelrlys tWst.t Le . sTkTs*ia sln asses&#13;
aold then sastnt*s&lt; way tae/saM tssfer&#13;
sahrea paeu, dSit, byeotute wr,o ausldA twheeanr slaodaefnerta tsstaf aw saayy 1 utter saass,&#13;
I&#13;
CARTERS Positively cored by&#13;
these Ltttls Pills.&#13;
BBJBBJ _____ They also relieve Dlas&#13;
_ _ _ S f T f T n P. tresafrom Dyspepsia,In-&#13;
^ 1 I W I M l digestion and Too Hearty&#13;
• 9 I l / F R Eating. A perfect rem-&#13;
WM f % | | | *V ^ y for Dizziness, Naif&#13;
• • r l L k O e Eea&gt; Drowsiness, B a d&#13;
MM' 1 Taste in the Mouth, Coat-&#13;
• • • • p J H ed Tdngfte, Pain In the ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ' « ' 'i" | TORPID LIVER.&#13;
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine Must (fear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
My Method of Tanning the Sole* makes Viem Morm&#13;
Flexible an^ longer Wearing than ant otkere,&#13;
Shoes few E v e r y M c a M r •€ t h e F u s s i l y ,&#13;
H e u , B»ya,Woasen»Msss«s a a d CblMeesaw&#13;
For sale by shoe dealers everywhere,&#13;
PAllTlhU I Xoite ffrimiiie without W. L. Dooj&amp;aa&#13;
liflU I l U n I uauie and pries stamped on buttons.&#13;
fast Oofe* Eyelets PeedXadaalesly. Cssalsg stafled trasw&#13;
W. L DOUftUS, 1*7 Stat* St, r&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES,&#13;
IF YOU YE&#13;
NEVERWRN&#13;
I&#13;
r5UCKER&#13;
you've yet&#13;
to learn tttebodify&#13;
cbmfort ft qwes in&#13;
the wettest weather&#13;
KADHFOR-—&#13;
' • AND&#13;
GUARANTEED&#13;
WATERPWOOT&#13;
ATAUGOOOSTOBti&#13;
CATALOG me&#13;
»j nam ca SOSTOM ui_*&#13;
» CAMMWM ca vMrrt6.Toeorro.aui&#13;
Vr:.y&#13;
HAIR BALSAM&#13;
IClasziees add beautifies the hats&#13;
I Promotes a frtxuritnt growth.&#13;
[Nrrer yslls to Bettors Gray&#13;
_Halr to Its Yotxthxul pojor.&#13;
raHta«;&#13;
P O R K A f F1 T'^rr*40acre farms, pinxl land.&#13;
* v»s% »J^*Sjaj nfar villago. I'ns-wssion at&#13;
r»nce. K^sy tortus. Adtirrs*&#13;
I. BENTLEY, B E M L K Y , MICH.&#13;
GALL STONES &gt;Vri»n rao ALL about it.&#13;
Will toll of aenro I—».&#13;
Address C. COVEY. B 1&gt;. A. Lanslns. Mich.&#13;
This Trade-mark&#13;
Eliminates All&#13;
•Jraertuiity&#13;
i n the purchase of&#13;
, u » i n t materials.&#13;
It is an absolute&#13;
guarantee oi purity&#13;
and quality.&#13;
F o r y o u r o w n&#13;
p r o t e c t i o n , see&#13;
that it is o n the side of&#13;
every k e g oi white lead&#13;
y o u buy.&#13;
IsTMtsLUII&#13;
If** M s *&#13;
No Matter what liver or Bowel medicine yon.&#13;
are winf, stop it now. Get a 10c&#13;
box—week's treatment—of CASCARBTS&#13;
today from your drugjiat&#13;
and learn how easily, natwrairy sod&#13;
deUghtfuDy your Ever can be made&#13;
to work, and your bowmkt more every&#13;
day. There's new-Bfm in every box.&#13;
CASC/.RBTS are nature's helper. &lt;s-&#13;
You will see ihm d£Ff*rwnc*l ssj-&gt;&#13;
CASCARBTS roc s box for s week's&#13;
treatment, nit druggists. Biggest seller&#13;
In the world. Mfllion boxes s m o o U t&#13;
KNOWN SINCE i»36 A S R E L I A B L E&#13;
. _ a » S v | * Q • TRADE MARK&#13;
^ C O R BLACK W ° ^ CAPSULES&#13;
SUPERIOR REMEOYf ^URINARY 0(SCHARGES&#13;
DRUGGISTS »« BY MAIL ON REC E I P T O F 5 0&#13;
H.PLANTEN&amp; SON. 95HENRY ST BROOKLYN N v.&#13;
tfaflnctcdwltti)&#13;
sons eyes, nse &gt; Thompson's Eye Water&#13;
DEnANCC STARCH ss«t«*t to work wtth and&#13;
• larcbs* ciotses ntesav&#13;
Dr. McIXTOSH c e l e b r a t e d&#13;
Natural Uterloe Sipperttr *rlv—j imm«()i»te »slt«f. Sals by an ss r-&#13;
Bipsi Jn«trnn«*st *•*!«-» s s d lesdliis:&#13;
rirugjtlnto in Vnit—J Statss and Csnadaw&#13;
OatiToer. pries isssadpstfttfttssssismHsd&#13;
nn sppllostlos.&#13;
T H E MASTINOa eft McINTOHH TBV8R CO^&#13;
813 Walnnt St., Phlladrtphla, Pa,^&#13;
maatifa«rarera ot trosaps sn4&#13;
sol«» m a k m of the (ie.nBtos&gt;&#13;
stamped "McIntosH" Sap—arte*.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 16-1909.&#13;
FLORIDA 12,000 HOMES, $240&#13;
$K&gt; Cash and $10 per Month Bays a Farm m No interest, no taxes until payments are completed.&#13;
TEN ACRES FLORIDA'S FRUIT AND VEGETABLE UNDS MEANS HtVEPiNDiNCE*&#13;
No frost, no failures of either fruit or refutable*. Ricliest of soil, best of&#13;
water, abrmdatit harvest, the best markets. Matchless climate. Never cold or&#13;
hot, the Atlantic and Gulf breezes are ever present to modify the temperature.-&#13;
This is art unequalled prop- - , - , _ , . | A 1 % . General and local agents,&#13;
cwition and we will prove it. H I I V Ml I W wauted. Kielusive territory&#13;
Poll information on request mM%J m l , V M assigned to hnstlera.&#13;
THE FLORIDA FRUIT LANDS COMPANY&#13;
W. •. FERGUSON, State Agent 828 Monadwock BssUmo,&#13;
RFFFlrFNrFV c * » t M r i t T Rank. K e n s a s City, Mn. FlrtrJ.U National Bmnk, Jacksonville, risv&#13;
•*"-' ^ - ^ ^ 4 - - ^ - N . B. BrywsrU, Extiovernur, Jn«k»onville. Fla.&#13;
COLT DISTEMPER sGasaat sebtea tbraian.d BieOd m—a—tt—y •s sbsUoy*,' ._, ass .t eba*y— u.as,l noirr IBnH OfeHed1T. S AUrtQe Dols&#13;
all forma of distemper. Bast 1&#13;
, Os* bottls msrantssd to enra «»• i&#13;
I SWdossa of drsaortaUsed 1&#13;
* Oat -&#13;
•i&#13;
We Want&#13;
ilk&#13;
We Want&#13;
^ We wish to announce t h a t in a few days we will be ready to accept Milk and Cream at the highest prices, and where we have no routes established&#13;
we would like to have the farmers bring in their milk or cream until such a time t h a t we can establish all routes.&#13;
Milk should be delivered every day not later t h a n 11:30 A. M. Cream should be delivered not less t h a n twice a week and in the forenoon.&#13;
,' W e will buy C R E A M from Hand Cream Separators, Water Separators and Cream skimmed from pans. Cream could be a little sour b u t must&#13;
be free from all bad odors. P a t r o n s having no cans can call on us and the same can be had on short notice. Call now and talk it over with us a t&#13;
r y the CREAMERY.&#13;
:••.?*&gt;.&#13;
&amp; . « *&#13;
' ^.5 ^&#13;
i&#13;
»V&#13;
W\&#13;
urn&#13;
r.&#13;
:±~*F&#13;
Mm&#13;
r&#13;
\%.&#13;
T&#13;
-&#13;
1-.&#13;
.Jv&#13;
•v.&#13;
O u r T h o n e W i l l S o o n B e in a&#13;
C o n d i t i o n t o w o r k 12 h r » a d a y The Michigan Creamery Company, riNCKNBY,&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
»*~ - -.:,- Ttm* to End the Courtship.&#13;
"Handy." said the lovesick Hiram as&#13;
h» twitched the wax flowers nervous&#13;
^ , ,lwon't you be inineV" I swan, it&#13;
feds like my heart is coming through."&#13;
"Gracious," exclaimed Mandy apprc&#13;
lvely, "I reckon I'll have to. Not&#13;
your heart is coming througb, but&#13;
W» have beeu courting so long two of&#13;
the sofa springs are coming through.'&#13;
News.&#13;
Quantity of Corn and Oats,&#13;
t 16 Met. Mclntyre&#13;
i A i , uL&amp;A*A&#13;
Among Dilr Correspondents&#13;
| Business Pointers,&#13;
HOT1CB.&#13;
Tbere will le a party at the opera&#13;
house this, Thursday, evening following&#13;
the play.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
40 acres one mile west of Pinckney.&#13;
Good house and barns.&#13;
H. G. Briggs.&#13;
Rooster. LeaVe&#13;
N O R T H HAMBURG.&#13;
Miss M a e Van Fleet it* visiting&#13;
Mrs, Geo. B a r u a r d in Genoa.&#13;
Miss Florence Kice is home&#13;
from Ann A r h o r for a weeks vacation.&#13;
T h e r e will be communion service&#13;
at t h e c h u r c h here S u n d a y&#13;
afternoon,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. S m i t h of&#13;
Lakeland spent Sunday with his | doctors care.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Hiuchey ia eutertainiug&#13;
h a r g r a n d c h i l d r e n from&#13;
D u r a u d .&#13;
Mrs. E l i z a b e t h D u r k e e is visitiug&#13;
at t h e home of Will D u r k e e&#13;
at present.&#13;
H a r r y Williams spent S u n d a y&#13;
with his sister M r s . R. H . Mackinder&#13;
n e a r Howell.&#13;
P e t e r Pool and wife a n d Miss&#13;
G r a c e Pool spent S u n d a y with&#13;
their mother near Gregory.&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Mrs. E . E . Phillips is u n d e r t h e&#13;
H e n r y Lillywhite is in Howell&#13;
A Black Minorca&#13;
word at this offi •«.&#13;
m o t h e r Mrs. Angeline Kice who&#13;
is in poor health. a t t e n d i n g court.&#13;
F r a n k B r e n i n s t al of Pettysville I E b b 8 m i t h a a d w i f e v i a i t e d&#13;
met with a great misfortune last! H o w e l l l w f c w e e k&#13;
week while sawing wood, losing&#13;
nearly all his right hand.&#13;
T h e S u n d a y school elected the&#13;
following officers for the coming&#13;
year:&#13;
in&#13;
Milk and cream haulers&#13;
at the Creamery building.&#13;
Earl Dav&#13;
Inquire&#13;
NOT1CB.&#13;
I am in the market for whi*e potatoes.&#13;
T. Read.&#13;
TO RENT.&#13;
The premise^ now occupied by&#13;
Hiram Pierce on the Dexter and&#13;
Pinckney road, locally known as the&#13;
Lipscomb place. Low rent to right&#13;
party. T. BIRKETT. tl6&#13;
For Sale&#13;
House and ouehalE acre of land&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Haney.&#13;
n&#13;
K. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for past favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I remain&#13;
vours. R. CLIHTON.&#13;
Supt.-W. W. Heudrick&#13;
Asst. Supt.—Jas. Boylan&#13;
2nd Aset. Hunt,—Grant Dunning&#13;
Sec. and Treats,— Joseph McKinder&#13;
Organist—Una Bennett&#13;
Aset. Orgauist—Mae Van Fleet&#13;
NORTH PUTNAM.&#13;
Wm. Bland spent Monday&#13;
Howell.&#13;
at&#13;
I. J. Abbott haB been drawing&#13;
his baled hay to Anderson.&#13;
L u l u and E d n a Abbott visited&#13;
Grace Pool F r i d a y afternoon.&#13;
Wra. D u n b a r and family are I great deal of damage to fences,&#13;
moving on the Norman Burgess windmills and several buildings in&#13;
I this township.&#13;
Wool b u y e r s are busy t h i s year&#13;
at prosperity prices.&#13;
G r a n t S m i t h will remodel his&#13;
large b a r n this spring.&#13;
Tim I s ham sold a horse to J as.&#13;
Foster of Unadilla the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs L. C. G a r d n e r visited relatives&#13;
in Howell and G e n o a last&#13;
week.&#13;
C. O. D u t t o n won t h e office of&#13;
member of board of review by a&#13;
tie vote.&#13;
Many of our farmers were ready&#13;
to sow oats b u t Tuesdays snow&#13;
storm changed their ideas.&#13;
T h e recent high winds did a&#13;
A Turk Who Wanted to Know.&#13;
He was a very wealthy landlord and&#13;
a descendant of the old sultans of&#13;
Marash and Albtahm. He would nsk&#13;
us every question under the sun from&#13;
the history of the royal family to the&#13;
views of the Kugllau on matrimony&#13;
whether England was smaller than&#13;
London aud which belonged to France;&#13;
how much bigger the Turkish fleet&#13;
was than the combined armaments of&#13;
England, France and Russia and what&#13;
was the fashionable costume at home.&#13;
We drew elaborate maps of the world&#13;
for his benefit on paper six Inches by&#13;
eight inches and the most artistic and&#13;
faithful portraits of trains, steamers&#13;
and hansom cabs. And I think I may&#13;
•ay with perfect confidence that, after&#13;
gravely discussing our statements with&#13;
hto servants and neighbors, he disbelieved&#13;
them all with perfect Impartiality—"&#13;
Notes From a Diary In Asiatic&#13;
Turkey."&#13;
A R a i l w a y G u i d e .&#13;
Now (tat the railrojjkJs are too poor&#13;
to a d v ezr s e in the parjbrs it is up to&#13;
Square Deal&#13;
Hatchery&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
P u r e B r e d Sickle Comb B r o w n&#13;
L e g h o r n Baby Chicks,&#13;
1 to 10 days&#13;
10 cents Each&#13;
P a r e b r e d B a r r e d P l y m o u t h Rock&#13;
baby Chicks, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 cents Bach&#13;
C Albert Frost&#13;
farm.&#13;
Walter Glover and wife of&#13;
Fowlerville visited her people&#13;
here Sunday.&#13;
S O U T H G R E G O R Y .&#13;
Mr. Barker is getting along&#13;
nicely.&#13;
House cleaning is the order of&#13;
t h e day.&#13;
J o h n Moore has a fine line of&#13;
Wall paper.&#13;
Mr. S p a u l d i n g and family were&#13;
in Jackson Thursday.&#13;
I d a Bates visited her p a r e n t s&#13;
H. Bates and wife S a t u r d a y and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H a m m o n d took&#13;
tea with F r a n k Ovitt a n d wife&#13;
April 4 t h.&#13;
Don McComer and wife visited&#13;
their p a r e n t s Mr. and Mrs. D.&#13;
P l u m r a e r Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H a m m o n d visited&#13;
her father, Geo. Cane, last week.&#13;
They have gone north to live.&#13;
Mr. and M r s . L. R. W i l l i a m s&#13;
attended church at Gregory Sunday&#13;
m o r n i n g and ate E a s t e r din&#13;
ner with F r a n k Ovitt and wife.&#13;
Chas. S h a r p is working for O'-&#13;
Brien Bros, in Stockbcidge on t h e&#13;
banks of Lowe lrke l u m b e r i n g off&#13;
60 acres of timber.&#13;
Miss E d n a Reade the t e a c h e r at&#13;
the corners was called homa last&#13;
week by the sudden death of h e r&#13;
father, Geo. Reade of Dexter.&#13;
ed&#13;
ANDEB80*.&#13;
Miss Mary Sprout retu&#13;
home from Mesick last week.&#13;
School closed in the Wilion&#13;
district Friday for vacation.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Powell of 4U«iok&#13;
spent latt week with retoirtftjim.&#13;
. V "&#13;
S O U T H I O S C O .&#13;
Mrs. J o s e p h Wattera visited at&#13;
L . T. L a m b o r n s T h u r s d a y last.&#13;
Mrs. W i l l Caskey and d a u g h t e r&#13;
Elva visited at Nick B u r l e y s Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Mowers a n d&#13;
d a u g h t e r L n c y visited at L . T.&#13;
L a m b o r n s Sunday.&#13;
Miss Grace L a m b o r n r e t u r n e d&#13;
home S u n d a y after sewing a few&#13;
weeks in Pinckney.&#13;
School commenced h e r e T a e s -&#13;
day with Miss B e r t h a H a r r i n g t o n&#13;
of W e b b e r v i l l e as teacher.&#13;
Mrs. T i n a R o b e r t s visited her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H a r r i n g -&#13;
ton of Webberville S u n d a y .&#13;
H o m e r Wasaon, wife and family&#13;
B e r t R o b e r t s , wife and family visited&#13;
at David Roberts S n n d a y .&#13;
Piatlc Repart**.&#13;
Bhe pouted, withdrawing her hand.&#13;
•TU button it myself," ah* aaid.&#13;
•*Y&lt;m'd never make a scrapper. You're&#13;
too awkward with the glovm"&#13;
"But see how neatly I can land one&#13;
OS the mouth," he aaid, suiting tha actios&#13;
to the word.&#13;
Then he heard her fitter approach&#13;
in* and displayed some marvelous lj&#13;
Htver and iwift footwork.—Hew York&#13;
ihe peopli to take &gt;om« railway guide&#13;
to keep informed of lite trains. The&#13;
Michigan Railway* .Kuide, published&#13;
and corrected by John H. Wood, tbe&#13;
original guide publisher, is very com*&#13;
pact, complete and reliable, shows all&#13;
Steam and Electfit^Jioads in the State,&#13;
several additions and improvements&#13;
will yet be made. Although sold at a&#13;
very cheap price, every care i* taken&#13;
to make it absolutely correct.&#13;
We have made arrangements so&#13;
that we oan furnish it to our subscribers&#13;
once a month for the low price ot&#13;
50 cents per year. If you have the&#13;
guide you will not have to be asking&#13;
anyone when trains arrive or depart&#13;
anywhere in the state. Send us 50c&#13;
and try the guide one year.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
the county of Livingston,—At a session of said&#13;
Court, held al the Probate Office In the Village of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 12th Jday of April&#13;
4. i), tSMW. Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montague&#13;
.TudRe of Probate. In the mutter of the estate of&#13;
SARAH J. RRIOOA, deceased&#13;
A. D. Thompson having filed in said court&#13;
his final account an administrator of satd estate&#13;
and hlB petition pray tag for the allowance thereof&#13;
It ia ordered, that tho Seventh day of May&#13;
A. 1),, 1909, at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
at said probate office, be and 1B hereby appointed&#13;
for examining and allowing said account.&#13;
It is further ordered, that public notice&#13;
hereof be ftivmi by publication of a copy of&#13;
this order, for three successive weeks previous to&#13;
said day ot hearing: in the Pinckney DISPATCH a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulated in said county&#13;
ARTHTJB A. MONTAGU!,&#13;
t l 7 Jotf* of Prctate.&#13;
See On r&#13;
Special Line&#13;
o£&#13;
B I R T H D A Y&#13;
a n d&#13;
Souvenir&#13;
Postcards&#13;
at the&#13;
Dispatch Office, Pinckney&#13;
Cong'I Church Notes&#13;
Easter Sabbath was observed with&#13;
fitting eiercis»s for tne occasion. The&#13;
pastor being absent the usual hour fur&#13;
vorship was dwvoted to tine recitations&#13;
by the little one*, together with&#13;
Lome beautilul anthems, solos and&#13;
duetts, all in keeping with the event&#13;
that has brought more joy and iomtort&#13;
to the wtiole world tr.an any other&#13;
in sacred or modern history. It seeaw&#13;
right that tlie children shoold joun.&#13;
with the church in makiug this a joyful,&#13;
happy season. Tbe spiritual motto&#13;
used, Because I I've ye shall live&#13;
also, is a sermon for everyone.&#13;
Rev. Gates will be home next Simday.&#13;
The Holy Communion service&#13;
will be observed. Any wisbiug to&#13;
unite with this church, will be welcomed&#13;
at that time. Mis* Vloran and&#13;
Ai". Swarthout will sing "Love Divine."&#13;
Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evening.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Sunday morning the pastor delivered&#13;
an Easter seimon that was one of&#13;
the best we ever had the pleasure to&#13;
listen to. The church was full, bardly&#13;
a seat being vacant and all telt well&#13;
paid for coming. The special musiv;&#13;
was good and called out words ot&#13;
praise.&#13;
There wa« a *ood attendance at&#13;
Sunday school, tbe record showing an&#13;
even 100 and the collection amounted&#13;
to | 3 .&#13;
In the evening there was not sc&#13;
large an attendance but the pastor delivered&#13;
a splendid sermon.&#13;
Do not forget the prayer meeting&#13;
this evening, and the mission study at&#13;
the close. The class have but two&#13;
more chapteis of the study.&#13;
W o u l d it not pay you to&#13;
r a i s e a good span of&#13;
m u l e s ? : : ; - : :&#13;
We have a squarely b n i l t&#13;
Jack, bred from imported&#13;
Spanish stock; good head&#13;
and ears; large bone and&#13;
feet; plenty of action. :&#13;
R e a d y for service at&#13;
Glennbrook Stock Farm.&#13;
F. A. GLENN, Manager,&#13;
Flowers For Easter&#13;
We will have in&#13;
Bli.om for Easter&#13;
the following&#13;
Easter Ulliss&#13;
Azaleas&#13;
Haacintiis&#13;
Cinerarias&#13;
Callas&#13;
also&#13;
Roses&#13;
Carnations&#13;
and all kinds of Gilt flowers&#13;
Floral Work for Waddings and Funints&#13;
A Spiclilty&#13;
J. A. BROWN, Florist&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN</text>
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                  <text>Newspaper</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="37157">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40424">
              <text>VOL. xx m. PIJTOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., TETJBPEA Y, APR. SS. 1909. No. 16&#13;
I&#13;
Our Ice Cream Parlor&#13;
Will be Open April 15th&#13;
We AISO have oo hand&#13;
a general line of&#13;
Groceries, Baked Goods, Confectionery, Etc.&#13;
T r y O u r C u c u m b e r P i c k l e s , S w e e t a n d&#13;
S o u r - E x c e l l e n t . In C a n s&#13;
M a r k e t P r i c e P a i d f o r flutter a n d E&amp;&amp;S&#13;
G i v e us a call W e will try to please you&#13;
E. BURGESS &amp; CO.&#13;
UOCAVU N E W S .&#13;
Fred Read was in Detroit the first&#13;
of the week. 0&#13;
Mrs. Huldah Jones of Detroit is visiting&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Perry Blunt.&#13;
Earl Day, of the Michigan Creamery&#13;
Co., cpent Sunday at Flint with his&#13;
wife.&#13;
W. H, Clark has purchased the E,&#13;
R. Brown residence on Unadilla street&#13;
and will move there soon.&#13;
Mrs Orla Headee of Durand has&#13;
been the guest of his parents, George&#13;
Hendee and wife of this place the past&#13;
week.&#13;
The Pinckney Base Ball Team will&#13;
play the tirst game o&lt; the season with&#13;
Iosco at Gregory, Saturday afternoon,&#13;
April 24th.&#13;
Navigation opened-at Portage Lake&#13;
the first of the week—C. J. Teeple being&#13;
the first to make the trip to Lakeland&#13;
with hi&gt; lauuch.&#13;
Mrs. Pearl Aultmaon has been under&#13;
the doctors care the cast week and&#13;
her mother, Mrs. Craoaon of Springport&#13;
has been in charge ot her millinery&#13;
parlors,&#13;
Chas. VanK.8uren and wife of Lansing&#13;
were guests of her pirents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs G. W. Teeple over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Van Ksuren will remain tor the&#13;
webk.&#13;
Electric lights have c.*er\ placed in&#13;
the opera hon«e here ani were used&#13;
the first at, the nlay last Thursday&#13;
evening. When the regular fixtures&#13;
arrive and are placed in they will be&#13;
fine addition to the house.&#13;
The Easter social and tea at the&#13;
home of Dr. and Mrs. H, ¥. Sigler&#13;
la«t Wednesday evening was a very&#13;
pleasant affair. A proijr^iaot lnstru&#13;
mental music and sengs was rendered&#13;
and was much appreciated. The lad&#13;
ies served a fine supper and took in&#13;
over 113-&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Put in another ton of coal.&#13;
Prof. N. J. Robinson was in Jackson&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Addie Potterton and daughter&#13;
Ruth, spent Sunday with friends in&#13;
Hamburg.&#13;
The past week nas been an ideal&#13;
one for the autoists and they have&#13;
been improving the time.&#13;
Edward Mansfiield of Niagara was&#13;
a guest at the home of Win. Kennedy&#13;
and family the past week.&#13;
N. B. Mann has erected a boat&#13;
Another big rain Wednesday.&#13;
Alex. Pyper of Unadilla transacted&#13;
business in town Tuesday.&#13;
There will be no Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club meeting this&#13;
month owing to the busy season both&#13;
in the house and on the farm.&#13;
Rev. A. G. Gates was at Grass Lake&#13;
the first of the *eek attending the&#13;
meeting of the Woman a Home Missionary&#13;
society and the Jackson Ministers&#13;
Association that were in session&#13;
there.&#13;
During the storm Sunday eyening&#13;
about 6 o'clock, lightening struck a&#13;
barn belonging to Chas. Brown, just&#13;
east of this village. Although Mr. B.&#13;
and the children were in the barn at&#13;
the time, no damage was done only to&#13;
the roof.&#13;
We understand that Edward Shields&#13;
of Howell is slated to take the place of&#13;
J. L. Winsbip of Saginaw, who recently&#13;
resigned as chairman of the&#13;
State Democratic Central Committee,&#13;
_ _ | Mr. Shields is one of the leaiing lawyers&#13;
of the County Seat and well fitted&#13;
tor the position.&#13;
...-. - - ' 3&#13;
""^'^Dpjtfl&#13;
* If Our Wall Paper&#13;
Looks Pretty ~ t • . • ,vr&#13;
•'&lt;• :W&#13;
here, how much handsomer it will look on your walla with yom&#13;
furniture and carpet. Come and see if you think our spring&#13;
patterns are pretty&#13;
If Y o u Don't Think S o&#13;
you will indeed be hard to please. Everyone to whom we have shown thenil&#13;
thus far has beeu delighted wiih them. They are so novel ajid artistic in de-j&#13;
sigu that they command admiration at the first glance. They are&#13;
P r e t t y P a p e r s P o p u l a r l y P r i c e d&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
* * * * • &gt;&#13;
C r e a m e r y N e w s . |&#13;
Mr. Day of the Creamery, has made !&#13;
arrangements to put in the machinery '&#13;
for the manufacture of full cream&#13;
cheese as well as butter and cottage&#13;
ch ;ese. He has engaged a man who&#13;
will haye charge of the cheese plant&#13;
and expects to enlarge the building.&#13;
He will be prepared to make 2,000&#13;
pounds of cheese per day. He believes&#13;
Just Received at&#13;
house at Lakeland and added a Mullen | t h e m , l k l 8 i n t h e country and intends&#13;
launoh to the fleet at Znkey Lake.&#13;
Perry Blunt, who had a slight&#13;
stroke last fall, while able to be&#13;
around, is very poorly. He bad another&#13;
bad spell the past week.&#13;
W. E. Murphy has commenced operations&#13;
lor the erection of a naw&#13;
store on his lot bet veen the poat otlc*|g^t the wheels mo'ving.&#13;
and the opera house&#13;
is doing the work.&#13;
W. H. Mftran&#13;
At the meeting ot the council last&#13;
week, the city fathers had an economical&#13;
streak and decided tj lop off all&#13;
expensed possible. Among them was&#13;
the printing of the actions of .aid&#13;
council, the marshall, etc. The sidewalks&#13;
are already in fine shape, elec&#13;
trie lights installed and several other&#13;
improvements hav* been made during&#13;
the last year so there is but little left&#13;
for tliis council to do on!y pay the&#13;
bills. We are glad the improvements&#13;
have been made.&#13;
to be prepared to handle all that comes&#13;
in and pay the highest prices going.&#13;
Although the butter machinery was ,&#13;
purchased over two weeks ago it has&#13;
not arrived although it is expected&#13;
every day. Tbe engine and boiler are&#13;
set and when tbe machinery does arrive&#13;
it will take but a day or two to&#13;
Mr. Day left Wednesday evening j&#13;
J for Chicago to see if there was any :&#13;
way of hurrying the machinery up.&#13;
Tho churn and some other parts arrived&#13;
Wednesday but he is anxious to get&#13;
all together at once. He will also&#13;
purchase the outfit for the Cheese&#13;
factory while there.&#13;
Cong'I Church Notes&#13;
The service last Sunday was of un&#13;
usual interest. The attendance good.&#13;
Btaryone was glad to have the pastor&#13;
R&#13;
.hMfc iltar his two weeks absence. The&#13;
tw^gc* was ot the best. The duet by&#13;
c u » c i iMisavtllorMk and Mr. Swarthout&#13;
S u m m e r H o m e s f o »..* «., ^»-» ~9 *r» »S« a l e o r L ™X ^ J a . . . . . . e n t , on o n e of t h e mmAo_s t » bro"B flAM liaw and touched the hearts i&#13;
B e a u t i f u l I n l a n d L a k e s of ° r V****—* People. Tbe Commun- j&#13;
M J c h i a a n . k n o w n a s Bi$ P o r t - ion service was very impressive. Mrs.,&#13;
a ^ e L a k e . W r i t e o r c o m e a n d : W m Clark, two sons and one daught* :&#13;
s e e t h e P r o p e r t y a n d O w n e r , | er were received into the church. Rev.&#13;
b o t h in L i v i n g s t o n C o u n t y . j Gates is at Grass Lake this week atj&#13;
tending the Jackson Association which&#13;
f&#13;
New and E l e g a n t lines of Prints, Ginghams,&#13;
Percales and L a w n s .&#13;
A Large Line of Room Rug\s, ()xl2, to select&#13;
from at Regular Prices \&#13;
L a t e s t Styles in Ladies', Men's, and Boys' Ox/-&#13;
fords A t the Right Prices&#13;
We are showing t h e Largest Line of Ladies&#13;
Shirt Waists, S k i r t s a n d Gowns ever shown in&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
OUR&#13;
SATURDAY SPFiCIALS&#13;
Ladies 15c Hose at&#13;
Extra value Bleached Cotton&#13;
Extra value Brown Sheetings&#13;
20c Coffee, 17c 15c Cofiee,&#13;
Soda, 5c Yeast,&#13;
2 pr for 21c&#13;
7c&#13;
6*c&#13;
13c&#13;
3c&#13;
From 2 to 3 P. M. only&#13;
300 yds Ginghams, 12c values, to close at&#13;
fie per yard&#13;
From 3 to 4 P . MM only&#13;
Bleached Table Linen, (iOc value, at&#13;
Bleached Table Linen, 75c value, at&#13;
Bleached Table Linen, *1 value, at&#13;
4fic&#13;
83c&#13;
C L A R E N C E E. BAUGHN,&#13;
P i n c k n e y ,&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
-•** 5fr&#13;
1-.v.V'&#13;
V&#13;
New goods are rapidly&#13;
tilling the store and its&#13;
worth yonr time to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
The best stock of Embroideries,&#13;
Laces, Ribbons,&#13;
Corsets, Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Hosiery and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Remember That&#13;
Every Day Is Bargain Day&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
's Busy Store&#13;
Farmers,&#13;
!&#13;
Bring in yonr har- j&#13;
nessee and have them !&#13;
repaired, washed and !&#13;
oiled ready for yonr j&#13;
spring work. If yonr j&#13;
i&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can do that work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane can sew ou patches,&#13;
rips, etc., in fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
new. ,: :: ::&#13;
W. B. DARROW&#13;
convened there Tuesday a. m. Prayer&#13;
meeting Thursday evening. Regular&#13;
services next Sunday. Everybody invited&#13;
to thi- church.&#13;
P r o d u c e t a k e n a t h i g h e s t m a r k e t p r i c e&#13;
( S a l e s C a s h&#13;
' *;lfrlj/ "C ar i&#13;
•* &lt; :¾&#13;
M. £ Church Notes.&#13;
There was not so large an attend*''&#13;
ance as usual at the morning service&#13;
owing to several being ill and then&#13;
you know it is house cleaning and&#13;
plowing time and man; were too tired&#13;
There was a splendid strmon just the&#13;
same both moruing and evening. In&#13;
the evening the rain kept many away.&#13;
There were only 74 at, Sunday school&#13;
and the collection of $2.62. The&#13;
whooping congh kept some away and&#13;
fear of it others.&#13;
In two weeks, May 1 and 2, will&#13;
occur tbe third quarterly meeting&#13;
here and Presiding Elder, Wm. Dawe,&#13;
will he present and preach Sunday&#13;
morning. He will also be present at&#13;
tbe quarterly conference Saturday&#13;
evening, May, May 1. Bear these services&#13;
in mind and let everyone make&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST of durability in a high-speed machine like the cream separator.&#13;
No other machine a farmer oaes has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
•vary day, winter and lummer.it must not only do thorough work,&#13;
but to be permanently profitable, it Must be durable. U.S. CREAM&#13;
are built for long service. A solW, "krw frame encloses entirely all&#13;
the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger of infury.&#13;
The part* arefew, simple and easytoget at. Ball bearings&#13;
at high speed points, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wear&#13;
as well as insure the easiest operation. Such careful and thorough&#13;
construction is what enables the V. S. to better STAND THE TEST ~ ~ than any other separator. Yon dont have to buy a new one evrry year ot&#13;
two. And remember: the U. S. does the cleanest akiaMalag a'l the time.&#13;
Examine the r . S. yourself a«d see its good points. It is sold by&#13;
Teeple. Hardware Col&#13;
.•jftW- '&#13;
m&#13;
P&#13;
*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
r&amp;&#13;
gincktfeg gisfiatcfj&#13;
F)U*K L. AjrUBKWB, P u b .&#13;
KWOKNBY, MIOHIQAN&#13;
Optimist Day. »&gt;&#13;
Fully will give place to, a better $ ^&#13;
of joyommess it the optimise c a n iA*&#13;
ducti the American people'to steal&#13;
from ihe calendar the daV tjhttrhaif ifr&#13;
root* to English tradition a t AU Footf'&#13;
Day, Bays t h e Baltimore, America*.&#13;
There la really n o reason j ^ ^ O i i P*p&#13;
petuation of this purely English institution&#13;
in thia country. It ha* degenerated&#13;
into a, day for Questionable witticisms&#13;
and has no signification that&#13;
endear* it to t h e minds of the Intelligent&#13;
people. The proposition to convert&#13;
k into a day "for sunshine, for&#13;
cheery salutation, for the sweeping of&#13;
life's way with the beams of gladness&#13;
comes from the Optimist club. This is&#13;
One of this finest organjjwtfab* in t h e&#13;
country, whose tenets are tonic, whose&#13;
prescriptions are invigorating, whose&#13;
pass words afftda^fcerly greetings. Its&#13;
ends are admirable, it points up to the&#13;
blue. •""' U v •**''*&#13;
Such men/ffaa. Andrew Carnegie and&#13;
Rev. Dr. SI iter a r e leader* i n the undertaking&#13;
to give a realistic turn to&#13;
the whimsicality of the English essayist&#13;
to extract sunshine from cucumbers.&#13;
All Fools' Day should be taken&#13;
from clownish pranks and be made to&#13;
bear tribute to the spirit of the Beason.&#13;
The beginning of April, even when in&#13;
tears, is radiated with sunshine and&#13;
well pictures forth life Itself. So that&#13;
the first day of April would be a fine&#13;
day to dedicate to the spirit of optimism&#13;
that is so strong,in the breasts of&#13;
Americans. It would be a purely&#13;
American holiday and should serve a&#13;
fine purpose and give national emphasis&#13;
to the brighter views of life. Optimist&#13;
Day would spread the gospel of&#13;
a smile.&#13;
The San Francisco graft prosecutions&#13;
differ from all other similar efforts&#13;
for civic purity. They have become&#13;
almost an institution, proving&#13;
that such endeavors for honesty and&#13;
the square deal are not necessarily&#13;
sporadic, leading only to reaction.&#13;
They serve also as a continual warning&#13;
to corrupt officials and corrupting&#13;
special interests in other American&#13;
cities, Bays the Kansas City Star. The&#13;
dramatic incident, where Heney's and&#13;
Burn'B men made wholesale arrestB&#13;
among the attorneys and special retainers&#13;
of "the men. higher up," was likewise&#13;
a refreshing demonstration that&#13;
the state, when represented by aggressive,&#13;
resourceful servants, can exert&#13;
as much ingenuity and pertinacity for&#13;
promoting a fair trial as rich and powerful&#13;
defendants can and do for defeating&#13;
justice. Interest in the fight&#13;
for municipal square dealing in San&#13;
Francisco has not languished, as the&#13;
cynics and lawbreakers usually count&#13;
upon its doing. On the contrary, it has&#13;
grown, and to-day there is no public&#13;
action of more dramatic intensity transpiring&#13;
on the American political stage&#13;
than the splendid effort for right Ihings&#13;
in the Pacific coast city.&#13;
A trapper haa come in from a remote&#13;
part of northwestern Canada and reported&#13;
that, during the winter there&#13;
was a period of 50 days when the thermometer&#13;
never indicated less than 38&#13;
degrees helow zero. This is "going&#13;
Rome" even for that latitude. And the&#13;
trapper will not. find himself fondly&#13;
loved by those Canadians who dislike&#13;
Kipling's characterization and who&#13;
wish to attract immigrants, including&#13;
well-to-do American farmers, to t h e&#13;
northwest, under the impression that&#13;
the sub-arctic section is not a bad second&#13;
to the sub-tropic one on'this side&#13;
of the line.&#13;
Eighteen hundred and nine has&#13;
been called "the year of genius" hecause&#13;
so many famous men were born&#13;
in that year. Abraham Lincoln undoubtedly&#13;
leads the list of statesmen,&#13;
Charles Darwin heads the list in science,&#13;
Tennyson and Holmes in literature&#13;
and Mendelssohn in music. Of&#13;
these Darwin and Lincoln were horn&#13;
on the same day. In many respects&#13;
the century just, closed has seen more&#13;
done for humanity than any other in&#13;
our era.&#13;
In spite of revolutions, mosquitoes&#13;
and freight rates, Central America&#13;
manages to trade its banana crop for&#13;
prosperity. The banana plant is as industrious&#13;
as it. is picturesque, working&#13;
all the year round, nights, Sundays&#13;
and legal holidays and while the&#13;
owner sleeps. Whpn a self-picking&#13;
banana plant is developed and the flying&#13;
machine allows t h e owner to flit&#13;
north with his csop under J i l t own&#13;
wings life in that locality will be Indeed&#13;
endurable. —&#13;
FREE LOVE COLONY&#13;
TO GET SHAKE UP&#13;
T H E R E 13, OR WAS, A FREE LOVE&#13;
COLONY I N M E N O M I N E&#13;
COUNTY.&#13;
LAKE NAVY MANEUVRES.&#13;
Break Up of the Non-Marriage &gt; Band&#13;
Haa Begun—The Naval Militia Will&#13;
Do Summer Stunts.&#13;
Living in Menominee county for&#13;
four years as quiet, respected cjtisens,&#13;
but in reality disbelievers of every&#13;
moral and national law affecting marriage,&#13;
possessed of the belief that t h e&#13;
Bible does' not sanction marriage/, bat&#13;
instead says man should find his "soul&#13;
mate" and live with her, atx couples&#13;
have been residing io .* little community&#13;
at Birch Creek. Tkelf,earnest&#13;
efforts to secure new believers and to&#13;
form a colony of respectable proportions&#13;
brought t h e matter t o the. attention&#13;
of the authorities Friday morning.&#13;
Joseph Klopeck, a toolmaker at t h e&#13;
IJoyd factory, was arrested on a criminal&#13;
charge. He admitted without concern&#13;
that he and his mate, Mary, have&#13;
lived as husband and wife for four&#13;
years and have worked hard to advance&#13;
their belief. He and his young&#13;
mate both declare they will suffer&#13;
prison or extreme punishment rather&#13;
than be forced to separate or marry.&#13;
Klopecke's "mate" was later arrested.&#13;
On the prosecution of the leaders&#13;
will depend t h e arrests of the other&#13;
five couples.&#13;
Five years ago in Chicago Klopck,&#13;
then a Bible student, after studying&#13;
for years, decided that it said nothing&#13;
favorable to marriage, but in many&#13;
places mentioned woman as man's&#13;
mate. After a short search he found&#13;
his mate and took her to Menominee.&#13;
They settled near the city.&#13;
Quietly they became acquainted&#13;
with Klopeck's fellow-employes and&#13;
soon convinced five that their belief&#13;
was the correct one. These in less&#13;
than two months also found mates&#13;
and built homes near Klopeck's property.&#13;
The men are all employed in local&#13;
factories.&#13;
Recently the six couples made concerted&#13;
efforts to convert several young&#13;
men who later took their sweethearts&#13;
to the settlement. When the matter&#13;
of living together was broached the&#13;
young ladies informed the authorities&#13;
aud an investigation followed.&#13;
The Naval Militia.&#13;
Naval maneuvres on the great lakes&#13;
on a larger scale than before have&#13;
been participated in by the naval militias&#13;
of Illinois, Ohio, Michigan and&#13;
Minnesota, bordering on those waters,&#13;
are in prospect for the coming summer,&#13;
The assistant secretary of t h e&#13;
navy, Beekman Winthrop, signified&#13;
his willingness to do everything possible&#13;
to assist the citizen sailormen,&#13;
It is probable that Commander Chas.&#13;
C. Marsh may be ordered to take command&#13;
of the squadron during the&#13;
cruise,&#13;
The flagship probably will be the&#13;
gunboat Nashville, which has been&#13;
under repairs at the Boston navy yard&#13;
for some time. This vessel has been&#13;
assigned to the Illinois naval militia,&#13;
('apt. W. F. Purdy, of that organization,&#13;
will take the Nashville from&#13;
Boston up the St. Lawrence and&#13;
through the lakes to Chicago. The&#13;
Nashville will leave Boston April 30&#13;
and will be manned by a crew from&#13;
the Illinois naval militia.&#13;
Plans for the maneuvres on the&#13;
lakes this summer have not been perfected,&#13;
but it is expected that the&#13;
squadron will be composed of eight&#13;
vessels. These will be the Wolverine,&#13;
the only regular naval vessel on the&#13;
lakes; the Nashville and Dorothea, of&#13;
the Illinois naval reserve; the Yantic&#13;
and Don Juan de Austria, of the Michigan&#13;
naval militia; the Hawk and Essex,&#13;
belonging to the Ohio militia, and&#13;
the Gopher, manned by the Minnesota&#13;
naval reserve.&#13;
Cost a Life.&#13;
The hurried attempt of Louis Finney,&#13;
a wealthy Leont farmer, to light&#13;
a kitchen fire by the aid of kerosene,&#13;
cast Mm his life and his wife and 7-&#13;
year-old son are terribly burned, the&#13;
wife -probably fatally.&#13;
Attired in his night robe, Finney,&#13;
after filling the stove with wood, began&#13;
to pour on kerosene. The flames&#13;
leaped up, the can exploded and the&#13;
blazing contents was spattered over&#13;
him. His screams attracted his wife&#13;
and son, who rushed to his rescue&#13;
and received their injuries trying to&#13;
extinguish the flames that enveloped&#13;
him. Finney died after eight hours of&#13;
terrible agony.&#13;
Neighbors extinguished the blaze,&#13;
which threatened the Finney home.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
Yeags Get $5,000.&#13;
Securing $5,00(1 and missing $2,000&#13;
in currency, burglars who blew up t h e&#13;
safe in the Alcona County Savings&#13;
bank at Harrisville Thursday night&#13;
got aay, leaving no clue. Entrance&#13;
to the bank was gained from t h e rear&#13;
door by knocking out one of the&#13;
panels so that the burglars could&#13;
reach in and unbolt it. The car house&#13;
of the D. &amp; M. railroad was broken&#13;
open and the thieves got their tools&#13;
there. Thry left all the papers, silver,&#13;
pennies and the $2,000 in bills.&#13;
Though an explosion WBR hcafrt''at&#13;
2 a. m., the robbery was not discover**&#13;
till 55 a m.&#13;
Pontiac school^ have adopted a aystern&#13;
of medical Inspection which la&#13;
now in effect.&#13;
Flint saloonkeepers have withdrawn&#13;
their petition for a recount qf t h e local&#13;
option ballots.&#13;
The official canvass of Grand&#13;
Traverse county shows t h e good&#13;
roads proposition to have carried by&#13;
851 voteB.&#13;
Driven out of i $ e saloon and brewery&#13;
business by t h e local option victory&#13;
in t h e county, 'several wealthy&#13;
Germans will start a hank in Petoskey.&#13;
Aimed*, t h e d-year-old daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Bobler, or Pontiac,&#13;
wits severely bitten through t h e&#13;
lip, by a large rat, while asleep In h e r&#13;
bed.&#13;
The board of supervisors of Branch&#13;
county have promised the prose-;&#13;
cutfog attorney their assistance in a,&#13;
rigid enforcement of the local option&#13;
lawB.&#13;
Mine officials in t h e copper district&#13;
say that 75 p e r cent of the foreigners&#13;
who laft for the old country during&#13;
t h e recent financial panic have returned.&#13;
After bleeding from t h e nose for a&#13;
week, Harry Flatt, of Calumet, ia&#13;
dead.. Physicians were unable to atop&#13;
the flow of blood which continued&#13;
till death.&#13;
Charles Greeley, aged 50, and a&#13;
Hillsdale baker, is dead of blood poiaoning,&#13;
the result of slightly scratching&#13;
his hand on a bread basket. Heleaves&#13;
a family.&#13;
The recount of the ballots in t h e recent&#13;
election has been completed h y&#13;
the supervisors of Hillsdale county,&#13;
and the dry majority is increased by&#13;
27 votes, making 1,385.&#13;
Joseph Israel, formerly a prominent&#13;
business man of Kalamazoo, and for&#13;
several years an invalid, killed himself&#13;
by jumping from t h e window of a&#13;
New York hotel where he was living.&#13;
Inspector F. S. Henderson, of the&#13;
state pharmacy board, is out to see&#13;
that the law requiring that only registered&#13;
pharmacists can dispense liquor&#13;
in "dry" counties is strictly adhered&#13;
to.&#13;
The property of Frank P. Glazier,&#13;
ex-state treasurer, which was appraised&#13;
at $15,000, has been sold at&#13;
auction and about 100 persons bought&#13;
the different parcels, paying $14,957.50&#13;
in all.&#13;
Hagar Anderson and Foster Rogers,&#13;
two incorrigible youths, were arrested&#13;
on a charge of robbing the Negaunee&#13;
postofrke. Both are said to have confessed.&#13;
They were bound over to t h e&#13;
circuit court.&#13;
David Laboe, of Newport, killed himself&#13;
by taking carbolic acid, He had&#13;
been missing lor several days. His&#13;
body was found in his own house.&#13;
Family trouble Is said to have been&#13;
the cause of his deed.&#13;
Charles Featherstone, of Grant, died&#13;
in Putterworth hospital as the result&#13;
of having been struck in the eye by&#13;
a splinter while he was chopping wood.&#13;
A blood VCSSPI was* rtfptured when t h e&#13;
sliver struck the optic.&#13;
A bullet was taken from the b(jdy&#13;
of T. I. Quinn, aged 60, at the hospital&#13;
in Hir.sdaje. Quiun ^ o t ^ t h ^ J m l l e ^&#13;
in the battle at Antietam. He served&#13;
in the Sixty-ninth New York regiment&#13;
of Cockran's Irish brigade.&#13;
After hearing the testimony of&#13;
Amelia and Ada Schmabelrauch, sisters,&#13;
of Dimondale, that they knew&#13;
nothing of how Clyde Saben met&#13;
death, the jury brought in a verdict&#13;
placing the blame on no one.&#13;
Elmer Sheltoh, M), station agent, at&#13;
Bath, placed the muzzle of a shotgun&#13;
to his temple and blew out. his brains.&#13;
Shelton had been a cripple for many&#13;
years and it is thought that this probably&#13;
was partly the cause of his act.&#13;
While returning from Muskegonjjn&#13;
a Pere Marquette train, Harold. ~&#13;
14, of Big Rapids, sustained&#13;
that will disfigure him for&#13;
transom broke over his h e&#13;
Ing glass cut several seve&#13;
his face.&#13;
Menominee has another mad dog&#13;
scare, and t h e order to muzzle all&#13;
dogs, which was withdrawn a few&#13;
weeks ago, will go into effect again.&#13;
A large collie, supposed to be mad,&#13;
haa bitten several animals and they&#13;
are being watched for signs of hydrophobia.&#13;
' . .&#13;
Some vandal armed with a hatchet&#13;
is trying to rob Owosso of the title&#13;
"The Forest City." He has cut into&#13;
dozens of beautiful maples on Oliver&#13;
and Mulberry streets, in the aristocratic,&#13;
part of town, literally "blazing&#13;
a trail" among the hundreds of towering&#13;
trees.&#13;
With an increase of population Lansing&#13;
has succeeded in getting two&#13;
more carriers for its postofftce.&#13;
Herman Girkey, aged 7, is missing,&#13;
and it is thought that be was either&#13;
drowned or kidnaped. T h e dam sluice,&#13;
has been dragged, but no trace of t h e&#13;
boy was found.&#13;
Mrs. Clarence Miller, aged 26, is&#13;
determined to live in Ohio. H e r husband&#13;
is equally determined to live in&#13;
Michigan. As a result Clarence Miller&#13;
is in a Saginaw police station for&#13;
wife desertion and an adjudication of&#13;
the marital dispute ia in the hands of&#13;
two governors.&#13;
Brought back from Billings, Mont.,&#13;
over 2,000 miles, to face a charge of&#13;
robbing Matthew Shinnerof $500, John&#13;
Edwards admitted his guilty, while&#13;
Shinner, in an inebriated condition,was&#13;
being led home by. John Hodges. But&#13;
Edwards charges that Hodges was not&#13;
taring the good Samaritan stunt in&#13;
takhir'Strfnnsrtionre/ but t h a f h e ' ' v i s&#13;
alBo In on the deal.&#13;
F,&#13;
#WAU(*HT*R OF C H R I S T I A N * • ¥&#13;
T U R K I S H • O L D I S H * 16&#13;
HORRIBLE.&#13;
Children and Mothers Not Spared In&#13;
th« Brut*I Work.&#13;
From ancient Beirut, on t h e eastern&#13;
coast of t h e Mediterranean to tonerum,&#13;
near t h e Russian border, 600&#13;
miles northeast, anti-Christian riot*,&#13;
accompanied by slaughter, arson and&#13;
rapine, a r e being enacted in Asiatic&#13;
Turkey.&#13;
Careful estimates place the number&#13;
of those slain today at 1,000 and the&#13;
total number who have fallen victims&#13;
of the fanaticism of the Moslem hordes&#13;
since t h e rioting began on Thursday&#13;
at 4,000. Women are being ravished&#13;
by the Moslem soldiers and carried&#13;
off into t h e mountains, while t h e helpless&#13;
children of the .Christians, mostly&#13;
Armenians, are dying with their parents.&#13;
Inflamed by t h e belief that their religion&#13;
J B endangered , by the uprising&#13;
in Constantinople, the Moslems are&#13;
committing ^he grossest atrocities&#13;
against Christians and the sands a r e&#13;
blotting up the blood of hundreds of&#13;
innocents.&#13;
Adana, 30 miles inland from t h e&#13;
Mediterranean, half h e r houseB in&#13;
ashes and hundreds of people butchep&#13;
ed, is the center of the massacre.&#13;
Will Stir Up Washington.&#13;
Fifty women, among t h e many hundred&#13;
employed by the bureau of engraving&#13;
and printing here, will be dismissed&#13;
if t h e National Civic Federation&#13;
of Women can secure their dismissal.&#13;
Some of t h e most influential&#13;
women in New York a r e interested&#13;
in this federation. A committee of&#13;
the federation visited Washington&#13;
some time ago and it was proposed to&#13;
establish a union of women in the&#13;
bureau, having for its object the betterment&#13;
of t h e women's condition spiritually&#13;
and in all lines of life. T h e&#13;
protection of t h e federation was much&#13;
desired and the women gladly agreed&#13;
to form a union with all these purposes&#13;
in view.&#13;
The executive committee of the federation,&#13;
however, has discovered sufficient&#13;
evidence to necessitate the formation&#13;
of a committee, on morality.&#13;
This committee went diligently to&#13;
work and it g o t evidence showing so&#13;
far that at least 50 women were not&#13;
fit subjects for the benevolences of the&#13;
federation.&#13;
The publication of these investigations&#13;
of the Woman's National Civic&#13;
Federation will produce a widespread&#13;
stir in Washington. T h e names of all&#13;
concerned are reserved for the present&#13;
but they doubtless will come out if&#13;
the secretary of the treasury accedes&#13;
to the wishes of the committee by&#13;
dismissing the marked employes.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
East Buffalo.—Cattle—Market 10&#13;
15r higher; best export steers, $fi&#13;
6.50; best 1.200 to 1.300-lb shipping:&#13;
steers. SS.75@&gt;6.2fi; best 1,000 to 1.100-&#13;
1b do $5.f&gt;0(g&gt;fi; best fat cows, $4.B0ftfi;&#13;
fair to KOOA, $3.fW©4; trimmers, $2,500&#13;
2.75; best fat heifers, $ri.50©R,76; light&#13;
fat heifers $4@4.26; best bulls, |4.7Fi(3&gt;&#13;
fi; bolosrna bulls. $3.75®4: best feeding&#13;
steers, $4.F&gt;0#4.75; best stockers, 14.25&#13;
©4.50; cummon stockers, $3.50(3^.75.&#13;
The good cows today sold hlKher. but&#13;
the common kinds were very dull nnd&#13;
hard to sell; best cows, $45®R6; common.&#13;
$30@3R.&#13;
Hojrs—Market steady; heavy, $7.70((¾&#13;
7.75; few, $7.SO; best yorkers, $7.60©&#13;
7.70; light, $7.25©7.40; pigs. $7&lt;S&gt;7.10.&#13;
Sheep—Heavy grades slow; handy&#13;
grades active; bent w&lt;ool lambs. $8.30®&#13;
8.40; fair to Rood, $R®8.25; best clipped,&#13;
$7.15¢)7.25: culls, $7©7.75; yearling!, $&lt;&#13;
0)7.25; wether*. $6.2fi@fl.60; ewes, $6.75&#13;
©6.&#13;
Calves—Lnwer: best, $8(^8.25; medium&#13;
to good, $707.75; heavy, $4®R.&#13;
Grain, etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red.&#13;
$1.40; May opened at $1.39¼ and ruled&#13;
steady; July opened at a drop of \ c&#13;
at $1.17¾ and advanced to $1,111%;&#13;
September opened at $1.10¼ and advanced&#13;
to $1.11 M,; No. 3 red, $1.37;&#13;
No. 1 white, $1.40.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, fifl\c; No, 3 yellow.&#13;
2 cars at fiSMro, 1 at 70Vtc, closing&#13;
at 70fcc.&#13;
Oats—Crash No. 3 white, fi cars at&#13;
f&gt;"VsC; No. 4 white, 1 car at 5R*ic&#13;
H\'f—Cash No. 2. 1 car at 85c.&#13;
Fleans—Cash, $2.40 bid; May. $2.45&#13;
bid.&#13;
Clovorseerl -Prime spot, 40 hajrs nt&#13;
$:,.8:,: October, 10(i hairs at $R.«0: March,&#13;
100 hug* at $fi.75; sample, 40 bajfR at&#13;
$5.60, 30 at $:-..20. 15 at $5; sample alsike.&#13;
5 haws 'at '17.&#13;
Timothy Seed — 1'rime spot, 50 hngrs&#13;
nt $1.R5.&#13;
Feed — Tn 100-lh, sncRs. lobbinjr lots:&#13;
Kran. f2K; coarse middlings, $29; fine&#13;
middlings. $30; crAcked corn and&#13;
rnnr?r rornmeal. $23; "corn and oat&#13;
ch«P. r2T per ton. i' :&#13;
^ Flo»r—-Hft*.t JUlr.hUan . p a U n t . $«.50;&#13;
ordlnarv patent, f(T.2R: sfrnlsrht. 16.TK;&#13;
clear, l«: spring patent, $«.50; pure&#13;
U.&#13;
niCTROlT-— Cattle—r&gt;ry fed steers,&#13;
iS.r.O; steers and heifers. 1.000 to 1.200,&#13;
$R.2fi^5.40; nteers and heifers, S00 to :&#13;
1.000. $5 (d 5,35; steers and heifers that |&#13;
are fat. 500 to TOO. $4.25f&lt;'5; choice fat&#13;
cows, $4.50; good fat cows, $4©4.25;&#13;
common cows. $3at 3.50; canners, $1.75&#13;
(a 2; choice heavy bulls, $4,50; fair to ]&#13;
jiood holofjnas, bnlln, $3.75 &lt;3&gt;4; stock&#13;
bulls, $3.50'® 3.75; choice feeding steerfc.&#13;
800 to 1.000, $4.50®4.75; fair feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000, $3.50^3.75: choice&#13;
Mockers, 500 to 700, $4^4.50; fair&#13;
stockers, 500 to 700, $3.50® 3.65; stock&#13;
heifers, $3.O0@3.50; milkers, larpe,&#13;
voung, medium apre, $40 ¢ 5 5 : common&#13;
milkers, $25^35, Veal calves—Market&#13;
steady at last week's close; best, $7.50;&#13;
others. $4@7. Milch cows and springers—&#13;
Steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Market steady ai&#13;
last week's prices; best lambs. $8;&#13;
fair to good lambs, $7@7.50; light to&#13;
common lambs, $fi.50©7; yearlings,&#13;
$6fff6.75; fnir to pood sheep, $5® 6;&#13;
oull« and common, $3.50 ¢5)4; clip Iambi,&#13;
$6.50@7.&#13;
Hog*—Market Rtandy at last week's&#13;
closing prices; light to good butchers,&#13;
$7.26r«)7.3R; pigs, $6.50; light yorkers,&#13;
$6.SO® 7.10; stags, one-third off.&#13;
clear ffj.so; pu&#13;
rye, $4.66 p t r bbl. in wood, Jobbing \a\&#13;
C*UMITY.J|^0W»RF8 AU.&#13;
Troubjpa Qf t h * Orpwn.^p* ftul ftub&lt;&#13;
[, bit* ftwid* T f a « t * y U &gt; 4 % ^&#13;
*J9' rowpd toy's taut.&#13;
People talk of calamities—the d r o p&#13;
of a few points tn some- stock, t h e&#13;
crash of a runaway horse, t h e buretlag&#13;
of a water Ripe, t h e cook leaving&#13;
just a s t h e company arrives, a fellow&#13;
getting m a d a a d trading a t another&#13;
Btore, an editor writing t h e word&#13;
"damn,"*Uft iorln&amp;" Ifctpdeet / u a &amp; l a f&#13;
into a d a s l wf rata wMJlei oBt-itf.her&#13;
richest W u w a * V i h * * i * w j a v M B * I&#13;
plain case which h e took on a contingent&#13;
fee—we^say .peonje &lt;alk 0t calamities&#13;
like thafte, *Bd,tb«yft»»r back into&#13;
unspea^&amp;e&lt;£ng\44h&gt;£Ut they « r +&#13;
(all 'the mere foibles of disappointsoeni&#13;
compared with what we saw t h e oty&gt;ejr&#13;
day, which w a s this: A small b o y&#13;
built a kite on**}* stick* a n d timeui&#13;
paper, and H had a long graceful ^alV&#13;
co tall, and he brought It forth t o aaU&#13;
it in a sunny breese. What a realization&#13;
of great hepe w a s thero&lt;wfc«j^&#13;
he held up t h a t thing of b e a u t y \ o&#13;
catch t h e first palpitating beams xrf&#13;
the morning! Jppw jiiar heart thumped1&#13;
with delight! Away goes t h e k i t e ,&#13;
borne on the sweet breath oft t h e&#13;
morning—up, up ft goes, and nowi-jt&#13;
sails and soars, a s if it transfigured&#13;
some happy dream—hut look, l o , t h e r j&#13;
ia a flurry a n d a d a r t . a n d down i t&#13;
dashes on a malignant tangle .of telephone&#13;
wires, and a boy's soul ia hajrrowed&#13;
with despair. T h a r * What 'wjf&#13;
call real calamity. All the others ane&#13;
boguB.-^Ohio State Journal.&#13;
BABY'S W A T E R Y ECZEMA&#13;
Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran&#13;
—$50 Spent on Useless Treatments&#13;
—Disease Seemed Incurable.&#13;
Cured by Cutlcura for $1.50.&#13;
"When my little boy was two a n d a&#13;
half months old he broke out on both&#13;
checks with eczema. It wa» t h e itchy,&#13;
watery kind and we had to keep his&#13;
little hands wrapped up all t h e time,&#13;
and if h e would happen to get them&#13;
uncovered he would claw his face till&#13;
the blood streamed down on his clothing.&#13;
We called In a physician at once,&#13;
but h e gave an ointment which was so&#13;
severe that ray babe would scream&#13;
when It. wns put on. We changed&#13;
doctorB a n d medicine until we had&#13;
spent fifty dollars or more and baby&#13;
was getting worse. I was BO worn out&#13;
watching and caring for him night and&#13;
day that I almost felt sure t h e disease&#13;
was incurable. But finally reading of&#13;
the good results of t h e Cutlcura Remedies,&#13;
I determined to t r y them. I&#13;
can truthfully say I was more than&#13;
surprised, for I bought only a dollar&#13;
and a half's worth of the Cutlcura&#13;
Remedies (Cutlcura Soap, Ointment&#13;
and Pills), and they did more good than&#13;
all my doctors' medicines I had tried&#13;
and in fact entirely cured him. His&#13;
face is perfectly clear of t h e least&#13;
spot or scar of anything. Mrs. W. M.&#13;
spot or scar. Mrs. W. M. Comerer,&#13;
Hurnt Cabins, P. , Sept. 15, 1908."&#13;
Potter Drug * Chem. Corp,, Rol» .Fron*, Bpaton.&#13;
POTATO MAKES PROUD BOAST.&#13;
Humble Vegetable Used for Many Other&#13;
Purposes Than Recoanlzed&#13;
Dinner Essential.&#13;
Whenever you lick a postage stamp&#13;
you partake of me, since all lickable&#13;
gums are made from dextrine, one&#13;
of my products.&#13;
Your neck caresses me all day—for&#13;
the starch that stiffens your collar is&#13;
made from the potato.&#13;
The bone buttons on your underwear&#13;
a r e probably "vegetable ivory"&#13;
—compressed potato pulp.&#13;
My leaves, dried, make a good&#13;
smoke. You have often smoked them&#13;
"unbeknownst," mixed with your favorite&#13;
brand.&#13;
Potato spirit is a very pure alcohol.&#13;
It is used to fortify white wines. Many&#13;
a headache is not so much d u e to&#13;
the grape as t h e potato. .-1&#13;
I yield a sweet Byrup. In this form&#13;
I am often present in cheap cocoa,&#13;
honey, butter and lard.&#13;
Let the corpulent try as they will,&#13;
they cannot escape yours truly,&#13;
THE POTATO.&#13;
Grief That Kills.&#13;
"My poor boy," said the beneficent&#13;
old clergyman, who had encountered a&#13;
young waif aobblng in t h e . ^&#13;
"what all« you? Soma case j £&#13;
distress h a s touched your ^fcitrtchorda,&#13;
n o doubt." ,&#13;
"No." sniffed the lad, "you're clear&#13;
off your baBe, old kazzozieks. Me a n '&#13;
Snippy an' de rest of de, fellies tin&#13;
canned t h e mangy, old yellow c u r up&#13;
at. Schwarz' grocery, and whi,le old&#13;
Srhwarz a n ' de gang followed the&#13;
dog, I sneaked back to the grocery tc&#13;
swipe dried apples. De Pido chased&#13;
into Schmltt's orchard and d e gang&#13;
cribbed de swellest peaches you $ver&#13;
seen, an' then dey smoked grape-vine&#13;
cigarettes and set t h e barn a*jlfc. 1&#13;
made a sashay into de apple barrel at&#13;
de grocery, a n ' de delivery boy pasted&#13;
me with a oed-slat and it hurts yet.&#13;
and J didn't, g f t Jo a e e . d e fire, And&#13;
' W » ' t ; t t t feSfcbV.to eat, and 1 » t&#13;
i wus dead—dog-gone I t a U T — T h «&#13;
Bohemian atagaiine.&#13;
ft . . 9 - / ,&#13;
5ja&amp;#«&#13;
»-*•**; .w- I &gt;t&amp;km&amp;M&#13;
•H-iV•-; *.' • -^p &gt;* " " -**&lt;,&#13;
• -fe. * . • M M U M M M l M t l llJLii&lt;»*i)»ll iiWmWiti T W ^ f l W R ^ " * * Lj&amp;l ^ - . ;w^*i&#13;
9 5&#13;
^ yl ., -Jiw&#13;
1IOTU&#13;
THE&#13;
ANISHING&#13;
T"&#13;
B y&#13;
EOY NORTON&#13;
CU.UST1A1TO B T A . W«tt&#13;
J "i " t Y N O M I S .&#13;
mi"gVhats ahsaMvne * hFaplepeetns.e"d ,"a oiptoerny* ionf W"wuhha-t tafton with the United States and Japan&#13;
8_r_t_U ehw aerm. bGasusyy , HaMndIe rM. eisesc rNetaanrra *o fR othbe- I*stAaj,r odeeheJadef as*iato*v eorf *.I nvJeasptaonr dReocblaerrteas, waarer and taaea the Philippines. Guy HUUer&#13;
¢1^^T3ea Wtoara hJBnujrgU laan dfo. r thNe orFmloar idaR ocboearatat. -arew daoits e1d». caTpotukryeod bbayr nthse oJf aaprei.s aAinlls ;p Joarpta- avninecseed f letheta ta nUdn witehdo leS wtaotrelsd hbaeo*o mpoeaw ecrofnu-l Aw afrle eatg teon cAym, eriXcannc lwaaadte rds eacaid aes Ctaon asdeinadn pporosete clati oan teargraibinles t suwbhmaat rtinhee fBlortlUillsah. sHuipl-- Itelerri oIuss lyse ndti sawpipthe aras . mTehsesa gkea.i seFrl eeist mmiysss-- Ifnrso;.s tedK ibnys; AEddmwiarradl Boefv lEnsn golfa ntdh e iUs nciotend- lSatnadte'ss , wTahres hDipres,a dins aduigshcto,v ebriegdg esatt oaf nE inmg-- pnoawss agbolee sp obianctk int ot hae tTimhaem mesa. nTy hem ostnotrhys Rbeofboerret at hvei switsa rt hber epakress ioduent.t aanndd Icnavbeinnteotr, tteiolUn.n s;T ohfi sa nodve recxohmibeisti nfgr icat iomne twalh epnr oedluecc-- tRriofibeedr taa.nedv olivse st oa bger eaapt pflileydin gto mvaecshsienlse.. aTghaei nscta bJianpeat nepsela. nsT hea straardt ioips lamnaed e wfoarr btheeli esvciennge Nofi pcpoonnf licsut.p reTmhee, Jsaupdadneensely fldeiest-, cveerrninsg thteh er aAdiirosphliapnse dfelseceetn. d,A fatnerd mbya nueuse- obfy sotrnoen, gf rmomag nthetes Bliefat . thTeh .ew avresshsieplss, oanree dUenpiotesdit edS taitne s at om aowunatiat inp ealcaek. e Thien Brthite- tissh c oflneevte yaecdc eptot s thAem eUrniciaten* hSotsaptietas libtyy atnhde tWheinirg lewsso ndteerrrfourl s. invTeno tiosnh,o wt hatth e rukleari seirs tAajkneenr icao—n thau sl onagc cotruipn—tinhgis ffoirr sth ivsi simt ytso- treardioioupsl andeis apbpreeaakrasn cdeo wfrno. mK Binegr linE.d wTarhde- is brought to'America on a radioplane.&#13;
CHAPTER XXI.—Continued.&#13;
The waning moon lighted up the&#13;
quiet reaches far beneath, and out&#13;
lined in diminutive spectral shapes&#13;
the fleet of anchored ships. The great&#13;
machine swooped lower until they&#13;
could descry the telescoped funnels,&#13;
from whose ragged mouths came no&#13;
curl of smoke, and the bared decks&#13;
whose lengths were paced only by&#13;
men of the watch. Aside from these&#13;
there was no sign of life. A mighty&#13;
squadron, bereft of power, floating on&#13;
still waters beneath a dying moon!&#13;
If America wished to prove her supremacy,&#13;
the lesson was complete.&#13;
The royal shoulders outlined against&#13;
the light of the port gave one great&#13;
shudder of sorrow, and turned away.&#13;
When the shutters closed and the&#13;
lights returned, the king was resting&#13;
his brow upon his hand, the lord of&#13;
the admiralty was standing with tightly&#13;
clasped hands, and the prime minister&#13;
was leaning, with folded arms&#13;
against the polished frame of the port&#13;
through which he had viewed Briton's&#13;
vanquished pride.&#13;
"If your majesty pleases." the voice&#13;
of the American admiral broke into&#13;
the quietude, "I have promised to land&#13;
MISB Roberts and Admiral Fields before&#13;
our return. With your consent&#13;
we shall stop in the place chosen for&#13;
«11 our visits to Washington, In the&#13;
outskirts."&#13;
The monarch still thinking of the&#13;
silent fleet, assented, and the radioplane&#13;
swept downward at a tangent&#13;
to the- lonely field. Again the lights&#13;
went out, the port opened, and. the&#13;
^ slight shock of landing was felt Almost&#13;
instantly a man in uniform stood&#13;
before it and saluted the admiral, who&#13;
started back in surprise.&#13;
, "A message for you, sir, from the&#13;
president and secretary of the navy,&#13;
with requests that it be opened and&#13;
read Immediately," the officer an-&#13;
•punced.&#13;
Jje^ins returned to the light of hood&#13;
^ j l Vviad:&#13;
^ I ^ K l n d l y report to the White House&#13;
tssinedlatery upon arrival. " In case&#13;
M§ majesty, the king of England, has&#13;
returned with you, which we earnestly&#13;
hope is the case, present to him&#13;
the hearty goofl will of the president&#13;
and people of the United StateB of&#13;
America, and extend to him o«r urgent&#13;
invitation either to accompany you,&#13;
with those who may be his companions,&#13;
or await the return of a committee&#13;
of invitation and reception&#13;
which will wait upon him as toon as&#13;
It becomes definitely known that he is&#13;
with'jrotr. ' '" ^&#13;
"In case he did not accompany you&#13;
on your return,1 It will be necessary&#13;
for yea to return to London at once,&#13;
Isvvfttng aim to a conference of fcrest&#13;
frjpjgfiance, whlcV&gt;'&gt;*S&gt;a*io*e&lt;il W&#13;
tie" exigencies ot events which hare&#13;
t*Jwn.plfcg *©-nJght. Mfe4ny lasaMWi&#13;
Pusaled by this explicit message,&#13;
Bevlns paused for a moment, with his&#13;
trows crown do*n'1n tfibught. and&#13;
then returned Jto the drawing room,&#13;
where a shaded light rested in the center&#13;
of the table round which his&#13;
guests were seated- With a brief explanation&#13;
he handed the order to the&#13;
king, who calmly placed his glasses&#13;
upon his high, fine nose,, leaned across&#13;
the table, and perused it.&#13;
Everything of the night was strange&#13;
and unusual. A few hours ago he had&#13;
gone to a theater to rest bid nerves,&#13;
ahfl here he was across the Atlantic,&#13;
Informally, and learning new lessons&#13;
or receiving astounding revelations&#13;
with each beat'oi time. He had gone&#13;
thus far. and would go through to the&#13;
end, and would go informally.&#13;
"We prefer to accompany you," was&#13;
alt the reply he made, and the party&#13;
tiled out into the night, where two big&#13;
automobiles ^brought for this very&#13;
emergency-were in waiting. They&#13;
whirled away to the White House,&#13;
where they were met in the blue room&#13;
by the president and his immediate&#13;
advisers. The kfng himself established&#13;
the basis of etiquette by extending his&#13;
hand.to the president and his companions.&#13;
He assumed no deportment&#13;
of royalty; but as the first gentleman&#13;
of England greeted the first gentle&#13;
man of America.&#13;
"Tour majesty," the president began,&#13;
',4the time is at hand when the&#13;
United States has no further object in&#13;
concealing the power at her command;&#13;
the' sole cause of concealment,&#13;
that of meeting the Chinese fleet, having&#13;
been nullified by the action of that&#13;
country itself. China has broken her&#13;
alliance with Japan, is ready to make&#13;
such overtures as we wish for peace,&#13;
and Is dispersing her fleet."&#13;
The president paused for a moment,&#13;
and looked at those around him. The&#13;
king, steadily watching him, was impressed&#13;
with his simple dignity, and&#13;
read aright the great and high purpose&#13;
that shone In his eyes. Once&#13;
more he resumed:&#13;
"It has come to this issue, your&#13;
majesty, much sooner than I had expected;&#13;
but events which make for&#13;
war and peace move fast. They are&#13;
in the hands of God Almighty, and&#13;
not of rulers. I desired this interview,&#13;
because you can assist me in&#13;
what I have to do, and for which I&#13;
believe I am a mere Instrument in the&#13;
hands of a power before whom all&#13;
must bow."&#13;
"And I am honored," the sovereign&#13;
instantly responded.&#13;
With his officials he was conducted&#13;
to the president's private apartments,&#13;
where they were followed by the secretary&#13;
of state and the secretary of&#13;
the navy.&#13;
The king looked round the room,&#13;
which he had entered on but one&#13;
other occasion, long years before,&#13;
when as a prince and without hope of&#13;
a throne he had been received by a&#13;
former president of the United States.&#13;
How many men had occupied it since&#13;
then, and how few of them had left&#13;
any great individual mark on the&#13;
world's history! He took the&#13;
proffered^ Beat and waited for the president&#13;
to speak, only half comprehending&#13;
that he was entering upon&#13;
one of the most important conferences&#13;
that the world had ever known.&#13;
"Your majesty and gentlemen," the&#13;
president began in his low, finely&#13;
modulated voice, "I told you I wished&#13;
your assistance. I need more than&#13;
that; I want your advice. I have been&#13;
a man with a dream, and that you&#13;
may know how much it has meant to&#13;
me, I must tell you something of myself.&#13;
I come of a race that for generations&#13;
has given Its blood for country.&#13;
It was almost obliterated in the wars&#13;
of the revolution and of 1812. In the&#13;
great civil war there were Ave men&#13;
in my family, a father and four older&#13;
' brothers, the youngest a mere lad,&#13;
who went to war as volunteers. Some&#13;
of them never returned. My father&#13;
was brought back shattered by suffering&#13;
to die in my mother's arms.&#13;
The lad that had gone out with his&#13;
drum came back to drag out only a&#13;
few wretched months of suffering.&#13;
"My home was on the borderland,&#13;
where men fought backward and forward&#13;
across our fields.'' He paused&#13;
for a moment as if the memory of his&#13;
childhood was too bitter for recapitulation,&#13;
then went bravely on: "In&#13;
those years the sight of ghastly&#13;
wounds and cruel death was before&#13;
me sometimes dally, but never far removed.&#13;
When peace came there waa&#13;
nothing left to my mother but her&#13;
ravaged farm, her bitter poverty, and&#13;
her one boy. Oh, it was a nightmare,&#13;
gentlemen, that never dimmed. ft&#13;
was a mesnory that never left me, as,&#13;
hard working, poorly clad and sometimes&#13;
hungry. I grew to manhood.&#13;
My mother went, as did thousands of&#13;
other widows made by war, to an&#13;
early grave, prematurely worn out lv&#13;
work and grief."&#13;
The floodgates were down at last&#13;
His repression was going, and he&#13;
rose to his feet behind his desk trembling&#13;
in every fiber, and with white,&#13;
quivering lips. In the stillness of the&#13;
room he stood thus for an instant;&#13;
then his teeth suddenly tame together&#13;
with a dick and his Sat oast* down&#13;
.» ± t I I I ' t ; i i&#13;
upon the table In one quick, bard&#13;
blow of e » P * 4 s « " ^ T i - f&#13;
"Do you wondei." be said, "that I&#13;
swore to give my life to peace? Is it&#13;
strange that I who have suffered have&#13;
taken unusual means to keep others&#13;
from suffering as I and mine have?&#13;
I have invited you bare not as the&#13;
president of a nation, but as man&#13;
to men to help me put—an—end—to&#13;
—war!" -!&#13;
Every word of his final declaration&#13;
was bitten off with sharp emphasis&#13;
and accentuated by a fist which beat&#13;
trme. The king was suddenly conscious&#13;
that he had leaned forward In.&#13;
his chair so far that nothing but the&#13;
tense grip of his hands upon the arms&#13;
had held him down4. In all his years&#13;
he bad Witnessed no such scene of&#13;
emotion as this, nor heard a more&#13;
earnest appeal.&#13;
The president, as if regretting bis&#13;
lack of control, settled wearily into&#13;
bis seat. He had said things in a way&#13;
that in any other man would have&#13;
been undignified; but he, inspired by&#13;
the grandeur of his purpose, failed, to&#13;
realise that an angel with a flaming&#13;
sword could scarcely have beep, more&#13;
impressive. He had been addressing&#13;
no ordinary audience. Before, bim&#13;
was an august ruler* but more than&#13;
that, a great man. And in the hush&#13;
Which followed, the sovereign roie&#13;
from Ms seat, stepped across to the&#13;
desk, and for one of the ' few times&#13;
in his life gave untrammeled vent to&#13;
his feelings as a man. He put his&#13;
hand out across the polished mahogany&#13;
top as the tall form of the president&#13;
straightened up. Their hands&#13;
met in oue strong grip of understanding,&#13;
and they looked squarely into&#13;
each other's eyes, reading, comprehending,&#13;
and binding themselves together&#13;
in a common purpose for hu&#13;
manity.&#13;
It was not the etiquette which demands&#13;
that all men shall stand when&#13;
a king is on his feet that brought the&#13;
others from their chairs, erect.&#13;
breathless and motionless. It was&#13;
rather the impulsive respect and&#13;
veneration due to two great minds&#13;
which before their very eyes were&#13;
entering an unwritten compact for a&#13;
high and noble cause.&#13;
Once more they took their seats,&#13;
but now by the subtle alchemy of humanity&#13;
they drew their chairs together.&#13;
They were no longer rulers&#13;
and subjects. Englishmen and Americana,&#13;
but men Inspired with inHir-&#13;
MA Message for You, Sir, from the&#13;
President and Secretary of the&#13;
Navy."&#13;
nanimity toward all their fellow beings.&#13;
They were on a Godlike plane&#13;
reasoning out momentous plans involving&#13;
the nations of the world and&#13;
all mankind. From their combined&#13;
fund of knowledge they evolved methods&#13;
which were to strengthen the&#13;
weak and put in leash the strong.&#13;
All reckoning of time was lost in this&#13;
review of what had been accomplished&#13;
and what was to be done.&#13;
The night paled, the sun crept up;&#13;
the lights of the darkness were extinguished,&#13;
and the day advanced without&#13;
their heeding It. The last tentative&#13;
clause was signed, and each&#13;
knew the part which his country&#13;
must play. Again they were all upon&#13;
their feet, looking into one another's&#13;
faces and abruptly conscious of weariness&#13;
and relaxation. Too overcome to&#13;
resume their homeward journey, the&#13;
visitors accepted the hospitality of&#13;
the White House fer a few. hours' rest,&#13;
and staggered to their rooms.&#13;
Once, more than a hundred rears&#13;
before, an unwise king had caused a&#13;
war between brothers which had sent&#13;
them on diverse paths. Each had&#13;
prospered but held aloof. And now&#13;
after all this time a wiser king had&#13;
proffered his hand, and the brothers&#13;
were to be friends again in truth, and&#13;
were to travel side by side unto the&#13;
end.&#13;
i neither dI3 it use shy treat endeavW&#13;
*tcf sYvW* ft,- Thoseaboard na&lt;f only&#13;
one w^ish, jf&amp;ichj ws*£&gt;rsjvold the gaffe*&#13;
•ring 6r a crowd. &lt;Tne machine was&#13;
the Roberts., conveying the king and&#13;
bjs counselors for a short interview&#13;
Wlttt the higher officers of the 'British&#13;
fleet. They had bade good-b? tb the&#13;
man in the White House, who was&#13;
henceforth to hold a place In thoir&#13;
strongest admiration and friendship,&#13;
and were now preparing for their&#13;
homeward journey.&#13;
The park entrances had been closed&#13;
In advance, and the public debarred&#13;
from its paths, hence there was no&#13;
demonstration-when the party stepped&#13;
out of the craft and took stmts in a&#13;
motor car which had been awaiting&#13;
their arrival. Only the secretary of&#13;
state and Hevins accompanied them&#13;
as escorts to the glaring entrance pf&#13;
the hotel, and even the august clerks&#13;
were unaware of the Identity of their&#13;
visiters. With polite insolence the&#13;
party was directed to a parlor until&#13;
the manager could be summoned, and&#13;
he on being informed that the king&#13;
wished to meet his officers at once,&#13;
conducted them to the elevator which&#13;
carried them upward.&#13;
By requisition of the .government,&#13;
the entire top floor bad been given&#13;
up to the accommodation of the British&#13;
guests, and with them on this&#13;
night as entertainers were many of&#13;
the higher officers of the American&#13;
navy who throughout the war had&#13;
been forced to rest in idleness. The&#13;
realization that their days of seafaring&#13;
were nearly at an end had not&#13;
come to them with full force, and all&#13;
within the extemporized naval club&#13;
were simply awaiting and hoping for&#13;
orders which would put an end to inactivity.&#13;
Beneath the shaded lights of the&#13;
celling were many tables, at some of&#13;
which men in fatigue uniforms were&#13;
being initiated into an American&#13;
game which seemed to find favor,&#13;
while at others spirited discussions&#13;
were being held. Wreaths of smoke&#13;
curling up to meet the lights added&#13;
to the air of informality, and a burst&#13;
of laughter in one corner of the room&#13;
indicated the success of some raconteur.&#13;
The door Bwung open noiselessly,&#13;
and on its threshold stood one who&#13;
looked smilingly at the idle veterans&#13;
of two nations. He stood thus for an&#13;
Instant before the crusty old Scotch&#13;
admiral known to his fellows as "Jimmy"&#13;
Barr lifted his eyes in the direction&#13;
of the door. His mouth opened&#13;
in astonishment beneath its bearding&#13;
of red, and his sharp eyes frowned as&#13;
he peered across the shoulder of the&#13;
man opposite, and then, with one hurried&#13;
leap he gained his feet, upsetting&#13;
his chair in his haste. His heels&#13;
came together, and his arm was raised&#13;
in salute as he exclaimed loudly:&#13;
"Gentlemen, the king!"&#13;
Instantly those in the room looked&#13;
at the admiral and then at the entrance.&#13;
There was the muffled sound&#13;
of chairs hastily shoved across the&#13;
carpeted floor, startled exclamations,&#13;
and &amp; hurried rising. Two score of&#13;
hands came to the salute, and a dramatic&#13;
moment followed in which their&#13;
owners strove to gather their wits,&#13;
It was almost unbelievable that their&#13;
sovereign was before them.&#13;
The king looked at them gravely,&#13;
and then took a few steps forward,&#13;
and his companions followed. He&#13;
stopped almost in front of Barr, and&#13;
slowly raised hls,^hand. with open&#13;
fingers In a gesture which combined&#13;
greeting and a demand for attention.&#13;
He wasted neither time nor words.&#13;
"My men," he said, "I have come&#13;
from a conference with his excellency,&#13;
the president of the United States.&#13;
Its results will be made known to&#13;
you within the course of a few days&#13;
at the most, or hours at the least. I&#13;
have come to say to you that in submitting&#13;
yourselves to an invincible&#13;
power for reasons which you could&#13;
not fathom you acted wisely and now&#13;
have our full approval."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
CHAPTER XX11.&#13;
Lights In the Night.&#13;
That night for the first time a radioplane&#13;
flew through the air from Washington&#13;
to New York, where it came&#13;
to earth in a portion of Central Park&#13;
adjacent to one of the moat exclusive&#13;
hotels. It was not late In the evening;&#13;
bos' while it "did not o w i discovery&#13;
AILJJgG WOMB**&#13;
Keep the Kidneys Weil and the KJeV&#13;
ncys Will Keep You Well.&#13;
Sick, suffering, languid women are&#13;
learning- {fee true pause of- bad backs&#13;
an4 After 40 -cage&#13;
them. Mrs. W. G.&#13;
Davis, of Groesbeck,&#13;
Texas, says: "Backaches&#13;
hurt me so I&#13;
could hardly stand.&#13;
Spells of dlisineas&#13;
and sick headaches/&#13;
were frequent and&#13;
the action of the kidr&#13;
» neys was irregular.&#13;
Soon after I began taking Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills I passed several gravel&#13;
stones. I got well and the trouble has&#13;
not returned. My back is good and&#13;
strong, and my general health is bet*&#13;
ter."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cenfts a boa;&#13;
Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
HI8 L U C K .&#13;
"Why didn't you come around earlier?&#13;
The snow Is all melted away."&#13;
"Dat's just my luck, lady. Every&#13;
time I feels like workin' de sun comes&#13;
out and does me out of a job!"&#13;
InrVud-r Among the W a r Dogs.&#13;
Prof. William Lyon Phelps of Yale&#13;
went to West Point last fall to lecture.&#13;
He was lecturing in the chapel,&#13;
the cadets were rigidly paying attention,&#13;
erect, eyes front, each man&#13;
a ramrod of military etiquette. An&#13;
Irish setter entered the chapel door&#13;
and ambled snifflngly down the aisle&#13;
and up on to the platform. The cadets&#13;
squirmed under the eagle eyes of&#13;
their officers but not a man smiled.&#13;
"Billy" noticed the strain. He looked&#13;
down at the dog wagging its tail benevolentlv&#13;
on the rostrum. "What!&#13;
How's this?" said Prof. Phelps. "A&#13;
setter? Why, I expected to see nothing&#13;
but West Pointers up here."—&gt;&#13;
Yale Alumni Weekly.&#13;
Question of the Hour.&#13;
"We are really at a loss to know&#13;
how to punish Eaiie," she said. "We&#13;
have tried all the punishment in our&#13;
kindergarten list without effect. We&#13;
have reasoned with him and told him&#13;
that he will cease to be our pretty pet&#13;
and will grow up to be a bad, bad&#13;
man, and—"&#13;
"Madam," interrupted the gentleman&#13;
of the old school, who was visiting&#13;
thexa, "you will find on the trunk in&#13;
my room a very excellent strap that&#13;
I shall not need temporarily."&#13;
But, of course, he didn't know anything&#13;
about modern methods.&#13;
Jess Said Her Prayers.&#13;
One day three-year-old Baby Jess&#13;
was visiting her grandmother, who&#13;
was very devout. She asked Baby&#13;
Jess if her mother had taught her&#13;
to say her prayers.&#13;
Jes3 answered; "Yes, ma'am."&#13;
"Whom do you pray to, dear, and&#13;
ask to forgive your naughty ways?"&#13;
"Sometimes I pray to mother's&#13;
knees and sometimes to the bed."—&#13;
Delineator.&#13;
"COFFEE DOESN'T H U R T ME"&#13;
Tales That Are Told.&#13;
A N C I E N T PARIS M I L L AT WORK.&#13;
Longchatnp Landmark Again Useful&#13;
After a Rett of Two Centuries.&#13;
Few of the throngs of Americans&#13;
who go to Paris fall to visit the Bolt&#13;
de Boulogne; so thousands of Americans&#13;
know the Longchamp windmill&#13;
especially those who go to the Grand&#13;
Prix or auy of the other races at&#13;
Longchamp.&#13;
A few days ago Parisians walking&#13;
or driving in the Bois were surprised&#13;
to see the wings of this old thirteenth&#13;
century mill turning in the breeas&#13;
that swept the Longchamp sward. It&#13;
is two centuries since the mill ceased&#13;
to grind grain, and while it has been&#13;
continued as one or the picturesque&#13;
and admired objects of this beautiful&#13;
landscape It has not been regarded as&#13;
a machine of utility.&#13;
The mill, however, has beer&#13;
equipped with four pumps, and now&#13;
when the wind serves these pumps&#13;
increase the water supply which furnishes&#13;
the great cascade of the Bois&#13;
de Boulogne. So this interesting&#13;
monument in a beautiful stretch of&#13;
parkland not only adds to the pVc&lt;&#13;
turesqueneas of the Longchamp end&#13;
of the Bois, but serves a practical use&#13;
in enhancing the charm of a neighboring&#13;
spot in taw great park.&#13;
"I was one of the kind who wouldn't&#13;
believe that coffee was hurting me,"&#13;
says a X. Y. woman. "You just couldn't&#13;
convince me its use was connected&#13;
with the heart and stomach trouble I&#13;
suffered from most of the time.&#13;
"My trouble finally got so bad I&#13;
had to live on milk and toast almost&#13;
entirely for three or four years. Still&#13;
I loved the coffee and wouldn't believe&#13;
It could do such damage.&#13;
"What I needed was to quit coffee&#13;
and take nourishment in such form as&#13;
my stomach could digest.&#13;
MI had read much about Postnm,&#13;
but never thought it would fit my case&#13;
until one day I decided to quit coffee&#13;
and give it a trial and make sure about&#13;
it. So I got a package and carefully&#13;
followed the directions.&#13;
"Soon I began to get better and was&#13;
able to eat carefully selected foods&#13;
without the aid of pepsin or other digestants&#13;
and it was not long before I&#13;
was really a new woman physically.&#13;
"Now I am healthy and sound, can&#13;
eat. anything and everything that,&#13;
comes along and I know this wonderful&#13;
change is all due to my having&#13;
quit coffee and got the nourishment I&#13;
needed through this delicious Postum.&#13;
"My wonder is why everyone don't&#13;
give up the old coffee and the troubles&#13;
that go with it and build themselves up&#13;
as I have done, with Postum."&#13;
Easy to prove by 10 days* trial of&#13;
Postum in place of coffee. The reward&#13;
is big.&#13;
"There's a Reason."&#13;
g v t f read the • • * • • totterf A * * w&#13;
rlsae te&gt; tlast, Ta#y&#13;
t**«&#13;
N ':&#13;
t ^&#13;
Bar ptukaeg fispaUb.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS A CO. PNO^HHTOKS.&#13;
THUBSDAY, A P i t 22, 1909.&#13;
I n deciding to adjourn early t h e&#13;
legislature is probably t r y i n g to&#13;
Bquare itwelf.&#13;
This ib just th« tiniM of yeAf when&#13;
you are most likeW tu have kidney or&#13;
bladder trouble, with ruHtim&lt;ttiaru atd&#13;
rheumatic pains caused by weak kidneys.&#13;
Delays are dftn^roua. Get De&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder Pills, and&#13;
be sure you get what you ask lor.&#13;
They are the best pills ruade for back&#13;
ache, weak back, primary disorders,&#13;
inflauiatioa of the M t'Mer, etc. They&#13;
are antiseptic and act promptly. Sold&#13;
and recommended t y nil dealers.&#13;
Pay* Well On The Farm.&#13;
A few years ago the raibiutr of&#13;
wheat and other crop* wit* one of the&#13;
main things that the farmer bad for&#13;
raising money, and thousands ot buebela&#13;
of wheal were raised where hardly&#13;
any is put in today. The reasons for&#13;
this are many. One of them was that&#13;
the price ot wheat went so low that it&#13;
did not pay to raise and then the land&#13;
bad been eruned so much that it was&#13;
poverisned.&#13;
Fatten, ot the Chicago "pit", has&#13;
tried to raise the price and has succeeded&#13;
to a certain extent but will it&#13;
last loug if all tanners go back to the&#13;
raising of the crop?&#13;
One of the beat things that has been&#13;
handled the past tew years in this&#13;
country, not onlv tor the raising of&#13;
money, but for the betterment of the&#13;
land, has been the raising of cows for&#13;
the condensed factory and other tact&#13;
ories that use milk and cream.&#13;
These factories h*vtj come to stay&#13;
and while giving the farmer a good&#13;
income each mouth, his farm i» grad&#13;
t h i r d s goes for salaries.&#13;
There is not a better Salve than l&gt;e&#13;
Witts Carbolized Witch Haael salve.&#13;
We hereby warn to* public that we&#13;
are not responsible lor any injurious&#13;
eflects caused from worthless or poisonous&#13;
imitations of our DeWitts Carbolized&#13;
Witch H&amp;ZFI SaWe, the original.&#13;
It is good for anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially&#13;
good for piles. He sure you get De&#13;
Witts. Sold bv all dealers.&#13;
Chicago ia taking notice of t h e&#13;
fact t h a t of the «21,000,000 fu HUually&#13;
costs to run Hie city, two- jually growing better and better evi-.ry&#13;
year and the income is sute.&#13;
Another of the"crops that has been&#13;
neglected on the farm is the orchard.&#13;
Many a good orchard has Deeu left to&#13;
itself or cut down, when it might have&#13;
been paying good dividends if rightly&#13;
bandied at spraying time. If the&#13;
farmer who had paid the money tor&#13;
harvesting machinery, etc., bad invested&#13;
part of the money in a spraying&#13;
outfit and taken care of his orchard as&#13;
as of his summer-fallow, he would&#13;
have been dollars ahead and saved the&#13;
hard toil of raising so much grain at&#13;
such a small price.&#13;
In this section we are soon to have&#13;
an outlet for all the milk that can be&#13;
raised within the radius of 7 or 8&#13;
B u t the penalty for stealing a&#13;
loaf of bread will not be reduced.&#13;
If no bigger than a regulation biscuit,&#13;
it is still a loaf in t h e eyes of ] m i ) e s a n d we venture the ascartion&#13;
the law.&#13;
Swept Off r Niagara&#13;
This terrible calamity often happens j crops&#13;
because a careless boatman ignores&#13;
the rivers warnings—growing ripnles &lt;&#13;
and faster current—Natures warnings !&#13;
are kind. That dull pain or ache in i&#13;
i&#13;
the back warn* you ih.it the kidneys ,&#13;
need attention if you would escape ;&#13;
fatal maladies—Dropsy, diabetes or!&#13;
Brights disease. Take Electric Bitters )&#13;
at once and see backache fly and all&#13;
vour best feelings return. "After&#13;
i&#13;
long suffering from weak kidneys and !&#13;
lame back, one $1 bottle wholly cured J&#13;
me," writes J. H, Blanken^bip, of Helk |&#13;
Tenn. Only 50c at F A. Sillers. j&#13;
that if taken hold by the farmers of&#13;
of this section they will soon find that&#13;
it is easier and better than raising&#13;
"I'd Rather Die, Doctor,&#13;
than have my feet cut off,' said M. L.&#13;
Bingham of Princeville, III. But you'll&#13;
die from gangrene (whice bad eaten&#13;
away eight toes) if you don't" said all&#13;
doctors. Instead be used Buck lens&#13;
Arnica Salve till wholly cured. Its&#13;
cures of Etzema, Fever sores, boils,&#13;
burns and Piles astound the world&#13;
25c at F. A. Sixers.&#13;
'Nough Said.&#13;
I One man in Couoctah stopped the&#13;
j Republican last week. Said be would&#13;
Savings deposits in Canada have not take a local option paper. Won&#13;
reached the magnificent sum, for | der if he will live in a local option&#13;
that country, of $700,000,000 b u t | county,—Republican. If the friends&#13;
over there they have government o f l o c a l ° P t f o n v e r e a s *aHhful to&#13;
postal savings banks. \tbeir c a U H B a s t b , s raan' W6&#13;
L&#13;
k n o w o [&#13;
&lt;^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm. several papers that would have to PUS&#13;
Word7fo FrcVzeThTsonl. | t i e n d pubhcation.-Dispatch.&#13;
"Your son has consumption. His I Thomas, W . Brewer informs us that&#13;
case i* hopeless.'' These appalling ' »« has sold bis interest in the Herald&#13;
words were spoken to Geo. E. Blevens | to his creditors and that this week&#13;
a leading merchant of Springfield, N : will be the last time that he will issue&#13;
C. by two expert doctors—one a lung | the Herald. Mr. Brewer has run the&#13;
specialist. Then was shown the won- ! Herald for sixteen years or more. Be&#13;
derful power of Dr. Kings New Dia- j fore that he ran a paper at Vernon.—&#13;
covery. "After three weeks use" | Republican,&#13;
writes Mr. Blevens, "he was as well as I Fr 0 m the Herald:&#13;
ever. I would not tal.e all the money j Having sold the plant, subscription&#13;
in the world for what, it, did to my • | i s t a n d ^ o o d w i l l o f t h e Livingston&#13;
boy." Infailablp for Coughs and j Herald to McPberson Bros., this week&#13;
colds, its the safest surest, cure of das- L 6 n d s t o r t h o u r l a s t i s 8 a e 0 , t h i 9 p a p e r&#13;
perate Lung diseases on earth. 50c ! a n ( j a s , b e p a p e r s g 0 i n t o t h e postoffice&#13;
and I I at F. A. Siglers. Guarantee j Wrt h a n d n v f t r i n f t k e y s a n d h a v e c l o 9 e d&#13;
satisfaction. Trial bottle free. | o u r c a r e e r a s a publisher.&#13;
^^m^^^'^^^mm'^ Now that, we have determined to&#13;
L. W. P a g e , director of t h e close our work a a publisher, we bid&#13;
U n i t e d States office of public oar readers one and all a friendly&#13;
roads, demonstrates t h a t t h e lack j *o o a &gt;va.&#13;
of good roads costs t h e Minnesota I&#13;
farmer $7,150,000 a year. \&#13;
Thos W. Brewer.&#13;
T h e special c o m m i t t e e of the&#13;
house to investigate t h e water&#13;
powers of the state l e p o r t e d Tuesday,&#13;
in a voluminous d o c u m e n t&#13;
T h e l e p o r t says t h a t 221,000 horse&#13;
power has been developed in Michigan,&#13;
and there r e m a i n s 300,000&#13;
more to be developed and the total&#13;
is equivalent to a saving of $40-&#13;
000,000 a year on coal. Supervisors&#13;
being given t h e r i g h t to g r a n t&#13;
franchises by t h e constitution, m a d e a desperate effort t o save&#13;
the legislature can do very l i t t l e t Be S t a n d a r d Oil C o m p a n y from&#13;
except to regulate taxation on i o a g t h r o u g h a reduction of t h e&#13;
water privileges. d u t y on petroleum.&#13;
I t may be very t r u e t h a t one&#13;
robin doesn't mean t h a t t h e w a r m&#13;
seflson has arrived. B u t neither&#13;
need a little flurry of snow drive&#13;
one back to his m i d w i n t e r fireside.&#13;
If you ne*»d a pill take De W ltts Little&#13;
Early Risers. Insist, on them,&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little liver pills,&#13;
Sold hv all dealers.&#13;
T r u e to his i n s t i n c t s "Uncle&#13;
J o e " Cannon took t h e floor and&#13;
THE KINDi&#13;
Make the&#13;
Home Bright&#13;
Worn, shabby floors, marred, scratched&#13;
woodwork, dingy, scuffed furniture can all&#13;
be refinished and made to look like new. You can do it&#13;
yourself at a trifling cost.&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
VARNO-LAC&#13;
stains and varnishes at one operation, imparting&#13;
to all kinds of surfaces the elegant&#13;
effect and durable, lustrous surface of&#13;
beautifully finished oak, mahogany,&#13;
walnut, or other expensive woods. .&#13;
If it's a surface t o be painted,&#13;
enameled, stained, varnished, or&#13;
finished in any way there's&#13;
an Acme Quality Kind to&#13;
fit t h e p u r p o s e .&#13;
tw*&#13;
FvtvcVowa, "WLvcVv.&#13;
LMRClAX.&#13;
• • ' • ^ :&#13;
First Mortgage Timber Bonds&#13;
•/ Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company &lt;tf Ground R&amp;pids Mich.&#13;
Beating Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable semi-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st.&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n s » $1,000. $ 5 0 0 e&gt;nd $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
ThtM bonds art dated March 4 th, 1909, and nature at the rate of $50,000 tach year, commencing&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any interest period and carry the privilege&#13;
of regiitration at to principle.&#13;
Truotow T H E MICHIGAN T R U S T C O M P A N Y . Grs»r\d Rtxplda. Michigan. Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co.&#13;
of Gra.nd Ra.pids Michigan.&#13;
Capitalisation. $ 1 , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . P a r V a l u * $ 1 0 . 0 0 . B o n d s . $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property securing this issue consists of 31,63a acres of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located on&#13;
the southwest shore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoria aod&#13;
within MO miles of all important port* on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Van*&#13;
couvtr. Mr. J. P. Brayton of Grand Rapid*, Mich., and Chicago, oat of the foremost timber&#13;
experts of the country has examined this tract of timber for ui and report! a stand of more thai&#13;
•,300,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than 20c per M ft. etumpage.&#13;
•J The present equipment comprises a complete lagging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam Tag,&#13;
Rolling Stock, etc., capablt of logging at the rate of $0,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S t&#13;
CBaft. W. LIKEN SKBKWAIWO, MiCR.&#13;
Fres., Huron Bay Lumber Co.&#13;
J. H. MOORS, SKATTT.R, WASH.&#13;
K*. Supt. Motive W. T. COLEMAN, Power, Chi•.K, ABTaTrX. H&amp;, QW.A RSH. IRM. TOBT&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska Investment Co.&#13;
S, M. COCHRANE, Capitalist, SBATTLR, W A S H .&#13;
WM. X,. CARPENTER, - . DKTaorr, MICH.&#13;
Of the firm of Stevenson, Carpenter &amp; Butxel.&#13;
CHAS. A. PtfBLpa., . Oaajrn Aartoa, Mrcm&#13;
Timber Operator. Treaa., Hackley-Fhelpa-Bonnen&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
W. P. MCKNIGHT, . . . G»ANt&gt; RAFTD*, Uxtm.&#13;
Prea . White River Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B. B. CADWRLL, N e w VOStX&#13;
Vice-Preaident, Standard icrrw Co., Detroit.&#13;
C T. MOORE, •aam.st, Wasja.&#13;
Timber Expert aod Mill Operator.&#13;
W» • « • * thoao bonala at par and aooruod tntoraal to ytold 6%.&#13;
&lt;H Privilege will be granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount of Hock of&#13;
the company. *J Further information and prospectus showing photographs of the property furnished on rtquott. L B. Cadwell &amp; Co., 7 7 0 MxoiscoT mum&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKER! MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
Sec Our Pine bine of Post Cards&#13;
/bt&#13;
^•jj^y^fete.&#13;
&lt;w .'«?• tii-i&#13;
mm&#13;
&gt;&#13;
A Phonetic PtJfchaM.&#13;
l a t e , iicnry Miller, who w a t&#13;
guide, phileit&lt;H lui am] frlcnd^tu Jfiuny&#13;
aaJcurnun. &lt;hu- day lie culled OQ Cullis&#13;
P. ilni," ii-jL'.'hjii ;iud showed Lini a ru.iv&#13;
copy el' a b'&gt;ok.&#13;
' T i i m&#13;
said M&#13;
to in i i rU'tr yv.iur, . u s J&lt;JU see l^ils,&#13;
uii" ); . "i (,&gt;u c;nuul possibly let tbeni&#13;
rseuj.e yi.u, j'ur you l;ny&gt;v \yuu hnvi1&#13;
iN..|ii:i^ ii'.'e i hi i in yi.ur library."&#13;
" "\ 'ua is i u ' price?" asked'the. rail&#13;
ro.tiJ king.-&#13;
' Si'ven :^uudi-eil. dollars," said the&#13;
b o i ' U u m j i ! &gt;&amp;\.&#13;
•'Those qgektouo vulaubie volumes fur&#13;
uiy library,-" ''Mr. Hmnin^lon ex&#13;
L'laiuiiHl.&#13;
Mr. Miller went b:n-k to his jihiee&#13;
and sent the books to Mr. lluiilinjj&#13;
ton's house with u bill for ^7&lt;»o. Next&#13;
day the railroad king sent for him.&#13;
"Why did you send me those books V"&#13;
ae demanded sharply.&#13;
"Because you bought them," was&#13;
the bookman's ealm reply.&#13;
MI certtdflly did not!" eiied the millionaire.&#13;
MOh, yes, you did!" answered Mr.&#13;
Miller. "You'll remember perfectly&#13;
well when 1 tell you what you said.&#13;
You told me dislinetly, 'Those arc&#13;
t w o valuable volumes for my library.'&#13;
" - Hampers Weekly:&#13;
All Object I*«ft»on.&#13;
A poor faiaiitfwM reported to t b t&#13;
book lover, w b l l n u thou*«Hi w J J e » [ o t t e d m a f . D t t l f J | Ust week a n d upon,&#13;
of .New Utrk, was a moBt aUci-esufu!ff B " i 4 f" * J&#13;
investigation t t a family was round p&#13;
coubiut of father, mother and oix em|U&#13;
children, the eldest being only six.&#13;
v are two volumesr of t u i s , ' | T b B o h i ; d r e n were nearly hbtrved and&#13;
' M i l k T ' ^ u t U e r v u l , u m ? } had been fed on tbeAe*h of a diseased&#13;
oow arid; a b r s e . ' One of the witnesses&#13;
at the io ventilation was a sa'.oon&#13;
keeper and he Unified that the couple&#13;
spent e n o u g h money for l i q u o r to&#13;
have kept tbe family in q u i t e pood&#13;
eircomittimws. He m nut have been&#13;
proud to have admitted that he had&#13;
received the money these a t a r v i n g&#13;
children needed lor food. Howevdr,&#13;
that goes with tha business a n d the&#13;
man who voted for the saloon April&#13;
5, be s a p a r t in the business.&#13;
Up Before The B a r .&#13;
N . H. Brown, an attarna&gt;, ot fcitts&#13;
field, Vt., writes. " W e have used Dr.&#13;
Kings New Life pills tor years and&#13;
find them such a good family medie&#13;
n e we wouldn't be without t h e m . "&#13;
For Chills, Constipation, Biliousness&#13;
or Siok headache they work wonders.&#13;
25c at F, A. Sigters.&#13;
tar ta» PtaHoMy Dlepeteh.&#13;
6 0 YEAR8*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADC MARKS&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S A C&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly jiacortuln our opinion free whether an&#13;
Invention la probably paten]table. Comninnies*&#13;
tlons strictly conndentlal. HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
tent free. Oldeat agency for aecuringpatenta.&#13;
Patents taken tfironnh Slunn 4. Co. receive&#13;
tptcial notice, without charge, iu t h e Scfeifflfie American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest ch&gt;&#13;
oulatton of iiny scientific Journal. Terms, | 3 a&#13;
year; four month*, | L Bold by all newsdealers.&#13;
N e w s p a p e r s of T o d a y .&#13;
A good many years ago the columns&#13;
of the newspapers were as correctly&#13;
w r i t t e n in tbe m a t t e r of style&#13;
and g r a m m a r as the best magazines&#13;
are today. T i m e however has changed&#13;
t b b a o d today the newspaper is after&#13;
t h a n e w s , put in as few words as&#13;
possible to convey the m e a n i n g .&#13;
' E l e g a n t ' writing iu o u t of date,&#13;
much to the dissatisfaction of grammarians,&#13;
b u t greatly to t h e benefit of&#13;
the public. No matter if the subject&#13;
does not. occasionally agree with the&#13;
yerb—though this may be a lapse&#13;
coming from writing u n d e r the pressure&#13;
of a time limit—if the idea&#13;
sought to be conveyed is clearly stated,&#13;
and is understandable by t h e ayerage&#13;
newspaper reader it is much&#13;
more effective than columns ot* commonplaces&#13;
propounded by some dull&#13;
witted g r a m m a r i a n .&#13;
Anthem Titles.&#13;
A certain Kdinburjrli organist, who&#13;
'posts up" his Sunday service lists at&#13;
the church door, had recently a very&#13;
practical Illustration of the risks tha;&#13;
tnav attend tae shortening of a n t h e n&#13;
M i l e s . T h e , a t - Dr. K. .1. H o p k i n s at&#13;
the ( i;y temple wrote an anthem, "';&#13;
Will Wash My i land's In Innocency "&#13;
The o:"!'ii!&gt;'t in his haste no doubt&#13;
&gt;et this down as "I Will Wash--Hop-'&#13;
!::!!&lt;," :IM1 was surprised when next&#13;
V'.\ so:;:e WMV; -•-':: him a cake of snap&#13;
"lo help '.v;i:'h Hopkins!" •- Glasgow&#13;
News.&#13;
Getting at tbe Heart of Tilings.&#13;
W h e n y o u b u y a n y t h i n g for u s e in- t h e&#13;
h o m e or t h e s h o p , y o u g o t o t h e m a n w h o&#13;
h a s the. t e s t e d a n d p r o v e n article. T h i * a p -&#13;
plies to p a i n t as well a s to f u r n i t u r e , m a -&#13;
c h i n e r y , a n d o t h e r a r t i c l e s of c o m m o n use.&#13;
B . P . S . P a i n t i s y e a r s p a s t t h e e x -&#13;
p e r i m e n t a l S t a g e , a n d is m a d e f r o m a&#13;
f o r m u l a t h a t h a s been c a r e f u l ly w o r k e d out&#13;
a n d proven to be e x a c t l y r i g h t t o g i v e t h e&#13;
p r o p e r s h a d e , c o n s i s t e n c y and w e a r i n g r e s u l t s .&#13;
B P . S. P a i n t s are all t e s t e d for c o v e r i n g c a p a c i t y a n d d u r a b i l i t y .&#13;
W e h a v e a few c o p i e s of t h e B. P . S . P a i n t B u d g e t , a n a s s o r t m e n t&#13;
of l i t e r a t u r e on p a i n t s a n d p a i n t i n g t h a t c a n n o t fail to s a v e y o u m o n e y&#13;
on v o u r p a i n t i n g bills. C o m e in a n d call for o n e t o d a y .&#13;
FOR SALE ST GEO. W. REASON&#13;
Eat What&#13;
You want of the food you need&#13;
Kodol will digest it.&#13;
* You need a sufficient a m o u n t of&#13;
fOod wholesome food a n d more t h a n&#13;
t h i s you need t o fully digest it.&#13;
Else you c a n ' t gain s t r e n g t h , nor&#13;
can you s t r e n g t h e n your s t o m a c h if&#13;
; ^ l H Is weak.&#13;
Y o u must* e a t in order to live and&#13;
m a i n t a i n s t r e n g t h .&#13;
Y o u m u s t n o t diet, because, the.&#13;
body requires t h a t you e a t a sufficient&#13;
a m o u n t of food regularly.&#13;
B u t t h i s food m u s t be digested,&#13;
ihrl it must lie digested thoroughly.&#13;
"When t h e -stomach c a n ' t do it,&#13;
yon m u s t take, s o m e t h i n g t h a t will&#13;
help t h e stomach.&#13;
T h e proper w a y t o do is t o e a t&#13;
w h a t you want, a n d let Kodol dii&#13;
e * t t h e food.&#13;
N o t h i n g else c a n do t h i s . W h e n&#13;
t l i f t r t o ^ l ^ M t t t t W * * W&#13;
it you. m u s t hel&amp; i t J)y, giving I t jQ-t,.&#13;
.Kodol will d o t h a t .&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Go t o y o u r d r u g g i s t today, a n d&#13;
purchase a dollar bottle, and if you&#13;
can honestly say, t h a t you did n o t&#13;
receive a n y Ixmeflts from It, a f t e r&#13;
u s i n g t h e e n t i r e b o t t l e , t h e d r u g -&#13;
gist will refund your monej7 t o you&#13;
w i t h o u t question or delay.&#13;
We will pay t h e d r u g g i s t t h e p r i c e&#13;
of t h e b o t t l e purchased by you.&#13;
T h i s offer applies t o t h e l a r g e&#13;
b o t t l e only a n d t o b u t one I n a&#13;
family.&#13;
We could n o t afford t o m a k e s u c h&#13;
an offer, unless wc positively k n e w&#13;
w h a t Kodol will do for you.&#13;
I t would b a n k r u p t us.&#13;
T h e dollar b o t t l e c o n t a i n s 2¾ t i m e t&#13;
as much as the fifty cent bottle.&#13;
TCodoi 1A tn&amp;d« at, tJielabor&amp;torieBV*&#13;
of E . C. Do W i t t &amp; Co., Chicago,&#13;
AmommtliMXL&#13;
It'i a vrjigo h a t b a n d w h o van tell it&#13;
is his wtf» a q m i a ^ i i u d t f r one of those&#13;
h a t s . / ; rM-.&gt;.- % _ .^&#13;
T h e y M Y © gooe. aboirkm *»r ** t h « y&#13;
can with wotnans headgear without&#13;
p u t t i n g on eavetroQgbB.&#13;
It is interesting to s n o w that the&#13;
price art ''the poor loans beer ; is not&#13;
t_ bt» affected -by tn« uow. tariff&#13;
T h e yar4s uf tbe village have commenced/&#13;
to baye their a n n u a l cleaning&#13;
and things begin to look quite spring&#13;
like.&#13;
P l e n t y of rain the past week . Sunday&#13;
a very heavy i h n n d e r shower.&#13;
Grass begins to look green and buds&#13;
are already to burst.&#13;
Potatoes have taken tbe raise as&#13;
well a$ wheat. They are now quoted&#13;
at 90 cents and fl.OO and 8000 bushels&#13;
were sold at one place in the state, last&#13;
week to go into Ohio, foi l|8000. There&#13;
will be a large acreage planted this&#13;
season as a result.&#13;
A man in the couoty j a i l serving a&#13;
a six months sentence is an object lesson&#13;
to those who would like to r a n a&#13;
" b l i n d p i g " d u r i n g the coming year&#13;
J u s t make the complaint and the&#13;
officers will do the rest—all seem bent&#13;
Sbr £toefcwjj $i»patch&#13;
a s c r i p t i o n Prloi $11» Advance&#13;
VnUifQ »1 t&amp;c Po*total&lt;» »t Plnckaey, Jftlcfclgeu.&#13;
M Mcoad-daM mittir&#13;
Adv«rtii&gt;lax rtXmm mad* known on apptl—tlop •&#13;
F I ^ A T ^ K . l_. ArsiO R E W 8 &amp; CO&#13;
tMT1«S »•» nWMMtYOM.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
M' nVTHUiUST JSr'lttOOi'Al. C i l U K C M .&#13;
# e v . U . U JLUUujeUa yuMUii. o*i\U.9» » v « j&#13;
Suud»y m o r u i n x »1 * 0 : « J , AUU t»very o u n u » y&#13;
vvaiung ivt 7 :ut» o'clock, fnkyux uiiNJtlng'A'kuit*&#13;
d»y eveuiriK6- ^'iflti»&gt; *cUooi » i eiuHtj o f t u u i u&#13;
»ii«bervac«. MJto MAKY VASi'LKJti, suyi.&#13;
C^O.NUtUiOAriU^AL, c u u u c u .&#13;
.' K e v . A. ( i . Uitbm yaakur. 6«rvit« e v e i j&#13;
Buaaay m o r u l a g M W.iO «nu every buuuuj&#13;
vveuiOK »t V:UC U'CVJCJL. l*r»&gt;ei- mnvuiiy, '1'buit&#13;
day «veiling-, ouudjt/ » c u o a l nl c l w i « u ] Lu&lt;jrii&#13;
iiK eurvii^e. Mitt, iuiimx Crutuul, aupt,, J. A.&#13;
Cadwtill atsc.&#13;
K I L L T H i c b u ^ l f&#13;
MP CURB TNB LUNC8&#13;
W I T H Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
wCWP-dSfc.&#13;
AHD ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLE*&#13;
G U A B A N T S S D &amp;AI1BXA0IQB.Y\&#13;
QB. MOATEY JtJEPTJNDED.&#13;
^ 1 V i l A t t i ' S 'jAl'tiKtUlSJ CutiJttCU.&#13;
O h e v . M. J. CuuuuerloiU, 1 » » i o r . 'lorvi'.OL&#13;
every » u a d * y . L o w xniu»i&gt; n i . i t u a m i&#13;
liigli luiutM wiiu»arinuu a t l O . i O * . m. ijaicctiibu.&#13;
i d : 0 o p. iu., ve«LM»rB«u^ be . JUACUOU BI'I :OU p . . .&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
rilhe A. O. H. Society o t Cine pities, u w u evet&#13;
± third buurt»y i u t a e *'r. Mjittaew l i n i l .&#13;
JOJJU Tuouiey ami M. i \ K « l i y , Couuljr Dbieuaii?&#13;
(t lU Ji «V. C 1. (J. intteta i h e second Saturday oi&#13;
X e a c n xuouth a t ^ : d c p . tu. tti m e Uuuittd ui tUc&#13;
HMuubertt livoryony uibereated i u leuiueruuu* ia&#13;
Loauiaily luviUKi. J&amp;ra; UeaL .^l^ler, r i e c . Mia&#13;
Jttiiide barton, siecretary.&#13;
'V'Ua C. T. A - a n U U . aociek/ a i i a l a p l a c e , wo&#13;
A. every t h i r d o a t a r o a y a v o a l u g i n m e t i . Jaa&#13;
hew Jdail. J o h u Donohuo, 1-rerfiaeui.&#13;
| / NlGMTbOlT MAVL'AUKKb.&#13;
XkJieeteverv Friday ttvanlng uu or uoioieiun&#13;
on seeing law breakers get their j u s t i °* tae moon at their a t u u i u a s w u i a u u i uu&#13;
B ° J V i s i u n g brothers a r e c o r d i a l i y i a v i t e u .&#13;
d e s e i t s . I C, V. VanWinkle, air SLui^ui c o m n an it,&#13;
\ A . P . Mortauiton, - Itecord Keeper&#13;
T h e high winds of last week t\ l i . Jackaon, Finance K.coper&#13;
LivingfltonLodjje.No.Te, F 4 . A . M. K*guJ»i&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or beioi i&#13;
the lull uf the uioon. b\ (Jt, Jackaon. H . -V&#13;
0' ^DJSH OB" EAbTEKN STAK me^teeach i n o u u&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular i&#13;
&amp; A . M . meeting, MKd.NKTTK V A U U H N , W. Al.&#13;
0 ULER OF MODISH** WOODMEN&#13;
hrBt Thursday eveninw oi each MoDth&#13;
Maccabet) hall. C. L. Grimeb V. C&#13;
Meet tht&#13;
iu ilii&#13;
it. O. T.&#13;
vited.&#13;
M. hall. Visiting sistera c o r d i a l l y in&#13;
L I L A C Q N I W A Y , Lady Com.&#13;
while&#13;
doing injury to some were a means of&#13;
profit to others. Up along iSaginaw&#13;
bay the higb wind blew wagon loads&#13;
of fish of all sizes and kinds u p on&#13;
shore and owing to the ice they were&#13;
unable to get back and were carried&#13;
off by the farmers and others in that&#13;
vicinity by the basket full and in j r A D I K S O F T U E MACCABEES. Meet Uver&gt; u&#13;
,„, , . , . J j a n u 3rd Saturday of each month at ^:ao u u..&#13;
wagons, l h e y salt them down lor "&#13;
the years use.&#13;
T h e piay at the opera house last&#13;
Thursday evening, "My Lady Darrei '&#13;
was well attended and is pronounced&#13;
one of the best that has been given&#13;
here in several years. The cast was&#13;
strong and each part taken in excellent&#13;
manner. Tbe play was put on by&#13;
t b e O . e g o r y KOTMM dramatic club&#13;
under the auspicies of St. Marys society.&#13;
Those interested wish to thank&#13;
the people ct Uregorv for the loan ot&#13;
tbe scenery liora their opera house&#13;
for the Ooera bouse here that evening.&#13;
RM O UTS oy TUK LOYAL GUAKU&#13;
F. L. Andrews 1J. jn. 1&#13;
( Mortgage Sale.&#13;
i&#13;
1 Default having l&gt;een made in tlie cunduiona of&#13;
| two mtirt^airea covrringtbeeameliuid (thereby the&#13;
1 ]xjWL-r ut eule therein contained has become oper-&#13;
I alive) made by Ad*m i'rasela and Anna L. Kranitfs&#13;
1MB wife ofr'utnaui, Livingston county, Mlrhi-&#13;
Bu, to G. W. Teeple of the saire place, ont* of&#13;
aaid mortagee being dated December ?9th, 1B99&#13;
and recorded in the Office of Kegieter of deeds&#13;
lor the County of Livinuitnn, State ot Michigan&#13;
May lo, 1'JOO, iu Liber 7a of mort^a^ts on pa^e&#13;
515 thereof, aud tbe other dalei! June 4tli, 11)08&#13;
und lecurded iu aaid Kegietere office on the loth&#13;
day of ilaicli, 190¾. in Liber 81 uf Muriga^ee uu&#13;
puge 5TV thweof: on which b«dd uiortagt*s tt.tre LB&#13;
now c'tnLued to be due and unpaid at this dale the&#13;
ouin of Two hundred fifty/our dollare and twenty&#13;
five cento ($2fi4.».ri) and attorney fpfs, and no suit&#13;
or proceeding huving ljfen cotonienced iu law or&#13;
equity to recover the debts secured by aaid uioirt&#13;
j{a«ear or ann part thereof.&#13;
Now therefore, under tbe power of hale contain&#13;
ed in said uioitgBgt;*, uotkt1 1» b e n b ) given that&#13;
on Monday, the !4th clay of June, HW, at one&#13;
o'clock in :be afternoon of said day, at tbe westerly&#13;
trout door of the Court h o o t e In the village&#13;
of Hovvell in aaid County (that being the placs of&#13;
holding the circuit court for the County In which&#13;
tbe m o r t g a g e d ptcmlaes to be sold are situated&#13;
and aaid mortgagee will be foieflosed by-Sale at&#13;
public vendue to thehigheat bidder of tbe premisea&#13;
described in said mortgagee, or so much&#13;
thereof as may be niceseary lo satisfy the anronnt&#13;
due on tuid mortgages with interest and legal costs&#13;
that ie to say; all that certain piece or parcel of&#13;
land situate iu the t o ^ n s h ' p of Putnam, County&#13;
of Livinaalon and Mate «&gt;i MicbiKan, viz: Three&#13;
acreB of land iu the northwest corrt»r of that part&#13;
of the went h a l f o f the fcut.tl.weet (juarter of section&#13;
twenty four (•„' 0 1^Int; south of m e highway&#13;
ranoin^ through -itin land and extending from&#13;
the center of said highway south to the center of&#13;
the creek and in witilb. cattt and wet-t, 6utilcient to&#13;
muke tLe thr&lt;e at res of land. All in Town one (1)&#13;
North and Range four (4) east, County &lt;&gt;1 Liviugstou&#13;
and ^tate of Michigan,&#13;
Dated &gt; arch 1Mb. 1901».&#13;
K.&#13;
t y-1&#13;
A. iV 1.. E. SluWK&#13;
Attys. for Mortgagee&#13;
O. W T K E P L E ,&#13;
Mortgagee&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.S.'GLER M, D. C. L. SIQLER M. L&#13;
ph DKS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
r h y e i c i a u b a n u s u r n e o u s - All call* pxoui^i!&gt;&#13;
attended today or night. Othce on Main aiu-ec&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS&#13;
Nervous&#13;
Prostration&#13;
"I ha J a general breakdown. A&#13;
gentleman advised Dr. Miles' Nervine,&#13;
and I noted an improvement j&#13;
after a few doses, and two bottles i&#13;
gave me entire relief." \&#13;
WM. R. B U R K H A R D T , j&#13;
36S&gt; Rawling St., Washington C. H., O.&#13;
W h e n the nervous system is weakened,&#13;
one after another of the organs&#13;
which they control become inactive,&#13;
and a general breakdown eventually&#13;
follows. It may be. either the stomach,&#13;
heart, lungs or kidneys that is&#13;
first affected.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine&#13;
makes weak nerves strong, by its&#13;
soothing and strengthening influence&#13;
upon the nervous system.&#13;
The ffrst bottle will benefit; If net, tfw&#13;
druQalat will return your money.&#13;
St a l e o f M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
the county of Livingston.— At a session of eairi&#13;
Court, held at tho Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell in anid county on the 14th [day of April&#13;
A, ii. 100Q. Prt?etit, Hon. Arthur A. Montague&#13;
Jndgo nf Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
SARAH J. RRtnos, deceased&#13;
A. D. Thompson having filed l a said court,&#13;
his final account RB administrator of said estate&#13;
and his petition praying for the allowance thereof&#13;
It is ordered, that the Seventh day of May&#13;
A. O., 190'», at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
at fiatd probnto office, bo and 1B herehy appointed&#13;
for e x a m i n i n g and allowing said account.&#13;
It is further ordered, that pnblic notice&#13;
hereof ho &lt;jiron by publication nf a copy of&#13;
this order, for tliro&lt;\ Burcesalvo weoks previous t.i&#13;
said day ot hearirn: in the Pinckney r&gt;isrATCtT A&#13;
newspaper printed and oirculat,ed in aaid countv&#13;
ARTH1TH A. MONTAOTJK&#13;
t l 7 Jo£*» of PrrtMte.&#13;
ST A T E Oh' MH'HIciAN*, the prooate conrt f or&#13;
the county of Livingston At a &lt;*ea*tou of&#13;
said court, held at the probate office in the village&#13;
of Howell in (*aid roanty on the 2nd dHy of&#13;
April A. t&gt;. 19&lt;W. Prevent: Hon. Arthur A.&#13;
Montague, juclse of Probate. ftv the matter of&#13;
the estate of&#13;
D A M I I , S. I.ARKIN, deceased.&#13;
Martha Larkin ha\1n? filed in aald court her&#13;
petition prayine that the adminatration of aaid&#13;
eatate, )&gt;e granted to Wm. J Larkin or to some&#13;
other suitable parson.&#13;
It le ordered, that the 80th day of April&#13;
A r&gt; 1909, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probate off ce. be and la herehy appointed&#13;
for bearing said petition.&#13;
It la further ordered that public notloe&#13;
thereof h* j?1ven &gt; r pnWirai«oT» nf a m^y of tola&#13;
uxdet L&gt;r o - u m t ^ . M m-c^B pie\ioU6 iw saiu day&#13;
ot hearing, in the Pinckney D I S P A T C H , a n e w s -&#13;
paper, printed and circulated in aaid county.&#13;
A R T H D * A. MOJOTAODE,&#13;
t | l * J u d g e of Probate&#13;
J. W. B I R D&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, call at uie 1'inekney llis-&#13;
TATCH Dflice. Auction Bills Fret-&#13;
Dexter Independant Phone&#13;
ArrangemeutH made lor *ale by phone »&#13;
my expense. Oct u'.&#13;
Address, D e x t e r , Michigan&#13;
E. VV. DANIELS,&#13;
OKNKRAL A LOTION t t l t .&#13;
Salibttictu u (iuaranteed. For infoimation&#13;
call at Dl srATCH lllfice DP address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. £. d. 2. Lyuilillu phoiuconueciion.&#13;
Auction iiill*- mid uu &lt;ii(.&#13;
rr.ruisiieii free.&#13;
FRA. .NK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
W'TH S?tL ^ ^ T ^ v&#13;
ATP.H OFF CF&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous&#13;
C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for die money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial Retails for&#13;
5. CENTS. ~&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
them tend lo us for a JOX as&#13;
a trial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We can convince you&#13;
that this is Uie cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
* MANUPACTUttD MP&#13;
CHMST1AI BBOt, - Wmtsiorf, h.&#13;
Does your back ache ? Is your akin leathery and yellow"&#13;
Is your urine murky ? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten persons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They don't always have It bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The kidneys have few nerves. They are afltag a long&#13;
time before the terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
well advanced before you feel it.&#13;
That is why it Is so necessary to notice the slightest Irregularity. If&#13;
anything is wrong with yoor kidneys it should be •tt—rkd to at once.&#13;
Bont take strong, drastic droga. They are dangerous.&#13;
Ton will be perfectly safe and anre of a ponnanent enrw by taking&#13;
DR. THACKERS LIVER &amp; BLOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing to* Oaoas and&#13;
| driving tae inflammation and the disease out of the affected organs.&#13;
All Dealers Sell 8O0 a n d $ 1 . 0 0 Bottles.&#13;
THACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.&#13;
DONT PAV T W 4 0 E&#13;
^ FOR THE SAME R O ^ P&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofings are reaily&#13;
never ,paid for, because they need painting or&#13;
coating every y e a r or two. If you add to the cost of these&#13;
roofings the cost of painting duriner the number of years in ser»&#13;
vice, you will readily understand why&#13;
J-M ASBESTOS ROOFING"&#13;
which needs no coating—is the " cheatK-st-per y e a r " Roofing&#13;
I t will not rot. or rust, is permanent!" durable and r e s i ^ nrp&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, gases, heat or coldjjafl affect -1. wosfc*&#13;
less than slate, i^-on or shingles. O.n be applied bj -.•sysne.&#13;
A--4k: trtr w i m p l e s .unci pr*i*-Oi*.&#13;
H. VV J O H N S - M A N V I b b B C o .&#13;
7 3 J e f f e r s o n A v e .&#13;
/&#13;
X&#13;
-ttjMM&#13;
PERUNA #afJTatjsrrfc * t t t * Tlera*t of Two&#13;
YoafaT atassfloK »&#13;
- . » " • • • • • ^ T T ^ ^ ^ T ^ * -V *, , ^&#13;
• n worn **Uct«d t o * t * » y j i j t wl0&gt;&#13;
^ j i a r f a . o t tike t a t v a t . A t # » t it,)»as&#13;
very f l i g h t , but every cold I topk made&#13;
•'I followed your directions end in »&#13;
vOrf Spate) t i v w I feoga* t o U p rove'. ' I&#13;
Cook one bottle a n d a m now taking&#13;
my sepo^d.. I .can aafely say * Sat my&#13;
throat and head- e r a cleared from catarrh&#13;
a t j f c e preeent tftne, but I still&#13;
continue l p toko ntf usual dose for a&#13;
spring tonSc. and I fioti there 4s nothi&#13;
n g b e t t e r . " ^ - M r a . W . Pray, 2 6 0&#13;
Twelfth 8 t . , drooklyn, N . Y .&#13;
Feoliati Queetien.&#13;
A Ne# York chap wants to be told&#13;
-way theater Jlc*Jbi|a that city do not&#13;
Indicate tfcsjboan o&amp;the beginning or&#13;
the performance. Should think he&#13;
would know, i Taw^hoiir Is not mentioned&#13;
because nooOSiTla ever on time&#13;
at the beginnfnjr1 of the performance.&#13;
What would be the good of wasting&#13;
printer's ink? ^ _ .,&#13;
Unlikely, .&#13;
Whale—What are vow. going to tell&#13;
yoir wife when you get home?&#13;
Jonah1—I don't know; I don't suppose&#13;
she would believe me if I should&#13;
tell her that I had been to a flan dinner.—&#13;
The Bohemian.&#13;
DODDS \&#13;
KIDNEY j&#13;
/ PILLS -^&#13;
'Guara^&#13;
SICKHEADACHE&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
rmc&#13;
PIUS.&#13;
roafttVOiy cored ft?&#13;
tboap L4J|tle Pills.&#13;
TOiey also relieve Distress&#13;
from Dyspepsia, In*&#13;
digeation aud Too Hearty&#13;
Baling-. A perfect rem*&#13;
t&amp;j for Dizziness, Nau&lt;&#13;
aea. Drowsiness, Bat)&#13;
Taste in the Mouth, Coafr&#13;
ml Toafrne, Faiu in tbS&#13;
S i d e , TOBPID.LIVER,&#13;
They regulate the Bo wela. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
ICARUS&#13;
t V l T T L E&#13;
ITlVER&#13;
6tmitne Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Sinile Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES&#13;
-&#13;
There's Danger&#13;
Ahead&#13;
!f you've been neglecting' a cold.&#13;
Don*texperiment with your health.&#13;
Get a remedy that you kn°u&gt; will&#13;
cure—that remedy is&#13;
DRD.JAYNE'S&#13;
EXPECTORANT&#13;
It's safe. In the severest cases of&#13;
coughs, colds, bronchitis, croup, inflammation&#13;
of chest and longs it is the&#13;
most effective remedy known. It does&#13;
its work quickly, removes the cause of&#13;
the disease&#13;
Sold cvcnjswtCK in three size&#13;
bottle*. $1.00, 50c. 25c&#13;
For h« can property adjust (t to&#13;
your Individual rsquireneots eo it will&#13;
keep perfaet time trader an conditions.&#13;
Never bay a watch by mail, for DO&#13;
natter how rood yem think it in—it&#13;
will never be accurate unless it is adjusted&#13;
for the one who carrle* it. A South Bend Watch&#13;
Frommn in aoateftraaaawaparAKtffim*&#13;
A Soata Banal Watch, with all the&#13;
skill and experience that iraeft into&#13;
its construction, wotild fall utterly as&#13;
a perfect time-keeper if it wasn't adjusted&#13;
to meet the raqnlrexaeats of&#13;
each individual.&#13;
You can never buy a Saatfc Bend&#13;
Watch by mail. Tbey are sold only&#13;
by retail jewelera.who are competent&#13;
to properly adjust tbem.&#13;
Ask yrmr jeweler tn iho* ftm. a Heath&#13;
Rood Watch — a real •aaaterpinoA of&#13;
nmaanlitm. Write a* and raw&gt;l»« by re-&#13;
IN WASH MATERIALS&#13;
M A N Y P R E T T Y T H I N G S F 0 I * T H E&#13;
Colors and Floured Designs Are as&#13;
, Popular This Season as t n i&#13;
White—Tub Texture* in&#13;
Immense Variety.&#13;
Wash materials distinguish? the&#13;
prettiest of the new things for children,&#13;
whether they are boys 0r girls.&#13;
White, too, is still Immensely popular.&#13;
There are persons, indeed, who will&#13;
*¥• N. U , D E T R O I T . N O . 17-1M9.&#13;
/Wo. ml *jm$*&#13;
• w • *_„ngej&#13;
Aa. M P e ' S * 4 ^&#13;
•**»&#13;
Pleasing Mode* for Girls from Eight&#13;
to Fourteen Years.&#13;
dress their young children in nothing&#13;
else, but if is evident from 'fh'e vnst&#13;
number of other materials shown that&#13;
fashion ia to give color and figures&#13;
the newest place.&#13;
Never was such variety seen in tub&#13;
textures, the 11st including every wash&#13;
material used before, and a round&#13;
dozen with entirely new names. With&#13;
close examination these last general-&#13;
WEARING JET IN ALL COLORS.&#13;
ly prove to be old acquaintances, improved&#13;
in some way and called by&#13;
new titles for novelty's sake. But&#13;
then old favorites have proven their&#13;
usefulness In a so**p-end-water way,&#13;
so it is always good to give them the&#13;
preference where garments are to be&#13;
much laundered.&#13;
As to this, it is absurd to fancy that&#13;
any tinted linen; cotton or muslin&#13;
texture, can be treated like the face&#13;
and hands. Some concession to. delicate&#13;
coloring must be made, and the&#13;
first step toward this is never to let'&#13;
the little colored garment get too&#13;
soiled before washing.&#13;
A thick suds ot some good white&#13;
soap is also better for colored things&#13;
than any other. If a strong soap Is&#13;
rubbed directly upon the garment,&#13;
you may expect to see the wild rose&#13;
pink or baby blue fly out of the window.&#13;
All tinted garments, except&#13;
those bearing the fastest dyes, should&#13;
be dried in the shade.&#13;
Linen, pique, crash, drilling, pongee,&#13;
cotton suiting and denim are&#13;
among the standard textures for&#13;
young boys. Sensible dresses for&#13;
girls, those for useful morning wear,&#13;
play, etc., are also seen in these materials,&#13;
some simple white embroidery&#13;
or braid taking the place of the handsome&#13;
stitching or contrast of color on&#13;
the masculine garment.&#13;
But the smarter of the little girl&#13;
toilets are very dainty fn texture, and&#13;
with muslin, dimity and swiss very&#13;
appropriate laces give a quite elegant&#13;
effect. The more elaborate of such&#13;
small gowns must, of course, be&#13;
cleaned instead of washed when&#13;
soiled, but since smart frocks get little&#13;
hard wear, and dry cleaning is&#13;
much cheaper than formerly, the extra&#13;
expense need not be feared.&#13;
At all times a wash frock is preferable&#13;
to a more pretentious; material&#13;
for girls up to six and the same thing&#13;
may be said of boys' suits for this&#13;
age and those up to it.&#13;
A delicately tlgured silk, such as&#13;
tiny rosebuds on a white background,&#13;
would make a very fetching summer&#13;
dress for any little gala occasion. And&#13;
here the bertha would be of swiss or&#13;
mull, trimmed with lace, or perhaps&#13;
of solid silk, lace trimmed, and in the&#13;
tint of the background.&#13;
However, though there is a preference&#13;
for dainty finery where small&#13;
girls are concerned, with the bertha&#13;
left oft, And plain elbow sleeves, tatsmodel&#13;
Tfiay do for this simplest country&#13;
gingham. The ages given for it&#13;
are from eight to fourteen, but six to&#13;
sixteen could wear it equally well.&#13;
MADE UP IN STRIPED LINEN.&#13;
-»!'.'&#13;
Variety of Colorings for Ornamentation&#13;
Is One of the Latest of&#13;
Fashion's Dictates.&#13;
"Black jet is very much in evidence&#13;
at present and white jet Interests me&#13;
very much," declares an enthusiastic&#13;
English woman in the Queen. "I am&#13;
very tired of all the cut and blown&#13;
glass that masquerades as diamante&#13;
work, crystals, precious stones of various&#13;
sorts, bugles and beads of all descriptions,&#13;
Infinitely preferring, for the&#13;
moment at any rate, something quite&#13;
opaque.&#13;
"Black and white Jet need not be the&#13;
alpha and omega of the list. In darkish&#13;
colors it is most attractive—green of&#13;
the laurel or creme de menthe shade,&#13;
garnet or ruby for embroidering, red&#13;
currant or wine shades of tulle, yellow&#13;
like clouded amber—quite fascinating&#13;
this last—turquoise, with all the real&#13;
gem's lack of transparency; brown—&#13;
think of a brown net frock worked in&#13;
brown jet and aluminum, with a dash&#13;
of gold over a slip of faint maize charmeuBe!&#13;
"Gray jet combined with dull silver&#13;
heads and platinum threads would&#13;
form charming matt effect, stitchery,&#13;
biscuit-colored jet, gray green jet, the&#13;
color of gooseberry fool, royal blue jet,&#13;
purple jet, and to finish up with molecolored&#13;
jet, with which one could do so&#13;
many charming things thtat I hardly&#13;
like to begin suggestions for fear I&#13;
should never be able to stop. And&#13;
these Ideas for a variety of colorings&#13;
in this opaque glass—for of course It is&#13;
only that, and cleverly made too, so as&#13;
not to be heavy—need not be confined&#13;
to evening wear, but in several cases&#13;
could form part of the new millinery—&#13;
does so in fact—and worn judiciously&#13;
makes an agreeable change."&#13;
I&#13;
Gallant Burglar.&#13;
After rifling a lady's boudoir and annexing&#13;
some jewels, the burglar left&#13;
a note—brief but gallant, and gratifying&#13;
to a degree—before taking his departure.&#13;
"A thousand regrets." so the&#13;
not# ran, "for not having found in this&#13;
chamber-by far Its molt lovely jewel"&#13;
Simple blouse of striped linen prettily&#13;
trimmed with bands of the same&#13;
and buttons. The collar is of linen at&#13;
a contrasting color.&#13;
Brown Paper for Kitchen Use.&#13;
If you have a taste for cooking and&#13;
like to go into the kitchen now and&#13;
then to make some fancy thing you&#13;
can save the cook no end of trouble&#13;
by the use of brown paper while you&#13;
are at work. Before you begin with&#13;
your bowls and things spread a large&#13;
piece of paper on the table and then&#13;
put all your cooking utensils down on&#13;
it and keep them on it. If you break&#13;
eggs throw the shells on the paper;&#13;
in fact, the paper becomes the r&amp;&#13;
ceptacle for all the "messiness" whic)&#13;
is a natural part of preparing things&#13;
to be cooked. When you have made&#13;
your dish, or arranged your salad, or&#13;
finished the thing* you are doing, all&#13;
the debris can be gathered up in the&#13;
paper and throw* away, leaving the&#13;
UbT^aa^clean a* if you had^jjot&#13;
at work.&#13;
A woman who is sick and sufferinr, and won't at least&#13;
trv a medicine which has the record of Lvdia JE. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, is to blame for ner own wretched&#13;
condition.&#13;
There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in&#13;
the United States who have been benefited by tfrsisuTious&#13;
old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over&#13;
thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering.&#13;
Read what these women say:&#13;
Camden,, W. *T. — « I t is with pleasure that X send my testimonial&#13;
for Lydia EL Pinkham's vegetable Compound, hoping* it&#13;
m a j induce other suffering? women to avail themselves of the&#13;
benefit of this valuable remedy.&#13;
« I suffered from pains in my back and aide, sick headaches,&#13;
no appetite, was tired and nervous all the time, and so weak I&#13;
could hardly stand. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
made me a well woman—and this valuable medicine shall&#13;
always have my praise."—Mrs. W. P. Valentine, 9 0 2 Lincoln&#13;
Ave., Camden, N. J .&#13;
Erie, Pa. -** I suffered for five years from female troubles, and&#13;
at last was almost helpless. I tried three doctors but they did&#13;
me no good. My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, and it has made me well and strong. I&#13;
hope all suffering women will just give Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound a trial, for it is worth its weight in gold."&#13;
—Mrs. J. P. Endlich, B. F. I&gt;. 7, Erie, Pa.&#13;
Since we guarantee that all testimonials which we publish&#13;
are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help&#13;
these women it will help any other woman who is suffering&#13;
from the same trouble.&#13;
For 3 0 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound has been the standard remedy for&#13;
female ills. No sick woman does justice to&#13;
herself who will not try this famous medicine.&#13;
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and&#13;
has thousands of cures to its credit.&#13;
Snraen*&gt; If the slightest trouble appears which&#13;
aw^v you do not understand, write to Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice—it is&#13;
free and always helpful.&#13;
4«*r«;&#13;
Your Last Chance to&#13;
Get Land&#13;
Cheap&#13;
lies in Idaho. Good land at such prices will soon&#13;
be gone forever. Fine farm tracts can be had&#13;
now at low prices, on easy terms. By the time&#13;
your last payment is made the land will have&#13;
doubled in value, at least.&#13;
New towns—needing trades — are growing up&#13;
fast in the wonderful Snake River country. Men&#13;
who went there poor a few years ago are now&#13;
well to do.&#13;
Own An Idaho Farm&#13;
Idaho's variety of resources is unsurpassed anywhere&#13;
in the world—money is made easily and&#13;
quickly in farming, in fruit, stock and dairying.&#13;
Alfalfa alone is making hundreds rich.&#13;
Save money, that might otherwise be spent in&#13;
tickets and hotel bills, by going direct to Idaho&#13;
and buying a farm now. Write today for our&#13;
free booklet.&#13;
E. L. L O M A X . C . P. JU,&#13;
Omaha. Neb*&#13;
J&#13;
MAruINc A flftTorlnff tkat is used the a am* aaZnmm&#13;
or vanilla. By rttnsolvlnjr fftanulated Rrtftar&#13;
In water and adding Maptetna, a delktoaa&#13;
»7nip i * mad* and a syrup tattartbanntapto.&#13;
Maplelnwla •old bynrocerf. If aotund Anfor&#13;
Soa.boVandr«eipebook. Ctm*miMtt.C+,H*tU*.&#13;
Fo* DISTEMPER&#13;
*8,~nr_*J&lt;v, na rtL »i»qdu ipdo, s»ltt*l*sn* porna rtnitn*t ttTrme.s pnjo« .n iuettue rM hIo twh e»I OBTl«o«o«d a ta anndy OatT*a aadwa t«onoa«jr»rmi»fmmtaabody. CumDmatB ' .-—•«-—&#13;
Pink Eye. Epizootic&#13;
Shipping Fever&#13;
&amp; Catarrhal Fever&#13;
i n InfMtod or&#13;
i «spat, tta.&#13;
&gt;yoar&lt;frri(nrmt."«&gt;io win j » f itforjroa.&#13;
and Cure*,'* Spacul afaata waatad.&#13;
SPORN MEDICAL CO.. £ ^ 1 ^ . . ^ GOSHEN. 1MB., U. S. A.&#13;
rC YK"MiaM&gt; k OGA AM iIX UIT TMbawrw tTnlallrargeof.a rmP*ow- e*iMooWd mla nadt,&#13;
fnr*. Ka«T t*Tm», Address&#13;
. B K M T L E V , BEXTXEY, MICH.&#13;
GALL STONES § £ £ &amp; BtXCAJW. &gt; about It,&#13;
i OPT* t W « . Address C. COVEY. B . D . A. Laa*ln«. Mieb.&#13;
••*-1 IJ *-&#13;
BEFIaastQatf Uttttttarek&#13;
makes laundry work » pleasure. 16. ea PfctJO*.&#13;
'•v «v *&lt;. / « i &gt; . ^ » » i j i •&#13;
4&#13;
zr ,;«&amp;* -fC « ~ . I «te- ll»1 4 &lt;&#13;
^ ^;3*s^ .¾ • . : &amp;&#13;
, J&#13;
_ I) II Mil &gt;l» Wf0fj*lm* » 1 » , » K *U ^ ¾ U3m:^e^.»a».;?::: :.-.-^- ;•*•«*»•»&#13;
1 -^..-..,&#13;
THE PEOPtim&#13;
THE&#13;
»»r&#13;
THE GREAT WHEAT CORNER&#13;
NftW MfOltKS fpJ**V HARD-&#13;
• H l f H &gt; N ^ U i £ L A f r * t 9 . ,&#13;
: *-&gt;4rn—* v;fi&gt; •. -, in&#13;
PATTEN IS UNDER GUARD&#13;
The Chicago Wheat Pit Ciaa^bjcra Became&#13;
Atarmajd^tFIfOU^ a|*y Raac^i&#13;
V ' V ' ^ V ^ v P " tSaaTpiAp* * « « * ^w» as*** "JftnV&#13;
James A^JRnWen's corner, which he&#13;
says is not a^torner, lu wheat baa&#13;
aroused such an outcry from all parts&#13;
of the country that board of trade&#13;
afflslals are becoming alarmed at the&#13;
possibility of congressional action prohibiting&#13;
wheat corners, and have decided&#13;
to have an "unofficial" session&#13;
with Patten, in an effort to call the&#13;
present deal off.&#13;
With wheat soaring to almost unprecedented&#13;
,nrices lS..Ubf. wheat pit&#13;
t h e - ^ e e o f flour has taken a jump&#13;
throughout the country. The rise in&#13;
the price brings. hardship upon the&#13;
bakers who, to save themselves from&#13;
ruin, are forced to either advance&#13;
the price of oread or cut the size of&#13;
the lpaf, with resultant distress to&#13;
the poor.&#13;
"There is no manipulation, no cor&#13;
tier," reiterated Patten. "Blame the&#13;
farmer. If his crrops were better the&#13;
present situation would ^not result. It&#13;
Just happens that I am On the'lnslde."&#13;
"King" Patten has installed a bodyguard&#13;
of two husky negroes in Ms office&#13;
and home. Whenever he goes&#13;
about the city he is accompanied by&#13;
the two men. Whether he has received&#13;
threats or mutely fears the frenzy of&#13;
some person caught by his vtoeat corner&#13;
is not known.&#13;
According to managers of milling&#13;
companies which operate the largest&#13;
plants tn the United Stales and practically&#13;
ff* the price of flour, there is&#13;
no relief iji sight from present price&#13;
conditions. They say tihere is every&#13;
Indication that flour will continue to&#13;
soar and may reach $10 a barrel.&#13;
The agents deny tiiere is any combination&#13;
to increase prices or to control&#13;
business. C. U Dihvorth said to-&#13;
'day:&#13;
"It is not the speculation in wheat&#13;
that is affecting flour at this time.&#13;
The price will be stiff all through the&#13;
summer. The United States has grown&#13;
a larger crop than a year ago, but the&#13;
world's supply is short. There is a&#13;
wheat, flour and bread famine In Mexico.&#13;
T h e price of Argentine wheat is&#13;
11.25. and of Canadian wheat $1.27.&#13;
Argentine shipments to Liverpool&#13;
have been short, and this has increased&#13;
the Liverpool demand for&#13;
American shipments.&#13;
"The result of this situation Is apparent.&#13;
It may sound jtjrange^to some ;&#13;
people, hut selling 'flour at 17 a barrel&#13;
;at present is selling below cost.&#13;
It requires five bushels of wheat to&#13;
make a barrel. Taken at $1.29 a&#13;
bushel the wheat in each barrel costB&#13;
$6*5. Add to that $1.05 for sacks,&#13;
freight, storage, delivery and^ejj^nfij&#13;
and carrying accounts, and it would]&#13;
bring the actual cost of a barrel of f&#13;
flour up to $7.50.&#13;
"The reason why we are now selling&#13;
at |7, below cost, is that we were not&#13;
prepared for such rapid jumps, and&#13;
could not prepare customers for them.&#13;
"It is difficult to say just what will&#13;
happen. I would not even venture to&#13;
«ay that there may not be a wheat&#13;
and flour famine in the United States&#13;
when I look around at the condition&#13;
In the rest of the world."&#13;
fatten'* View.&#13;
'The wheat .shorts are in Wall street&#13;
And it is pretty well known that Wall&#13;
street has some influence at Washington.&#13;
The only thing Secretary Wilson&#13;
has right in his statement of Friday&#13;
is that I am making money in wheat.&#13;
1 admit that."&#13;
Smarting under the charge that he&#13;
has been conducting a corner and has&#13;
been robbing the consumers of bread,&#13;
James A. Patten, Chicago's wheat&#13;
king,, thus Teplied to the charges of&#13;
«elf-interest marts at Washington. Besides,&#13;
he declared that President&#13;
Taft's department; qf agriculture was&#13;
purposely misrepresenting the facts.&#13;
The Napoleon of the pit arrived at his&#13;
office under guard of three attendants,&#13;
but said that he had lost, no sleep over&#13;
the threats that nave been made&#13;
against his life.&#13;
"Anv one In the limelight, as I am&#13;
now.** he said, "become* more or less&#13;
a tasget for cranks, but I do not take&#13;
their threats seriously"&#13;
n Relieve, and have believed for a&#13;
long time, that the duty ought to be&#13;
tftriten off wheat and all other grains.&#13;
The crop needs no protection. In 10&#13;
years the duty will have to be taken&#13;
off. The. duty on wheat la now 25&#13;
cents a bushel, and in 10 years we will&#13;
not be ralilrig enough wheat for home&#13;
consumption,. .&#13;
"They can't scare me with any auch&#13;
threat "because I know I am right and&#13;
that conditions are as I have them re&#13;
ported to me."&#13;
WIRELETS.&#13;
Rosalie Davis, a pretty white girl In&#13;
New Yorkj aged 20, is awaiting sentunee&#13;
on a charge of forgery in the&#13;
second degree. She will come Into&#13;
an inheritance of $15,000 a year !n a&#13;
few months and is said to have beep&#13;
th&gt; leader of a baa&lt;**«f near*** t**«j&#13;
Mr hoi&amp;e. The negroes are j l i d w*&#13;
b i w oMBtP'tted many crimes M *«*-&#13;
planning.&#13;
It C a n n o l W , 0 * i i 1 b y fciing Che«»&#13;
In arranging for painting, a good&#13;
many propertyo^aer* £ g y to aar©&#13;
money by employing the painter who&#13;
offers to do the job-'cheapest—or try&#13;
to* eote money by insisting on a lowpriced&#13;
para*. But • BO property-owner&#13;
woaJd'rfcn ramh Hafts ff he realized&#13;
what fltmA $ e ' taken into consideration&#13;
in order to get a Job that will&#13;
wear and give t W ^ n g h satisfaction.&#13;
No homeowner ijwH£ go wrong on&#13;
| h e painting, queatloh*ff'ie'wjltes Nationat4&#13;
Lead Company; ]M8 Trinity&#13;
4 Building, Kew York, tor their Houseq^&#13;
MBeri-Vfflfctitfg O t p P X o : 4?, which&#13;
is sent free. It is a complete guide&#13;
to painting. It includes a book of&#13;
color schemes for either exterior or&#13;
interior painting, a book of specifications,&#13;
and an Instrument for detecting&#13;
adulteration In paint materials.&#13;
Nearly every dealer has National&#13;
Lead Company's pure white lead.&#13;
(Dutch Boy Painter trademark.) It&#13;
yours has- not notify National Lead&#13;
Co., and arrangements will: be made&#13;
for you to get i t&#13;
1 • ; * • » rZTC -sw5—SKI—«r 11," »f&#13;
Clarence Dubb—May&#13;
dance, Miss 8harply?&#13;
• Mta*v Sharply—Certainly!&#13;
want itt&#13;
have&#13;
I dont&#13;
$100 Reward, $100.&#13;
One Thing 8h« Was Sure Of.&#13;
Grace—Really, mother, you seem&#13;
cross this morning.&#13;
Mother (sternly)—How .often have I&#13;
told you not to let that young rnan&#13;
kiss you?&#13;
Grace—I don't know, mother, but&#13;
certainly not as often as he has&#13;
kissed B e .&#13;
Do You Feel Like This?&#13;
Does your head ache or simply feel heavy&#13;
and uncomfortable? Doen your back ache?&#13;
Does your bide ache?.Do you feel fugged&#13;
out? The tonic laxative herb tea known as&#13;
Lane's Family Medicine will clear your&#13;
head, 'remove the pain in fide or back and&#13;
restore your strength. Nothing else is so&#13;
good for tfce fctoraaeh and bowelti. At druggists'&#13;
and «4ealers',. 25c.&#13;
ttMt tsar* a aosf. Jtehaast pOaMpe rd rwaaasi abt e6 apalaatitte dta taos&#13;
has been able to cure to aH ttt m w i i 4 taat *&#13;
Calarr*. Hall's Catarra Cm* 1» tte oatjr pasttive&#13;
can BOW kaova to taa medical Jratarjtfty. Caiarrfa&#13;
taint a eonsUtutkaaJ rttwaw, rrcttftts •&#13;
UOMI trartmest. H*B*s Gfttarrb Cun S&#13;
Urwaiy. metiat directly upoo UM blood a&amp;4 WWCOHB&#13;
of UM system, thereby- flmmjSw the&#13;
foundation, of the «1»BM*, «nd Rlvtei tbe p&amp;Urat&#13;
•treocta by bulldtaf up tBe ooMUtutioo tod amtgti- tat utore to dotttf ttt work.' Tlw proprtnon teva&#13;
ap muea bUtfc to «* euntivo w*em_Vut tbteeyU otS teor&#13;
Deception.&#13;
"Did a man ever kias you against&#13;
your wi&amp;?"&#13;
"No; 'but some have thought they&#13;
did."—Brooklyn Ltte.&#13;
R*4, Weak, W^ary, Watery Eyen&#13;
Reliewjd by Murine Eye Remedy. Compounded&#13;
by Experienced Physicians. Conforms&#13;
to Pure Food and Drug Laws. Murine&#13;
[Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain.&#13;
Trjr Murine in ITour Eyes. At Druggists.&#13;
When you wear out a suit of clothes&#13;
yoa can generally get another, but it's&#13;
different when you wear out your welcome.&#13;
Ona Hundred DoUu* for efly&#13;
awe. Sead foe -Ujt ofJeattoaofiiJa&#13;
Addrea* F. J. CHENfiy * CO.. Toledo. 0-&#13;
Hold by ail DrucxtaU.?7Sci '• •&#13;
- TUM Hall's ¥nmllf ^1U« for cooKipattoa.&#13;
Offensive Advice.&#13;
"Madam," said the medical man,&#13;
gravely, "you must practice filling&#13;
your lungs with deep breathe of .pure&#13;
air."&#13;
"An' bust the smithereens out of my&#13;
new direct'ry gown," (sniffed the lady.&#13;
"I think I «ee myself."&#13;
And turning on her high heels she&#13;
haughtily left the apartment.—Cleveland&#13;
Plain Dealer.&#13;
Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot-Eata.&#13;
"I tried A L L E N ' S FOOT-EASE recently,&#13;
and have Just bought another supply.&#13;
It has cured my corns, and the hot, burning&#13;
und itching sensation in my feet which&#13;
was almost unbearable, and I would not&#13;
be without it now.—Mrs. W. J. Walker,&#13;
Camden, NL J." Sold by all DruggiBts, ioc.&#13;
M M . W i n d o w ' s Soathlnir Syrrm.&#13;
3lag, sof teal the guraa, reclix&#13;
aaniinsttop,aUayspaia,cart*windcoUu. 25cabotUe,&#13;
Far children teething, softeiu guraa&#13;
J7o woman really believes that she Is&#13;
hi (he homely claes.&#13;
Ambiguous.&#13;
"What sort of time did you have in&#13;
your automobile trip?"&#13;
"Oh, we bad a perfectly killing&#13;
timer&#13;
TIME? is the best test- For over iifty&#13;
years Hamlins Wizard Oil has been.^the&#13;
iu«* popular .remedy in the United States&#13;
for the cure • of Rhwmatism, Neuralgia&#13;
and all pain and infiaomiation.&#13;
The total number of sailing vessels&#13;
in the world is &lt;4ouble that of steamera.&#13;
I)o not force yourself to take offensive&#13;
(and harmful) druKs—take Uartield Tea,&#13;
Nature's Her*) laxative; it overcomes con-&#13;
^Upatiom, p«B5Jtie« the blood, brings Health!&#13;
The sugar ;production of the United&#13;
States does mot grow with the consumption.&#13;
if.&#13;
« »&#13;
[•iO^DKOL^S j.&#13;
,&#13;
\ 1&#13;
,; Akc6HOL-3 FER CZKt&#13;
JtetttahkYnparmanUrAMsiwitoting&#13;
(tir Food and R««idaf&#13;
«gihe$ipwida4^BowvUof&#13;
r &gt; * h i i L M t i N&#13;
Promotes Dige»rion,Ch«rfuJnessand&#13;
Rnl.ConUms neUhcr&#13;
Opium .Morphine nof Minrral&#13;
NOT N A R C O T I C&#13;
JMUbSmi'&#13;
JmutJnJ *&#13;
'/•awnaiV&#13;
Wmkrjrttm•. fhatmt-&#13;
A perfect Remedy foTCoiwlipation.&#13;
Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Fever i shness&#13;
and LOSS OF SLEEP&#13;
-&gt;- « * . .&#13;
?ac Simile Signature of&#13;
\ T H E CCXTAUR COMPAWY.&#13;
N E W Y O R K .&#13;
CASTOBIA&#13;
Thfl Kind YOB Havo&#13;
Always&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Year*&#13;
A r t&gt; m o n t h •* o l d&#13;
^Guaranteed under the Foodasjl&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrappoc&#13;
•«**£*$&#13;
TOWER'S FISH BRAND&#13;
WATERPROOF&#13;
OILED CLOTHING wilt give you ftdl value&#13;
for every doHaf spent&#13;
and keep you dry in&#13;
the wettest weather.&#13;
SUITS «322&#13;
SUCKERS43S2&#13;
POMMEL SUI&#13;
S0L9EWWYW&amp;C&#13;
•GUM09/JPBC&#13;
AJ.TOWEP Ca BOSTON. U£AJ&#13;
TOWER CANADIAN C a u m u ToaomaCAK&#13;
JUST DOUBLE&#13;
320 ACRES INSTEAD&#13;
OF 1 6 0 A C R E S&#13;
Ai hntncT inducement&#13;
to aealeaent. of the&#13;
wlwat-nwag Undb at&#13;
WetU.nt' Canada, the&#13;
Cafadi'iin Gorenuneaf&#13;
kaa nicreated the area'&#13;
sW BMV be taken by m&#13;
»—160 free and 160 to&#13;
per aae. Thete Uadl&#13;
i awxed {arawf&#13;
•qaaWrH succets. A -&#13;
k&gt; Httdaas Bay, I&#13;
ihonainH miles&#13;
achoota and&#13;
, ra3w«yi cloat •»&#13;
•arkets good.&#13;
"rt w « I d lake thn^to aaaKnUate the revelations&#13;
that a visit to the great empire lying to&#13;
the Nortb of na unfaMasl at every turn.*—&#13;
Correspondence of A IttlioruH Editor, xufie ItiSiMd&#13;
WtsUm C***&amp;* at August, I90t.&#13;
Land's asav- also be pawhsirrl from iailwa]r«kJ&#13;
taad coBpaaica at low phces*nd on easy&#13;
to 32Da«&#13;
be paxbased at $3XX&gt;&#13;
asesalibe m a&#13;
• aia» earned&#13;
•aslwaywiii shortkybe&#13;
•ag sW wwfcTs&#13;
these whrat ftrlrb.&#13;
are caovenieaf, diosate&#13;
aU seaiaaeats. aad local&#13;
For ptunphrrta, saapa aod ftifofmatfon as to&#13;
low railway rates, apply to Superintendent&#13;
of finmigratica. Ottawa, Casada, or the&#13;
authorized Caaadaaa Government Agent:&#13;
H. r. Heroics. i» !•• At&#13;
Mica***; at CA. UEBEI. Sasdt Ste. Marie. Kick.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and&#13;
-how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they&#13;
enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome&#13;
diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved,&#13;
not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious&#13;
or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist&#13;
mature, only those of known excellence should be-ueed; remedies which are pure&#13;
and wholesome and truly beneficial In effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy,&#13;
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured ;by the California Fig Syrup Co.&#13;
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has come into general favor in many millions of&#13;
well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon&#13;
personal knowledge and use.&#13;
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has also met with the approval of physicians generally,&#13;
because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform&#13;
all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of&#13;
Senna, obtained by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act&#13;
most beneficially, and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Califbmian&#13;
blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret&#13;
remedy, and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do&#13;
not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.&#13;
Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs&#13;
and Elixir of Senna always has the full name of the Company—California Fig&#13;
Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in&#13;
bottles of one stee only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent&#13;
size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it.&#13;
If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family&#13;
should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and&#13;
the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required.&#13;
PIMPLES *'I tried all kinds of blood remedies&#13;
which failed to do one any good, but I&#13;
have found the right t h u g at last. My&#13;
face was full of prmptesand black-heads.&#13;
After taking Caacarets they all left I am&#13;
coatunsBg the tae of them and recommenddag&#13;
them to my friends. I feel fuse&#13;
when 1 rise in the morning. Hope to&#13;
have a chance to irosiintend Cascarets."&#13;
FredC.Wittcn,?6Elm St.,Newark, N . J .&#13;
- _ _ — - . , ., ..,.,., . - ~ _ Taate Good..&#13;
poGoed. N e w SAckaa.Weaken or Gripe.&#13;
Wc.2Sc.50e. Never ac*d la bulk. Tbegvaok*&#13;
» tablet stasaped C C C» Goaraateed to&#13;
Bus Trade-mark&#13;
Eliminates All&#13;
Uncertainty&#13;
fo thtffirchase df riisr fcateriaK,&#13;
is an absolute&#13;
guarantee of pur*&#13;
fty and quality.&#13;
For/ TOUT own&#13;
jpratactlon, see&#13;
thstftisocttheaidcof&#13;
esery keg of white lead&#13;
yon boy.&#13;
LESS&#13;
Live Stock and Mtcellaneous&#13;
Electrotypes&#13;
In g r e a t v a r i e t y for s a l e&#13;
at t h e l o w e s t p r i c e s b y&#13;
wESTEtN m r w s r a r e i U N I O N&#13;
73 W. Adama Bt, CHICAGO&#13;
PUTNAM F A D E L E S S D Y E S 6 s l w s k i f S t * a * M t f &gt; ^ s a 4 l a t M ^ OaalOtsaniaas aaawaali&#13;
ananas ^sa^pmafaWM nnnnnnanasft awnasnaansa a^aaaa^ ttbnssn nana Annans ^B^a^aVnAu,—Mgnnn **% ^^^¾ ^•aansaBa ntansa mtaW&#13;
Liquor Habit&#13;
You C « G«|JRID OF IT!&#13;
W« caa saW s i s i l i l i . «a C U M YCHl W O&#13;
k t U ^ l a e a M a a j H s s s M i v t a a a s a t a t a w t f s a . Yaaeaaeis&#13;
!fe&#13;
I&#13;
t:&#13;
-•&#13;
\ \&#13;
- 'X&#13;
M i l k&#13;
M i I k&#13;
M i l k&#13;
Mi Ik&#13;
M i l k&#13;
We Want Both&#13;
Our Prices&#13;
Will Surprise&#13;
You&#13;
*&#13;
PH0«E £9 FOR ?ARTINJURS&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
The County 8. 8. Convention&#13;
will be held at Hamburg Village&#13;
this spring. Eaoh township should&#13;
be well represented and catch the&#13;
iuwpiration 0f ^. 8. work.&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
M i l k Michigan Creamery Co.&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
M i l k&#13;
Would it nut pay you to&#13;
r ni 8 e a good span of&#13;
mules? : : : * : :&#13;
We have a squarely built&#13;
Jack, bred from imported&#13;
Spanish stock; good head&#13;
and ears; large bone and&#13;
feet; plenty of action.&#13;
R e a d y f o r service at&#13;
Glennbrook Stock Farm.&#13;
F. A. GLENN, Manager.&#13;
&lt; Huong Qiir Correspondents »&#13;
r •»• * • *w * n n r w f * T * T * v ** w&#13;
SOUTH GREGORY.&#13;
A nice April shower Sunday.&#13;
Dan Wrights house iB nearly&#13;
completed.&#13;
John Moore is busy every day&#13;
hanging paper.&#13;
TL$XW7IRJ).&#13;
Rev. Saigeon is at Monroe this&#13;
week.&#13;
E. N. Braley and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Wm. Woods.&#13;
Miss Lamborn apent one evening&#13;
last week with Mrs. Jacobs.&#13;
Bert VanSyckel and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with his brother in Iosco-&#13;
E. L. Topping and wife euter-&#13;
(** !•£&gt; 51 ITt ^ 1 1 0 ^ tt 8 m a ^ party of frieuda last&#13;
V ~ r t £ d I I l priday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Bates&#13;
of Williamsville and Mrs. White&#13;
of Iosco visited Plainfield Hive&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
You are invited to the uie tings&#13;
of the &gt;W. F . M. S. next week&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday. Rev.&#13;
Perry, a returned missionary will&#13;
givt) the address Wednesday eveuing&#13;
and a good program is expected&#13;
at each session.&#13;
Cream&#13;
. . i i i L i n m n u i i i i i i m&#13;
What a Child Saw. \&#13;
4&#13;
t&#13;
Business Pointers. I&#13;
r o f t S A I A&#13;
Quantity of Corn and Oat;&#13;
t 16 A ley. Mclntyre&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Early Michigan Seed Potatoes,&#13;
t 17 Frank Ei&amp;e'e.&#13;
Mrs. W r i g h t i s e n t e r t a i n i n g h e r j [Copyright. ISMS, by American Pre»a AMO&#13;
ciattan.]&#13;
"And this is the place?"&#13;
"It is."&#13;
"Where ia the ghost?"&#13;
"The ghost, herr, is only to be seen&#13;
by children. They describe it BH a woman&#13;
ratting loaves. When she looks up&#13;
at them they see only a skull instead&#13;
of a face. She may be raking over&#13;
there now. Yet we cannot see her."&#13;
Annette, who was with me, looked at&#13;
me with a frightened expression. Wo&#13;
were in the valley of Caamonlx surrounded&#13;
by snowy peaks, among&#13;
which Mont Blanc roee highest. Hearing&#13;
of the legend, I had engaged a&#13;
guide to conduct us to the spot the&#13;
For Rent&#13;
brother from Ypsilanti.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Moora called on&#13;
Mrs. Whitehead Sunday.&#13;
The Baptist Minister of this&#13;
place wears a smiling face in honor&#13;
of a baby boy.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Bowman of Anderson&#13;
vuited her brother Frank&#13;
Bates and other friends in Williamsville&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
There was a fairly good attendance&#13;
at church Sunday but there&#13;
are enough people in this place to j ghost was said to Inhabit&#13;
Good house and barn^&#13;
40 acre.* one mile west of Pinckney. j t o fiU t l i e church every Sunday.&#13;
! There is a new hardware man&#13;
iJ. Ihiggs. J in this place and his name is&#13;
Howlett. He came to live with&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Howlett last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
WAJmBD.&#13;
Milk and cream IK-IU hjrat&#13;
the Creamery building,&#13;
Inquire&#13;
Earl Dav.&#13;
n o n e * .&#13;
I am in the market for whhe potatoes.&#13;
T. Read.&#13;
TO RENT.&#13;
The premise* nov occupied by&#13;
Hiram Pierce on the Dexter and&#13;
Pinckney road, lecally known as the&#13;
Lipscomb place. Low rent to right&#13;
party. T. BIRKETT. t l 6&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Honseand one-half aore of land in&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Haney.&#13;
K. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for pa«t favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, { remain&#13;
vours. R. CLINTON.&#13;
"Your children hereabout," I said to&#13;
the guide, "are doubtless under the Influence&#13;
of the story. Imagination paints&#13;
the image ou the retina of the child's&#13;
eye."&#13;
The guide shook his head negatively.&#13;
"If herr will bring a child here who&#13;
has never heard of the legend he will&#13;
know better."&#13;
"That Is a proposition which meets&#13;
my concurrence, An American family&#13;
arrived at the hotel this morning&#13;
among them a ltttle girl of seven.&#13;
vThat do you say, Annette? Shall we&#13;
make the teat with ber?"&#13;
Annette winced. She placed the tips&#13;
of her fingers on my sleeve as If for&#13;
protection.&#13;
The act gave me a suggestion. Ii&#13;
] was not clearly defined, nor had I much&#13;
faith In it. Nevertheless, I had a mind&#13;
to proceed.&#13;
"We will bring the child here," 1&#13;
added, then, turning to the guide,&#13;
"and, Herman, if the sees the ghost 1&#13;
will give you an American gold eaplo&#13;
for a memento of the occasion."&#13;
"Thanks, herr. I consider myself&#13;
richer by that amount."&#13;
"Don't say ice will bring her here,"&#13;
said Annette, with a shrug. "I shall&#13;
have nothing to do with the matter."&#13;
"Surely you do not expect -well,&#13;
then, Herman must lose his eagle."&#13;
Square Deal&#13;
Hatchery&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Pure Bred Sickle Comb Brown&#13;
Leghorn Baby Chicks,&#13;
1 to 10 days&#13;
10 cents Each&#13;
Pare bred Barred Plymouth Rock&#13;
baby Chicks, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 cents Bach&#13;
C. Albert Frost&#13;
OTADIUJL&#13;
Don Harris is able to be out&#13;
again.&#13;
Warren Barton has been having&#13;
an attack of LaGrippe.&#13;
Fred Durkee of Jackson called&#13;
on friends here last week.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy May is slowly gaining&#13;
from her fecent illness.&#13;
Miss Helen Watson is helping&#13;
care for Mrs. May for a few weeks.&#13;
Rev. P. J. Wright is spending&#13;
some time with his son in Toledo.&#13;
J. D. Colton and wife of Chelsea&#13;
visited at A. C. Watsons last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Wirt Barnum entertained ,i «i TI n &lt; , * i« , , the M. E. Society for dinner las t; "I'll come," said Annette after a bit o f s t r u g g l e w l t n h e r s e l t &gt;&#13;
We succeeded in getting permission&#13;
from the child's parents the next aft-&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Wm. Laverock and family are&#13;
moving into Elder StoweB house&#13;
in the village.&#13;
Mrs. Lillie Burden and Miss&#13;
Marshall of Gregory attended the&#13;
LAS meeting at Mrs. Barnuras&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG .&#13;
House cleaning seems to be the&#13;
order of the day.&#13;
Miss Clella Fish visited Miss&#13;
Adda Kice over Sunday.&#13;
A young son is being cared for&#13;
at Art Flintoffa since Thursday.&#13;
Clyde and Hiram Smith spent&#13;
last week with their parents near&#13;
Lakeland.&#13;
The people of North Hamburg&#13;
regret very much to have Grant&#13;
Dunning and family move, as they&#13;
have been efficient workers in the&#13;
church, S. S. and Aid, and will&#13;
leave vacancies that will be difficult&#13;
to fill. Oar lo*8 will be&#13;
Howells gain.&#13;
ernoon to take her to walk with us. 1&#13;
felt sure that If spirituality would en&#13;
able her to discern the ghost she&#13;
would see it. She was like a waif&#13;
from spirit land, large dreamy eyeswonder&#13;
eyes I would call them—the&#13;
face of n child Madonna, senrHlve lips,&#13;
the figure of a sprite. She walked&#13;
| with us in silence, treading the ground&#13;
j so lightly that I sometimes wondered&#13;
if Rhe touched It at nil. Annette could&#13;
not keep her eyes off her, seemingl.v&#13;
enthralled by her, though our quest&#13;
may have hnd much to do with that.&#13;
Besides, our surroundings were impressive.&#13;
What is there more typical&#13;
of the infinite than a mountain nils&#13;
ing its white head into the heavenly&#13;
bl'ie? And what, more typical of in&#13;
flnity than a host of such mountains&#13;
looming on all sides, three snow&#13;
fringed glaciers wriggling like ser&#13;
pents down their sides? Our little&#13;
friend looked up at the peaks with a&#13;
sort of trustfulness, as If they were&#13;
animate—her older brothers, resting,&#13;
silent, conscious of latent power. The&#13;
wind was fresh, and It seemed that It&#13;
would take up the child and carry her&#13;
to some far peak gilded by the afternoon&#13;
sun where ahe would be nearer&#13;
her own country.&#13;
As we drew near the spot we sought&#13;
Annette weakened. I saw la her expression&#13;
that she feared we would&#13;
hare evidence, of the specter's, pretence.&#13;
The child wae walking before&#13;
ua, and Annette, sidling toward me,&#13;
laid ber hand on my arm, «* before,&#13;
tnie time clotchlng it in tenor.&#13;
We stood on the ground we had oc~&#13;
cuptod the day before, looking out on&#13;
the spot Herouui had referred to when&#13;
he Jjuid, "She may be raking over&#13;
there now." A wind rolled over some&#13;
dead leuves where we fancied the wouiuu&#13;
worked. Annette drew near me—&#13;
•o neat that her silken sleeve rubbed&#13;
against my arm. The child atood a&#13;
few Btepa before us, looking at the&#13;
mountains, the valleys, anything, ev&#13;
erything that made up the view.&#13;
"Ueruiuu baa lost hia eagle," I aald&#13;
In a low voice to Annette. "She bees&#13;
nothing unusual."&#13;
"Thuuk heuven!" was the whispered&#13;
reply.&#13;
"Whut a desolate spot!" i remarked&#13;
aloud. "Not a living thing here but&#13;
uuraelves."&#13;
MYes, there la," aaid the child.&#13;
"There's u woman over there raking&#13;
dead leaves."&#13;
I felt u convulsive grip ou my arm.&#13;
I knew Aunette needed support, and 1&#13;
put my arm about her to steady her. 1&#13;
confess 1 was startled, myself.&#13;
"WhereV" I asked of the child.&#13;
"Over there," poiutlng. "Shu bees us.&#13;
Fhero are only hules where the eyes&#13;
should be."&#13;
"Oh, come away!"&#13;
It was Annette who walled the&#13;
words. But she had no power to go.&#13;
My plan had worked too well. Its object&#13;
to excite In her that craving for&#13;
protection which would throw her into&#13;
my arms had succeeded, but l feared&#13;
the shock. 1 took her in my arms and&#13;
put my face against her cold cheek. I&#13;
looked love into her wild eyes. All to&#13;
no purpose. I could get nothing but&#13;
convulsive shudders, clutchiugs.&#13;
That was a long while ago. Annette&#13;
la my wife, but I have never ceased to&#13;
regret that I uncovered her heart In a&#13;
way so dangerous. She was long in re&#13;
covering from the shock, and even nov&#13;
I do not dure refer to the matter. Xn&#13;
explanation of the wonder has ever&#13;
come to me. I have no theory concerning&#13;
It and don't wish any, All 1 ask&#13;
Is that I and Annette may forget It.&#13;
MURIEL K. GRAY.&#13;
Ths Wis* Though QentU Reader.&#13;
In an armchair of a Pullman smoking&#13;
car on the way east from Louisville&#13;
a polite but resourceful man waa&#13;
trying hard to read a novel while his&#13;
next neighbor kept up a running fire&#13;
of chatter. With the light of a desperate&#13;
resolve In his eye, yet cloaking&#13;
determination with exquisite politeness,&#13;
the reader presently said: "Par-&#13;
Son me, but my memory for names Is&#13;
not to be depended upon. Tour name&#13;
sV»-&#13;
"Shepherd,' replied the voluble one&#13;
cheerfully.&#13;
The one sided conversation kept on&#13;
awhile longer, the light of desperate&#13;
reeolve meanwhile burning brighter&#13;
fcnd brighter. Then the readef raited&#13;
hte eyes to a stranger, his neighbor&#13;
Across the aisle, and suddenly demandfed,&#13;
"What is your name, sir?"&#13;
"Ward," said the stranger.&#13;
"Tea, yes, of course!" cried the readir&#13;
briskly. "Mr. Ward, let roe introduce&#13;
Mr. Shepherd."&#13;
By which simple but ingenious expedient&#13;
the torrent of extraneous chatter&#13;
w a s diverted to poor Ward, and&#13;
the reader read happily ever after,—&#13;
Harser't Wookrg&#13;
H i i Chanca to G«t Evan.&#13;
A lawyer came Into court drunk,&#13;
when the judge said to him, "Sir, I am&#13;
sorry to see you in a situation which&#13;
Is a disgrace to yourself and family&#13;
and the profession to which you belong."&#13;
This reproof elicited the following&#13;
colloquy:&#13;
"Did your honor speak to me?"&#13;
"I did, sir. I said, sir, that in my&#13;
opinion you disgraced yourself and&#13;
family, the court and the profession by&#13;
your course of conduct."&#13;
"May 1-i-lt please your honor, I have&#13;
been an attorney in-ln-in this e-c-ourt&#13;
for fifteen years, and permit me to say,&#13;
your honor, that this is the first correct&#13;
opinion I ever knew you to give."&#13;
—Rehoboth Sunday Herald.&#13;
ABHHIWUU iOOAL.&#13;
The weather bureau promises more&#13;
rain for today.&#13;
April baa bad its showers all right&#13;
$»ow if it would warm u p .&#13;
The Oity council of Ann Arbor&#13;
Monday night passed a stringent liquor&#13;
ordinance. Licenses in tbe future&#13;
will be issued only to saloon keepers&#13;
of approved moral character, who&#13;
have never violated tbe liquor laws.&#13;
All free lunch counters must be abolished.&#13;
Tbe B. F. Andrews property in Par-&#13;
Bhallville, consisting ot house, barn&#13;
and live acres of land.&#13;
F. L. Andrews, Ex.&#13;
Pinckney, Mbh.&#13;
See Our&#13;
Special Line&#13;
of&#13;
BIRTHDAY&#13;
and&#13;
Souvenir&#13;
Postcards&#13;
at the&#13;
Dispatch Office, Pinckney&#13;
Sold Out&#13;
T h i s is t h e r e p o r t t h a t h a s finally reached us, however&#13;
i t i s n o t S O . W e are still d o i n g business a t t h e old .&lt;&#13;
s t a n d a n d are here t o serve t h e public in their milling&#13;
needs. W e a r e willing t o let o u r p r o d u c t s b e j u d g e d&#13;
Upon Their Merits&#13;
F a r m e r s , we w a n t all t h e g o o d w h e a t within a r a d i u s&#13;
of 10 miles a n d we a r e p a y i n g&#13;
Above The Market&#13;
If you have a n y t o sell a n d w a n t t h e t o p price, b r i n g it&#13;
d o w n t o t h e old reliable&#13;
Pinckney Flouring Mills&#13;
F. M. PETERS, Prop.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 22, 1909</text>
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                <text>April 22, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. xx m. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO.,MICH., TBT3BSDAY, AIB. S9. 1909. No. 17&#13;
51 One Dollar S I&#13;
Will buy as many Groceries&#13;
at O u r S t o r e as at any&#13;
other and as an inducement&#13;
we will give one dish of : :&#13;
ICO CRBAM F R E E&#13;
with every $ worth of trade,&#13;
Saturday, May 1st ' 0 9&#13;
Highest market price paid for flutter and Eggs&#13;
E. BURGESS &amp; CO.&#13;
Sunday School&#13;
Workers&#13;
C o n v e n t i o n a t H a m b u r g . M a y&#13;
4 a n d 5&#13;
The second annual convention of the&#13;
reorganise! Livingston County Sunday&#13;
School ASHH.. wiil be Laid at Haipbur#,&#13;
Alay 4 and 5 Toe program is&#13;
an excellent oue. commencing in the&#13;
afternoon Tuesday and continuing u,ntil&#13;
Wednesday at 5 p. m.&#13;
Supta. Edwards ct organized Bible&#13;
class work; Currie, of Home Department&#13;
work; and Washburn of Primary&#13;
work, will represent the iState S.&#13;
8. Association upon the program, and&#13;
will give addressee. etc. Miss Buell&#13;
of Ann Arbor will also give an address.&#13;
Pastors and S. 8 . workers of the&#13;
county will also present papers upon&#13;
various phases or Sunday School work.&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
L O C A b N B W S .&#13;
VIS&#13;
This is a little more like spring.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Surdam of Detroit is&#13;
iting her parents here.&#13;
Mesdames C. P. Sykes and C&#13;
Sigler were in Detroit shopping Fri- i&#13;
day. I&#13;
milliard Darrow of Jackson, Ohio,&#13;
is spending some time with his parents&#13;
here.&#13;
E. (J. Glenn cl Detroit spent a tew&#13;
days the past week at the Grlennbrook&#13;
farm here.&#13;
Rhea and Robert, children of Geo.&#13;
Reason Jr., of Detroit, formerly of&#13;
this place, hive a severo attack ol ths&#13;
measles.&#13;
Mrs. Clayton Place way of Detroit,&#13;
spent Sunday and Monday with he"&#13;
parents, H. D, Grieve and sther relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
0. A. Tup per is spending the week&#13;
with his family here. He expects to&#13;
move his poods here from Ann Arbor&#13;
and make Pinckney his home.&#13;
Mrs. James Greene o\' Howell underwent&#13;
a senoiH opertion at Harper&#13;
hospital Detroit, the first of i«st week.&#13;
She wa- a former Pjnckney Girl and&#13;
her many friends will be glad to hear&#13;
of her speedy improvement.&#13;
Examinations of eighth grade pupils&#13;
of the county will he IHd at Pinok&#13;
ney, Howell, Fowlervillp, Hrigh.on,&#13;
Hart land, Oak Grove, Gregory, and&#13;
Hamburg, on Thursday and Friday,&#13;
May b" and 7. For further particulars&#13;
inquire of County School Commis j&#13;
eioner, Fowlerville.&#13;
E. J. Briggs began (he mannfacture&#13;
ot Cement Blocks the past .veek with&#13;
fall force, and added to his equipment&#13;
A Chase Roller Bearing Block Truck&#13;
to *ave time and tabor in handling his&#13;
products. He has the contract to&#13;
furnish the blocks for W. K Mnrphys&#13;
new store, which he will erect soon.&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
N e w goods a r e rapidly&#13;
filling t h e store a n d its&#13;
worth y o u r time to give&#13;
us a look when in Howell&#13;
T h e best stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, R i b - i&#13;
bons, Corsets, H a n d k e r -&#13;
chiefs, H o s i e r y a n d N o t -&#13;
ions shown in town.&#13;
f t e m e m b e t ' T h n t — i&#13;
E v e r y D a y Is Bargain Day&#13;
Saturday is May 1—moving day—&#13;
j for the .saloons at least.&#13;
| E. L. Thompson visited Fowlerville&#13;
relatives the rjast week.&#13;
F. L . Andrews and wife were in&#13;
Flint the last of I*st week.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. White of Pingree, visited&#13;
at W. E. Tuppers last Friday.&#13;
J . VV. Sweeny and wife of Chifson&#13;
visited at Guy Halls last Friday.&#13;
C. L. Sigler and Carl Sykts made a&#13;
run over to Howell in the auto Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Mike Fitzsimmons ot Jackson,&#13;
is visiting her mother Mrs. Margaret&#13;
Black.&#13;
E. R. Brown of Detroit was home&#13;
again Sunday, making his tinal arrangements&#13;
to ship his household&#13;
goods to that city. His house is not&#13;
quite ready however for the family.&#13;
A card from J, C. McDonnel. M. D.,&#13;
gives his present address as Frederick&#13;
Crawford Co , Mich. The many friends&#13;
of Dr. xMcDonnel will be pleased to&#13;
know that he is exceptionally successful&#13;
in his chosen calliog.&#13;
1:30&#13;
1:50&#13;
2:10&#13;
2:40&#13;
3:10&#13;
TUESDAY AFTEKNOON&#13;
Song Service&#13;
Prayer,&#13;
Kev. L. N. Pattibon, Hamburg&#13;
" 0 ur Opportunity''&#13;
. . . . . . .Mrs. V. H. Hibley, Brighton&#13;
"Essentials of Success"&#13;
Rev. L. S. Brooke, Howeli&#13;
"'Kindergarten and Manual Training&#13;
in .Sunday School"&#13;
Miss Flora Buell, Ann Arbor i&#13;
"Home Department" - '&#13;
Rev. F. L. Currey, Lansing j&#13;
A Good Move.&#13;
One of the first things that VV. E.&#13;
Murphy is doing about his ne^ building&#13;
is to have a good well put down&#13;
in front on the street, making a town&#13;
pump of it. This has been needed for&#13;
several years and Mr. Murphy .should&#13;
be extended a vote ol thanks by every j 2:o0 Address&#13;
citizen ot Pinskney and surrounding I&#13;
country. |&#13;
TUESDAY KVENING&#13;
7:00 Song Service&#13;
Devotional&#13;
.. .Rev. D. C. Littlejohn, Pinckney&#13;
7:30 Address&#13;
Mrs. Fred Washburn, Benton&#13;
Harbor&#13;
8:10 Address&#13;
. .. .E, C. Edmunds, Benton Harbor j&#13;
WEDNESDAY MORNING I&#13;
8:30 Devotional Service&#13;
Rev. \V. D. Cole, Brighton j&#13;
3:50 Appointment of Committees&#13;
9:00 Report of County Officers&#13;
9:45 Report of Township Officers&#13;
10:15 Report of the Department&#13;
Mrs. Ada Vincent, Howell \&#13;
10:30 Question Box, in charge of j&#13;
G. L. Adiirus, Fowlerville i&#13;
11:30 "The Object of a S. S. Assn." . . . !&#13;
Mrs. G. Mtisch, Hamburg I&#13;
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON j&#13;
I&#13;
1:30 Song Service # j&#13;
Devotional&#13;
. .Rev. F. S. Osborne, JJew Hudson [&#13;
2:00 Report of Nominating Committee |&#13;
2:10 "Elementary Department" j&#13;
Mrs. Fred Washburn, Benton&#13;
Harbor '&#13;
3:30&#13;
.Rev. F. L. Currey, Lansing&#13;
'Our Convention Theme'' , '&#13;
Rev. W. N. Ferris, Howell&#13;
S u m m e r H o m e s f o r S a l e o r I 4 : 0 ° R e T o r t o f C o n j m i U e e o n Resolutions.&#13;
R e n * , o n o n e o f t h e m o s t&#13;
B e a u t i f u l I n l a n d L a k e s o f&#13;
M i c h i g a n * k n o w n a s B i g P o r t -&#13;
a g e L a k e . W r i t e o r c o m e a n d&#13;
s e e t h e P r o p e r t y a n d O w n e r ,&#13;
b o t h in L i v i n g s t o n C o u n t y . &lt; v&#13;
C L A R E N C E E . B A U G H N ,&#13;
P i n c k n e y ,&#13;
M i c h i g a n .&#13;
Closing Song&#13;
M. £. Church Notes.&#13;
Farmers,&#13;
B r i n g in y o u r harnesses&#13;
a n d have t h e m&#13;
repaired, washed a n d&#13;
oiled n»ady for y o u r&#13;
s p r i n g work. If y o u r&#13;
The sermons Sunday wer* excep- j&#13;
t ionally good and the attendance fair.'&#13;
Many are bnsv and some are sick.&#13;
Next Snnday will be the third!&#13;
quarterly meriting and there should bei&#13;
a good attendance. Quarterly con-(&#13;
ference at the church Saturday evening&#13;
at. 8, at which the district soperintendant&#13;
will preside. Sunday&#13;
morning Love Feast at 9:30 and Mr.&#13;
Dawe will preach at 10:130. Let ns&#13;
make it one ot the best days of the&#13;
year.&#13;
There were 94 present at Sunday&#13;
school and the collection amounted to&#13;
' - ; • &amp; - &amp; *&#13;
If OUr Wall Paper&#13;
Looks Pretty *&#13;
here, h o w much handsomer it will look on your walls with you&#13;
f u r n i t u r e a n d carpet. Come a n d see if you t h i n k o u r s p r i n g&#13;
p a t t e r n s are pretiy&#13;
If You Don't Think S o&#13;
you will indeed be hard to please. Kveryune to whom we have shown them!&#13;
I thus far has been delighted wiih ilitm. T h e y are so novel and artistic in dejsign&#13;
that they command admiration ai the brst glance. They are&#13;
Pretty Papers Popularly Priced&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
/W«&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing!*201 The school has already com&#13;
menced to talk about. Children^ Day.&#13;
I can d o that, work in I&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
£ have added a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
[f yon have no church home you&#13;
are invited to attend all the service?&gt;&#13;
here.&#13;
a n e cau sew on patches,&#13;
rips, etc., in fact&#13;
m a k e t h e shoe a s&#13;
new. ,: :: :: E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
Howell's Busy Store W . B. DARROW&#13;
Thft buds better keep their coats on&#13;
for a time.&#13;
Howetl is talking creamery. Well,&#13;
Pinckney leads, etc.&#13;
Wonder if that ground doflfi not&#13;
think it a long six weeks.&#13;
KOTA1M assessment 155 is due and!&#13;
must be paid by Friday, April 80.&#13;
i l c U l ! i . - ;i.t .1. r ; j k c ii'uu:tt. j&#13;
Just Received at&#13;
f&#13;
New and Elegant lines of Prints, Ginghams,&#13;
Percales and Lawns.&#13;
Latest Styles in Ladies', and Men's. Tan, Oxbloods&#13;
and Black Oxfords.&#13;
We are showing the Largest Line of Ladies&#13;
Shirt Waists, Skirts and Gowns c\\:v shown in&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
A Large Line of Room Rugs, 9x12, to select&#13;
from Prices $12,50 to $25.00&#13;
Don't fail to visit our Furniture and Rug department&#13;
2nd flooo. W e w i l l s a v e y o u m o n e y .&#13;
Our Saturday Specials&#13;
Bleached S h e e t i n g p e r yard&#13;
E x t r a heavy Brown Sheeting, Do kind&#13;
All 50c Wool Drese Goods, p e r yard&#13;
20c Coffee, 17c 50c Tea,&#13;
Soda, op Yeast,&#13;
5c Salt, He R a i s i n s&#13;
.4:*c&#13;
44c&#13;
3c&#13;
8o&#13;
From Z to 3 P. M. only&#13;
200 yds' Apron Checks and Dress G i n g h a m s ,&#13;
to clone at fyc per yard&#13;
F r o m 3 t o 4 P . IVJ., o n l y&#13;
Bleached Table Linen, *1 value, at&#13;
10 Pieces Table Oil Cloth, 18e value&#13;
L a d i e s ' Aprons&#13;
S'.V&#13;
14c&#13;
22c&#13;
Produce taken at highest market price&#13;
'Sales Ca*h&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST of durability in a high-speed machine like the cream separator.&#13;
No other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
everyday, winter andsummer.it must not only do thorough work,&#13;
but to be permanently profitable, it must be durable. U.S. CREAM&#13;
&amp;]&#13;
I&#13;
are bmtt for long service. A solid, low frt&gt;me encloses entirely R'.\&#13;
the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger of injury.&#13;
The parts srefew, simple and easy to pet at. Ballbearings&#13;
at high speed points, combined with automatic oiling, reduce wear&#13;
as well as insure the easiest operation. Such careful and thorough&#13;
construction is what enables the r . S. to better&#13;
STAND THE TEST than any other separator. Yon dont hare to buy a new one every y«ar or&#13;
two. And remember: the TJ. S. doe8 the cleanest Aklaraiftf all the time.&#13;
Kx amine the U. S. yourself and see fts good points. It is sold by&#13;
Teeple^ Hardware Col&#13;
•A --Vj._. fflry'&#13;
gimhieg gispatcfi&#13;
L. jLVStMWB, PuV.&#13;
rurtatww, KIOHIOAH&#13;
Restoring Confederate Battlo Flag*&#13;
A Cincinnati dispatch toxyn the new*&#13;
rrgm Columbua that Guv. Harmon hai&#13;
given orders to return to ti»e Cooled&#13;
Brat* veterans in Alabama certain&#13;
flacs captured by tbe Ftourtn Ohio Volunteer&#13;
infantry durin* the civil war&#13;
ba* lea t o protests and that the &lt;L&amp;&#13;
partment commander of the O. A.&#13;
K. will be asked to take action enjoin&#13;
log the governor. Among old union&#13;
bojdifcria there will be difference* of&#13;
opinion as to the merits of the controversy.&#13;
A great many will side With&#13;
Gov. Harmon and hope that the flags&#13;
wiH b« returned. The sentiment on&#13;
tnte BTDhject among the great body of&#13;
veterans has softened very much since&#13;
the flrat administration of President&#13;
.C.ltfveJaud, when huge uproar was&#13;
raised in many parts of the north oyer&#13;
the report that the federal government&#13;
was preparing to send back- captured&#13;
southern battle flagB to their original,&#13;
owners. Another Memorial day is&#13;
aproachlng. The sections that were&#13;
severed during the civil strife have&#13;
grown together Eleven years have&#13;
passed Bince sons of the north and&#13;
sons of the south marched side by aide&#13;
under the starry banner of their reunited&#13;
country, to confront a foreign&#13;
foe. It is high time to bury all the lingering&#13;
hatreds of the past—and a&#13;
very large proportion of the men whe&#13;
did the actual fighting in the civil war&#13;
have done so.—Exchange.&#13;
Fiench and British capital Is said&#13;
to be behind a $50,000,000 scheme for&#13;
the development of the iron and steel&#13;
business in Mexico, where there is an&#13;
abundance of raw? materialB/^lexico&#13;
will need an increasing amount of&#13;
iron and steel, as she is developing&#13;
rapidly both in population and business,&#13;
and moreover, trade in these&#13;
products with South America is developing&#13;
very rapidly through settlement&#13;
and business enterprise. The reported&#13;
Mexican scheme should dictate renewed&#13;
energy on the part of the business&#13;
men of the United States for the&#13;
capture of the increasing trade of&#13;
South America and the upbuilding of&#13;
a merchant marine that will stimulate&#13;
commerce between the main divisions&#13;
of the western hemisphere.&#13;
The Zeppelin airship, which was to&#13;
have descended at Munich, but was&#13;
J e#rrf4$'qif' by: a' gale/fcatoe down at&#13;
Difa^lfinS ; No hajm " resulted, bef££&#13;
u*e;th^ftf are piping tjjnes of peace.&#13;
But suppose that sort of thing were&#13;
to happen in war, and suppose the&#13;
place where an aerial ship put into&#13;
port was in the enemy's country!&#13;
However, the enthusiastic aeronaut&#13;
may not worry so much about the possibility&#13;
of becoming a prisoner of war.&#13;
That is likely to be a minor consideration,&#13;
weighed against the tremendous&#13;
chances of coming down to earth with&#13;
a thump so hard that it will make little&#13;
difference whether the landing&#13;
place is in the enemy's country or&#13;
not.&#13;
Evidently there is need for a school&#13;
of instruction for voters, says the&#13;
Springfield Republican. Many ballots&#13;
were spoiled In the recent primary&#13;
here. In the Fourth ward one man&#13;
did not pay any attention to the names&#13;
of the candidates on the ballot, but&#13;
wrote: "I vote for Allaman for mayor,&#13;
for Vogt for councilman, for R. Fred&#13;
WWte f 6 r school board, and I don't&#13;
give a famn for the rest." He even&#13;
dated the ballot.&#13;
There is not so-much livelihood of&#13;
a "holy war" in Morocco as there was.&#13;
The priest who went about inciting&#13;
such a conflict has been captured and&#13;
locked up, and for a while at least&#13;
therms ,wttl. he a cessation of attempts&#13;
by pretenders to get possession of the&#13;
throne. A holy war which leads to&#13;
jail ie neither inspiring nor promising&#13;
of success.&#13;
"Gypsy" Smith, the evangelist, tells&#13;
New Yorkers that if Christ came to&#13;
their city he would not go to fashionable&#13;
Fifth avenue cburcheR, but would&#13;
go Into the tenderloin and red light&#13;
districts, seek the unfortunates and&#13;
try to make their burdens lighter. But&#13;
if all the stories about New York are&#13;
true, there Is need of some scourging&#13;
of sinners in Fifth avenue temples.&#13;
ASST. POSTMASTER&#13;
WENT WRONG&#13;
NOW ALMA HAS A ttENBATJONAL&#13;
CASE T H A T STIRS UP&#13;
T H R T O W N ,&#13;
FOOLISH AND CRUEL JEST&#13;
Soma Phasea of L i t * That Have&#13;
Hard Conditio** Umter Which tana*&#13;
cence Bears the Burden.&#13;
Assistant Postmaster Isaac Fink, a&#13;
general favorite among; his townsmen,&#13;
haa been found $1,966/7T **hort in his&#13;
account* by Inspector Crookson, fotr&#13;
lowing a three days' inspection of the&#13;
postoffice at Alma. Fink made affidavit&#13;
that he alone was responsible'for the&#13;
shortage in the Alma postoffice. He&#13;
said that he alone bandied the money&#13;
and made up the accounts. Postmaster&#13;
C. F. Brown trusted bis a'sdistant implicitly.&#13;
The postmaster disclaims all&#13;
knowledge of crooked work in his office.&#13;
Fink has been connected with the&#13;
Alma postoffice since 189ti. He is 30&#13;
years old. On being taken to Saginaw&#13;
he waived examination and was bound&#13;
over to the United States district court&#13;
of Bay City by Commissioner Brooks.&#13;
He was later released on ¢5,000 bonds,&#13;
with two securities.&#13;
lvove of the gay life, flimsy purpose&#13;
and temptation have swung the balance&#13;
against moderate means in the&#13;
case of Fink, who is a self-confessed&#13;
embezzler to the extent of $1,96«.77.&#13;
This sum may prove to be but nominal.&#13;
Ugly rumors of the mysterious&#13;
disappearance, some time ago, of a&#13;
16,000 shipment of gold are being revived.&#13;
The old story of the misery a man's&#13;
misstep brings not only on himself,&#13;
but on his dear ones, i« exemplified in&#13;
the pledging by his mother of her little&#13;
home—her all—to save her son from&#13;
a cell. Fink's popularity is attested to&#13;
by the fact that a number of business&#13;
men have clubbed together and made&#13;
good the shortgage named, so that his&#13;
bondsmen will not lose through his&#13;
dishonesty.&#13;
Wrecked His Life Dream.&#13;
Because of a foolish and unintentionally&#13;
cruel jest on the part of his&#13;
comrades, Andrew Johnson, of Esoanaba,&#13;
a sailor, is a gibbering lunatic&#13;
now, after he had been almost overcome&#13;
with joy.&#13;
Johnson, who was one of the crew&#13;
of the steamer May wood, had just received&#13;
a $1,000 draft from his early&#13;
home in Finland wherewith to buy a&#13;
farm—the dream of his life. In an&#13;
unguarded moment the simple-minded&#13;
tar showed it to his companions, whonot&#13;
only said it was bogus, but jollied&#13;
him about being a "sucker"' until re&#13;
burned the draft by holding it to a&#13;
lighted cigar.&#13;
When he found out that he had&#13;
been made Ihe victim of a joke and&#13;
that the draft had been a good one,&#13;
Johnson became violently insane and&#13;
tried to leap over Ihe side of the boat&#13;
tagt night. He was put in a stralghV&#13;
jacket and taken to an asylum.&#13;
Shot in Jealous Rage.&#13;
Jealous of the place held by Floyd&#13;
Ketehum in the affections of Mrs. Ida&#13;
Fredenburg, a pretty Battle Creek&#13;
widow, A. K. Mueller shot the former&#13;
three times and also tried to kill the&#13;
woman, The shot fired at Mrs. Fredenburg&#13;
just grazed her body, lodging&#13;
In a door. Ketehum ran for refuge, after&#13;
being shot twice, to the home of&#13;
Mrs. George Hess, locking the door as&#13;
he entered. But Mueller followed,&#13;
broke down the door and fired the&#13;
third and doubtless fatal shot. Both&#13;
men roomed at Mrs. Fredenburg's&#13;
house. Ketehum is 27 years old, Mueller&#13;
45. the widow 40.&#13;
Ketehum stated to Dr. W. S. Ship&#13;
that there was no rivalry for Mrs.&#13;
Fredenburg.&#13;
"I don't know why he shot me,"&#13;
said Ketehum.&#13;
Nurse Commits 8uicide.&#13;
Taking a bottle of carbolic acid&#13;
/rom the dispensary of which she had&#13;
charge and swallowing the poison so&#13;
carefully that her lips were not&#13;
burned, then lying on the hed With&#13;
her hand on a newspaper to give the&#13;
impression she had fallen asleep while&#13;
reading, Miss Esther Keller, aged 25,&#13;
a pretty nurse of the Northern Michigan&#13;
asylum for the insane, committed&#13;
suicide.&#13;
There is no known motive for her&#13;
deed. The girl was engaged to a well&#13;
known local young man. She was a&#13;
graduate of the local trafnlng school&#13;
for nurses and had been with the&#13;
aRylutn several years before that. Her&#13;
clothes had all been packed and in&#13;
her bank book was found a check for&#13;
all deposits, drawn in favor of her&#13;
mother, who lives in Kalkasa.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
Great Britain is discovering 1 hat. the&#13;
-new wire-wound 13-Inch guns designed&#13;
to throw shells 18 miles cannot with&#13;
stand the strain of discharge. Crack"&#13;
develop in the tubes and the guns be&#13;
come dangerous. IR the gunner reach&#13;
ing ths Hmft of his ability to drive&#13;
heavy minrsilea over long distances or&#13;
through armor plating? _..&#13;
Jealous Husband's Crime.&#13;
Jealousy growing out of the impression&#13;
that George BurriH MrKinncvn, 31,&#13;
of Mooretown, Ont., across the river&#13;
from St. Clair, had been too friendly&#13;
with his wife, led Capt. Ralph Pringle,&#13;
a. well-known ve?selman, to send three&#13;
bullets into the body of the former&#13;
at 12:30 o'r'nrk Sunday morning. Mc-&#13;
Kinnon died Sunday afternoon. Pringle&#13;
Is in jail at Port. Huron.&#13;
Ill health and despondency are&#13;
given as the reasons why Oliver Mother,&#13;
axed 98. a farmer living near Stanton,&#13;
killed himself by banging.&#13;
Lou B. Winsor. grand treasurer of&#13;
the grand lodge, F. ft A. M.t who bas&#13;
been critically ill at his home in Raid&#13;
City, is reported as recovering.&#13;
Because William F. MaJlo, a saloonkeeper,&#13;
hit him in the face and broke&#13;
hU nose, he alleges, Joseph F. Weber,&#13;
of Kalammoo, is seeking $300 damages.&#13;
Asked regarding bis Intenttoas of&#13;
running for 8enator Burrows' seat in&#13;
the United States senate, Gov. Warner&#13;
said fee had no idea of being a candidate&#13;
next year.&#13;
The department commander of the&#13;
O. A. R. has issued official notices,&#13;
designating Monday, Hay 31, as&#13;
Memorial day, as May 30, the regular&#13;
date, falls on Sunday.&#13;
While suffering from an attack of&#13;
periodical insanity, James Kadloc, a&#13;
wealthy farmer of iatUe. River, hung&#13;
himgelf in his barn. .His body was&#13;
found b j members of the family.&#13;
James £ . &gt;Vincent, business partner&#13;
of Arthur Hill, denies the report that&#13;
Mr. H i l l l ^ i n a critical condition, and&#13;
say8, that the latter wJU return to&#13;
Sagfrtaw'tne latter part of this week.&#13;
The convention of the Knights and&#13;
Ladies' of Honor indorsed a plan t»&#13;
build a state home, t o ! cost $35,000.&#13;
Detroit, Grand Rapids and - Saginaw&#13;
are mentioned as locations for the&#13;
building.&#13;
The Michigan &amp; Ohio Railroad Co.&#13;
has applied for a franchise to run its&#13;
lines through Ann Arbor. The p.an&#13;
is to build a line from*Toledo to Ann.&#13;
Arbor and later to extend it to Whitmore-&#13;
lake. ' "&#13;
Charles Featherstone, of Grant, died&#13;
In Butterworth hospital as ttfe result&#13;
of having been struck in the eye by&#13;
a splinter while he was chopping wood/&#13;
A tnooci vessel was ruptured when the&#13;
silver struck the optic.&#13;
According to an .opinion-,, banded&#13;
down by Attorney General Bird,\the&#13;
residents of any county have a voice&#13;
in the makirg, of special local laws for&#13;
the protection of deer, in addition to&#13;
the general laws now in force^.&#13;
Vicksburg council, at a recent meeting,&#13;
voted to accept saloon bonds only&#13;
from local men, thereby shutting out&#13;
the several Battle Creek men who&#13;
were driven out there by local option,&#13;
and' had decided to locate in Vicksburg.&#13;
James Freelmane, the fourth of the&#13;
quartet charged with robbing the&#13;
HUUdale poBtoftice, was sentenced to&#13;
from sev* a and one-half to fifteen&#13;
years in Marquette prison, The other&#13;
three are now serving sentences In&#13;
Jackson. ^&#13;
While returning'from Mupkegon on&#13;
a Perc,, Marquette train. Harold Shaw,&#13;
14, of Big Rapids, abstained injuries&#13;
that'will disfigure1 him for life. A&#13;
transom broke over his head and falling&#13;
glass cut several severe gashes in&#13;
his face.&#13;
What is said will be the third&#13;
largest plant manufacturing explosives&#13;
In the United States will be that&#13;
which it is officially announced will&#13;
be established in the Michigan copper&#13;
mining district. It will produce dynamite&#13;
only.&#13;
Hamilton Reeves, superintendent of&#13;
the grounds and buildings of the IT.&#13;
of M., was badly Injured when ah. assistant&#13;
who had gone up a tree lo&#13;
place ft rope preparatory to pulling It&#13;
down, fell, landing on Mr. Reeves'&#13;
head and shoulders.&#13;
Jacob Green, of Swartz Creek, took&#13;
a large dose of laudanum and then&#13;
went to a doctor asking that the latter&#13;
write to Green's mother, telling her&#13;
that her son was dying. The doctor&#13;
used a stomach pump instead of a&#13;
pen, and Green will live.&#13;
Mrs. Belle Hazard, whose mother,&#13;
Mrs. Bertha Ziegler, rushed into Lansing&#13;
police headquarters and declared&#13;
that the former was stolen or had met&#13;
with an accident, was found after an&#13;
hour's search by the police, at work&#13;
in the cellar of the home.&#13;
Fred Shaw, 28, of Gardendale, owes&#13;
his life to his shepherd dog "Rove,"&#13;
whose faithfulness a few days ago in&#13;
dragging him from the track, where&#13;
he lay sleeping, saved his master&#13;
from being ground to death beneath&#13;
the wheels of a Grand Trunk train.&#13;
Phil Eichhorn, of Port Huron, who&#13;
was recently robbed of all his rnoi%,&#13;
at Salt Lake City, while on ft trip to&#13;
California, and had to borrow money&#13;
to get home, has received a check for&#13;
$100 from the Pullman Car Co., as the&#13;
robbery occurred in one of their cars.&#13;
Charles Leonard, of Kansas City,&#13;
who has been contesting the will of&#13;
his brother, John, of Flint, did not&#13;
appear in court at. the hearing and&#13;
the estate, valued at $5,000, goes to&#13;
John CaHahan, a saloonkeeper and&#13;
one of the rloseRt friends of the dead&#13;
man.&#13;
Though John Mann, a Nile* hotelkeeper,&#13;
drove an automobile the 12&#13;
miles to South Bend in 20 minutes,&#13;
in an effort to reach the bedside of&#13;
his wife who was dying as the result&#13;
of an operation, he was too late, she&#13;
having died a few minutes before hffl&#13;
arrival.&#13;
William Miller, charged with the assault&#13;
of Roadmaster Chas. Yazel, of&#13;
the Flint &amp; Saginaw road, was placed&#13;
under $1,000 bonds in Saginaw and&#13;
will be tried April 29. The injured&#13;
man is recovering rapidly, and no serious&#13;
results of the beating are anticipated.&#13;
Benjamin F. Earl, the new mayor of&#13;
Niles, is beginning hin reign most&#13;
strenuously. He recently declared&#13;
that no prlvste concern could last a&#13;
y«ar if it were run on the same plan&#13;
as the affairs of the city. He promises&#13;
reforms and the strictest enforcement&#13;
of the law.&#13;
AND THE TARIFF&#13;
CONGRESSMAN DENBY W H I L E IN&#13;
D E T R O I T TALKS OF T A R I F F&#13;
BILL.&#13;
TRADE WITH CANADA&#13;
Thinks the Payne Bill a Good On* and&#13;
That There 1« No Use to Talk of&#13;
Reciprocity With Canada.&#13;
• I . . •! «&lt;&#13;
Rep. Edwin Denby, who has bean&#13;
spending a few days In Detroit, has&#13;
this to say of the tariff bljl:&#13;
"It is impossible to say exactly wfcen,&#13;
the bill will be passed by congress and&#13;
signed by the president. The senate&#13;
has no power to make rules by which&#13;
to end debate, and if aeaators desire&#13;
the debate can be continued all summer.&#13;
UN is generally understood, how:&#13;
ever, that the senate does not car*;to&#13;
tafce a. very lung time over,the bill,&#13;
and will probably end its deliberations&#13;
about the jniddle of May. Then the&#13;
bill will go to a conference of the&#13;
committees of the two houses and&#13;
probably the conference will last "1Q&#13;
days or so. Then It tflll have again to&#13;
be brought before both houses and the&#13;
conference reports accepted and the&#13;
bill finally passed. I hope this wtil be&#13;
done before June*! and that the bill&#13;
•Will tlien .become &amp;.U*w. ^&#13;
"I think it 'yml hi fy *tee maiin a&#13;
good bill. A&gt;g*e%t ma*y Jlitereate &gt; $ !&#13;
be dissatigj$edj of cawwa&gt; aa it is impossible&#13;
fonjajasa.all J» so complicated&#13;
a matter, as/itne. tariff, particularly&#13;
wheft. as lb-thisi instance, importer&#13;
And domestic prodiice'r are diametric.- a l l v ,?f*QWd 'ia ty*jf views of what&#13;
the JfciHf sndultl be. /&#13;
"The conference here on" trade relations&#13;
with Canada, will, I hope, result&#13;
beneftciailyi. .We are alf theoretically&#13;
in tnvor of reciprocity with Canada,&#13;
but T have not yet found one merchant&#13;
or manufacturer who was willing&#13;
that the tariff on the article which he&#13;
produced on in which he dealt should&#13;
be1 reduced In consideration of Canadian&#13;
tariff on some other article. The&#13;
time has comfe to be specific irt this&#13;
matter. If we can inform four lejfcciretary'of&#13;
state that the American people&#13;
are willing that,the tariff shall be reduced&#13;
or removed entirely from certain&#13;
specified articles, he may approaclr&#13;
the, Ottawa government with&#13;
something-In his hamfl^to trade, with,&#13;
but it IS perfectly useless to itake reel&#13;
procity as a policy* any longer. Canada&#13;
was-at o a a » &amp; $ $ witHog ,«nd aa*ious&#13;
to make advatfcfs to, us in.fhls regard,&#13;
but that day haa passed. We have by&#13;
Our tariff polfey^fle* iu creating on&#13;
our northern bordefc.DK© ol bur strongest&#13;
potential trade^cd^^Uara.^ r A,&#13;
great empire is g r f f P m g ^ | j q y ¢ 1 an&#13;
industrial as well as^a;JM9tJc«»lm&#13;
pire, and the question o f t h e tfifopei&#13;
relation between this country MTtf that&#13;
is one of an importance that cannot&#13;
be exaggerated.&#13;
"I believe general conditions In the&#13;
United States today are excellent. The&#13;
business of the country appears to bo&#13;
thriving, and when the tariff is settled&#13;
whether the manufacturers like it ot&#13;
not, they will quickly adjust them&#13;
selves to whatever it contains a*nd&#13;
business will progress by leaps and&#13;
bounds. I see no reason for doubting&#13;
that we are on the eve of an industrial&#13;
revival and at the beginning o/&#13;
an era of prosperity."&#13;
HSS5555-5S55-&#13;
FINS PAfD.&#13;
r«*at 0ftg4i|Mrl/^ooawijrom an&#13;
Oil Company.,&#13;
v T h * 9?*1 chapter in "the ijtiuitioxi&#13;
*Mke state'el Texas 'tgaanit the w » -&#13;
ttus-Pferce Oil Co., the payment of&#13;
probably the largaat t n « ever aaaaaaad&#13;
against., a corporation, nearly 92,009,-&#13;
000, waa paid Saturday afternoon, Two&#13;
big touring c a n , bagging officials, repreaentatlves&#13;
of the oil company and!&#13;
officials of tfce-'statt. b§fi a part In th*&#13;
transfer or the money from the sev-&#13;
«f«J fcaaaavt? Iba-atata treasury,&#13;
, F-ram the Americas National&#13;
o c a i s t f ot fre^bttai :amoont, in&#13;
Agurtst t i O i ^ M V waa carried&#13;
livered. Then at breakneck aj*«i tht&#13;
two cart were d/lvefi to th£&#13;
National, bank, .and. a afcUs/&#13;
o r currency taken on. Then ^earne another&#13;
recbrd-b^eaiinf ran up Congress&#13;
avenue to the capitol, a distance of&#13;
i eight blocks.&#13;
In o n * telescope, H. &gt;.. Wree, vicepresident&#13;
of the first nataed 'banal carried&#13;
its. cjuiafiity in bUla of different&#13;
^denominations, up the capitol steps.&#13;
rSheriff'tefctthews followed with another&#13;
,&gt;and in turn each of *ne-party conveyed&#13;
a part of the automobile's load,&#13;
Vtiit&amp;eut Hoppeir, of. the A u s t i n Na-'&#13;
tional bank, being among the last to&#13;
alight with flto0,000.&#13;
When the fine bearers reached the&#13;
treasury department, doors, were&#13;
locked and Attorney General Davidson&#13;
and. jother officials were sent for,&#13;
the- money counted and -the litigation&#13;
which has been foungb-t In courts of&#13;
every degree was ended.-&#13;
•The fine was paid With 718 $1,000&#13;
bills, 160 $10 bills and t|'e remainder&#13;
in smaller currency. /Of the total&#13;
amount the state is enriched by $1,-&#13;
71«,266.20 and Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
Beady will receive the balance as his&#13;
fee.&#13;
TIDE OF BLOOD.&#13;
The Unspeakable Turk Makes an In&#13;
discriminate Butchery.&#13;
The entire population of Kirikan, located&#13;
between Aleppo and Alexan&#13;
dretta, even unto the -laBt babe, has&#13;
been massacred. The French mission&#13;
at Ekbaz is besieged by fanatical&#13;
Moslems. The Armenian village oi&#13;
Deurtyul la surrounded, and according&#13;
to a messenger who crawled&#13;
through the Arab lines at night and&#13;
made his way to Aleppo for help, the&#13;
situation there is hopeless. The build&#13;
ings on the edge of the town already&#13;
were in flames when he escaped.&#13;
The massacres are being carried oul&#13;
with the greatest violence. Neither&#13;
women nor children are spared. The&#13;
motto of the Moslem is "no twig oi&#13;
the accursed race shall be suffered to&#13;
live."&#13;
The Armenians, recognizing that&#13;
the massacres have been organized&#13;
and carried by adherents of the Old&#13;
Turkish regime, are looking to the&#13;
Young Turks for future protection.&#13;
Five American women missionaries&#13;
are In danger in Hadjlm, In the vilayet&#13;
of Adana, Asiatic Turkey. One&#13;
of them, Miss Lambert, has sent a&#13;
message down to the coast, asking&#13;
for immediate help. The women are&#13;
entirely alone and defenseless.&#13;
The villages surrounding Hadjim&#13;
are In flames, and Hadjlm itself is inrested&#13;
by Nomad tribesmen. Messages&#13;
from the interior are being suppressed&#13;
by the authorities.&#13;
FLASHES FROM THE WIRE&#13;
The house of representatives of the&#13;
Missouri general assembly defeated a&#13;
measure taxing corporations 2o cents&#13;
for each $1,000 of capitalization.&#13;
The government has entered into&#13;
an agreement with the Standard Oil&#13;
company, whereby each is to be?ir haK&#13;
the expense of printing and binding&#13;
the testimony taken *in the St. Louis&#13;
casrs. The testimony and other matter&#13;
connected therewith will fill 20 or&#13;
21 volumes of 500 pages eRch. Tb*&#13;
cost will be between $20,000"ond $2/).-&#13;
OOfl it is said.&#13;
Sultan a Prisoner.&#13;
After a battle lasting from dawn&#13;
Saturday to noon, in which thousands&#13;
on each side were killed, the constitutionalists&#13;
are in complete possession&#13;
of Constantinople.&#13;
The sultan is a prisoner In his palace,&#13;
though part of the garrison still&#13;
holds out.&#13;
The Young Turks attacked the city&#13;
from two sides.&#13;
The larger force marched from San&#13;
Stefano Into Stamboul and captured&#13;
the bridges over the Golden Horn without&#13;
much resistance. The other column&#13;
moved against the Ylldiz Kiosk and&#13;
met with little opposition until they&#13;
approached the barracks of Tashkischla&#13;
and Taxim, near Pera.&#13;
Here they were met by a hot fire&#13;
from the loyalist troops, who disputed&#13;
possession of the barracks with obstinate&#13;
fury. The fusilade of small&#13;
arms was reinforced by quick firing&#13;
guns. Parties of the defenders had&#13;
barricaded themselves In houses.&#13;
Street fighting by detached numibers&#13;
became general, and hand to hand encounters&#13;
with bayonets were frequent.&#13;
President, Taft has promised to come&#13;
to Chicago on June 7 to attend the&#13;
national conference on criminal law&#13;
and criminology, if congress adjourns&#13;
in time.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
' Detroit'.—.Cattle—Extra di y-f'nrt steers&#13;
and heifers, $15.7S@)6.30: "steers and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1.200 lbs. |5.C0fS&gt;5.75; fltecrs&#13;
and heifers. 800 to 1,000 lbs. |5©8.3&amp;;&#13;
steers and heifers that ore fat, 50» to&#13;
700 lbs. $4.60(S5.10: choioe fat cows,&#13;
$4.r»0©4.8D; good tut cows, |4@4.30;&#13;
common cows, $3@3,75; cannera, $2$&#13;
2.25; choice heavy bulls. 14.50; fair to&#13;
good bolognas, bulls, ft®4.25; stock&#13;
bulls. $3.50&lt;$4: chofce feeding steers,&#13;
800 to 1.000 lba, M.5B®5; fair feeding&#13;
steers. 800 to 1.000 lbs, $4@4.50; choice&#13;
Htockers. 500 to 700 lbs, |4.25&amp;4.fi5;&#13;
fair fltockern, 500 to 700 lbs, $3.75@4;&#13;
stock heifers, $3.26 03,75; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, 145055;&#13;
common milkers. |25@40.&#13;
Veal calve*—Market steady with Yflj*&#13;
Friday, 60c lower than last Thursday.&#13;
Bent, $«.25©fi.7&amp;; others, $3.60^6.&#13;
Milch cows and springer*— Steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Market steady at&#13;
laat week's prices. Best lajnbe, $6.(50©&#13;
6.80; fair to good lambs, $5.60©«,26;&#13;
light to common lambn, $4®5; wool&#13;
lamba, $708; fair to good nheep. $4.50&#13;
¢5: culls and common, $2.50@3.50; best&#13;
fall clips, $7; spring ItimbS," $1:) per&#13;
hundred.&#13;
Hogs—Market lflc »'&gt; 1 ^ htjrher than&#13;
last waek. Hang-* of prices: Light to&#13;
good butchers, fr.25®7.35; pigs. $$.50,-&#13;
light yorkers, $«.8507.50.&#13;
Ea*t Buffalo.—Cattle—Best export&#13;
&amp;teera. $«(©«.50: best 1.200 to 1,300-lh&#13;
Rt«rs, $5.?6G&gt;6.25; beat 1.000 to 1.200-lb&#13;
Shipping sseer*, $5.5005.75; best fat&#13;
cows. $4.5005: fair to good. $3.75&lt;@4-&#13;
trlmraen, $2.50®2.7G; light fat heifers,&#13;
$4®4.25; bent bulls, $4775^5; bologna,&#13;
bull*. $*,*!5©4; beat feeding is terra. $4.50&#13;
&lt;8&gt;4.75; best stockera. 14.25.®4.50; common&#13;
atockern. $3.50©S.7S. The rows sold&#13;
about steady with laat week's pHceu*&#13;
bent cows, $4R@5r.; common, $30035.&#13;
Hogs—Market *stflady; hiftvy, $7.35»&#13;
7.45; few at $-7,*Q; yorkers. $7.25©7.30;&#13;
plgn, $«.65®«.75; roughs. $e.30fi&gt;6.40&#13;
Pheep—Market slow; woo* la&#13;
&lt;5&gt;8.1Q; beat cltppsd lambs,- $6.¾&#13;
fair to good, $6.2&amp;@6.7»; culls.&#13;
5.76; yearling*, $5.Tfi@6; wetbe&#13;
5.25; ewes. $4.50@4.75.&#13;
Calves—Lower at $4.r&gt;OQ7.75.&#13;
Orals, Etc.&#13;
Detroit.—Wheat—Cash No. 2 rafi.&#13;
$1.39 bid; July opened with a drop of&#13;
%c at $1.18¼. declined to $1.14¾. artvanced&#13;
to $1.145¼ and nloacd at $1.13;&#13;
Srptemher opened !&lt;• off at $1.08¾. lost&#13;
to $1..0 7 antf closed at&#13;
$1.::1.: Nn. 1 white,&#13;
l?,c; No. ;! -yellow,&#13;
3 w h i t e . 2 at&#13;
1)1^8 n t&#13;
2c, advanced&#13;
$l.0fiVi; Xo. :; red,&#13;
$1.30.&#13;
Cnrrn—Cash Nn.&#13;
74c.&#13;
oats-—Cash Nn.&#13;
67»£o.&#13;
Itvp—Cosh No. 2, SSc b!d.&#13;
Heans—Cash and May. $2.50.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot. 50&#13;
$:..80: Octoher. 100 btijr* n; $'&gt;.&amp;(); M-or-h,&#13;
$«.6:1 nominal: snmp!c, 2.". l).t!?&lt;» ;»t ;5.r&gt;0&#13;
2fl a&gt; $ri.25, T. nt $.*&gt;; namplc alslke. t&#13;
hacs at $fl»2T.. .&#13;
Timothy seed—Prlrmi« spot, r.O bnR*&#13;
at I1.R6.&#13;
K'eed— In 1O0-". sack*, jobbing: lnts:&#13;
Rrnn. $2$; coarpe mlddltncTH. S2n: line&#13;
middling*, $30; rmrkerl enrn nnd coarM*&#13;
cnrnineal. $-*!); e»«ni and cat chop. $27&#13;
per ton.&#13;
'" ! ri«ftf-^W**» Mrenlintrr ?&gt;atc&gt;it. $6.50;&#13;
orrllnarv patent, fiV2u slTAf^htu, lff.15;&#13;
lear. $«; »nrtS4T patent. ftt.*o, pum rye.&#13;
11*4 fiit ••! la wwi JMfcla* tot* .,&#13;
I ' I »&gt; 1» i 1 1 » -tr-&#13;
SERIAL&#13;
STORY&#13;
* r t&#13;
Several m i n u j ^ ejs&#13;
from one and auolner&#13;
.¾¾^ tnen&#13;
e'starlJeji&#13;
FT FFTS&#13;
By&#13;
lOY NOKTOlt&#13;
ouisnuno •« A. w«a,&#13;
nTTT WTTTTl&#13;
• Y N O P t l * .&#13;
'•Varaahju*- Fleets," a story of "what&#13;
might have happened," opens In waahlaittoa&#13;
with the United State* and Japan&#13;
near war. Guy HWieii aecretary of the&#13;
British emhasey, -and Mia* Norma Roberta,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberta, are&#13;
Introduced as lover*. Japan declares war&#13;
aad takes the Philippines. Quy HUlter&#13;
starts for England. Norma Roberts&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast&#13;
Hawaii Is captured by the Japs. All ports&#13;
are closed. Tokyo Jearna of misstoa Japanese&#13;
fleet England's fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears. The kaiser Is missing. King&#13;
Edward of Enjrlahd is confronted by Admiral&#13;
Bevlns of the United States. The&#13;
Dread naught, biggest of England's warships,&#13;
is discovered at an impassable&#13;
point In the Thames. The story now goes&#13;
bock to a time many months before the&#13;
war breaks out. Inventor Roberts exhibits&#13;
a metal production. This overcomes&#13;
friction when electrified and is to&#13;
be applied to Vessels. Roberts evolves a&#13;
creat flying machine. The cabinet plana&#13;
a radioplane war against Japanese. The&#13;
atart is made for the scene of conflict.&#13;
After maneuvering the airships descend,&#13;
and by use of strong magnets lift the&#13;
warships, one by.one, from the sea. The&#13;
vessels are deposited in the United States.&#13;
The British fleet accepts American hospitality&#13;
and is conveyed to the United&#13;
States. The kaiser Is taken on a trip—&#13;
his first visit to America—thus accounting&#13;
for his disappearance. King Edward&#13;
is brought to America on a radioplane&#13;
for conference with the president. They&#13;
agree to work for world peace. Announcement&#13;
of the secret of the radioplane is&#13;
made in Central park. N«w York, to the&#13;
wonder of millions. The king meets his&#13;
men.&#13;
exclamations. ? 176* fjojn&gt; f&gt;f jstfflt&#13;
park, soaring ^above the tree* 'anfe&#13;
tfc*tlW&gt;eryr w i t * . stately f «reep, came&#13;
secret iwas out at last, and the American&#13;
officers s&amp;ve a frantic cheer,&#13;
which was joined iu by the English&#13;
men, and taken up by the crowd. As&#13;
if to' recognize 'their parting shouts,&#13;
the searchlights of the Roberts in dazzling&#13;
ripples of color flared suddenly&#13;
upwnirn and round'" in ftm-snnped&#13;
sweeps, which were finally directed&#13;
full trpon the streets below. At a&#13;
comparatively low altitude the craft&#13;
went slowly attcoss the city and headed&#13;
toward the Atlantic, while men&#13;
upon the pavements beneath took up&#13;
the cry, until from all sides windows&#13;
opened and the people rushed Into&#13;
the streets for a sight of this mysterious&#13;
aerial visitor. Reaching the lower&#13;
edge of the city, the radioplane shot&#13;
up «nd up until It was a speck of light&#13;
against the stars, took one last cir&gt;&#13;
d i n g flight, *no with marvelous&#13;
speed disappeared in the east. And&#13;
while America was gaining her- first&#13;
knowledge of this incredible flying&#13;
.machine, the Boberts was shooting&#13;
away in a long straight track for the&#13;
old world.&#13;
The king .had watched the sights&#13;
below as long as they were visible.&#13;
Through his glasses he had seen the&#13;
streets become filled with excited&#13;
CHAPTER XXII.—-Continued.&#13;
The British officers exchanged&#13;
quick side glances of relief. Bare&#13;
alone had the temerity to break into&#13;
an open smile of satisfaction. They&#13;
were not, then, to be censured by&#13;
their country, and the situation would&#13;
bear no disgrace. His majesty continued:&#13;
"You have unwittingly assisted in&#13;
reuniting the Anglo-Saxon race, I&#13;
hope, after Us separation of nearly a&#13;
century and a half. You have been&#13;
made involuntary guests by a man&#13;
whose friendship I esteem, and whom&#13;
I honor above all men. I refer to the&#13;
president of this nation, and I ask&#13;
that you remember him as kindly as&#13;
I do. Your countrymen will have no&#13;
just cause for criticising you or your&#13;
actions. Instructions will be sent you&#13;
In due time through the admiralty.&#13;
Until then you are to maintain patience.&#13;
I wish you good night."&#13;
With dignified grace he bowed to&#13;
them, took a step backward, turned on&#13;
his heel, and was going before they&#13;
grasped the significance of his speech&#13;
•or awakened from the wonder of his&#13;
unexpected visit to this alien land.&#13;
The clang of an elevator door recalled&#13;
them and stirred them to action.&#13;
They ran after him, rang for and&#13;
surged into the elevators, to debouch&#13;
on the street a minute later a group&#13;
of hatless men craving further explanations&#13;
and wishing to honor their&#13;
ruler. They crowded t o the edge of&#13;
the pavement beside which the motor&#13;
car was humming in readiness for its&#13;
start.&#13;
The king saw them coming, smiled&#13;
at their eagerness, and turned to&#13;
Bevins with a question which they&#13;
• could not hear. The American admiral&#13;
gave a laughing reply, and the&#13;
monarch leaned over te* Jimmy Barr,&#13;
who was standing on the curb close at&#13;
hand.&#13;
"My host, the admiral," the king&#13;
said, "says Jack of time prevents your&#13;
accompanying us. Otherwise we&#13;
•Jhould ask you to witness our em-&#13;
^Mrkation. We are returning to Lon-&#13;
^'efce on a radioplane to-night, and the&#13;
world's mystery is at an end. We&#13;
muBt say good nights"&#13;
- The lights of the hotel entrance&#13;
were full upon them, bringing out In&#13;
detail to the curious guests who were&#13;
gathering on the marble steps the&#13;
men with bared heads and the graybearded&#13;
English gentleman in the machine.&#13;
They saw him nod to the&#13;
chauffeur, who was looking back, saw&#13;
the latter turn to his work, and then&#13;
tho machine leaped away into the&#13;
broad drive toward the nearest park&#13;
entrance. And to the amazement of&#13;
the onlookers the men in uniform&#13;
stood at salute until the machine had&#13;
disappeared. Not even then dlrl they&#13;
disperse, but stood there silently&#13;
watching the skies. Pedestrians joined&#13;
the group, speculating as -to the cause&#13;
of this uniformed gathering.&#13;
"Hardly; but we dare take no&#13;
chances.&#13;
"What do you think it Is?"&#13;
"'„"1 ''don't know. A mlnuje or two;&#13;
ypjll tell If, they have seen us,"&#13;
' The king and his countrymen&#13;
fumbled for their glasses in the darkness,&#13;
found them, and , lined n themselves&#13;
up ' againat the Jransparept&#13;
port which had not been closed. The&#13;
cause of the sudden cautionary measures&#13;
was apparent. There, comparatively&#13;
far away, aijft high up against&#13;
the starlit sky, they .saw the blazing&#13;
line of a searchlight thrust up into the&#13;
darkness. It wavered uncertainly for&#13;
an Instant, and $hen slowly, as if feeli&#13;
p g its way, approached them. It&#13;
seemed uncertain and for a moment&#13;
disappeared. Their own machine had&#13;
come to a halt&#13;
For an instant .nothing was visible,&#13;
and then there leaped into^the air a&#13;
vertical beam of red. Beside it came&#13;
another steady ray of brilliant white,&#13;
and then to complete the color trio a&#13;
vivid shaft Of blue arrayed Itself beside&#13;
the other Jtwo. Outside in the&#13;
hood they heard a wild unrestrained&#13;
burst of cheering, and the cabin was&#13;
again flooded with light. The bid ad-&#13;
WirdA stepped hurriedly in, his face&#13;
aglow, and his cap in his hand.&#13;
"We have sighted the Norma, your&#13;
majesty, the craft which disappeared&#13;
with his imperial' majesty, the emperor&#13;
of Germany."&#13;
Before he bad finished speaking the&#13;
ducted by the king, they turned end&#13;
entered* the,'&lt;^$Eh Jfr&amp;ttton and Bovine&#13;
brought unktfe« ff*r'i At^cuwf end&#13;
of the table stood CbeuAmerican'secrery&#13;
oj state, and beside him were the&#13;
line minister* fll England and the&#13;
W H A T COLORS S H A L L I USE?&#13;
This Question i s lmportafK4ii-#taJa$k»fl&#13;
a House or Other Building.&#13;
I&#13;
" T h e Soldierly Form of the Kaiser Appeared."&#13;
men, women and children, and their&#13;
shoutings had come to him faintly&#13;
above the hum of the dynamos. The&#13;
glimmerings of the great harbor&#13;
dimmed and died away, and here and&#13;
there could be descried the lights of&#13;
the slow steaming patrol ships keeping&#13;
the outpost watch upon the sea.&#13;
When the last sign of life had vanished,&#13;
he turned to his companions in&#13;
silence, thinking of all that had taken&#13;
place within the few recent hours.&#13;
Only a short time ago they had entered&#13;
this aerial chamber, standing in&#13;
dread of the unknown terror of the&#13;
waters and the menacing silence of&#13;
this western continent they were leaving&#13;
behind. Only a few hours past&#13;
they had trembled at the powerlessness&#13;
of their nation and shudderingly&#13;
awaited the shock of invasion.&#13;
Now they were going back to England&#13;
bearing news that would upset&#13;
old ideas, remove all fear for the future,&#13;
and ally her with the most powerful&#13;
nation history had ever known.&#13;
They had sailed away furtively with&#13;
darkened ports, and were now returning&#13;
in a glare of white light, careless&#13;
of vwho might observe. Events had&#13;
followed each other in such remarkable&#13;
sequence, with such astounding&#13;
rapidity, that It wearied the mind to&#13;
follow them. The king was pondering&#13;
over the new situation when with&#13;
no preliminary notice every light in&#13;
the radioplane went out and they were&#13;
left in darkness.&#13;
From without and through the open&#13;
door came the voices of the admiral&#13;
and. ejigineev in conversation:&#13;
"It can't be an enemv."&#13;
signal calling hearers to the wireless&#13;
telephone buzzed insistently, and he&#13;
turned to answer. From the dome&#13;
above they could see answering lights&#13;
playing rapidly from their own craft.&#13;
They heard Bevlns talking to some&#13;
one excitedly, and peering once more&#13;
through the side ports saw they were&#13;
rushing onward to meet this other&#13;
traveler of the spaces. With decreasing&#13;
speed the two approached each&#13;
other, retaining their altitude high&#13;
above and "beyond sound of the sea.&#13;
Now they were floating abreast, and&#13;
finally, after a moment's tensity, they&#13;
came to a stop. Their metal sides&#13;
came together with an almost imperceptible&#13;
jar, and they adjusted themselves&#13;
for further communication.&#13;
Simultaneously their great ports&#13;
slid open, and the king, who had gone&#13;
to the companionway, saw the interior&#13;
of the other radioplane. Bevins and&#13;
Brockton in delight were shaking&#13;
hands and congratulating each other.&#13;
They talked for a moment, and then&#13;
the rear admiral retired from view.&#13;
Bevins turned to the king and said:&#13;
"Your majesty, the emperor of Germany&#13;
wishes to come aboard."&#13;
Before the king could give his assent&#13;
the soldierly form of the kaiser&#13;
appeared c/utlined in the light of his&#13;
own port, took a cautious step across&#13;
the threshold, and stood before the&#13;
men of England. Whatever doubts he&#13;
may have had of his reception wore&#13;
set aside by the hands outstretched&#13;
to receive him and the words of welcome&#13;
which tht? king hastened to give&#13;
him. The bulky form of the chancellor&#13;
came behind, and then, conof&#13;
I.tlif &gt;dnHr«ty.. % The chancellor&#13;
ponderously edged' his way forward&#13;
uutll he was near them, leaving the&#13;
king and his Imperial nephew ou the&#13;
opposite side ofthe table."&#13;
The visitors greeted and were presented&#13;
to the others, and then, for&#13;
&lt;he fraction? i£f * minuje, they all stood&#13;
confronting and expectant until the&#13;
king with his usual tact put an abrupt&#13;
end to the restraint by inviting all to&#13;
be s e a t e d and'asking for an explanation&#13;
of the accident The kaiser curbed,&#13;
his anxiety for news of developments,&#13;
and briefly recounted his adventure,&#13;
appealing now and then to Brockton&#13;
for details whlea he did not understand.&#13;
He concluded, and hesitated&#13;
for an instant In embarrassed silence.&#13;
Before be. could formulate the opening&#13;
question in a delicate subject the&#13;
Jking had again stepped into the&#13;
breech.&#13;
"The world will soon he at peace,"&#13;
he said meaningly, looking at his kin*&#13;
than. "We have come from a meeting&#13;
in America with the man who has&#13;
so decreed it, and I have had the&#13;
honor of joining him in plans for the&#13;
future."&#13;
"And Germany?"&#13;
"Will be glad."&#13;
"But her allotment?"&#13;
"The privilege of being one of the&#13;
foremost in the movement."&#13;
"With dignity and honor?"&#13;
"Yes, and with-an opportunity to&#13;
play her part voluntarily."&#13;
England's king, grave' and gray and&#13;
reading men from the serene heights&#13;
of long life and philosophy, had expected&#13;
a tempestuous outburst; but to&#13;
his contentment none came. He&#13;
studied the face of the ruler who had&#13;
gained a world-wide reputation for&#13;
warlike ambitions and constant truculence,&#13;
whose mailed fist had long&#13;
been clenched in readinesB for a blow,&#13;
and was surprised. No sign of storm&#13;
was apparent, but instead a calm and&#13;
placid pair of eyes stared back at&#13;
him.&#13;
In rapid sentences he told of the&#13;
president's design, which Great Britain&#13;
would accept and which she had&#13;
helped outline in detail, and closed by&#13;
predicting the results which would&#13;
follow. He talked low and earnestly,&#13;
leaning his elbows on the table before&#13;
him and addressing himself only to&#13;
the emperor. His summary concluded,&#13;
he straightened back into the hollow&#13;
of his chair and waited for the others&#13;
to speak.&#13;
The chancellor, who had been so intent&#13;
that he had never changed attitude&#13;
or expression, shifted his ;#aze&#13;
from the king to his sovereign, \&gt;ho&#13;
for a time sat wrapped in thought. As&#13;
if he had come to a quick conclusion,&#13;
he looked up and in three words expressed&#13;
his views, i t looks perfect,"&#13;
he said. The chancellor smiled, the&#13;
king looked satisfied and the prime&#13;
minister with a Bigh of relief gave a&#13;
quick sidelong glance at the American&#13;
secretary of state. The lord of the admiralty&#13;
was rubbing his hands.&#13;
"Germany asks nothing more than&#13;
fairness," the emperor aaid, "and I&#13;
think she will gladly accept and enter&#13;
into the conclave. It will upset her&#13;
more than any other nation perhaps,&#13;
because she is founded on military&#13;
form; but the whole world shall understand&#13;
that she permits no nation,&#13;
race or people to go beyond her in enlightened&#13;
methods." His stern expression&#13;
changed to one of warmth.&#13;
He smiled at some thought of his own&#13;
and continued:&#13;
"We all change, I suppose, as we advance.&#13;
I have learned that one may&#13;
have his ideas enlarged by accident.&#13;
I have known for many days what it ia&#13;
to be free to think, to learn profound&#13;
lessons in philosophy from the forest&#13;
and streams, and have come nearer to&#13;
men of the American nation than I&#13;
had ever hoped. I have formed new&#13;
friendships, and by the camp fires at&#13;
night have been given other views of&#13;
life, of men and humanity, by a most&#13;
admirable teacher."&#13;
He nodded his head toward Brockton,&#13;
paused for a moment and then&#13;
laughed aloud, "I caught a trout that&#13;
weighed nearly four pounds ant sHot&#13;
four caribou!" he chuckled.&#13;
At this incongruous termination of&#13;
his speech his hearers gasped, and&#13;
then waited for him to continue,&#13;
which he did in humorous vein, interspersed&#13;
with comments of graver&#13;
trend. And in this recountal of adventure&#13;
they read of his broadening. By&#13;
suggestion he conveyed to them that&#13;
he had gone away on a strange journey&#13;
wrapped in the cares and dignities&#13;
of position to be taught many lessonr&#13;
in democracy.&#13;
(TO BK CONTINUED.)&#13;
Not for the Poor Man.&#13;
The girl who doesn't take care of&#13;
her clothes is no wife for the poor&#13;
man; she needs some one who can&#13;
give her an unlimited dress allowance&#13;
and a maid to look after her, say3&#13;
Home Chat. There is another point.&#13;
If it is too much trouble to take caro&#13;
of her clothes before, it will be too&#13;
much trouble to take caro of her&#13;
house-keeping stores after marriage,&#13;
.with the result that a large part of&#13;
them axe wasted.&#13;
A proper color scheme is extremely&#13;
impoxtunt in painting a houjse, , It&#13;
S ^ ^ ^ L ^ g ^ ^ W t t J B ? i e t w o e n i a&#13;
really attracllfe nome and one . at&#13;
Which you wouldn't' take a -second&#13;
glance. And it makes a big difference&#13;
in the price the property will bring on&#13;
the market. ' '" "&#13;
As to the exterior, a good deal depends&#13;
upon the biae and architeeSore&#13;
of the b o u ^ t t f l d upon, 4t*L surroundings.&#13;
For a good-tafcei1ef|fc£eet» you&#13;
must consider the size of the rooms,&#13;
the light, etc. '&#13;
You can avoid disappointment by&#13;
studying the books of color schemes&#13;
for both exterior and interior painting,&#13;
which can be had free by writing National&#13;
Lead Company, 1902 Trinity&#13;
Building, New York, and asking for&#13;
Houseowuer's Painting Outfit No. 49.&#13;
The outfit also includes specificajioua,&#13;
and a simple instrument for testing&#13;
the purity of paint materials. Pure&#13;
White Lead which will stand the test&#13;
in this outfit will stand the weather&#13;
tost. Kaltoosi Lead, Company's famous&#13;
Dutch Boy Painter trademark&#13;
on the keg is a guarantee of that kind&#13;
of white lead.&#13;
COUNTRY IN MOVEMENT.&#13;
Meeting of National Association for&#13;
Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis&#13;
W i l l Be Largely Attended.&#13;
The fifth annual meeting of the National&#13;
Association for the Study and&#13;
Prevention of Tuberculosis will be&#13;
held in Washington, X». C , at the New&#13;
Willard hotel, on May 13, 11 and 15.&#13;
Owing to the present interest in the&#13;
campaign against tuberculosis, the&#13;
meeting will be of unusual Interest&#13;
and importance. The membership of&#13;
the national association now numbers&#13;
nearly 2,000, and is distributed in almost&#13;
every state in the United States.&#13;
The national association has also a&#13;
considerable membership in Canada,&#13;
Cuba, Porto Rico, Philippine islands,&#13;
and in several of the European countries.&#13;
Kx-President Roosevelt and&#13;
Dr. William Osier are honorary vicepresidents&#13;
of the national association.&#13;
Dr. Vincent Y. Bowditch of Boston is&#13;
the president; Mr. Homer Folks of&#13;
New York city, and Dr. Charles L.&#13;
Minor of Asheville, N. C„ are the vicepresidents;&#13;
Gen. George M. Sternberg&#13;
of Washington, D. C, is treasurer; Dr.&#13;
Henry Barton Jacobs of Baltimore, is&#13;
secretary, and Dr. Livingston Farrand&#13;
of New York is the executive secretary&#13;
of the asseciatlon.&#13;
A D O U B L E E V E N T .&#13;
\&#13;
Mrs. Highfiy—And has she really&#13;
got two servants?&#13;
Mrs. Flutter—Yes—one coming and&#13;
one going.&#13;
Practical Gain.&#13;
Teacher—Lennie, if you were to&#13;
take your father's ra*or and leave, the&#13;
steel blade open out in the grass overnight,&#13;
what would happen?&#13;
learned Lennie—it would get as result&#13;
oxidation of the steel or what is&#13;
commonly called rust.&#13;
Teacher—Quite right. Now, Willie,&#13;
if you would put your mother's diamond&#13;
ring in the fire, what result&#13;
would you get?&#13;
Wise Willie—I'd get a liekin*.&#13;
FOOD FACTS&#13;
W h a t an M. D. Learned.&#13;
A prominent. Georgia physician went&#13;
j through a food experience which he&#13;
j makes public;&#13;
I "It was my own experience that first&#13;
led me to advocate GraperNuts food&#13;
and I also know, from having prescribed&#13;
it to convalescents and other&#13;
weak patients, that the food i s a wonderful&#13;
builder and restorer of nerve&#13;
and brain tissue, as well as muscle. It&#13;
Improves the digestion and aide patients&#13;
always gain just as I did in&#13;
strength and weight very rapidly.&#13;
"I was in such a tqnr state that I&#13;
had to give up my work entirely, and&#13;
went to the mountains of this state,&#13;
but two months there did not improve&#13;
me; in fact I was not quite as well as&#13;
when I left home.&#13;
"My food'did not sustain me and&#13;
| it became plain that I must change.&#13;
j Then I began to use Grape-Nuts 'ood&#13;
and in two weeks I could walk a&gt; oiile&#13;
i without fatigue, and in five weeks&#13;
I returned to my home and practice,&#13;
{ taking up hard work again. Since that.&#13;
i time I have felt as well and strong as&#13;
' I ever did In my life.&#13;
"As a physician who seeks to help&#13;
i all sufferers, I consider it a duty to&#13;
make these facts public."&#13;
Trial 10 days on Grape-Nuts, when&#13;
1 the regular food does not. soem ro sustain&#13;
the body, will work miracles.&#13;
"There's a Reason."&#13;
Look Jn pkgs. for tho famous littlo&#13;
; book, "The Road to Wellville"&#13;
j Evf» read the above ietter t A net*&#13;
one Jivnenr* fr«vm time to time. Tt»e&gt;-&#13;
ar* tt+nnlne, true, and fall ot aniaaa&#13;
Interest.&#13;
Sue f itt&amp;ntg ityatek,&#13;
n ANDREWS 4 CO. PROPRICTO«6.&#13;
Old Boys and Girl*.&#13;
— — m* " i&#13;
THUBSDAY, APR 29, 1909.&#13;
The man who lias the most to&#13;
learn is the one who thinks he&#13;
knowe it all.&#13;
Thia is juut the tim« ot year when&#13;
you are most likely to have kidney or&#13;
bladder tronbla, with rheumatism and&#13;
rheumatic pains caused by weak kidneys.&#13;
Delays are dangerous. Get De&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder Pills, and&#13;
be sure yon get what you ask tor.&#13;
They are the best pills made tor back&#13;
ache, weak back, primary disorders,&#13;
inflamatioc oFrbe bltdder, tto. They&#13;
are antiseptic and act promptly. Sold&#13;
and recommended ly all dealers.&#13;
We have heard of more towns&#13;
dying from lack of enterprise than&#13;
from local option.—Fowlerville&#13;
Standard.&#13;
There is not a better Salve thao De&#13;
Witts Carbolized Witch Hazel salve.&#13;
Wo hereby warn the public that we&#13;
are not responsible tor any injurious&#13;
eflects caused from worth 'ess or poisonous&#13;
imitations of our DeWitts Carbolized&#13;
W^tch Haz&lt;! Sa've, the original.&#13;
It is good tor anything when a&#13;
salve is needed, but it is especially&#13;
good tor piles. Be sure you get De&#13;
Witts. Sold by all dealers.&#13;
Iu two or three generations the&#13;
decendants of Jas. A. P a t t e n / w i l l&#13;
acknowledge in shame that he&#13;
made his fortune by making bread&#13;
hard to get. There are some living&#13;
today who blush to admit that&#13;
their ancestors obtained their&#13;
wealth at the point of the pistol.&#13;
The hope of the world is in those&#13;
men who choose to remain poor&#13;
rather than bequeath * tainted&#13;
fortunes to their children.&#13;
We ptHftume that soma of you hat*&#13;
begun to think that ycu were never&#13;
to bear any more about the "Old Boys&#13;
and Girls" association, bat you are&#13;
mistaken. The time of the next meeting&#13;
was set tor August 1911, but that&#13;
is only two years away ani will soon&#13;
be here.&#13;
However this is not what this article&#13;
is written for, bat to inform yoa&#13;
about the money received the past&#13;
year and the expenditures. We have&#13;
started to make out the report several&#13;
times but something would bijMer&#13;
and then tor a week or two we would&#13;
forget It only to wake up some night&#13;
and wonder if we would ever think ot&#13;
it when awake, etc.&#13;
We find that after all has been paid&#13;
there is a good balance in the treasury&#13;
to start with. You will see that there&#13;
was quite an expense attached to the&#13;
getting the grove ready and cleaning&#13;
up again and there was uo picnic&#13;
tbeie. Well the committee had to&#13;
make their arrangements just the&#13;
same and it cost just as much as it the&#13;
picnic bad been held while the committe&#13;
) lost the sales of the privileges&#13;
which would have partly paid for the&#13;
expence.&#13;
The association is certainly in good&#13;
shape and with the hustling set of&#13;
officers now doinur service, we look tor&#13;
one of the "biggest times ever" in&#13;
1911. Keep your eye on the indicator&#13;
and make arrangements to visit the&#13;
"old home town" then. Come before&#13;
if you can but COME THEN.&#13;
RECEIPTS&#13;
On band Jan, 1, 1908,&#13;
Received from dues,&#13;
Total&#13;
$62.33&#13;
88.15&#13;
$150.48&#13;
EXPENDITURES&#13;
Swept Ovf r Niagara&#13;
•This terrible calamity often happens&#13;
beoanse a careless boatman ignores&#13;
the rivers warnings—growing ripnles&#13;
and faster current—Natures warnings&#13;
are kind. That dull pain or ache in&#13;
the back warns you that the kidneys&#13;
need attention if you wonld escape&#13;
fatal maladies—Dropsy, diabetes or&#13;
Brights disease. Take Electric Bitters&#13;
at once and'se* backache fly and all&#13;
your best feelings return. "After&#13;
long suffering from weak kidneys and&#13;
lame back, one $1 bottle wholly cured&#13;
me," writes J. R, Blankenship, ot Belk&#13;
TeDn. Only 50c at P. A. Siglers.&#13;
Pinckne? Dispatch&#13;
800 invitations and 800 env'p's 110.00&#13;
Letter heads 1.00&#13;
I Printing 500 ribbon badges 2.60&#13;
i Secretary&#13;
j Whithead &amp; Hoag, 500 buttons 11.00&#13;
j Express ou samel 1.10&#13;
Postage and mailing invitations 10.00&#13;
Extra postage foV 2 years 6.60&#13;
W W Barnard, bill 2.50&#13;
S^arthout &amp; I*iaceway 1.35&#13;
T e e p l e H d w d o 2.76&#13;
Jackson A, Oadwell .63&#13;
Work on Park 16.25&#13;
Unadilla Band 50.00&#13;
Total 115.68&#13;
Balance on hand f 34,90&#13;
If you need a pill take DeWitts Lit*&#13;
tie Early Risers. Insist on them,&#13;
gentle, easy, pleasant Little liver pills.&#13;
Sold by all dealers.&#13;
The Post Card.&#13;
Everybody wants the government&#13;
to run on in a proper and&#13;
efficient way, but nobody wants to&#13;
pay for it. Taxes in whatever&#13;
form thay come are never welcome.&#13;
What taxes buy for the&#13;
people is highly desirable—in fact&#13;
indispensible; but they are paid&#13;
grudgingly. Would be tax dodgers&#13;
are frequently in evidence,&#13;
but they are never so numerous&#13;
•ttd noisy as when Congress is reftdjotticg&#13;
the Tariff-Kansas City&#13;
Journal.&#13;
Word* To Freeze The Soul.&#13;
"Your son has consumption. His&#13;
case is hopeless." These appalling&#13;
words were spoken to Geo; E. Blevens&#13;
a leading merchant ot Springfield, N&#13;
C. by two expert doctors—one a lung&#13;
specialist. Then was shown the wonderful&#13;
power of Dr. Kings New Discovery.&#13;
"After three weeks use"&#13;
writes Mr. Blevens, "he was as well as&#13;
e\er. I would not take all the money&#13;
in the world for what it did to my&#13;
boy." Infailable for Coughs and&#13;
colds, its tbe safest surest cure of desperate&#13;
Lung diseases on earth. 50c&#13;
and SI at F A. Siglers. Guarantee&#13;
satisfaction. Trial bottle free.&#13;
N o other university in the&#13;
United States has as many students&#13;
upon the one Campus&#13;
t h e U n i v e n i t y of Michigan.&#13;
a*&#13;
The Post Card has come into&#13;
tremedous importance, especially&#13;
since the origin of sending pictorial&#13;
cards as souvenirs. Americans&#13;
are great producers of post cards&#13;
but they are facing foreign rivalry&#13;
of enormous proportions. This&#13;
haB moved the Postcard Manufacturers&#13;
and Allied Trades Protective&#13;
Assn. of the United States to&#13;
frame a demand on Congress for a&#13;
higher rate of duty than that imposed&#13;
by the tariff bill now pending.&#13;
The petitioners say: "The&#13;
value of importations is from $40,-&#13;
000 to $50,000 a day, and the&#13;
home production represents an investment&#13;
of many millions of&#13;
capital and the employment of&#13;
many thousands of workmen."&#13;
That is an interest which deserves&#13;
consideration, and when it is added&#13;
that a proper rate of duty will&#13;
assure a large revenue to the government,&#13;
which needs the money,&#13;
the proposition appeals still more&#13;
strongly to the American sense of&#13;
fair play.—Troy Times.&#13;
"I'd Rather Die. D^tor,&#13;
thin have my feet cut oft," said M. L.&#13;
Bingham of Princeville, III. Bat you'll&#13;
die from gangrene (whice had eaten&#13;
away eight toes) if you don't" said all&#13;
doctors. Instead he used Bucklens&#13;
Arnica Salve till wholly cured. Its&#13;
cures of Eczema, Fever sores, boils,&#13;
burns and Piles astound the world&#13;
25c at F. A. Siglers.&#13;
t«&#13;
Dainty&#13;
Enameled&#13;
Bedroom&#13;
What could be prettier or&#13;
more inviting than a dainty&#13;
bedroom with walls, furniture&#13;
and woodwork all enameled itiv&#13;
white or some delicate tint t6 few-,&#13;
monize nicely with furnishings and&#13;
draperies? Why not have one?&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
ENAMEL (Neil's)&#13;
gives that smooth, beautiful, genuine enamel surface&#13;
so sanitary and so easy to keep bright and attractive.&#13;
Anyone can apply it by following the simple directions.&#13;
juinar,&#13;
If it's a surface to be painted, enameled, stained,&#13;
varnished, or finished in any way there's&#13;
an Acme Quality Kind to fit the purpose.&#13;
THE: KIND) J. C. DINKEL&#13;
PINCKNF.Y MICHIGAN&#13;
9TMMS M VARHl-&#13;
First Mortgage Timber Bonds&#13;
qf Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company &lt;/ Grand Ra.pids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable eemi-annueJly&#13;
Mar. lat and Sept. 1st.&#13;
$500,000&#13;
Denomination* 1 Sl.OOO. $ 5 0 0 e*.nd $100.&#13;
Theec bonda an dated March 4th, 1909, and mature at the rata of $50,000 tach year, commeadag&#13;
March, 1911. They are subject to redemption at $105 at any interest period and carry the privilege&#13;
of rcgiatratioa aa to principle.&#13;
Traeteet T H E MICHIGAN T R U S T COMPANY. Grevrtd Rapida. Michigan. Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co,&#13;
9/ Gra.nd Rapids Michigan.&#13;
Cepitalisttion. $1,500,000. P a r Value $10.00. Bonda, $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property securing thit issue cenaitta of 31,63s acrea of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located oe&#13;
the southwest ahore of the Iiland of Vancouver, thirty milea up the Strait from the City of Victoria and&#13;
within iso milea of all important porta on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Vanceavef.&#13;
Mr. J. P. Brayton of Grand Rapida, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremoat timber&#13;
experts of the country haa examined thia tract of timber for ua and re porta a eland of more thai&#13;
8.100,000,000 feet. Therefore thia issue of bonda ia for leu than 20c per M ft. atumpage.&#13;
m The preaent equipment compute* a complete logging outfit, including Dock, Railway, Steam Toga&#13;
Rolling Stock, etc., capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S .&#13;
CKAa. W. LIKEN SRBKWAISQ, MiCBT.&#13;
Pre*., Huron Bay Lumber Co.&#13;
JL H. MOORS, SSATTI.R, WASH.&#13;
Ex. Supt. Motive Power, Chi., Bur. &amp; Q. R. R.&#13;
W. T. COLEMAN, a*&amp;rrt.K, WAaHivoraar&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska laveatment Co.&#13;
a. M. COCHRANE, Capitalist, 5BATT1.B, WASH.&#13;
WM. L. CARPENTER, - DRT*OTT, MICH.&#13;
Of the firm of Stevenson, Carpenter &amp; BuUel.&#13;
CHAS. A. PHBLPS, . OaAKD aUKM, atn&#13;
Timber Operator. Treas., Hackley-Pneipa-Bonoell&#13;
Co , Grand Rapida, Mich.&#13;
w. F. MCKNIGHT, Oaaxo sansa, at*&#13;
Pre*-, White River Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
H. B. CADWELL, . . Naw TO&#13;
Vice-President, Standard 8crcw Co., Detroit.&#13;
C T. MOORE,&#13;
Timber Expert and Mill Operator.&#13;
Wo offot thooo bonda at pair and aoeruod tntoroot to *told 69b.&#13;
•3 Privilege will be granted to aubacriben to thia iaaue of bonda to purchase an equal amount ef Heck ef&#13;
the company, q Putthtr information and proaptctuj showing phetographe of the property furnished on request&#13;
7 7 0 HNOSICOT BtmJMI&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
E. B. Cadwell &amp; Co.,&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS&#13;
See Our Pine bine of Post Cards&#13;
•&lt;r&#13;
T*r&#13;
&amp; * ! K V&#13;
. • , - » . r \ '&#13;
.'vv»^rt&gt;'.^«^jaif-wwi«j!»*v'«aw^*^/,jitWWffritt W * &gt;l»Vl lilfcVwi in *jj» H^jji'luiii'nifc^iL •»»ww »'umiii i M|&#13;
^&#13;
P P P ••!.... MV , H&#13;
f J. JIW ' I ! * » I 111,1 . jfc|l| l.| | &gt; W W ^ W | l &gt; i&#13;
S*?&#13;
J''&#13;
M *&#13;
1 " 7 —"J '&#13;
• 'a'&#13;
; * u » « v -&#13;
A Society Composition.&#13;
professor seated himself airily&#13;
* t t b * ptanc .ttml,*oBoua«&lt;*l in a f a r }&#13;
•fsM* Tfic*, "Song mitoudt VQ«ttft#&#13;
H t rendered a few dayman ffeurdsx&#13;
t B d the* Bertie Flippy toki|M«|~B*irth&#13;
tatgh afftreauiinif story,; aod a; bunch&#13;
of debuymtes in the c o r * * quarreled&#13;
About u huudBonie actor, m:&#13;
The professor routed, A /.'Soug mlt&#13;
•ordt*—i©ts of vordte," he corrected-&#13;
Fnck, f&#13;
Uses of Alcohol. AMJITIOIAI LOCAL&#13;
j M k&#13;
x n i&#13;
YEARS'&#13;
TRADC MARKS&#13;
g*C6tONS&#13;
COJ»TKIQHT3 &amp; C .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch aqd description ma*&#13;
quickly uncertain, our opinion free wbethe&#13;
invention la i*obably ¾». COtUtUUDlOS.&#13;
OOK on Patent*&#13;
iriug eatenta.&#13;
i &amp; Co. reoelve&#13;
Htbei catc A handsomely lltaatrated weekly. -&gt;)JtnMl circulation&#13;
of any acieatifleJournal. ^flOU,Q3j&#13;
rear; four month*. I N N &amp; Co, branch Ottoe. S» If&#13;
theriTia a t ' t h ^ 1 e i $ * *a ^gcxS&#13;
deal of £aik in ftbmka regarding&#13;
tbe saloon and its mission. I n&#13;
tbe country districts it is decreed&#13;
tbat if there are to be saloons tbey&#13;
must be few and far between. Tbe&#13;
Eustis (Neb.) News, wbile&#13;
acknowledging that alcohol will&#13;
- remove igifoiss Btaina from snmqaejr&#13;
clothes, says: "It will also rerodve:&#13;
8nmm^clotlres and also spring&#13;
and winter &lt;ift&gt;tbe8, not only from&#13;
the man who driuks it but also&#13;
;'|froin his wife and children. I t&#13;
will remove the household furniture&#13;
if QUI t h e house and&#13;
the eatablas from tbe pantry&#13;
and smite^ifrqrp Jthe face a t tbe&#13;
wife,-and.the happiness £rom his&#13;
homi*. Asa 'remover &amp;t tbiDgs&#13;
alcohol Ij.as few equals and no (Superiors.&#13;
"—Western Publisher.&#13;
rr - - .,-^ _ ^..... .&#13;
ttabecriOwlor tae-Piackiw Oiapatch.&#13;
m i i i . THE HIGH GRADE LEHR PIANO&#13;
M USED AND END0R8ID BY&#13;
T i t CraMl CMMffttary at Husk, New tor* ft*.&#13;
Tlw PsnMjrtaal* CoHefls &lt;* MuriC PhHsdetos*.&#13;
CMeuae testtrvttorf * Hlnsks* School of Opart,&#13;
The Pu«b*# pensamtory ot Mtw)e, Posblo,e©a».&#13;
A N D O T H I R LftADJNQ O O N S I R V A T O M f *&#13;
A •w—tfrthiflU—&gt; sad powerful tone, exquisKo&#13;
&lt;*ee, perfect adjttsteiea* and durable workmanship&#13;
nlaoe ft In the front rank of the best instruments mad©&#13;
to-day. It fa the Ideal piano An the home* where its&#13;
preaanoiss a sign of culture and refinement&#13;
TteXBHK PIANO is manufactured under stngtflatfrj SEWJMMO ooadllli MIS .w&#13;
tbe east Of production, and it has achieved a brilliantsuccees aa the most elegant i&#13;
In tbe market at S&gt; satisfactory price. WKITK FOB JMTAUKilTE AND&#13;
H. LEHR A COMPANY, Manurrs, * Easton, Pa.&#13;
Whit* lMW&#13;
Lostnuuent&#13;
PBXCB8.&#13;
•w&#13;
THE GIBBES PORTABLE SHINGLE MACHINE&#13;
WITH OR WITHOUT BOLTING ATTACHMENT. The cut shows machine wttti&#13;
20 inch Saw and Shingle Carriage,&#13;
ready lor cutting shingles&#13;
18 In. long, and,4 In, wide.&#13;
P r i c e $ 7 5 . 0 0 .&#13;
With 36 inch Bolting Saw and&#13;
Bol'lnc Carriage.&#13;
Price $25.00 extra.&#13;
This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
to 12,000 shingles per day.&#13;
Carriages made from selected&#13;
hard wood. Track Is solid&#13;
rolled steel. For cutting shingles&#13;
requires 4 to 6 H. P. For&#13;
bolting 8 t | 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
660 lbs.&#13;
IT IS A MONEY-MAKER * Fqnippec! with the bolting attachment it is a complete shingle outfit in iteelf. Can be adt&#13;
jiiMt-'ti for any desired taper or thickness. For euttiug the round log into shingle lengths, we&#13;
i. ' &gt;u 'uii'actur^ahiKhgrade.low priced drag saw machine. Send for circulars &amp; special net prices. GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
COLUMBIA; SOUTH CAROLINA.&#13;
E n g i n e s , « « t | » r f t , O a w » 4 l | I . M a o h l n e r y , E t o .&#13;
H o t t o r one was w n t to tbe ^ a u t y&#13;
JAII from Fowleryille last J?Q*k tor&#13;
being drank. A tew iettsojp likl thit&gt;&#13;
wiU take tbe fan oat ot tbat ki«B of&#13;
buMneus. '&#13;
It 18 evident tbajf1 Bill Stoddard,&#13;
ihtjnff, and Bill tlobb, p r o j e c t i n g&#13;
attorney, are a pair or Bii's wbo ,will&#13;
make violators bt the local optiot law&#13;
stop and take notice ot tbe sign board.&#13;
—Fowlervjlle Obber?er.&#13;
We beard rumors wbile in Howell&#13;
last week tbat tbe buildings to be va&#13;
catcd by tbe saloons there May i ,&#13;
were, eome of tnepa a | least, already&#13;
rented tor other parpoeeiTtnat will be&#13;
au advantage to Howell.&#13;
Tbe citizens of Webberville. are&#13;
btrivu^g every way to have tbat&#13;
town on the dry list. *Nearly 6very&#13;
town on this Bide of' Ingham county&#13;
has voted dry. Webberville seems to&#13;
be tbe place where saloomsts want to&#13;
locate. A petition is belntj circulated&#13;
there tor tbe council te refuse liquor&#13;
bouds—a new law makes tbis possible.&#13;
Fran* Mealeo, janitor of tbe fourt&#13;
bouse at Howell, died suddenly of&#13;
heart trouble Thursday of last week&#13;
while sitting in a chair in tbe jounty&#13;
clerks office. He bad been feeling as&#13;
well as usual during tbe day but bad&#13;
been doctoring for heart trouble lor&#13;
some time. He bad been janitor of&#13;
tbe county building ever since it was&#13;
erected and made many friends among&#13;
the officers and tbosu wbo have had&#13;
business there. He was 68 years pld.&#13;
She ?iwi«8 giapauh&#13;
rUHXJMMM&amp;WWWMBVamDAy B O W l l &gt; w * i&#13;
S lbecrlpttjpa JPriea $1 In Adv soce.&#13;
ftat*T«4 at tt^e Foetoace at Pineknej, MichUo'&#13;
if sacoacHlaae matter&#13;
AdverUf lug rate* made Jutown on appUc»tiou.&#13;
F R A N K . U. A N D R E W © &amp;, C O&#13;
Uftmrn mm MOMISTOMe.&#13;
C H U R C H E S .&#13;
/&#13;
MjjTMOlilBT Ifi^UKJOfAL (jaUKUM.&#13;
Kev.U.C.i-iiUejoba paator. 6ervic*»«v&gt;r.&#13;
buu0ay uiuruioK **• W:^&gt; *nu every &amp;uflc»;&#13;
eveulng et TiLWo'cAock. tiny«r meeting TbaU&#13;
day evenini(i». $&gt;uiday ecuuoi at ulos« otuioi.&#13;
lu^»ervice. Miut MAKY VAMFUUST, ttupt.&#13;
rr-- j-——TV"" • • ' - " ' ~ CAO-NLfUJiliAriOJSA^ CUUUCil.&#13;
,' Uev. A. U. Uatee pastor. Service tvt»i.&#13;
buouay uiuruiag at W:iJ and erery buuun,&#13;
evtmiag aW:0C t*'cijCJc. Jfrayer uieetio^ 'I uuii&#13;
day evening'', tsaaday dcuooi at cioae oi IUOII.&#13;
infiTeervke. Mrm iiiaoe Ccoiuot, ouyt,, J. A&#13;
Cadweii bee.&#13;
Elect FIC&#13;
8ucceed when everything .elet Wis.&#13;
In aervoua prostxadoo. anj^ (pmala.&#13;
weaknesses they are the supreme&#13;
remedy, as thousands have testified*&#13;
FOR K I D N E Y , L I V E R A H O&#13;
S T O M A C H T R O U B L E&#13;
it is the best medicine ever eoloT&#13;
over a druggist's counter.&#13;
r&#13;
t;T. MAKYTi 'JAl'MUJJA; OilUltOtt.&#13;
' Uev. M. J. Cuuuuuriord, i a e i o x . \&gt;«rviue&#13;
every Sanday. LOW UUUM at I:MJO'CHKI&#13;
iugJiauutB wuhBeriuoaat lU'^Ua. » . Caiecutcx.&#13;
.•ici:(X) p. ui., vuHpereau^ be. juicuon ui v :iti ^-&#13;
i i a C i t T l t S ;&#13;
fllhe A. O. U. SSocJeiy oi itua p u c e , u i e e u BVBI.&#13;
Xthird, bunday m i a e f'r. Mauaew Uali.&#13;
JbbnTuoiuey anu A. r. KnUy.Coumy Dmeaaici&#13;
ritBii W. C. T. U. uMMtd tiweeoondbaturday w&#13;
Xeach mouth at 4:&amp;J p. ui, at iuu bouica oi lUt&#13;
Kiaatben islvuryouuiuuixeaLed in tempexuuee m&#13;
coaUiaily iuvitou. Atu, Ut&amp;L ftigler, fiea. Aim&#13;
Jeunie JtUuton, ctetreiary.&#13;
X «jv&lt;uy tUifU aatuxuay oveuiug IU ifle n . ^-^&#13;
Lew HaU. Jubu i&gt;uuoiiue, i ruaiuou..&#13;
Up Before The Bar.&#13;
N . H. Brown, an attorney, ot Pittsfield,&#13;
Vt.t writes. "We have used Dr.&#13;
Kings New Lite pills for years and&#13;
find them such a good family medi&#13;
c ne we wouldn't be without them."'&#13;
For Chills, Constipation, Biliousness&#13;
or Sick headache they work w o n l e r s .&#13;
25c at F, A. Sifclers.&#13;
iy NiUHTa oif M.A»Jc;AbJs.b.S5.&#13;
JSaJkleeievery tf'tiauy evening uu ui uc.^.c ^u.&#13;
oi tue utoau at tueir uaUiu tiit&gt; a*afiuuai ui..t Vlbiung Orotbert&gt; ctrtooraiaii^ luviiea.&#13;
c, V. V&amp;uWinkltf, ftii ivuik,ui ^oiuu ciu&#13;
X«. f. aiurtdueon, - Kecord iLeept i&#13;
i . U. Jackttoa, - t'uiauce Ji.ctpei'&#13;
LWiagetou Lodge, iS'o.V'J.i? A.A. AL. l&gt;*0.u».&#13;
Comuiuuicatiou Tueaday BveuinK&gt;ou ur u c . u .&#13;
liioiull ut itie uioun. F. G. JacMSOu, V\ . ..&#13;
OUDifia OF iiAaT-bltiN siTAii uieeta each xuua .&#13;
the .Friday evenmg tohowiug tuo regui.ii i&#13;
A A. M. uieetiug, ilaoJStTTii VAUUUN, SV . JU.&#13;
O tXbEK OF MOi&gt;J£aN WOODMEN AUel i h t&#13;
uxat'i'uursday evening ot eauh Xuutii m iht.&#13;
ilaocabee uali. (J. L.Uniueb V. L'&#13;
f AD1JSS-OFTHE M A C U A B E K S . Jieet uvtrj lc&#13;
l j and drd Saturday oi each moutb at ^:ao p iu.&#13;
£7(). T. M. hall. ViaiUu^ sUtora curdiaiiy m&#13;
vited. LILA CQNIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
K N1QHT8 OK iua LOYAL. GUA11U&#13;
F. L. Andrews P *u, 1&#13;
Mortgage Safe.&#13;
ITefaaH having been made in ti.f cunditions of&#13;
two mort^aK^e coveriugtht)itamelhod(mbereby t^e&#13;
power of bale tbereiu contained Las betome .oper-.&#13;
a(tve) made by Adun Francis-and &gt;nn»L.' Franciii&#13;
hid wife oi'Putnam, Liviogbton county, Michi.&#13;
an, to G. W. Teeple ot tbe oanrt place, one of&#13;
bald mortag?&amp; being dated l'eceuber ^ t h , l$f*&#13;
and recorded iu the Office of Ke-it'tr of ueedsior&#13;
tbe County of Livingston, Mute ot Hkjtigask&#13;
May lij, HKH)riu Libej- 7y of. iiiuiitat:** on page&#13;
515 tl.ejeof, and the other dated June 4tb, 1W8&#13;
and recorded in eaid Registeva ortice on' tbe 1.5th&#13;
day of March, iy09 in Liber blf of Mortgagee on.&#13;
page 572 theieof; on which baid luortagcb there le "&#13;
now c'aiuifd to be cueaud unpaid at thin'date the '&#13;
bum ui'Two hundred fifty /our dollars and twfcety&#13;
live ctnib (|254'&lt;!6) and attotney let*, and no euil&#13;
or procetdi-og having been commpriced i n law or&#13;
equity to recover tbe deLta securtu.\.y said mort&gt;&#13;
traifea, or any part tbereof.&#13;
Kow tberelure, imdci Ui« powti ul sale cuntain&#13;
ediuaaid mortgage*, notice is liertly ^iveu that&#13;
on Monday, the I'itb day of June, HM, at one&#13;
o'clock iu :be afleruoon otMiid day, .;; tLe weuterly&#13;
trout dour of the Court hou^e iu rt:e village&#13;
ol Howell in said County (that • &gt; *.- i n 14 t . e place Of&#13;
uoldiug tae circuifcourt for the Cuuaty iu wbieh&#13;
the niortyam-J piemite.-&gt; to Lt ?«.M .ir&gt;: bjtuated&#13;
and said mortgages will-Le foreclceed by taVe a t&#13;
public vmdue to tbebighect Lidderoi the prem?&#13;
ISHS described io said no rtu.iLt* •&gt;! so much&#13;
ttiurcf a-i may be mceetary u -a:&gt;»ly tL*- amount&#13;
due on said mort^a^es witli ii:t^;eK ar&lt;d iegulcoet*&#13;
that is to aa&gt;; ail tr-at certain p:»'&lt;..- cr jhrcel of&#13;
laud bituaio iu the townah'p nF I\ituaiu, County&#13;
ot Livingston ami ' tatc &lt;»: .Vu Iryan, viz: Thjree"&#13;
acres ot laud in t hf» ncri iw t^t t orner &lt;i that part&#13;
ot the we^t half »-t tli.'&gt;oi.t: v, ••-! imarter of sec-'&#13;
tion twenty tour (-Jli IviTit/ s.'iiii of tne tu^hwaf&#13;
running through &gt;:ii«i !;4ud n:-d exti'titiing from&#13;
the center of said In^hway t-ou'h U- the center of&#13;
the creek and in vhiiii. east ami wert, s&lt;utricitnt to&#13;
make the tbre** acre.- ot laud. All in Town one (1)&#13;
North and Hange four (1) east, County &gt;&gt;i Living,&#13;
bton an&lt;l State of Michigan,&#13;
Dated A arch J. tb, l'J'jt).&#13;
K. A . ^ I . K . !rT&lt;WK (.;. W. i'KEPLK,&#13;
t ^1 Atlya. !&lt; r Mortgiij.ee Mortgage*&#13;
LOOK I N T O IT.&#13;
Your neighbor lias a horse he wants to sell&#13;
you. Will you tiny it " si^lu u n s e e n " as w e&#13;
used to trade knives at s c h o o l N o . Y o n try&#13;
» him out; look him 6Ver carefully, to satisfy&#13;
yourself that he is a " q u a l i t y " horse.&#13;
HOW ABOUT BUYING PAINT?&#13;
Do you investigate before you buy? You can&#13;
iIr u^&lt;n ;kr-\ if »nv vr ^n r »i^ e ^ a t ( ' B - P l s - P n i n t . You may see it i n l h e c a n . s t i r i t n p ; s m e l l i t ; r u b i t b e t w e e f l y 0 l i r&#13;
fingers and see h o w finely it is ground; even try it out on a piece of&#13;
tx&gt;ard^—all before y o u buy.&#13;
We have a t e w copies ot the H. P. S. Paint Budget, an assortment&#13;
oi literature on paints and p a i n t i n g that cannot fail to save you m o n e y&#13;
on your painting bills Come in and ask for one today&#13;
FOR SALE BY GEO. W. REASON&#13;
It Couldn't Be Done.&#13;
An individual with considerably&#13;
more iun.*» puwer tban was agreeable&#13;
to his h&lt;'ururs was hawlun^ lish' one&#13;
morning in a northern tcAvn.&#13;
"FJnc fres?h herritr: F.»wer a penny!"'&#13;
ho roarpirina'fnfthlon that made&#13;
tbe whidews rattle." ,; • •&#13;
A woman nppri»avl&gt;«rij the .-bartuw I&#13;
nnii &lt;5»ed $\w .Uv4i. wi,i&gt;. a vermin I&#13;
aniouut of suspicion, wbich, ennfcider&#13;
- l hv&lt; .the 'cji'eun'istiinoes, -was not w\\-\&#13;
\ natu'ra'l. ' \&#13;
I -Ar^' vhff- IY^h?,, she 'dt'maihlvt].&#13;
! with M'srtUpieloris snift'.^r ,'•• )l I&#13;
i "'I'hey're fower a penny, mum." was I&#13;
! 11t&lt;» uuarded ft'l^.v. \&#13;
i "V(i.s," XvJl'^uled the oilier, wish •'&#13;
[ ton •!&gt; nf satvasiii. "i think i 'eard yer i&#13;
1 say :-o, (:.1( ;ii'e they fivsh'/" ' ,&#13;
''r "'^'1'en' V.Vir they eofelied'.'" • '•» !&#13;
This u a s lot. much, anil, adopting |&#13;
j 'hi* :-ai'caslic s t y l e of h i s q u e s t i o n e r . '&#13;
| ( !c ha v. ker replied; I&#13;
'I "Can"! s j y for Mtrtain. muih. 1 api ;&#13;
I pit••&lt;! 1'or' the liirlh an' death stiliesit? |&#13;
j "I' e\-ei',\' lish on Hie liarrer. l»ui lit I&#13;
lower a per.in " simply c'ruildnh Iw,'&#13;
" 'I^ie y' are! I&lt;\»wor a penny, lieri&#13;
'in'."—London Ansv/era.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
M.F.SIGLER M. D- C. L, SIQLER M. .&#13;
pi DRS. SIGLER &amp; S1GLER,&#13;
rbyeiciaub and aur^ttoiitt. Ah cittte ^l^ux^.f&#13;
attended to day or uight. Office on Main an eel&#13;
rinckney, Mich.&#13;
J. W. B I R D&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, call at me 1'inckney JUJi'ATCH&#13;
office. Auction Bilk Free&#13;
D e x t e r independant Phone&#13;
Arrangements made for sale by nlione ;i&#13;
• my ex;&lt;ente. Oet o.&#13;
Address, Dexter,/N Mchiitan&#13;
L"l VV. DANIELS,&#13;
SatiBtactim Guaranteed. For inform:;-&#13;
tiou call at DIBFATCJI DtHce or suidtecs&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla (»ion:e&#13;
counection. Auction lh!N mm tin it;,.&#13;
tumished trt'e.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH S5BL&#13;
f ' T C H O F F CF&#13;
CIGARS Anyone enjoying an elegant&#13;
smoke will be delighted&#13;
with the famous C. B. CIGAR. The best possible value&#13;
for the money. Better than&#13;
many on the market that are&#13;
sold for double the price.&#13;
Worthy of a trial. Retails for&#13;
5 CENTS.&#13;
If your dealer don't handle&#13;
themaeud to us for a box as&#13;
atrial Guaranteed in every&#13;
way. We tan convince you&#13;
that this is fclie cigar for you&#13;
to smoke&#13;
9 MANUFACTTTRBD B¥&#13;
CHRISTMM BlOt, . Wmfatat h.&#13;
1 Kodol&#13;
For Dyspepsia and Indigestion&#13;
If you Suffer from Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Gas on&#13;
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,&#13;
etc., a little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly&#13;
Kodol supplies t b e same digestive&#13;
Juices t h a t are found in a healthy&#13;
stomach. Being a liquid, i t starts&#13;
digestion a t once.&#13;
Koflol n o t onl.v digests your food,&#13;
but "helps yort en joy every mouthful&#13;
you eat.&#13;
You need a sufficient amount of&#13;
good, vvliolesonie food to maintain&#13;
strength and health.&#13;
But. this food must ho, digested&#13;
thoroughly, otherwise the pai?is of&#13;
indigestion and dyspepsia are the&#13;
result.&#13;
When your stomach cannot do its&#13;
work properly, take something t o&#13;
help your stomach'. Kodol is the&#13;
onlyfthing t h a t will give the stomach&#13;
complete rest.&#13;
Why? Became Kodol tiors th?t&#13;
same work as a st rong stomacii, and&#13;
aoea^Via ftiii^vn*! way. .&#13;
So, clon't 'neglect your stomach.&#13;
Don't Income, a chronic dyspeptic&#13;
Keep your stomach healthy and&#13;
strong by taking a little Kodol.&#13;
You don't have t o take Kodol all&#13;
the time. You only take it when&#13;
you need it,&#13;
Kodol is perfectly harmless.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Oo to your druggist today and Ret a dollar&#13;
U)ttti\ Then after you have used U&gt;«&#13;
entire contents of the bottle If you can&#13;
honestly say that it has not done you anr&#13;
pood, return the bottle to the drugxutana&#13;
he will refund your money without question&#13;
or delay. ..We will thttn pay the drug*&#13;
KI st. Dont hesitate, all druscgists know&#13;
that our (roarantee Is jrood. Thlsoffer applies&#13;
to the large bottleonly andtobutooe&#13;
in a family. The lartre bottle contains2¾&#13;
t i n n nl much natho fifty cent bottle.&#13;
Kodol ia prepared ntthelahQratoPle&#13;
»0f E. U DeWitt &amp; Co., Chicago.&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS&#13;
Aches and Pains&#13;
"No remedy that I haw ii^cd has'&#13;
been so sure a cure for pain of every&#13;
kind as Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills.&#13;
They are a sovereign remedy for&#13;
pain." MRS. II. BRADEiiX,&#13;
Rapids, Maine,&#13;
Pains arc in the nerves-—all feeling&#13;
is; headache, toothache, neuralgia.&#13;
sciatica, rheumatic pains, backache,&#13;
etc.—They're all there, but in dif»&#13;
ferent parts—It's nerve trouble.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
relieve the nerve irritation, and the&#13;
pain subsides—that's all, no derangement&#13;
of the stomach, no disagreeable&#13;
after-effects. That's why they art&#13;
•o popular with those that use them.&#13;
The first package will benefit; If not,&#13;
your druBQl*t win return your money.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , thp probate ponrt fnr j&#13;
the county of Livingston,— A t ft sension of M M&#13;
Oonrt^ held al the Probate OfRc* in the Village of,&#13;
I Howell in said county on the 12th May »r' April&#13;
j A. r&gt;. 1009. Pr«B«nt, Hon. Arthur A. .Montague&#13;
| Judge of Probate. Tn thi&gt; matter of the ostate of .&#13;
! SARAH J. RRTOOB, deceamtf&#13;
I A. 0 . Thompson having filed in wvirt oourt&#13;
! hia final account an adminifttrator of aaid estate&#13;
and his petition praying forthe allowance thereof&#13;
It 1« ordered, that the Seventh day of May&#13;
A. n.. 190«, at ten ©"doe* in the forenoon&#13;
at aaid probate office, he and ia hereby appointed&#13;
for examining and allowing aaid account.&#13;
Tt is further ordered, that unhllc notice'&#13;
hereof be sflveu by publication of a copy of&#13;
this order. f*&gt;r th'*"-. fl"-f&gt;n«ivn WVPICJ ••&lt;•••• i:-&gt;n9to&#13;
said dav oi unarms \u too 1'itiutcney l»isr\Tr&gt;i a&#13;
newapeper printed and circulated in said county&#13;
ARTHUK • . MONTAQUS,&#13;
tl7 JntTft of PrDtaatt.&#13;
Does your back ache? Is your akin leathery and yellow^&#13;
Is your urine murky? These symptoms are sure signs of the&#13;
dreaded kidney trouble. Nine out of ten persons have kidney&#13;
trouble. They dent always have it bad. That's why they&#13;
neglect it. The kidneys have few nerves. They are ailing a long&#13;
1w before tbe terrible pain begins. In fact, kidney trouble may be&#13;
I aiwanced beibreyoo feel it.&#13;
li Why it is so necessary to notiee the slightest irregularity. If&#13;
eg to wrong with r*n kidneys it should be attended to afc once.&#13;
You- tlyi&#13;
DR.THACHERS LiVLP £ BlOOD SYRUP&#13;
This great home remedy cures kidney trouble by removing'&#13;
driving the Inflammation and the disease out of the affected organ*&#13;
All Dealers Sell BOc and it.OO Bo.tl***&#13;
THACHER MEDICINE CO., Chattanooflfc&#13;
; DdNT PAVvf&#13;
- FOR THE S A M !&#13;
Iron, tin and most prepared roofing&#13;
never paid for, because they need painr'""&#13;
eoatinp: every year or two. If you add to the •:.-.&#13;
roofings the eost of pairtt./n^ durinir the nunibor or •-&#13;
vice, you vri\\ readily understand why&#13;
J-M ASBESTOS ROOFING&#13;
which needs no coatiner—is the '•e'lenprsr-ner voti^,' R.&#13;
It will not rot or rust, is permanent}'- durable an i&#13;
No acids, chemical fumes, pases, ho.n or eoidean ai'V;, .&#13;
less than slate, iron or shingles. C/.m lo5 ap^'iod 1^: ; •&#13;
A'-ik f o r s a m p i c s ^ n t l p r ;&#13;
r: H. W. J O H N S - M A N V l b U B Co.&#13;
7 2 J e f f e r s o n A v e . D e t r o i t , vllchlSart&#13;
. * S ;&#13;
y&#13;
'&gt;Ki&#13;
i f&#13;
^1,- ""I&#13;
V^I^/WJMtf&#13;
•V*&gt;&#13;
imp « i i -&#13;
• \ \ &gt; -WM'&lt;V;;&lt;«v*&#13;
• J « . ' *&#13;
• •w^ft.-.^-.jv"«»&gt;»^ J». "•«&#13;
/*-\&#13;
»r A ' .."]V1,&#13;
«.,*k-;.&#13;
. &gt; ' * ^&#13;
V,&#13;
&gt;.'.F &amp;&#13;
' . : v &gt; ^ . *'. ••ft-'-' ••'•,"*.?.»:rt-« / A&#13;
•wr.&#13;
X* H''.'l &lt;&gt;•: ^1"&#13;
^ . T ' ~ ' • ;&#13;
*•:. ' v-&#13;
»Mm WOSPECTS. 3 &lt;:&#13;
" v f lb'- i f '.h&#13;
X".&#13;
ft"&#13;
•fcV,'Ai'.- - : ? • * -&#13;
•• '&#13;
am '&#13;
B^Bx&#13;
g^get^&#13;
H^^^uj'^&#13;
H^aV*""-"&#13;
« • * 'i&#13;
'l6~' " I*.&#13;
*v&#13;
;&#13;
' V&#13;
'ft&#13;
• ! '&#13;
*.;&#13;
- ^ '&#13;
^&#13;
' 4,' '&#13;
PiA**.&#13;
fa, "V ';.'&#13;
tf**&amp;L&#13;
33i&#13;
^&#13;
»&#13;
V&#13;
§&amp;rf .;&#13;
i^ ,&#13;
I i ' ^ W ' d B d i 4he devel6pm«rit bf&#13;
WeeteS* Canada began has sprung&#13;
brought a brighter outlook than: it&#13;
t p ^ r a a r , .jn j ^ Mecoling&#13;
cat.advancing development and&#13;
f a Y M * . •% Tn*, m o V ^ n ^ y * JfrnUgratao*&#13;
baa already assumed largep*o-,&#13;
As as desirable in chera*&#13;
ic {awa*4iafacte»»in volume;&#13;
froa? awsnoen the Atlantic sturdy, Indus*&#13;
UsusW and thrifty newcomers are arrivis**&#13;
ta large numbers homeseekers&#13;
Ckatario anil the other older&#13;
are coming in a steady&#13;
amd from across the Inters*"&#13;
t i o a ^ b j w ^ r y a movement is at*&#13;
ta fail nWrwhi"cK.'it is conflgswefcted,&#13;
will beat the uncords&#13;
«f at* acwtaoa yaars; 'special settlers'&#13;
th«^lica\ loaded&#13;
mafem! wealth&#13;
ttaa brought Into the country at&#13;
'- at aalUtons of dollars' worth&#13;
ssovament ts sto^un^ecedea^h&#13;
that extra Dominion laimign.-&#13;
have Jh»4. to Jbe pcpvlded&#13;
at Tpitt North Portal and at Smerson,&#13;
{•aid ft Is eatlmated that the total numsjer&#13;
ad a-sar settlers from the. United&#13;
Btataa this year will be 70,000, at&#13;
may run well up toward&#13;
Last year'd total of new set«&#13;
Uem trasn tjhe South was 53,723; thus&#13;
the1 area, that will be placed jn wheat&#13;
other grains this yesr will-greatly&#13;
that of last year. Settlers are&#13;
extraordinary efforts to get on&#13;
thefr laada ahd begin seeding opera-&#13;
Uoava, The price of wheat now; away&#13;
above the dollar mark, 1B incentive&#13;
mad when one has in view the&#13;
results that the past few&#13;
yearp have shown, it is not to be wondered&#13;
at that the present will be the&#13;
banner year for Immigration to Canada.&#13;
Ask your nearest Canadian Government&#13;
Agent for rates flf transportation,&#13;
and he will also send you illu»&#13;
trated pamphlets.&#13;
TlMtlreeparable. Lams;.&#13;
"What has happened to me?" asked&#13;
th* patient w h e n c e hid^reccrVered&#13;
fraaa the *dfeefel cf the*«tner. ^ -v&#13;
to amputate your right&#13;
batek on the j|Itlo^, spbn&#13;
daad."&#13;
He&#13;
biajs aloud&#13;
iChaejr up," said the nurse,, patting&#13;
hfns on the hea,d, ."/ou'll sow learu to&#13;
get aloag all righ| ^ i t U your left&#13;
nand.*" "&#13;
"Oh. U waaa'fe fettles* of the • hand&#13;
itself that J-was thinking of," sighed&#13;
the victim. "But on the forefinger&#13;
waa a string that my wife tied around&#13;
It to ranted me to get something for&#13;
her this morning, and now I'll" never&#13;
be ease to remember what it waa."&#13;
How's This?&#13;
Hundred Dollars Reward tor may&#13;
•C OttMrti tb*t cannot be cured by Hallt&#13;
T. I. CH^KEY A CO., Toledo. O.&#13;
a%v. .flS? uadei •Uned1, hatt' known F. J. CTwgy&#13;
•MS U y w n , aad betteve him perteetly boala&#13;
« S buBlo«« transactkm* and financially&#13;
r o«t any otolfcattoa made by hie irm.&#13;
WaLscto. 4CwKAff * ILiwriK,&#13;
Wboleaalc Drufftota, Toledo. O.&#13;
Cure to taken totcraaliy, acting&#13;
the blood and mucoua nrtaoca ot the&#13;
tale sent-free. Price 76 cent* per&#13;
by alt Druurtsta.&#13;
Family PU1* for cocrtloatloo.&#13;
r t&gt;ressed as Scholars.&#13;
At the;.«redding lately of the head&#13;
master of B&amp;stbourae -college, Eaglaad.&#13;
the three pages in the bridal procewatew&#13;
. were garbed^iiflalJatholara in&#13;
blhe^k satin topee breeches, buckled&#13;
sioea, scarlet aill£,: gowfGk, %ith whfte&#13;
aMTt frosxts. Eaqh osatria* j , morUrboatrd&#13;
hat and a, acar^jboyudr prayer&#13;
Important to WttHMra*&#13;
~ y carerulTy e v « * bottle df&#13;
CA8TORIA a safe hnd au4%'remedy for&#13;
infa&amp;wa aaid .^hjldxen, and^ece that it&#13;
mgm M r Over-aOtYwata**&#13;
at** *^galY o a H a v e Always Bought&#13;
• &gt;^gjf»y'f"» i|gwl (, i i - » — . — : — . • ••• i »&#13;
His Daughter Played.&#13;
r^Ras-Hli can't understand, John, why&#13;
ye* aNrays alt on the piano-stool&#13;
•re have .compan^.^ .Everybody&#13;
you can't play a note.&#13;
*m well aware of it,&#13;
Neither can any one else whaa&#13;
rsa^atttas there.&#13;
whea&#13;
k« Into Your 8)&gt;e««&#13;
Allea^a Ftet-Kaae,^ powder for your feet.&#13;
ft cawaa palatal, swollen, smarting, sweattag&#13;
fcetf Kak«« new «hoe« easy. Said by&#13;
all Drasafarte and Shoe Stores. Don't accept&#13;
mmw awaatltute. Sample FRBE. Ad-&#13;
Olmstad. LeRoy, N. T»&#13;
On» Pornt Settled.&#13;
"They say the new Mrs. Bangs is a&#13;
very gstad plain cook."&#13;
"I don't know^ about the excellence&#13;
of the cookery, but she's plain all&#13;
rlaht-&#13;
, ' « ! ; • ^V«ak, Weary, Watery Eye*&#13;
Renewed a y Murine Eye Remedy. Compounded&#13;
by Sxperienced Physicians. Murine&#13;
© M e a t Smart: flnothca Eye Pain.&#13;
WttMJinrJpe Eve. Rpg)f dy,Ccu.Chicago.&#13;
Baied^Xyw^Bwa^ntt Brug«7iat&gt;-&#13;
(Conyrifht. by J. B. Uppincott Co.)&#13;
3 » , vi -. -.;•&#13;
Old John Davis camd'alon* Southern&#13;
L^ae in .the early dusk and stopped, in&#13;
rrojit di the house- nearest the churchyard.&#13;
He stood a moment and stared&#13;
acraaa *t It t •• rx&gt; *&#13;
"I can small them bushes oat here,"&#13;
he said. "My, aint they sweet!"&#13;
. BM aroasad ta UM gate and entered.&#13;
A long, straight path led ua. to the Ut-U&#13;
tie sloping-rooted, ahntterless house. It&#13;
faced the rich yellow west, and its&#13;
windows were the color of those of a&#13;
cathedral ' "* ^ *&#13;
"Is that yjHVlte. Davisr&#13;
He camw tfl a halt; JfYes, it's me,&#13;
Mis* WaMi- .&#13;
A sleotfex old. woman same around&#13;
the comer &lt;^ift#mkmr*t*t.*b*&#13;
dartaotly sw a moaaeat Her fane was&#13;
•aialljand dark;.&gt;bjr eyea ware -dark,&#13;
a»- &lt;MVlmraf"*DSaiBuLavaS&amp;eaa.&#13;
thar cT'e^eUn'cy.'^h ung ahottt ner.&#13;
"I seen yoa coming." she said briety;&#13;
i guess yon oome for the hvaeadar."&#13;
"Yes, Mis' Weld, that* what I want-&#13;
He followed her back to a grassy&#13;
space hedged in on two sides by tali&#13;
lavender bushes, brtmming with their&#13;
June spears of exquisite bloom.&#13;
"Here's your lavender," said Mrs.&#13;
Field, as she put the blossoms into&#13;
his outstretched hands. "You ask Ave&#13;
peat* a bunch for them stalks—you&#13;
JiearT' s - • • _ . • •&#13;
"We always do," said the old man.&#13;
"Lord, ain't they sweet!" He thrust&#13;
his withered face down into them.&#13;
Mrs. Field looked at him with a&#13;
curious hesitancy. "What kin&gt;—what&#13;
kind of market did you have yesterday,&#13;
Mr. Davis?" There was a secret&#13;
and faltering eagerness* ia her voice.&#13;
"Oh, middling, middling. Fojks&#13;
want stuff for nothing these aliftns.&#13;
They want you to grow it, and dig It&#13;
up, and cart it to town, and then just&#13;
throw it at 'em when you get there.&#13;
And if you ain't willing, they're ready&#13;
to sass you. Them hucksters get all&#13;
the profit."&#13;
.The woman's face grew wistful* in&#13;
the waning light/ "Nobody could fell&#13;
tbetter'h me when 1 wanted toy' %he&#13;
said.&#13;
•"That's so, Mis' "Field.'' Susanna and&#13;
pie w*re»Jus*talking about ifc-.We all&#13;
^thought it was a better chance tor (he&#13;
£est.of us when yon give up your stall,&#13;
wow long;ago was that, Mfr'Tield?*&#13;
"Teh year land more, Mr. Davis."'&#13;
"It\wa«4hat year we had them three&#13;
hard frosts haadrunning," said.he; /'it&#13;
was whea--when—" &gt; L&#13;
"You mean wtien my Jean went&#13;
"away,"' said Mrs. Field.&#13;
Ttte old m a n i a s abashed. 1 didn't&#13;
tnesA to bring up any of your troubles,&#13;
Mis' Field," he blundered oh.&#13;
She stood silent The crickets&#13;
seemed te grow louder and louder.1&#13;
"We)l." He rose and moved slowly&#13;
away out of the sweet-smelling space.&#13;
"Mis' Field!"—he had halted and was&#13;
looking back,—"Mis' Field, why don't&#13;
.you. 8/e 11 ua one of them lavenderroots?"&#13;
A flash like that of fire passed over&#13;
her dark, tense face. ' And yet ' it&#13;
seemed long before "she spoke. "It's&#13;
Jean," she. said at last. ;.&#13;
"Jean!" he said hallly.&#13;
"Yes, Jean, Jean?" She was flerjbe&#13;
and remote and appealing ail In qQe.&#13;
Then she Seined to falter beneath his&#13;
. wondejfSjaf dyea. ^ ^ o f ^ h e n the&#13;
.comes .a«&lt;lk^wheH:'an©:Inkles basic,&#13;
' f h ^ a f t when m w e a y ^ ^ --^&#13;
"Yes^yea, Taa'aad/* *eH|M/&#13;
"I fes^, s,ure ; « ^ S 'coi^B*|back, Mr.&#13;
, Da***."-^*^ ..• tr&gt;•.'*'•?&gt;• -,\r uA,A «-m -..&#13;
' "Yes. ma'am^ maybe she will."&#13;
; That^tash came . pain. "Sljell&#13;
. come back alive, or ane'U come baak&#13;
d«aW#-Iohn Ua40».',Jl4saw¥.sh^wfl^"&#13;
-«e rumhered'away ttimighthe dusk&#13;
Without; anojher worj. she returned&#13;
to her little table,-and,,taking ,up lt*e 1 loosened lavender, handful by handjfjpi,&#13;
began tying It into bundle* of uniform&#13;
length and thickness. She warnd&#13;
mechanically, her fingers trembling&#13;
a little. The half light, the strict&#13;
odor, the memory-throbbing hour, were&#13;
filled with the daughter that had&#13;
faddd out OC Aer .paager M* vW^He&#13;
morateg-WBeke/ what mattered the&#13;
rumor regarding her that, atii; floated&#13;
abo^t among the narrow country fine&#13;
after these- long years? To het ske&#13;
was virgin- still. ,.• , t&#13;
•Oh lidrdl" said Mrs. Field J , It was&#13;
half a cry, halt a groan. She looked&#13;
up. A glimmer of white struck her&#13;
eye. "Who's that coming down&#13;
through the graves?n she asked. ^&#13;
"Mrs. Field! Mrs. Field!" called&#13;
a voice across the palings.&#13;
The old woman came slowly forward.&#13;
"I've just, slipped down to .smell&#13;
your lavender," said the minister's&#13;
wife. "How I love it!" 8ne held her&#13;
girlish face towards the delicate lilac&#13;
hloom. "I wonder if you won't sell me&#13;
Just one little root, Mrs. Field. I'd&#13;
'like to t*} it la my garden.'^ ,&lt;&#13;
"I «in»t, going to pa*$, with, one of&#13;
Sham roots, Mis' Bowden: B u r n t five&#13;
yon some Hattjis, if *«&amp; wraaVihe."&#13;
"Oh, thank you. I'm jUJt 'WalaV to&#13;
a^aometW»«WJl!^ik»t.«r*e«.&#13;
heea bare a n t p n t h ^ . a A d . T e ^ * ^&#13;
«ee» a flower in it yet : 'How long&#13;
baa that hedge been growing, Mm&#13;
• "Soma. * of i- tt'av^ Sweaty year-old.&#13;
maybe more. The last I planted, was&#13;
eleven year ego.'* r • ( i •' •--*»** *&#13;
Bowawa drew a toag breath.&#13;
*\&#13;
n t o w dear and ald-timoy aad atraf-i There were the pld% ihrill noises la&#13;
g l y t t U ! New l i m y cutting*-grew,—&#13;
and yoa must show me how to nsaaage&#13;
them, Mrs. Field,—I'U be the proadest&#13;
Jwoman in the world. And when ye*&#13;
sit to church end small the aloaaoma,&#13;
tdieyfU l e aa^^awt yoaJU thiak *&#13;
vcmr ofa Jiveadar. fJ^hOt mme at&#13;
j ^ V » J$f«*w*XH..a»-&#13;
., cfre&amp;e sld^oX the fence roes the&#13;
graves, v e i ^ distinct la the cWar yejlow.&#13;
of the-west, and beyond them the&#13;
church, distinct and dark. On the&#13;
other stood the narrow old house, a&#13;
side window one sheet et quiet,radiance.&#13;
The hedge looked dim and&#13;
cloud-like, and seemed to float away&#13;
into the softened space. Beyond the&#13;
hedge stretched acre after acre of&#13;
market-garden, whose already furrowed&#13;
levels were filling with phantom&#13;
mist, and out pt this ghostUness&#13;
was blown a primeval aroma that&#13;
could be subtly detected under that of&#13;
the lavender.&#13;
"Idon't go to church," repeated Mrs.&#13;
Field. "I got tired of hearing preachers&#13;
talk about Mary Magdalenes and&#13;
the thief on the cross. You'd think&#13;
"You Helped to Drive H%r to I t John&#13;
Field."&#13;
there was only two kinds of commr.&#13;
ndments that ever got broke."&#13;
Mrs. Bowden looked rather vagua&gt;&#13;
"I guess everybody gets tired of&#13;
preaching sometime," she said. Then&#13;
she laughed. It seemed easy for her&#13;
to do so.&#13;
Her neighbor gone, Mrs. Field stood&#13;
a moment gazing out into the churchyard.&#13;
H she had put her hand over&#13;
the sunken palings, she could have&#13;
torched her husband's tombstone. He&#13;
had been a hard man. A certain rigidity&#13;
of conduct had brought him an&#13;
enviable reputation, which, after his&#13;
death, had ripened and mellowed roto&#13;
that of the saint. Some fleeting recollections&#13;
of their early youth; when&#13;
they had both lived away from the&#13;
neighborhood, came into his wife's&#13;
mind. Then some later and keener&#13;
ones that roused and stung her. All&#13;
at once she spoke out sharply. "Ybu&#13;
helped1'to drive-^ her to it, John&#13;
Field&gt; and then, just like a man, you&#13;
had to ge and dfe", and leave me to&#13;
bear it." Her voice rang out, peKfftg&#13;
0th fW«t;;••••»&#13;
,...J^4awiHiiw&#13;
tying the lavender stalks, hat the&#13;
tdteek^etay ee«a the geta*4og darkapron&#13;
over the unfinished heap on the&#13;
little table and 'looked around and&#13;
about Aar. a ft wonder # •b#l}t£om:"&#13;
1 thfi stArt- An added'- hreatihjiwsneiii&#13;
M*&gt;P took $c**eaeio&amp;"of hw. Her'WJy apr*&#13;
ae^re^'tawtfajtt Ar%arVatf'»i attltade&#13;
of almost painfui. watchfulness,&#13;
"I wojeVer if shell oome to-nlghC she&#13;
repeated14a she p e t * into the Jiouae.&#13;
Oat la the lane each tree waa a soft&#13;
blurred black, behind wihich stretched&#13;
1 the disiant and exquisite west The&#13;
road itself was a halt-blotted track.&#13;
the hidden grass-&#13;
Mrs, Field came out to her front&#13;
door. "Jean,'' she called, softly-&#13;
It seemed to her, so sharp was bey&#13;
longing* t*a* th#glrl mnat rise ap before&#13;
her out of the brooding darlu&#13;
All hopes, her deairea, bar eahemes,&#13;
her ambitioas, had reeeiyed tbemaelves&#13;
into that one ory of her foriera&#13;
heart She had given up ehnrefc, market,&#13;
friaada, all the petty bat aheerbing&#13;
threats of a country life, and lived&#13;
eleven lonely years in a lonely house&#13;
that she might be at home whenever&#13;
Jean returned. Against that how.the&#13;
chamber had been kept ready, the&#13;
garden pruned and tended in«the old&#13;
fashion. There should be nothing&#13;
new. nothing accusing and strange.&#13;
"Jean," and her voice struck into&#13;
the dusk with a passion that was like&#13;
a flame, "if you're dead, come back!''&#13;
A step came faltering along the lane&#13;
outside, .&#13;
"Jean!"&#13;
There was no answer.&#13;
Old Mrs. Field went swiftly down&#13;
the gravel path.&#13;
The step began to draw nearer.&#13;
"I knew you'd come back, Jean, I've&#13;
been waiting.- There's only you and&#13;
me now. Your father's dead."&#13;
The guests came and rocked against&#13;
the far golden sky.&#13;
"Jean! Jean!"&#13;
There was no answer.&#13;
Mrs. Field ran out into the road,&#13;
groping blindly before her with outstretched&#13;
hands.&#13;
A halting figure came out of the pale&#13;
darkness and swayed towards the garden&#13;
gate.&#13;
"Jean!;; crled^ojd^Mrs. Field. - -&#13;
Bird and Animal Tipplers.&#13;
Interesting fact's about animals and&#13;
alcohol were given at the southwestern&#13;
police court when Cap*.* Frederick&#13;
Palmer was accused ot cruelty1 *e his&#13;
dog. It was alleged thaLCapn^pAlmer&#13;
gave the dog biscuits soaked Hi jlspfeAl&#13;
in-a-puMle house, and that the animal&#13;
fell dead.&#13;
A. Piess, a veterinary^aurgeon, said&#13;
most dogs liked biscuits soaked In alcohol.&#13;
"Then it Is not an acquired taste?"&#13;
the magistrate, Mr. (key, remarked.&#13;
"1 thought it was."&#13;
"This dpg was not a total abstainer,"&#13;
stated Mr. Hanne, who defended. "It&#13;
! had "fatten1, simulants for two years.&#13;
Even birds like a little drop of beer or&#13;
stout."&#13;
"I have heard of a racehorse, named&#13;
Care van, which would not run unless&#13;
it had a bottle of port wine," the magistrate&#13;
observed.&#13;
"And I know of a bantam cock which&#13;
would have nothing but a bottle of&#13;
Bass," satd Mr. Hanne.&#13;
The magistrate said there was no&#13;
evidence of deliberate cruelty and dismissed&#13;
the summons.—London Express,&#13;
\ir f*-&#13;
w * W % . ;&#13;
Kldntys and&#13;
Lost Ring Found After 42 Years.&#13;
, The gold band ring which Theodore&#13;
Geissel found while digging in hh&#13;
garden recently has been claimed by&#13;
Mrs. Anna Wolf, widow of Joseph&#13;
Wolf of Woodbury, who is now 86&#13;
years old. She says it was her wedding&#13;
ring, which she lost 42 years&#13;
ago as she was milking a cow. while&#13;
living on the place. At that time dillgent&#13;
search failed to reveal it—&#13;
Mantua correspondence Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
Due to Preventive Medicine&#13;
* -&#13;
Life of Human Beings Prolonged and&#13;
the Ravages of Infectious Die* •&#13;
Cheeked.&#13;
During the last 50 years preventive&#13;
medicine has done far more to alleviate&#13;
suffering ahd to prolong life than&#13;
the average man is aware. It is est**&#13;
mated that during the seventeenth&#13;
and eighteenth centuries the death&#13;
rate throughout the civilized world&#13;
ranged from 50 to perhaps 80 per&#13;
1,000. To-day in London, Berlin and&#13;
New York the average lies between&#13;
17 and 19. This great decrease in&#13;
yearly mortality is due principally to&#13;
protection from infectious diseases&#13;
now afforded to children during the&#13;
first five years of life; In New York&#13;
city there has been a reduction since&#13;
IS73 ot over 50 per cent in the death&#13;
rate of the infantile portion of the&#13;
population. It. is obvious that the&#13;
probable lifetime has increased coincldently&#13;
with the.prevention of diseases&#13;
to which children of tender years are&#13;
especially susceptible. Dr. Hermsnn&#13;
M. Biggs of the New York city health&#13;
department has estimated that "the&#13;
expectation of life at birth in this city&#13;
In 1866 was only a little more than&#13;
25 years, while in 1903, calculated on&#13;
the death rate for that year, it had&#13;
almost doubled, and equaled about&#13;
forty-two years." Such statistics as&#13;
these are certainly striking commentaries&#13;
on the advance and triumph&#13;
of medical research; for It is true beyond&#13;
cavil that this progress has been&#13;
dependent primarily upon the knowledge&#13;
gained in the laboratories, the&#13;
harvest oVperslstent investigation.—&#13;
Dr. John C. Torrey, In Harper's.&#13;
Flavored with Tomato Catsup.&#13;
The waters of Narragansett bay&#13;
-vere- well, seasoned with, tomato catsup&#13;
the other day when 660 cases&#13;
containing 16,600 bottles were damped&#13;
Into the sea because the manufacturers&#13;
bad hot labeled the bottles, in -accordance&#13;
with the purs food law.&#13;
,0, JW. W4^«-.!dad&gt;a, KJTV,Jfr&#13;
vital) kidney wiffjsrara to write ,tb Wm.&#13;
"i-usfro. * » Vbo f*o»oap&#13;
e&lt;»uge havtfW &gt;re-&#13;
.jr-ply.. i telling.r.*ow&#13;
Coaaw Kidney PUIS&#13;
.eared Wmj«ftevrhn&#13;
had doctored and&#13;
.M'g^feMBi-&#13;
; fenmt. froipitato for&#13;
:j&gt; elg^eien^iSOAtnt.&#13;
;-pain fatUhe hack.&#13;
•r lameness,, twiagfte&#13;
when stooping or&#13;
lifting, laagnor, dlasy apelas and*fceamatism,&#13;
"Before l need Dean's gBd-&#13;
MT'tm.K enya rUr~ IWnaaF^-I&#13;
weighed 448. After taking 10 o r 1*&#13;
boxes I weighed 181 and was completely&#13;
cored."&#13;
Jtold by all deajara./M cents a box&#13;
ytettrWbtrn- Go* Battel*, K. T.&#13;
v •• t ... * y - • - • - *&#13;
U1lwn.aVitANtdVTt.OOK.&#13;
•t hope U dont rain; itit tnln all&#13;
de starch out of my dreea."&#13;
-tea, and if ntaw aeea^ot ttf^foor&#13;
best dress shell take daf :*taijflj^out&#13;
of you!M — • -&lt;.#*-«H.&#13;
Oen*t Cough, But LU» Uoag&gt;,&#13;
If every cough were cmeaVw)^JMBSt&#13;
a strong hold, human life would be fcagth-&#13;
K' ip the cough in a few minutes, he would&#13;
glad to escape tee Mrious oonaeagences.&#13;
If^sny medicjne will pure a oougiy-Kemp B&#13;
B a p a will do it. At droggjiits* and&#13;
^ 5 ^ . 2 6 0 . • ' - - ^ ¾ _&#13;
«"••••• A Waturai ttoubtv .,&#13;
yoalhftik thgt oculist Is a pracra&gt;&#13;
anenidn't be be?"&#13;
} "Hecauae of his business. Doesn't&#13;
he* go in for eye deals?"&#13;
A brother is a mirror that never&#13;
flatters.&#13;
ADVISED&#13;
OPERATION&#13;
CuredbyLydlaE.Mnkhani's&#13;
Vegetable Compouo4* '&#13;
PawPaw, Mich—-,4I suffered terribly&#13;
from female ilia,&#13;
including inflammation&#13;
and congestion,&#13;
for several&#13;
years. Hy doctor&#13;
said there was no&#13;
hope for me but an&#13;
operation. I began&#13;
inking lydia £ .&#13;
Pinkhaih's Vegeta-&#13;
;"ble Compound, and&#13;
I can now say I am&#13;
a well woman."&#13;
EMMA DBAPEE.&#13;
A n o t h e r Operation Avoided.&#13;
Chicago,' 111.«- " I "wamtr women to&#13;
know what that wonderful medicine,&#13;
Lydia JB. Pinkham's Vegetable Coatpound,&#13;
has done for me. Two of the&#13;
best doctors in Chicago said I would&#13;
die if I did not have an operation, and&#13;
I never thought of seeing a well day&#13;
again. I had a small turn or and female&#13;
troubles so that I goffered day and&#13;
night. A friend recommended Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound*&#13;
and it made me a weU wcjaanJ'—Mrs.&#13;
AxvzjrA SFSBLnrflk U Langdbn S t ,&#13;
Chicago, 1U&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- Kimd, made- front roots and herbs,&#13;
a proved to be toe most ituscenafai&#13;
remedy for curing the worst forms of&#13;
female 111%. i i ^ u d i i » displacements,&#13;
inflammaticm, flbxoia tumors, irregularitiea*&#13;
periodic painsj^mebevbear.&#13;
ingrown feeling, flattilency, indigestion,&#13;
aMnervons prostration. Itcost*&#13;
imt A trifle t6 try itw an« ^he resclt&#13;
nas been worth twlttgM to&#13;
gnffaring woman.&#13;
. • • !&#13;
«•'&#13;
If yon aafler from Fits, ralUag aHskaeas,&#13;
Rpaamaorhar«etatldr«a 0» friends that do so,&#13;
tny New Discovery will rslteve them.aod all yon&#13;
art ukMl to do la s«na for m PSEE Bottle of&#13;
Dr. Hay's tpUsetlolda Cor*.&#13;
It haaenred thous«ndi where everythlntr else&#13;
failed. Sent free *ith dLrectlons. Expr*aa&#13;
Prapalrf. Ouara«te«4 by,May Medical Lal&gt;-&#13;
oratory, under the NattboaT Food and Drnga&#13;
Aot, Jane 80th, IMS. &gt;0«aramy No. ISSn.&#13;
PiaaM tiva AO* mod faU addreaa.&#13;
« — « ' . . DaM W. gft aUY.&#13;
54« Peart Sirwet. New York City.&#13;
zr^a: •aV urut Sntua.&#13;
' eaialAabaaau.&#13;
^.&#13;
1* -^-&#13;
w&#13;
O.OOVST, aV P. k, J^Mlaa^MaSav&#13;
awti k ettllUaWgi awai&#13;
• i 1 , • • • « ' " '•'&#13;
I ' f : . , - . - ^ ^ " f ^ . . ; « : , : . : " . . ^ , - ^ - ^ - - ' / - " ' A v - . r ! ' - " ' ^ ' ^ v , - «. .•&lt; ...\H -:'• , • / ' . ^ . - : •* "• • • •&#13;
*&gt;£r;, 'i*-:* app&#13;
• * "&#13;
P I » • •*• ' " ' - v ' f»"&#13;
:t-&#13;
• « • *&#13;
- t ^ w&#13;
• v - ' • . • ; « •&#13;
''•••ijfc'"'&#13;
•&lt;r;&#13;
..*&#13;
LAXATIVE FOR&#13;
JMIIII 111» 1 » ^ » ^ — . •&#13;
' There I I I treat diflerenoe In Ihe&#13;
p«rpoeea to wfciafi a laxative nhoald&#13;
he pwt Tabettglmd pain, edttt. ate*&#13;
are ' wait? violent pwgattvat or&#13;
rathartses, u U H w ^ i r j b o s powerfil&#13;
for the aaarago pigeon*.&#13;
(,A wofaMT^t »M tfaea *aad* 0(0» a&#13;
mild toxnttye~to UcV M M 0 4 ¾ to&#13;
aaedod by ejtyoaa, weak or strong&#13;
though t &amp; inaFhe, fottbr ob)wt it&#13;
atajSy to&amp;OTe tile bo#a|a, and it a&#13;
genu? laxative will dojfwpat I* the&#13;
osa oTa veaieat ©ne*&gt;f*•-•;". ^&#13;
Or. Calo^eU'r S y r # ^ | N i W ^ e i&#13;
aataad a. w«a*oaereo6&gt;»oge*vjwrtng&#13;
woman, and children and &lt;dd folk*—&#13;
tiOM what they Uxa. ;.,.&#13;
mItU? eIdsl ya' t hlel qngrldea^tmesxta taltydetotoancnioy liavnerd uanddbowel&#13;
ramsdy *.***&#13;
vara do,&#13;
J. a'Blaofrc omuotr ien,&#13;
CO.cen _ _ __,.&#13;
boOi sties, and all&#13;
% tsutocmh alickhe/ dsJfagmte tiibvfaia cdoaaombel,a inhtWi. rItwtsa uma eh afnodr tui rsehlyo rst ot imthea tw-fluHtu rreem osnvee tttkhaetk tmro.^uwbllell ebne-; uthnen ecsteossmaarcyh. Iatsn dto niinct epsrtoinpaelr timesu bsculielsd uaop&lt;i itsh«at» tlhae *yi *ae c.ets pnoarttuerna—lly « af gmaiann. s/ Tnheaatd at hoisf' , families, like Mrs.&#13;
WA., Mrs. K. ^ A t i „ . . , andjjutinerous otheKj; fti fact, way out in&#13;
WlJSHUEs, Cal., a s ^&#13;
M M y w R a m e to the doctonrxmreas as&#13;
ibelqjLJMid a free test tottleWwUr be sent&#13;
yduTThen, if results are saSMhctory you&#13;
can- buy it of your druggist.-&#13;
If there is anything about&#13;
your milment that you don't&#13;
uoderatajadt or if you want&#13;
any medical advice, write&#13;
to the doeter, and he* will&#13;
answer you fully. There is&#13;
no charge for this service.&#13;
The address is J)r. W. B.,&#13;
CatdwelirtOl "CAIdwett bid*.,&#13;
ISonticetlo, Jtl.&#13;
AWQTHER BORING QUEeTTOJ*.&#13;
"I say, pa, is a man from Poland&#13;
called a Pole?"&#13;
"Yes, my son."&#13;
"Then, pa, why Isn't a man&#13;
Holland called a Hole?" . „&#13;
CURED ITCH!Nil HUMOR,&#13;
from&#13;
ff'«&#13;
Big, Painful Swelllnga Broke and Did&#13;
Hot Hoa». Buffered 4 Yearn,&#13;
• • •» : :- 4&#13;
Torturoo Yield to Ctftie^Mu&#13;
*Tdttra black sweljings were scattered&#13;
over my fdee anfe nKcsj^iod they&#13;
woti»l Jeavo lltde bU*n-pi*rs that&#13;
wooM Itch eo 'I «Aildn't{ keep from&#13;
scratching them. Larger swellings&#13;
woold appear and my clothes would&#13;
stick tn the sores. I went to a doctor,&#13;
bift the trouble only got worse. By&#13;
thta tissV*\W*raU^er&gt;4r*tna» add&#13;
the wpper part of my body In swellings&#13;
aa large as a doflar. It was so painfal&#13;
that I coold not bear to lie on my&#13;
back. Tfae second doctor stopped the&#13;
aweUaeB, bwt when they wrote the&#13;
plages vsasjd aot heat I biught a set&#13;
of the Ontsenra Remedies aad hi less&#13;
tham a week sosae of the pteees were&#13;
I eoadnwad aaftfl I had&#13;
and aow t&#13;
0.1». Witeoa, Ptn-yoar.&#13;
ash.«, &amp;mr&#13;
a&#13;
A Natural Mistake.&#13;
A teacher in a Pennsylvania primary&#13;
school Instructed her popUs one&#13;
'Composition day" that they slight&#13;
each wr^te her a letter malting excuse&#13;
for not'inviting her to an''Imaginary&#13;
birthday party,&#13;
The foltewflag effort of one little girl&#13;
was decide* to he the best:&#13;
~My Dear Wm Alice: It becomes&#13;
'ray dvjty ss\ apologize .for not inviting&#13;
you'tb my birthday party last week. I&#13;
had fnHy Intended to do so, but—as I&#13;
always e^.laaver^oUng-rLPoaU"1^1&#13;
it tfll the saat sttmate. When I at&#13;
last started aisVfceeched yoor gate.:I Lsaw ther Assoar^s carriage standing&#13;
'there, and &lt;Mnklng some one was til,&#13;
f did not A h * tt best to go in. What&#13;
Was my nordftcatiom and consiefrnsv&#13;
tion to ssasa thaaext day that the- doe&gt;&#13;
irmg esjnsJM yoar sister.!"—Illustrated&#13;
Sunday Magasln*.&#13;
*t&gt;.&#13;
"Hi'ltT I L ' ^&#13;
TEH TEARS&#13;
RMfOafTf ON H.i.lNOIt eOUMTt&#13;
., FARM OsWXARi* MJ» MAROtwT ;&#13;
OCCU»ATlpN l i aATINO.,&#13;
" . ' I l l :&#13;
HE IS SOUND AND HEALTHV&#13;
n&#13;
••*+• **«• •U&#13;
5: ^^SS^^m^ir said th.&#13;
l^an with a oteef&gt; k^k In We eye. .&#13;
A "Art," .|aU*.the JeatatKf ^ ^mimical&#13;
liarestidihlrtsfsB atperfdet hstrument,&#13;
apsotutelf^ra^^UiatlTW v- e&gt;-&#13;
"I don't want H. t want oncuthatMI&#13;
produce nothing but blue notes. There's&#13;
a man,next door who is studying the&#13;
trombone. I'm going to play the clarionet&#13;
in self-defense."&#13;
fays Hs Never Cowrted r &lt;H* Be&gt;&#13;
cause It Was Ton Hard Work—&#13;
1 Never Reada, ttut Has Wonderful&#13;
Memory.&#13;
fJ»MI;IP'm&#13;
vrs&#13;
Jerseyvttle, 111.—John Muncra,la»r&#13;
eat man In t h e world; who has rain in&#13;
bed fbrteh years at«thh Jersey eottnty&#13;
farra, near this city, said to a correapoadeot&#13;
who visited him recently,&#13;
that he never had'a sweetheart because&#13;
courting a pretty'girl requires&#13;
too much' energy:&#13;
"No, slree," said John, tossing hm)&#13;
long, ^lack hair back-fronr" his foi«-&#13;
headt "f never" liked work well&#13;
enough to go chasing after the gals.&#13;
While the other fellows were chasing&#13;
n round and thinking they were hating&#13;
a lot of fun I was in bed gotUng&#13;
BTy rest. I always did' tike to sleep.&#13;
"It's fuhtty how some men waste&#13;
their.-time cowling. Vre heard of&#13;
them sitting up till nine or ten&#13;
o'clock doing it when sleep would&#13;
have done them a lot more good. Of&#13;
course, a fellow might get a good wife&#13;
that way, but he'd never make up for&#13;
the time he lost. That's why so many&#13;
people die. They don't get enough&#13;
sleep."&#13;
ThiB' man with the queer philosophy&#13;
of courtship and slumber is 69&#13;
years old and weighs 80* pounds; yet&#13;
he has not been ill a day since he&#13;
went to bed for good, March 1, 1899.&#13;
"You don't need a lot of muscle&#13;
when you don't work," he said.&#13;
"Work Is what makes a fellow old.&#13;
I don't see why anybody works when&#13;
he can He in bed like I do. It's the&#13;
only way to live. I'll bet I've a better&#13;
appetite than anybody here."&#13;
This statement was verified by&#13;
A N I M A L O a T l LOOwstJANOMLOCK*&#13;
TRAJPFIC. F J P R ^ M H O U R— %&#13;
i t FINALLY t H O t .&#13;
Btddedotfd, Me.—For nearly aa hoof&#13;
jtn aageredeew that had esoaped from&#13;
Btophen Meaervo, an AUrad road&#13;
farmer, held possession of the bnalaess&#13;
aeetlon-'of thecfty, forcing pedestrians&#13;
to flee fot their 11 ves aad ca«aing two&#13;
horseav to run away* &lt;» The excUeaent&#13;
oeaaed only after the animal had beea&#13;
killed by a rifle buUet&#13;
-'Mr.- Meeerve* was . ariving dowa&#13;
Centerlafaeetwtth,two cows attached&#13;
to thaMsk o t hit pong on hM way to&#13;
a ataughter house where the animals&#13;
ware to be butchered. One.of them&#13;
got loose and a number of boys tried&#13;
The •aejeefs Nature,&#13;
«What kind of rates do they pay for&#13;
balloon •toJdear - ; -&#13;
• l s d W t know, but they ought to he&#13;
Osrneld Tea has brought good health to&#13;
thossands! Unequalled for constipation&#13;
J f a ^ o M M£m disesssf Cmnpoewi of&#13;
Herbs. Buy trom your&#13;
T e a Years of Persuasion Was Failed&#13;
t e Oat Him Out of Bed.&#13;
Richard Mourning, superintendent of&#13;
"Eat•,', said Mourning, "why, John&#13;
would eat ne out of house and home&#13;
here if we would let him."&#13;
"Bet your life," exclaimed John,&#13;
"and I haven't seen a table for ten&#13;
years, either—just ten years and 13&#13;
days, nww, letft it, TMck?"&#13;
John1* memory -for dates and&#13;
names is considered marvelous by&#13;
attendants at the farm, who say&#13;
that Ina mental faculties have in no&#13;
way toeea impaired by his long stay&#13;
in bed. This is considered more&#13;
wonderful because John refuses to&#13;
look at books or papers or amuse&#13;
himself with card* or other games. , -&#13;
&gt;Ree*rVng&gt; W too-raneh work/' he&#13;
said. -Tt-wsn't do a fellow any&#13;
good to Tie In bed If fee spends his&#13;
time working. T tried playing, solitaire&#13;
once aad It fixed me so I oaaldnit&#13;
sleep."&#13;
John never e*erta ftfmeett 1s) any&#13;
way except When the atteadants&#13;
attempt to make him leave his:&#13;
bed. Then be battles tallantli" for&#13;
hlB right te remain on the coach&#13;
where he has chosen to pass tba remainder&#13;
of his days.&#13;
John was asked whether he believes&#13;
in the theory that laziness Is a germ&#13;
disease.&#13;
"I should say not," he replied. "It's&#13;
the deadly germ of work that's killing&#13;
everybody off."&#13;
Of the 147.000,000 of&#13;
£*witsx%&lt; m*00,000 are&#13;
. WAKTBD. Beach plane stock*. State&#13;
price. Gage Tool Co* Vineiand, N. J.&#13;
Two is company; three h eovUeai&#13;
corporatiom.&#13;
L-tl&#13;
The Maddened Cow Held Possession&#13;
*r; of the Streets, v J&#13;
to. get a rope around her horns. Soon&#13;
becoming excited, and being chased by&#13;
boys and dogs, the cow apparently&#13;
went mad and, loweripj^ 4uer horns,&#13;
rushed through the streets'' lunging at&#13;
everybody i n sight. V *&#13;
With head down antr tall raised&#13;
she made for two delivery pungs&#13;
badked up to the store of the Andrews&#13;
&amp; Horigan . Company, searing. ..the&#13;
horses, which galloped wildly up the&#13;
street, overturning the pungs and&#13;
spilling the loads.&#13;
Dr. Daniel A. McNally, who attempted&#13;
to catch the cow, was forced&#13;
to take so a telephone pole t o escape&#13;
her fury, l^elville Woodman„ was&#13;
walking.down, Elm street when t h e&#13;
cow rushed for him. Alarmed by a&#13;
shqut,' Mr. Woodman dodged, into a&#13;
doorway just In time tc&gt; escape. Nicholas&#13;
L». Gibbon was struck by the cow's&#13;
horns and knocked dOfltt, bat he was&#13;
not seriously hurt.&#13;
The cow then' fan Into Main street&#13;
and made for the open dooi of Napoleon&#13;
P. Dionle restaurant, the waiters&#13;
heading her off in the nick of time.&#13;
Two young women were.forced to flee&#13;
into John B. Morln's drug store. She&#13;
was finally killed.&#13;
BABY ON CAR IS A TORCH.&#13;
Fire Engines, Hose Carts, Hook and&#13;
Ladder Companies and Police&#13;
Called to Fight Blase.&#13;
Cleveland, O.—Six fire engines, s i t&#13;
hose wagons, four hook and ladder&#13;
companies, 25 firemen, and half a&#13;
dosen policemen were called to East&#13;
Sixth street and Euclid avenue to extinguish&#13;
a fire in a baby's dress.&#13;
For 15 minutes during the rush hour&#13;
traffic was tied up in the heart of the&#13;
down-town district.while the firemen&#13;
and police hunted desperately for the&#13;
blase.&#13;
When Mrs. May Vogelsang - g o t&#13;
through shopping s h e boarded a Euclid&#13;
avenue car. She had Baby Vogelsang&#13;
in a go-cart and this, with the&#13;
child, she placed on the front vestibule,&#13;
alonslde the inotormah. The&#13;
mother took; a seat in the front of the&#13;
w h e n the motorman started the car&#13;
there was a blinding flash, and a deafetfinfc4&#13;
report a s t h e fuse blew ont.&#13;
Smoke poured*^81^60^.010 front door&#13;
from the vestibule. Then there w a s a&#13;
rush of passengers to get off and&#13;
somebody called the fire department.&#13;
When the fuse blew but Baby Vogelsang's&#13;
clothes caught fire, but the motorman&#13;
smothered the flames with his&#13;
hands and, seising baby, cart, and all.&#13;
leaped to the pavement.&#13;
It's Psttlt's l y e Salve,&#13;
(sat given instant relief to eyes, irritated&#13;
from dust.heflt, saner wind. 36c. AH dragputs&#13;
or Reward Bros.; Buffalo, X. Y.&#13;
There wllT he diaapM^tment with&#13;
the* mast* of. ka&gt;»emWeW rttfsmrm&#13;
fosp^gre sang there&gt; ..,,&#13;
Never Again.&#13;
Bessie—Are you fascinated by your&#13;
fiance?&#13;
Tessie—Fascinated) You onght to&#13;
see the cute way he kisses me under&#13;
my chin.&#13;
^Bessie—Ye* it Is cute; I tn tight him&#13;
tb*t.—Saart s«t&#13;
Europe's Onerous Burden.&#13;
In foreign lands the question of armament&#13;
is dlseussed in conjunction&#13;
with treasury deficits. In Germany&#13;
increased taxation is grumbled at;&#13;
Japan has already curtailed hey military&#13;
expenditures for lack of revenues,&#13;
while in England an almost oertain&#13;
falling off of $85,000,000 in revenue&#13;
is foreseen, and a demand for at leust&#13;
100,000,000 n e w expenditure has been&#13;
created by the enactment cf service&#13;
legislation coupled with the institution&#13;
of oWajse pension. '' ' '&#13;
* * •&#13;
Interesting Acta&#13;
T*&gt; onij c i e x ^ p a d&#13;
remedy koown for Govt,'.&#13;
tia, Janndicc, Kidney ami&#13;
der troubles, Owtiraniom, HemV&#13;
ache, Bilkmanesa aad efl eWsrder&#13;
of the. bowcla U v&#13;
D R . D . J A Y N E S&#13;
SANATIVE P I U #&#13;
•\i; *V.;.. J " : ' .&#13;
/ . $&#13;
^-,4. -*'J&#13;
For several&#13;
U f sad csriag complaints of thm&#13;
Thsy ass ssis and sure&#13;
As a laxative,&#13;
cathartic they are an&#13;
SstflasVsfifao&#13;
2*cmmdl0c&#13;
J . ' ^ I&#13;
-U- 3&#13;
.. „ * -1¾¾&#13;
, 1 . i V 481 ht n&#13;
•;' 'tn&#13;
0 .-&#13;
SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by/&#13;
these LiUle Filla.&#13;
They also reHere ^Distress&#13;
from Dyspeptsla, IndlgcBtlon&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Eating. A perfect remedy&#13;
for Dizziness, Noumea,&#13;
Drowt»iaesu« Bad&#13;
Taste 1 a the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain in the&#13;
S i d e , TORPID LIVER.&#13;
They regulate the BoHrelft- Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simite Signature&#13;
3 2 0 Acres&#13;
IMWKTEWICUiia&#13;
WILL HIAKE YOU fMCH&#13;
Fifly&#13;
acre aav/« beea&#13;
Qcacsal&#13;
in any&#13;
the&lt;&#13;
possible to secure a homesteaooff&#13;
free, and additional 160 acres at t 3 ]&#13;
"The drrdmmcflt pfthc cowrtrr &gt;*••»»&#13;
niarreloua stride*. It U a rcvdatlaa, m i&#13;
erdpfconaucstbr scUl«menttlM(tis&lt;i&#13;
able."—Extract from corrtsponitnqtofm -&#13;
Ettttor, xul» vtstttd C*n*U in Asgasttast'&#13;
The grain crop of 1909 winfanners&#13;
$20.00 to $25.00; per acse. ..&lt;Jcf*»-&#13;
raUing*. pi^ed farming and 4 * *&#13;
the principal industries. Clbaaee&#13;
lent; social conditions the bes^ milway&#13;
vantages unequalledjschools,&#13;
markets dose at hand. Land&#13;
purchased from railway and land&#13;
For "Last Bert West" painpBteta,&#13;
informttion as to how to secure k&#13;
way rates, apply to Superintendent&#13;
gration, Ottawa, Canada, or the&#13;
Canadian Government Agent:&#13;
N. V. HeWHM, 0|~ Mstrita 1'&#13;
WcMUMi or C. A. UU11E1. Seek&#13;
• ; ' It.&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
FDR OUT DOOR WORK&#13;
IN THE WETTEST YVEATHEP&#13;
NOTHIM EQUALS&#13;
WATBRPROOP&#13;
O I I / B D&#13;
GARMENTS&#13;
iTHEYlOORWEli-WEARVmL&#13;
! AWWU.NOTUAK&#13;
Jfltg fwmrmwMt&#13;
wAra.CJm. TajioAwMa Cao . Cuwor.r maoaroM.uaA. -TOSOWIO. CAM.&#13;
Your Jeweler Know*&#13;
a Good Watch&#13;
toR yeo okrn otowdsi Thiodwoa tlo fpeqrotupreermlye andtsj—nsst eo nIet wffl be accurate ander all ooadHions.&#13;
neTvehra tb'ys ntvhaejL o nly way to bay a&#13;
^ :im&#13;
TOILET ANTISErTM&#13;
-HOTHINC LIKK IT&#13;
THE TEETHE&#13;
remonng tartar frees the Stethv&#13;
all germ* of decay aad efiaeai&#13;
tooth preparations caeae* ds.&#13;
THE MOUTH ES55&#13;
sad ihroat, ptaiseemvaVeadt, aad lew She&#13;
wbkfc cobect in sW siimiK caosi&#13;
bad teeth, bad Ssssth. grippe, and&#13;
THE EYES i T u * -, u&#13;
reaeved and sSeagtheaeel ay Pastssa.&#13;
C A T A I t t t H metesuse a&#13;
eanuBation aad ssas&gt; the discharge.&#13;
remedy far saerana eatarrn.&#13;
Pastine m a aarmlesi yet Dowatal&#13;
eersucide,cB.issirtsnr and deodorizer.&#13;
Used m hsltsagit ctrstioj 1 odoss sad&#13;
leaves the beds; ssOsepncalr/&#13;
;i&#13;
rOa OALC MT gSMM STORCS&#13;
oapoarwuonv&#13;
Bend'&#13;
LARGE SAsTIX FREE!&#13;
T N I PAXToa v o m e r o o .&#13;
^&#13;
nilllismssf • I M&#13;
tothepsmAaw ed rtnt&#13;
i s a a&#13;
\r n&#13;
that it is.&#13;
eeesykt&#13;
•»• • — J _ *•-»&gt;-» » r &gt; • * • • •&#13;
beA awceancrcabie.n noe teeseast atedrj u*sotwed gtoo othde, cpaenrsnoont wWhaot eths~ atcok acoawrrleyd gIetd. raAp eSriwoart mh elveearyd glordahdrck~hcia«UoJyd aad'ht ahsetaepd. p erfect rbne anless&#13;
BeAo»dk wTaOtOcrh J. ewWelreitre t aos s hfoorw o ayro nfr eae S booeotkh k—eeihpoaw afcocgo rahroew t ima eS ionu atnhy Bteemsdp erWatautrceh.&#13;
A hese Wsrea C*., Seem Bead, mi,&#13;
KNOWN tiNCt !836 A&lt;_ RELIABLE&#13;
•ViTe* BLACK&#13;
*" °^ CAPSULES&#13;
SUPIRJOR REMtOY. -URINARY OlSCMARGLSr&#13;
U R U G f - I S T b OR * Y M &amp; i L O N R t C L t P T o i 5 0 c&#13;
H P L A N " [ N &amp; SON d 3 H C N R Y bTBROOMYW NY&#13;
THE QILLBTTI tAPtTV RA20R&#13;
Used by More Than Two Million Men&#13;
n o STsroaatisc a o Hoatsie&#13;
Your Health Worth?&#13;
Yon start sickness by mistreat&#13;
and h generally shows first x*&#13;
of CA^AWaTl?w5ltI3j,*t&#13;
yon. They will d o a'&#13;
regnlarly as yon need&#13;
medicine o a Earth. Get a I&#13;
take a CASCARHT tonight,&#13;
the morning;. lt»s the result that i&#13;
milbooa&#13;
tCrAea8tCmAeXntS,T aSll dwrues a box for a lathe world. MilUoa eoxea a i&#13;
DEFIANCE S T U C I &amp;&#13;
KaflHctedwtlh?&#13;
sore eyos, nasi Th0mftM*fC|t&#13;
J W. N. U., DETROIT, N f t&#13;
tr-:&#13;
[ZARL&gt; O I L G ^ - ) grTarTTsnrajst:uaTXgg P A ; &gt;&#13;
,m • * ; •laaW'i t«5,&#13;
W'&#13;
»•?»••&lt; :\r ~id\t&#13;
•af^pt*'*— - H-in?^«^^^^r*,^'?r'rr,lir*r^? r ^ ^ W U ' l N W f 1&#13;
7 j ! " " • , &gt; • " ' ^ " ' !&#13;
. . , • ,. . « ^ \ - . ••&lt;•••»• - r . f ! » : : • &gt;&#13;
:,»• - A - •• ~ '&#13;
&gt; r '&#13;
" &gt; • • • • • - . £ • •&#13;
i ' T o » . v :: ••,&#13;
t ^ i .'•: « ' " » '&#13;
s ' (&#13;
£*»V'-...&#13;
ft&#13;
V&#13;
1-- r ' * •&#13;
•-;:{'&#13;
L i&#13;
1 fV*V_&#13;
,:- m&#13;
•i JE&#13;
Br*&#13;
Hi*- *»&#13;
JtSOj/g&#13;
-•4&#13;
. ¾ - — . — . -&#13;
'Xi&#13;
•('-;.&#13;
M i l k&#13;
M i I k&#13;
M i l k&#13;
M i l k&#13;
M i l k&#13;
M i l k&#13;
We Want Both&#13;
Our Prices&#13;
Will S u r -&#13;
prise Y o u&#13;
PHONE 69 FOR PARTICULARS&#13;
Michigan Creamery Co.&#13;
H n c k n e y , Mlctl.&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
Cream&#13;
iA*:4&#13;
Jtiong Otlr Cormpondeiits&#13;
Would it not pay you to&#13;
r a i s e a good span of&#13;
mules? : : : - : :&#13;
We have a squarely built&#13;
Jack, bred from imported&#13;
Spanish stock; good head&#13;
and ears; large bone and&#13;
feet; plenty of aotion.&#13;
R e a d y f o r service at&#13;
Gleunbrook 8tock Farm.&#13;
F. A. GLENN, Manager.&#13;
*&#13;
_ _ _ _ _ «&#13;
4 Business Pointers.&#13;
*&#13;
WEST MARIO*.&#13;
Gladys Gorton was home Sun- day.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
40 acres one mile west of Pinckney.&#13;
Good house and barn-.&#13;
H.G. BriKfls.&#13;
Milk and cream haulers. Inquire&#13;
at the Creamery building.&#13;
Earl Day.&#13;
i \&lt; nvrtcu.&#13;
I am m the market for white potatoes.&#13;
T. Read.&#13;
worn SAJ4B.&#13;
The B. F. Andrews property in Parshallville,&#13;
consisting ol * house, ham&#13;
and five acr^s of land.&#13;
F. L. Andrew 8, Ex.&#13;
Pinckney, Mish.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
House and one-half acre of land in&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Haney.&#13;
K. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for past favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, I re*&#13;
main vonra. R. GLUTTON.&#13;
8qtJare Deal ftatsherg&#13;
MTCKHIY. MICH.&#13;
CAPACITY,l00ur S&amp; JS&#13;
Pure bred Barred Plymouth Rock&#13;
baby Chicks, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 cents Up&#13;
Pare Bred Sickle Comb Brown&#13;
Leghorn Baby Chicks, the laying&#13;
kind, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 cents Up&#13;
Sickle Comb Brown Leghorn&#13;
Eggfr for hatching,&#13;
15 ESS*. 3 0 c&#13;
30 Eggs, 8 0 c&#13;
More In Proportion&#13;
day.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Merrell and Alger,&#13;
visited friends in Detroit the last&#13;
of last week.&#13;
John Wylie and Miss Lillian&#13;
Evers were married Wednesday&#13;
evening at the home of the bride,&#13;
Rev. McCollum officiating.&#13;
Friday evening a surprise was&#13;
given John Wylie and wife, which&#13;
all enjoyed very much. They received&#13;
some very useful presents.&#13;
PLADTFIILD.&#13;
Mrs. Sexton of Howell was in&#13;
town last Monday.&#13;
Oourtland Sweet has been visiting&#13;
his parents in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Harvey Dyer spent last&#13;
week in Detroit and Howell.&#13;
Rev. Saigeon returned Monday&#13;
from a weeks visit in Monroe Co.&#13;
Wm. Plummer and family spent&#13;
Sunday with Frank Boyce and&#13;
wife.&#13;
The annual Branch Meeting of&#13;
theWFMSis being held here&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mrs. Braley and Miss 'Mary&#13;
Kellogg made a business trip to&#13;
Gregory last Saturday.&#13;
A number of the young friends&#13;
of Ross McGee gave him a genuine&#13;
surprise last Thursday evening.&#13;
A couple of hours were spent&#13;
in visiting and all departed saying&#13;
they had a pleasant time.&#13;
AOOO meeting this week&#13;
Thursday evening. AU members&#13;
are requested to be present&#13;
Mrs. Monroe Hart died at Harper&#13;
hospital, Detroit lees Friday&#13;
morning. Mrs. Hart went to Detroit&#13;
Tuesday and underwent a&#13;
serious operation Wednesday, after&#13;
which perionitis set in. Mrs.&#13;
Hart has spent her life in Iosco&#13;
and is known by a large circle of&#13;
friends. She leaves one son and&#13;
one daughter beside the bereaved&#13;
husband to mourn their loss. The&#13;
remains were brought home Friday&#13;
evening. The funeral services&#13;
were held at the Iosco M. E.&#13;
church Sunday at 1 o'clock. Bev.&#13;
McCullum officiating.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Miss Adda Kioe entertained her&#13;
brothers and sisters and Mrs,&#13;
Ann Qrewry Sunday in honor of&#13;
her mothers 80th birthday.&#13;
The funeral of Mrs. J no. Larkin&#13;
a resident of Livingston county&#13;
for many years, took place at the&#13;
family residence in Ohilson Mon-&#13;
C. L, Benjamin of Fowlerville, Bep&#13;
uty Great Commander ROTMM will&#13;
be at the meeting of the tent at Plain&#13;
field Friday evening. A good attendance&#13;
is desired as be intends to explain&#13;
the now plan of insurance and do&#13;
sosse wer*.4er tee ssafc .- *:.*&gt;-Vt&#13;
:&amp;&#13;
.CASH WITH ORDER ^&#13;
G. flttert Frost&#13;
Gladys Gorton was home from&#13;
Ypsilanti over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Laich is under Dr.&#13;
Siglers care at this writing.&#13;
Little Dea Titmus has been on&#13;
the sick list the past few days.&#13;
Little Howard Wilson, who has&#13;
been very sick is getting along&#13;
nicely.&#13;
Dr. Lamereanx of Fowlerville&#13;
is spending a few days at bis farm&#13;
doing seme repairing.&#13;
La Verne Demerest and wife of&#13;
near Pinckney visited Mark Allison&#13;
and wife over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Alexander of Handy&#13;
visited her cousin Mrs. G. A.&#13;
Kirkland last Wednesday.&#13;
Lewis Booth and wife were&#13;
called near McBain last week on&#13;
account of the serious illness of&#13;
Mrs. Booths father.&#13;
There will be services at the&#13;
M. P. church next Sunday afternoon&#13;
at t t y r * m k * a B - Sunday&#13;
; $ • • . &gt; _ • • • • ' • ; " _ &lt; • , ^ . . &gt; ' « - * • • • . . , ^ ' " '&#13;
' • • • • • » j * • • " • » . . ! . ; • * ' , " . • . '&#13;
Friends and neighbors gathered&#13;
at the home of Grant Dunning&#13;
Wednesday evening for a farewell&#13;
surprise. After having spent a&#13;
pleasant evening, Geo. YanHorn&#13;
in behalf of the company, presented&#13;
them with some pieces of silver&#13;
as a token of love and friendship.&#13;
A Daring A t t e m p t a t&#13;
House-breaking.&#13;
On Wednesday evening April 21st, as&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Dunnkig were about&#13;
to retire for the night, they were* startled&#13;
by a sharp knock on the door, and hastily&#13;
collecting his wits, also hid courage, Mr.&#13;
D. cautiously opened the door, and peering&#13;
out into the inky darkness, saw a company&#13;
of about 30 of his friends and neighbors,&#13;
who swarmed in and took possession&#13;
of the house. But it was a peaceable poesessiou,&#13;
as they had come to pay their&#13;
last visit before Mr. and Mrs. Dunning&#13;
moved to Howell.&#13;
Soon everyone was made to feel at home,&#13;
and a. very pleasant evening was spent in a&#13;
social WAJ. Finally the young ladies&#13;
thought of the scheme of drawing cuts for&#13;
partners and when all were paired off and&#13;
comfortably seated, the waiters unpacked&#13;
some suspicious looking baskets which&#13;
wore found to contain several kinds of refreshments,&#13;
to which everyone did ample&#13;
justice. After which Mr. Geo. Van Horn&#13;
in behalf of the company, presented Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Dunning with a beautiful set of&#13;
silver knives aud forks.&#13;
The crowd broke up shortly after midnight&#13;
and departed for their several homes&#13;
feeling that they bad spent a very pleasant&#13;
and profitable evening which will long&#13;
be remembered by all present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dunning have made a&#13;
good many friends during the three years&#13;
they have been living here, who regret to&#13;
lose them. As soon as they are settled in&#13;
their new home they will be pleased to&#13;
welcome their old friends -and neighbors&#13;
when ever they visit Howell.&#13;
ONE WMO WAS THERE.&#13;
* * * * » • mmmm IV? f, f mm&#13;
»• • : . i . I. .i M i , i . i . — '&#13;
Soring hat Bet*spranfM sa;igh to&#13;
to s&gt;»ift *e? stys't.'; »&#13;
Ursl-Gttir4f plasts rsasmbar this&#13;
i» the last weak m which to say the&#13;
April sattafoieat and dass.&#13;
Mis! Mary tirojraa aom to Jaskaoa&#13;
today, whsrs ifet set a position is tss&#13;
telephone office. Mias Brogan bad&#13;
charge of the Mntoal osotrsl station&#13;
here for years.&#13;
C. L. Benjamin of Fowlerville was&#13;
in town this week in' the interest of&#13;
the KO ra M and attended a meeting&#13;
of the order Wednesday evening. He&#13;
is a deputy great commander and is&#13;
doing some work in this vicinity.&#13;
AKDSBSOK.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Caskey visited&#13;
in Plainfield Sunday.&#13;
The cheese factory at this place&#13;
will soon be in running order.&#13;
Fred Mackinder visited his&#13;
brother near Howell last Wednesday.&#13;
Grace Barton spent a couple of&#13;
days last week with her parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Bullis and Mrs.&#13;
Roy Placeway were in Stockbridge&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Miss Myra Williams and Mr.&#13;
Floyd Fortman visited at Fred&#13;
Mackinders Sunday.&#13;
Miss Grace Pool underwent an&#13;
operation for appendicitis at&#13;
Pinckney last Wednesday. Her&#13;
many friends hope for her speedy&#13;
recovery.&#13;
An Iron Tip.&#13;
••Now, boys," said the teacher, "can&#13;
say of yon tell me how Iron was first&#13;
iftKoveredr*&#13;
• hand shot up.&#13;
Tee, sir!" cried Thompson.&#13;
"Well, Thompson, just tell the class&#13;
what your information is en that&#13;
point"&#13;
"Please sir." replied the scholar, "I&#13;
heard father sty ytaloiisy they smelt&#13;
T h a t bldjitenlnd, Ca»e.&#13;
Many of our readers will remember&#13;
the case where two ladies were killed&#13;
by lightening near Hartlan i last season.&#13;
A damage case resulted and has&#13;
just been tried in Howell. We elip&#13;
the following from Wednesday's Free&#13;
Press:&#13;
After being out from Monday after&#13;
noon until 9 o'ciook Tuesday morning&#13;
a jury in the circuit court gave John&#13;
Allen a verdict of $500 against the Interstate&#13;
Long Distance Telephone Go.&#13;
for the death ot his daughter, Carrie&#13;
Alton, who was kriled by a bolt of&#13;
lightening which entered the home of&#13;
Pnter North, it is alleged over an unused&#13;
telephone wire, left dangling&#13;
from the house after the phone had&#13;
been removed.&#13;
Mrs. North and the girl were standing&#13;
at the window during the storm&#13;
and both were killed by the same bolt.&#13;
Miss Allen was 17 years old and her&#13;
father sued for her services until she&#13;
would have been 21, claiming the telephone&#13;
company wa* negligent in not&#13;
removing the wire from the bouse&#13;
when the phone was taken out the&#13;
day previous to the storm.&#13;
It developed from the evidence introduced&#13;
that there were no ground&#13;
wires for six miles on the line.&#13;
The oase is novel in that it is the&#13;
first case of its kind ever tried in&#13;
Michigan. It is likely to be followed&#13;
by another suit tor the death of Mrs.&#13;
North.&#13;
* =&#13;
Striking a Match.&#13;
T f i a woman," said Lecoq, the do&#13;
tSCttve. heatedly. "We're on the trull."&#13;
"It looks like a man to me," the reporter&#13;
murmured.&#13;
"But didn't you notice how s!m&#13;
struck that match," said Lceoq. "Z'.w&#13;
•truck It away from her—a sure si«jn&#13;
Sf her sex. Men always strike mntclios&#13;
toward them."&#13;
After the arrest of the suspect—a&#13;
woman, sure enough—Lecoq anipllflec?&#13;
his match statement. . "It is tobacco&#13;
that causes this difference between the&#13;
•exes in match striking," he said. "All&#13;
of us unconsciously strike matches toward&#13;
what we are going to light.&#13;
Woman always Is going to light a&#13;
lamp or a fire—that Is, farther off than&#13;
the match—so she strikes her match&#13;
away from her. But man is always&#13;
going to light a pipe or cigarette—that&#13;
is, nearer—so he strikes his match toward&#13;
him."&#13;
Death Signs in Holland.&#13;
The outward signs on the houses&#13;
where some one has died In north Holland&#13;
are original In the extreme.&#13;
When the dead person is a Protestant,&#13;
a long black mantle such as the&#13;
undertaker wears when he goes to the&#13;
grave is hung In the middle of the&#13;
front door. In the case of a Rornnn&#13;
Catholic a tall black cross Is placed&#13;
on the doorstep.&#13;
ie#k* «f HtSiceiisa. v Hlwepeper editors like to answer&#13;
questions iMrssnd to them Of their&#13;
readers—b! they are not too hardend&#13;
they deem tbeaaatWee as arbiters&#13;
rather than as accessories to s ou&gt;&#13;
demeanor when they are appealed t»&#13;
for information *fto decide s net* But&#13;
they wonder eoiaarjmfiB why certain&#13;
questions are p$t to them for arbitrament&#13;
when the answers are to be&#13;
found in one of three very aeceesfble&#13;
booktv-as almsaae. a.SKanunar and a&#13;
email dictionary.&#13;
These art nooks of reference that&#13;
ought to be in every home library,&#13;
however smalt. We guess that they&#13;
are, but that they are sometimes dusty&#13;
with misuse or out of easy reach on e&#13;
top ahelt It Is well to have an almanac,&#13;
a dictionary or an atlas handy&#13;
when yon are reading your newspaper.&#13;
By consulting them frequently the&#13;
reader will find hla daily paper relates&#13;
his early historical studies to present&#13;
events and makes his touch with the&#13;
world closer and more significant. Get&#13;
the habit !^New York Mall. v&#13;
A Sporting Paraon.&#13;
The inhibition of s hunting rector&#13;
by his bishop reminds a correspondent&#13;
that the Rev. Jack Russell, the famous&#13;
west country sporting parson,&#13;
was once cited to appear before the&#13;
bishop of Exeter to answer charges of&#13;
neglecting his spiritual and parochial&#13;
duties, and he was also remonstrated&#13;
with for keeping and following a pack&#13;
of hounds. The charges were proved&#13;
unfounded, and Russell refused to&#13;
give up the snort. whU*h he continued&#13;
to pursue almost to the day of his&#13;
death in 1883, at the age of eightyeight.&#13;
Besides being au insatiable&#13;
hunter, he was, as bis biographer&#13;
pithily remarks, ua stanch supporter&#13;
of Devonshire wrestlers, an admirable&#13;
sparrer and an enthusiastic upholder&#13;
of the virtues of Devonshire cider and&#13;
cream." And in the pulpit he tried to&#13;
reform conduct rather than to expound&#13;
doctrine and was u stern denouncer&#13;
of bad language, strong&#13;
&lt;rink and *&lt;the filthy habit of smoktfcf,*&#13;
V-8t James* Ossstte.&#13;
SeeOor&#13;
Special Line&#13;
of&#13;
B I R T H D A Y&#13;
and&#13;
Souvenir&#13;
Postcards&#13;
at the&#13;
Dispatch Office, Pinckney&#13;
S. C. BLACK ORPINGTONS&#13;
After May 10th, we will reduce the price of E g g s from our&#13;
Famous Strain of O r p i n g t o n s and&#13;
White Rocks to&#13;
-$1.50 per setting of 14 ESSs^&#13;
- We won ten prizes at&#13;
the Howell show, 3 lsts, 3 2nds, 3 3rds&#13;
1 4th. These Birds Will Be In Our Breeding Pens.&#13;
All who wish to Start with the&#13;
best, will do well to avail themselves&#13;
of This Opportunity.&#13;
SSTTMcase. note Change, of Add rest*.&#13;
W. A. Reynolds,&#13;
R. F. 0. No. 2 Pinckney, Miofc.&#13;
fr/*&#13;
«&gt;» *'«.&#13;
!••••?&#13;
It&#13;
&amp;mp f&#13;
$»</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 29, 1909</text>
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                <text>April 29, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1909-04-29</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>VOL. a w . PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY 6. 1909. No. 18 f &gt;' V&#13;
SPECIAL SALE&#13;
FOR&#13;
SHTUHDfiY. J W 8,1&#13;
25c Baking Powder, 2 0 c&#13;
15c Baking Powder 1 2 c&#13;
10c Baking Powder . 0 8 c&#13;
1 pkg. Jello . 0 8 c&#13;
1 bottle horseradish . 0 8&#13;
1 qt. can cucumber pickes 2 0 c&#13;
1 lb. Apricots 1 3 c&#13;
E. BURGESS &amp; CO.&#13;
Perry Blunt was k&gt;om in Benton&#13;
Center, » . Y., Ju!y 9, 1838 and died in&#13;
Pinckney April 30, 1909, at the age ot&#13;
70 years, 9 months and 2i days. He&#13;
wab one of the fcirbt to answer hiM&#13;
countryc* call for volunteers at the be&#13;
KinninK ot the Civil war.&#13;
He came to Michigan in 1866 and&#13;
was married to Miss Sophia VanOrden&#13;
Oct. 14, 1869. From this time until&#13;
bis death he has made his home in&#13;
Pinckney. A little more than two&#13;
years ago he became a Christian and&#13;
united with the Methodist Episcopal&#13;
church since which time be has lived a&#13;
faithful Christian lite, demonstrating&#13;
the fact that the Gospel of Christ js&#13;
the power of God unto salvation. He&#13;
leaves a faithful wife and many relatives&#13;
and friends to mourn their loss.&#13;
The funeral was held at the M. E.&#13;
church Sunday afternoon May 2, Rev.&#13;
D. U. Littlejohn officiating.&#13;
LOCAbNbWS.&#13;
Have your potatoes come up yet.&#13;
Miss Irene Crabb of Grand Rapids&#13;
is yisiting her aunt, Mrs. Thos. Read.&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. A. G. Gates were&#13;
called to Edmore the past week by the&#13;
death of his father.&#13;
Mrs. Pearl Aultman, who has been&#13;
ill tor several weeks, is able to attend&#13;
her millinery shop now.&#13;
Alts. Adda Pottetton and daughter,&#13;
Rntb, spent a couple of days the last&#13;
of last week in Hamburg.&#13;
Eight of the members of the Masonic&#13;
fraternity attended a big meeting&#13;
in Stockbrid^e Monday night.&#13;
Rev. W. G Stephens ot Fowlerville,&#13;
spent a lew days the past week with&#13;
his daughter, Mrs. F. G. Jackson.&#13;
Thos. Norton of Howell and Miss&#13;
Agnes Carr of Pinckney were married&#13;
at St. Marys church Tuesday morning&#13;
by Rev. Fr. Counerfoid.&#13;
Mrs. Huldab Jone^ and SOA Will of&#13;
Detroit were called here the past&#13;
week by the death of Perry Hlunt.&#13;
Mrs. Jones is a sister of Mrs. B.&#13;
Mrs. John Kelly ot Chelsea died at&#13;
her home there Thuuday last. She&#13;
leaves a husband, four sons and two&#13;
daughters to mourn their loss. She&#13;
was well known here.&#13;
Herbert Gillette and wife moye this&#13;
week to Hownll where htj enters the&#13;
office of the Parshall Mills. We understand&#13;
he has an interest in the mill.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gillette have made many&#13;
friends during the few years residence&#13;
here.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Coraerfoid will deliver hifl&#13;
lecture, "Jerusalem" at the Fowlertille&#13;
opera house on Tuesday evening&#13;
May 18, under the auspices of St. Agnes&#13;
church. The people of that village&#13;
have a rare treat in store for&#13;
them and do not want to miss hearing&#13;
him.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy writes that on&#13;
Easter day they counted only 98 Calla&#13;
lillies in their garden.&#13;
Mrs. F. A. Sigler is spending a couple&#13;
of days with her daughter, Mrs. B.&#13;
K. Pierce of So. Lyon..&#13;
Some Irom hero attended the Sunday&#13;
school convention at Hamburg&#13;
Tuesday ?nd Wednesday.&#13;
Rev. A. G. Gates will be home so&#13;
the usual services will be held in the&#13;
Cong1! church next Sunday.&#13;
Max Martin, Dr. McCoy, and Miss&#13;
Anna Brogan of the State Sanatorium&#13;
visited in Pinckney Tuesday.&#13;
An interesting letter from the pen&#13;
of Miss Franc Burch, from Quincy,&#13;
Florida, was received too late for this&#13;
issue. Will appear next week.&#13;
Mrs. Earl Day has been spending a&#13;
few days with her husband herb the&#13;
past week. They will move here as&#13;
soon as the Creamery get* to running.&#13;
Orville Tupper and family have&#13;
moved from Ann Arbor to the M. C.&#13;
Wilson house on Unadilla street. Mr.&#13;
Tupper is on the road for a grocery&#13;
firm.&#13;
CAW) OF THANKS.&#13;
I desire to thank all the friends and&#13;
neighbors who so kindly assisted me&#13;
during the last illness, death and burial&#13;
of my husband. When your time&#13;
of sorrow comes may you Snd as true&#13;
kind friends to assist you.&#13;
MBS, PBBBT BLUNT&#13;
M. £. Church Notes.&#13;
Sunday was not a vwy pleasant day&#13;
and the attendance was not up to the&#13;
standard. Although it was a union&#13;
service as Rev, Gates of the Cong'l&#13;
church bad been called away, still the&#13;
attendance was below the average,&#13;
Rev. Dawe, Dist. Supl., delivered a&#13;
most excellent sermon and administered&#13;
the Lord's Supper.&#13;
There was but a short session of the&#13;
Sunday school owing to the funeral of&#13;
Mr. Perry Blunt being held there at&#13;
2:90 and many had to go home for&#13;
their meal and return. There were&#13;
57 who remaned and the collection&#13;
amounted to $1.44.&#13;
Prayer meeting as usual this eyen-&#13;
J ing and the mission study class will&#13;
The weather man who insists that it J take up the last chapter in the book.&#13;
v\ ill be pleasant weather, only to be |&#13;
confronted with a snow storm, seems&#13;
to be moro ot an optimist than a scientist,&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Brown and Miss Kate&#13;
Brown are spending a month at Long&#13;
Beach, California. They visited a few&#13;
days with Miss Belle Kennedy at the&#13;
home of D. G. Clark in April.&#13;
Fletcher-Haze&#13;
Summer Homes TOP Sale or&#13;
Rent, on one of the most&#13;
Beautiful Inland Lakes of&#13;
Michigan* known as Big Portage&#13;
Lake. W r i t e OP come and&#13;
see the Property and Owner,&#13;
both in Livingston County.&#13;
C L A R E N C E E. BAUGHN,&#13;
Pinckney,&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
New goods are rapidly&#13;
Riling the store and ite&#13;
worth your time to give&#13;
us ft look when in Howell&#13;
The beat stock of E m -&#13;
broideries, Laces, Ribbons,&#13;
Ooraeta, Handkerchiefs,&#13;
Hosiery and Notions&#13;
shown in town.&#13;
Remember That . mas*&#13;
Every Day Is Bargain Day&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
Howell's Busy Store&#13;
Farmers.&#13;
Bring in your harnesses&#13;
and have them&#13;
repaired, washed and&#13;
oiled ready for your&#13;
spring work. If your&#13;
Shoes Need Repairing&#13;
I can do that work in&#13;
a workmanlike manner.&#13;
I have'*dded a&#13;
New Sewing Machine&#13;
ane cau sew on patches,&#13;
rips, etc., in fact&#13;
make the shoe as&#13;
new. ,: :: ::&#13;
w. B. DARROW&#13;
Joseph A. Fldtcher of Bradentown,&#13;
Florida, and Miss Jennie M. Haze of&#13;
Pinckney, Mich,, were married Thursday&#13;
April 22, 1909. They will make'&#13;
their noire at Bradentown. j&#13;
Now A Machine Shop.&#13;
Art Flintoff of Pettyeville has purchased&#13;
the buildings on W. Main St.&#13;
of R. Clinton, former.y the Sykes bnRpy&#13;
factory, and will convert them into&#13;
a blacksmith r.nd machine shop We&#13;
understand that he will fix one up as a&#13;
residence. Art has established quite&#13;
a trade as machinist at Pettysville&#13;
and will probably find plenty to do&#13;
here.&#13;
StHI Held Up.&#13;
The opening of the Creamery is still&#13;
held up on account of the non-arrival&#13;
of some of the machinery. Mr. Day&#13;
has made every endeavor to hurry&#13;
matters but cannot start until the absent&#13;
machinery arrives.&#13;
He lias built an addition, 14x21, on&#13;
the east side for the accomodation of&#13;
part of the cheese plant and has every&#13;
thing1 m readiness so that upon the&#13;
arrival ot the delayed material, it will&#13;
be but the matter of a few hours be-&#13;
J fore the whistle will blow and the&#13;
j wheels turn. He hopes to start any&#13;
j day between now and Monday.&#13;
LOST.&#13;
Somewhere between the residence&#13;
of Daniel Richards and the postdffice&#13;
a nair of nose glasses. Finder please&#13;
teavp at- roc*.-^5 n.&#13;
Ariving Daily&#13;
New Ginghams, Prints, Lawns, and Percales.&#13;
Large asst. of Ladies Shirt Waists and Muslin&#13;
Underwear to select from.&#13;
Latest Styles in Ladies Corsets at SOc, $1, $1.48(&#13;
A Large Line of Room Rugs, 9x12, to select&#13;
from Prices ranging from $12,50 to $25.00&#13;
Latest Styles in Ladies', Men's, Boys and&#13;
Youths Oxfords. at Popular Prices&#13;
Mens Dress Shirts, latest paterns, at 50c, 98c&lt;&#13;
f Our Saturday Specials&#13;
Mens 1908 styles in soft Hats, $1.50 values 98c&#13;
Ladies 13 shoes (size 3 to 4 only) to close at $1.75&#13;
All Odds and Ends in Misses and childreus Shoee&#13;
at Manufactures Cost&#13;
i2Ac All Linen Crash&#13;
200 yds DreBS Ginghams&#13;
20c Coffee, 17c&#13;
Soda, oc&#13;
10c Starch 8c&#13;
2 cans Salmon 25e&#13;
50c Tea,&#13;
Yeast,&#13;
Raisins&#13;
4 pk. mince&#13;
per yd. 9c&#13;
per yd. 6^c&#13;
44c&#13;
3c&#13;
7c&#13;
meat 25c&#13;
Higbect Ma r ^-e t Price For g u t t e r&#13;
and Eag*&gt;&#13;
'j,j&#13;
TIME IS THE TEST cl durability in a high-speed machine like the cream separator.&#13;
No other machine a farmer uses has a harder test. Run twice&#13;
every day. winter and jumaer, it must not onlydo thorough, work,&#13;
but to be permanently profitable, ft moat be datable. U *r&gt; C R E A M&#13;
. ¾ . S E P A R A T O R S are bailt for lonj? service. A solid, law frame enclose* entirely all&#13;
the operating parts, protecting them from dirt and danger ot injury.&#13;
The parts arc few, simple and easy to ret at. BiUbeannps&#13;
at high speed points, combined with automatic oiling, rednce, wear&#13;
as well as insure the easiest operation. Such careful and thorough&#13;
construction is That enables the U. S. to better STAND THE TEST than any other separator. Von don* have to b*f » new erne every year cr&#13;
two. And remember: the D. S. does the clearest akiainlnft all t i e tune.&#13;
Examine the U. S. yourself and fee its food point*. It is sold by Teeple. Hardware Co.&#13;
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h M&#13;
jBimkqeg j^ispatcfj&#13;
JFMAMM L. Ajr&amp;uwa, PuV&#13;
flUlftCNaY, • MIUHIQA*&#13;
A B»ttle of Names.&#13;
. AccvrdJns to a Washington dispatch&#13;
In the Tribune "there lb a l a v e m e n t&#13;
on lout in Wa»bington to restore the&#13;
use, of the term 'Executive M.an»Ion'&#13;
lnbttttd of White House,' which has&#13;
heen the custom during the Roosevelt&#13;
adminlbtratlon;" and many member*&#13;
of congress are said to prefer the&#13;
longer and more pretentious name,&#13;
says the New York Sun. "White&#13;
House" it 1B, in the mind and mouth&#13;
a t every American, so known across&#13;
the water, too. The term, as rec&#13;
«#n* researches fcy correspundtrata of&#13;
the Sun have shown, is of respect&#13;
able antiquity. It seems to have been&#13;
traced as''fa* back as Madison's second&#13;
'administration. It will soon be&#13;
entitled to its centenary, it is a familiar&#13;
ligure, of homely and cordial&#13;
look. It is not to be put out by a&#13;
long trained intruding trollop like "Executive&#13;
MaiiHion." That may accommodate&#13;
itself well to the legal, formal&#13;
and clerkly style, but the popular and&#13;
the fittest name is and will be "White&#13;
House." President Taft is no friend&#13;
of pomp and swollen words. We have&#13;
ho doubt that he prefers to live in a&#13;
"house." As for those members of&#13;
LEADEN BAIN&#13;
STARTLES COURT&#13;
AN ARMENIAN DOCTOR &amp;HOOT0&#13;
HIS WIFE'S NEPHEW IN&#13;
POLICE COURT.&#13;
THE SHOTS TOOK EFFECT.&#13;
Th« Court Rpom W u » Scene of W»|d&#13;
Woat Effect* That Made Spectator^&#13;
Duck.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
Hartoon H. G a s t a n i ^ , a g e d 2 3 , a&#13;
Detroit medical s t ; j d e n t w a a Hbpt&#13;
down by his u ^ c l e D r . G K . Boyajian,&#13;
at 11 o'jiock Friday morning, just&#13;
an G a ^ a n i a n arose in the prisoner's&#13;
box In Justice Jeffries' police courtroom&#13;
No. t, to be arraigned on a&#13;
charge preferred by the doctor against&#13;
the young m a n and against his own&#13;
wife, Mrs. Ethel Boyajlan. The doc^&#13;
tor fired fcix shots, three of which&#13;
struck the young man, one of which&#13;
went through his wife's hat, one imbedded&#13;
Itself in the wall, while the&#13;
other went through the window of the&#13;
jury room.&#13;
Harotoon Gastanian died at St.&#13;
Mary's hospital at 10:45 p. m.. about&#13;
12 hours after the tragedy. In his&#13;
dying breath he maintained that he&#13;
and his aunt, the wife of Dr. Boyajian,&#13;
w?re innocent of the charge-made&#13;
congress who from fondness for elo- 'against them by the doctor.&#13;
' quence •o r want of taste love high- ' Chief of Detectives McDonnell, howsounding&#13;
names, Mr. Taft may tell&#13;
them a little jest by which Dr.&#13;
William Everett used to teach&#13;
simplicity:&#13;
lady retires;' at Harvard 'the presi&#13;
dent's wife goes to bed." "&#13;
ever, says that both Gastunian and&#13;
the doctor's wife confessed their guilt&#13;
to him and the doctor after their arrest&#13;
Thursday afternoon. Yet, Mrs.&#13;
At Yale 'the president's i J°yaJian. like Gastanian protested&#13;
her innocence when questioned at the&#13;
county jail immediately after the&#13;
shooting.&#13;
Standing on the blood-stained spot&#13;
where Gastanian was murdered in the&#13;
police court Friday morning, Dr. Boyajian,&#13;
the murderer, was arraigned before&#13;
Justice Stein Saturday morning.&#13;
He was brought into court by Detectives&#13;
Palmer and Bodinus, who made&#13;
the charge of murder against him.&#13;
"Do vou know the nature of the&#13;
Rameses II. is dead. He was not&#13;
the great ruler of ancient Egypt, as the&#13;
name given him might indicate, though&#13;
the date of his birth ran well back&#13;
into the past. Rameses was a toad,&#13;
and miners digging 500 feet below the&#13;
surface at Butte, Mont., found hi»i™m ; charge against you?" asked tho court,&#13;
there, imbedded in rock. He was "No, I don't know the nature of&#13;
sound asleep, hut awoke when brought it," the prisoner replied&#13;
into the light of day, and has been decidedly&#13;
l i v e l y since. 'The Bronx zoo&#13;
acquired him as one of its most notable&#13;
cuVHosifihw, scientists paving decided&#13;
that" he must be l,0Q0jOr 1,200&#13;
years old, if not more so. And now,&#13;
having lived tb what was liberally a&#13;
green old agfcjffe^nas succumbed to the&#13;
inevitable. Life under modern conditions&#13;
appears to have been too swift&#13;
for a reptile that had passed so long&#13;
a period in unbroken stone and&#13;
quiet.&#13;
The April dividend and interest pay- j&#13;
ments in this country aggregate considerably&#13;
more than $123,000,000. This j&#13;
is about $10,000,000 above the pay- ;&#13;
ments of the same kind a year ago,&#13;
which is convincing proof of the im- j&#13;
provement in conditions. What is espe- ]&#13;
daily significant is the advance in in- |&#13;
dustrial dividends, which are nearly j&#13;
$5,000,000 greater than in 1908. Dividends&#13;
represent actual profits, while '&#13;
interest is money paid out for loans, j&#13;
But from either point of view the situation&#13;
is satisfactory. It shows that&#13;
industrial -concerns are making more&#13;
money and that railroad and other&#13;
earnings are sufficient to meet all in- ;&#13;
terest demands and in most cases to j&#13;
provide for distribution of gains to i&#13;
stockholders. j&#13;
"Well, it is in connection with the&#13;
shooting of your nephew yesterday,"&#13;
the court explained.&#13;
"Do I have to answer any questions&#13;
here?" the doctor asked.&#13;
"Xo. you rsfay stand mute if you&#13;
want to." thr/court fold him.&#13;
"Very well, then," the doctor said.&#13;
"1 will not say anything,"&#13;
"All right, I shall set your hearing&#13;
for next Friday and remand you&#13;
to the custody of the sheriff without&#13;
bail," tlie court declared,&#13;
"Make it Tuesday," suggested the&#13;
prisoner.&#13;
The court did as requested and then&#13;
the doctor was taken over to the&#13;
county jail.&#13;
At I he jail he broke down and wcjit&#13;
bitterly. He volunteered the Information&#13;
that in Armenia radical measures&#13;
are taken against a yierson who&#13;
commits the offense charged to his&#13;
wife. In this cDuniry he complained&#13;
the laws are not strict enough.&#13;
"In Armenia," said the doctor, "a&#13;
person guilty of this crime Is taken&#13;
by a mob about a mile and a half beyond&#13;
a town and stoned. The laws&#13;
of America are not sufficient; they&#13;
are net strict enough."&#13;
The doctor showed some surprise&#13;
when Informed that his wife was out&#13;
on bail. He also apologized to Detective&#13;
Robert Palmer because the bullet&#13;
fired at his wife narrowly missed&#13;
Detective Palmer's head.&#13;
The next development of the wireless&#13;
telegraph idea seems to be the&#13;
establishment of municipal stations In&#13;
all principal cities, to the end that, no&#13;
matter what storms may sweep the&#13;
country, it will be possible to communicate&#13;
with the outside world so long&#13;
as the city hall tower remains standing,&#13;
Philadelphia is taking the lead,&#13;
and inasmuch as the expense is relatively&#13;
Rlight, it, la likely that other cities&#13;
will he communicating with each&#13;
other in the i*ear future.&#13;
Morocco may again become the theater&#13;
of disturbance. There are signs of&#13;
the outbreak of a revolt against the&#13;
new sultan which may take the form&#13;
of a holy war—that is, one in which&#13;
the Mohammedans may be summoned&#13;
to fight on the pretense of devotion to&#13;
License Medicine Vendors.&#13;
The bill of the state druggists' association&#13;
providing a license for itinerant&#13;
medicine vendors and peddlers.&#13;
and against which h u n d r e d of petitions&#13;
have been filed, failed to pass&#13;
the committee of the whole, although&#13;
there was a decided sentiment in the&#13;
h o m e in favor of the measure. What&#13;
killed the bill was the adoption of an&#13;
amendment by Representative Baker&#13;
taking the whole matter out. of the&#13;
hands of the state board of pharmacy,&#13;
and giving it to county clerks. There&#13;
was a warm fight over this amendment&#13;
on which the fate of the bill&#13;
practically hung, and it was carried&#13;
only by a very close vote. In his remarks&#13;
upon the merits of the hill.&#13;
Representative Curtiss predicted that.&#13;
the introduction of this bill is but the&#13;
preliminary skirmish of the big struggle&#13;
that, is to ensue in this state to&#13;
determine whether the peddler system&#13;
should l&gt;e allowed to overrun the&#13;
state to the extent that, the country&#13;
and village stores will be practically&#13;
wiped out. He stated that stringent.&#13;
laws with prohibitive licenses have&#13;
been or are being passed in surround&#13;
their faith. But. with Ralsull and aev- i ing states, and that the peddlers are&#13;
eral other former disturbers of the B w ^rming Into Michigan, where they&#13;
peace keeping quiet, there is hope that " e l l p , .n K wel&lt;,omen* with open arms.&#13;
,,. _ ' ' There j s at. present no way of securthings&#13;
may simmer down. , } n K a n * t a x P f , o r s u p p r v l 9 l o n o f a n y&#13;
The contract has been given for&#13;
the construction of the Clermont,&#13;
which is to be a fan simile of the famous&#13;
steamer built by Robert Fulton,&#13;
and which made the trip to Albany 100&#13;
years ago. The craft, like the imitation&#13;
Halfmpon, typifying Hudson's&#13;
craft, will he used in the tercentenary&#13;
calebratlon thi« year, and . everybody&#13;
afcmgr the river win have a* chalet t©&#13;
Me the boats.&#13;
kind over these itinerant dolars. and&#13;
the public is being constantly imposed&#13;
upon by fakes of the most pronounced&#13;
type. Mr. Curtiss contended&#13;
that failure to take some action on&#13;
this situation would in the near future&#13;
compel the legislature to pass a&#13;
measure much more prohibitive than&#13;
the one proposed.&#13;
Ann Arbor council license com/nIttee&#13;
has.deoided to cut the number of&#13;
saloons this year. Ten less licences&#13;
will be granted than in i*og&#13;
Wiley P. TJtiey, founder of the village,&#13;
of Whitehall, is dead at the Matonic&#13;
home In Grand Rapids, aged S8.&#13;
George j | , Miefcaejs, CO, hung, a * ^ '&#13;
tself in u barn belonging to his c &lt; &lt; a a j a &gt;&#13;
George Mitchell, near W h i t ^ c l o u d '&#13;
He had been mlBtsIng two d * W C e a&#13;
found.&#13;
Joseph M c K e o w r ^ 3 i | W R B f o u n d&#13;
dead in the rtx a o f m fiattle C r e c k&#13;
bei£r n !wLiKthP p-a r ^raevt lotlvf er *»wvlh»iKc h Wwl laesd ChoIumnd"&#13;
on the&#13;
, dresser.&#13;
VV.. B. Hayden, the Cafesopolis hardw&#13;
a r e merchant who fell through a&#13;
trapdoor in his store last week and&#13;
received a slight fracture of his skull,&#13;
lb in u critical condition.&#13;
Marlon Bailey, the 3-year-old daughter&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. A. Bailey, of&#13;
Church, is dead as the result of injuries&#13;
received when she was knocked&#13;
down by a horse and trampled&#13;
upon.&#13;
Vincent Abbott, defendant In MUH&#13;
kegon's famous affinity ease, was sentenced&#13;
to one year la Ionia reformatory&#13;
by Judge Sessions Friday. The&#13;
co-defendant, Mrs. Geo. Kimpel, was&#13;
released.&#13;
No trace or Ralph C. Phelps, the&#13;
Ann Arbor liveryman who disappeared&#13;
two weeks ago, has been found. Monday&#13;
his horses were sold at auction&#13;
for $585, and this amount will go to&#13;
his creditors.&#13;
Jonathan Wright, 58, was struck by&#13;
an automobile in Jackson and died&#13;
soon after reaching the City hospital.&#13;
The automobile was driven by Ralph&#13;
Lewis, who was recently arrested for&#13;
exceeding the speed limit in Detroit.&#13;
The inmates of Jackson prison are&#13;
sending out circular letters stating&#13;
that they have formed a "league for&#13;
self-improvement" and ask that the&#13;
people outside the prison lend their&#13;
assistance that the movement may be&#13;
successful. .&#13;
Miss E. Stanford Millar, an Australian&#13;
evangelist,, held up the services in&#13;
a Saginaw Methodist church Wednesday&#13;
night lor several minutes until&#13;
every lady in the audience had com;&#13;
plied with her request that they remove&#13;
their hats.&#13;
Attorney George Lambert is after&#13;
the Business Men's association for the&#13;
alleged illegal granting of bonuses to&#13;
manufacturers, to locate in Niles. He&#13;
claims that In the past eight years&#13;
$5:),0(.1(1, raised by the s,iU&gt; of "park&#13;
bonds,", -have been ffiven- away.&#13;
Fred Shaw. 28, of Gardendale, owes&#13;
his life to his shepherd dog "Rove,"&#13;
whose faithfulness a few days ago in&#13;
dragging him from the track, where&#13;
he lay sleeping, saved his master&#13;
from being ground to. death beneath&#13;
the wheels of a Grand Trunk train.&#13;
Victor II. Thomas, 72, of Three&#13;
Ouks. is dead of a cancer which appeared&#13;
oa.his hand a.few weeks ego.&#13;
He wa« one of the three men in the&#13;
same locality who wire affected at almost&#13;
the-same time. One of the 'other&#13;
! men died a week ago, and the other&#13;
I is now recovering.&#13;
I Judge Kinne Thursday night heard&#13;
j the arguments in the application of&#13;
! the American Surety Co., surety on&#13;
, the bond of former State Treasurer&#13;
j Frank P. Glazier for $50,000, to be declared&#13;
a preferred creditor. After&#13;
several hours of argument the court&#13;
took the matter under advisement.&#13;
The body of Stawham Kalahtak, of&#13;
Amasa, Mich., was fouud in Peshtigo&#13;
river with a bruise on the head. It is&#13;
believed lhat the man, who was last&#13;
Been on Saturday when he was drinking&#13;
with a number of companions and&#13;
had several hundreds of dollars in his&#13;
pockets, had been killed and the body&#13;
thrown into the river.&#13;
Dr. F. M. Shumway, secretary of&#13;
the state board of health, has been&#13;
notified by Charles J. Hatfield, chairman&#13;
of the awards committee of the&#13;
International Congress on Tubeculosis,&#13;
that the model shack designed by the&#13;
board, and which has been on exhibition&#13;
in New York and Washington,&#13;
has been awarded first prize.&#13;
"People, you may think this strange,&#13;
but there is no girl in it." So read a&#13;
note left by Frank Miner, 25 years old,&#13;
of Allegan, before he slashed his&#13;
throat with a razor at the home of&#13;
Samuel Ashley, of Doster, with whom&#13;
he boarded. He later said he wsnted&#13;
to live. He will. He had been out of&#13;
his head following an attack of gastritis.&#13;
Michigan and Indiana officers are&#13;
hunting for John Schneck, who disappeared&#13;
mysteriously several days ago.&#13;
Schneck, a Stevensvllle merchant,&#13;
made a trip to St. Joseph, purchased&#13;
some goods for his store and then&#13;
dropped out of sight. During his absence&#13;
his aged father died, and the&#13;
body is now being held pending the&#13;
location, if possible, of the son.&#13;
George Jefferson, who was arrested&#13;
shortly after he attempted to obtain&#13;
an interview with the men held, for&#13;
robbing the Hillsdale postofflce, and&#13;
on whose person several skeleton&#13;
keys were found, was sentenced tn 1(1&#13;
years in Jackson prison Friday. This&#13;
ir, the limit for carrying such articles.&#13;
It is believed he intended to give the&#13;
keys to prisoners in order that they&#13;
might escape.&#13;
Francis A. Morgan, 70, of Hanover,&#13;
said to be the tallest man ever an inmate&#13;
of the Jackson county poorhouse,&#13;
was admitted to that institution&#13;
recently, c«'d a special bed is heing&#13;
built to accommodate him. Morgan&#13;
was formerly a prosperous merchant&#13;
01 Hanover, but when he received&#13;
a legacy of $800 at the death&#13;
of a sister a few years* ago decided&#13;
that it would keep him th,e remainder&#13;
of his life. The-money,tlwbjdled gv^ay.&#13;
rapidly, however.&#13;
J « PRISON&#13;
GRAFTERS HAMEB&#13;
TEN ARE ON THE LIST HEADED&#13;
BY ARMSTRONG AND&#13;
WENQER.&#13;
SOME STRONG COMMENT.&#13;
One Whose Name Is Not Given Is&#13;
Out of the State, and Will Be&#13;
Looked Up.&#13;
The Jackson county grand jury,&#13;
which for nearly Ave weeks had been&#13;
Investigating the state prison and its&#13;
administration,, taking *"i eleventhhour&#13;
look into som£ Jackson city matters,&#13;
made its report to the circuit&#13;
jourt, Judge James Parkinson presiding,&#13;
Saturday, and with the report returned&#13;
20 indictments for 19 men. Ten&#13;
of these men are, or have been, connected&#13;
with the prison, directly as&#13;
warden or acting warden or as contractors&#13;
or purveyors of prison supplies.&#13;
Of the remaining nine, eight are&#13;
Jackson plumbers and not concerned&#13;
in the prison matter at all. The nineteenth&#13;
man is a former resident of&#13;
Jackson, now living elsewhere in the&#13;
United States, and whose name all&#13;
the newspaper men on the job agreed&#13;
to withhold, to the end that the offlceis&#13;
may lay hands on him. He Is ac*&#13;
cused of a certain Jackson city, deal&#13;
of no great public, interest. The list&#13;
of men indicted and made public follows:&#13;
ALLEN N. ARMSTRONG, ex prison&#13;
warden.&#13;
MILTON DAILY, agent for binder&#13;
twine machinery, 115 Dearborn street,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
J. A. EMMINGER, president Hoover&#13;
&amp; Gamble Co., twine machinery&#13;
manufacturers. Miamisburg, Ohio.&#13;
JOHN C. VVENGBR, acting warden,&#13;
Jackson prison.&#13;
CLYDE B. ELWOOD, agent for a&#13;
brick company, Jackson, two indictments.&#13;
CHARLES A. ELLIOTT, well digger,&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
FRED SNYDER, swill dealer, Jackson.&#13;
GEO. J. MA1NO, boilermaker, Jackson.&#13;
M. J, NORRIS. grocer. Jackson.&#13;
CARL G. TRUMBLB. druggist,&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
J. J. DOWSETT, J. H. MAHONEY.&#13;
LUTHER H. NEWBY. LUTHER A. NOWLIN, J: R. MURRAY, SEBASTIAN&#13;
j . WI«TZ, wrLLiAM 'wrrtTz&#13;
and W. J. BELL, all members of the&#13;
so-called plumbers' trust of dackson.&#13;
ONE OTHER MAN, formerly of&#13;
Jackson, indicted for a Jackson city&#13;
matter, name known, but withheld&#13;
till warrant can be served.&#13;
Some of the comments in the jury's&#13;
report are here given: Most of the&#13;
time of the jury was spent in investigating&#13;
the affairs of the Michigan&#13;
state prison. This institution is under&#13;
the control of a board of three,&#13;
appointed by the governor. The members&#13;
of the board receive no compensation&#13;
for their service. It meets&#13;
once a month and spends a few hours&#13;
hearing reports, allowing bills and&#13;
transacting other business, Our investigation&#13;
disclosed the fact that the&#13;
members of this board performed&#13;
many of their duties in a perfunctory&#13;
manner, and for this reason their&#13;
judgment to the state was of little&#13;
value in purchasing materials, allowing&#13;
bills, or even in the enforcement&#13;
of their own rules. Bills have been&#13;
presented before this board, and have&#13;
been allowed and paid without anyone&#13;
in connection with the institution&#13;
having actual knowledge of the correctness&#13;
of the claim. Responsibility&#13;
was divided and shifted from one to&#13;
another of the employes, showing a&#13;
lack of system in receiving and accounting&#13;
for material and supplies&#13;
which would not be the case If proper&#13;
methods were adopted and enforced&#13;
throughout. Lumber was purchased&#13;
and the bills paid, and afterwards the&#13;
lumber account was found to be 20,-&#13;
000 feet short, showing that the method&#13;
for accounting for lumber distribution&#13;
was wrong, or that the lumber&#13;
was never received.&#13;
Purchases by the warden of all sorts&#13;
of supplier have been made and contracts&#13;
awarded for them without advertising&#13;
for bids&#13;
We found one instance of a member&#13;
of the prison hoard usln£ hia&#13;
official connection for the purpose of&#13;
assisting himself during the late financial&#13;
depression. Currency was scarce&#13;
and h a r d e n get in the small town&#13;
where the official conducts a hanki&#13;
Unable to secure currency himself on&#13;
draffs made upon Detroit banks, he&#13;
did not hesitate to invoke the aid of&#13;
ihe warden to get his drafts converted&#13;
into currency, and he rather naivelv&#13;
admitted that It did not make any&#13;
difference to him, even if state funds&#13;
were used, so long as he got the currency.&#13;
Stale funds were used, and&#13;
while no loss t'* the state occurred in&#13;
this instance, we rail attention to it&#13;
to show how easy it is for some men&#13;
in official positions, even with honent&#13;
Intentions, to mix the public business&#13;
wllh their own.&#13;
At. the beginning of our Inquiry info&#13;
xtate matters, we were delayed by the&#13;
nlmost universal dlsjinsitlon on the&#13;
part of witnesses to deny knowledge&#13;
of anything wrong with the purchasing&#13;
of the binder twine plant. Every&#13;
nne.ronnoctod with thai matter ln*isi&gt;&gt;&#13;
ed that it was new machinery and&#13;
sp$i£,of fhosc ,^fho paf^icipated i a d t n&#13;
purchase seemed very hard to con-&#13;
:¥".*.&#13;
STQ&#13;
%&#13;
FALSE.&#13;
The Warehipe W ^ h Made t h * Great&#13;
*• ^ T o l i r M o i w r e i k e . V * &lt;&#13;
BeWetarT «t *fMT 1 W S **reyei*&lt;ec&#13;
l a r « fnaf the "16 ~battTesE!pB of the&#13;
Atlantic f i « « wMett •nme-Htre v«y»8«&#13;
around the worl* were Jn..e9cgt|fjit&#13;
6bn0ftlon"and the fact that they were*&#13;
accompanied by a repair ship k e p t&#13;
them in good ord,ef throughout Tte»&#13;
trip.&#13;
&gt; He referred**! an Article In an aftfe^&#13;
pan publication saying the result o t&#13;
the trip was worth frito J35,C?t),W0 t o&#13;
|50,000b000 t c r t t e Unlfe* ^ t a t e b n*?y-&#13;
The eelrftkry A i d faf kad fofind t h e&#13;
voyage ha&lt;f cbsr'ottly $1.51)0,000 more&#13;
than if the,t)9t,U««JiljMt had been kept&#13;
at home;jind assigned to ordinary&#13;
juti.es. *fhe^ b a t t l e m p s needed n o&#13;
extensive i-epati»/&gt; *od HJile f*act that&#13;
(hey were to remain at the navy yafda.&#13;
a month longer than at first contemplated&#13;
was not due'to a need of more,&#13;
repiirs bat to tH* fact that material*,&#13;
needed for the repairb were not available,&#13;
i&#13;
The changes in the.-njagtB had bee a&#13;
decided upon after extensive teats&#13;
and experlmeutrnrri.whlch fBe told&#13;
masts had been fired Into by fcigr&#13;
gune. The adoption of the skeleton,&#13;
masts with which the battleships arebeing&#13;
fitted was decided upon after&#13;
these tests. Some of the ships wilt&#13;
leave the yards with only one of&#13;
these masts because the material for&#13;
a second one will not be available in&#13;
time to complete the change--before&#13;
the beginning of the summer maneuvers.&#13;
Hanged at Dawn, !:&#13;
• Kadtr Pa^ha, second eunuch- of the&#13;
palace .under the- regime of Abthil&#13;
Hamid, was hanged at dawn Thursday&#13;
on the GaJaM bridge, the great thoroughfare&#13;
tbat connectB Statebpul with&#13;
the quartern of Galata and Pera. The&#13;
body was allowed to swing until 8&#13;
o'clock in the mornliyr and the people&#13;
stopped to look at the g r e a t Nubian&#13;
whose name was a terror under Abdul&#13;
Hamid.&#13;
The dead man's face showed an undershot&#13;
jaw and thick, heavy lips, in&#13;
life he had been fullv 6 feet 4 inches&#13;
tall.&#13;
Nadir was executed after a trial by&#13;
court-martial on the charge that he&#13;
Instigated the mutiny of the troops&#13;
April 13. He was reputed to be intensely&#13;
ambitious, subtle-minded and&#13;
insensible to the feelings of others.&#13;
He was one of the trio that formed&#13;
Abdul Hamid's private cabinet under&#13;
the old regime.&#13;
To Save Missionaries.&#13;
Two battalions of Turkish troop3 arrived&#13;
in Mersina, Thursday. It is understood&#13;
that a strong detachment will&#13;
at once be sent up country to Hadjln&#13;
to effect the relief of the American&#13;
women missionaries there who for&#13;
nearly a fortnight have been besieged&#13;
in their miBsiou house by a horde of&#13;
fanatical Mohammedan tribesmen&#13;
from the surrounding country.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit.—Cattle—Kxtra steers, $f"&gt;.7G&#13;
@t&gt;; .steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,200&#13;
lbs, $5.50(^5.60: steers uand hoifers, 800&#13;
•to 1,000 IbR, $5@5.25; grass .^tcerff and&#13;
heifer* .-thnt avo fat, 800 to 1,000 lbs,&#13;
$5@r&gt;.i!5; irrass steers and heifers that&#13;
ure fat, 500 to 700 lbs, $4.50®4.85;&#13;
choice fat cows, $4.50&lt;&amp;'4.75; good fat&#13;
cows, $4 ¢4.50: common cows, t'iii&#13;
3.75; cannerg, $2@2.25; choice heavy&#13;
bulls, $4.50; fair to good bolognas,&#13;
bulls. $4^4,25; stock bujl», $S.50&lt;o&gt;4;&#13;
choice feeding steers, 800 to 1,000 IbB,&#13;
$4.50®4.90; fair feeding steers, 800 to&#13;
1,000 IbB, $4®4.50; choice stocicers. 500&#13;
to 700 lbs, $4.25@4.60: fair stockors,&#13;
500 to 700 lbs. $,1.50@4; stock heifers,&#13;
$3.25(¾3.60; milkera, large, yomiK, medium&#13;
age, $40@.i5; common milkera,&#13;
$25(3)40.&#13;
Veol calves—Market steady, lant&#13;
week's prices. Best, $6.50®7; other*,&#13;
$4fi!6.&#13;
Milch cows and springers-—Stoady.&#13;
Sheep and Iambs—Market steady,&#13;
last week's prices; a fevr choice ellpn,&#13;
10c to 20c higher. Best lambs, $6.75&#13;
6&gt;7; fair to good lambs, $5.50(8)6.50:&#13;
light to common lambs, $4.50®5; wool&#13;
lambR. $7.50@8; fair to good sheep,&#13;
$4.50@6; culls and common, $2.50®&#13;
3.50; spring lambs, $12.&#13;
Hogs—Market 5c to 10c higher than&#13;
laat Thursday; steady with Friday,&#13;
Range of prices: Light to good butchers.&#13;
$7.25^7.40; pigs, $B.50«?R.75; light&#13;
yorkers, $6.85@7.15; »taj?s, 1-3 off.&#13;
East Buffalo—Ottle—Best export&#13;
steers, $6©6.50; best 1.200 to 1.3,Q0-lb&#13;
shipping steers, $S.7n(g&gt;6.25; best 1,000&#13;
to 1,100-lb shipping steers $5.5e©5.75;&#13;
best fat cows, $4.Sft@5; fair to good,&#13;
$3.75®4; trimmers. $2.50@2.75; best fat&#13;
heifers, $4.50(^5.25; light fat heifers, $4&#13;
($4.25; best bulls, $4.75(5)5; bologna&#13;
bulls. $4(J*4.25; beat feeding steers, $4.50&#13;
^4.75; best stockers. $4.2fi@4.50; common&#13;
stockers, $3.R0®3.75; fresh cow*&#13;
and springers today sold&lt;About steady;&#13;
best, $45@55; common. $30&lt;S&gt;33.&#13;
Hogs—.Lower; medium to heavy, $7.60&#13;
(?i7.7Q; two or thr«e decks choice. $7.75;&#13;
mixed, $7.fi0S&gt;7.«&gt;R; best, $7.50@7.«0;&#13;
light york«rs, $7.30®7.50; pigs, $?.10@&#13;
7.15; roughs. $6.55®6.«0; stags, $5&lt;f?)f».56.&#13;
Sheep—Ton lambs, $7.30(^7.35: fair to&#13;
jcood, $fi.25(fi»7: culls. $606.50; skin&#13;
-ulls, $4 62 4.50: yearlings, $5.75@6;&#13;
wethers, $5.25(ff&gt;5.40; ewes, $4.50(5f&gt;4.75,-&#13;
culls. sheep. $2&lt;fi&gt;3.50.&#13;
drain, KU-.&#13;
Detroit.*—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red.&#13;
$1.40: July opened with au advance of&#13;
%c at $1.12½. worked up to SI.14. declined&#13;
to $1.13¼ and closed at $1.13%:&#13;
September opened nt $1.05^, advanced&#13;
to $1.0fiv4, (ipr»iined to Ji.Ofi and closed&#13;
at $1.06¼ ; No. 3 red, $1.37, No. 1 white,&#13;
tl.40.&#13;
Corn---Cash No. 3, 75.:: No. :: vr-How,&#13;
76 c.&#13;
Oats—Cash No. 3 white. 1 iar at&#13;
5 7 M c&#13;
Uyc—-Cash No. 2,1 ~ f at ^Oo.&#13;
Reans- -Cash and Mny, 32...5 bid; October,&#13;
ll.ftT old.&#13;
Clove* .•M("-&gt;d--rrlme spot. 40 hags at&#13;
*".75- Gfioher. 100 liners ut. '$«.50;&#13;
March, iM bags at 16.6:-: sample, 20&#13;
bags at $5.40. 35 nt J5.25. 10 «7 $5.&#13;
Timothy se«d—Primo s p o t / 50 hag*&#13;
at 11.65.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lh sneks. jobbing lots:&#13;
Branr"$28; coarse middling*, $2£&gt;; ftnertiiddliigs.&#13;
**•; c**cH»d corn nna coarse&#13;
nofnTnea^ $29^ corn and .^at chop, $27"&#13;
Flour—Best Michigan pHt*nt. 16 50;&#13;
ordinary patent. $«.2fi; straights. $6.15:&#13;
;1MT, $*; sprln* patent, $6.GO; purtfrye,.&#13;
$4.65 per bbl in wood, lobbing lots.&#13;
['eftm&#13;
SERIAL&#13;
STORY&#13;
&gt;&gt;i"i»'i ' • • • • ' • » sne&#13;
'I I I I H H&#13;
FLEETS&#13;
*OY NORTON&#13;
ILLUSTftaTED BY A. WEIL&#13;
TTTT^STTTT&#13;
Ck&amp;IV*. INT. kt Tfa Aimfcn* S«»4*j IbcMiaw.&#13;
8 Y N 0 P 6 I 8 .&#13;
"Vanishing Fleets," a story of "what&#13;
might have happened," opeas In Washington&#13;
with the United mate* and Japan&#13;
Hear war. Guy HUller. secretary of the&#13;
British embassy, and Miss Norma Roberts,&#13;
chief aide of Inventor Roberts, arts&#13;
introduced as- lovers* Japan declares war&#13;
and takes the Philippines. Guy HllUer&#13;
•tarts for England. Norma Roberts&#13;
leaves Washington for the Florida coast.&#13;
Hawaii is captured by the Japs. All ports&#13;
aro closed. Tokyo learns of missing Japanese&#13;
fleet. England's fleet mysteriously&#13;
disappears, The kaiser is missing. King&#13;
ESdward of England is confronted by Admiral&#13;
Bevlns of the United States. The&#13;
Dreadnaught, biggest of England's warships,&#13;
Is discovered at an Impassable&#13;
point in the Thames. The atory now goes&#13;
back to a time 'many months before the&#13;
war breaks out. Inventor Roberts exhibits&#13;
a metal production. This overcomes&#13;
friction when electrified and is to&#13;
ba applied to vessels. Roberts evolves a&#13;
grsat flying machine. The cabinet plans&#13;
a. radloplane war against Japanese. The&#13;
atari is made for the scene of conflict.&#13;
After maneuvering the airships descend,&#13;
and by use of strong magnets lilt the&#13;
warships, one by one, from the sea. The&#13;
vessels are deposited In the United States.&#13;
The British fleet accepts American hospitality&#13;
and Is conveyed to the United&#13;
States. The kaiser is taken on a trip—&#13;
hla first visit to America—thus accounting&#13;
for his disappearance. King Edward&#13;
is brouRht to America on a radloplane&#13;
for conference with the president. They&#13;
agree to work for world peace. Announcement&#13;
of the secret of the radloplane is&#13;
made In Central park. New York, to the&#13;
wonder of millions. The king n*?ets his&#13;
men. He departs In an airship for London.&#13;
Half way across the Atlantic the&#13;
radloplane bearing the kaiser is met.&#13;
CHAPTER XXII.—Continued.&#13;
He had worked with hla hands,&#13;
shared the annoyances of his companions,&#13;
and known the joys of independence&#13;
and self-support. He had discovered&#13;
the trappings of courts to be&#13;
shallow emblems and tawdry when&#13;
contrasted with the true coats of primitive&#13;
nature. He had learned that men&#13;
when stripped of outward rank and&#13;
position were very similar, and could&#13;
demand only such respect from their&#13;
fellows as they were entitled to by&#13;
merit. Honest companionship which&#13;
nought no other return was a priceless&#13;
treasure. And now with this new&#13;
view of life, stronger in health and unjaundiced&#13;
in mind, he was glad to ally&#13;
himself and his empire in a movement&#13;
which promised advancement without&#13;
conquest and gain without aggression.&#13;
The drums of war sounded very hollow,&#13;
and their unmusical beatings&#13;
were dying away in the distance, going&#13;
to inglorious silence and disuse. It&#13;
was hetter so!&#13;
In response to an order from Bevins,&#13;
a servant with noiseless feet and deft&#13;
hands brought refreshments to them.&#13;
The king rose, and tho others immediately&#13;
stood.&#13;
"Before we part company and re&#13;
nume our way to our homes," he said,&#13;
"I shall ask you to drink my toast."&#13;
He stood erect, lifted his glass high in&#13;
the air until the lights above caught&#13;
the quivering opalescent liquid in their&#13;
rays, and then in a voice of extreme&#13;
reverence said:&#13;
"Gentlemen, to the ruler of that&#13;
greatest of all kingdoms, Peace, his&#13;
excellency the president of the United&#13;
States."&#13;
CHAPTER X X i f l .&#13;
Peace It Declared.&#13;
The world had become an- instrument&#13;
attuned to the breaking pitch,&#13;
and awoke to have every string within&#13;
it played upon in a day. It was a&#13;
royal tune in which city after city was&#13;
called upon to contribute. London,&#13;
which had passed a sleepless night,&#13;
was astir before dawn, aroused into a&#13;
pitch of terrific excitement by the return&#13;
of the Rrrberts, which swooped&#13;
down from the air aglow with light,&#13;
and courting notice.&#13;
At the iron gates la front of the palnee,&#13;
where the' sentries were briskly&#13;
tramping to and fro until called together&#13;
by the descent of the radioplane,&#13;
the Roberts came to the ground&#13;
with every searchlight playing into&#13;
the air. The alarm had been given&#13;
before she came, and guards wero&#13;
turning out from their barracks and&#13;
hurrying to the palace on the run,&#13;
with arms in hand to defend Buckingham&#13;
from the oncoming monster. Not&#13;
until it was near the ground was it&#13;
discovered that from the peaks Abated&#13;
three flags, the Union Jack, the Star*&#13;
and Stripe* and the white banner of&#13;
t r w * . .. .&#13;
JB—hasty "^formatton —tJae soldiers&#13;
faced the 4»Iace where the amenta*&#13;
with its staring Wes would alight, and&#13;
rank oaf rank, present*** a| , syibbfft^&#13;
front id the visitor. Taeir astonish&#13;
mkffl ^ r r t a L r t y W f t ' p t e l ttf* rec&#13;
o^atteg' Ms the n&gt;*t tntan {Jo emerge&#13;
frjbn* the *4de j&amp; this , unexpected&#13;
craft the missing king, followed by the&#13;
prime minister and the head of the&#13;
navy, aa well, all smiling, and all taking&#13;
quick cognizance of the array of&#13;
defenders.&#13;
The ranking officer of the guard recovered&#13;
bis poise, gave the command&#13;
and the soldiers saluted, after which&#13;
he stepped forward In response, to the&#13;
king's beckoning and received Instructions&#13;
for the safeguarding of the Roberts.&#13;
Bevlns and the secretary of&#13;
atate, aa they walked through the Iron&#13;
gates, guests of the British nation,&#13;
heard the quick precise steps of men&#13;
marching to form a square round&#13;
their craft, and pictured to themselves&#13;
the curiosityl which would be&#13;
aroused when the day broke.&#13;
Thug l£ was that within an hour&#13;
after their arrival a crowd was collecting&#13;
which outdid the one that assembled&#13;
to view the Dreadnought on&#13;
the day of her return. The strange&#13;
and silent Roberts, resting in the roadway&#13;
and floating the American and&#13;
English flags, which had been intertwined&#13;
by the fingers of a friendly&#13;
breeze, was of greater interest than&#13;
any other sight within memory. It&#13;
was rumored through the throng that&#13;
the king had returned; but the explanation&#13;
of his absence was yet to come.&#13;
For once officialdom did not hesitate,&#13;
but sent to the newspapers of the city&#13;
the full account of the visit to the&#13;
United States, together with the reasons&#13;
and results, and also the story&#13;
of the fleet which had been given up&#13;
for lost. It was Intimated that the official&#13;
overtures of the United States&#13;
would be made known at a later hour&#13;
of the day through due channels, and&#13;
thuB the air was charged with expectancy.&#13;
In the meantime Berlin too had&#13;
been given its time of tumult. The&#13;
return of the emperor had been no&#13;
less astounding; but he with characteristic&#13;
energy had no sooner stepped&#13;
within the doors of his palace than&#13;
he called his secretaries and dictated&#13;
a complete explanation of his own disappearance,&#13;
together with a statement&#13;
of what had transpired in the United&#13;
States and a summary of the proposals&#13;
for peace which had been formulated.&#13;
The Norma waited for a&#13;
brief time only, and then in full sight&#13;
of an immense gathering of spectators&#13;
turned her nose homeward to carry&#13;
her report to Washington.&#13;
This news was cabled to London,&#13;
where its dissemination gave another&#13;
Impetus to speculation, and before it&#13;
had subsided the world's cables resumed&#13;
operations.&#13;
An operator in a transatlantic&#13;
cable office, who for weeks had sat&#13;
before his silent keys, saw a livid&#13;
signal flash, and sprang excitedly to&#13;
respond. Across the depths of the&#13;
ocean came the words:&#13;
"All embargbs are removed. The&#13;
United States of America gives greeting,&#13;
and reiterates the message which&#13;
was the first to be transmitted, 'Peace&#13;
on earth. Good will to men.' "&#13;
Events were now moving with such&#13;
prodigious rapidity that wherever&#13;
wires of communication ran men left&#13;
their occupations and waited for&#13;
whatever other remarkable information&#13;
might be forthcoming. For once&#13;
the nations seemed in such close&#13;
touch that they reactfed out to each&#13;
other "to toll their own part in the&#13;
unfolding of the great mystery. The&#13;
whole civilized world knew speedily&#13;
that the kaiser had been carried away&#13;
by accident, that his health had been&#13;
improved, and that he bore nothing&#13;
but good will toward his captors.&#13;
London transmitted the complete&#13;
story of the taking of the British fleet,&#13;
elucidated the Dreadnought's singular&#13;
return, and also made known that the&#13;
king and his associates had visited&#13;
and been detained in Washington by&#13;
their own volition.&#13;
In the United States the night had&#13;
passed with most exceptional activity.&#13;
The sight of the Roberts leaving&#13;
New York had been heralded from&#13;
coaBt to coast, and the administration,&#13;
besieged for information, yielded to&#13;
the poipular demand and gave out the&#13;
history of the war, including the account&#13;
of the invention and the creation&#13;
of the plant on the Florida key.&#13;
The little inventor and his daughter&#13;
were thrown into the limelight, and&#13;
exaggerated accounts of their marvelous&#13;
work were spread over pages&#13;
of extras wherever newspapers were&#13;
printed. The public insistently clamored&#13;
for news, more news, throughout&#13;
the hours, and seemed never satiated.&#13;
All eyes were turned to the president,&#13;
who finally, in desperation, declined&#13;
to make any further statements,&#13;
and announced that details&#13;
would have to come in later sequence,&#13;
when time could be given to their dictation.&#13;
From the great republic the cloak&#13;
of mystery and inaction was thrown&#13;
aside and the cordons to the north and&#13;
the south were being dissipated as if&#13;
by magic. That menacing line of blue&#13;
along,, the- Canadian border wws&#13;
crumbling with greater rapidity than&#13;
it had beat* formad. • Here and there&#13;
through the air awept 50 radloplanes&#13;
carrying improvised passenger accommodations,&#13;
the sun showing them&#13;
as flashing birds of blue carrying the&#13;
hosts of the guard back to their armories,&#13;
whence they might return to&#13;
their homes and occupation's of peace.&#13;
In every city throughout the, land astonished&#13;
and exultant inhabitants&#13;
watched these friendly monsters&#13;
which had made the nation the most&#13;
redoubtable in all the world. The&#13;
guns of the border were now standing&#13;
unguarded, the bivouacs obliterated,&#13;
and the paths of the sentries abandoned&#13;
to the effaceuijut of nature's&#13;
kindly growth.&#13;
Seattle was at last liberated, and&#13;
proceeded to astonish- the world with&#13;
accounts of tho imprisonment of the&#13;
Japanese fleet which had rested in&#13;
the waters of Lake Washington for so&#13;
many days. Photographs of it were&#13;
sent broadcast, together with interviews&#13;
gained from the commanders&#13;
of the napless expedition, and by special&#13;
permission Admiral Kamigawa&#13;
was allowed to cable to his government&#13;
the first full report of his disaster&#13;
which went through uncensored&#13;
and unchecked. The fact was made&#13;
patent to Japan that her men were&#13;
prisoners on parole, her ships trapped&#13;
in a helpless position, and their fate&#13;
resting entirely on the mercy of the&#13;
government.&#13;
As if to add to the proof of helplessness,&#13;
Tokio learned of the detention of&#13;
the British shipB, and knew that any&#13;
or all alliances could not be depended&#13;
upon in the presence of such might&#13;
as the Americans could brim? to bear.&#13;
Another day dawned in Washington,&#13;
bringing with It the unconditional&#13;
capitulation of Japan. She appealed&#13;
for peace with dignity, and left the&#13;
suggestion of terms to the nation with&#13;
whom none might dispute, trusting to&#13;
her magnanimity. Congress had&#13;
been called into being again, and, imbued&#13;
with the spirit which had actuated&#13;
the president through all his&#13;
Arms in Hand to Defend Buckingham.&#13;
siege of stress and trial, followed his&#13;
wishes. The lone man in the White&#13;
House loomed as something more than&#13;
mortal, and was at last being appreciated.&#13;
Japan was told that the United&#13;
States demanded neither indemnities&#13;
nor retention of the conquered fleet.&#13;
For the benefit of the public the latter&#13;
would be conveyed to New York bay,&#13;
where it would be liberated and restored&#13;
to its crews. The only condition&#13;
was that on its return to Pacific&#13;
waters it must withdraw all men it&#13;
had placed in the Philippines and&#13;
Hawaii, and restore the American flag&#13;
with appropriate salutes.&#13;
This then was the end of the great&#13;
venture by the island across the western&#13;
sea, which had staked its hope of&#13;
advancement upon a ruthless descent&#13;
on an unprepared and apparently impotent,&#13;
nation. It. had spent years in&#13;
anticipation, had purchased the most&#13;
deadly agents of destruction when&#13;
ever presented, had worked night, and&#13;
day in its navy yards to build giant&#13;
ships of war, had covered the United&#13;
States with its spies until its espionage&#13;
reached everywhere, and all for&#13;
this!&#13;
Now, after all Its deliberate plans&#13;
and quick action, it was to accept as&#13;
a sole cause for jubilation the return&#13;
of the men who had manned its mighty&#13;
fleet, and wait for the return of ships&#13;
that were useless for all purposes. Its&#13;
dream of indemnities was gone, its&#13;
ambition for more territory was never&#13;
to be realized, and its hope of competing&#13;
with other great powers as a&#13;
world factor had come to naught.&#13;
It Is doubtful if the government&#13;
shared in the joy of those who had&#13;
given up for dead the ones they loved&#13;
and were now enabled to cast aside&#13;
scarfs of- mourning. The Japanese&#13;
were to learn that one successful war&#13;
does not constitute a series, and that&#13;
all nations were not inefficient. The&#13;
lesson of civilization had been hammered&#13;
home with sickening emphasis.&#13;
Scarcely had peace been concluded&#13;
when the administration by a declaration&#13;
to its own people cut as with one&#13;
Mow of a Unite "a" knbt Which'threatened&#13;
financial panic. It was prefaced&#13;
witk a statement that the reason wfty&#13;
no Indemnities had been demanded&#13;
from Japan waaJyaaoae undet, altered,&#13;
conditions folldjtlnj i%&amp; war it would*1&#13;
be Imposing a'Hardship on a nation&#13;
already stricken, without the need&#13;
Uxer0$f. raj substance- it stated thai&#13;
inasdkjien asy there Would be no future&#13;
appropriations and consequently no&#13;
taxation for navies or fortifications,&#13;
vast reductions would automatically&#13;
be made in the expense of operating&#13;
the government. It was also announced&#13;
that as the United States&#13;
had been preseuted with a uew form&#13;
of transportation by its inventor, it&#13;
had sot aside for him and his heirs&#13;
sufficient royalties to render them&#13;
financially independent, and that iartherinore&#13;
in the interest of perpetual&#13;
peace the secret of the radloplane&#13;
would be maintained inviolable.&#13;
The railways of the country would&#13;
be permitted to reorganize and continue&#13;
as freight carriers until such&#13;
time as their rates were deemed exorbitant&#13;
or their charters expired, the&#13;
government abrogating to itself all&#13;
passenger traffic within the confines&#13;
of its own continent, and declaring&#13;
itself a competitor for all ocean transportation&#13;
under tariffs to be formulated.&#13;
It ended by asserting that government&#13;
ownership of aerial transportation&#13;
was not adopted at the behest&#13;
of any political party, but solely that&#13;
the people might derive the benefit&#13;
and the nation maintain its invulnerable&#13;
power. Thus It was that the railways&#13;
were still permitted to exist and&#13;
no hardship worked save in the readjustments&#13;
of capitalization, which&#13;
losses fell mainly upon those who had&#13;
accumulated vast fortunes by the&#13;
very inflation w^hich was now punctured.&#13;
As if to knit the world together in&#13;
international harmony, the culmination&#13;
came In a message addressed to&#13;
all nations which was penned by the&#13;
hand of the president himself. It was&#13;
his proposal for the maintenance of&#13;
peace, and read as follows:&#13;
"That war and its barbarisms may&#13;
for all time be done away with, the&#13;
United States of America submits&#13;
that:&#13;
"By the grace of God it has been&#13;
placed in possession of such power&#13;
that it could not only conquer the&#13;
world, but destroy the inhabitants of&#13;
other nations. This has been fully&#13;
demonstrated, it has no desire to util&#13;
ize its strength unjustly, but purposes&#13;
to exert it for the benefit of all men.&#13;
"It considers territorial greed to be&#13;
the real impelling motive iu nearly&#13;
all international wars. Therefore it&#13;
requests all nations become signatory&#13;
to an agreement in perpetuity that under&#13;
no circumstances shall there be&#13;
any invasion of the territory of one&#13;
country by another, and that all&#13;
boundary lines shall remain as now&#13;
established, except they be changed&#13;
by the mutual and amicable agreement&#13;
of the adjoining powers to which&#13;
they belong.&#13;
"Questions involving national dignity&#13;
can be adjusted by better means&#13;
than war, as can nearly all other&#13;
questions which from time to time&#13;
arise between governments; hence the&#13;
United States urges that full powers&#13;
of adjudication and arbitration be&#13;
vested in a standing commission representing&#13;
each nation, wlmii shall have&#13;
tor its seat of office some place upon&#13;
which the greater number may agree.&#13;
"The United States, having faith in&#13;
the Anglo-Saxon race as representing&#13;
one of the most peaceful and conservative,&#13;
has formed an offensive and de&#13;
fensive alliance with Great Britain,&#13;
through the personal efforts of the&#13;
king and his prime minister. These&#13;
two governments have no desire to&#13;
act as peace officers for the world,&#13;
hut pledge themselves to place all&#13;
their power at the command of the&#13;
international commission for the enforcement&#13;
of its findings."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
SAYS QRAiN DOES NOT F E E L&#13;
P A I N T - s W E R Y Y E A R .&#13;
No One Wantisr to Do It, But Sorffa&#13;
Paint Will Wear No Longer.&#13;
French Professor Declares Stomach li&#13;
Emotional Center.&#13;
The solar plexus is the emotional&#13;
brain, says Prof. Francois Guyot. Ar&#13;
emotion that attacks us is felt there&#13;
first. Thin, if we fool anxiety it may&#13;
give us, if severe, a positive stomachache.&#13;
It may even be productive of&#13;
nausea.&#13;
While thr&gt; brain (loos trie thinking,&#13;
Prof. Guyot opines that it does not&#13;
feel. The cerebrum, the major part&#13;
of the brain, is the intellectual, but&#13;
not the emotional center. The hraln&#13;
represents the intelligence. The spinal&#13;
cord and the cerebellum, the latter the&#13;
little brain, not yet well understood,&#13;
and attached to the brain proper,&#13;
govern equilibrium and the muscles oi&#13;
the body. But the emotions are located&#13;
in the sympathetic nervous sys&#13;
i^va ramifying through the body. Their&#13;
chief center is the great plexus ot&#13;
nerves which lies against the backlw&gt;&#13;
ne and embraces the stomach.&#13;
This dons not. think, but it feels.&#13;
What it does not feel is not felt at&#13;
all, apart from pure intellectual cog&#13;
nition. and its purely passive and subjective&#13;
sensations may often be regarded&#13;
as warning of danger or possible&#13;
mischief.&#13;
When you have a Job of painting&#13;
done you &lt;ton't expect to hate it dene&#13;
uver again-very soon. But to make&#13;
a lasting job, several things must be&#13;
taken Lnto consideration the proper&#13;
time to paint—the condition of the Curface—&#13;
the kind of materials to use, etc.&#13;
All these matters are fully covered in&#13;
the specifications which can be had free&#13;
by writing National Lead Company-,&#13;
190JJ Trinity building, New York,&#13;
and asking rfor Houaeowner's Painttug&#13;
Outfit No. 4». The outfit also includes&#13;
a book of color schemes for&#13;
both Interior and exterior painting,&#13;
and a simple instrument for detecting&#13;
adulteration in the paint materials.&#13;
The outfit will solve many painting&#13;
problems for every houaeowner.&#13;
Meantime while buying paint see t i n t&#13;
every white lead keg bears the famous&#13;
Dutch Boy Painter trademark, which&#13;
Is an absolute guarantee of purity and&#13;
quality. If your paint dealer cannot&#13;
supply you National Lead Company&#13;
will see that some one else will.&#13;
THE TWO SIDES OF HISTORY.&#13;
l o m i Pertinent Observations Mads by&#13;
Writer Evidently Not Fond of&#13;
Subject.&#13;
A long engagement means a shori&#13;
marrisjK^-^here la no stand without&#13;
its silver lining.&#13;
History is a running account of how&#13;
King Somebody-or-other either did or&#13;
did not get to a certain place, which&#13;
nobody ever heard of, before King&#13;
Somebody-else got there, from which&#13;
we are usually supposed to conclude&#13;
that it would have made quite a difference&#13;
whether he did not not.&#13;
Like nearly everything else, history&#13;
has two sides. The history of the&#13;
Garden of Eden depends upon whether&#13;
it is related by a man or a woman.&#13;
The history of the American revolution&#13;
reads quite different in English&#13;
books from the way it reads in&#13;
our own books. The history of the&#13;
civil war depends upon which side of&#13;
the Mason and Dixon line you happen&#13;
to be sitting when you write it.&#13;
History is a bore, not only because&#13;
you are unacquainted with the people&#13;
who figure In it, but because it repeats&#13;
itself.—Life.&#13;
C O M F O R T I N G .&#13;
Doctor — Most—er—fortunate you&#13;
consulted me. I'm just the very man&#13;
to—er—cure—you.&#13;
Patient—Ah, that's lucky! You are&#13;
quite familiar with my complaint,&#13;
then?&#13;
Doctor—Familiar? My dear sir, I've&#13;
had it myself-^-er—this 20 years!&#13;
Judge Will Wait and Sea.&#13;
An earnest plea was made by Attor&#13;
ney Charles Pettljohn to Judge Pritcft&#13;
ard of the criminal court for leniencr&#13;
to a client who had entered a plea of&#13;
guilty to larceny. The burden of the&#13;
attorney's argument was that his client&#13;
was the father of twins and was&#13;
tempted to theft in order to feed the&#13;
mouths of the infants.&#13;
"Your honor, I will say frankly,"&#13;
said Mr. Pettijohn in closing, "that if I&#13;
were the father of twins and needed&#13;
food for my family, I would not hesitate&#13;
to go out and steal It."&#13;
"Mr. Pettijohn, when you are the&#13;
father of twins I will consider your&#13;
proposition," said Judge Prftchard.—&#13;
Indianapolis News.&#13;
OLD SOAKERS&#13;
Get Saturated with Caffeine.&#13;
When a-person has used coffee for a&#13;
number of years and gradually declined&#13;
in health, it is time the coffee&#13;
should be left off in order to see whether&#13;
or not that has been the cause of&#13;
the trouble.&#13;
A lady in Huntsrllle, Ala., says she&#13;
used coffee for about 40 years, and for&#13;
the past 20 years was troubled with&#13;
stomach trouble.&#13;
"I have been treated by many physicians&#13;
but all in vain. Everything failed&#13;
to perfect a cure. I was prostrated for&#13;
some time, and came near dying. When&#13;
I recovered sufficiently to partake of&#13;
food and drink I tried coffee again and&#13;
it soured my stomach.&#13;
"I finally concluded coffee was the&#13;
cause of my troubles and stopped using&#13;
it. I tried tea and milk in its&#13;
place, but neither agreed with me, then&#13;
I commenced using Postum. I had it&#13;
properly made and it was very pleasing&#13;
to the taste.&#13;
"I have now used it four months, and&#13;
my health is so greatly improved that&#13;
I can eat almost anything I want and&#13;
can sleep well, whereas, before, I suffered&#13;
for years with insomnia.&#13;
"I have found the cause of my troubles&#13;
and a way to get rid of them.&#13;
You can depend upon it I appreciate&#13;
Postum."&#13;
"There's a Reason." Read "The Road&#13;
to Wenvllle," in pkgs.&#13;
E^er r*md thm t b o v c l e f t * * f A sww&#13;
• * • i f K « N frass ttsac to tftss*. T h e y&#13;
a r * ccawsaa, trwa, a s * f a l l • !&#13;
tats&#13;
••Hi*&#13;
WW w.,im,^mm\4n*imnm «ii &gt;»»W»Oi)i »i m m m. in&#13;
i^.-v&#13;
KS??'^&#13;
-««Biffiffliiray^^&#13;
•MJ"I ' - ' y , • • • ^ n y ' l ' M ~m d" ' • ' « ii nni&gt;ii. .&lt;.&lt;fr»— ifii W » i » '&#13;
. % * # - ^ ^ i ^ ^ ' ^ ^ ' ^ v ^ i ^ ^ ^ i ^ - i '&#13;
* # • • •&#13;
• » - - ^JMWT'WW&#13;
tr'-n •&#13;
«*H»«»M*«»«Mi**&lt; • « * * •&#13;
1 &lt; • •&#13;
• ' , • ' • *&#13;
^¾&#13;
1 f&gt; i&#13;
6*+&#13;
in* jPwkiuj fwpatth.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; GO. HHWRIKTOHS.&#13;
TH:&#13;
THUK8DAY, 5IAY 6, l « m&#13;
I A "Qu«r"&#13;
&gt; Ivi'v. &gt;Ir. HttK«uor«, t o wifcoae memory&#13;
l s / a slab tD t h e church a t Cats*&#13;
; hwge, Leke.stenibire, England, w a a "t»&#13;
i little guetr." It seeuiH that th« rev&gt;&#13;
•rend geutleuiau dfcil In January, lSckJ,&#13;
i l m v i u g a i i o f bin [jruptrrty, vnlued a t&#13;
———.—.. i .,.- fS^COO, to u railroad porter.&#13;
wrr, ., , , . . . , , This &lt;jueer old preacher kept oua&#13;
When it oouieb to irettini; rid of ^ „ ^ w w i », ^&#13;
, . u u u v w «w 6w » « b **u v* ^jfvant uf each aex, whom he locked&#13;
fliea n o t h i n g cau boat a d e t e r m i n - B p e v e r y night. Hla last employment&#13;
ed w o m a n armed with « u e w a p a p - 'of an evening was to go tho round* of&#13;
_, jbia premises, let loose the dogs and&#13;
I fire off his guu. He lost his tlfe In&#13;
;:_: :: :. ~ « curious manner. Starting out to let&#13;
Kills to Stop the Flcud. !«?* h l s « ™ m t n . the d o K * fawned upon&#13;
| him and threw him into a pond of&#13;
The worst foe tor 12 years of .John iWHter. The servants heard his cries,&#13;
Deye of Gladwin, Mich, was a running but, being locked up, could not render&#13;
ulcer. He paid doctors over $400.00j wsktance, so the old man was&#13;
without benefit. Then Bucklens A m , fl™^ned- K t . . . . _ .&#13;
I When t h e inventory o f his property&#13;
i t * S a l v e killed the ul«er a n d cuted &gt; w a 8 t u k e n f h e w a H found to be the&#13;
him, Cures fever sores, Boil-, talons, owner of 80 gowns, 100 pairs of troueczema,&#13;
salt Hheurn. L.tailibta for'aers, 100 pairs of boots, 400 pairs of&#13;
piles, burns scalds, ruts, , rns. 25 • "*&lt;**&gt; *&gt; ^ f , ^ l t h ° u f h h e * a d p l e n t y&#13;
fc1 -of natural hair), 50 dogs, 96 wagons&#13;
at t. A, b i k e r s . | ^ c a r t 8 ^ wheelbarrows, 249 raaors,&#13;
L" J. ..i_i L1. -LL.H. ,'i'i1... i.1 j B0 plows. 50 saddles a n d 222 pickaxes&#13;
and shovels. He surely was "a little&#13;
A r t i l l e r y for attacking airships&#13;
is n o w c o m i n g to b e regarded RH&#13;
an essential feature of G e r m a n&#13;
army manoevreH.&#13;
queer.&#13;
A Monument to • Horse.&#13;
There :iro some very curious moniv&#13;
ments to animals scattered over the&#13;
1 'I'l.. !._. countryside. T h e one with t h e most&#13;
II y o u expect to Ret the orifcua! Car remarkable story crowns Farley&#13;
! mount, near Winchester. Underneath&#13;
It lies buried, us a n inscription on t h e&#13;
exterior records, "A horse, t h e prop-&#13;
«rty of Paulet St. John, Esq., that in&#13;
n m - , , , . t&amp;e month of September, 1733. leaped&#13;
piles. Refuse substitutes, bold by toto a c h a l k p l t twenty-live feet deep&#13;
bolized Witoh Hazel iSalve, you must&#13;
be sure it is DeWitts Carbolized Witch&#13;
Hazel Salve. It is uood for cuts, burns&#13;
and bruises, and is especially pood for&#13;
All dealers.&#13;
L • _&#13;
a-fox hunting, with his master on his&#13;
back, and in October, 1734, won the&#13;
Hunters' plate on Worthing downs&#13;
If the binder twine plant c ould and was rode by his owner and enm&#13;
a k e s u c h an e x c e l l e n t s h o w i n g jtered In the name of Beware Ohalk&#13;
i n spite of t h e blood s u c k e r s that j"Pit." This inscription, which is a copy&#13;
cplinunnegr tt oo iitt , iift cpoonnnsHtiftuuttaeRs aa gorreeaatteerr , oRt 1^thhet Hor^mlnajl&gt; g l r wwal sl J"l asmto reHde atbhyc otthee,&#13;
argumerit for state account labor Bart., in 1870. A duplicate is in the&#13;
in p r i s o n s than it d i d before t h e I interior, which is provided with three&#13;
•eats intended for the accommodation&#13;
e x p o s u r e . of wayfarers.—Wide World Magazine.&#13;
Li red 152 Years.&#13;
Wm. Parr—En^lands oldest m a n -&#13;
married th« third tiiiu* at [20, worked&#13;
in the fields tih 182 and lived 20 years&#13;
longer. People should be youthful at&#13;
80. James Wright of Spurlock, Ky.,&#13;
shows how to remaiu vouusr. 441 feei&#13;
Homamado Pocket Lamp.&#13;
A simple und safe pocket lamp that&#13;
will last for about six mouths without&#13;
extra expense can be made at home&#13;
for a few cents.&#13;
Have your druggist take a strong&#13;
vial of clear glass or a pill bottle with&#13;
screw or cork top and put into it a&#13;
just like a 16 year old boy," he writes piece of phosphorus about the size of&#13;
a pen and till the bottle one-third full&#13;
of pure olive oil that has been heated&#13;
for fifteen minutes, but not boiled&#13;
Cork tightly, and the result will he a&#13;
luminous light in the upper portion of&#13;
the bottle. If the light becomes dim,&#13;
"after taking six bottles ol Electric&#13;
Bitters. For thirty \ i-ars Kidney&#13;
trouble made life a burden, but the&#13;
first bottle of this wonderful medicine&#13;
convinced me I bad toned the greatest&#13;
cure on earth."&#13;
wea&#13;
Try&#13;
• • • • i&#13;
They're a godsend to uncork and recork again. The lamp&#13;
k, sickly, rundown or o'd people. ^ 1 1 ' e t a l » »» brilliancy for about six&#13;
' Vn • EI A u- i months. This makes a perfectly safe&#13;
them. 50c fitP . A. balers. I lamp to carry. These lalammppss aarree uusseedd&#13;
by watchmen of powder magazines.&#13;
P a r i s has followed t h e splendid [ Cnre «h«ulrl tie exercised in handling&#13;
example set by the United States ; ^ ¾ ^ . ^ ™ " ^ ^&#13;
and has set apart one day each I —&#13;
week for the hearing , of charges&#13;
against children of both sexes who&#13;
Ha Was Vary Dun.&#13;
He was a very shy young gentleman,&#13;
, , . , , ., ,. and, although Ermyntrude had prehave&#13;
b e e n arrested b y t h e police . M n t e ( ] h l m w k h i n n u m c r a b l e o p p o r .&#13;
of t h e capital. i tunlties for declaring his love in praci&#13;
i i II ••• ' tlcal fashion, he could never summon&#13;
.-, , , . . , , A , , j i up sufficient courage to take advantage&#13;
E v e r y b o d y is likely to have k i d n e y \ * i L&#13;
, 0 * , \ H i * * . i o f t n e m -&#13;
and B l a d d e r trouble. In fact nearly T h e y w e r e g l t t l n g ^ U £ m a l Q n e c v e u .&#13;
eyerybody has soma trouble of this m j ? _ 8 U e o u t h e s o f a ) h e o n a c h a l r _&#13;
kind. That is the reason why you with the usual half hour intervals in&#13;
so often have pains in the back and between remarks, when the climax wan&#13;
gro. in, sca, ldin.g. s,e,n sation,. .u,r inary dmi.s - r t*"cIhsne'dt . it funny," she said, 'that the orders, etc.—that s your kidneys. Tfce l,e ngt.h. of. a man ,'• arm_ i, s *th7 e .s„a me as&#13;
beat thing to do is to get some of De- _ t n e drrurnforence of a lady's waist?"&#13;
Witts Kidney and Bladder Pills right ! "Is that so?" said he, mildly lntereataway.&#13;
Take them for a few days or \ **• "What do you say If we get a&#13;
a week or so and you will feel a l ! P ^ e of string and sec if it's right?"&#13;
right.' In this way too, you will ward&#13;
off dangerous and possibly serious ailments.&#13;
They .ire nertactly harmless&#13;
and are not, only antiseptic but allay&#13;
pain qnickly by their healing proper&#13;
ties. Send your name to E^ C. Hewitt&#13;
&amp; Co., iChkdsro, tor a fme trial box.&#13;
They are sold here by all druggists,&#13;
Wh;n Tower Loomed.&#13;
&gt; M i l l ! ' ( " ] i : i i ' ! e ! i T i - ' ! i i T.&#13;
•'• • ' : ' • ' : - ' ' . ' l l ! i 1* ; o l ' H - : s i ; i I ! r ; ; ,1 N &lt; .&#13;
. ' ii ..• new.-]);] \ i-r "*spiv;;il i: -!e!&#13;
i ;t I'-le h e ' d a t S t . IVt'&gt;rs!mrj.\&#13;
o ei'jiy r e n d e r n r e d i u ' r i l t h i s r&#13;
I t h a s ' l e a k e d o u t at t h e W a r ;&#13;
D e p a r t m e n t that t h e orders t o call j&#13;
a halt o n t h e sale of discarded I&#13;
a r m y rifles were issued that t h e&#13;
U n i t e d S t a t e s m i g h t have a reserve&#13;
s u p p l y of arms for volun- ;&#13;
teers i n cape of WRT, and r o t b e -&#13;
cause t h r rifles were b e i n g sold to&#13;
S o u t h A m e r i c a n revolutionists.&#13;
h i ;&#13;
i \ i&#13;
!• : i s n i :&#13;
'hi':!! i(&#13;
Mr.&#13;
t ; i e v e&#13;
):&lt; - - . 1 &lt; '&lt;'&#13;
y\v .,::;;i&#13;
h&#13;
l!,e I'IY-S&#13;
T n v c r .&#13;
r.:i;ix ttvr&#13;
' - • W : " ! &lt; • •&#13;
e y e ;is W;;s : - ,&#13;
\\'.:.^ -;:lilii ioiuii&#13;
.):'•. i r.e stn.id ;; t&#13;
'ekr X c r s k a . of&#13;
J;rnii;iiWl.v illllv.&#13;
d ;iml inipos-&#13;
' s k v . " - S u c e r s s&#13;
Smashes All Records.&#13;
DeWitt's Litt.e K.-ir'y Risers, the&#13;
famous little luer pills snia!! gentle&#13;
and suro. Sold by all drugg'..st&gt;.&#13;
R e c r u i t i n g officers of t h e n a v y&#13;
estimate that there will be about&#13;
25/)00 e n l i s t m e n t s into t h e naval&#13;
A s a n a l i r o u n d laxative tonic and H urvice d u r i n g the a p p r o a c h i n g&#13;
fiscal year. U p o n anlistment a&#13;
man is furnished, a c o m p l e t e o u t -&#13;
tit of c l o t h i n g , etc., and for t h e&#13;
next fiscal year t n e aura nf 11,201,-&#13;
000 is available for t h e outfits of&#13;
health builder no other pills can com&#13;
pire- wtth Dr. Kines New bite Pill*&#13;
They tone and regulate stomach, liver&#13;
and kidneys, purify the blood, streng&#13;
then the nerves; cure Constipar. on,&#13;
Djspepgia, Biliousness, .Jaundice,,&#13;
Headache, Ghills and Malaria. Try :a l 1 unlisted men and apprehensive&#13;
tb*m, 25c at F. A. Siglers. seamen.&#13;
w&#13;
Paints&#13;
and Finishes for&#13;
Every Home Use&#13;
This is the time to freshen up the home by doing&#13;
the odd jobs of painting you have been planning. For&#13;
the buggy, the furniture, for the floors and woodwork,&#13;
for every paint purpose, we have the right Finish.&#13;
ACME QUALITY&#13;
PAINTS, ENAMELS, STAINS and VARNISHES&#13;
are each and every one scientifically prepared for specific&#13;
uses. Remember—if it's a surface to be painted, enameled,&#13;
stained, varnished or finished in any way, there's an&#13;
Acme Quality Kind to fit the purpose. We can&#13;
tell you what to use, how much to use and&#13;
the cost. Ask us.&#13;
SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY&#13;
J. C. DlNKFib&#13;
Finckney, Mich*&#13;
m&#13;
u*cx&amp;L*-^i'-i&#13;
**.»..&#13;
first Mortgage Timber Bonds&#13;
qf Michigan-Pacific Lumber Company &lt;jf Grand Rapids Mich.&#13;
Bearing Interest&#13;
at the rate of&#13;
Payable semi-annually&#13;
Mar. 1st and Sept. 1st,&#13;
$500,000&#13;
D e n o m i n a t i o n s i $ 1 , 0 0 0 . $ 5 0 0 * n d $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
T h « t bonds a n dated March *tk, 1909, and mature at the rate of $50,000 each year, comraeaciaf&#13;
March, 1911. They are iubject to redemption at fioj at any interest period and earn/ the pririleca&#13;
M registration aa to principle.&#13;
T n u t e e t T H E M I C H I G A N T R U S T C O M P A N Y . G r * r t d R * p l d » . M i c h i g a n . Michigan - Pacific Lumber Co. of Ground Reipids Michigan.&#13;
Capitalization. $ 1 , 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . P a r V a l u a $ 1 0 . 0 0 . B o n d * . $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 .&#13;
The property securing thi* i^ue conatstt of 31,63» acrei of virgin Fir, Cedar and Spruce, located on&#13;
the aouthweat shore of the Island of Vancouver, thirty miles up the Strait from the City of Victoria and&#13;
within iso miles of all important ports on Puget Sound, including Seattle, Everett, Tacoma and Van* .&#13;
eouver. Mr. J. P. Brayton of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Chicago, one of the foremost timber&#13;
experts of the country has examined this tract of timber for us and report* a stand of more taaa* ¾500,000,000 feet. Therefore this issue of bonds is for less than aoc per M ft. aturapage.&#13;
The present equipment comoiiscs a complete logging ouifit, including Dock, Railway, Steam T a f ,&#13;
Rolling Stock, etc., capable of logging at the rate of 50,000,000 feet annually.&#13;
D I R E C T O R S .&#13;
CHAR. W. I.nCRN, SF.HEWAWO, MICH.&#13;
Pre*., Huron Bay lumber Co.&#13;
%. H. MOORS, SRATTI.E. WASH.&#13;
Ex. Supt. Motive Power, Chi., Bat. &amp; Q. K: R.&#13;
W. T. COLKMAN, BKATTIF, WAsnrifaToir&#13;
Treasurer Nebraska. Investment Co.&#13;
S. M. COCHRANE, Capitalist, . . S*ATTt«, W A S H .&#13;
WM. L. CARPKNTKR. - - DKTBOTT, MICR.&#13;
Of the firm of strvrnson, Carpenter &amp; Butael.&#13;
CHAS A pirsx.pa, . . OUAJHJ t i m KrOB.&#13;
Timber Operator. Treas., Hackley-Phelpa-BoaneU&#13;
Co , Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
W P. M*KNir.HT, . . . Q*AWD R A ^ * , UlKM.&#13;
Prea , White River Lumber Co., Quebec, Canada.&#13;
B. S. CADWHLL, Nmw voms&#13;
Vice-President, 8 tan da rd Bcrew Co,, Detroit.&#13;
C T. MOORK. aBATTLZ, WAIS.&#13;
Timber Expert and Mill Operator. ^ ^&#13;
. W * ° ' , a r «*»••• b o n a * » t pax a n a a o c r u a d Jnt«r«st to y i « ! d 6 ¾ .&#13;
€J Pnvtlege will be granted to subscribers to this issue of bonds to purchase an equal amount&#13;
the company. «J Further infermatjon and prospectua showing photographs of the property furaJ E. B. Cadvvell &amp; Co.,&#13;
INVESTMENT BANKERS&#13;
of stock ol&#13;
property furnished 00 request.&#13;
7 7 0 WMKKOT BOTUNM&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.&#13;
I « M B E R S NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.&#13;
S e c Our Pine bine of Post Cards&#13;
»*•••&gt;&#13;
•.''&lt;.&#13;
•V ,&#13;
w ^ - ^ A - i . . . • l&amp;f &gt;H»iyB»ii-&gt;.»^- ' H X M I I I I •&#13;
. . ~ ^ _ - O - . - J J J ^ F : . . • . ,.., •-.„ ,&gt;"&lt;»;.&#13;
1 » o Ureat * flswara.&#13;
"Too have »uv«d m y life!" said uw&#13;
e M m a u whom t h e young Hero bud&#13;
) w t polled ouc^ftrthe river at Black-&#13;
M u g . j("As a rewmrd y u u f , f m f marry&#13;
nor daughter there/'&#13;
T h e hero glanced, ut ifie daugUut.&#13;
t b e n bent uguiu over the ,«Jd man.&#13;
"What are you duliig?"4- asked the&#13;
perplexed father.&#13;
"Going u&gt; drop y o u In again."—Lon&#13;
4 o u T ^ g r a p h ^&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPBfMENQE&#13;
i7&#13;
STENTS&#13;
T R A U K M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S 4 c&#13;
Anvtmu sending u sketch snd aeaoriptlon mar&#13;
quickly :;-certain our opinion free wuetlier an&#13;
Invention is probably patentable. Cuiiimurilcs-&#13;
Uoiumrictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
tent free, oldest agency foMecurinirputeats.&#13;
Puteiila tiUitu through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
tptdul %wtU.t, «Ittauut cuarxe, lu the Scientific American. oAo hlamtiunu&amp; aoofn ainuyir s Woteuosttmraeia ido awrueeskLl y. TwJ*ajraw, s¢8t eaJ r- rear; tour naoatfaa, fL loldhyaU newsdealera MUNU Mi) »«*-*•». New York&#13;
Branca 6¾¾. £* Y 8U Washington. • &gt;. G,&#13;
» o « n Slight « ttowl Friend&#13;
"It ever 1 need a. c o a ^ h medicine&#13;
twain I k f l 0 ^ ^ h a t $ &gt; &gt; g e t " deuiaies&#13;
H i 8 A. l ^ A H i / o r f c * ^ Me,, "for&#13;
after UHiug t e a bpltJea 0% Dr. K I U ^ B&#13;
N e w D'lMioveiy, and HCt'Vug it3 excellent&#13;
rebulta in my o w n f a m i l y ' a n d&#13;
u1hni'f&lt;, 1 am eouvinced it is the best&#13;
medioiue uiinie tor cau«Lii, colds and&#13;
luny trouble." Everv one wbo tries&#13;
it feels j u s t that way. Lielief H felt&#13;
at, yjn-e and its quick cure surprises&#13;
v j u . Kor l»i un ' 'tis, Asthma, Jeoiorrhame,&#13;
Uroup, LaLirijJim, oore throat&#13;
p.tiri in che.si uv iuuuti its supreme, 50u&#13;
ami $ 1 0 0 Trial bottle free. Guaranteed&#13;
by h\ A. Siuler.&#13;
A Powerful Plea.&#13;
A c o u n t . w h o s e norma) position wim&#13;
one of insolvency paid court to the&#13;
daughter of a millionaire. When inter&#13;
v i e w i n g her father the impecunious&#13;
suitor remarked ingenuously, "Be as&#13;
sured, sir, that lu asking y o u for your&#13;
daughter I a m guided by n o selfish or&#13;
interested motives. All your daughter's&#13;
marriage portion will g o to my&#13;
creditors!".&#13;
»nbacrib*)for t h e Ptnekaey i&gt;;spatcn.&#13;
. THE HIGH GRADE&#13;
LEHR PIANO I t U f t f i D A N D E N D O R S E D B Y&#13;
The Or** CoMenttery 4 Masfe, «•*;fork ftta.&#13;
Tea Pewieyhinh Oaiejs ot • • » PfctUdetoWa.&#13;
TIM Pytfcto CooMmtoy of Mote, PwtMo, Colt.&#13;
AH* OTHIR L1AOIMQ OONMRVATOHItS&#13;
case, fcffriflHOTT^Mnt anddorable workmanship&#13;
place fftn the front rank of the best instruments made&#13;
to-day* It Is the Ideal piano fo» the home, when urn&#13;
preaaopeJlajdffnofCDltore and refinement. . ._&#13;
T S S T L E H O B PIANO ia manufactured nndsr imgnlatif&#13;
the oo» • / production, and acMered ahrifflant - —&#13;
O• Oi—D UdtmliUl !P•e• •l _WuHtiI rtin ^t1i ,&#13;
theoSea?Droduction,and it has achieved a brilliant sniwai aaaa tthee mogsetj ^eleefc^apntt llnsyttronnmmeennit&#13;
to fft^SXtTaatialac^ prtoe, W E 1 I X FOB OASAaVOOtTE AMX&gt; PBI0K8.&#13;
H.^LlHR A COMPANY, M a n u f f t * Easton, Pa.&#13;
THE BIBBES PORTABLE SHIN6LE MACHINE&#13;
WITH OR WITHOUT BOLTING ATTACHMENT.&#13;
The eut shows machine wWi a This Machine will cut 10,000&#13;
20 Inch Saw and Shingle Car- ^ . A ^ M a ^ s a v to , 2 , 0 0 ° *h , n «, e * *" *•'•&#13;
rlage. ready for cutting shingled , ^ ^ 0 1 ^ 3 1 Carriages made fron selected&#13;
18 In. long, and • In. wide. T B B ^ P ^ I I h a r d *o o d « T r M * , 1 * *,?1&#13;
IW&#13;
*&gt;rlce $ 7 0 . 0 0 . ^ I f l R ^ ^ a J rolled steel. For eertting shin.&#13;
With 36 Inch Bolting Saw and E r ^ ^ a ^ ^ * ^ •'•• r*1u,r«i 4 •• • M* p" ,F®r&#13;
Boltlnc Carriage. ^ Q f V i siting 8 to 8 H. P. Weight&#13;
P r i c e $ 2 0 . 0 0 eIxTt r a -I S A *M*O^ NEY-MA1K50E INR. i Equipped with the bolting attachment it ia a complete ahingle outfit in itaeMl Can be ad-&#13;
! lusted for any desired taper or thickness. For cutting* the ronaid log into abinfie Jenftpha, we&#13;
i manufacture a high ffrade,low priced drag saw machine. Send fbr circulars &amp; special net prices. CIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY,&#13;
C O L U M B I A , S O U T H C A R O L I N A .&#13;
E n g i n e s , B o i l e r s , S a w M i l l M a o h l n e r y , C t o .&#13;
B. P. S. THE PAINT THAT LASTS&#13;
B u y t h e p a i m t h a t w i l l last ior y e a r s . E a c h&#13;
y e a r t h a t p a i n t s t a y s i n g o o d c o n d i t i o n y o u a r e&#13;
s a v i n g j u s t a s m u c h m o n e y a s it w o u l d c o s t t o&#13;
r e - p a i n t .&#13;
B. P. S. PAINT IS MADE F O R&#13;
Y E A R S O F S E R V I C E .&#13;
Y o u b u y p a i n t s a t i s f a c t i o n w h e n y o u b u y B . P . S .&#13;
Y e a r s after, y o u r h o u s e w i l l p r o v e y o u r g o o d&#13;
j u d g m e n t . It will g i v e e v i d e n c e t h a t B. P . S&#13;
Is " T H K B K S T P A I N T S O L D . "&#13;
W e h a v e a f e w c o p i e s of t h e B. 1 \ S . P a i n t B u d g e t , a n a s s o r t m e n t&#13;
ot l i t e r a t u r e o n p a i n t s a n d p a i n t i n g t h a t c a n n o t fail t o s a v e y o u m o n e y&#13;
dh y o u r p a i n t i n g bills. C o m e i n a n d a s k for o n e t o d a y '&#13;
FOR SALE BY GEO W. REASON&#13;
Better Not Get&#13;
Dyspepsia&#13;
If you can help i t Kodol prevent* Dyspepsia, by&#13;
effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion.&#13;
But don't trifle with Indigestion.&#13;
A great, m a n y people w h o havo&#13;
trifled with indigestion, have been&#13;
•orry for i t — w h e n nervous o r&#13;
chronic dyspepsia resulted, and&#13;
t h e y have n o t b e e n able t o cure i t&#13;
:Use Kodol a n d p r e v e n t having&#13;
Dyspepsia.&#13;
Everyone ia subject to indigestion.&#13;
Stomach derangement follows&#13;
stornach abuse, just aa naturally&#13;
and just a s surely a s a sound and&#13;
healthy s t o m a c h r e s u l t s upon t h e&#13;
taking of Kodol.&#13;
W h e n y o u e x p e r i e n c e sourneRS&#13;
of stomach, belching of g a s and&#13;
nauseating fluid, bloated sensation,&#13;
gnawing pain i n t h e pit of t h e&#13;
stomach, heart burn (so-called),&#13;
diarrhoea, h e a d a c h e s , dullness or&#13;
v r o n i c tired f e e l i n g — y o n n e e d Kodol.&#13;
And t h e n t h e quicker y o n t a k e&#13;
Kodol—the better. B a t w h a t y o n&#13;
V a n t , l e t K o d o l d i g e s t I t ^ , . ,&#13;
OrdlnAry fiepsjb " d y s M S f s . t a V&#13;
wis, physics, e t c . , a r e n o t IHwly&#13;
to b e of much benefit t o y o u , i n digestive aiiqenlp, ^Pepsin Is oafr&#13;
a partial digester—and physics a r e&#13;
not digesters at all.&#13;
Kodol ia a perfect, digester. If&#13;
you could s e e Kodol digesting every&#13;
particle oi food, of all kinds, in t h e&#13;
g l a s s test-tubes i n our laboratories,&#13;
you would know t h i s j u s t a s well&#13;
a s w e do.&#13;
Nature a n d Kodol will a l w a y s&#13;
cure a sick stomach—but in order&#13;
to be cured, t h e stomach must rest.&#13;
That i s what. Kodol does—rests t h e&#13;
stomach, while t h e stomach g e t s&#13;
well. Just a s simple a s A, B, C.&#13;
Our Guarantee&#13;
Oo to your atmnri«t today and jret a dollar&#13;
hott.lo. Then after von hare nwd ta«&#13;
mure content* of the bottle tt you caa&#13;
honestly amy, that it haa not don* you any&#13;
pood, return the bottle to the drutnrlat and&#13;
ne will refund your money without qvea&gt;&#13;
tion or delay. We will then pay the dntc*&#13;
crist for the bottle. DonH heaitat*, all&#13;
drasnriRta know that onr guarantee la goo4»&#13;
Thta otter applies to the large bottle only&#13;
*n4ta Sot one In a family- The larsre be**&#13;
tie containagJi times aa much aa the flffcjr&#13;
cent' bottle.&#13;
Kodol ia prepared at t h e laborir&#13;
t o r i e t o f E. 0 . Do Witt, ft Co., Chicago.&#13;
ABBFTSBMAL IMAJ*&#13;
N o ed^ool i n i b « t^jffb School room&#13;
Thursday' and F r i d a y &lt;$n aceouut of&#13;
the E i g b j h Grade oxaenjpatiuQii being&#13;
held there. &gt; ,.;' i&#13;
C £ . Bang4uinras. its J a c k w n tat&gt;&#13;
last of iaat wees), l o o k i n g : after the&#13;
the sitle aud rent o t luta a t t b e Blutfe,&#13;
Portage Lake.&#13;
Itev. b\ HenneHtty on r e t u r n i n g&#13;
home from t h e south w a s presented&#13;
with it purse of $ 8 0 0 by bis B r i g h t o n&#13;
pansboneera and f n e n d i — U e p u b l i e a n .&#13;
The (iideons, t h e (Jhristmn traveling&#13;
men's association, have placed 1 5 0&#13;
Bibles in t h e roomw of t h e Uribwold&#13;
House-Detroit. This is o n e o f t h e&#13;
most popular hotels i n t h e city.&#13;
Walter Moore a n d f a m i l y of A n n&#13;
Ai bor, s p n t Saturday and S u n d a y a t&#13;
their cottage, P o r t a g e L a k e . Should&#13;
have been tbere a c o u p l e of days soon&#13;
er a n d enjoyed coasting with t h e editor&#13;
of this paper.&#13;
•Senator F. J. Shields has introduced&#13;
a bill r e q u i r i n g all railroads o p e r a t i n g&#13;
in this state shall g r a d u a l l y a c q u i r e&#13;
steel passenger coaches a n d that a l l&#13;
cars ordered after J a n . 1, 1910, shall&#13;
be of steel c o n s t r u c t i o n .&#13;
If y o n are n o t k e e p i n g track of t h e&#13;
a d v e r t i s e m e n t s i n t h i s paper each&#13;
week y o u are m i s t i n g bargains t h a t&#13;
will save y o u m a n y times tba prijo of&#13;
the DISPATCH for o n e year. B e sure&#13;
you take tbe paper and then read t h e&#13;
a d v s .&#13;
The line in t h e DISPATCH last w e e k ,&#13;
"this is a little more like s p r i n g "&#13;
caused much m e r r i m e n t as by t h e&#13;
lime t h e papers were distributed t h e r e&#13;
were several inches of s n o w on t h a&#13;
g r o u n d and the drays were kept busy&#13;
d r a w i n g coal. H o w e v e r , all a d m i t t e d&#13;
that we c a m e as close to it as t h e m i l&#13;
lion dollar a year weather bureau.&#13;
The Weather.&#13;
ruauaaao KTBMT vamaanay aoairjjiu ar&#13;
a luswrlpUott Pries 11 la Adv«uc«.&#13;
&amp;tl«rea ai i&amp;fe Postotttce at PlncJfcney, MiutolxaL&#13;
IM second-class matter&#13;
AdverdBinx rsies UUMIW knows on application.&#13;
F R A N K U. A N D H £ W 8 ( f c C C&#13;
CMT'M *ae raoraiaToat.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Jt»v. i). C. Lutiejoha yatttor. iSorvkes evtr.&#13;
Sunday uxorinnK »t 10:.^u, anu e««r/ ounuuj&#13;
evtuang »l i :JC&gt;u'oiuck. Fts^et uuMtlaK'inoit&#13;
day bvejutngB. auauay ccuooiatcio»e otinuiu&#13;
d AUJiUttlfiUAiluJNAL CUUltOil.&#13;
K^' Kev. A. (i.&#13;
Bitters Succeed when rverythlug elae fafla.&#13;
In nervous proatxatiorj and fcttaU&#13;
weukncM»ca they are the supreme&#13;
remedy, aa thousands have teattiflcd.&#13;
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER A N D&#13;
S T O M A C H T R O U B L E&#13;
it ia the beat medicine ever sold&#13;
over a drug gist's counter. J&#13;
sunuay morning si iu:40 anu ttyvtj iuno*}&#13;
evouiux »i 7:UL O'&amp;AJC*. frayer aisnsusif, ILutt&#13;
day evening, .^uuiay acuuui at c/uae ul inori.&#13;
Inn aervk«. Mm, Uraos Crutixit, oun(„ J. A&#13;
CadweJU ooc.&#13;
bT. a A l i r s &lt;j Al'titiuic; CHUilCll.&#13;
i4«v. M. J. CuuiuttrXuxa, 1 sstur. '^»rvic»L&#13;
every bunOsy, i.uw IUHU »i .iioo a.^ji&#13;
ni^u atau wlUt oaimou *t Hi iO a. m. VaioCiii^u&#13;
o u C l t I i t 5 .&#13;
ritna A. O. H. Outleli vi iam plac«, ujeru, evt&gt;i..&#13;
Xtiiixd buu&lt;ia&gt; iniau r'r. Jlaiiuow UaU.&#13;
Junu Tuuuivy IUU ii.. 1. K«Uy ,Cuuucy XJelegattt&#13;
A'.ilj. vV. C 1. U. uitwi* ine oocoud oaturuay ui&#13;
titnji inuuth MI J:JC ^. in, at, mv iiuiueo ot ilic&#13;
lueuiLwrt) Jbveryuuv iuu)Jr«riU3il lu i«juiyer»uoe is&#13;
cusuiaiiyluviUHi. Mra, Leal ni&amp;ivc, live. JUta&#13;
1'iitJ U. 1. A- axiU a. iuuiawj J I UxU placa , u/«i&#13;
over/ tuira onLiiruaj evening lu Itie t'x. M.±i&#13;
ixvw iiiiii. Juiiu Uuuuiiac, i ro^JUoul.&#13;
The weather last week, well, t h e r e&#13;
is n o t much need of s a y i n g m u c h&#13;
about it as e v e r y o n e has "said their&#13;
say" long before this issue of the paper.&#13;
However it has been o n e of t h e&#13;
worst for this season of the y e a r that&#13;
any ol the oldest i n h a b i t a n t s have a n y&#13;
k n o w l e d g e of. We have had bad&#13;
storms even later than this b u t nothing&#13;
came to i t a y tor t h e length of t h e&#13;
time and then repeat t h e dose.&#13;
Wednesday n i g h t it snowed a n d&#13;
blowed almost a burrycane, several&#13;
inches of s o o w f a l l i n g . It continued&#13;
ail day T h u r s d a y , being interspersed&#13;
| with plenty of l i g h t e n i n g and t b u n&#13;
der, Thursday n i g h t it began to.rain&#13;
and continued all n i g h t with terriflic&#13;
electrical disturbances,&#13;
The storm w a s general t h r o u g h o u t&#13;
the state and e v e n m a n y parts of t b e j&#13;
U n i t e d Slates and much d a m a g e was j&#13;
done to property and many lives were I&#13;
lost. |&#13;
_&#13;
After Waterloo.&#13;
This morning 'fcur days after t h e&#13;
great bat:KM 1 ww to visit the field&#13;
of Waterloo * * * bur on arrival there&#13;
the :sit;ht \, a.s too !mrnl;le to behold.&#13;
I f c l ; si 1; ;:i ; :; &gt; ^ :&gt;: Ma^h a : u l w . i s&#13;
• t''.i;. u to :!•:;•; : 7i:r :;iiiMiti:t:i' ,M&#13;
:.('.'.' •'• i &gt;r V\ ( niidi'ii i'.'u".)&#13;
iip.i -', una bio to move&#13;
from not having thriv&#13;
ii er from hunger, as ihe&#13;
:.;....- \,. »\ . ' i co'ui.c, obliged to u,..e&#13;
tlielr siir:,o&lt;i!is a n d w a g o n s with them,&#13;
fonnod a r p e e t a d e I shall not forr:&#13;
ot. * * -: At ITougomont, when1 tbere&#13;
; •* an oroli. &lt;;t), e\«&gt;ry tree is pieret'd&#13;
with bullets. T h e barns are all burned&#13;
down, ami in the courtyard it is : aid&#13;
they have be-m obliged to burn upward&#13;
of a thousand carcases, au a w f u !&#13;
holocaust to t h e w a r demon.—From&#13;
"Reminiscences of European Trarol,&#13;
1816-1819," by Major W. F. Frye.&#13;
MLeelsvery l n u a &gt; c &lt; o u i . a un oi u b u r e r m .&#13;
ol tUe u o u u MI meij uoii lu ut&gt; owiuiliuiii blu^&#13;
VliUClng brotucro di t ^ jt oitu.j mvUaU.&#13;
C, V. vanWiakle, j . i A^i.^iii ^LIUIU-IUILIU&#13;
A. P. Aurtdnoon, - itocordKeeper&#13;
F. U. Jaukaun, - FUJUUKM KJMPIU&#13;
I" ivlugflton Lod&amp;v, Hv.iK, s A. A. M. K4rgu:ar&#13;
I j (JOUUUUIUCMUUU l u t J a U i i , . o V e U l U k , U U u r b t i l u l e&#13;
iuu iull ot the IMOOU. i'. U. Jackson. H . AI&#13;
OltDifiK Ob iLLs'KLtUS oiA-tl utwueACh rnuui,&#13;
the Friday evening luUowuig ine reguUr r .&#13;
A A.M. meeting, Jiao.AbTTh VALUUN, W. H.&#13;
0 n^ EH Ob' Hob&amp;iUi »Vool&gt;MifiN Meet the&#13;
lirat '.Qiu-auay etenin^ oi tatcn M.octU in t u t Aiaooaoow null, c . U Gninee V'. C&#13;
| AD1E8 Ot £HE MACUAlilihiS. Meel every lb&#13;
Xi and 3rd Saturday of each uioaih at 2:80 p m.&#13;
tL O. T. M. hall. Vtsitinij sisters cordially in&#13;
vited. U L A CONIWAY, L*dy Com.&#13;
KN I G U T S O V T U K L O \ A L lilAiiL)&#13;
F. L, Andrews P. Jl, 1&#13;
Mortgage Sale.&#13;
Uelaalt Uavlng bttju niuile in the cuaditiona of&#13;
two uiort^afeo covenu|jtbe&lt;uiau: land (whereby the&#13;
power ot uale therein contained has become operative)&#13;
made by Aduu FraiicJe and Anna L. Pr&amp;ncio&#13;
hie wile, of Putnam, Liviigitloa county, iJichijan,&#13;
to CI. W. Teeple of the wine plane, one ot&#13;
aaid uiurta^eb being dated Ueceniler 2Mb, l»a9&#13;
and recorded in the Otni* of Ke^iuter uf deeds&#13;
fur the C'yuuty of JUiviuK««ou, tiale Oi Mkb)^an&#13;
May 30, 1900, in Lit&gt;er 79 of mortgagee on pago&#13;
515 tt.eieoi, and tLe other dated June 4th, l'JWl&#13;
uud recorded in oawi Kegietere utnee un tbe 15th&#13;
day uf .March, I90U in Lifter •jl uf Mortgages on&#13;
page !&gt;'i% tbeieul; un which aaid ururtagt^s there Is&#13;
nuw claimed to be due and unpaid at thia date the&#13;
eiuiii ot'Two hundred titty /uur dollare and twenty&#13;
Cvt; etui* (t'^M'-•&lt;) and at'uiuey fetu.and DO suit&#13;
or proceeding baviojj l&gt;ren conrmenced in law or&#13;
equity to recover tbe debta aecured by uaid mortyaifea,&#13;
or un) part thereof.&#13;
JNow therelure, under tbn power of nale contain&#13;
ed iu aaid mortgage*, notice ie hereby given that&#13;
on Monday, tbe 1Kb day of Jnne, 1UUU, at one&#13;
o'clock in tbe afternoon of uud day, at the westerly&#13;
iront doeir of tbe Court bouee in tbe village&#13;
of Howell in uaid County (that being tbe place of&#13;
holding the circuit court for the County in which&#13;
the mortgaged pieuiitea to be sold axe situated&#13;
and tiaid mortgages will be fuieclcaed by Bale at&#13;
public vendue to tbebigbeat bidder of the preeniaeo&#13;
described in said mortgages, or BO much&#13;
thereof an may be ntceaeary to satiety the amount&#13;
due on said mortgagee with interest und legalooststhat&#13;
ie to sa\; a! 1 tr at certain piete or parcel Of&#13;
land situate iu the townflh.p of Putnam, County&#13;
of Livingston and etate of Vicbljjan, Tiz: Three&#13;
acree ol laud in tht» nortbwtht corner of that part&#13;
uf the. weflt half «if tbe aoi.tbweat ({uarter of aeej&#13;
Uon twenty foui cJ4) lylnt suuih uf the highway&#13;
running through said laud aiuf extending froat&#13;
the center of said hiuhuay Buuth to tbe center of&#13;
the creek and in width, eaat and wert,sufficient t o&#13;
make tbe threat acic^ ut land. All m Town one (1)&#13;
North and Range tour [i) east, County ol Living.&#13;
Btou and Sttite of Michigan,&#13;
Dated &gt; arch K-th, li)»'j«.&#13;
E. A. A L. E, STOWE G. \V. Ttupi^a,&#13;
134 Attys. for Mortgagee Mortgagee&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
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GREAT CONGRESS Of, PEACE&#13;
WORKERS HELD IN CHICAGO&#13;
Thousands of the Opponents of War farm, including Many&#13;
Distinguished Diplomats and Statesmen, Gather to&#13;
Discuss Disarmament and Worldwide&#13;
Arbitration.&#13;
teresttng Eye Books Free.&#13;
Early Experience*.&#13;
Some t i n e ago an office boy, answering&#13;
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he was to answer it.&#13;
When, therefore, he heard it ring, he&#13;
picked up the receiver and shouted:&#13;
"Hello, who's there?"&#13;
The answer came back: "I'm 105."&#13;
"Go on," said the boy. "Its time&#13;
you were dead.'"&#13;
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fenrrally sell these tablets, price 25 cents.&#13;
i you cannot get them send to Orator F.&#13;
Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y. Sample free.&#13;
Omissions of History.&#13;
Romulus, having built Rome, was&#13;
constructing a wall around it.&#13;
"What's the use of putting a wall&#13;
on the north side?" jeered Remus.&#13;
"Evanston will never try to break in."&#13;
Then ensued the first boxing contest&#13;
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knocked o u t&#13;
Kill the Flies Now&#13;
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Ask your dealer, or send '20c to H.&#13;
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The American eats more than his&#13;
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Chicago.—Every civilized country on&#13;
the globe was represented in the second&#13;
National Peace Congress, which&#13;
began here Monday. The gathering&#13;
was the greatest of it* kind ever held&#13;
in America, and brought to Chicago&#13;
some 25,0410 persona who are zealous&#13;
workers in the cause of world-wide&#13;
peace- Among these w*r&gt;\ ejakont&#13;
statesmen and diplomats of this "&lt; and&#13;
other nations. Unfortunately, official&#13;
duties prevented both President Tatt,&#13;
the honorary president, and Secretary&#13;
of War Dickinson, the president of the&#13;
congress, from being present.&#13;
On Sunday there were special services&#13;
in most of the Chicago churches,&#13;
peace meetings under the auspices of&#13;
socialist and labor organizations, and&#13;
a large mass meeting which was addressed&#13;
by President Schurman of&#13;
Cornel] university, Rev. Jenkins Lloyd&#13;
Jones and Dr. Emil O. Hirsch of Chicago.&#13;
Welcome to the Congress.&#13;
Orchestra hall was filled to the&#13;
limit Monday when the first session&#13;
was called to order by Robert Treat&#13;
Paine of Boston, the presiding officer,&#13;
for governors, mayors and hundreds of&#13;
clubs had been asked to appoint delegates,&#13;
and most of them had responded.&#13;
President Dickinson's address,&#13;
the same he delivered several&#13;
weeks ago before the Hamilton club,&#13;
was read, and the congress was then&#13;
formally welcomed by Gov. Charles S.&#13;
Deneen for the state, Mayor Fred A.&#13;
Busse for the city and Rev. A. Eugene&#13;
Bartlett, chairman of the reception&#13;
committee. The secretary then read a&#13;
brief letter from President Taft, in&#13;
which the chief executive heartily&#13;
commended the alms of the congress.&#13;
Miss Anna B. Eckstein of Boston&#13;
next was introduced to the meeting&#13;
and read a "World Petition to the&#13;
Third Hague Conference." This was&#13;
Mr* WbsstaWs Boothia* Syrap.&#13;
itldran lw*IUB*&gt; softMu tb« gums, rertucw m-&#13;
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^ . . C.COVM' *. SV• IXWAin. tell of a n r n fM.&#13;
a euro tit.&#13;
.Mica.&#13;
William J. Calhoun.&#13;
followed by an address by Dr. Benjamin&#13;
F. Trueblood, secretary of the&#13;
American Peace Society, on "The Present&#13;
Position of the Peace Movement."&#13;
What Has Been Accomplished.&#13;
f Dr. Trueblood said in part:&#13;
'^'Let me sketch In the barest outlines^&#13;
wj*aJt ^ « a , already, been accomplished.&#13;
The interpretation will take&#13;
carejjf itself.&#13;
"I.nrfThe men and, women, now a&#13;
great^tost, who b e l i e f that the day&#13;
ia' paif when blind brute force should&#13;
dIreo**he policies oftoations and preside&#13;
.ajt the settlement of their differences,&#13;
are now thoroughly organized.!&#13;
fija hundred years ago there was&#13;
not a^soclety in existence organized&#13;
tor promote appeafto the forum of&#13;
reason rand right in the adjustment of&#13;
international controversy* To-day&#13;
there, *are more than .500, nearly&#13;
every important nation having&#13;
Its group of peace organizations. Their&#13;
constituents are numbered by tens of&#13;
thousands, from every rank and class&#13;
m society—philanthropists, men of&#13;
trade and commerce, educators and&#13;
jurists, workingmen, statesmen, rulers&#13;
even.&#13;
"The organized peace party has Its&#13;
International Peace bureau at Berne,&#13;
Switzerland, binding all its sections&#13;
Into one world body. It has its International&#13;
Peaces congress which has&#13;
held 17 meetings in 20 years—congresses&#13;
over which statesmen now feci&#13;
it an honor to preside.&#13;
Triumph of Arbitration.&#13;
"II. The position which the peace '&#13;
movement has reached is no less distinctly&#13;
determined by the practical at-.:&#13;
tainments of arbitration. We are this&#13;
year celebrating what, is really the&#13;
one hundredth anniversary of the birth&#13;
of our movement, for it was In 1809&#13;
that David L. Dodge, a Christian merchant&#13;
of New York city, wrote the&#13;
pamphlet which brought the movement&#13;
into being, and led i i r years&#13;
later to the organisation in his parlor&#13;
in New York of the first Peace society&#13;
in the world. There had then been&#13;
no arbitrations between nations in our&#13;
modern sense of the word 'nations.' In&#13;
the 100 years since 180U more&#13;
than 250 important controversies have&#13;
been settled By this means, not to&#13;
mention an even greater number of&#13;
less important cases, the settlement&#13;
of which Involved the principle of arbitration.&#13;
Within the past 20 years BO&#13;
rapid has been the triumph of arbitration&#13;
that more than 100 International&#13;
differences have been disposed&#13;
of by this means, or between five'and&#13;
six a year for the whole 20 years.&#13;
The HagUs Conferences.&#13;
"III. In order to determine further&#13;
the advanced position which tho&#13;
peace movement has attained on its&#13;
practical side, the two Hague conferences&#13;
and what they have accomplished&#13;
must be taken into ac&#13;
count. It Is still the habit of some persons&#13;
to speak disparagingly of these&#13;
great gatherings and their results.&#13;
Some do it because they are satisfied&#13;
with nothing short of immediate perfection;&#13;
others because they wish the&#13;
whole movement for the abolition of&#13;
war to fail. Othere do It purely from&#13;
Ignorance.&#13;
"The first Hague conference gave us&#13;
the permanent international court of&#13;
arbitration, to which 24 powers finally&#13;
became parties by ratification of the&#13;
convention. This court has now for&#13;
eight years been in successful operation,&#13;
and not less than four controversies&#13;
have been referred to it during&#13;
the past year. The second Hague&#13;
conference enlarged and strengthened&#13;
the convention under which this court&#13;
was set up, and made the court the&#13;
tribunal, not of 25 powers, but of all&#13;
the nations of the world.&#13;
"The high water mark of the work&#13;
of the second Hague conference was&#13;
reached in Its action in regard to future&#13;
meetings of the conference. The&#13;
principle of periodic meetings of the&#13;
conference hereafter was approved&#13;
without a dissenting voice. The date&#13;
even of the third conference was fixed&#13;
and the governments urged to appoint&#13;
at least two years In advance an International&#13;
commission to prepare the&#13;
program of the meeting."&#13;
Dean W. P. Rogers of the Cincinnati&#13;
Law Bchool brought this session to a&#13;
close with an eloquent talk on "The&#13;
Dawn of Universal Peace,"&#13;
AddresMS Monday Evening.&#13;
Monday evenings meeting was devoted&#13;
to "The Drawing "Together or&#13;
the Nations," and was presided over&#13;
by Dr. Hirsch. The addresses wero&#13;
on "Independence Versus Interdependence&#13;
of Nations," by Prof. Paul S.&#13;
Reinsch of the University of Wlscon&#13;
sin; "Racial Progress Towards Universal&#13;
Peace," by Rev. H. T. Koaling of&#13;
Nashville, Tenn.; and "The Biology of&#13;
War," by President David :Starr Jordan&#13;
of Leland Stanford, Jr., University.&#13;
At the same time another meeting&#13;
was in session in M-us'ic hall, with&#13;
Miss Jane Addams in the chair, The&#13;
speakers there wero Joseph B. Burtt&#13;
of Chicago, on "Fraternal Orders and&#13;
Peace;" Prof. Graham Taylor of Chicago&#13;
Commons, on "Victims of War&#13;
and Industry;" Samuel Gompers, president&#13;
of the American Federation of&#13;
Labor, on "Organized Labor and&#13;
Peace," and John Spargo of Yonkera,&#13;
N. Y., on "International Socialism as&#13;
a Peace Factor."&#13;
Commercial and Legal Views.&#13;
Two big meetings were held Tuesday&#13;
morning, one oft commerce and Industry,&#13;
presided over by George E.&#13;
Roberts, president of the Commercial&#13;
National bank of Chicago, and the&#13;
other on "Women and Peace," with&#13;
Mrs. Ellen M. Henrotin of Chicago as&#13;
chairman. The former session was&#13;
addressed by Belton GUreath of Birmingham,&#13;
Ala., W. A. Mahoney of Columbus,&#13;
O., James Arbuckle, consul of&#13;
Spain and Colombia, St. Louis, and&#13;
Marcus M. Marks, president, of the&#13;
National Association of Clothiers, New.&#13;
York city. The women heard interesting&#13;
speeches by Mrs. Philip N.&#13;
Moore, president of the General Federation&#13;
of Women's Clubs; Miss Jane&#13;
Aildams and Mrs. Lucia Ames Mead&#13;
of Boston.&#13;
"Some Legal Aspects of the Peace&#13;
Movement" was the general topic of&#13;
the Orchestra hall meeting Tuesday&#13;
afternoon, and the chairman William&#13;
J. Calhoun of Chicago. Prof. William&#13;
1. Hull of Swarthmore college discussed&#13;
the advances registered by the&#13;
t v o Hague conferences, and .TamoR&#13;
i:rown Scott, solicitor of the state de*&#13;
i::.rtment,. talked about some questions&#13;
vliich the third' Hague conference&#13;
probably will consider* "Legal Problems&#13;
Capable of Settlement by Arbitration"&#13;
was the subject of a leai-ned&#13;
paper by Prof. Charles Cheney Hyde&#13;
ftf T'htoagp . ... . ._.«._«._ -&#13;
In Maadel hall, at the University or&#13;
Chicago, a special aesalen'waf ^ i l d for&#13;
universities ( and colleges, a fefafcnre&#13;
ot which "wis an oratorical congest&#13;
participated in by students. Louis P.&#13;
Locbeer ot Madison, Wis-, spoke on,&#13;
"TJie CoatnopollUs) Clubs."&#13;
The general session of Tuesday&#13;
evening was perhaps the most Interesting&#13;
of the congress. "Neat Steps&#13;
in Peacemaking" was tho topic. The&#13;
audience was aroused to great enthusiasm&#13;
by an eloquent and spirited address&#13;
by Congressman Richard Bartholdt&#13;
ot Missouri, president of the&#13;
American Group, iuterparllapoj&amp;ntary&#13;
union. Another paper that met with,&#13;
deaerred applause was that of Edwin&#13;
N E W S T R E N G T H FfiR O L D B A C K * .&#13;
No Need to outre* V v e r / Day f r $ m&#13;
Backaetie. a . ' i '&#13;
_ _ * t , . u ]&#13;
Mrs. Joannah totraw/ feo^Htarth.&#13;
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^ ^ ^ i tlre«iye«rs W anf.&#13;
r e r e d evttythina&#13;
with rheumaftttm in&#13;
my limbs and a dull,&#13;
ceaseless aching in ty back. I was&#13;
euik, l a n g u i d ,&#13;
broken with headaches&#13;
and dlzsy&#13;
Bj^Ils.Jind (he ikijl,&#13;
hey secreUona weso&#13;
thiok with solids, \&#13;
, ., . ,.. „,».r was reatiy In a crit.&#13;
lea) condition when I began wltt*&#13;
Doen's Kidney Pills, and they certkif&#13;
ly did wonders for m e , THwugb l i m n&#13;
81 years old, I am as way as the atrefT&#13;
age woman of 50. 1 jsrork well. e d |&#13;
well and sleep well.rt t •.&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 5« cents a bosr.&#13;
Foater-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Drather 8Itdown—-Dat'B a mightyf&#13;
short stub yer smokm', Dusty,&#13;
Dusty Dodgework—Yep! Iknpws|lt;&#13;
dat's de way I allera like 'em; you&#13;
don't bev ter pull de smoke so furl&#13;
RA8H A L L O V E R BOY'S BODY.&#13;
Richard Bartholdt.&#13;
D. Mead of Boston on "The Arrest In&#13;
Competitive Arming in Fidelity to The&#13;
Hague Movement."&#13;
Competitive A r m i n g .&#13;
In discussing this question, Mr.&#13;
Mead said:&#13;
"Let us consider simply Great Britain,&#13;
Germany and the United States. "My little boy had an awful rash all&#13;
It Is unnecessary to go further, be- over his body and the doctor said it&#13;
Awful, Crusted, Weeping Eczema on&#13;
Little Sufferer—A Score of Treat,&#13;
menta Prove Dismal Failures.,&#13;
Cure Achieved by Cuticura.&#13;
cause these three nations control the&#13;
situation, and they are the chief sinners.&#13;
If these three nations began today&#13;
to act, with reference to armaments,&#13;
In accordance with the spirit&#13;
and purpose of The Hague convention,&#13;
the peace and order of the world&#13;
would be assured to-morrow.&#13;
"In 1898 Great Britain spent on her&#13;
navy |124,000,000; Germany spent&#13;
$29,000,000; and the United States&#13;
spent *50,000,OOJ). Last year Great&#13;
Uritain-spent $17Q,UO0,O0O; Germany,&#13;
$«3,000,000; and toe'.United States,&#13;
$104,00«,000. The increase in precisely&#13;
ten yearn Vhea theru should have&#13;
been decrease was enormous. Our&#13;
own army e penses last year were as&#13;
great as our navy expenses. Our navy&#13;
expenses this year will be $30,000,000&#13;
greater than last year. We are today&#13;
paying for expenses of past wars&#13;
and preparations for possible wars 65&#13;
per cent., practically two-thirds, of&#13;
our total national revenue, leaving&#13;
barely one-third available for ail conat'fuctivo&#13;
purposes. What would Washington&#13;
and Jefferson and Franklin say&#13;
to this? We know what they did say&#13;
about things of this sort. They would&#13;
say torday that the republic was standing&#13;
on Its head.&#13;
Hope for the Future.&#13;
"This Is what has come about In&#13;
ten years in these three, nations because&#13;
The Hague conference in 1899&#13;
did nothing about the reduction or arrest&#13;
of armaments. As we now look&#13;
back, we see that it could not do much&#13;
directly at that time. The war system&#13;
of nations could be supplanted&#13;
only by the gradual development of a&#13;
system of international law and justice&#13;
to take its place. 'When the first&#13;
Hague conference created the international&#13;
tribunal, it did indirectly the&#13;
most probably which it could do in behalf&#13;
of the reduction of armaments,&#13;
because it took a long step in furnishing&#13;
the nations with such legal machinery&#13;
for the settlement of their differences&#13;
as makes recourse to war&#13;
machinery more and more unnecessary&#13;
and inexcusable. It has been In&#13;
the line of this thought that the international&#13;
lawyers have had their&#13;
hopeful assurance. Develop the legal&#13;
machinery, they said, and the armaments&#13;
will perforce crumble of their&#13;
own dead weight.&#13;
"The continued and rapid development&#13;
during the decade of provision&#13;
for the peaceful settlement of international&#13;
disputes has been something unparalleled&#13;
in history. Tho leaders of&#13;
the movement for International justice&#13;
are sometimes reproached with being&#13;
dreamers. The only trouble with them&#13;
in the past ten years has been that, so&#13;
far as tho development of tho instruments&#13;
of international justice are concerned,&#13;
they have not been able to&#13;
dream daringly enough or fast enough&#13;
to keep up with tho facts."&#13;
Among th,e diplomats who came to&#13;
Chicago to nttend tho Peace con.rirnsa&#13;
were: Ambassador Count Joliann&#13;
Helnrlch von Herns tor ff of Germany;&#13;
Herman de Lagc-rrrantz, envoy from&#13;
Sweden; Wu Tlnjr Fang: envoy from&#13;
China: Alfred Mitchell Tunes, counselor&#13;
of the British embassy, and Dr.&#13;
Halvdan Kont of the University of&#13;
Norway. The Japanese, Turkish and&#13;
French embassies also were represented.&#13;
was eczema. It was terrible, and used&#13;
to water awfully. Any place the water&#13;
went it would form another sore and it&#13;
would become crusted. A score or&#13;
more physicians failed utterly and dls*&#13;
mally in their efforts to remove the&#13;
trouble. Then \ was told to use the&#13;
Cuticura Remedies. I got a cake of&#13;
Cuticura Soap, a box of Cuticura Ointment&#13;
and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent,&#13;
and before we had used half&#13;
the Resolvent I could see a change la&#13;
him. In about two months he was entirely&#13;
well. George F. Lambert, 139&#13;
West Centre St., Mahanoy City, Pa,.&#13;
Sept. 26 and Nov. 4, 1907."&#13;
Potter Drag ft Chem. Corp., Sol* Props., Boston&#13;
A Frank Opinion.&#13;
Once a youth thought it his solemn&#13;
duty to learn something about Henry&#13;
James. So, to the great admiration&#13;
of his frivolous friends, he picked up&#13;
"The Wings of the Dove" and disappeared&#13;
Into its pages.&#13;
"Two weeks later he was thinner, but&#13;
still at It, when one of the afore-mentioned&#13;
frivolous friends camp into the&#13;
room, and, for the first time showed&#13;
interest.&#13;
"Say," he observed, "is The Wings&#13;
of tho Dove' a collection of short&#13;
stories or one long story?"&#13;
The delver into James glanced up&#13;
from the pages.&#13;
"One darned long story," he replied,&#13;
throwing hia whole soul Into the&#13;
words.&#13;
Playgrounds in Boston.&#13;
Boston women established the first&#13;
playground In 19o2. Last year t h e ^&#13;
were eight, and nearly $2,000 was expended,&#13;
or about $1 for each child, a&#13;
very cheap price for the amount of&#13;
good obtained. The Playground leagsels&#13;
the name of the society of the playground&#13;
boys themselves, wha. welts&#13;
buttons and ^discipline all bad boys,&#13;
thus making" the government -easy&#13;
enough for those in cberge. Not !thj&gt;&#13;
least important reault of the plSygrounds&#13;
in that city is said to be that&#13;
involved In the self-government.&#13;
Vases In Autos.&#13;
Vases of flowers have for some&#13;
time been an adjunct of the closed automobile.&#13;
N.&lt;}w $bme smart broughams&#13;
have a vase of flowers beside each&#13;
door. The hanging vases of Japanese&#13;
porcelain are the favorites, though the&#13;
metal cases into which a vaae slips are&#13;
also used.&#13;
A Rara Qood Thing.&#13;
"Am using ALLEN'a FOOT-&amp;ASE, and&#13;
can truly say I would" nj&gt;t have been without&#13;
ff so lonf, had I known the raliat it&#13;
would give my achinf test. I think: ht a&#13;
rare good thing for anyone having sore&#13;
or tired feet,—Mrs. Matilda Hnkweft,&#13;
Providencft. R. I." Sold by all Drug«-lata,&#13;
25e. Ask to-day. . , .&#13;
•8?"&#13;
* ' • •&#13;
T V&#13;
And 9avr« Time,&#13;
"He lets his wife do just as she&#13;
pleases."&#13;
"Nothing startling about that"&#13;
"No; hut he does It without an argument."&#13;
Pain and avellina seldom indicate. Internal&#13;
organic trouble. They are usually.&#13;
tho result of local cold or inflammation&#13;
v.-hich can be quickly removed hy a little&#13;
Hamlinn Wizard Oil. Try and see.&#13;
Ha» .thai hires on* garden W ^ J I ^&#13;
birds; he that hires many garden*,&#13;
the birds will eat him.&#13;
• * * • :&#13;
' * : • " • ,&#13;
MADE&#13;
WELL AND&#13;
srpG By Lydia E pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compottpk DardstowiL, Ky.—,4I suffered; from&#13;
itineration and utherfemaletifcublesf C*&#13;
&amp; long time. Boo.&#13;
k m bad failed to&#13;
help me. Lydia E.&#13;
HnUiam'iV^et^&#13;
bio Qompound«48&#13;
recommended, and&#13;
I decided to try it&#13;
It cured my trouble&#13;
and mado me well&#13;
and BtroDg, so that&#13;
I can do all my own&#13;
wojJfeiVMrs. Jos-&#13;
EPHSAIX, Barda-&#13;
Ano*h«^*^bfl&amp; Cured.&#13;
Ghriatiada,' S e n n i t Iauffered from&#13;
tbe worst form of female trouble so&#13;
that at times I tttoughfr I could not&#13;
live, and my nerves were in a dreadful&#13;
condition. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Oompoiffld cured me, and made&#13;
me feel like a diSeEeat woman. Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ia&#13;
worth its weight in gold, ta suffering&#13;
w^omen."—MHS. MABY WOOD.ILF.D.3.&#13;
If you belong to that countless army&#13;
of women who suffer from' some form&#13;
of female ills, don't hesitate to try&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
made from roots and herbs.&#13;
Forthirty years this famous remedy&#13;
hasl&gt;een the standard for all forms of&#13;
female ills, aQdrhas cured thousands of&#13;
women who have been troubled with&#13;
Buch ailments as displacements, fibroid&#13;
tumors, ulceration,-inflammation, irregularities,&#13;
backache, anl nervous&#13;
pigstration.&#13;
traou want special advice write&#13;
foriftarMrs. Pinkbam,Lyiin,Mass.&#13;
It is free tvnd always helpful.&#13;
45 to 50 Bu. of Wheat Per Acre&#13;
have been grown on farm lands ia&#13;
WESTERN CANADA&#13;
Much less w o u l d be&#13;
satisfactory. T h e general&#13;
average it aboYe&#13;
twenty busoeU.&#13;
"AllareJoud in their&#13;
praise* of the great&#13;
crops and t h a t w o n -&#13;
derful country." - Extract&#13;
from correspondence Nttiona EiiiorUd&#13;
Association cfAugust&gt; 1901.&#13;
h i» n o w possible to secure a homestead of 160&#13;
acres free and another 1 6 0 acres at $ 3 . 0 0 prr acre.&#13;
HuncWedi fcave paid the cost of their lanni (if&#13;
purchased) and then had a balaace of from $ 10.00&#13;
to $ 1 2 . 0 0 per acre b o m one crop. W h e a t , hurley,&#13;
oats, i a x — a H d a welL Mused iarsung u * great&#13;
success and dairying it highly profitable. Excellent&#13;
ciimate, splendid school* and churches, rail,&#13;
ways bring most every district "within easy reach&#13;
of market. Railway and land companies have&#13;
lands for sale at l o w prices and o n easy terras.&#13;
"Last Best West"pamjitoeta and snaps s e n t&#13;
free. For these and information a s to h o w&#13;
to secure l o w e s t railway rates, apply t o&#13;
Superintendent of Immigration, O t t a w a ,&#13;
Canada, or the autborUad Canadian Governm&#13;
e n t A v e s t :&#13;
f t V. MciHRBS, 171 Wfsraaai ATSJQM, D a n * *&#13;
Mkcbifaa; m €. a, LAU1IE1. 5 s a h 9tt. Ksrk. Jffca.&#13;
RID WEARS&#13;
rrn^pc^Trrr"—nw t" v » . i \ • •;'. - T ~&#13;
•BOO,&#13;
BB»M!&#13;
J U M&#13;
aae&#13;
at « - r h a « M s * « 1 Mat***:* Sell Mate Msa*a tlM&#13;
Vsd *** **M Shots Thsn Aay Haer Maaatsctiira&#13;
isd»*ea*M Xgl«wtlNwsar«T tfes asastt ottas&#13;
• M t «es»«lt*s «rgaaiiaUea of traiaad ••*-&#13;
pattawaadsKllledaaoassaaw lnUasaaaWy.&#13;
flaaetlsettoa.ar'UMileatBsrs far i t t h paOaf.tas&#13;
«•jTai &lt;eaa*..aaA&lt;a««iVid«taUafth« n a s i a i ia .«T«rr&#13;
? i £ 7 .aaaartausrt. Is looaa* after fcy tke b n t she*-&#13;
SLAYS KEEPER&#13;
MAMMOTH BRUTE, ENRAGED AT&#13;
MASTER'S ABSENCE BEATS AT&#13;
TENDANT TO A PULP.&#13;
' • • I I • • • • ' &lt; "l&gt;r&#13;
D0IXAR tHEAT HAS&#13;
COME-10 STAY&#13;
IN 4a*S* THAN flVR YKAR8 CEN&#13;
TRAL CANADA WILL BE CALLED&#13;
UPON TO SUPPLV THE&#13;
UNLTID 9TATE&amp;&#13;
LATTER HURLED INTO AIR&#13;
Animal Than Goes on a Rampage, Uprooting&#13;
Trees, Overturning Wagons&#13;
and Finally Demolishes a&#13;
Rustle Bridge.&#13;
Dee ^Joln^i I Ia-^-BecominK enraged&#13;
by itye cGBtinUfrtl absence of bis regular&#13;
Wei&gt;e.t, "Tom," the mammoth elepbaxU&#13;
\n'\hv Yankee Robinson circus,&#13;
In winter quarters here, the other&#13;
afternoon picked up his attendant,&#13;
Charles Bartlow, hurled him Into the&#13;
air and then beat hits body into pulp&#13;
against &amp; barn.&#13;
After inflicting fatal injuries to his&#13;
keeper, the bis; fcrate ran through In«&#13;
geruoil,, p*vrk, uprooted half a dozen&#13;
tiiiiall trees, turned- over three circus&#13;
wagpne, tore.!tfce . roOf from. his barn | creasing millions."&#13;
smaO«raila\ftka shoe iaaastry. If f coal 4 skew&#13;
-yoajkowoartfntty W.LJB*atlas saeas arsssatfs,&#13;
9 M - W M M t£»a «a*awtaee why thay h*M&#13;
tt'baSWr, aad wear leagar taaa&#13;
ftbdt*&#13;
«*TS'&#13;
U M I .&#13;
Aity atheraaak*.&#13;
OJOO Mm M*tKttd-afTaw»inf*tfif SnUt mak*a tkrm Horr.&#13;
&amp;lewlbl**mi jLo*Q*r •Keari+n than any other*.&#13;
Bhoswi &lt; « r g f t j a g M e m h a r o f t h e F a m i l y *&#13;
JKercateAy «hoe d^stierB^TPry where. If J T I M I f ^QM l*nnln« vW.ithout W. U DntiirUii&#13;
S J i M F S J l M B M and prioe stamped on bottom.&#13;
m. L. MJHUja.Mf jwuait HTOKit. aaocnToa, «iHS.&#13;
o&amp;d Breath "For maatftai I taftd creat ttoattfe with my&#13;
stomach aatd ttaed aU kind* cf aaedicinea.&#13;
My tongue haa beca actually aa green as&#13;
grass, my breath havmg a bad«aelor. Two&#13;
weeksago a friend re&lt;x&gt;snm«id«dCaacarets&#13;
aad after nsiag them I can willingly and&#13;
cheerfully say that they have entirely&#13;
cured me. I therefore let you know that I&#13;
shall recommend them to anyone suffering&#13;
from such trc-aWca."—-Chaa. H. Halpern,&#13;
114 B. 7th St., New York, N. Y.&#13;
PDloea Gsaonotd,. PNaalavteacbSlleo.k P«ao,sWse«*e. kTaoBootrsG Gr1opod«.. u1m0e6 .t2a9bble,t 9a0tca. mNpeevde rC tCo lCd. iaG bnaalkra. oTfoteed rtoe s- cursor your&#13;
and demeleajfead. the :qwt|c bridge&#13;
across the park lake..&#13;
For nearly an hour 40 me» Jabured&#13;
to capture the enraged animal."-Forty&#13;
bullets were cent into his side and onq&#13;
into his right eye, and he was finally&#13;
taken when he stepped into a chain&#13;
noose. Heavy ropes quickly were fas.&#13;
tened to his legs and he was tied tc&#13;
trees In a corner of the park.&#13;
After returning to the park from&#13;
town Bartlow went to the elephant&#13;
barns in the east end of the park and&#13;
led the animals to water on the edge&#13;
of the lake. After watering Little&#13;
Tom and Queen and chaining their;&#13;
in their stalls, the keeper walked to&#13;
the water's edge with the older elephant.&#13;
As "Tom" stood near the lake at the&#13;
side of his attendant he turned his&#13;
trunk upward, trumpeted, and then&#13;
shoved Bartlow into the lake. After&#13;
this the elephant ran to the northeast&#13;
corner of the grounds. Bartlow&#13;
dragged himself out of the lake, and,&#13;
A couple of years ago, when the announcement&#13;
ww mjade lu theoe columns&#13;
that "dollar wheat" had come to&#13;
stay, and that the time was not far&#13;
distant when the central provinces of&#13;
Canada—Manitoba, Saskatchewan and&#13;
Alberta—would bo called upon to supply&#13;
a large part of the wheat consumption&#13;
in the United States, there&#13;
were many who laughed at the prediction*&#13;
and ridiculed the Idea of wheat&#13;
reaching the dollar point and staying&#13;
there. Both of these predictions have&#13;
come to pass. Dollar wheat ia here—&#13;
and It Is not only here, but is here to&#13;
stay; and at the same time, whatever&#13;
unpleasant sensations It may arouse&#13;
in the super-sensitive American, Central&#13;
Canada is already . being called&#13;
upon to help keep up the bread supply,&#13;
and within ^he ne*t five years&#13;
will, as James J. Hill says, literally&#13;
"become the bread-basket of our In&#13;
elevator* are springing up; railroads&#13;
rare se^^feTxtuli thfelr branch lines In&#13;
all directions; 'thousands of prosperous&#13;
farmer* are leaving their prairie&#13;
shelters for new and modern homes—&#13;
"built by wheat:" everywhere Is a&#13;
growing happiness and coale&amp;tnu&amp;t—&#13;
happiness and contentment built by&#13;
wheat—the "dollar wheat/' which haa&#13;
come to stay.. Notwithstanding this,&#13;
the Canadian Government is still giving&#13;
away Its homesteads and selling&#13;
pre-emptions at 93.00 an acre, and the&#13;
Railway and Land Companies are disposing&#13;
of their lands at what may be&#13;
considered nominal Jiguxea,&#13;
PROOF POSITIVE.&#13;
T: ^ &gt;Y.'&#13;
He Hurled the Keeper Into the Air.&#13;
pickiKg up a pitchfork, said to Arthur&#13;
Eldredpe, head hostler:&#13;
"I'll trim that d— beast."&#13;
"He's mad," answered Eldredge.&#13;
"Leave him alone, or you'll get killed."&#13;
But Bartlow rushed toward the elephant&#13;
with the pitchfork before him.&#13;
"Tom" grasped the fork, jerked it&#13;
from his keeper'8 hand, and sent the&#13;
man Into the air with his five-foot&#13;
tusks. When Bartlow fell at the elephant's&#13;
feet the maddened animal&#13;
pick«*d him up, walked to the barn,&#13;
and beat hhn against the side of the&#13;
structure until two boards were shattered&#13;
..&#13;
Barikrw crawled through the barn&#13;
dnor with the elephant following 'him.&#13;
Rut at that instant Eldredge came&#13;
around the corner and shouted for&#13;
help. When 40 of frho employes appeared&#13;
"Tom" began to run along the&#13;
fence from the north to the south&#13;
sidee of the park. Bartlow died ten&#13;
minutes' later.&#13;
"Tom,*" who i* one of th« biggest&#13;
elephants in capthrity, wi« known as&#13;
an exceptionally gentte beaut, and&#13;
Rartlow is his first victim. For a&#13;
week, however, the elephant had b&lt;*en&#13;
causing trouble and the animal men&#13;
with the circus attributed it to a do&#13;
she for the return of hla old keeper,&#13;
John Boldman, from whom he had&#13;
been separated two months.&#13;
CASH -rnr jonr pmmrtjr nharavartamlad. If yon&#13;
want to Mil, aaad dtorrletloa anl prta*.&#13;
If yov watt, to .buy. ataot yoak^tKirti&#13;
„ ,, -. __ N o H k w o a f a w ftnlatss Arfaocy&#13;
Dapi.'O, Bask of Commerce BMf.. XlaAaasMUa. Hlaa.&#13;
ocnANCc I T M C K " — ^ £ £&#13;
Justifiable.&#13;
'How dear to my heart is the map of&#13;
your features."&#13;
He sAng, "Lovey-Dovey, you're a&#13;
bit."&#13;
Thi» maiden said: "Faugh, I ab'cor&#13;
slangy creaturea,"&#13;
And proceeded to hand him tne&#13;
mttt&#13;
There are few men in the United&#13;
States better acquainted with the&#13;
wheat situation than Mr. Hill, and&#13;
there are lew men, if any, who are inclined&#13;
to be more conservative in&#13;
their expressed views. Yet it was this&#13;
greatest of the world's railroad men&#13;
who said a few days ago that "the&#13;
price of wheat will never be substantially&#13;
lower than it is today"—and&#13;
when It Is taken into .consideration&#13;
that at that time wheat had soared to&#13;
$1.20, well above the dollar mark, the&#13;
statement is peculiarly significant,&#13;
and doubly significant is the fact that&#13;
in this country the population is increased&#13;
at the ratio of 65 per cent.,&#13;
while the yield of wjieat and other&#13;
products is increasing at the rate of&#13;
only 25 per cent. For several years&#13;
past the cost of living has been steadily&#13;
increasing in the United States,&#13;
and this wide difference in production&#13;
und consumption is the reason.&#13;
This difference must be supplied by&#13;
Ihe vast and fertile grain regions of&#13;
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.&#13;
There is now absolutely no doubt of&#13;
this. Even the press of the country&#13;
concedes the fact. Results have shown&#13;
Lhat no other country in the world can&#13;
over hope to equal those provinces as&#13;
wheat producers, and that no other&#13;
country can produce as hard or as&#13;
good wheat. Said a great gram man&#13;
•ecently, "If United States wheat maintains&#13;
the dollar mark, Canada wheat&#13;
will be well above a dollar a bushel,&#13;
for in every way It is superior to our&#13;
,-&gt;orae-grown grain."&#13;
With these facts- steadily Impinging&#13;
'.heir truth upon our rapidly growing&#13;
population, it- is hrterefltrng to note&#13;
just what possibilities as a "wheat&#13;
grower" our Northern neighbor possesses.&#13;
While the United States will&#13;
never surrender her prestige in any&#13;
manufacturing or commercial line, she&#13;
must very soon acknowledge, and with&#13;
as much grace as she can, that she is&#13;
bound to be beaten as a grain producer.&#13;
It must be conceded that a&#13;
great deal of the actual .truth about&#13;
the richness of Canada's grain producing&#13;
area has been "kept out of sight,"&#13;
as Mr. Hill says, by the strenuous efforts&#13;
of our newspapers and magazines&#13;
to stem the exodus of our best&#13;
American farmers into those regions.&#13;
It is a fact that up to the present&#13;
time, although Canada has already&#13;
achieved the front rank in the world's&#13;
grain producers, the fertile prairies&#13;
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta&#13;
have as yet scarcely been&#13;
scratched. Millions of acres, free for&#13;
the taking, still await our American&#13;
farmers; and when these millions are&#13;
gone there are other millions in regions&#13;
not yet opened up to immigra&#13;
tion. A few years ago the writer, who&#13;
has been through those wheat provinces&#13;
several times, laughed with others&#13;
of our people at the broad&#13;
statement that Canada waa bound to&#13;
become "John Bull's Bread Basket"&#13;
Now, after a last trip land though he&#13;
is a stanch American) he frankly believes&#13;
that not only will Canada become&#13;
John Bull's bread-basket, but it&#13;
will within the next decade at least&#13;
BECOME THE BREAD-BASKET OF&#13;
THE UNITED STATES. Perhaps this&#13;
may be a hard truth for Americans to&#13;
swallow, but it is a truth, nevertheless.&#13;
And it is at least a partial compensation&#13;
to know that hundreds of&#13;
thousands of our farmers are profiting&#13;
by the fact by becoming producers&#13;
in this new country.&#13;
The papers of this country have naturally&#13;
made the most of the brief period&#13;
of depression which swept over&#13;
Canada, but now there is not a sign of&#13;
it left from Winnipeg to the coast.&#13;
Never have the three great wheat rais&#13;
ing provinces been more prosperous.&#13;
Capital is coming into the country&#13;
from all Quarters, taking the form of&#13;
cash for investment. Industrial concerna&#13;
seeking locations, and, best of&#13;
all, substantial and sturdy immigrants&#13;
come to help populate the prairies.&#13;
Towns are boom ing; score* of new&#13;
"Do you really love me, George?"&#13;
"Didn't you give me this tie, dear?"&#13;
"Yew, love. Why?"&#13;
"Well, ain't I wearing it?"&#13;
Deafness Cannot Be Cured&#13;
by local application*, aa tbey cannot reach toe diseased&#13;
.purlktu or the ear. 'Fberc ia ooiy one way to&#13;
cure duaftwm. aad tbat la by constitutional remedies.&#13;
Deafnessi 1&gt; earned by an Inflamed coodltloa of the&#13;
mucous 11D1I)( ol tbc Eustachian Tube. When tnla&#13;
tube la Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect&#13;
hearing, *ud when It is entirely closed. Deafness&#13;
Is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition,&#13;
hearing will be destroyed forever; nine oases&#13;
out of ten arc caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing&#13;
but an liiflam«1 uoudlttoa of the mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any eaaeurt&#13;
J Deatnees (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured&#13;
by UaJl'a Catarrh Cure. Send for circular*, free;»':&#13;
I *\ J. CHKN'KY &amp; CO., Toledo. O.&#13;
[ Bold by Druggists, 76c. '&#13;
: Take Hall's family PHU for constipation.&#13;
! The Tally.&#13;
J "What are those notches In your&#13;
gun?" asked the flirt, who was visiting&#13;
; the ranch.&#13;
"They represent men," replied Cactus&#13;
Sim, "who thought they wuz&#13;
• smarter than I wuz."&#13;
"A good idea! I'll have to notch my&#13;
parasol handle."&#13;
A Famous Health Builder.&#13;
A m e d i u m * t h a t w i l l c l e a n s e t h e b o w e l s&#13;
.trul p u t t h e m in c o n d i t i o n t o do t h e i r&#13;
p r o p e r w o r k u n a i d e d will d o m o r e t h u n&#13;
| a n y t h i n g e l s e t o n r e s e r v e h e a l t h a n d&#13;
i s t r e n g t h . S u c h a m e d i c i n e if^ t h e t o n i c laxa&#13;
t i v e herh t e a . Lane'H F a m i l y M e d i c i n e .&#13;
(Set a 25c p a c k a g e t o - d a y a t a n y d r u g g i s t&#13;
, or d e a l e r . X o m a t t e r w h a t y o u h a v e tried&#13;
before, try t h i s f a m o u s h e r b t e a .&#13;
Mamma's Orders.&#13;
"Mamma has given me orders that&#13;
when a young man gives me anything&#13;
I must give it right back."&#13;
"All right, prepare yourself."&#13;
i "What for?"&#13;
"I'm going to gite you a kiss."—&#13;
Houston Post.&#13;
j » ' • • .. -&#13;
Important to Mother4*.&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTQK1A a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears fhe&#13;
Signature of|&#13;
ID Use For Over ;M) Years.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
' The Sorrew of It.&#13;
Scribbles—Jingleton's latest poem Is&#13;
• certainly rhythmic and beautiful.&#13;
A Criticus—Yes; it's too bad it doesn't 1 mean anything.&#13;
I T a k e (Jarfield T e a ! M a d o of H e r b s , it is&#13;
! pure, p o t e n t . h e a l t h - R i v i n g — t h e m o s t r.i-&#13;
| tional r e m e d y for c o n s t i p a t i o n , liver a n d&#13;
! k i d n e y d i s e a s e s . A t all d r u g s t o r e s .&#13;
I WThen you go away from home, don't 1 forget that God is everywhere.&#13;
A Jewelry Store&#13;
Is the&#13;
orttta, bowels; &lt;&amp;anse&amp;&#13;
To 6e\\fe bei\e^LC\o\&#13;
4cuu\ne,&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
FIG SYRUP CO.&#13;
SOLD BY LEADING DfHJGGISTS 5tTAB0Ttl£&#13;
"A Little Cold i s *&#13;
Dangerous Thing"&#13;
a n d o f t e n l e a d s , t o h a s t y d i s e a s e a c d&#13;
d e a t h w h e n n e g l e c t e d . T h e r e a r e&#13;
m a n y w a y s to t r e a t a c o l d , b a t t h e r e i s&#13;
o n l y o n e right w a y — u s e t h e tight&#13;
r e m e d y .&#13;
DR.D.JAYNKS&#13;
EXPECTORANT&#13;
is t h e s u r e s t a n d s a f e s t r e m e d y k n o w n ,&#13;
for C o u g h s , C r o u p , B r o n c h i t i s ,&#13;
W h o o p i n g C o u g h , A s t h m a , P l e u r i s y .&#13;
It c u r e s w h e n o t h e r r e m e d i e s f a i l .&#13;
D o s o m e t h i n g f o r y o u r c o l d i n t i m e ,&#13;
you k n o w w h a t d e l a y m e a n s , you&#13;
k n o w t h e r e m e d y , t o o — D r . D . J a y n e ' a&#13;
E x p e c t o r a n t .&#13;
BoUles In thee atrea. $1. 50c. 25c&#13;
THEdEAKEST&#13;
THEUCHTE5T ^&#13;
THE MOST&#13;
POMMEL&#13;
SUCKER cheapaensdt in the&#13;
end because it&#13;
weans (onoest •3sa&#13;
T o w s * CAMAOMN&#13;
tWBY GARMENT&#13;
mMRAMTEED&#13;
CO. Star USA.&#13;
Tbacarro.&#13;
laBTrade-mark&#13;
J3imin«ies AH&#13;
ttieeriainty&#13;
in the pvreBafe ox rint anterizjv&#13;
ia an absolute&#13;
guarantee of pnb*&#13;
try aasi quaiitr,)&#13;
For yojLr o v a '&#13;
p i elect foil) see&#13;
4hat it ia aavtbe side of&#13;
every keg ol white lead ,&#13;
yon. bay.&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 19-194*.&#13;
i^^&#13;
t . ft&#13;
-m&#13;
._H&#13;
&amp;£aV&#13;
For a competent jeweler is "on the&#13;
ground" to properly adjust the watch&#13;
to your own indfvidna} needs.&#13;
And that's the only right way to&#13;
buy a watch—never by mini.&#13;
For no matter how good the watOh&#13;
—or how well known the maker—it&#13;
can't keep accurate time anlesapersonally&#13;
adjusted. A&#13;
South Bend Watch&#13;
Frnmmn in Solid / c * JC*e*« f a v f t c * Tim*&#13;
A Soot A Bmnd—acknowledged by&#13;
authorities to be the peer of all in&#13;
every grade—wtmKr fall aa'k perfeiaj&#13;
time-keepar unless- It was adjusted&#13;
for the one who is to carry it.&#13;
A South Bend Watch is never sold&#13;
by mail—only by the best jewelers.&#13;
Ask your jeweler to show you one.&#13;
And write us for onr free book&#13;
showing how and why a South Bend&#13;
Watch keeps accurate time in any&#13;
temperature.&#13;
South Bend Watch Coanpany&#13;
S c u t a B « » d . latL&#13;
. /&#13;
MAPLEINE A flavoring t h a t I* n a e d t h e amine a s l e m o a&#13;
or vanllla&gt; By (Uaaolvifca;nanulnt«d s u g a r&#13;
in w a t e r Ami a d d i n g a t a p l c i o e , a d e l l c i o u a&#13;
KTnip Is made and a s m p be*t#rthan maple.&#13;
Maplcln* is Hold bre-raeera. If not aaod Kc for&#13;
2ox. bot. and reelD* book. CNMM*BSJ. Ca., nsstita.&#13;
Corn Planting ia h e r e — D i a t e t n p c r a j n o n g t b «&#13;
all&#13;
tnuy t a k e s o m e o f theui&#13;
h a v e D i s t e m p e r .&#13;
horaea aaay b e n e a r&#13;
m a r e s a r e fomllaa'^-DtStemnaT&#13;
-L-orn ptavmLa* ma y be ts&gt;ie ti ftj r o u r horaea&#13;
SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE i a . y o n r t r u e RaJet?uai&gt;d-~a e n r e « a Well a a »BMJS&lt;attsw—SjBB a * d t l t f n&#13;
bottle—16 QU and 110.00dozen. d e l i T w e d . L a r g e i a aaosv Uaaa t w i c e t a w&#13;
t m a l t e r a u e . Don't p n t i t off. O e i l t . Drucrjriattt—or«ew4*oaaaaaiactar«ra.&#13;
MedtceJ Ce&gt;., Cla*aJstoaa4|seaerfca«0as», t?iaana. lad_. tl.3.i&#13;
- ^ . ^ ^ ^ : - ^ ^ - :4.&#13;
non— mumw" *"" """ ?rr:_/_7 - ^ ^ : ^ • " T T — T \ 7 ^ «i" ':'&#13;
: * • • '&#13;
»&#13;
4,&#13;
^f/£AT MZ7 «?£&gt;!M NEWS&#13;
W e wish t o say t h a t in a few days we&#13;
will be ready t o r u n a n d p a t r o n s wishing"&#13;
t o sell cream can s t a r t t o save&#13;
cream n o w a n d haulers v/ill pick it u p&#13;
on r o u t e s already established.&#13;
P a r t i e s desiring t o sell milk c a n also&#13;
skim cream from milk and- bring o r&#13;
send it in o n t h e first wagon a n d send&#13;
milk when we s t a r t .&#13;
YOUR MONEY TWO TIMES A MONTH&#13;
Michigan Creamery Co.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
ZEBsiise D e m i e s&#13;
Would it uot pay you to&#13;
r a i s e a good span of&#13;
mules? : : : - : :&#13;
We have a squarely built&#13;
Jack, bred from imported&#13;
Spanish stock; good head&#13;
and ears; large bone and&#13;
feet; plenty of action.&#13;
R e a d y f o r service at&#13;
Qlennbrook Stock Farm.&#13;
F.A.GLENN, Manager.&#13;
Business Pointers.&#13;
*&#13;
&lt; Along Oifr Correspondents t&#13;
SOUTH GREGORY.&#13;
Mr. Livermore is better at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
It looked more like winter last&#13;
week than like May.&#13;
Born to Jay Hadley and wife&#13;
Sunday May 2nd, a girl.&#13;
Mrs. C. Hoylaud of Howell has&#13;
been visiting her sister Mrs. L. R.&#13;
Williams and family.&#13;
The young people of this place&#13;
like to take a pleasure trip once&#13;
in a while as well as others.&#13;
C. J. and T. S. Williams were in&#13;
Ann Arbor Friday night of last&#13;
week and played with their band.&#13;
For Rent&#13;
40 acres one mile west of Pinckney.&#13;
Good bouse and barns.&#13;
H. G Hriggs.&#13;
Milk&#13;
at the C&#13;
I am&#13;
toes.&#13;
WABTBD.&#13;
and rream haulers.&#13;
IreaiLei'v building.&#13;
Earl&#13;
RfTICfe.&#13;
Inquire&#13;
Day.&#13;
in the market tor white pota-&#13;
T. Read.&#13;
warn MAIM.&#13;
The B. F. Andrews property in Par-&#13;
8ballviUe, consisting ot bouse, barn&#13;
and five acrts of land.&#13;
F L. Andrews, Ex.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
House and oue-hulf acre of land in&#13;
the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Haney.&#13;
K. CLINTON, Auctioneer, is prepared&#13;
to conduct auction sales as usual.&#13;
Thanking you for past favors,&#13;
and soliciting your patronage, [ remain&#13;
vours. R. CLIKTON.&#13;
Square Deal Hat&amp;tiery&#13;
PINCKNEY. MICHCAPACITY,&#13;
1000 HiSS&#13;
Pure bred Barred Plymouth Rock&#13;
baby Chicks, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 c e n t s Up&#13;
Pure Bred Sickle Comb Brown&#13;
Leghorn Baby Chicks, the laying&#13;
kind, 1 to 10 days old&#13;
10 c«nts Up&#13;
Sickle Comb Brown Leghorn&#13;
Egg* for hatching,&#13;
15 Eggs, 3 0 c&#13;
3 0 E5Ss&lt; 8 0 c&#13;
More. In Proportion&#13;
« ^ J J S H WITH 0RDER_^&#13;
G, Albert Frost&#13;
Lansing&#13;
at&#13;
VEST PUTMAlC.&#13;
Bessie Murphy is on the sick&#13;
list.&#13;
H. B. Gardner was in&#13;
last week.&#13;
Miss Moore spent Sunday&#13;
her home in Dexter.&#13;
Wendell Bates of Leslie called&#13;
on friends here Sunday-&#13;
Mrs. Patrick Kennedy visited&#13;
relatives in Fowlerville last week.&#13;
Wellington White was in Howell&#13;
one day last week on business.&#13;
Robert Kelly and wife attended&#13;
the funeral of Mrs. John Kelly of&#13;
Chelsea Saturday.&#13;
Grace Gardner spent Friday&#13;
and Saturday with Mrs. John&#13;
Dinkel of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. John Dunbar visited her&#13;
son Will Dunbar and family of&#13;
Anderson the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. D. M. Monks was one of&#13;
the many guests at the home of&#13;
Mrs. M. Lavey of Pinckney, Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Mrs. Louis Boucher and son&#13;
who have been spending a few&#13;
weeks at Mrs. Ann Bradys&#13;
returned to their home.&#13;
The highway on Bates crossing&#13;
is now impassible and the people&#13;
of this vicinity are pleased to&#13;
know that the work of opening&#13;
the drain has commenced.&#13;
Owing to the present condition&#13;
of the highway, H. H. Swarthout,&#13;
mail carrier on route 3, drives out&#13;
of his way several miles that the&#13;
people may not be deprived of&#13;
their mail.&#13;
Mi&amp;s Inez Hill of Waterloo&#13;
was in Unftdilla Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Godley and children were&#13;
in 8 toe-bridge (Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Laverock is entertaining a&#13;
niece trow Eaton Rapids.&#13;
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. O. Marshall,&#13;
a daughter last week.&#13;
Geo. Doody and bride have&#13;
commenced housekeeping.&#13;
Won. Livermore of Gregory is&#13;
very poorly at this writing.&#13;
Wm. Stowe and wife were in&#13;
Pinckney Monday on busineaa.&#13;
Rev. P. J. Wright is spending&#13;
borne time with his sou in Toledo.&#13;
P. W. Watts of Webster spent&#13;
Wednesday with his sister Mrs.&#13;
Jno. Webb.&#13;
Mrs. Mills spent Tuesday with&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. A. O. Collins&#13;
of Stockbridge.&#13;
Eugene Smith and family of&#13;
Cavanauph Lake spent Sunday&#13;
with Mr. Godley and family here.&#13;
The Missionary Society of the&#13;
PreBb. church will meet with Mrs.&#13;
Ed. Cranna Wednesday for supper.&#13;
WEST MARI0H&#13;
What ails the weather? The&#13;
weather is what ails the people.&#13;
J. C. Dinkel of Pinckney papered&#13;
at Mrs. Henry Smiths Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Stevenson hung paper&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Miller Thursday.&#13;
Miss Eva Roberts is helping&#13;
Mrs. Harwood with her house&#13;
work.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Hutson of Iosco&#13;
were guests of Mrs. G. D. Bullis&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Stevenson has gone&#13;
to Cavenaugh Lake to spend the&#13;
summer with her sister Mrs. Gene&#13;
Smith.&#13;
The wind Thursday night blew&#13;
down the silo at Albion Phaughs&#13;
and also the one at Gus Swirths&#13;
besides turning over apple trees&#13;
at other places.&#13;
for&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Knhn is staying with&#13;
iMm Walter Miller at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Wasson vis&#13;
ited at Wm. Caskeys Friday last,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Roberts and&#13;
family visited at T. Wainwrights&#13;
8nnday.&#13;
Mrs. Joe Roberts and sister visited&#13;
their parents Mr. and Mrs. C.&#13;
Harrington, of Webberville.&#13;
Miss Grace Lamborn returned&#13;
home after sewing the paat two&#13;
weeks for Mrs. L. B. Demerest&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Bert Munsell is working&#13;
Jas. Foster this week.&#13;
Frank Peterson visited his&#13;
brother G. C. Peterson Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. A. W. Elliott has been&#13;
having a severe attack of the&#13;
mumps.&#13;
Eugene Acker and wife were&#13;
elected delegates to the Sunday&#13;
school convention held at Hamburg&#13;
May 4 and 5.&#13;
Paul Haines and Blanche Smith&#13;
were married at the home of the&#13;
brides parents last Wednesday in&#13;
the presence of a few invited&#13;
guests by Rev. M. R. Saigeon.&#13;
Thty have the best wishes of their&#13;
. i many friends.&#13;
navej '&#13;
NORTH PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Gladys Daley of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday at home.&#13;
MisB Katie VanBlaticum is assisting&#13;
Mrs. Younglove.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. Brogan visited&#13;
at Marcellns Monks Sunday.&#13;
Bernard Glenn of Fowlerville&#13;
visited his parents the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Glenn entertained&#13;
company Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Buhl and daughter&#13;
Lillian spent a few days at Geo.&#13;
Blands last week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. White and son&#13;
Claude transacted business at&#13;
Howell Saturday.&#13;
During the storm last Thursday&#13;
night the bridge over the creek at&#13;
School-lot lake was washed away.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ohas- Frost have&#13;
returned to their home in Detroit&#13;
after visiting their parents here&#13;
for a few days.&#13;
Griswold House&#13;
DETROIT, MICHIGAN&#13;
——European Plan&#13;
200 Rooms&#13;
with running $]00&#13;
water&#13;
Per Day " X —&#13;
100 Rooms 150 Rooms&#13;
with privats&#13;
bath&#13;
Per Day na|5s«.$2s&#13;
. r „- — ———&#13;
Dining Room and Caf •&#13;
Club Bceakfait frouY 2 5 cento up TabWcTHots&#13;
Luge, well lighted dining room on parlor&#13;
Boor, and c*io grill loom on ground floor.&#13;
nifht, 50&#13;
Lady waken in mm&#13;
POSTAL &amp; MOREY, Proprietors&#13;
Had Put It U Proof.&#13;
Most of the men who went west In&#13;
1849 were from the north. There were,&#13;
however, a few southerners, among&#13;
them a Baltimore family who took&#13;
along an old slave, Samuel Jefferson.&#13;
Samuel was a patient traveler on the&#13;
long journey across the plains, but&#13;
vary skeptical about the success of bis&#13;
master's expedition. It was not until&#13;
bis master became one .of the gold&#13;
kings of California that Samuel stopped&#13;
shaking his head In silent protest.&#13;
Samuel lived to a good old age and&#13;
after the war was the special attend&#13;
ant of his master's children. One day&#13;
Hugh, the youngest son, was explaining&#13;
to Samuel the spherical shape of&#13;
the earth.&#13;
"If you should go straight aheail far&#13;
Mough, you'd come rl^ht around to&#13;
Where you started from."&#13;
"Now, loo heah, chile, yo' cyan' mole&#13;
me b'lieve dat. I ain't helped yo' d;i«V&#13;
dy tote bis 'hlugs all de way out \w.\h&#13;
f m Baltlmo' f'r uuffln If what y&lt;r&#13;
tails me was true, we'd 'a' come back&#13;
to Ma'ylan' about fo" times. I know&#13;
i*m sperience, honey, drivln' 'cross&#13;
4t:u plains, dat de worl' am flat out&#13;
•ttter'n a hoecake clean rill yo bump&#13;
da ocean."&#13;
Subtle Self Praise.&#13;
Once when Moltke heard himself&#13;
fompared to Caesar, Turenne, Marlborough,&#13;
Wellington and others he remarked,&#13;
"No; 1 have no right to rank&#13;
with such great captains, for 1 have&#13;
never commanded a retreat," which nt&#13;
the same time convoyed a subtle com&#13;
pllmont to himself.&#13;
Bismarck was equally subtle when&#13;
he was asked whom he thought to&#13;
have boon the ablest plenipotentiary at&#13;
the congress of Berlin, "I don't know&#13;
about the ablest," bo replied, with ft&#13;
grim smile, "but the next ablest was&#13;
certainly Lord Beaeonsfleld."&#13;
The Michigan aud Ohio Railway&#13;
has applied to the City Council of Ann&#13;
Alitor for a tr-nohise throuub the city.&#13;
The company proposes to construct au&#13;
electric Railway beiween Toledo and&#13;
Ann Arbor, which will probably be extended&#13;
to Whitemore Lake an l Lake&#13;
land— Electrical World.&#13;
The Contractor, published at Chi&#13;
catro and as its n*me signifies, is devoted&#13;
to matters pertaining to construction&#13;
and, will, in its annual number,&#13;
published May 15, jzive an extended&#13;
account of the work on the r'ani&#13;
ma canal, the article bein^ fully illus"&#13;
trated. Anyone desiring this number&#13;
should send at once to th^ publishers&#13;
842 Manadnock block, Chif-ago. $1&#13;
per year or 20 cents per number.&#13;
The Pinckney Dispatch is very anxious&#13;
that some one in the bur« should&#13;
buy an automobile, just so that we&#13;
can say that we have one.—Fenton&#13;
Independent. Well, well, Bro. Beach&#13;
put on your passes and read a^ain.&#13;
The wants of Pinckney in that direc&#13;
t i o n n c w i s a n auto club There is&#13;
not probably a town of its size that&#13;
has more autos in its corporation and&#13;
immediate vicinity than Pinckney.&#13;
Why, even the editor has one oeirly a&#13;
year.&#13;
Llnooln's Freedom From Cant.&#13;
One of the delightful things abott&#13;
Lincoln was his freedom from cant&#13;
He never set out to "set an example."&#13;
He Uvea" his life simply and naturally&#13;
thought out and spoke the though!&#13;
that was in him, did the work he&#13;
found to do and let his example shlfi&#13;
for itself. By consequence It Is one&#13;
of the great examples, one of the great&#13;
Inspirations of human history.—Hnr&#13;
ptr's Weekly.&#13;
ADDXTIOKA^ LOCAL.&#13;
A Rood many are putting in their&#13;
next years supply of coal. If it keeps&#13;
np the way it nas the past few weeks&#13;
we see where there will be but little&#13;
left for next winter. The fire in the&#13;
DISPATCH heating plant has not been&#13;
out ia seven months and a half at the&#13;
present writing.&#13;
P e r c h e r o n S t a l l i o n&#13;
N A N S B N !&#13;
Re.latercp No. 14,160&#13;
Weight 1715 pounds. Foaled May 16,&#13;
1904. Hired by Curio, No. 28,315 (48,492)&#13;
Dam—I&amp;is, No. 24,083.&#13;
Will he in&#13;
Pinckney, Wednesdays&#13;
A t Hotel Barn&#13;
Howell, Saturdays&#13;
T e n Cent Barn&#13;
DURING THE SEASON, 1909&#13;
T e r m s $12 t o I n s u r e M a r e In&#13;
Poal.&#13;
THOMAS LOVE, Owner.&#13;
See Card&#13;
S. C. BLACK ORPINGTONS&#13;
After May 10th, we will reduce the price of Eggs from our&#13;
Famous Strain of O r p i n g t o n s and&#13;
W h i t e RocksUo&#13;
-$1.50 per setting of 14 £$£3"&#13;
1 4th.&#13;
We won ten prizes at&#13;
the Howell show, 3 lsts, 3 2nds, 3 3rds&#13;
These Birds Will *Be In Our Breeding Pens.&#13;
All who wish to Start with the&#13;
Z l best, will do well to avail themselves&#13;
of This Opportunity.&#13;
•aT" PI e a s e , n o t e C h a n g e o f A d d r e s s . „*__2 _____&#13;
W. A. Reynolds,&#13;
R. F. 0. No. 2 Pinckney, Mich.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 06, 1909</text>
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                <text>May 06, 1909 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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