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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>P i n c k a t y , L i v i n g s t o n C o u n t y , M i c h i g a n W c d n e ^ h v , M a r c o &gt; ' &lt; N o . 9&#13;
.***-.«*&gt;&#13;
TOWNSHIP EXCHANGE&#13;
CANDIDATES! CLIPPINGS&#13;
&gt;-/ •"-..^&#13;
II o w n I , ' i i o&#13;
* ' : o - - . :&#13;
l e c t i o n W i l l&#13;
.. . . d a y , A p p i l 3&#13;
I t e m i o f I n t e r e s t f r o m&#13;
N e i g h b o r i n g T o w n s&#13;
POR SPRING 1916&#13;
We are Showing a Very Large&#13;
Ladies' Smt« ,^ -&#13;
•* ' \ '*"'"••. t ; ':&#13;
Ti!f' fo\ io T: *J i &lt;.'«.ndidatea were&#13;
* u V , • , i : •&#13;
jjJlip of "-V- :.-::: .&#13;
A c h a n g e in the game laWB&#13;
^ • U ' } ' - ' i". {&#13;
:u the town- j went into eff«c;. March 1. For&#13;
h" caucuses j the Crsltiuic iu years tke rabbit&#13;
" !HSI Sitnr-[season cloaed wirly. The 1915&#13;
| legislature uade the open season&#13;
, ,iKT tfroii October 1 to March 1. Unv&#13;
j_&gt;C V 0r e a Q X | til October the killing of r a b b i t s&#13;
\V. Murta ! w*'- -Je illegal.- Brief .Sim.&#13;
AH&#13;
Skirts&#13;
New and T-to&#13;
mar the beautv&#13;
•c* r** J 1 Ik f * I&#13;
.1.)-1&#13;
.( : r&#13;
! 1&#13;
\' 'i. L . vii&#13;
vVbile overhauling :.in old two-&#13;
. _ . , ; cylinder Marweli car, t!ie ma-&#13;
J"tmes S m i t h ' , . . , , » - 4, t ,,,, ) nil vacanev icf.nm,st , toB,i id .iu tlir.- crun,.k c,a ae ,a, . p . " sizable cuuiii: oi rehned gold&#13;
M .. ,, ." .which had aoparentiy been once&#13;
j:e IVace, lunll U^r un,, »-t,h,e crown ori some:b od,y ,s .to o,t.h,. , . •uim^a H. Dovle, T . . . . ., , 4. •«l TrlIi. *'h,w ave, I t s .pjr esen,c e m th. e. oil and l o•t hejr i&#13;
(i v , [residue has oot been explain t o ,&#13;
•Mi / o T R l v t e w 0 1 6 ' b u t P r o b a b l y somebody tried to&#13;
rV I-, ni ' i D l t e off more than th#y) coola&#13;
George D. Bland. , 0 , T 0 **&#13;
, Mk-hael Lavey, Syk «hew.-Sott.h LyooHifnld&#13;
Higlr&#13;
Jns4i':'- &lt;v&#13;
for :•) } \ v : •&#13;
. Justit* o&#13;
Overs •&gt;&lt;•:•&#13;
Me tube :&#13;
Oonst.iblfvester&#13;
H u m . , George Hoben, 0 H r e k r u a r y to R m a t i n g of&#13;
William E. Fa main.&#13;
ftEPUBLICAV TICKETS.&#13;
Sapervisor, Wdliam C. Miller&#13;
Olerk, William J. Duo bar&#13;
Treasurer, Alger Hal!&#13;
Highway Commissioner&#13;
fire insurance policy holders from&#13;
all over the stale was held at &amp;*)•&#13;
omazo* far the purpose of taking&#13;
steps to protest against the existing&#13;
insarane* laws. A committee&#13;
of nineteen men, representing&#13;
Very Beautiful&#13;
Tailored Suits&#13;
Fashioned from exceedingly&#13;
beautiful material.&#13;
In New, Plain&#13;
and Novelty Effect&#13;
Hansomely tailored and&#13;
very attractive.&#13;
Nci^lf'ts h\&#13;
Justice »o fill vacauty, Wales j various cities and towns through-!&#13;
Lelaod. j o l l t the state, wae appoiated to '&#13;
Justice, foil term, Guy Hall j a c t iQ eon junction with the officers!&#13;
Orerseer of Highay, elected at this meeting ae as ex-'&#13;
John Chassbers&#13;
Board of Review,&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Constables, Fred Daltou, George&#13;
^Valch. John Bell, Valentine&#13;
Dinke)&#13;
^ ^ a&#13;
\ )ur new Sjnin'j - ivi-; -&#13;
tihow t/ie effect J-." \v&gt;-&#13;
•)f new roater?a!1' v^&#13;
Hansome Plain&#13;
Cloths and Unique&#13;
Checks and Plaids&#13;
very becermn^ .^rfy &lt;.-p.&#13;
dietiiictive.&#13;
ecutive borad, to ask the next&#13;
legislature to amend or repeal the&#13;
so-called Anti-Discrimination Tnsurance&#13;
law, enacted at the last&#13;
session of the legislature President&#13;
Robert Phillips of Drightou&#13;
was appoiated on that bouH and&#13;
he wetit rn f-rrand Knpids this&#13;
afternoon •&lt;&gt; be present ' the&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F Id SRCOJ spent} t i ^ 1 meeting of the Woard, '.rh^-a&#13;
b:in(lav at W, S. &lt; 'askey'p. {Is to ho he'd in 'hut ••;{&gt;• I'll &gt;:&gt;-&#13;
Mr. »-.nd Mw. Walter Miller I( U y ™oni:»-. Hris'hton Ar^r.K.&#13;
A&gt;ri't: Fowlorviiio-•iillurn Tiiiu'eday. i -&#13;
Mrs. E m m a \"anKeureu, who i s ' i*^\*%&gt;"^J+**JV*'&#13;
frrionsiy ill with ^ancer1 retnm^rl 1&#13;
' o m e from JacKson IhnrsdaA.&#13;
"New and Elegant Spring Skirts and Waieta&#13;
'Vhfcy a r t correct in nyh. T h t y are becoming; hiuly m a d t . M,id&lt;- from t h r mov.&#13;
&gt;cautifiil materials a n d they are nut expensive.&#13;
New spring Goods ia Every Department&#13;
South Iosco GOODNOW &amp; GARTRELL. Howell. Mich.&#13;
Th^ Ntore T o FMo»i,so&#13;
K M&#13;
• - « i&#13;
•»^/|/i**-&lt; •- •**&amp;/•* " a t^l/lt* i*-f ft » ;&#13;
d Mrs.&#13;
a.'.ngiiter v;s:tc&#13;
fty [&gt;^i her and i&#13;
.i •] on Koberi'^ •&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
J. D. Kob^ru •'•!iLerta;ut&lt;d litiseel&#13;
Livermore of Gr-^ory Friday&#13;
night and Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. b e o . Ha id ford, who was&#13;
.juite ill is slowly recovering.&#13;
Mrs. J as. Allison called on' Mrs&#13;
Douglass (ireen Saturday.&#13;
Eva ^leabon nnd daughter visited&#13;
fit th* Watters Bro^. last we»"vk&#13;
Mies (rlaJys Roberts spent&#13;
Ihuraday at Mrs. M. F. Knhn'soi&#13;
Gregory.&#13;
Spring&#13;
Millinery&#13;
Opening&#13;
The Good Old Spring Medicine t&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
11 • i\ red coiTciv&#13;
0 ! l l ; l d \ ' i"&#13;
1&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Mr.'andfMr?. N. Pacey entertained&#13;
a-party of friends at dinner&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mr."and Mrs Elmer VanRenren?&#13;
tittenrfed the funeral J of Mr1&#13;
Demrey of Iosco Friday.&#13;
The Misses Kit and Veronica!&#13;
Brogftn nf Howell spent the week&#13;
*nd at the home of Chris Brogan&#13;
Jae. Jones and family moved.&#13;
from tha Chambers farm to 'South&#13;
Patnam last week. Ha will work i&#13;
the Van Winkel farm the coming i&#13;
year.&#13;
Dnane Larey of Pinokmey spent j&#13;
Thansday at the home of Will]&#13;
S W i a a . ^ '&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday&#13;
and Friday&#13;
March 22nd&#13;
23rd and 24th&#13;
V&#13;
T four Patronage Solicited&#13;
MISS NELLIE OAEDNEE&#13;
Plncltticy, Mlch«&#13;
\'"'*.v hl*&gt;j&lt;l- -pr.rc .di.sjdi. nc\&gt; ii: :.d.i :' - " d&#13;
&lt;!&lt;-. an irirr^a.^od •': r&lt; u'.ltioi" - -1 ;'ir -\-^ f^ 'h:.: ow^iiw i-i'1., r^.-'M&#13;
ot impurities a n d in vigor, U e l .&#13;
T h a t ' ? \vha.i you need ihi- ^iiriiu r&lt; &lt; •. ( .vsrlf iroiv; ihr&#13;
:.-::ditions ari-.ine i'ro:n :\v&gt; indoc.r l i ^ ^.itVi'.T v-.irw &gt;;&gt;\ &lt;-ncryy&#13;
,-rd \]'.j(-r for 'he i oivjin^ s u m m e r 4 0 a V t h c .&#13;
Nyals Spring Sarsaparilla&#13;
w i l l m a k e y o u f e e l l i k e n e w&#13;
CU-ar.-es mr- 1&gt;1 ood and make- it nourish the ~y-&gt;i.rrit siinin*&#13;
iatcs the liver, kidnev- :in&lt;) hl-idder ;ind ,is«i^fs Uiem in their&#13;
'"unetions.&#13;
Il will rouse your r;icr,»,v *&gt;&gt; 'op :v&gt;:en. I'ri^h'rn the eyes'&#13;
elear the brain and give yon that sprint;&gt; sff j) .leeompanin^&#13;
perfect health -you will fee! it too.&#13;
You won't enjoy ihe summer—your work will hang—in tact&#13;
e\erythinc: will lx&gt; unpleasant unless iht: whole s\stem is cleansed&#13;
.im\ placed on a new basis.&#13;
N y a l s S p r i n g S a r s a p a r i l l a w i l l d o it and we nev-.&#13;
er heard of a case where it f jiled to do as wo say-&#13;
All this for $1.00--100 full doses 10 the bottle.&#13;
We ezpect to be here in business a good many years. The&#13;
only way we can do it is by treating everybody rifcht. That's&#13;
our policy&#13;
#12&#13;
+&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
Pfnckfiey9 Mich*&#13;
•«.&lt; •"n'tjti/mZiJMi y&#13;
* V&#13;
• '.i.&#13;
V;&#13;
i: •&#13;
• ^ - ^ • d&#13;
, ' f . ; * &gt; * * • ;&#13;
mvH&#13;
St&#13;
:£f&#13;
X "-A\ -.&#13;
,4&#13;
' • ' * • '"•• v . - '&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ONE BFA&#13;
rs aivd SKrub&#13;
Their Care ai\d GiMvatiorv&#13;
"Pm so nervous&#13;
ZwddtixF*&#13;
No sick headache, sour stomach,&#13;
biliousness or constipation&#13;
by morning.&#13;
Get a l'J-ceat bcx now.&#13;
Turn the ratcalb out -the headache,&#13;
billoUBiieiss, ind^-eitiou, the sick, bour&#13;
Stomach and foul Kascs turn them .&#13;
Out to-uiyht and keep them out with&#13;
Casc&amp;rtts.&#13;
Million 6 of men and ^oruen take a&#13;
Cascaret nc.v and then and never&#13;
know the m it t r y caused by a lazy&#13;
liver, clogged bow eld cr an upset stomach.&#13;
Don't put in another day of distress.&#13;
Let Cascartta cleanse your stomach;&#13;
femove the BOUT, fermenting food;&#13;
l a k e the excess bile from your liver&#13;
and carry out all the constipated&#13;
w a s t e matter and poison in the&#13;
&gt;owels. Then you will feel great.&#13;
A Cascaret to-night straightens you&#13;
out by morning. They work while&#13;
JOtt sleep. A 10-cent box from&#13;
any drug store means a clear head.&#13;
i w e e t Btomach and clean, healthy liver&#13;
And bowel action for months. Child&#13;
r e n love Cascarets because they&#13;
l e v e r gripe or sicken. Adv. _-~.' .&#13;
Evidence at Hand.&#13;
"It is said,' remarked the boarder&#13;
Who reads the scientific notes in patent&#13;
medicine almanacs, "that the scanty&#13;
garments worn by the savages account&#13;
for their unusual longevity."&#13;
"1-don't doubt it," rejoined the old&#13;
bachelor at the pedal extremity of the&#13;
mahogany. Just look at the great&#13;
• f t attained by our ballet girls."&#13;
Colds Make Backs Ache&#13;
r&#13;
Boston Ivy as a Beautifier.&#13;
FIRST WORK FOR GARDEN&#13;
' Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle ot&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the yjf x / P ^ . /&gt;&#13;
Signature of t ^ £ t £ ^ ? ^ &lt; &amp; &amp; &amp; t f&#13;
In Use for Over 30 Years.&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
•i'* What H e d L i k e .&#13;
Church —An unusual dinner was reeently&#13;
given in Toledo. Each guest&#13;
COjked his own food by electricity.&#13;
Gotham —I'd rather enjoy that, foi&#13;
they'd be so tired after their exertions&#13;
ao one could make an after-diouei&#13;
speech,"&#13;
SWAMP-ROOT STOPS&#13;
SERIOUS BACKACHE&#13;
When your back aches, and your bladder&#13;
and kidneys seem to be disordered, remember&#13;
it is needless to suffer—go to your&#13;
nearest drug Ft ere and get a bottle of Dr.&#13;
Kilmer's Swamp-Root. It is a physician's&#13;
prescriptiin f&lt;T diseases of the kidneyt&#13;
and bladder.&#13;
It hns stood the test of years and has&#13;
I reputniinn for quickly and effectively&#13;
giving results in thousands of cases.&#13;
Thi« prescription was used by Dr. Kiltner&#13;
in h.s private practice nnd was so&#13;
Very effective that it his been placed on&#13;
sale everywhere. Get a bottle, 50c and&#13;
$1,00, at your'nearest druggist.&#13;
However, if you wish first to test this&#13;
treat preparation send ten cents to Dr.&#13;
Kilmer &amp; Co., Binghamton, N. Y , for &amp;&#13;
sample bottle. When writing be sure and&#13;
mention tbis paper.—Adv.&#13;
By L. M. BENfSUNGTON.&#13;
One does not need a large variety&#13;
of flowers or vegetables to get both&#13;
pleasure and profit from a garden. I&#13;
do the planting and much of the work&#13;
on a plot of about one acre. The products&#13;
include asters, dahlias, strawberries,&#13;
tomatoes, celery, string beans,&#13;
etc.&#13;
March is none too soon to commence&#13;
shaping one's plans for the&#13;
garden. A good catalogue from some&#13;
reliable seedsman is necessary. My&#13;
experience has been that It is a mistake&#13;
to try too many varieties of vegetables.&#13;
Of peas, tomatoes and cabbage,&#13;
select two varieties, one early&#13;
the other late. Of all the other vegetables&#13;
I find one variety suffices.&#13;
Order your seeds early, for by the&#13;
middle of March one can begin operations&#13;
by sowing tomato, cabbage, and&#13;
celery seedB in boxes filled with earth.&#13;
Cigar boxes make a good receptacle&#13;
for starting plants. They are deep&#13;
enough and a good size for standing&#13;
on the window sill. Two hundred&#13;
plants can be started in one box, The&#13;
early cabbage and tomato should be&#13;
started first.&#13;
If you are going to try celery it&#13;
should be among the first started. Do&#13;
not cover the Beed too deep Follow&#13;
the direction on the package as to&#13;
depth.&#13;
Do not get discouraged about re&#13;
suits, as celery seed germinates very&#13;
slowly. Keep the top of the earth a!&#13;
ways moist, and do not look for&#13;
plants until the third week. When&#13;
they do show give plenty of light, so&#13;
that they will not be spindling&#13;
Tbis also applies to cabbage and to&#13;
matoes. All of them will grow long&#13;
threadlike stems, which will be too&#13;
weak to support themselves, unless&#13;
given plenty of sunlight. The celery&#13;
plants can remain in the cigar box&#13;
much longer than any of the other&#13;
plants that 1 have suggested for house&#13;
starting. They grow slowly The tomatoes&#13;
and cabbage wiil sxm need,&#13;
larger quarters.&#13;
As soon as the fourth leaf Is uarder&#13;
way, they should be planted into&gt; fiats.&#13;
Mine are about two feet square- and&#13;
three inches deep. I nailed them up&#13;
myself, and any other womat witr a&#13;
few boards, a saw and a hammer, can&#13;
do as much. Once made they wiU be&#13;
good for several seasons Do not till&#13;
with earth to the top.&#13;
By the time the plants are trans&#13;
planted in the flatB there will be many&#13;
days when they can be placed outside&#13;
for a few hours This should be done&#13;
whenever possible.&#13;
MOREL aching bacLs, more kidnap troubles came in March, tfcan in&#13;
any other month. Slushy sidewalks, dampness, raw wimia and&#13;
sudden, c&amp;anges cause dull la and. colds. A n d ofeitta or colds tend to&#13;
hurt tire kidneys. It is good senja* to use a ktdneyv remedy whs©; recovering&#13;
fitem a cold and at: any tftne when stgfnrfris from a lf*ae back*&#13;
t~ | sharp j * in* when stooging or lfltting, dizzy spells* irregular car annoying&#13;
k&amp;foey action, a n d a. runrdwrn, nervous slated&#13;
Ztoat delay and take a- casnee of getting: dropsy, g r a ^ ; BrigbjrB&#13;
disease or some otjter sexl&amp;ta kidney cftaca&amp;o&gt; Use Dccu!fe Kidney&#13;
Flttsv the best-recoounenitaA. special k&amp;luey remedy. Ail over (be&#13;
worW grateful pecfiie frsnJfcfcr praise Dojtn'A.&#13;
Here?!, What Michigan Pteople Sagt&#13;
START THEM EARLY&#13;
A great many annuals and perennials&#13;
can be planted now for early&#13;
plants. Pansies, daisies, sweet peaa&#13;
and verbenas; but where there is no&#13;
conservatory or greenhouse it is best&#13;
to wait until March before planting&#13;
anything but the pansies or daisies.&#13;
Start sweet allysum now in your window&#13;
gardeu. Sweef peas are too hard&#13;
to handle from the window box. Better&#13;
wait and sow them where they are&#13;
to remain all season.&#13;
Frank Ming** W.. St. Joe St..&#13;
Union City, W}ch.„. SAJ&amp;: "Some&#13;
years ago I wa« folN*«d and my&#13;
back and ksdpeys were affected.&#13;
Every time t ca&lt;ugb* cold, it settled&#13;
on m y kidneys causing muclfc&#13;
misery frog* a_ lfl,H»% back and pain©&#13;
through wy loi^a* Doan's Kidr\#*-&#13;
Pills hav*. dtoae H * more good troop,&#13;
any othec kWn*y medicine I hfljy*&#13;
ever usadl T*»«y nave r e t r e a d&#13;
backache and lameness ajidi&#13;
strength***** my kidneys."&#13;
Mr*. Mary McL*fla«, 94ft Stark&#13;
8ft-., Saclnaw, Mlchi.9jR.yai **Wben I&#13;
oveiTOftrked or caught oohk my kidnw&amp;&#13;
got badly dlsor^wed. My&#13;
bacfe used to acftfr intejeoety and I&#13;
^r^qpently had d}#*y st*tta and felt&#13;
; ttir*d and worn oufa. Sty doctor told&#13;
*W» to try Don*-;* Rttney Pills and\&#13;
I did. They regulated the actio*,&#13;
of my kldofcjts, strengthened nay/&#13;
back and pxft in* ta good shaped&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
P I L L S&#13;
At All Stores, 50c % Box. Fo*tef4tfburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. DOAN'S&#13;
PLAN EARLY FOR VEGETABLES&#13;
"Plan for an extra-early bed of vegetables&#13;
by throwing the soil of a welldrained&#13;
bed into narrow ridges with&#13;
deep furrows between them. The action&#13;
of the elements will so work upon&#13;
the texture of the soil that you will&#13;
be able to plant a bed a week or two&#13;
earlier than the rest of the garden.&#13;
COLT DISTEMPER You can prevent this loathsome disease from running&#13;
through your stable and cure all the colts suffering with&#13;
it when you begin the treatment. No matter how young.&#13;
gPOHN'S Is safe to use on any oolt. It Is wonderful how&#13;
It prevents all distempers, no matter how colts or horses&#13;
at any age are "exposed." All good druggists and turf&#13;
goods houses and manufacturers sell SPOHN'8 at 50 centa&#13;
and 11 a bottle; $5 and 110 a dozen. SPOHN MEDICAL&#13;
CO., Chemlata aad Baeterlologlata, Goaken, lad., U. S, A*&#13;
PURIFY WATER IN LILY PONDS&#13;
To purify water In thj lily ponds&#13;
and to destroy insect life in it, slake&#13;
fresh stone lime in water, making a&#13;
liquid as for whitewash, and stir some&#13;
of this Into the water until it becomes&#13;
thoroughly Incorporated. If not effective&#13;
add a little more. The lime&#13;
must be fresh and sharp.&#13;
Too Original.&#13;
"What we want to do," said the&#13;
actor, "is to get away from the old&#13;
conventional stereotyped Ideas. Now,&#13;
in this new comedy, for example, I'm&#13;
cast for the part of an Irishman&#13;
How would it be If I played the part&#13;
without the usual red whiskers?&#13;
Wouldn't that be a novelty?"&#13;
"It would be a novelty, all right,'&#13;
admitted the manager, "but how&#13;
would the audience know that you&#13;
were supposed to be an Irishman?&#13;
New Bandtt Style.&#13;
Bill —A mail and express auto, tra&#13;
Terslng the wilds of Colorado, has a&#13;
bandit proof cage in the rear for valu&#13;
ables.&#13;
Jill—No good One jf those bandit&#13;
parties with their Zeppelin will come&#13;
along and lift auto, cage, valuables&#13;
and everything.&#13;
'•V " *'&gt;..£&#13;
A G R A T E F U L A C K N O W L E D G M E N T .&#13;
Mr. P. C. Case of vr'elcome Lake,&#13;
J»a,, writes: "I Buffered with Backache&#13;
and Kidney Trouble. My head&#13;
ached, my sleep was broken and unrefresbing.&#13;
I felt&#13;
heavy and sleepy&#13;
after meals, was&#13;
always nervous&#13;
and tired, had a&#13;
bitter taste in my&#13;
month, was dizzy,&#13;
h a d floating&#13;
specks before my&#13;
M v r r&gt; eyes, was always&#13;
Mr. ¥. c . c a s e . t h i r 8 t y &gt; h a d a&#13;
dragging sensation across my loins,&#13;
difficulty in collecting my thoughts&#13;
and was troubled with shortness&#13;
of breath. Dedds Kidney Pills&#13;
• a r e cured me of these complaints.&#13;
To* a r e at liberty t ^ publish this lettar&#13;
for the benefit of any sufferer who&#13;
doubts the merit of Dodds Kidney&#13;
pins.-&#13;
Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at&#13;
Tour deaier or Dodds Medicine Co..&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y. Dodds Dyspepsia Tablets&#13;
for Indigestion have been proved.&#13;
Me. per box.—Adr.&#13;
! - \ / * &lt;'&#13;
FOR PLEURISY, BRONCHITIS&#13;
AND SORE THR0A1&#13;
Readers are advlged not to dose tha&#13;
stomach. The best way to quickly&#13;
overcome soreness In the throat or&#13;
chest is to rub on true Mustarine, which&#13;
all druggists keep on hand in the rigi&#13;
nal yellow box for about 25 cents.&#13;
It is quicker and mort efficient ^han&#13;
any liniment. Rub it on at night and&#13;
blessed relief comes by morning. True&#13;
Mustarine is made by Bcgy Medicine&#13;
Co.. Rochester, N. Y It stops Rheumatic&#13;
pains and N'euralgla almost like&#13;
magic. There's blessed relief in every&#13;
rub. It stops pain ana congestion.&#13;
His Idea.&#13;
"I'm writing a personal article aboul&#13;
Villa. Do you know if he has any&#13;
fads9 "&#13;
"Oh, yes. He's making a collection&#13;
of honeymoons."&#13;
In One Lot.&#13;
Some years ago in a certain county&#13;
court, which was not one of the bestfitted-&#13;
up places, three auctioneers&#13;
were seated in a pewlike contrivance&#13;
, awaiting the Judge's order to give&#13;
evidence.&#13;
All at once there was a terrible&#13;
noise in court, and a dense cloud of&#13;
dust flew up.&#13;
"What's that?" asked the Judge. •&#13;
"Oh, it's nothing, your honor," replied&#13;
a ready and facetious lawyer;&#13;
"it's only '.hree auctioneers gone off&#13;
in one lot."&#13;
The seat had given way.&#13;
USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EA3R '&#13;
Tho antiseptic powder to be shaken Into&#13;
shoes and used In foot-bath. It relieves&#13;
[ painful, swollen, smarting, aching, tired&#13;
feet and instantly takes the sting out of&#13;
i corns and bunions. The greatest comfort&#13;
j discovery of the age. Sold everywhere, 25c.&#13;
Trial package FREE. Address Allen S.&#13;
Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Adv.&#13;
Proof Positive.&#13;
Knicker — Is Smith a prominent&#13;
man&#13;
Hocker— Me must be; he hasn't&#13;
been suggested for the cabinet.&#13;
An Ob; &gt;c!e.&#13;
Did he swear a b k * streak""&#13;
"I really can't tell—on account of&#13;
hoing color blind."&#13;
Not Gray Halrm but Tired Ey«a&#13;
mske us look older than we are. Keep&#13;
your Eyes young and you will look young.&#13;
After the Movies Murine Your Eyes. Don't&#13;
tell your age. Murine Eye Remedy Co.,&#13;
Chicago, Sends Eye Book on request.&#13;
Copenhagen has prohibited t h e&#13;
wearing of unprotected hatpins by&#13;
women in stieet cars.&#13;
1.' ?, i&#13;
» • y ^ .&#13;
S*A£aV&#13;
Throw Off Colds and Prevent Crip.&#13;
W"hm Ton &gt;*nl a cold eonftig on, t»ke LAXA&#13;
• n v « BBOMO QC1NINB. It renwrres cause of&#13;
COKH and Grip. Only On« ' BROMO QCOKLNH&#13;
a W Q&amp;GVK'Sslgna.tureonbox. 26c&#13;
A shopper considers the price, but a&#13;
buyer considers the value.&#13;
The love that dwells in a cottage&#13;
never thrives on terrapin and champagne.&#13;
Tbb naughty schoolboy is always&#13;
glad when he sees the teacher lay&#13;
dowti the rule.&#13;
^w«. 1* •.&amp;•:.$**.&#13;
•v -&lt; * '&amp;* • ?.. **&gt;..&#13;
* * * •;'&gt;;*s W* ;i •*; \ k~&#13;
FUintWa&#13;
ia Court&#13;
i rest the case.&#13;
You ought to.&#13;
*Ve pretty&#13;
.. s**&gt; r ^&#13;
- " &lt;&#13;
%^&#13;
* ' • * &lt; % :&#13;
• » . 1 -&#13;
A Sample of Tree tvrpery.&#13;
Pale, Sallow Cheeks show that the blood i3 impoverished and that the stomach is not prep*&#13;
erly assimilating its food. In fact a woman's physical condition always&#13;
abows in her face. Paleness, blotches, pimples, sallownesa or dull eyes all Tell the Need Of&#13;
Beecham'a PHIs. Women who are subject to these conditions should&#13;
not fail to avail themselves of their prompt and beneficiai effect&#13;
Beecham's Pills a n prepared to furnish the necessary relief. They&#13;
dear the system of impurities, gently stimulate the liver, regulate the&#13;
bowels and tone the system. Their mild and thorough action quickly&#13;
rid the skin cf blemishes, improve the diQaUtkm and help the digestion.&#13;
Every woman should know the comfort, anrf experience the help of Beecham's Pills fcMW&#13;
?i*-mi • " &amp; .&#13;
[A ••. 'y~.;*,t%?%'.*&#13;
Tatar ,.;^ •"&#13;
?-&#13;
^ ,&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
r&gt;&#13;
*&gt;v -&#13;
ajf&gt;e'&#13;
PresidenPs&#13;
Wedding&#13;
Cake—&#13;
— an example of&#13;
decorative art never&#13;
equaled in the history&#13;
of cake decorating&#13;
— an example of&#13;
dehciousness, lightness&#13;
and wholesomeness&#13;
that would be a&#13;
pride to any housewife.&#13;
It is&#13;
Another&#13;
Testimonial&#13;
for&#13;
CALUMET&#13;
BAKING&#13;
POWDER&#13;
This world-famous&#13;
Wilson-Gait Wedding&#13;
Cake was made&#13;
by Mrs. Marian Cole&#13;
Fisher and Miss&#13;
Pansy Bowen, both&#13;
well known Domestic&#13;
Science Experts.&#13;
Calumet BakingPowder&#13;
was used because&#13;
both these experts&#13;
use it exclusively in&#13;
their work and know&#13;
it is the purest, the&#13;
safest, the most&#13;
wholesome and economical&#13;
to use.&#13;
So do millions of&#13;
housewives who use&#13;
it every bakeday—so&#13;
will you if you try it&#13;
on the things hardest&#13;
to bake.&#13;
Send your name and&#13;
address for free recipe&#13;
and history of&#13;
the Wedding Cake.&#13;
Then bake one just&#13;
like it yourself.&#13;
Rmcotvmd Hightit Awards&#13;
World'i Purs Food Expositions,&#13;
Chisago and Pari*&#13;
Calumet&#13;
BakingiPowderCo.&#13;
Chicago&#13;
It a man has a true sense ot humor&#13;
he knows when not to get funny.&#13;
Children Who Are Sickly |&#13;
Wben your child cries at nlsrht, tosses&#13;
restlessly in its slcsp. is constipated, feverish&#13;
or has symptoms of worms, you feel&#13;
worried. Mothers who value their own&#13;
comfort and the welfare of their children,&#13;
should never be without a box of Mother Gray's Sweet&#13;
Powders for Children&#13;
for DM throughout ths sea.&#13;
son. They tend to Break&#13;
Qp Colds, relieve Feverish*&#13;
neu. Constipation, Teeth.&#13;
tag* Disorders, move tnd&#13;
rami its the Boweis and&#13;
destroy W o r m s . These&#13;
powders are pleasant to&#13;
take and sis? for parents&#13;
to give. They cleanse the&#13;
stomach, act on the Liver&#13;
and give healthful sleep&#13;
by remitting the child's ajrr saBStststa,&#13;
system.&#13;
UsedbymoihertforTSyean. Sold by aU&#13;
drufffists. 25 els. Sample mailed PR BE.&#13;
Address, Mother Gray Co.. Lc Eoy, N. T.&#13;
Be&#13;
iottw BTIJI Smtt Ponton for CMdm.&#13;
Trad* Mark.&#13;
Don't aeeeet&#13;
ASTHMA&#13;
OR.J.O. KELLOGtfSASTHaAREBEDY&#13;
for the prompt roliof of Asthma&#13;
and May Fever. Ask your drug*&#13;
(riot for H. 19 oente and ©«• dcrtar.&#13;
Writ* for FRII SAM P i t .&#13;
(sorthrop a Lyman Co.,lnt.,BMltalo,HY&#13;
D r. J . D. ^. f" " f**&#13;
• i f c . * * " ' REMEDY&#13;
ABSORBiNE&#13;
Reduces Bursal Enlargesaents,&#13;
Thickened, Swollen Tassoes,&#13;
Coifes, Filled Tendon*, Sore- I M\ stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain.&#13;
W\ Does not poster, reaaove the hair or&#13;
m&amp; ay up tW berse. $2.00 a bottta&#13;
at diucgists or delivered. Book 1 M free,&#13;
ABSORBINE, JTL, far&#13;
tis*^f^ tor bftttaaa/&#13;
laassJ m SI.as a&#13;
Willasflyesja&#13;
faaat V. I A . * *&#13;
M&#13;
BIRDS, f t - O W € H S AND CAMPAIGN&#13;
INTEREST APPEAR IN&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N .&#13;
PRIMARIES DRAW ATTENTION&#13;
Excitement Far Lees Than Four Years&#13;
AflO, for Few Candidates for Preal&#13;
dentlal Nomination Have Headquarters&#13;
In Capital City.&#13;
re if yea&#13;
By GEORGE CLINTON.&#13;
Washington.—There axe signa of&#13;
spring in Washington, marked signs&#13;
of various kinda. The advance guard&#13;
ol migratory birds has come up the&#13;
Potomac valley; the big black bird a,&#13;
purple gracklea, the scientists call&#13;
them, are stalking across the White&#13;
House grounds; the hepaticas are&#13;
peeping from the ground along the&#13;
bluffs in Rock Creek purk; the forsythia&#13;
Is bursting Into I loom in the&#13;
gardens; the crocuses are everywhere,&#13;
and every other day Inert is a balm&#13;
In the air which is the forerunner of&#13;
a heat which before long fill set the&#13;
asphalt boiling on Pennsyl ?ania avenue.&#13;
So much for the signs of nature's&#13;
spring. There Is another sign of&#13;
spring, however, which is more Interesting&#13;
to the politicians in Washington&#13;
than the blooming of Sowers and&#13;
the return of the birds. It may be&#13;
called the primary sign of spring, for&#13;
the awakened interest is in the presi&#13;
dential primaries throughout the country.&#13;
Four years ago Washington politicians&#13;
did not have to wait until the&#13;
springtime for plenty of excitement&#13;
and interest specifically political In&#13;
character. In February, March and&#13;
April, 1912, there was a political pot&#13;
boiling near everyone of the principal&#13;
street corners in the downtown district&#13;
of this capital city.&#13;
Lively Spring of 1912.&#13;
In 1912 every Republican and Democratic&#13;
candidate for the presidency&#13;
had his headquarters open tn this city,&#13;
and the campaign in its intensity, anxiety&#13;
and interest was like the campaign&#13;
throughout the country in the&#13;
late October days of a presidential&#13;
year. Four years ago the fight for the&#13;
nomination was on between William&#13;
Howard Taft, who then was president,&#13;
and Tneodore Roosevelt. Bulletins&#13;
were sent forth twice a day from each&#13;
of the two headquarters. Prominent&#13;
Republicans from all over the country&#13;
were pouring into Washington daily&#13;
and making lively, and on occasion&#13;
noisy, the headquarters of each of the&#13;
party candidates. There was life and&#13;
political news every hour of the day.&#13;
In the same months of late winter&#13;
and spring four years ago, all the Democratic&#13;
candidates for the presidency&#13;
had headquarters in this town, and in&#13;
their offices the scenes attending the&#13;
daily sessions in the Taft and Roosevelt&#13;
headquarters were repeated. In&#13;
one place the friends of Harmon of&#13;
Ohio, gathered. Not far from the Harmon&#13;
headquarters were those of Wilson&#13;
of New Jersey, and the efforts in&#13;
his behalf were just as strenuous and&#13;
marked by just as much enthusiastic&#13;
noise as were those in the other quarters&#13;
of political activity.&#13;
Just a little way removed from the&#13;
Wilson headquarters were those of&#13;
Champ Clark, where the speaker's&#13;
friends gathered daily to watch the results&#13;
of the primaries as they came&#13;
along. The other Democratic candidates,&#13;
Underwood, Marshall, and the&#13;
rest, also had their headquarters here,&#13;
and the noise of acclaim from all the&#13;
Democratic offices met that which&#13;
came from the Republican headquarters&#13;
and the din, if one may so put it,&#13;
was somewhat terrific.&#13;
Few Headquarters Thia Year,&#13;
This year there is a change, but just&#13;
now enough interest and excitement&#13;
has been put into the situation to keep&#13;
the politicians keenly alive to the fact&#13;
that a presidential campaign is framlnenL&#13;
There are no Democratic&#13;
headquarters open here except those&#13;
of the party itself, for the subdivisions&#13;
into supporting forces of this candidate&#13;
or that candidate are no longer&#13;
in evidence, because seemingly the&#13;
Democrats have taken it for granted&#13;
that Woodrow Wilson is to be nomi&#13;
nated to succeed himself. This may&#13;
not be a correct view of the case, but&#13;
it is the view so far as most of the&#13;
Democrats assembled in Washington&#13;
are concerned.&#13;
It Is the fact that presidential primaries&#13;
have just started In the different&#13;
states of the Union that baa&#13;
finally roused Washington to extreme&#13;
interest in the campaigning. Tola&#13;
year there are a go xl many Republican&#13;
candidates for the nomination, but&#13;
with one or two exceptions they have&#13;
not opened headquarters in the city&#13;
of Washington. For the Interest lathe&#13;
case, the politicians here must look&#13;
to the primaries as the/ occsr throughout&#13;
the Union.&#13;
War Maps in Cabinet Room.&#13;
The cabinet room at the White&#13;
Houhb tntsae day* IOOKS. uk« one&#13;
of the council cfca*nbfcXb of ihe war&#13;
college. Maps ot eii the countries&#13;
jti the 'prtjseru' lime ecgaged In war&#13;
! feave place* on the a/alJa and with&#13;
tiiem are mapa of couuincs that uuppoaedly&#13;
are near to war, and alongeltfk:&#13;
of ihe&amp;e are maps of those lands&#13;
wh*ch are i peace, but which by Boaid&#13;
turn of the wheel may bo brought Into&#13;
war.&#13;
The war mapa In the cabinet room&#13;
are of particular Interest, because by&#13;
means of pins with rather large and&#13;
different colored heads the poaitiona&#13;
of the armies in the different warring&#13;
countries are shown day by day Not&#13;
only are the armies positions shown,&#13;
but the positions as near as they can&#13;
be told of the fleets of the warring&#13;
nations are marked ou the maps of&#13;
the seas of the world.&#13;
In addition to the maps of the European&#13;
countries and of Japan and the&#13;
places in the East which have been&#13;
scenes of battle during the present&#13;
war or of the transfer of islands from&#13;
one allegiance to another, there is a&#13;
great map of Mexico which includes&#13;
in its compasB a map of the frontier&#13;
of the United States In the SoiTh&#13;
west.&#13;
On this Mexican map are shown the&#13;
positions as near as they can be determined&#13;
of the fighting factions tn&#13;
Mexico, and upon the map showing&#13;
the American side of the border are&#13;
placed little flags, either yellow, white&#13;
or blue, marking the camping grounds&#13;
of the regiments and detachments of&#13;
United States troops now stationed in&#13;
places from which they can look&#13;
across the border into the Mexico of&#13;
turmoil.&#13;
A large part of the cabinet delibera&#13;
tions of today, of course, must con&#13;
cern themselves directly or indirectly&#13;
with the questions ot war.&#13;
Getting the News In Washington.&#13;
Newspaper correspondents in Wash&#13;
ington divide prominent men in official&#13;
life into three classes, "good&#13;
copy,'' "fair copy" and "poor copy.'&#13;
Some statesmen—politeness and pol&#13;
icy compel the use of the word&#13;
for all national legislators—are will&#13;
lng often to take the public Into their&#13;
confidence. Others are willing to do BO&#13;
occasionally, while out of some others&#13;
it is Impossible to get a word with&#13;
any means of persuasion short of dynamite.&#13;
There are, however, some senators&#13;
and representatives who will say practically&#13;
nothing and yet they are&#13;
classed as "good copy," because their&#13;
characteristics are such that it Is&#13;
worth while to write of them if one&#13;
cannot write from them&#13;
The outer office of the White House&#13;
is a better place than the capltol itself&#13;
to learn into which class congressmen&#13;
fall, according to the newspaper men s&#13;
views. The president's visitors every&#13;
day number from scores to hundreds&#13;
and a considerable part of these vial&#13;
tors have their seats after twelve&#13;
o'clock under the dome of the capitoL&#13;
When the members of congress have&#13;
finished their talks with President Wil&#13;
son, they leave him and pass through&#13;
the room where ordinarily are gath&#13;
ered ten or a dozen newspaper men&#13;
ready enough to learn and to write&#13;
what the great ones of earth have said&#13;
to the greater one of the earth.&#13;
There are some members, notably&#13;
senators, who ran come from the&#13;
presidential presence with the prom&#13;
ise of a friend's appointment to the&#13;
Court of St. James or to that of Berlin&#13;
in their possession and yet never&#13;
betray by so much as a sparkle of the&#13;
eye or a smile that they have received&#13;
anything better than the prott&#13;
ise of the appointment of some friend&#13;
to a postma8tership at an office which&#13;
pays a few hundreds a year. There&#13;
are other senators who can no more&#13;
conceal the fact that they have picked&#13;
an appointment plum than they can&#13;
hide the evidence that they are on&#13;
earth.&#13;
Cannot Quote Directly.&#13;
Washington newspaper men cannot&#13;
quote any official directly without his&#13;
consent. Sometimes a cabinet officer&#13;
or senator or representative will say:&#13;
"Ton can use this and say that I said&#13;
ft." but more frequently information&#13;
is conveyed in words like this: "For&#13;
your own guidance l'will tell you that&#13;
such and such a thing is likely to bappen.&#13;
You can use the Information but&#13;
don't say from whom it comes."&#13;
If any newspaper man in this town&#13;
oversteps the r^ark and quotes directly&#13;
when be should not do so, he&#13;
gets Into trouble. If It la known that&#13;
he has coupled an official" name with&#13;
a statpment without permission other&#13;
officials will fight shy of him In the&#13;
future It is only fair to the corre&#13;
spondents to say that any mistakes&#13;
of thia kind generally are mads&#13;
through s misunderstanding&#13;
Of course the president of the United&#13;
States never is to be quoted directly&#13;
eicept on the extremely rare&#13;
occasions when he gives permission&#13;
Most of what the president says, bowever,&#13;
to the newspaper men. directly&#13;
or through his secretary, geta Into the&#13;
papers with tome such advance words&#13;
at "K can be said on high authority/&#13;
or "Friends of the president lot It be&#13;
known today," or something of tots&#13;
nature.&#13;
/3* •?&#13;
( * &gt; j&#13;
M i x ,&#13;
i n O n e 1&#13;
M i n u t e with1&#13;
CoLd W a t e r -&#13;
I m m e d i a t e l y " ^&#13;
P§anita^&#13;
Beautiful&#13;
Permanent&#13;
Let as tcO yoa ot t*e woesicrfeJ e c o n -&#13;
omy, simplicity and sffecticenrss ol&#13;
the Alabsatia* way of interior deceratka.&#13;
T h e Alabaatine w a y&#13;
is wnftic in the ext&#13;
r e m e — Y o u buy t h e&#13;
A l a b a s t i n c ID the colors&#13;
ar.d q u a n t i t i e s you req&#13;
u i r e — it i* mined wtth&#13;
co d water in a. pail according&#13;
to the directions on t h e&#13;
package.&#13;
T h e r e it no boiling w a t e r req&#13;
u i r e d ; n o m i n e t o be addled&#13;
n o u D n e c c M t r y t i m e&#13;
Y o u CUD aecure s h a d e * a n d&#13;
tinta t h a t are mdrxdua/ w i t h&#13;
t h e A l u b a a t i n c w a y b y c o m -&#13;
b i n i n g t i n t s to p r o d u c e •&#13;
Drw shade. Y J U need not nae&#13;
c e r t a i n fixed c o l o r * u a l c a *&#13;
y o u w a n t t o ; a n d y o u e a n&#13;
h a v e an artistic color s c h e m e&#13;
o n your wi.Jla«ntirc^y«wratfKb&#13;
; : . _ • } )&#13;
7¾. SaaaOirW WaO 7 ¾&#13;
W h * t A l a b a a t i a e Is M « i « » n d U s e d for 3 5 Y&#13;
A l d b a s t i n e h a s b e e n ua«4&#13;
by h u n c r r d s oi t h o u a a o d a o f&#13;
p a i n t e r s a n d d e c o r a t o r s —&#13;
by h o u s e k e e p e r * a n d houaeo&#13;
w n e n for t h i r t y - f i v e y e a r s&#13;
w i t h unqualified meets*.&#13;
i m p o r t a n t to&#13;
A i a b a s d n e Purchasers&#13;
We put a red croae and a&#13;
rt»d ei r\ le on oacli paokagre&#13;
of AUUaatlne Just HO it&#13;
would be ea*y fur you to&#13;
Identify Alabaatlaa wben&#13;
you a«V for and pay for&#13;
i t It'* your protection.&#13;
Will you look for the red&#13;
croasa^d nyl circle unthe&#13;
AlabaiitlDe you buvl&#13;
Alatxuinu u i u W b y m o i l&#13;
&amp;rug ifi*' *, h " r d ma n de &lt; &lt; I •&#13;
tr* an i pain* tiorea&#13;
evtrywtere.&#13;
A l a b s s t i n e is a clean, d r y ,&#13;
s a n i t a r y , fir e trxturcd p o w -&#13;
d e r — g r o u n d to impalpable&#13;
fineneaa—thecolorsand t i n t s&#13;
a d d e d — a n d t h e n it is put&#13;
up iu p a c k a g e * .&#13;
Special Sttncil Offer— Ordinarily stencilo for border&#13;
desifcnacobt you from 50c t o £1.00 e a c h . Our f-re b JO^&#13;
t e l l s you h o w y o u can e e t t h e t t e n c i l a yi&gt;u&#13;
w i s h practically free of c h a r g e . Our color&#13;
s c h e m e c a r d s eu(%ebt color* t h a t h a i -&#13;
m o n i x e for y o u r rooms. W r i t e ^ ^ . , - - - ^ ^ ¾&#13;
for t h e m t o d a y . AdiJre&amp;a ^P^^T%^&#13;
THE ALABASTTNECOMPAff, X r f - " U&#13;
3S3 GraadvuTs Koa*&#13;
Graad Rapid*, Mica. ron^Tbol&#13;
^Needed&#13;
Three Hundred MiHion&#13;
Bushel Crop in 1915&#13;
Farmers pay for their lead with one year's crop&#13;
aad prosperity was never ao £r*aL&#13;
Regarding Western Canada as a grain&#13;
producer, a prominent business man&#13;
says: "Canada's position today is&#13;
sounder than ever. There is more&#13;
wheat, more oats, more grain for feed, 20% more cattle than&#13;
last year and more hogs. The war market in Europe needs&#13;
our surplus. As for the wheat crop, it is marvelous and a monument of strength&#13;
for businesscotiAdence tobuild upon, exceeding the most optimistic predictions.'*&#13;
Wheat averaged In 1915 over 25 bushels per aore&#13;
Oats averaged In 1915 over 45 bushels per mors&#13;
Barley averaged in 1915 over 40bushe/sper aore&#13;
Prices are high, markets convenient, excellent land, low in price either improved&#13;
or otherwise, ranging from $12 to $30 per acre Free homestead&#13;
lands are plentiful and not far from railway lines and convenient to good&#13;
schools and churches. The climate is healthful.&#13;
There Is ao war (ax en land, nor Is there any cenacrlntron. For complete information&#13;
as to best locations for settr&lt;-ment, reduced railroad rates and descriptive Qhastrated&#13;
pamphlet, address Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, or&#13;
M. V. McKINNIS, 176 Jefferson Ave., Detroit. Mlcb.&#13;
Canadian Government Agent&#13;
Looked That Way.&#13;
"You know every boy tn this country&#13;
has a chance to bo the president&#13;
of the United States," said the school&#13;
master.&#13;
"Oh, I know what you're driving at,"&#13;
paid the bright boy; "you want me&#13;
to be for preparedness."&#13;
FRECKLES&#13;
Now Is the Tim* to Get Rid ot These&#13;
U g l j H p o U .&#13;
Th?re'« no l o n g e r the »ll»rht«»*t nrc-d of&#13;
feeling- a s h a m e d of your freckle*, a s t h f&#13;
p r e s c r i p t i o n o t h l n e — d o u b l e •rrenirth—1*&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d to r e m o v e t h e s e h o m e l y «pot»&#13;
S i m p l y g e t a n o u n c e of o t h l n e — d o u b l e&#13;
s t r e n g t h — f r o m your d r u g g i s t , a n d a p p l y a&#13;
tittle of It n i g h t a n d m o r n i n g a n d you&#13;
nhould soon s e c t h a t even t h e w o r s t f r e c k l e s&#13;
h a v e b e g u n to d i s a p p e a r , w h i l e t h e l i g h t e r&#13;
o n e s h a v e v a n i s h e d entirety. It Is s e l d o m&#13;
t h a t m o r e t h a n one ounce Is n e e d e d to c o m -&#13;
p l e t e l y c l e a r t h e s k i t and gain a b e a u t i f u l&#13;
clear c o m p l e x i o n .&#13;
Be s u r e to a t k for the double str^nglr-.&#13;
o t h l n e , a s t h i s la sold under guars m e e oi&#13;
m o n e y b a c k If It fall* to r e m o v e f r e c k l e * —&#13;
Adv.&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Is Growing Smaller Every Day.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible — they&#13;
not only give relief&#13;
— they permanentlycure&#13;
Cs&#13;
•upsiiss. Millions&#13;
u s e&#13;
them for&#13;
iaelfssnea. Sack Hsaeacae, SsJssv SUa.&#13;
SMALL PILU SMALL DOSE, SMALL HLKX&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
PATENTS W a t s e a K. Olssja»a«&#13;
Pataott U_ w_ y.O T.. Us * *SM-,s-«•-t.&#13;
D.U AdvtossMtieasuilraa,&#13;
Highest rafsrenaas.&#13;
Still Intact.&#13;
"How can Bhe marry him. knowing&#13;
that he's dissipated?"&#13;
"But his fortune Isn't. *&#13;
HTKV8 A I X WOOL SUITS SoM Dteeet&#13;
Kaetcrr to&#13;
factory for a&#13;
SUM * ou- l&#13;
tea sad inf9o1n0s4sxStOo a. WJr iItts itMo —. m "i. m sracrr, r t m i i v i u , r£&#13;
W. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 12-191S.&#13;
Clean the Blood&#13;
8prtng ia the time of the year when&#13;
we should put our house In order.&#13;
We're run down after a hard winter^—&#13;
after grip, eolda, catarrh. It's time&#13;
to take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical&#13;
Discovery, purely vegetable and free&#13;
from alcohol or narcotics. It will&#13;
search out Impure and poisonous mat*&#13;
ter and drive it from the system. Bay&#13;
"Discovery" new in tablets or liquid.&#13;
It will dissolve the poisonous accumulations&#13;
and replace the bad blood&#13;
it drives out, witn. rich, pure blood full&#13;
of vital force. ^ _ , , ^&#13;
^ It wfll dear the akin; ecsema, prm*&#13;
pies, rash, blotches wilt dry op sad&#13;
disappear; boils, carbsmclee sad other&#13;
evidences of tainted blood wfll&#13;
away, never to mppstr sgai*.&#13;
A NEW DISCOVERY&#13;
"Anuric" is a recent discovery at&#13;
Doctor Pierce, who is head of the la*&#13;
vallds' Hotel, Buffalo, N. T. Experiments&#13;
at Dr. Pierce's Hospital for ss*»&#13;
eral years proved that "Anuric" Is ft&#13;
wonderful eliminator of arte a d d . f a r&#13;
those easily recognized symptoms of&#13;
inflammation—aa backache,&#13;
urine s a d frequent urination,&#13;
aa sediment ia the urine, or at srti&#13;
add \R. the blood has ceased&#13;
tism, it i s limply wonderful&#13;
"Anuric* acts; sad in grave* sad*&#13;
invariably ths pains aad&#13;
idly&#13;
0 o to year&#13;
saasfy a s k for a I t c s a t&#13;
Ma\aaric,M or sead Dr.&#13;
toa*l)kav&#13;
asekaf* at&#13;
law fat&#13;
.'*.'•.'/; i • - * » »&#13;
.^\'t'.-n. -JXZ -½ - 3 ^ ^ . . . ^ : - . ^ , ^ . ^-\^ - .,..&#13;
^i-\\*^M;&#13;
L a . v&#13;
*J»:&#13;
• . . ' • *&#13;
• J,&#13;
fV. '*&#13;
ftm-&#13;
- . ! '••' '&#13;
Pinckney f)ippateh&#13;
Entered at the Pottoftee at Pinckoey&#13;
r Mich n as Second Claae Matter&#13;
C. J. SIBLET, EDITOR AID PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year iu^Adranee&#13;
Exchange Bank A ' l ."(."J l i v 'V_-&#13;
i p : &gt; l i c &amp; l i « u i .&#13;
r;ue* rum.J L- r i . j ' i or j&#13;
(V-irdi &gt;i ' l ' l i i u j * . - , l i f i y :*ui.5&#13;
J) . f - s &lt; »&#13;
t » a d l U c v . - . .&#13;
itirjc- or C&lt; ndolL-uct one coiLa-r. i&#13;
N'o'.^v?, in LACO.' eolnujTii fi:tj&#13;
.... .it,-* , .ttfjL'ol a n y l t d i v i d -&#13;
MJ i ' il! D,-&#13;
i r&gt;&#13;
i f.,&#13;
I&gt; Pi nr.Ivney !V! . &lt;.. t h r . ; . ' c .&#13;
.. . i. v p s '. i J .:&#13;
- t - l l i i l U .&#13;
, . ! C C ^ I = J O -&#13;
l ^t J'Hi e o r&#13;
For Painless Dentistry, See&#13;
EOPLE ^¾&#13;
/Jr. ». 7. »/wAf&#13;
/A 77? e Da/a/? 0/oc/r&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN&#13;
ft O U R F r i e n d - can Iniy&#13;
a n v t h i i i - you «.:nn U'IVCJ&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. 0. G. Meyer were&#13;
in Howell Thursday.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Siffler was a Detroit&#13;
• visitor the first of the week.&#13;
Leo Monks of Ypsilanti spent&#13;
the week end with relatives here.&#13;
Mr, aud Mrs. John Me In tyre&#13;
of Howell were iu town Tuesday,&#13;
Mrs, Margaret Black is \ isituig&#13;
relatives in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Ross Read visited Detroit&#13;
relatives several days last week.&#13;
Mrs. Lawrence McClear of&#13;
Gregory is a guest at the home of&#13;
Pat Murphy.&#13;
Mr. ami Mrs. Ed, Faruam werejbist month, can&#13;
Detroit visitors the first of&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Willis Lyons of Howell&#13;
visited at Win. Blades one day&#13;
last week,&#13;
Mrs. Alice Kring of Jackson&#13;
visited her aunt, Mra. Jennie Barton,&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Harry Jackson spent the week&#13;
end with his grindpareuts at&#13;
Stockbridge&#13;
Harold Swartkout of Jackson&#13;
spent last week with his parents&#13;
here&#13;
t o i j r a p h .&#13;
M A K K AN W ' I ' O I N U l i . N TO(&gt;A\&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , Michigan&#13;
Grand Trunk Time TaW&lt;&#13;
For l\\e cf*n»en;pn&lt;'p of "Ur r#t4*r«&#13;
La Rue Moran of Big Rapids&#13;
t h c n v - &lt; - x » v p t vtMir j i h o ^ P 6 1 1 1 8 f t t u r d f t &gt; w i t h h i s mother&#13;
here&#13;
Mrs. C. K Sykes and Mrs. W,&#13;
tf. Clark were Jaokson visitors&#13;
last Thursday&#13;
Mrs. Ruth Chapman of Gregory&#13;
was an o?er-Sunday guest of&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Barton&#13;
John Coyle of rVoitmore Lake&#13;
andWill Coyle of Idaho were o w | | U C l i o B 6 9 r&#13;
Sunday guests of Father Coyle.&#13;
Mrs Rob- Tiplady and daughter&#13;
Helen and Misa Mary Loohian&#13;
3 . £ . Swerthoat wae HI Dexter&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Will Dunbar transacted business&#13;
in Howell Saturday&#13;
(ruy and Paul Kabn of Gregory&#13;
were in town Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. ("has. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Loin we:re in Jackson .Saturday.&#13;
Frank Shields of Howell traobacted&#13;
business here Monday.&#13;
Don't forget the pla/ at the&#13;
Opera House Friday evening,&#13;
March 17tb.&#13;
Uhi Smith of Ai^n Ar^or spent&#13;
Scuda&gt;. -tt the horLO of Fred Burgp&#13;
«s,&#13;
Mr. Clark who has been on the&#13;
^ick list Is a^ain at work at the&#13;
depot&#13;
Fred Teep'e aiid family spent&#13;
last f&gt;und»y '.vith BIyrou D i n n i n g&#13;
and wife&#13;
Mr*, Robt. Jblij'w\^1^ uf (iicrli-&#13;
(ar,d ie spending the week at ?he&#13;
home of her parents.&#13;
All who were not at the Cong'l.&#13;
church Suaday eTeaing, miiaed&#13;
hearing one e l the beat sermons&#13;
ever preached in Pieckney.&#13;
I will sell my entire personal&#13;
[property at auction, Wednesday,&#13;
March 22nd. beginning at 10 o'-&#13;
clock. Clarence Staokable.&#13;
A dance will be held after the&#13;
Piav, "The Country Minister"&#13;
Friday evening. March 17th, by&#13;
ths youug men,&#13;
Refcnlar meeting of the O. E. S,&#13;
Friday evening March 17th. The&#13;
Chapter will open at 7:30 and remain&#13;
open until after the play.&#13;
Those not receiving their receipts&#13;
et them Friday&#13;
thpjni^ht by applying to the Sec'y.&#13;
i Last .Friday evening the "Est e;&#13;
Fidelia'1 class of the M, K, church i&#13;
held a class party at the home of&#13;
Mr, aud MTM. R, K. Elliott, north&#13;
of Pinckney About .i() being&#13;
present and all reported a good&#13;
time&#13;
VThen you wish to sell anything&#13;
or buy something, or find something,&#13;
or get a job, or hire help,&#13;
or anything else of that nature,&#13;
use a "Liner Ad."' in the Dispatch.&#13;
It costs only fire cents a line, a&#13;
week. You can telephone them&#13;
in and come in and pn\ when&#13;
convenient&#13;
Trains E&amp;*t&#13;
X o . 46—S :34 • . ai&#13;
X o . 4S—1:44 p . *i&#13;
% » % * * % : » » » % % » % » » » » » % » » » » » » % » » » » » » % «&#13;
TrA;n» W«at&#13;
v . rr— *:« * ci,&#13;
y...-if-'-arv. "»•} spent Tueediy in South Lyons.&#13;
Mrs. John Pitzimmons who has&#13;
H . y . i w C J t J K H , M ^ » » . ( ^ . . " H j r . f ^ &amp; , « % &gt; ,&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sigler&#13;
1 ^&#13;
AU c«n« {irMtn^e)&#13;
day or nijfh&lt;. Otfioo r&gt;J i&#13;
| beem spending the past ten days&#13;
j in Jitockbridge returned home&#13;
j Monday.&#13;
H. Carr Has bought the dray&#13;
(T. P. Richardti iiviug three&#13;
fourths of a mile south of Fiagree&#13;
will sell his property consistiag&#13;
of horses, cows, hogs, sheep,, and&#13;
a large amount of farming tools&#13;
at auction, on Thnrsday, March&#13;
23, commencing at, 10 o'clock.&#13;
R. Clinton of this place is the&#13;
ks.&#13;
line of E u g e n e Duikei and ootnme&#13;
need work&#13;
i last week&#13;
the latter pr.rt of&#13;
Clething manufacturers of the&#13;
United States are so short of dre&#13;
ituffs that a nation wide appeal&#13;
is to be made to the pobh'e to recognize&#13;
the fact that it must content&#13;
iteelf with the simplest colors&#13;
in apparel. Thi^ was announced&#13;
recently at. the department of&#13;
J commerce after a conference hej&#13;
tween -he department officials&#13;
! and officers r&gt;f the National Assoi&#13;
icintii'-i of C l o t h i e r s . - - f t x .&#13;
PINCKNKV Mf&lt;-mUA&gt;T&#13;
TLe Advertised&#13;
ArHcif&gt;&#13;
Mrs. K u Flacewav aud son&#13;
Forbes visaed Mr. and Aire.&#13;
Frank Boylan of Chilson the&#13;
latter part of laat week&#13;
J. W. Elliott has accepted a&#13;
Why She Wii Pleased. .&#13;
'.Dc* r*n !«onn tc&gt; !ptl me that yon&#13;
aotUAllr &lt;yvorisimr&gt; that nndcsxt autipa&#13;
Uiy of TiWH for Mrs. Moggsby and&#13;
called on b#r thi^ nft«nooti?" «aid hi*&#13;
position in a barber shop at! *"tfe's hnshatuS.&#13;
Petoakey, and will move hie1 "rhaV* o t K m ,h" ^ ^ ! t '&#13;
family there the first of next week&#13;
While returniug from the claas&#13;
party at Elliot's laat Friday eve.&#13;
the horse driven by Waiter Cook&#13;
was taken suddenly sick, falling&#13;
down in the road and b reaking&#13;
up the carriage considerable. I t !&#13;
WHS iiiipossihle to get a vetrinaryj , :, , ^ , - - ,&#13;
and the horse died before morn-l&#13;
ing. The horee was owned b y . Sett.ng Him Right.&#13;
Robt- Ent.wisie and will » « a n I l™&lt;* L&gt;fd that Ami fall tv J W it&gt;&#13;
. , . J delrfs? Knorlc—Tt fallM so It wouldn't&#13;
quite a loss to him. Hnrfv t 0 a r &lt;),r&gt;™ - C V c . - i ^ n c w M ,&#13;
bcr hnst»Hr&gt;4'.s «rif&gt;&#13;
And she viia glad t«&gt; see you'"'&#13;
•Ther^ \HT\'I .iny donM about it."&#13;
Why do yon thh's tia(?"&#13;
"Wrtl. t lmd A'i fhnt o!d dross I're&#13;
worn tln*t\' •^^s-' -n^ nud n hst that: i*&#13;
UJ *ut r»'ftre in some&#13;
iiii'o.-- ivhile who hnd&#13;
\ i-' tif'liWl t o d e a t h .&#13;
• 1_ v. ' • , ) , ! r : l !»€•&lt;! ^ -&#13;
• ontltU'id n-. .•» p,r&#13;
^ 0 - 1 : • &gt; ••• &gt;h&#13;
3= 3= &gt; • • • • • • • • • " ^ . | » ^ i . i ^&#13;
n&#13;
B&#13;
Clever Mew&#13;
Spring r°!&#13;
*^"i*tn ' "&#13;
•r&#13;
Unusual&#13;
Values at $25&#13;
li would !&gt;&lt;j difricult to exceed the h aaiy aud o!ai ».;i\ii e&#13;
u'••&gt;•« &lt;.)! our display of Spring Suitfc.&#13;
All the desired materials are here in wiodeU that are unusually&#13;
distinctive. You will find Poplins, Serges, Plain and&#13;
Novelty Checks, Taffeta and Chuddah Silks and Silk Poplins&#13;
in full flare shirts with clever touches in collar and cuff trimm&#13;
u i ch.&#13;
!&#13;
t Smart&#13;
!&#13;
Spring&#13;
Goats&#13;
In novelty checks over plaids and fancy stripes. Also&#13;
in plain colors beautifully t r i m m e d with Faille. Silk and iu&#13;
S u e d e leather and but tons.&#13;
$10, $12.50 and $15&#13;
and up&#13;
Our «ia*ortment of Spring Blouse* is unusually striking.&#13;
The models arc clever and the materials are rich and attractive.&#13;
Wc show them 'in plain and Georgette Crepes, fancystripes&#13;
in Tub Silks and Crepe de Chine. The two and threewax&#13;
collar effects are new and Incoming.&#13;
From $1.98 to $ 5 . 0 0&#13;
Spring Skirts&#13;
Junior:-' and misses' blacks and blues, in Sergei-&#13;
Poplins \ , $3-50 a n d 3,75&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
;?uttuv$ \Datar VEV lYve &amp;as&#13;
!&gt;zxk. ADow\ S o d axv&#13;
The thin -urtace mi gaaokne o«i the *of&gt; *irte an^ht makt:&#13;
the owner think the re»t iiwdarneath wa« AK real arflete. H*t&#13;
he'd not; go very far before CifUirmms .Oat.."&#13;
So it i&gt; with cerraia Mud^ oi dothc*. Some men hu\"&#13;
solely from the exterior. They se^ a suit rkat k&gt;c«kp the part&#13;
of perfection, and without investigating w4»at's underneath.&#13;
spend their money only totind «fee g a r m e n t S*K&gt;Q ''RufMiiftg;&#13;
0.ut" of style shapline** aitd durability.&#13;
Satisfaction Depends&#13;
Upon Genuineness&#13;
aed wh«n ordering your ne*' a^ftuag and summer clothes, beon&#13;
the safe side by having them made expressly for you by&#13;
Bd V. Price&#13;
S. W. GUTHRIE, Aot&#13;
c - • V * '&#13;
^ i • t » t *&#13;
, - . . ' . • . &gt; ^ . .&#13;
..•&lt;-&#13;
• • ' • y /&#13;
• . . . . J&#13;
.J***- i _ i /';:'&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
F O B S A L E O R E X C H A N OK&#13;
l&amp;j * c r « » 8 t •* 'i I W - k t i c y&#13;
J 00 mn v* 4&#13;
PINCKNEV P I S P A T C H&#13;
^ - ¾ ¾ ^ ucr&lt;* ii&#13;
y ^ y , •''•-••&#13;
*&#13;
Y&#13;
A'. atf?&#13;
D R G . j . P L A k ^ j . N 1 ' i n e k n e v&#13;
L e « 4 a l ftdvttt 3 S 111¾&#13;
^-lu &lt; n f r I 1.,&#13;
'1;&#13;
i.-s.u-tu.&#13;
ST A T I L O K . M I C U I U A . S u i -&#13;
"&lt; j U ; N l * 1 ; ^ - 1 ( t ' ^ &lt; ' y - . - . - u i , - i t i oi&#13;
V , i ; . . l : * . : ' . ; j &gt; ,&#13;
^ V t V J O I : . : I l l ; ; ; i : . ; . v I ; , \&#13;
V* / . i i i a , * ! C I , ! ,, -,&#13;
- l i u ^ all c l a m * . «ud d c u i . ^ l s . . , , , : / 3 2&#13;
i.«^Vu«%J f^l !1 '!S..t&#13;
J&#13;
l H ,&#13;
l&#13;
r ' T 1 ^ n ^ : 1 , t a ^ L 8 0 u t b i bU- e i l v m e r c h a n t s&#13;
h ' a l d W t a : « . ' ' ^ - ^ ^ "•• * • ' • » - ^ t i . t r .&#13;
If i * f - . H l i / ..",.&gt;. . , . ' . '] .,..•&#13;
A . I ' X b l ' j a&lt;, l e i , o ' t l u C i t )i t";&#13;
I ' l - :.'•&lt; f •• ' • a r M i r ' &gt; ,.•&#13;
e s a i i ' i j . . i ' i . ,, •• ,:,i K.J •&lt;• , n . . . .&#13;
J ' - l u&#13;
: i u &lt;1.&#13;
-JUtiii, :'iil(&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
T O K E N T -R^,tns. [&#13;
1&gt;- Kit-hards.&#13;
F O I L S A M v A few cord* o! d r y Oak&#13;
(-. W. Clark.&#13;
Crowdini Out the&#13;
Small Merchants&#13;
A Ljreat e c « m » m . c q u e s t i o n in&#13;
g O i u y ; t o b e b r o u g h t t t q u a r e l y L* -&#13;
f o r e t h e A m e r i c a n p e o p l e w i t L i n&#13;
t h e m - . t t f e w u i o n t l i H . a n d u p o n&#13;
Tin* ( i o u j i u r n n t i c i i o f t h n i-,^ut'.-.&#13;
r * i * r i i L&gt; t i n - c o c i i l U J S o v e u ^&#13;
H d l , p e n d i n g It) C n U ^ r e a ^ , (Itipt-L i I&#13;
in M v e i \ lnrjj»- m- K h i n e ]\'' '. .;&#13;
of t h e M I I M I I (1» iiU-r, a n d »-nf.ec IH 11 -.&#13;
T h L « e in I h e s m H 1 i e r t&lt; iWn&gt;, :: ' '&#13;
LI ' . (.. : j &gt; i ! .-•' &gt; • ' ( ' : _ ) • T • a i&#13;
\ U ! _ ; i i ' j ! . . ! • t - \ ' &gt; v ' n o i ^ . :&#13;
^ M . " * L C j t ) i t p t t t ' l H i * " l i t h i M r ' . - . f l . i l&#13;
uifail o r d &lt; - r UeUaeH. K v e i y p e r s o n&#13;
w h o h a s k e p t h i s e y e s o p e n , r m i s i&#13;
h a v e o i j s e r v r d t l m l f o r N O A I H I H H -&#13;
l&gt;vcn L;:iiutnu: j ^ r o u i n J , w h i . o t h i -&#13;
tni&lt;lf-i&gt;nit''!i in t h ^ i n t e r i o r t i a \ ' t&#13;
f o u n d llit- &gt; t r; i LJ _•! t-" u ' r o w i u ^ ; cuus!&#13;
•.;!!&lt;&gt; h;: i ii r. i ' i i e l e c o r d s o f&#13;
posT&lt;'fH(.'e^ : ' M { e x n r e H H t a o u e y&#13;
ori.Ioi i.^.-'i..'^. Kn.i ' u i u k d r a f t r t p u r&#13;
c h t t r t i : ! . c i r - n r i \ sii...:w t i i a t ^ r ^ a t&#13;
s u m s of 'ii'&gt;ni'y t h ; i t a h o u l ' i b e &gt;&#13;
u a e t l i n L r a t l i u ; ' a', h o m e , is j ^ o i n ^ '&#13;
t o k h e LUtt'J u : J e r h o u » e a i u t h e&#13;
lary;© c i t i e s . A n d l i ) e d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
s t o r e s i n t h e ^ r e &amp; t c e u t e r a a r e&#13;
m o L o p o l i z i o L ; the t r a d e , a n d t h e&#13;
St. Patricks Day&#13;
This d*y we J e d i c t tii to E r i u a s n u t&#13;
Auii J I I J I C u uudei Pat.i"iclt'd juiiadicu 'U.&#13;
A"J"Ut fli&gt;' d a l r I ' v e Lenfd a lo^rinl&#13;
&lt; ] ' : : IJ l n .&#13;
f3ut kn.,.'. in.j il ' i u Libioi r or ui. UJIJ.&#13;
I n &lt; • ! ! ; , . . . T i &lt; ,1.- H f b a v b t ' . V n f i l : : &lt;•! • ' ! ! ! ' ! L-&#13;
! ' ' - , ' - .. I'-'' •; .'.n M •• ti . i ».;J .• I&#13;
• . &gt;1 , : ' •••' , :&lt; i s i . ] . -;•! . ji I, : - .&#13;
i n i \ c d&#13;
ii &lt;.v r i i c ' . A I • )»;&lt;•• I 1 1 \ i n * 1.-: '.•• &lt; i - , : v&#13;
b , ' ; : . \ t i : .&#13;
•y \v v - ' e i i&#13;
. i • - '&#13;
I . - «&#13;
) \ i ' i •, &gt;1 . : • • •&#13;
r : l i i i i m ; .&#13;
( i.&lt;.-_%' ;i r &lt;; ,.&lt;•(] Ii i ^ ; i ,&#13;
. (•&gt;«.'i ; r ! l u w&#13;
; . . ' _ • ' V . &gt;'.'i&#13;
: t - u i M ' n .&#13;
• t L ' . ' V . i ! - ' .• -.&#13;
l r » r l i -:i .&#13;
P ( I P V f o u n d u ,'. «•&#13;
. • &lt; ; ! : . i d i a c t I U M&#13;
- : .'K e : t l ! u K ' n !;» ' \&gt; '&#13;
find&#13;
r i M t i J J M I L L I i - : J it i: L-ri&#13;
•v 1¾&#13;
w . 1: i&#13;
1 fa&#13;
, &lt; • ' -[ii r 3&#13;
SI&#13;
- S3' .aa&#13;
i i i u s l UUc &gt;.imrj]&lt;jii r n i u d ;&#13;
' i-: oe&#13;
W A N T E D ^&#13;
i' .i porh:-. :i_u i o&#13;
h^lin* a; ::l:&#13;
(/ i-l Ui i' ;. ! , c e . s .&#13;
.,,1 J l i t t l e s t o r e s rtr-.- I»e&lt;j amiu£: f o w e r&#13;
j a n d fe',vi-r. J h\&gt; c o n d i t i o n i s a t -&#13;
A riMti JJMILLI i-:J it i: L-rr n&#13;
dt-f r:i i * J t-t I .&#13;
I t \jr&lt; &gt;\ v.-- . i' ;JM&#13;
WJ&gt;ci cr^)-^! .iiL d : . U ; vs l,:i !&#13;
; i p j d : U l t l t ' d .&#13;
H e puL ati end to all lUc fu»4&gt; «ud b.cifiei&#13;
By iiiLply a d d i n g ei^'ht and ninr tti&#13;
gether.&#13;
—George H. .Morewood.&#13;
FOf; S A L E - T a m e "hav&#13;
B « t f « t a « k S m o t h e r e d In T o m a t o e s .&#13;
S o m e d a y w h e n t h e o v e n is b e i n g&#13;
,. i. ,. i , ., , ,- , »«ed f o r o t h e r c o o k i n g p l n a t o lmve f o r&#13;
i \ \ t.HDiK'1 lotiiid w p l a n k e d s t e a k cooked&#13;
ilbo Y-~ii:TTr&gt;n:-- j M " ' ' • " : ' i , r i l ' " f - M in_r, a n d f r o m j w i t h t o m a t o e s , a n d for t h i s d i s h e i t h e r&#13;
ock Jersey !!r..iv, c o g i b ' ^ K, r o ^ t c - . -t-\&gt;-i' ; ' i : ! &lt; • f t:i»- ' ' o n n t r y huri c o m e f r ^ i i or c a n n e d o n e s c a n bu utilized.&#13;
P l i . M i e d r e ^ r v E t c l w u . ^ f ; -P ! a t | M n a h d f o r 111*' (dOlCtUK-nt o f n\ P I u c e t h e s t o ; i k l n ; l sliglitly g r o u s e d&#13;
a l F . A. i J a O . n . j ^ i ^ o ! u f u U„* i . i i l »«»1»!^ ! b a , C m f f p a u N v L i d l I i a s - 1 c**e tlttiliff&#13;
r , v . , - , , , i . , cover. C o v e r It w i t h t o m a t o e s , sliced&#13;
J( &gt;K &gt; A L E -I) ann Burner CVH; Sii.vt- aiid ' m a t i n f i i c h m - i s of s t a p l e a r t i c l e s t o&#13;
Vil I.itureJ P,;o,c,p. r.:,rirai., ir taken I fix ;: f j r i c e o n t i u - i&#13;
r j / o o d b a n d&#13;
l^apTEED T^QftlNG&#13;
tiiiw we«k.&#13;
F&lt;»K SAI.S-&#13;
!•'« »i: S A L E&#13;
Ininti Apr:&#13;
if fresli o r i'u«t t u r n e d o u t of t h o c a n&#13;
if c a n n e d . A d d a l s o o n e s m a l l onion&#13;
&gt;•« ir(&#13;
1" Ik'wk T.&#13;
F'&gt;}i v U . K iL.i&gt;,&#13;
' O l d v v h t l i •• ; 'i i, •. :&#13;
M li .&#13;
F o i ; "&lt;\r,K r; „ , | \ynrk Tpniu •Jari.&#13;
t-'M .uid A«tf..t). lui^ lire /&#13;
Mr*. AN-e i i o l l , i'jmkwey&#13;
1 ' H i I MC ';!, ]•' 'JU&#13;
p r ( " I h &gt; V ( ' r P : l J X ' i c o m p e l t h e M u i l u i L : a t a b t a u d a r d f ° , &gt; a i ^ e ' - v '-'""PPCd a n d u s m a l l piece of&#13;
i, i i , . , ' . . . . Lf- i g u r e , n o m a t«t.e»r w tii e r e t, hi e L'OOI i H phay l^af, in-,.tlior wi t h salt a n d p e p n e r f t l ..1 ( 1 t , „ „.,, , , , j y11,&#13;
IJ i i « ' i . e ; - . t ^ r ^ - . , 1..0^ ci* trie 'A h o l e closely a n d cook Cor&#13;
U'm. (Nsk^v. | H ; V n u M T n e F e d e r a l T r a d e a n liour :u:d rt halt w i t h o u t r e m o v i n g&#13;
' U ' n t n n n H b i o n is w o i k i n y i n t h i s t h e covpr o? Mio !mkii.« tlLsli. A d d n o&#13;
r , , • ,- , . w a t e r , a s t h e t o n m t o e i a r e mol&lt;o&#13;
( l i t . c i i o n , n id d i e i n d i c a t i o n * a r e e n o u g h . - r h i i a d H r &gt; h m L e d g e r .&#13;
tiie.t t h e r e irt h u d w e a t h e r a h e a d - __&#13;
f o r t h e l u u u l f u l nf Mie c d v i n t e r - , „ . , D ^ " " 1 ^ t h ? „ c y n l c -&#13;
W liMt a evii!,; lie i&gt;..&#13;
eot t h a t h ) \ v e b e e n d r i v i n g o u t t h e „ v ^ . ^ . , , , ^ j h e ; | r h j ] n ( ] r , n u U n ( j n : :&#13;
s m a l l e r d e a l e r , a n d g r o w i n g o p u l - , e \ e n l . H . d y a n d e v e r y t h i n g r c a n ' t lieip&#13;
a t i d a r r o ^ o i i t at t h e e x p e u n e o f , ^ ' o n d e r i n ^ .1n-r v / h a t sort of .-i place lie&#13;
j eX])erteci tli»&gt; \\i&gt;rld t&lt;&gt; lie a nyhio.v "••-&#13;
Spring Suits and Overeoats&#13;
Best Ever at&#13;
. U t - . , i i! i- !&#13;
k E . K t - i h ' V&#13;
'' l « ' r '-if-. W o i M&#13;
. ' ' . ' . • ' l l f i t S^«i , i I;I » ' ! i e s s&#13;
'•' ' r:i: u t ! ' 1 , i • liken&#13;
'-•• O. i f o v i . I'ini'knev.&#13;
M O N K S B R O ' S l&#13;
3g£ia&amp;iaBe/@f&amp;@e3esia&amp;is/@ese^^&#13;
ttie e o n ntrv mei'ohantB.&#13;
F n | : H A L E&#13;
1'-' iiores (&#13;
' &lt; ) } {&#13;
Not In His Line.&#13;
j " I I u v o yon -sfutliod politif-al e o m -&#13;
ouiy V&#13;
1S&lt;' i i i u J ! ) '1 , n ftr)(l " N o , su-. E o i u o i n y i&gt; all r i g h t In its&#13;
place. I'm one of tho:&gt;c w h o b e l i e v e&#13;
in k e e p i n g b u s i n e s s o n t of politics."—&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n Stnr.&#13;
!e villa'v of P i n c k -&#13;
MJ&gt;. H . D. lr! i e v o i&#13;
A - - i . t ! k 'U'li-- : n s u e v i' •&#13;
k n i ' e " l i i ' t i M ' a;,,l&#13;
f i1''! ' - t . i n q u i r e of&#13;
1.. E. Ki.Lf.nh.&#13;
J1 ' ^ •'•" ^ i i 1 . t)-:r- • : i m l&#13;
bugg.v !.. -,11 M ,ck r,„..( ii?;0 ij Pmvdcr iu&#13;
Livingsioo Ooantv. S ' , « r j ?:&lt;) ^ v uuauh,&#13;
A ^ d r e » s 9 fnir«flVri»l fcii^g., Indiana;,. i ^ .&#13;
3 ndisr.i&#13;
11 :er: i nwd 1 M &gt;&#13;
W A N T E ( # .Mft,&#13;
Oetl'nir F r e e I ' . r - s .&#13;
M e a n T h i n g .&#13;
Elsie— M a u d e ' s f a c e Is h e r f o r t u n e .&#13;
AJlCfr—My d e a r , y o u m e a n mUfc-r&#13;
t i m e , d o n ' t y o u ? — J u d g e .&#13;
CncDiber Pickle Coatracts&#13;
C'orj^racts for growing cucumber&#13;
pickle for tin? season of 1816&#13;
may now bo had from our representative&#13;
X. P. Morteuson at&#13;
'greatly increased prices We are&#13;
paying from &amp;evenly-five cents t-o&#13;
joue dollar and a half per bushel&#13;
for small pickles according to&#13;
PILLS BE8T FOR LIVER&#13;
Because they contain the best&#13;
liter medicine*, DO matter how bitter&#13;
or nauseating for the sweet sugar&#13;
coating hides the tarte. Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills contain ingredients&#13;
that put the liver working, move the&#13;
bowels freely. No gripe, no nausea,&#13;
aid digestion. Just try a bottle of&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills and notice&#13;
how much better ycru feel 25o at&#13;
your Druggist.&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
Notice.&#13;
The Pore Bred (Stallion, Kd«&#13;
moiirem will mako the season as&#13;
size aod thirty-five centt for large. , * i C ^ \ i •&#13;
J . . * nenal. $15.00 to insure&#13;
1 h" Kncx-Harrie racking Lo&#13;
Shep ist door ts*est&#13;
Dtnkel &amp; Dunbar's&#13;
If'Ten Are Deaf BeaA This i&#13;
I)&#13;
Jackson, Mich Geo. Kochs.&#13;
Eczema ^ur«d or Money Refunded.&#13;
This guarantee goes with every&#13;
box of Dr. Hobson'e Eczema Ointment.&#13;
Makes no difference whether&#13;
its a baby, child or aged. No matter&#13;
how long standing the case the guarantee&#13;
holds good. Cut out this strip&#13;
20 to your druggist, get a box of Dr.&#13;
Hobscm's Eczema Ointment, use it| ifrg. B8 r t Applefeoa, last Thursday&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Mr. Dryer &amp;•&lt;! family from&#13;
Howell, hAve «»?a4 • • the M A,&#13;
Dftvis faim&#13;
The liadiea Aid at tk* hone of&#13;
Z&#13;
k i p Fit at! iti; o'scl':^ *'"rtic eye ;.-&#13;
,':i':o'''. Tliis &gt;• m'y :- es*ils' : i -&#13;
qn'r d HIOMIL'^ our CWreip r^lenf r&#13;
{Viii rsc. I'v io : " i : ;r ' ri'.i :1 thr»&#13;
:i !a r - !ij&gt;- Tnu c;Mi a^Jiio r r;j ''V&#13;
cr&gt;it(.&gt;il.- &gt;&lt;{ R^iiTfr^rdi.'in *itlt-&#13;
OHt Pir.bHtT.iasmemt--fltrovr HA-.V nil&#13;
SMch«nicn3 licarin^ i W i c e * inW recti&#13;
for «tvicyr.&#13;
A GOOD J? R£«0Efi SEL001 BETRIYb"&#13;
m% DeifHESS T.'. ' &lt;TRW&#13;
G£R. W r i ^ for T R E K R ^ A l « t . ArL&#13;
**« SCHOOL Of UP UKUI6E,&#13;
KTHSIS CITY, •ISSOBRI.&#13;
c&gt; a s d i r e c t e d a n d if y o u a r e n o t f m l l y . , - , , « . . „ „ „ . .&#13;
X\-.&gt;s a t i s f i e d , t^h.e d, _r u. .g_g/i,s. t. o. _r m a k e r ^ u %TRS A ( l a n d e d s i c « p s f .&#13;
r e f u n d y o u r m o n e y . T r y I t J u s t o n c e&#13;
y o » w i l l b e h a p p i l y s u r p r i s e d .&#13;
1&#13;
Good Furniture&#13;
Robin jrd-brsafit havS torn*-&#13;
Welcome&#13;
Friday started » i t with A serus&#13;
of accidents on thr» faria of Beri&#13;
-m O I /%L I ^ a 8 ^ ^^° *»»HU were hitched fQP ofllB l/h68P|oaUide wluleth* *9n were ci,t*,&#13;
jtiog&lt;.?oc{i trees After the tree |&#13;
j fell they started to see to the bor-l&#13;
OIK: 8-ft Dining Table (Walnut) j ^ a wi\ l h e ao\^ 0 f the breaking&#13;
Side-board, Walnut Book-case j c r n „ t together with the falling I&#13;
A Comedy Drama In 5 A c t s&#13;
Will be presented at the&#13;
Yiwcku^ 6^erarouse&#13;
Under the Auspices of the young people of&#13;
The Cong11 Church Friday Evening&#13;
March 17&#13;
SV^TXOVSVS&#13;
: - « d « W ^ tree frigMaued he horses. One v U J e N y Qn a ra0rning i n A u g U i .&#13;
team broke away, one horse fell&#13;
down stripping nearly all the haruess&#13;
from it, but no serious dare&#13;
AOT II—Same as Act I, half an hour later.&#13;
ACT.--Grandy Grime's garret, on the East Side, Mew York*&#13;
City, the following November&#13;
ACT IV—Miss Burleigh'9 home in New York, the same&#13;
. L t « •.• r% L i - k. «r *i ~ - i ACT I.—Yard of Mist Judkin's store and poetoftce, Mullen&#13;
with Writing Desk, Light Wood&#13;
L .- •. j Bed-room Suit (Dresser has long&#13;
THE ACHES OF HOUSE CLEANING! Cheval Mirror,) Silk Covered Sofa&#13;
The pate and soreness caused by j Walnut frame, Silk covered Chair,&#13;
d ^ ' b £ e T 1 ! e e ^ Pant*eota Rocker | ^ d o n e . kiu&gt;r cniiing W W a I&#13;
aoothed awmy by Sloan's Liniment. | Walnut frame The above 3 pieces&#13;
W ^ o e ^ ' e ^ i i x S n l to°"£e £ £ | • « natch. Oak Rocker with Cob- j iW;nM t o t r y o n « i o fb e open,&#13;
epots, mh only a little, in a short [ bier seat, Oak Rocker with uphol-&gt;tf,j8 t r p e 9p[U o n w i i m b strnek&#13;
S r ^ a l ^ e ^ T r ^ C h e r r &gt;' H o c k e r ' Krwio on the side of tbe hear! |One month has elapsed&#13;
One gratefal user writes: "Sloan's all in Good Condition One good&#13;
K ^ ^ A J T S ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ - ! Eight-day Clock, half-hour strike.&#13;
gainst all Soreness, Neuralgia snd| 1 1 1 | A f D f u m s i i i l B«£.. Km. p^. »c.« wr vv. w . Bamara&#13;
evening.&#13;
ACT V.- -Back at Mullenville, in Mies Judkin's sitting roomknocking&#13;
him dowo, while the! . ^ - - A r ^ m t n r * *"r**Ta—» «^T A i r&#13;
ether hit Bert kooekiag him down | D A N C E A F l E R T H E P L A Y&#13;
They decided to qaii for the &gt;Uv +&#13;
before some of Ik** were killed. &lt;' ven under the au^ncc^ of the young men of . Good&#13;
F&gt; x"-V.&#13;
-V*. A&lt;' .'&gt; ...*&lt;Ji&#13;
tf. iit&#13;
•v,-&#13;
ir*: &gt; « .&#13;
[ : , 1 - - . ,&#13;
2=2 ^ j i ' i ' . ^ j j . 1&#13;
&amp;$!£;•&#13;
v-'-t:; ^x_r,-vn-'i r_*.-i.-*&lt;*.»*-i • &gt; + ;*::*-i • * • •&lt;&#13;
v ' • • * , .&#13;
Tr&lt;:&lt;-&#13;
^--&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
K V&#13;
'"- 1&#13;
41&#13;
eel&#13;
4&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
• / • ' • • • • . .&#13;
- v . . , •&#13;
NO&#13;
IN&#13;
No War Tax on Land—Embargo&#13;
on Shipment of Live Stock&#13;
Removed.&#13;
During ilie prevalence of the footand-&#13;
mouth disease in t&gt;ome portions of&#13;
the United States, an embargo was&#13;
placed upon interstate shipments.&#13;
This also had an effect upon shipments&#13;
to Canada, and necessarily an&#13;
embargo was placed upon them, making&#13;
it almost impossible for upwards&#13;
of a year to ship cattle into Canada,&#13;
from the United States. This was especially&#13;
hard on the settler. As a result,&#13;
Western Canada lost a number of&#13;
settlers, they being unable to take&#13;
their live stock with them. Canada is&#13;
practically free from horse and cattle&#13;
diseases, and the wish of the authori&#13;
ties is to keep it so.&#13;
Recently, though, an order has been&#13;
issued by the Department of Agriculture,&#13;
removing the embargo, and settlers&#13;
are now free to take in the number&#13;
of head of horses or cattle that are&#13;
permitted by the Customs authorities&#13;
and the freight regulations. This will&#13;
be welcome news U those whose intention&#13;
it L« tc rrove to Canada, taking&#13;
with them stock that they have had in&#13;
their possession for six months, and,&#13;
which it is the intention to use on land&#13;
that they will farm in the Provinces&#13;
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta.&#13;
There are thousands of splendid&#13;
homesteads of 160 acres each in any&#13;
of these provinces, that may be had&#13;
upon the payment of a ten-dollar entry&#13;
fee and fulfilling the requisite living&#13;
and cultivation duties. These&#13;
lands are well adapted to the growing&#13;
of all the small grains, and besides,&#13;
having an abundance of grass, and sufficient&#13;
shelter, they are well adapted&#13;
to the raising of stock.&#13;
If one prepares to purchase land,&#13;
there could be no better time than the&#13;
present. Prices are low, and particulars&#13;
may be had from any of the land&#13;
companion of which there are several,&#13;
or from the Canadian Pacific and Canadian&#13;
Northern railways, whose holdings&#13;
are in the oldpr Bettled districts,&#13;
and whose terms are exceedingly easy&#13;
to the settler. What these lands will&#13;
do in the matter of production cannot&#13;
be more strongly emphasized than in&#13;
reading the reports of the crops&#13;
throughout all parts of the Canadian&#13;
West in 1915. Yields of 50, 60, and as&#13;
high as 70 bushels of wheat to the&#13;
acre were numerous, while reports of&#13;
yields of from 'JO to 45 bushels per&#13;
acre were common. Oats as high as&#13;
13u bushels per acre are reported, 50&#13;
and 60 bushels per acre being ordinary.&#13;
The prices realized bv farmers&#13;
have placed most of them on "^asy&#13;
street."&#13;
Lately there have appeared articles&#13;
in a number of United States newspa&#13;
pers to the effect that there was consjription&#13;
in Canada, or that such a&#13;
law was likely to be put intc effect.&#13;
We have it from the highest authority&#13;
in the Dominion that there \H no truth&#13;
in th«^ statement. Sir Robert Rorclen&#13;
at the opening of Canadian parliament&#13;
on January 17th, said:&#13;
"In the first few months of the war&#13;
I clearly stated that there would n .&lt;t&#13;
be conscription in Canada. I repeat&#13;
that statement today."&#13;
This statement should set at re3t&#13;
the consciiption lalk that has be^n so&#13;
freely used to influence those whe may&#13;
be considering settling in Canada during&#13;
the war.&#13;
It has also been said that there was&#13;
a war tax on land. Hon. Dr. Roche,&#13;
Minister of the Interior, over his OTgn&#13;
signature has denied this, and the premiers&#13;
of the different provinces join&#13;
in saying "such a report is absolutely&#13;
untrue, and has no foundation whatever&#13;
in fact, nor is there likely ever&#13;
to be any such tax upon land in&#13;
Canada."&#13;
The general prosperity of Western&#13;
Canada farmers and business institutions&#13;
is sueh that Canada is well able&#13;
tc take care of the extra war expenses&#13;
without any direct war taxation. This&#13;
has been well illustrated bv the- magnificent&#13;
response to the Dominion Government's&#13;
recent bond issue, which&#13;
was more than dotiblv .subscribed for&#13;
within the first eight hour* of its being&#13;
offered to the public.&#13;
(The above appears as an advertisement&#13;
and is paid for by the Dominion&#13;
Government which authorizes iH publication.)&#13;
GENERAL CARRANZA REFUSES&#13;
TO LET UNITED STATES&#13;
SOLDIERS ENTER MEXICO&#13;
All Mexico To Be In Arms Against United States Soldiers&#13;
Crossing The Border Is The General View&#13;
At The White House&#13;
THE CARRANZA GOVERNMENT BELIEVED TO BE TOPPLING&#13;
American Invasion Of Mexico To Get Villa And His Bandits,&#13;
Who Raided American Territory, Will&#13;
Not Be Tolerated By Carranza&#13;
Mexico City—General Carranza issued&#13;
a manifesto to the nation declaring&#13;
that under no circumstances&#13;
would the Mexican government grant&#13;
the right to the Unted States to violate&#13;
Mexican territory by sending in&#13;
an armed force in pursuit of Francisco&#13;
Villa without consent and the&#13;
reciprocal privilege being first obtained&#13;
and admitted.&#13;
Word was sent to the confidential&#13;
agent of the Mexican government in&#13;
Washington to make immediate representations&#13;
to this effect.&#13;
Part of General Carranza's text to&#13;
United States follows:&#13;
"Because of the assault which&#13;
Francisco Villa and the bandits who&#13;
accompanied him made on the town&#13;
of Columbus, in American territory.&#13;
burning houses and killing some of&#13;
the inhabitants, soldiers, as well as&#13;
civilians, the international situation&#13;
in these moments is very delicate,&#13;
as the North American press has&#13;
excited their people against Mexico,&#13;
and the government of that&#13;
country has discussed the situation&#13;
in the American congress, members&#13;
of which have advised intervention.&#13;
The constitutional government, which&#13;
I have the honor to represent,&#13;
is also occupied dilligently in an effort&#13;
to solve this delicate situation,&#13;
trying at all costs to maintain the&#13;
dignity and sovereignty of Mexico,&#13;
and we yet hope that this lamentable&#13;
incident may be decorously arranged,&#13;
and that there will be no reason for&#13;
an international conflict."&#13;
Washington — The conviction is&#13;
growing in official circles that the&#13;
American expedition into Mexico to&#13;
capture Francisco Villa means the be&#13;
ginning of intervention.&#13;
Reports of a decidedly disturbing&#13;
character concerning the attitude of&#13;
the Carranza government are beginning&#13;
to arrive.&#13;
Throughout these reports the&#13;
threat appears that within 24 hours&#13;
after the expedition has gotten well&#13;
under way all Mexico will be in arms&#13;
against the United States.&#13;
What attitude Carranza personally&#13;
assumes appears from these reports&#13;
to be negligible.&#13;
With his government already tottering,&#13;
it is declared that any prom&#13;
ises of non-interference or co-operation&#13;
which he may make are unlikely&#13;
to bind his followers. Rumors of&#13;
plots among these followers to overthrow&#13;
him have been reaching the&#13;
state department in increasing number.&#13;
Talking privately those through&#13;
whose hands these reports have passed&#13;
express the view that one of two&#13;
things is going to happen. Either&#13;
Carranza will find himself forced by&#13;
popular opinion to resist the invasion&#13;
or his followers will ignore him and&#13;
lead the resistance. There is growing&#13;
suspicion that General Obregon&#13;
is said to have given ear to the suggestion&#13;
that he himself should be in&#13;
Carranza's place.&#13;
Private advices from the border&#13;
describe American refugees arriving&#13;
at El Paso from Chihuahua city as&#13;
declaring that the Carranza garrison&#13;
there has taken up the cry of "death&#13;
to the Gringocs." Carranza officials&#13;
are declared to have openly stated&#13;
that American troops will not be permitted&#13;
to pass through the town.&#13;
(Conducted by the National Womtua'i&#13;
Christian Temperance Union.)&#13;
LABOR AND PROHIBITION.&#13;
'The trend of sentiment of organized&#13;
labor is towards prohibition," aaid&#13;
Richard Jones of Duluth, a member of&#13;
the Minnesota state senate, speaking&#13;
before the Scandinavian Socialist organization.&#13;
"Some trade union leaders claim&#13;
that prohibition would make for nonemployment-&#13;
If this is so why have&#13;
locomotive engineers to the number&#13;
of 70,000 indorsed it? If prohibition&#13;
is Inimical to the interests of labor,&#13;
why did the southern labor congress,&#13;
composed of men from nine southern&#13;
states, refuse to ask for a repeal of the&#13;
prohibition laws of the South, when&#13;
requested to do so by the United&#13;
Brewery Workmen of America? L o -&#13;
cal labor leaders may insist that the&#13;
saloon is a poor man's club, but the&#13;
American Federation of Labor at its&#13;
convention at Toronto condemned the&#13;
use of that term.&#13;
"We are urged not to vote men out&#13;
of employment in a business which is&#13;
destructive to society. I would vote&#13;
those men out of that employment&#13;
and into something valuable to themselves&#13;
and their fellow men. I would&#13;
like to have a chance to vote about&#13;
6,000,000 men in Europe out of their&#13;
present Jobs. If this principle applies&#13;
in one case why not in another? To&#13;
advocate peace in Europe would throw&#13;
thousands of workmen in America who&#13;
are engaged in the manufacture of&#13;
munitions of war out of their present&#13;
employment, but thousands of trade&#13;
unionists and Socialists are today doing&#13;
all in their power to spread antimilitaristic&#13;
propaganda among their&#13;
fellow workers."&#13;
EX-SENATOR H. G. DAVIS DIES SEWER BLASTS INJURES TWO&#13;
Was Twice Elected to the United 'Gasoline Leakage Run. Into Sewer&#13;
States Senate.&#13;
Washington—Henry Gaesaway D'ivis,&#13;
former United States senator&#13;
from West Virginia and vice-presidential&#13;
candidate on the Democratic tick-&#13;
; et in 1904, died here early Saturday&#13;
morning after a brief illness, aged wP,&#13;
years. Although Henry Gassaway Davis&#13;
earned his first dollar as an employe&#13;
on a Maryland plantation, it was&#13;
as a railroad brakeman that he began&#13;
the active career that put him in the&#13;
ranks of the Aladdins of American&#13;
life. From railroad employe he hei&#13;
came successively merchant, banker,&#13;
railroad ow-ner, founder of two towns&#13;
' and the largest single owner of coal&#13;
and timber lands in the United States.&#13;
While accumulating a large fortune&#13;
he found time to devote to Democratic&#13;
politics; was twice elected to the United&#13;
States senate and at the age of&#13;
81 was nominated for the vice-presidency.&#13;
and Caused Explosion.&#13;
ASSESSMENTS ARE BOOSTED&#13;
Detroit — Injuring two persons,&#13;
hurling sewer covers hundreds of&#13;
• feet in the air, breaking water mains,&#13;
smashing windows, tearing up thousa&#13;
n d s of tons of concrete pavement&#13;
and shaking houses for miles around,&#13;
' Scotten avenue was blown up for a&#13;
'distance of two miles when the&#13;
'sewer exploded at 8:55 o'clock Sunday&#13;
night. The explosion was caused&#13;
by the leakage of 9,400 gallons of&#13;
gasoline from a 10,000 gallon tank car&#13;
jthat stood on the Michigan Central&#13;
'tracks at Scotten avenue. The gasoline&#13;
found its way into the sewer and&#13;
the vaporization caused the upheavel.&#13;
The damage to city property was&#13;
I placed, roughly, at 1500,000. However,&#13;
this figure may be greatly in-&#13;
1 creased.&#13;
| Scotten avenue was torn up from&#13;
Fort to Jackson streets. Concrete&#13;
three feet thick was hurled in all directions&#13;
and the covers of the sewer&#13;
mains were found in every Instance&#13;
[ from 100 to 150 feet away.&#13;
SHORT-SIGHTED POLICY.&#13;
In the Judgment of many, it is difficult&#13;
to understand why preparedness&#13;
to meet a remotely possible attack by&#13;
a foreign foe should take precedence&#13;
i over preparedness to conquer and&#13;
I overwhelm a known foe in our midst,&#13;
| who is every day defying us, and&#13;
whose toll of death and disease rivals&#13;
| that of the battlefields of Europe, says&#13;
the Union Signal, official organ of the&#13;
National W. C. T. U. There is posi&#13;
sibly one chance in a thousand that&#13;
our fathers, brothers, husbands and&#13;
sons may be called upon at some future&#13;
time to defend the safety of this&#13;
country from an alien* enemy, but&#13;
there is a positive certainty that every&#13;
day and night of every week until the&#13;
liquor traffic is put out of existence it&#13;
will injure thousands of our young&#13;
men, physically, mentally and spiritually;&#13;
and that this injury will not&#13;
end with this generation, but will affect&#13;
disastrously the next generation.&#13;
A policy so short-sighted that it neglects&#13;
to guard against a recognized,&#13;
Immediate, continuing peril of gigantic&#13;
proportions in order to prepare for one&#13;
which may never have to be faced, Is&#13;
unworthy of enlightened America.&#13;
Everyone Should ...&#13;
Drink Hot Water&#13;
in the Morning&#13;
Wash away all the stomach, liver,&#13;
and bowel poison* before&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
To feel your best day in and day&#13;
out, to feel clean inside^ no sour bile&#13;
to coat your tongue and sicken your&#13;
breath or dull your head; no constipation,&#13;
bilious attacks, sick headache,&#13;
colds, rheumatism or gassy, acid stom~&#13;
ach, you must bathe on the inside like&#13;
you bathe outside. This is vastlymore&#13;
important, because the . s k i n&#13;
pores do not absorb impurities into&#13;
the blood, while the bowel pores do,&#13;
says a well-known physician.&#13;
To keep these poisons and toxins&#13;
well flushed from the stomach, liver,&#13;
kidneys and bowels, drink before&#13;
breakfast each day, a glass of hot water&#13;
with a teaspoonful ot limestone&#13;
phosphate in it. This will cleanse,&#13;
purify and freshen the entire alimentary&#13;
tract, before putting more food&#13;
into the stomach.&#13;
Get a quarter pound of limestone&#13;
phosphate from your druggist or at&#13;
the store. It is inexpensive and almost&#13;
tasteless, except a sourish&#13;
tinge which is not unpleasant. Drink&#13;
phosphated hot water every morning&#13;
to rid your system of these vile poisons&#13;
and toxins; also to prevent their&#13;
formation.&#13;
To feel like young folks feel; like&#13;
you felt before your blood, nerves and&#13;
muscles became saturated with an accumulation&#13;
of body poisons, begin this&#13;
treatment and above all, keep it up!&#13;
As soap and hot water act on the skin,&#13;
cleansing, sweetening and purifying,&#13;
so limestone phosphate and hot water&#13;
before breakfast, act on the stomach*&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels.—Adv.&#13;
;4&#13;
SUNDAY REST FOR POLICE,&#13;
The blotters at police headquarters&#13;
in Duluth, Minn., are, says Chief Mc-"&#13;
Kercher, illustrated temperance lectures.&#13;
On Saturday forty arrests were&#13;
made, most of them on charges of&#13;
drunkenness. That included Sunday&#13;
morrAig until seven o'clock. A clean&#13;
sheet was put on the blotter Sunday&#13;
morning at that hour. At eight p. m.&#13;
there was not a name on it. At 8:30&#13;
there was one arrest—a man who was&#13;
wanted in another town on a charge&#13;
of passing worthless checks.&#13;
Saturday, a big day in the saloon&#13;
business—result, forty arrests. Sunday&#13;
dry—result, no arrests for drunkenness.&#13;
"If that isn't an argument for&#13;
temperance," says the chief, "I don't&#13;
know what is."&#13;
Wayne County Values Rise to $300,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
What's in a Name?&#13;
"I wonder if the Russians had a&#13;
hard time capturing the c'ty of&#13;
M o t o r&#13;
" W h y r&#13;
"It sounds like they might have bad&#13;
a soft Job ot i t H&#13;
Detroit.—State tax examiners walked&#13;
into one of Detroit's largest hoteU&#13;
recently and told the proprietor that&#13;
I his assessment was about to be boost-&#13;
' ed from $300,000 to $1,000,000.&#13;
This is an example of what is being&#13;
done by the state tax commission&#13;
in the work of assessing all of Detroit's&#13;
property on a 100 per cent&#13;
basis, it is said, and Auditor Charles&#13;
A. Buhrer estimates that the increase&#13;
in the county of Wayne assessment&#13;
will be no less than $300,000,000 when&#13;
the state board of equalization meets&#13;
in August.&#13;
GOVERNOR PAROLES CONVICT&#13;
Jimmie Duggan't Conduct In Prison&#13;
Won Freedom.&#13;
Tlis «vH that men do is soon forgotten—&#13;
by themselves.&#13;
A good repatation soon gees lame tf&#13;
it lent Mved sp to.&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
The Central Paper Co., of Muskegon,&#13;
has announced an increase of 10 per&#13;
cent In the wage* of Its 100 employes.&#13;
This will Increase the monthly payroll&#13;
of the company to mors than&#13;
$20,000.&#13;
Lansing.—"Jimmie" Duggan, who in&#13;
1903 slashed legislator W. H. Schantz&#13;
with a ra2or in this city while the&#13;
legislature was in session, has been&#13;
paroled fro JI Marquette prison by Qov.&#13;
Ferris.&#13;
Duggan accosted Rep. Schantz on&#13;
the street and a^ked him for a dime.&#13;
When refused he out the legislator&#13;
several times on the face and head&#13;
with a razor. lie was convicted and&#13;
sentenced to a life term. Duggan had&#13;
been a trusty for sev U years and&#13;
Jala conduct while in prison won him&#13;
his freedom.&#13;
AS ONE NEW8PAPER SEES IT.&#13;
To present on the first page t h e&#13;
particulars of a gruesome tragedy resulting&#13;
from a drink-maddened brain;&#13;
on another page the guaranty of a&#13;
cure a t the Keeley institute; on the&#13;
editorial page a preachment against&#13;
the sin and shame of overindulgence,&#13;
and in the advertising section a full&#13;
page invitation for everybody to have&#13;
a drink—adding, in the case of a certain&#13;
Detroit beer advertisement the&#13;
tempting otter of "three bottles tree"—&#13;
is as grotesque a situation as the&#13;
nurse marrying the undertaker so aa&#13;
to catch them coming and going.&#13;
He Knew.&#13;
Ben Blewett recently visited the&#13;
Benton school and was much inter*&#13;
ested in listening to a primary class&#13;
recite physiology which happened to&#13;
be on the subject of the atomach.&#13;
After the recitation Blewett gave a&#13;
short talk on the subject and among&#13;
other things said:&#13;
"And remember, children, that the&#13;
stomach is one of the busy organs of&#13;
the body that has no bone3 in it."&#13;
At this statement he noticed a troubled&#13;
look on the face of a bright little&#13;
red-haired boy and said kindly:&#13;
"Why, Francis, what's the trouble?&#13;
Did you think there were bones in the&#13;
stomach?"&#13;
"Some people have, Mr. Blewett.&#13;
Our baby's got a bone in his stomach,&#13;
all right. He swallowed the dollar&#13;
dad gave me for Christmas last night."&#13;
— St. Louis Globe-Democrat.&#13;
Financiers Still Working.&#13;
Everybody in the financial district&#13;
seems to be on the Job these days. As&#13;
a rule, the moneyed men of Wall&#13;
street have been in the habit of taking&#13;
a vacation twice a year In the&#13;
winter they nummer at Palm F^ach&#13;
and in the summer they winter in&#13;
Switzerland or at some health resort&#13;
in Europe. Last year was an exception&#13;
on account of the new situation&#13;
in the winter created by the war and&#13;
the active bull market of the summer.&#13;
At the present time the foreign situation&#13;
is keeping the men of finance in&#13;
New York, although their families&#13;
may be in the South or California.&#13;
There is no wandering away from the&#13;
stock ticker nowadays while it is performing&#13;
gymnastics. There is too&#13;
much at stake.—New York Times.&#13;
STOPPED SHORT&#13;
Taking Tonics* and Built up ore&#13;
Right Food.&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
The Muskegon County Federation&#13;
of Gleaners, meeting at its quarterly&#13;
sesskfe, adopted resolutions in farot&#13;
[ot state-wide prohibition.&#13;
PROHIBITION RE8ULTS.&#13;
The following figures from the police&#13;
records of Moorhead, Minn., indicate&#13;
conditions in that city before and&#13;
after the abolishment of saloons:&#13;
July. 1914. arrests, 439; 1915, o n *&#13;
31. August, 1914, arrests. 570; August,&#13;
1915, only S. September, 1914«&#13;
arrests, 1,136; September, 1915, only&#13;
1«. A total of 2,056 fewer arrests daring&#13;
three months under prohibition&#13;
than daring the corresponding period&#13;
The mistake is frequently made of&#13;
trying to build up a worn-out nervous&#13;
system on so-called tonics.&#13;
New material from which to rebuild&#13;
used up tissue cells is what should b e&#13;
supplied, and this can be obtained&#13;
only from proper food. V j&#13;
"I found myself on the verge of Ja.&#13;
nervous collapse, due to overwork a n # .&#13;
study, and to illness in the family^*&#13;
writes a Wisconsin woman.&#13;
"My friends became alarmed because&#13;
I grew pale and thin and could&#13;
not sleep nights. I took various&#13;
tonics, but their effects wore 0 %&#13;
shortly after I stopped taking thena^.&#13;
My food f H not seem to nourish n H t l ^&#13;
"Reading of Orape-Nuts, I deterainenr *&#13;
to stop the tonics and see what a&#13;
change of diet would do. I ate Grape--&#13;
Nuts four times a day with cream*&#13;
and drank milk also, went to bed&#13;
early after eating a dish of Grape*&#13;
Nuts.&#13;
"In about two weeks I was sleeping&#13;
soundly. In a short time gained&#13;
weight and f ett like a different woman.&#13;
Grape-Nuts and fresh air were the&#13;
only agents used to accomplish the&#13;
happy results.- "There's a Reason,*&#13;
Name given by Postum Co, Battle&#13;
Creak, Mien.&#13;
4&#13;
~m&#13;
•-••VV&#13;
KX*&#13;
„ v :&#13;
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* T " - „ '.v* Jtlii „y *i* i&amp;;&amp;?\:&#13;
" • . ,_&#13;
i~i**.&#13;
' • * $ 3¾&#13;
F^JMH&#13;
• * • * : , » &lt; • « * ^^^^^^^^£^1 •^itMM&amp;tii&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
•,+..•-*"&#13;
••&gt;,-&#13;
THE CITY DF *&#13;
DAYS&#13;
6/ FRANCES LYNDE • •&#13;
ILLUSTRATIONS byC.D.BMQOES • • ' MT BY CHAPLCS 5C«J8ftfR'5 50M5&#13;
S Y N O P S I S .&#13;
Brouillard. chief engineer of the Nlquoia.&#13;
Irrigation dam, goe« out from camp to&#13;
Investigate a strange tight and finds an&#13;
automobile party cumped at the canyon&#13;
portal. He meets J. Wesley CoriwriKht&#13;
and hi? daughter, Genevieve, ot the auto&#13;
party and explain* the reclamation work&#13;
to them. Cortwright seen In the project&#13;
a big chance to rmcke money. Brouillard&#13;
1s Impervious to hints from the financier.&#13;
who tells Genevieve thai the engineer&#13;
"Will come down und hook himself if the&#13;
bait la Well covertd." Cortwright organizes&#13;
a company and obtains government&#13;
contracts to furnish power and material&#13;
for the dam construction. A busy city&#13;
springs up about the site. Steve Massln-&#13;
.gale threatens to start a gold rush if&#13;
Broulllard does not influence President&#13;
Ford to build a railroad branch to the&#13;
place, thus opening an easy market for&#13;
the ore from the "Little Susan" mine.&#13;
Brouillard and the company's promoter&#13;
clash, but on orders from Washington.&#13;
Brouillard turns over the plana for the&#13;
power installation.&#13;
I&#13;
* r Do you believe that a really&#13;
honest man can be persuaded to&#13;
? turn a shady trick In order to [ help the material fortunes of the&#13;
girl he loves—even if he be-&#13;
| tieves the trick wlil never be&#13;
\ found out on him?&#13;
C H A P T E R V I l ~ C o n t i n u e d .&#13;
i&#13;
*v.&#13;
fca&amp;v&#13;
To his utter amazement the blue&#13;
eyes filled suddenly. But the owner&#13;
of the eyes was winking the tears&#13;
away and laughing before he could&#13;
could put tbe amazement into words&#13;
"You shouldn't hit out like that&#13;
when one isn't looking; it's wicked,"&#13;
• h e protested. "Besides, the railroad&#13;
i s coming; it's got to come."&#13;
"It is still undecided," he told her&#13;
mechanically. "Mr. Ford is coming&#13;
over with the engineers to have a conference&#13;
on the ground with—with the&#13;
Cortwright people. I am expecting&#13;
htm any day."&#13;
"And the government?"&#13;
"The department is holding entirely&#13;
aloof, as it should. Everyone in the&#13;
reclamation service knows that no&#13;
good can possibly come of any effort&#13;
to force .the region ahead of its normal&#13;
and natural development And,&#13;
besides, none of us here in the valley&#13;
want to help blow the Cortwright&#13;
bubble any higher than it has to be."&#13;
"Then you will advise against the&#13;
fcuildlng of the extension?"&#13;
Instead of answering her Question&#13;
h e asked one of his own.&#13;
"What does It mean to you—to you.&#13;
personally, apart from the money your&#13;
father might make out of it, Amy?"&#13;
She hesitated a moment and then&#13;
m e t the shrewd scrutiny of his gaze&#13;
with open candor.&#13;
"The money is only a means to an&#13;
end—as yours will be. You know very&#13;
well what I meant when I told you&#13;
t h a t three times we have been obliged&#13;
to come back to tbe mountains to—to&#13;
t r y again. I dreaded the coming of&#13;
your camp; I dread a thousand times&#13;
more the other qhanges that are coming—&#13;
the temptations that a mushroom&#13;
city will offer. This time father&#13;
has promised me that when he can&#13;
make his stake he will go back to Kentucky&#13;
and settle down; and he will&#13;
keep his promise. More than t h a t&#13;
Stevie has promised me that he will&#13;
go, too, if he can have a stock-farm&#13;
and raise fine horses—his one healthy&#13;
ambition. Now you know it all."&#13;
He reached up from the lower step&#13;
where he was standing and took her&#13;
hand.&#13;
"Yes; and 1 know more than t h a t&#13;
I know that you are a mighty brave&#13;
little girl and that your load Is heavier&#13;
than mine—worlds heavier. But you're&#13;
going to win out; if not today or tomorrow,&#13;
why. then, the day after. It's&#13;
written in the book."&#13;
She returned his handgrip of en&#13;
couragement impulsively and smiled&#13;
down upon him through quick-spring&#13;
ing tears.&#13;
T o m l ! win out, too. Victor, because&#13;
a strong man; you have a&#13;
of strength that is greater&#13;
t men's full gift: you can cut&#13;
and slash your way to the thing you&#13;
really want, and nothing can stop you&#13;
But— you'll forgive me for being plain,&#13;
won't you?—there is a little. Just the&#13;
least little bit of desperation in the&#13;
present point o* view, and—"&#13;
"Say it." he commanded when she&#13;
hesitated.&#13;
"1 hardly know how to aay i t There&#13;
were ideals in the beginning; don't let&#13;
them fall down in the dust or in the—&#13;
In the mud. It's got to be clean money.&#13;
you know; the money that ia going to&#13;
give yon the chance to aay. 'Come, girl,&#13;
let's go and get married.' You wont&#13;
forget t t a t win y o o r&#13;
• .,!!• f adaqmabod the hand of encoorbecmose&#13;
ho dared not hoM It&#13;
sad tamed sway to etafY&#13;
absently at the timbered tunnel mouth&#13;
whence a faint clinking of hammer&#13;
upon bteel Issued with monotonous&#13;
regularity.&#13;
"1 wish you hadn't bald that, Amy—&#13;
about the ideals."&#13;
"I don't know what you mean," she&#13;
said simply.&#13;
"Perhaps it is Just as well that you&#13;
don't. Let's talk about something&#13;
else—about the railroad. President&#13;
Ford hasn't decided; he won't decide&#13;
until he has looked the ground over&#13;
and had a chance to confer with me."&#13;
She bridged all the gaps with swift&#13;
intuition. "He means to give you the&#13;
casting vote? He will build the exten&#13;
sion if you advise it? Then it will lie&#13;
in your hand to make us rich or to&#13;
keep us poor," she laughed, _ "Be a&#13;
good god-in-the-car, please, and your&#13;
petitioners will ever pray." Then, with&#13;
an instant return to seriousness: "But&#13;
you mustn't think of that—of course,&#13;
you won't—with so many other and&#13;
greater things to consider."&#13;
"On the contrary, I shall think very&#13;
pointedly of that; pointedly and regretfully—&#13;
because your brother has&#13;
made it practically Impossible for me&#13;
to help."&#13;
"My brother?" with a little gasp.&#13;
"Yes. He offered to buy my vote&#13;
with a block of 'Little Susan' stock.&#13;
That wouldn't have been so bad if he&#13;
hadn't talked about it—"&#13;
"When Mr Ford comes you must&#13;
forget what Stevie said and what I&#13;
have said. Qood-by."&#13;
An hour later Brouillard was closeted&#13;
In his log-built office quarters with&#13;
a big, fair-faced man, whose rough&#13;
tweeds and unbrushed soft hat proclaimed&#13;
him fresh from the dusty-dry&#13;
reaches of the Quesado trail.&#13;
"It is your own opinion that I want.&#13;
Victor," the fair-faced man was saying,&#13;
"not the government engineer's. Can&#13;
we make the road pay if we bring it&#13;
here? That is a question which you&#13;
can answer better than any other living&#13;
man. You are here on the ground&#13;
and you've been here from the first"&#13;
"You've had it out with Cort&#13;
wright?" Brouillard asked. And then:&#13;
"Where is he now—in ChicagoV&#13;
"No. He is on his way to the Ntquoia,&#13;
coming over in his car from El&#13;
Gato. But never mind J. Wesley. You&#13;
are the man I came to see."&#13;
"I can give you the facts," waB the&#13;
quiet rejoinder.&#13;
A smile wrinkled at the corners of&#13;
the big man's eyes.&#13;
"You are dodging the issue, Victor,&#13;
and you know it," he objected. "What&#13;
I want Is your personal notion. If you&#13;
were the executive committee of the&#13;
Pacific Southwestern, would you. or&#13;
would you not, build the extension?&#13;
That's the point I'm trying to make."&#13;
Brouillard got up and went to the&#13;
window. When he turned back to the&#13;
man at the desk he was frowning&#13;
thoughtfully, and his eyes were the&#13;
eyes of one who Bees only the clearly&#13;
etched lines of a picture which obscures&#13;
all outward and visual objects.&#13;
. . . the picture he saw was of a&#13;
sweet-faced young woman, laughing&#13;
through her tears and saying: "Besides,&#13;
the railroad Is coming; it's got&#13;
to come."&#13;
"If you put it that way," he said to&#13;
the man who was waiting, "if you insist&#13;
on pulling my private opinion out&#13;
by the roots, you may have i t I'd build&#13;
the extension."&#13;
CHAPTER VIII&#13;
MirapoEs&#13;
monlrlng third at the circular table.&#13;
The little dinner had been a gustatory&#13;
triumph. Nevertheless, when Mlsa&#13;
Cortwright had gone upstalnj. and the&#13;
waiter would have refilled his glass.&#13;
Brouillard shook his head.&#13;
the power company the government.&#13;
which will always be the largest consumer,&#13;
should be represented in some&#13;
effective way; that Its interests should&#13;
be carefully safeguarded. It lu not so&#13;
easy as u might seem. We can't exit&#13;
tho millionaire saw the refusal he i ttcliy make ihe government a stock&#13;
During the strenuous weeks when&#13;
Camp Nlquoia's straggling Btreet was&#13;
acquiring plank sidewalks and getting&#13;
itself transformed into Chigringo avenue,&#13;
with a double row of false-fronted&#13;
"emporiums" to supplant the shack&#13;
shelters, Monsieur Poudrecaulx Bongra8,&#13;
late of the San Francisco tenderloin,&#13;
opened the camp's first counter&#13;
grilL&#13;
Finding monsieur's name impossible&#13;
in both halves of It. the camp grinned&#13;
and rechristened him "Poodles." Later,&#13;
discovering his dual gift of past mas&#13;
tership in potato frying and coffee&#13;
making, the camp gave him vogue&#13;
Out of the vogue sprang in swift succession&#13;
a cafe with side tables, a restaurant&#13;
with private dining rooms, and&#13;
presently a omm odious hotel where&#13;
the food was excellent the appointments&#13;
luxurious, and where J a c k -&#13;
clothed and in his right mind and with&#13;
money in his hand—was as good as his&#13;
master.&#13;
It was in out of Bongras private&#13;
dining rooms that Mr. J. Wesley Cortwright&#13;
was entertaining Bronlljard.&#13;
with Mis* Oenwvieve to make a bar.&#13;
was too wise to remark it. He was&#13;
still the frank, outspoken money&#13;
maker, hot upon the trail of the nimble&#13;
dollar. Yet there was a change of&#13;
some kind. Brouillard had marked it&#13;
on the day, a fortnight earlier, when&#13;
(after assuring himself morosely that&#13;
he would not) he had gone down to&#13;
the lower canyon portal to see the&#13;
Cortwright touring car finish Its second&#13;
race across the desert from til&#13;
Gato.&#13;
"Of course 1 was quite prepared to&#13;
have you stand off and throw stones&#13;
at our little cob house of a venture,&#13;
Brouillard," the host allowed at the&#13;
lighting of the gold-banded cigars&#13;
"You're the government engineer and&#13;
the builder of the big dam; but you&#13;
can't build your dam in one day. or&#13;
in two, and the interval ia ours I tell&#13;
you, we're going to make Mirapolis a&#13;
buzz-hummer while the daylight lasts.&#13;
Don't you forget that."&#13;
"'Mirapolis?' queried Brouillard.&#13;
"Is that the new name?"&#13;
Cortwright laughed and nodded. "It's&#13;
Gene's name—'Miracle City.' Fits like&#13;
the glove on a pretty girl's arm,&#13;
doesn't it?"&#13;
"It does. But the miracle is that&#13;
there should be any money daring&#13;
enough to invest itself In the Nlquoia "&#13;
"Why, blesB your workaday heart.&#13;
Brouillard," chuckled the host, "nothing&#13;
is permanent In this shuffling,&#13;
growing, progressive world of ours—&#13;
absolutely nothing. Some of the big&#13;
gest and costliest buildings in New&#13;
York and Chicago are built on ground&#13;
leases. Our ground lease will merely&#13;
be a little shorter in the factor of&#13;
time."&#13;
"So much shorter that the parallel&#13;
won't hold," argued Brouillard.&#13;
"The parallel does hold; long time,&#13;
small profits and a slow return; short&#13;
time, big profits and a quick return.&#13;
You've eaten here before; what do&#13;
you pay Bongras for a reasonably good&#13;
dinner?"&#13;
Brouillard laughed. "Oh, Poodles&#13;
He cinches us, all right; four or five&#13;
times as much as it's worth—or would&#13;
cost anywhere else."&#13;
"That's i t He knows he has to&#13;
make good on all these little luxuries&#13;
he gives you—cash in every day, as&#13;
you might say, and come out whole be&#13;
fore you stop the creek and drown&#13;
him. When we get in motion we're&#13;
going to have Alaska faded to a frazzle&#13;
on prices—and you'll see everybody&#13;
paying them Joyfully."&#13;
"And in the end somebody, or the&#13;
final series of somebodies, will be left&#13;
to hold the bag," finished Brouillard&#13;
"There needn't be any bag holders,&#13;
Brouillard. Let me put it in a nut&#13;
shell: we're building a cement plant,&#13;
and we shall sell you the output—at a&#13;
good, round price, 1 promise you, but&#13;
still at a lower figure than you're paying&#13;
for the imported article now, or&#13;
than you will pay even after the railroad&#13;
gets In. When our government&#13;
orders are filled we can afford to&#13;
wreck the plant for what it will bring."&#13;
"That Is only one Instance," objected&#13;
the guest.&#13;
"Well, Bongras, here, is one more,"&#13;
laughed the host. "And our power&#13;
plant is another. You made your little&#13;
kick on that to Washington—you&#13;
thought the government ought to control&#13;
its own power. That was all&#13;
right, from your point of view, but we&#13;
beat you to ft Now the reclamation&#13;
service gets all the power it needs at a&#13;
nominal price, and we're going to sell&#13;
enough more to make us all feel&#13;
happy."&#13;
"Sell it? To whom?"&#13;
Mr. Cortwright leaned back in his&#13;
chair and the sandy-gray eyes seemed&#13;
to be searching the inner recesses of&#13;
the querying soul&#13;
"That's inside information, but I&#13;
don't mind taking you in on it," he&#13;
said between leisurely puffs at his cigar.&#13;
"We've Just concluded a few contracts:&#13;
one with Massingale—he's going&#13;
to put in power drills, electric orecars,&#13;
and a modern equipment gener&#13;
ally and shove the development of the&#13;
'Little Susan;' one with a new mining&#13;
syndicate which will begin operations&#13;
at once on half a dozen prospects on&#13;
Jack's mountain: and one with a lum&#13;
ber combination that has just taken&#13;
over the sawmills, and will install oth&#13;
ers. with a planing mill and sash factory."&#13;
Brouillard nodded. The gray eyes&#13;
were slowly hypnotizing him.&#13;
"But that isn't all." continued the&#13;
promoter. "We are about to refneor&#13;
porate the power plant as the Nlquoia&#13;
Electric Power, Lighting and Traction&#13;
company. Within a fortnight well be&#13;
lighting, Mirapolis. and within a month&#13;
after the railroad gets in we'll be oper&#13;
ating trolley cars."&#13;
The enthusiast paused to let the&#13;
Information sink in. also to note tbe&#13;
effect upon the subject. Tbe noting&#13;
was apparently satisfactory, since b»&#13;
went on with the steady assurance of&#13;
one who sees his way dearly&#13;
"That brings us down to business.&#13;
Brouillard. i don't mind admitting&#13;
that I had aa object to asking ros to&#13;
dine with me this evening. It's this:&#13;
wo fool that ia the reorganisation of&#13;
Look, Mother! If tongue&#13;
coated, give "California&#13;
Syrup of Figs."&#13;
Children love this "fruit laxative.&#13;
IS&#13;
holder."&#13;
"No," said Brouillard mechanically.&#13;
The underdeptha were stirring, heaving&#13;
as ir from a mighty groundswell&#13;
that threatened a tidal wave of&#13;
overturnings.&#13;
"We are going to make you the gov- ' and nothing else cleanses the tender&#13;
ernnient director, with full power to i stomach, liver and bowels so nicely,&#13;
investigate and to act. And we're not j A child simply will net stop playing&#13;
going to be mean about it, either. The ! to empty the bowels, and the result is&#13;
capital stock of the company Is ten they become tightly clogged with&#13;
millions, with shares of a par value \ waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach&#13;
of one hundred dollars each, full paid '. sours, then your little one becomes&#13;
and nonassessable. Don't ga^p; we'll&#13;
cut a nice little melon on thai capitalization&#13;
e\ery thirty days, or my name&#13;
isn't Cortwright."&#13;
"But 1 have no money to Invest."&#13;
was the only form the younger man's&#13;
protest took.&#13;
cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat,&#13;
sleep or act naturally, breath is bad,&#13;
system full of cold, has sore throat,&#13;
stomach-ache or dianhoea. Listen,&#13;
Mother! See if tongue is coated, then&#13;
give a teaspoonful of "California&#13;
Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all&#13;
"We don't need your money," cut in , t Q e constipated waste, sour bile and&#13;
the financier with curt good nature, undigested food passes out of the sya-&#13;
"Wbat we do need is a consulting en t e m &gt; a n d y o u h a v e a ^ e l , c h i l d a g a l n &gt;&#13;
gineer. a man who. while he ia one of , Millions of mothers give "California&#13;
UB and identified with us, will see to S y r u p o f p j g s . . D e c a u s e it is perfectly&#13;
it that we're not tempted to gouge our ' harmless; children love it, and it nevgood&#13;
Cncle Samuel." e r f a i l s t 0 a c t o n t h e b t omach. liver&#13;
Brouillard smoked in silence for a 2 ^ D O w e ] g&#13;
full minute before he said: "You know I A s k a t th"e 8 t o r e f o r a 50-Cent bottle&#13;
as well as I do. Mr. Cortwright, that o f "California Syrup of Figs," which&#13;
has full directions for babies, children&#13;
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly&#13;
it Is an unwritten law of the service&#13;
that a civilian employee of the govern&#13;
ment shall not engage In any other : printed on the bottler Adv.&#13;
business." j - - ~&#13;
"No. I don't." was the blunt replv J Dye Problem Solved.&#13;
"Supposing your father had left you a , American dye works are now turning&#13;
hundred thousand dollars to invest in- j out coal-tar colors at the rate of 15,000&#13;
stead of a debt of that amount—you tona annually, and a report on the&#13;
see, I know what a load your keen present dyestuff situation Issued by&#13;
sense of honor is making you carry— t he bureau of foreign and domestic&#13;
suppose you had this money to Invest,&#13;
would your position in the reclamation&#13;
commerce calls attention to the importance&#13;
of the fact that these colors are&#13;
American raw material.&#13;
BABY'S ITCHING SKIN&#13;
Q u i c k l y Soothed and Heated&#13;
C u t i c u r a . T r i a l Free.&#13;
by&#13;
service compel you to lock it up in a j being manufactured wholly from&#13;
safety vault?"&#13;
"Certainly not, but if the department&#13;
should learn that I am a stockholder&#13;
in a company from which it buys its&#13;
power—"&#13;
"There wouldn't be a word sald-^not&#13;
one single word. They know you ii&#13;
Washington, Brouillard, better, perhaps,&#13;
than you think they do. They&#13;
know you would exact a square deal&#13;
for the department even if it cost ynu&#13;
personal money. It's your duty and&#13;
part of your Job as chief of construction.&#13;
And we'll leave the money con&#13;
sideration entirely out of it if you like&#13;
You'll get a stock certificate, which&#13;
Bathe with hot water and Cuticura&#13;
Soap. If there is any irritation anoint&#13;
gently with Cuticura Ointment on end&#13;
of finger. Refreshing slumber for restless,&#13;
fretful babies usually follows the&#13;
use of these super-creamy emollients.&#13;
They are a boon to tired mothers.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
y o V m a r k e e p o 7 t e a T u p ' o r l f c r o w T n t o | A d d r e 8 B ^ 0 ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ U&#13;
the wastebasket just as you please If Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
you keep it and want to realize on it&#13;
at any time before you begin to put&#13;
the finishing forms on the dam I'll do&#13;
this: I'll agree to market It for you&#13;
at par. Now let's quit and go and find&#13;
Gene.&#13;
Fair W a r n i n g .&#13;
"My dear," said Mr. Meeker at&#13;
breakfast the other morning, "what&#13;
would you dc If I were ^nc &gt;f those&#13;
husbands who get up cross in the&#13;
' ' , „ . . „ ... . ,,, One moment, said Brouillard. ' l ,m , o,r ning* and sl,am. , things ar.o, und «a-nd kick up a row Just because 'he coffee&#13;
happened to be cold,''&#13;
"John," replied his better half, "I&#13;
wouldn't do a thing but make It hot&#13;
for you."&#13;
couldn't serve as your engineer Mr&#13;
Cortwright not even In a consulting&#13;
capacity. Call It prejudice or anything&#13;
else you please, but I simply couldn't&#13;
do business in an associate relation&#13;
with your man Hosford."&#13;
"Do you know, Brouillard, Hosford&#13;
gets on my nerves, too? Don't let that&#13;
Influence you. We'll let Hosford go.&#13;
We needed him at first to sort of knock&#13;
things tnto shape; it takes a man of&#13;
his caliber in the early stages of a&#13;
project like ours, you know. But he&#13;
has outlived his usefulness and we'll&#13;
drop him. Let's go upstairs."&#13;
Late in the evening Brouillard&#13;
passed out through the cafe of the&#13;
Metropole on his way to his quarters.&#13;
There were a few late diners at the&#13;
tables, and Bongras, smug and complacent&#13;
in evening regalia, was waddling&#13;
about among them like a glorified&#13;
head waiter.&#13;
DRINK LOTS OF WATER&#13;
TO FLUSH THE KIDNEYS&#13;
Eat Less Meat and T a k e Salts f o r&#13;
Backache or Bladder T r o u b l e —&#13;
Neutralize Acids.&#13;
Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys,&#13;
they become overworked; get&#13;
sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of&#13;
lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the&#13;
bladder is irritated, and you may be&#13;
obliged to seek relief two or three&#13;
times during the night. When the kidneys&#13;
clog you must help them' flush&#13;
off the body's urinous waste or youTI&#13;
Holding the engineer for a moment be a real sick person shortly. At first f e e l ft d u H m l , n t h e k i d n e y&#13;
at the street door, "111 been wanting ( ^ n n „„„ 0 M «0 „ frnrn h a r l r 9 M i a a&lt;r V&#13;
to h-ask you," whispered the Frenchman&#13;
with a. quick-flung glance for the&#13;
diners at the nearest of the tables,&#13;
"doze flood—when she is coming,&#13;
M'sieu' Brouillard?"&#13;
"When we get the dam completed."&#13;
"You'll bet money h-on dat?—hall&#13;
de money you got?"&#13;
"Why should you doubt it?"&#13;
"Moi. 1 don't doubt nottings; I maki&#13;
de grsss to be cut w'ile de sun is shine. , , , , , . , ,&#13;
But Til been hearing somebody say S ^ 9 a n d l e m o n Ju l c e - combined&#13;
dat maybe-so dis town she grow so fas' I w i t n 1 , t h l a - a n d h a s ^ e n used for&#13;
and so beeg dat de government is not fenerations to clean clogged kidneys&#13;
going to drown her." j a n d stimulate them to normal activity.&#13;
"Who said that?" a ^8 0 t 0 neutralize the acids in urine,&#13;
"1 don't know; It Is bruit—what rou | 8 ° It »° longer is a source ot irritacall&#13;
n m a i r e You hear it h-on de j U o n - t h u 8 ending bladder weakness,&#13;
avenue, in de cafe, h-anyw'eres you \ J&amp;d Salts is Inexpensive, cannot lng0&#13;
•• j jure; makes a delightful effervescent&#13;
"Don't lower your prices on the lithia-water drink which everyone&#13;
strength of any such rumor as that, j should take now and then to keep the&#13;
Poodles. The dam will he built and I kidneys clean and active. Druggists&#13;
region, you suffer from backache, sick&#13;
headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour,&#13;
tongue coated and you feel rheumatic&#13;
twinges when the weather is bad.&#13;
Eat less meat, drink lots of water;&#13;
also get from any pharmacist four&#13;
ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful&#13;
in a glass of water before&#13;
breakfast for a few days and your&#13;
kidneys will then act fine. This famous&#13;
salts is made from the acid of&#13;
the Nlquoia will be turned Into a lake,&#13;
with the Hotel Metropole comfortably&#13;
anchored In the deepest part of It--&#13;
that is. if it doesn't get gay enough&#13;
to float"&#13;
"Data Juz what I'll been thinking&#13;
smiled the little man, and he sped the&#13;
parting guest with a bow that would&#13;
have graced the antechamber of a&#13;
Louis le Grand.&#13;
Do you believe that Brouillard&#13;
will permit himself to be seduced&#13;
by Cortwright's smooth&#13;
form of bribery&#13;
lard understand&#13;
rtrriom s smootn t&#13;
'? Does Brouil* j&#13;
Cortwright? I&#13;
T -r i T i • « limm&#13;
(TO Bfc COSTlNVUXt&#13;
here say they sell lots of .Tad Salts to&#13;
folks who believe In overcoming kidney&#13;
trouble while It is only trouble.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Disengaged.&#13;
Safety—So Jack Is engaged, is he?&#13;
And Is Fanny the brlde-to be?&#13;
First—No, she ts the tried to-be.&#13;
Dr. Pierre's Pleasant Pellets lire the&#13;
original little liver pills put up 40 years&#13;
ago. They regulate liver *nd bowels.—Adv.&#13;
i^ove may be blind, but it can as*&#13;
ally locate tbo almighty dollar.&#13;
Many a courtship is torpedoed om&#13;
the sea o/ matrtooej.&#13;
*#£. ?&gt;*.:•&#13;
V * •&#13;
fe- -.-*:'^1&#13;
'. &gt;&#13;
£V&#13;
*&#13;
)-&#13;
# ;&#13;
*i&#13;
1'&#13;
fe''&#13;
&amp;&gt;-&#13;
&amp; ' •&#13;
».j£fS'&gt;&#13;
7/&#13;
&gt;•! ....&#13;
?#••-'&gt;&#13;
MNCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
T i n n r i miiMiir&#13;
*&#13;
^ H * ^ . * ^ ' - * - ' - * * " '&#13;
Another Good *?- &gt;-?&gt;. c&#13;
T h e Toeple ll an ft&#13;
iroods for cash .&#13;
A Cash Discount of 10 r, o •ant&#13;
w 1 &gt; 1&#13;
M,&lt;:il a n d Si&#13;
will be deducted from all goods&#13;
Oils of all kinds, Coal Salt, Ca&#13;
Pood.&#13;
Wcexpect every one to settle accounts and&#13;
notes in the next 30 days.&#13;
Respy. y&lt;/*rs&#13;
Scientific&#13;
Farming&#13;
FARM ELECTRIC MOTORS.&#13;
i iety of Work Which Th»»» Machine*&#13;
Can Accomplish.&#13;
A M.I'.V iiu porta ut feature is t h a t u&#13;
I lew motors properly selected m a y be&#13;
used to operate all of t h e machines&#13;
on the farm instead of having a steam&#13;
or gasoline prime mover a t t a c h e d to&#13;
i-aeh machine, writes Frank. Koe&amp;ter in&#13;
• Is book, "Electricity F o r t h e F a r m&#13;
d Home." lu tliis feature lies a&#13;
,.-..' M.'Mintage of el'.-.-rncaily ope ruti&#13;
machinery. F o r instance, a&#13;
i,ou.r may be placed on n low wheeled&#13;
rncl: a n d connected by m e a n s of a&#13;
jit to a t h r a s h i n g machine, taking it^ |&#13;
i;.-v.ik' supply i'rom t h e mains by a i&#13;
aide plugged hrjj a -ultabl&lt;-&#13;
On t h e throwing' of ;. switch&#13;
r KUirts* and operates centime&#13;
dtliout attention. After th&gt;-&#13;
- is t-omploted t h e motor ma.\&#13;
connected to ti:e baling ran&#13;
.v. Ll.-L packs tiiL - t r a w into&#13;
ij.lo it' nc-eetsary : bo motor&#13;
.. . •• ;.&lt;od in loading the bales upon&#13;
.V.-'.J!:- I'.V operating a hoist. At other&#13;
. .u;es il&lt;j Kiinc motor may drive ft wa&#13;
;cr pump, wood saw, ore.&#13;
It la readily *een t h a t t h e electric&#13;
mot. r can be operated w i t h o u t t h e attention&#13;
necessary for s t e a m or gasoline&#13;
prime movers, which h a r e to be supplied&#13;
v.ith w a t e r a n d fuel. With all&#13;
other prim© movers, when placed in&#13;
' h e barn or h a y mow, or beehle tbe&#13;
? rack in t h e field, the risk from fire is&#13;
i thousandfold greater t h a n with a a&#13;
electric motor. i n f a c t a n inclosed&#13;
&gt;i&#13;
- j e u&#13;
BREAK YOUR MATCH IN TWO.&#13;
A Suggestion That Became a Rule in&#13;
Forest Fire Prevention.&#13;
One day late in June a man in a&#13;
room on the seventh door of an old&#13;
fashioned brick building in Washington,&#13;
holding a sheaf of telegrams In his&#13;
left hand, was busy with hit right taking&#13;
red headed pin* out of his moQtb&#13;
and slicking them Into little Irregular&#13;
blocks of green ink scattered orer a&#13;
large white wall map of the United&#13;
States.&#13;
'The bte problem,1' he said, taking a&#13;
fresh pin out of his month and turning&#13;
sldewiso to his assistant, "is to get at&#13;
the fellow who knows what conservation&#13;
1B but forgets to apply it when he&#13;
lights up a cigar la the woods."&#13;
The assistant sat at a flat topped oak&#13;
desk 1a the middle of the room, struggling&#13;
through a mase of reports from&#13;
held men in ibe endeavor to find suggestions&#13;
for a set of fire prevention&#13;
"rules."&#13;
"Well, what do you think of this' '&#13;
he said, holding up a report from the&#13;
Pacific northwest: " 'Break your match&#13;
in two before you throw it away.' "&#13;
The other man stuck the laat red phi&#13;
into the a - •'•. icncho,] for his pipe and&#13;
lighted 1(.&#13;
"Let's see." be sakL H e s n a p p e d the&#13;
burning m a t c h in hi* ungers. As t h e&#13;
pieces dropped to the floor he u t t e r e d a&#13;
tJiarp exclamation and tenderly Hcked&#13;
the index linger o)' his left liand.&#13;
The a s s i s t a n t laughed. " T h a t ' s t h e&#13;
idea!" he said. "You've got to blow it&#13;
out bolero you break it o r g e t burned."&#13;
So this suggestion became No. 1 of a&#13;
get of ten rules which the forest service&#13;
sent to (J.000 newspapers a t the beginning&#13;
of the s u m m e r ' s fire season in&#13;
t h e national forests.—Outlook.&#13;
From Weak and Lame&#13;
To Wei! ant? Stro&#13;
Try them. Foley \^ldo&#13;
for other ciea auu v, &gt;&#13;
ly—what they nave dc&#13;
StrayzuBe. , , ...&#13;
"Last year, I g o t almost down with&#13;
m y back," writes MJ-S. H. T. Strnynga&#13;
of Gainesville, Ga., K. No. :i. "*&#13;
fered from iniiamrnaiicn «.•; n&#13;
&lt;ier, and w h e n e v e r I stopped ••...•:•&gt;•••: a s&#13;
I grew woise. T tried V-&gt;'•:•* K ' /&#13;
Pills, a n d a l t e r t a k i n g HH-H: u\k i.tlo&#13;
my bladder action btc^unc n ,,w!;.. :tn&lt;\&#13;
th« stingine1 Benaatloi d ^ a p ^ D ^ . j ' . 1&#13;
1«.&#13;
v&#13;
am now stronger in my &gt;v l n &lt; . ) At&#13;
»&gt;e€n for eevcral vi-;"-'. " &lt;v:&#13;
t i n g wtsll, I've s t a y e i VLno&#13;
return of t h e trouble.''&#13;
Start in now to u.':''. i-^.'-J&#13;
Pills. You will J'f.l ;-'• •&#13;
f*om t h e v t r y JirKt &lt;J(^^'&#13;
how quickly t h e y act to. h&#13;
bladder. They stop im'K^l&#13;
ttction, eaae pain in back o-ci i;w ,&#13;
Umber u p utiff joint* und u&lt;.i..^i i - - -&#13;
cles. They put t h e kidney*! auu bia.i-&#13;
\fsT in sound, healthy eooCitiou. Try&#13;
FOP Sale BvGfj&gt;'where"&#13;
'1.1V/!1 •&#13;
-. s u-,&#13;
•:&lt;W%:&#13;
•lei&#13;
tht&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
A hew Hlodel Typewriter /&#13;
M M A i m T H A N S l ' O K J A K I . I . M O T O l i .&#13;
eltji-ule motni- amy be phu.'e-i c.nywhero&#13;
the I'uriii witlmui Kir&#13;
. ]• &lt; :' an »v\; •!' &gt;-:&lt;»n.&#13;
1 l - K H I ' the&#13;
Th. l ' l l d !&#13;
or '&#13;
i : i &lt; i; i I : \ ; i p ;!;• i i o " &lt;&#13;
• ) j ) e r . «&#13;
il \ V (&#13;
Sandwich's Wonderful Drum.&#13;
The eccentric Lord Sandwich had, according&#13;
to his biographer, a strange&#13;
passion for tbe thunder of big drums,&#13;
for the gratification of which passion he&#13;
had caused the cctire side of one large&#13;
music room ID his mansion at Hlnchinbrook&#13;
to be covered with parchment,&#13;
I so that when it was struck with a&#13;
! massive stick it gave out a roar suffi-&#13;
; dent to terrorize any sensitive ftoul.&#13;
Many who beard this dmm once struck&#13;
positively declined ever to enter the&#13;
j apartment again lest they should be&#13;
i given a Hcoond performance.—fit. Louis&#13;
' RepubMo.&#13;
A Novel Dovecot.&#13;
. Almost every farm has lti&lt; flock of&#13;
; pigeons, tbe nsunl home being p^o^ id&#13;
ed in tue bani loft. Thid is net ;ii&#13;
ways .satisfactory or easy io Ueej^ ii '&#13;
proper rundltion. ;iiul the birds M&gt; t&#13;
more or &gt;PSK out of si^ht '&#13;
The dovecot liere Illustrated is ,u••'•&#13;
ui tract ire and Inexpensive, beinj: noiLi&#13;
iug moi*e tban a barrel stood &lt;m t i-.&#13;
e n .*\ p b i l f o r r r . ,,.• flu&lt; f o p oi* w NO'H. '.&#13;
BBSS&#13;
Fs&gt;r N«urmlg;ia, n o t h i n g i a&#13;
k e t t * r t h a n Dr. M i l e s&#13;
Amti-Paln P i l l s&#13;
U s e d b y t h e u a a n d a&#13;
f#r a g e n e r a t i o n&#13;
Those who have suffered from&#13;
neuralgic paius need not be told&#13;
how neceisary it is "to secure relief.&#13;
The faucet way «ut of&#13;
neuralgia if to use Pr. Miles'&#13;
Aati-Pain PiU?. They Have relieved&#13;
M'flfrrcrs i'er ^o many&#13;
years that they lu.vc become a&#13;
household nrcessity.&#13;
"I have takta Dr. Miles' Aaii-IWn&#13;
TUlm for rive j . a r j aj.J tUey ar« the&#13;
only thina that do^H iae any gee*.&#13;
Th«y navo ieJic\(d n«uralf4&amp; in tttf&#13;
bead In nft#^a nontktei*. 1 hav* als4&#13;
taken tb«in for ih*unwitlsm, beadacne,&#13;
^ains in tue fcreaht, tcothadw,&#13;
earache and , ••:: r . the &gt;»owel« and&#13;
limb*. I lu.vo f"\v.)d r o t t i n g to&#13;
equal them :.r.u : i &lt; y s.'« *'l that Is&#13;
claimed for &lt;&gt; .n .&#13;
J. W. PKi •&lt;;&gt;•: Vii,i«' Splint*, Mo,&#13;
At all «ii-iitfrjia:,—:".&lt; ^otes re centt.&#13;
Never soUJ in bu!k» i&#13;
MILES MEDICAL- CO,, Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
(-1&#13;
I BUY IT NOW!&#13;
I ! :&lt; ' I i' -"i\ U i ' l ; . " &gt;:1 1 \ a l i t ; i &gt; \ :i'A . &lt; •'. M i&#13;
ai\' all eontrolled b y f &gt;Ii\ •&gt;.r. Kv&lt;&#13;
fninotis in their d a y - i i e w r I-;ad&#13;
il p u t s Hii whol* i untrol (j!&#13;
little fingers &lt;&gt;f the rio-ji; and Vft&#13;
write them all with only 2^ U"-'\-&gt;,&#13;
standard t y p e w r i t e r m a d e&#13;
pre \ He&#13;
l e l i i l e&#13;
1,&#13;
OnlicMial Duplex Shift&#13;
• i i . e :'&#13;
• . t e &lt; l&#13;
i&#13;
;t.&#13;
1 lett&lt;M"s ait&lt;l (diaraeier&#13;
] . a n d s&#13;
lie Jc-a&#13;
. l j . i n t l&#13;
And it&#13;
t&lt;&gt; o]h'r;\'&#13;
- m ill'1&#13;
t &gt; y o' i&#13;
o1' a u v&#13;
Y e s&#13;
It&#13;
' 0.&#13;
the'&#13;
/7".&#13;
crowning t\pewriter t n n m p t h&#13;
M i l l - i&#13;
Kor ma.kei'&gt; lia\ r&#13;
chine. A n«.l 01i\&#13;
H i '•&lt; i i i i i : - \ ' i ' a&#13;
t s ' i \ &lt;T a i i i'&lt;' '&#13;
' iia&gt; wui'i aira&#13;
g a v i * t In wnrn&#13;
T h e r e is&#13;
Oliver "9;&#13;
kitten will&#13;
i N t i r&#13;
truly no e&gt;tht1:" lyje&#13;
T h i n k of t«Mnr• 71&#13;
run the kcv&gt;.&#13;
re1 in attain i In,.-.&#13;
]. a &gt; We s c o r e d&#13;
it iiiir.&#13;
t' T ( e l t '[\ i"t ii ] ik'i&#13;
li.C"hl t h a t t h e&#13;
IS H K R E&#13;
•.\*]iec|-*jvi ii.&#13;
i d e a l&#13;
w h e n&#13;
t i l l s&#13;
(• a (.i&#13;
V, '&#13;
new&#13;
ol&#13;
rrri&#13;
* ? - .&#13;
17c a Day!R f n e n i h e r t!ri&gt; lirand-new Oliver&#13;
is the1 greatest value c\-er uiveu in a&#13;
* t&#13;
t y p e w r i t e r .&#13;
ble w r i t i n g .&#13;
Tt has all&#13;
a u t o m a t i c&#13;
our previous special inventh'ms—vi.si-&#13;
&gt;paeer. Tii ounce toutch—." .s -•';•- ^ -&#13;
tioqai Duplex S*if:. z-ier ~o''r ~''&lt; ' ~r-'s a n d a l P h e s c&#13;
o t h e r new-day fpaturcs.&#13;
Yetwo h a v e decided to sWl it t» e v e r y o n e e v e r y w h e r e&#13;
o n o u r f a r a o n s ]&gt;ayment p l a n — T " ;: r v r&lt;. jzj N o w every&#13;
w r i t e r r a n easily afPordto h a v e thi* world's c r a c k visible&#13;
w r i t e r w i ' h i h e famous P R T N T Y P E . that w r i t e s like print&#13;
included F K K E if d e s h v d .&#13;
Is-Osy write for full Details. i ^ ^ L w&#13;
his marvel of writing machines See why typists.&#13;
employers, and individuals everywhe * are flocking to the&#13;
Ottrer^ Jfuat mail a }x&gt;stal at onoe. No obligation. It's&#13;
a pteasojeior us to tell yon about it. Seeing Is believing—&#13;
Drop in attfceDISPATCH OFFICE aud see for yourself&#13;
his X«w Model Oliver "9.v&#13;
.,.-^ ATtfEWRITER CO. i^fifCVJO, ILL. ^&#13;
S \ N f 0 III s ,&#13;
mn:a '-^^s ;\ IJU ntarr ;a-i'i:-b:"Me ^eu;K ;&#13;
may !&gt;'•• s i v c l from hpoLHn^, la m a n ; j&#13;
'"•a.ses, ospc'-iiiliy with frait. a farmer !&#13;
Is forred t&gt;i ;et his produr-t lie &lt;m tlie &gt;&#13;
ground r.ud n"»t. boonuso ' h e j-rice offer- j&#13;
od doe* iaot pay t h e expense of picking,&#13;
packing and shipping ^° t b e com- ;&#13;
mis.-!'MI m r r r h a n t . A pri^'ate cold stor j&#13;
age system would enable him to pick '•,&#13;
Ms freit in ^e^-03i, when t h e market&#13;
nrir-e was low, and stnro it until he re- i&#13;
•"^Ived his riwn price.&#13;
lAir sr.v.h lnirposos irh.'etiae Wv mak- i&#13;
In;: maohincs for rcfrigernt.iu^ plants j&#13;
'e prrferaele. The motor applied to j&#13;
j's C'Cpilpment can be arranged to start j&#13;
and stop automntieally a n d will Uveyi i&#13;
tlic remporaturc in t h e cold storage !&#13;
r.iom vrlrhLi a few di'irv*-'^ of that de- |&#13;
Piieo.&#13;
i-'or lfrii:atioii purposes d e trii: pumps j&#13;
are o/ s^reat porvire, wholher on a lar^re i&#13;
or ii small sonic. As these pumps -work j&#13;
only in t.ertaia seasons of the ypftr and I&#13;
ar reriain hours of the dny public perv- j&#13;
ice corporations have recognized of j&#13;
Tate t h a t they are a means of keeping &gt;&#13;
up ft uniform povrer d e m a n d on t h e&#13;
plant, a n d consequently energy for this&#13;
pTirpoHc Ig offered fit exceptionally low&#13;
rotes. T h e motor driven pumps may&#13;
h* staflonnry or portable-&#13;
Large smns nre yearly Kp^nt for irrigation&#13;
pnrpi&gt;«f^, w a t e r w a y s regulation&#13;
rtTid drainage systems a n d seemingly&#13;
ia ftiTUott all cases without due consideration&#13;
for t b e possibilities of utilising&#13;
the energy of tbe w a t e r for generating&#13;
an elsetrie c u r r e n t whicfi m i g h t adTan-&#13;
• a f a o n i l y ht ns*d for farming or m r a l&#13;
fndnstrie*.&#13;
Ni«t P a i n t s of t h e Law.&#13;
"Biassed a r e tne meek, for fbey shall&#13;
inherit tbe e a r t h . " quoted tbe good deacon.&#13;
WATCH CHILD'S COUGH&#13;
c'olde, r u n n i n g of noae, continued&#13;
irritation of t h e m u c o u s m e m b r a n e&#13;
if n e g l e c t e d m a y m e a n C a t a r r h later&#13;
Doii'i t a k e t h e chancea—do&#13;
s o m e t h i n g for y o u r child! Children&#13;
will n o t t a k e e v e r y m e d i c i n e , b u t&#13;
the., ^ i l l t a k e D r . k i n g ' s New Discovery&#13;
ar.d w i t h o u t bribing o r teasing.&#13;
\m a i w e e t p l e a s a n t T a r S y m p&#13;
and bo cficctive. J u s t l a x a t i v e enough&#13;
to e l i m i n a t e t h e w a a t e poisons. Almost&#13;
t h e first, d o s e helps. A l w a y s prepared,&#13;
n o m i x i n g or fussing, .lust&#13;
ask your d r u g g i s t f o r Dr. K i n g ' s&#13;
New Discovery. I t -will safeguard&#13;
your child a g a i n s t serious a i l m e n t s&#13;
r e s u l t i n g from colds.&#13;
He Uses the Safe and&#13;
Sure Thing at //erne&#13;
;; i . i : . ' •&#13;
: - ! l . i * ? f . . - :&#13;
platform two-thirds of the v,-ay \\\\ \\ic&#13;
barirl, under the tlaitch. T w o iloors&#13;
with several i.ests each a r e provided.&#13;
tmd the house is large enough to 1ml !&#13;
quite a flock.&#13;
This dovecot a t t r a c t s the attention &lt; :'&#13;
every passerby ;md adds a more nttr:ilive&#13;
touch to t h o barnyard. Reinu so&#13;
ine_\i&gt;eii5ive a n d easy t o make it is r&#13;
possibHity on every farm. — Tounri"&#13;
frentloman.&#13;
t&#13;
4&gt;&#13;
| POULTRY NOTES. i&#13;
Better keep one good hen t h a n t h r e e j&#13;
t h a t you have your doubts a b o u t \&#13;
If m e a t aeraps a r e fed to t h e poultry 1&#13;
better see t h a t they a r e not too old. i&#13;
Ten dropH of carbolic a d d t o a gal- i&#13;
Ion of drink w a t e r makes a good dia- I&#13;
ease preventive when cholera threaten*.&#13;
!&#13;
, Kxeited men and women m a k e CX- ;&#13;
cited birds, a n d that has a bad effect [&#13;
on the egg producing mechanism of t h e&#13;
VIrd*. . j&#13;
fbarcoal nud grit sboul^ lie kept !&#13;
M% . where tbe tov?\* can iiave aces— to h&#13;
«JJicy may inherit it, aU rigbt," ^ { ^ , , , a t n l l { f m c ^ T i i e y ' m a p f *&#13;
T«dtJr« ^'bjmlf nfl « ctire for IndlCM- '&#13;
P. A. Efird, Conejo. Calif., writes a s&#13;
follows:—"l have sold Foley's Honey'&#13;
and Tar Compound and also other line9&#13;
of cough medicines for a number of&#13;
years, b u t ' never UPC anvthlng but&#13;
Foley's Honey a n d Tar Co:r.pound for&#13;
my family or myself, a s I find it produces&#13;
t h e be^t results, always curts&#13;
severe colds a n d sore chest cud does&#13;
not contain opiates or other hr.rmi'ul&#13;
drugs."&#13;
Unthinking and careless people m&#13;
lect their coughs and colds, not rea'&#13;
Ing how they weaken t h e system a,&#13;
lower the vital resistance to such grai&#13;
diseases a s bronchitis pleurisy al&#13;
even pneumonia. ,, ,y „.&#13;
For promptly averting serious r*«***&#13;
suits from a cold. u«^e Foley's Honey&#13;
and Tar Compound. Tt spreads a healing&#13;
soothing influence over r aw in-&#13;
Jamed surfaces, eases tightness and&#13;
soreness of chest, helps croup, wl&#13;
ing cough, stuffy wheexy breat&#13;
bronchial and la arippe cough?,&#13;
w w w S r s r y wssr la a frlsad. -•••. ^¾&#13;
**FOP Safe 6y:i»ywhe*t'&#13;
OVER 6 5 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
^&#13;
:"\*1&#13;
&gt; 1 -&#13;
m&#13;
1**•**•:•*.'* n-.&#13;
$ * tlie^hacksiiiler, "but theyvn«t&#13;
•jnlckff iwtwftam our &lt;*P„'W«ti^ftes^. .-,—.,-&#13;
Mnit Uf9. oldest aceiir; foriiei»rir#lieftwf*.&#13;
Palrnu taken tTrouth ICsna | « a m i M&#13;
tperi*l uoticfi without CSSTM, l a t i S ^ Scientific /ftarkm&#13;
-&gt;&#13;
&lt;v&#13;
'•Ww^TsteS ••Alt*&#13;
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•jmaesJSt. i . -'</text>
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                <text>March 15, 1916 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>ckney,. Livingston County, Michigan, Wednesday, Marcir^i&amp;rJ$$*::;;':v:^l^p^&#13;
1 • •—tjpw^nw^lf^—m\ 1 ! • 1 1 1 1 wuiiiiiiw 11,11 — "'**&#13;
S^: i*t • ' . a.&#13;
• &gt; : « " * &amp;&#13;
FELLOWSHIP&#13;
RALLY&#13;
EXCHANGE&#13;
CLIPPINGS&#13;
i&#13;
At- the Pinclrney Conftl ^ ^ * ' l"*V?f* , P O m&#13;
Church March 29th N«l«hb«rin*Town»&#13;
FOR SPRING 1916&#13;
We are Showing a Very Large Assortment of&#13;
Ladies' Suits? C o a t s&#13;
*&#13;
Fni'oniMi Confertmce.&#13;
Aii cuuicii meoibei'S a u d oSicis."..,&#13;
}..r,, ,-v-hooi workers a r e i n -&#13;
- L- ' I I I .&#13;
p. m.&#13;
Fellowship S a p p e r .&#13;
welcome to all.&#13;
Platioi'in&#13;
&lt;J p . Li:&#13;
&lt;"ordia&#13;
7 ::J0&#13;
\. .leu a t^ti.'ii of eit'eciive Bpeakers | basement&#13;
r.ii'.ler th-.- HMCiei-ssiiip of Rev. -• building,&#13;
Supt. Mo D o a g a l w h o h a s&#13;
been a t the head of t h e B r i g h t o n&#13;
schoola for the past t h r e e years,&#13;
ha8 tendered his resignation, to&#13;
tak3 efi'ect at t h e close of t h e&#13;
school year. -Brighton Argils.&#13;
Flarenden ^V liearlaley, proneetiuy,&#13;
|pi«ietors of the pool room in t h e&#13;
of tho Wilkinsonia&#13;
^-ere before J u s t i c e :&#13;
F?-i»7&#13;
^ * £ . AVITi&#13;
Skirts ^&gt; ^T H! Wm I.&#13;
^ ^ ^B^iJBjiiHBJi&#13;
i W i t&#13;
New and U-to-Dat^. Not an oUl ^-u i H J J B&#13;
mar the beauty of the Ladies Department&#13;
to&#13;
i^ioyd of Ann Arbor will speak on&#13;
subjects of ' i:n&lt;'ly bn* rest.&#13;
•ome.&#13;
Witherell last evening&#13;
with allowing niinors to&#13;
A Lively Runaway&#13;
charged&#13;
frequent&#13;
ptac'-1 (it t)usiness. T h e y ;&#13;
plead guilty and M r . Beardtdey'&#13;
, svaa fined .^25 and costs. .-Chelsea '&#13;
T r i b u n e ;&#13;
A v e r y lively runaway occurred , Chelsea is to have one of t h e&#13;
t t i c d a s t MondaN eveuiug, when ] bebt bands in t h e state. Such j&#13;
LeeBennett, who waa Jrivin^ the i is the asaurance given us by t h e '&#13;
bus back f i r - ! the 7:27 train, ^ot Lewis S p r i n g and AxDe Co., a n d ;&#13;
off to romov- a few of the s u r p l u s ; in view of the fact that t h e band&#13;
kids from he- bacK of t h e vehicle. , is already a reality, this is n o&#13;
The team stalled to run when he .hollow promise.--Tribune.&#13;
j u m p e d of! and he was unable to &gt; T h e m e m b e r s of the : U B I Mich, I&#13;
&lt;jatcb hold of the bus again. T h e ; i n f a u t r y were called to J a c k s o n , !&#13;
team ran through town not doing | Wednesday to appear for govern-]&#13;
any damage till they were off from | mentfi\ impaction before a regu- i&#13;
M a i n St., when they knocked &gt;ia r a r m y 0 f f i c e r . T h e r e are r a - j&#13;
down several hitching posts, ft more th»t Ihe g u a r d i will b e sent j&#13;
t t U p h o n e pole a n d an «l«ctric t o t b e Mexican border a n d the I&#13;
light pole, letting the w i r w down c o m p a a y j , b t i n g raoraited t o i t t |&#13;
mcctoss t h e road ahd s m a i b i n g the f u l l effioienoy.--Btookbvilsg€&gt; Brief. I&#13;
window glaas a n d t o n g u e o u t of § u n I&#13;
Die bus. T h e !»or#«» w#re only i&#13;
alightly iDJar§d. j&#13;
Very Beautiful&#13;
Tailored Suits&#13;
: Faahioncd_from w c \ j&#13;
ceedingly beautiful_material.&#13;
( . .&#13;
In New, Plain&#13;
and Novelty Effect&#13;
*&#13;
Hansomely tailored and&#13;
verv attractive.&#13;
:j#*u m&#13;
M&#13;
: ^&#13;
"*7!S&#13;
Poverties Hi&#13;
Sprmg Coals&#13;
Uur s;&lt;..-w Splint, Siylcs&#13;
show the] effective use&#13;
.,rf rew iVijtieria!^ in&#13;
Hansome Plain&#13;
Cloths and Unique&#13;
Checks and Plaids&#13;
very becoming .iud&#13;
distinctive.&#13;
•"».&#13;
A *'&#13;
School Notts&#13;
Plan \o send your boy or y;irt to&#13;
H i g h School next year. If you&#13;
do not live in the district see that&#13;
youi' school district pays his tuition.&#13;
The child cannot afford to&#13;
mifie a good education,&#13;
Supt, Doyle has made application&#13;
to the University of Michigan&#13;
to be placed on the accredited&#13;
list, this co&#13;
school on a p&#13;
the state.&#13;
ome Talent A Suecetft&#13;
The I&#13;
i&#13;
h o s e U l e o t play} given&#13;
i by t he T o u n g people £of t h e&#13;
j Cony'J Sunday school wai declared&#13;
a success in every way.&#13;
T h e young people have p u t in&#13;
several weeks of hard practising&#13;
and carried out their parts in fine&#13;
shape, receiving many compliments&#13;
on their ability to do RO.&#13;
Specialties were introduced be-&#13;
. tween acts consisting of piano t&#13;
completed, puke t h e U u e t t g a n d also vocal d u e t U b y | E d&#13;
a r with t h e best i n : \ « ; u i a v\nr*uo* kr ir^ «&gt;&gt;,! M r a&#13;
New a&amp;i Elegant Spring Skirtn and Waibts&#13;
kfcty a i t correct in style. They are becoming, unel&gt; made. Made from ?he m o s t ^ t j&#13;
| N | n t U u l materials a n d t h e y are not expensive. | | |&#13;
New spring Goods ia Every Department ^&#13;
GOODNOW &amp; GARTRELL Howell, Mich.&#13;
rI?lie S t o r e rI"o lJ ieit«e&#13;
Notice.&#13;
Mies Florence Kioe a n d Mrs.&#13;
F r e d Swarthout, which were very&#13;
improvements in t h e library, much enjoyed, About $30 was&#13;
and t h e laboratories ure being ' cleared.&#13;
iliscussed. . 4 , _ » • .* • • _&#13;
A goo-1 rrowd e n d a very n i c s&#13;
School closes Friday for a ; rime was reported b y all w h o a t - .&#13;
week's vacation. • tended the dance. T h e r.mfic wa»&#13;
furnished b y r h e P i n c k n e y&#13;
Orchestra Resisted l')y *'Mes8ers&#13;
Culvert Mid (i-leason, a (.'."&gt;vuPt&#13;
P u r e Bred Percheon Stallion,&#13;
naonton, Black, wfc. 10CK). Will&#13;
make the season of 101G a r j j l o to&#13;
insure.&#13;
Geo, Roclie.&#13;
Algebra 0 is rapidly mastering&#13;
simultaneous equations.&#13;
Madeline Bowmen returned to&#13;
B'/;.:oo! la«t Mon 1 v .&#13;
U P,\ i].'1 ( '-'U'i' i.n- i 1 !•] ; r \ ' 3 . 1 M -&#13;
player :i;vl trap d r u m m e r fi'om&#13;
ETowidl. A i n u t 20 numljer:- w-'vo&#13;
I i. Church.&#13;
Will ba a t the Pinckney Hotel&#13;
F r i d a y a s d S a t u r d a y . Mar. 31 a n d&#13;
April l e i AH eyee correctly iif -&#13;
ted. Pi-ieea reasonable, fciiamina!&#13;
in- free, J . C H &amp; H C R .&#13;
u&#13;
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We Always Stlgpt&#13;
t • '•'&#13;
,&#13;
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L :,.• r» s' i^w r . 'i&gt;.s&#13;
,-v *o ri r'ouri t \- cr.rtifica&#13;
- - . i - nreivnra-&#13;
Walter ( 'lintDM visits&#13;
Ja-t woek.&#13;
Soiin1 of t,li*&gt; i)nvs ar^&#13;
baseball,&#13;
.sch 0 0&#13;
dki t Lf&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
Tin' Pliis Ultra Class w;-;&#13;
* i i Mik P. 1:1 t h oae 'w ho in an y&#13;
helped fo inqke t h e 'f&gt;Tay,&#13;
Cnuntr.v Minister" fi success.&#13;
IT C. V., P r e .&#13;
Whisky and Brandy&#13;
Are Not Drugs&#13;
W i. ,1 7 -.,-1&#13;
•l'he&#13;
d.-ut.&#13;
o&#13;
dii 1 oi"oi;iy vtu&#13;
P.. the brew-M'a an&#13;
rlv&gt; ;• v.nV r\' tais-- 1&#13;
Dexter Couple Both&#13;
Die the Same Day&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
H. D, Brown IIRS purchaserl a&#13;
F o r d Oar.&#13;
o , eave&#13;
the P .&#13;
isti) ler.^&#13;
•nighty&#13;
wail and a ci ; o'i politic.-?. S-") \h^&#13;
i&gt;ov&lt;-mrn'*n* was iiuporvnn-1 HUCceflsfnlly&#13;
to order a new comraitt^'&#13;
to work on the matter.&#13;
T h e report of the second committee&#13;
has just bean made publkv.&#13;
S&#13;
If&#13;
••il&#13;
:x&#13;
v£-&#13;
W&#13;
m&gt; Who&#13;
,w&#13;
I&#13;
I n s t e a d of p u t t i n g booze back i n -&#13;
Clyde D u n n i a g ' a family ha^eS t o t h # TJ^ 9 i p^ i t h l l H dropped it&#13;
e r e * from t h e National F o r m a l -&#13;
0 HOCOL.&#13;
J . M Blanckard a n d wife o f ; t h e w h j h&#13;
D e x t t r both died a t their home xt T . , ,&#13;
ia D e x t e r last Friday a n d t h e Mrs. ^ t t r r t i t s b b s t o l i t « p | M y .&#13;
fnaeral t e r r i c e s were held Mon- p * r t o f " ' * h m r&#13;
day. N e p h r i t e s was t h e cause of. While at the farm, Mrs. M. A.&#13;
M r . Blaockard^s death, Cancer of j D &lt; i v i * r e c e i v e ! word of t b * death&#13;
Mrs. Biaachard's. Mr. Blanchard ; °f her brother, W a r r e n Hnrguss.&#13;
was the proprietor of t h e Dex*er j Miss Bessie Ellis ia entertaining&#13;
F l o o r i n g Mill. ' b«»r sinter.&#13;
Mrs. E, W. Konneifer U epen&lt;lfng&#13;
a few days with her parents.&#13;
I a other words, the druggtste of&#13;
t a e U l i t e d fttates h a r e deeided&#13;
t h a t whUky and b r a n d y have n o t&#13;
the slightest medicinal ralne.&#13;
A chnrf tftjctn Dr Mills' I AXiiUve Tab-&#13;
11 i&#13;
May 17 is t h e ilate, t h e O p e r a&#13;
Honae t h e place, and t h e Mattelman&#13;
Orchestra, of Jackson, t h e&#13;
occasion fot o u r meeting t&gt; «*uj&#13;
° y a giee^sau-jicAl feast.&#13;
5. G-. 3^: "IP&#13;
' * . * ) &gt; -&#13;
~M&#13;
• : " 4 j&#13;
;i335£3^Sv' N^IS ipwf*&#13;
:^^&#13;
&amp;&amp;*&#13;
PB^TO&#13;
? M ^ -&#13;
:¾^&#13;
-. -**• ^:^-&#13;
$?•'&#13;
• ' ^ :&#13;
HTHREE years have made the movement successful in hun-&#13;
43dreds of cities and towns. Every farmer should apply the&#13;
idea to his premises. How it improves rental property,&#13;
• e ^&#13;
3¾&#13;
;*v- ;*&#13;
wr.&#13;
,(f&#13;
; • &gt; # . • *&#13;
?f*v-&#13;
The upper picture shows a vacant lot in a southern town before a Clean Up and Paint Up campaign.&#13;
It was rid of all the trash by negro children in the neighborhood. Then they planted a&#13;
vegetable and flower garden on the plot and had fine success with the enterprise. Can't we do&#13;
something equally good with some of the vacant lot eyesores in this town? The lower picture&#13;
§hows what can be done with a ragged, good-for-nothing side yard. It took a great deal of persuasion&#13;
to wake up the owners and tenants of the property, but once aroused they made up for&#13;
lost time—as the neat garden indicates. This is a lesson for us.&#13;
F%&#13;
N UP and Paint Up"&#13;
bat become a nation-wide&#13;
slogan in the Interests of&#13;
homes and towns beautiful&#13;
since Allen W. Clark, a St. Louis&#13;
publisher, organized the National&#13;
"Clean Up and Paint Up" campaign&#13;
bureau in May, 1912. Mr, Clark, for&#13;
many years Identified with the Amen-&#13;
•can paint trade, sought to arouse and&#13;
organise Into a single national moven&#13;
e a t the "clean up" spirit which stirs&#13;
each spring in every normal man and&#13;
voman and nearly erery thriving com*&#13;
jneeity.&#13;
The first year something like LOCK)&#13;
t o v s * aad cities conducted local clean&#13;
'ip Mid paint up campaigns based on&#13;
jtlftas sugfested by the national bu-&#13;
7«*a. This number baa increased each&#13;
-fmrmtfl in 1915 approximately 6,000&#13;
- _ toejnl campaigns were organised. Bach&#13;
\ &gt; ^ « f ttiose took the form of a real ciric&#13;
Where Everybody Help*,&#13;
City and town officials, woman's&#13;
lore, boards of trade, health&#13;
.fire insurance aad Art sve»&#13;
iera, school&#13;
the lose! the mmffsntt a&#13;
more^ jMMffcy east more&#13;
fcidlridual propincrease*,&#13;
ioaa&#13;
was&#13;
of clean-&#13;
•rifts to any&#13;
tewaa eesnoet&#13;
••-&#13;
tee lajiaeel&#13;
ba&#13;
1&#13;
has been brought In and disease driven&#13;
out.&#13;
The creator gave to the country a&#13;
peculiar charm. Beauty—beauty of&#13;
blade and blossom, of hill and hollow,&#13;
of daydawn and sunset—comes as the&#13;
birthright of every person who is country&#13;
born. In the springtime nature&#13;
writes in pink her orchard proclamation&#13;
of plenty, and in late summer and&#13;
fall time fills the fields with grains of&#13;
gold. Sometimes civilisation has cluttered,&#13;
but never has nature. Whatever&#13;
there is of ugliness in the great out of&#13;
doors is man made.&#13;
Means Better Health.&#13;
Beauty is a part of the farmer's unearned&#13;
increment Health, too. should&#13;
be for him and his—health and happiness,&#13;
best of ancient blessings so often&#13;
wished for friends. Because we&#13;
"absorb environments," a farm clean&#13;
up day may result In better living,&#13;
higher thinking—yes, and better&#13;
health. It may also play no small&#13;
part in the solution of a big problem.&#13;
of keeping on the farms of the&#13;
a large number of agiicultura&#13;
»x_ trained and efficient men and&#13;
Such as these will find in&#13;
their work not only a living, but a&#13;
life. They will share in the spirit of&#13;
joy in the excellence of production.&#13;
There is much work for a farm&#13;
clean up day. It may be that there&#13;
are disease breeding places that need&#13;
attention. The appearance of the barn&#13;
yard—often such as to suggest that&#13;
various old vehicles and farm implements&#13;
had taken fright and backed&#13;
into the corners—might be changed&#13;
tor the better. Maybe there 1s a com&#13;
poet heap—rich in nitrogen, phosphorus&#13;
and potassium and vahiable as&#13;
a fertiliser if spread over the fields,&#13;
but in its present place an incubator&#13;
for Insects and dangeroua as a possible&#13;
aouree of fever.&#13;
Flowers and New Paint.&#13;
If mother is fond of flowers, and&#13;
usually the (a, the farm clean up day&#13;
might mean a new flower bed or perhapa&#13;
a fence fixed so as to protect aa&#13;
old one. There may be a gate that too&#13;
long has sagged and creaked or thai&#13;
needs painting, and it so the R F. D.&#13;
mail box is sure to need brightening&#13;
up. Whitewash on poultry or other&#13;
buildings will work wonders. Before&#13;
the day's work is done, prompted by a&#13;
new pride in the place. It may be that&#13;
the farmer will display the farm name&#13;
near the main entrance to the place.&#13;
States, counties, a communities,&#13;
churches, schools or farmer!' clube&#13;
may proclaim farm clean op days, but&#13;
best of all each Individual farmer may&#13;
have his own.&#13;
Don't Neglect to Paint.&#13;
it is apparent to even the casual&#13;
observer that many property ownere&#13;
let their rented houses, or houaee for&#13;
rent, go too long without painting.&#13;
This neglect makes the houses look&#13;
unsightly but also hastens the day of&#13;
decay. A little paint ts a good investment&#13;
from every viewpoint. It preserves&#13;
the wood and it keeps the&#13;
houses rented. The writer visited an&#13;
niinois town last spring and after a&#13;
careful Observation found not a single&#13;
house which was not well and fairly&#13;
recently painted. There had just been&#13;
a clean up aad paint up campaign.&#13;
The Impreasion left was one or a&#13;
thriving town where a man would like&#13;
to live and bring up a family. The&#13;
yards were well kept, with lawns,&#13;
flower beds and shrubbery, and each&#13;
nouseholder seemed -to vie with his&#13;
neighbor in making his place look attractive.&#13;
New Sterilizing Agent.&#13;
German scientists have found that&#13;
glycerin is a valuable sterilising&#13;
agent Various deadly germs, whea&#13;
heated In it to a temperature of 148&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit, were completely&#13;
killed in one minute. This process is&#13;
particularly valuable for sterittxlng&#13;
surgical instruments, for the reason&#13;
that the metal ia not attacked nor hi&#13;
the temper affected. Rubber tubes&#13;
can be sterilised in it, aad, instead of&#13;
being Injured, the elasticity of those&#13;
which have become tftttja at&#13;
by tfce treatment&#13;
KIDNEYS CLOG UP FROM&#13;
EATING TOO MUCH MEAT&#13;
Take Tsbiespoonfut of Salts If Back&#13;
Hurts pr Bladder Bothers—Meat&#13;
. Forms Uric Acid.&#13;
We are a nation of meat eaters and&#13;
our blood is filled with uric acid, says&#13;
a well-known authority, who warns us&#13;
to be constantly on guard against kidney&#13;
trouble.&#13;
The kidneys do their utmost to free&#13;
the blood of this irritating acid, but&#13;
become weak from the overwork;&#13;
they get sluggish; the eliminative tisanes&#13;
clog and thus the waste is retained&#13;
In the blood to poison the enure&#13;
system.&#13;
When your kidneys ache and feel&#13;
like lumps of lead, and you have stinging&#13;
pains in the back or the urine is&#13;
cloudy, full of sediment, or the blad^&#13;
tier ia irritable, obliging yoa to seek&#13;
relief during the night; when you have&#13;
severe headaches, nervous and dizzy&#13;
spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or&#13;
rheumatism in bad weather, get from&#13;
your pharmacist about four ounces of&#13;
Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a&#13;
glass of water before breakfast each&#13;
morning and in a few days your kidneys&#13;
will act fine. This famous salts&#13;
Is made from the acid of grapes and&#13;
lemon juice, combined with Hthia, and&#13;
has been used for generations to flush&#13;
jtnd stimulate clogged kidneys, to neutralize&#13;
the acids in urine so It is no&#13;
longer a source of Irritation, thus ending&#13;
urinary and bladder disorders.&#13;
Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot&#13;
mjure; makes a delightful effervescent&#13;
Hthia-water drink, and nobody&#13;
«can make a mistake by taking a little&#13;
occasionally to keep the kidneys clean&#13;
and active.—Adv.&#13;
Stepping on a banana p^el has en&#13;
abled a lot of men to go their length.&#13;
FIERY RED PIMPLES&#13;
Soothed and Healed by Cuticura Soap&#13;
and Ointment. Trial Free.&#13;
RHEUMATIC PAINS&#13;
Get a box of true Mustarine in -the&#13;
original yellow box for about 2$ c«ata&#13;
at drugg^sta. Rub it on the Inflamed&#13;
Joints or muscles, and that almost unbearable&#13;
*goay will go at once.&#13;
No rheumatic sufferer can afford to&#13;
be without true MunUrine. for it never&#13;
fulls to give b leased relief. Use it tor&#13;
aches or pain* anywhere, and for aore&#13;
throat, bronchitis and pleurisy. There's&#13;
relief In every rub. It Stops pain aad&#13;
congestion. True Mustarine 1a mads b /&#13;
Begy Medicine Co., Kocaestor, ft. X,&#13;
Inconsistent.&#13;
Jones—Is Brown a vegetarian?&#13;
Smith —Brown'' Well, hardly—why,&#13;
Browns an Elk!&#13;
Get This FREE Magnlflctnt&#13;
rABUSH&#13;
L^MotorCar&#13;
the Agtftcy for Yoor Territory&#13;
Get a Car Free and qualify to m a k e $3000&#13;
to 15000 a. rear and ap in the Automobile Badness.&#13;
A Postal brings fall details of this great&#13;
Free Auto Offer, write euick -* before yoor&#13;
territory is taken. Address me like tills—*»H»&#13;
fcttSSw President,&#13;
BUSH MOTOR COLLEOE, l a c '&#13;
B % B U T s i A l — H U B M ssjMBA^^sflBMsa&#13;
North Clark fctreet and CWcsse Avenue. CWcsoo. 111.&#13;
Make the Liver&#13;
Do its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten whea the liver te&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
MVER PILLS&#13;
gent'y Sutfirmly comj&#13;
f.il a lasy liver toi do its duty.&#13;
Cures Constipation,&#13;
In&gt;^&#13;
digestion,&#13;
Sick&#13;
Headache,'&#13;
and Distress After Eating.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICfc&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Smear the affected skin with Cuticura&#13;
Ointment on end of finger. Let it remain&#13;
five to ten minutes. Then wash&#13;
off with plenty of Cuticura Soap and&#13;
hot water. Dry without irritation.&#13;
Nothing like Cuticura for all skin&#13;
troubles from infancy to age.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere—Adv.&#13;
The people who never make mistakes&#13;
all reside in the cemetery.&#13;
a ^ Z *&#13;
., rUfekia'a—&#13;
HAIR BALSAM&#13;
A toUat preparation of m«rtl&#13;
BFeolr p aR teot aterkrdialo*a tCtto dlo*rn darftudt&#13;
~ »rerFa4«4Haftr,&#13;
Mo. fcnrf #LS0 at PriiCTrUta&#13;
Beauty to Graf or Faood]&#13;
Ladies, Beauty Is an Asset&#13;
that belongs to every woman. Nature bestows it&#13;
We perfect it. Write for FREB booklet that tells jroo&#13;
how. Heat PM* Dirtrisattar C*,. BM 3«4. L*raJe,flto&#13;
Invalid*&#13;
Now in Good Health Through Use&#13;
of Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. Say it is Household&#13;
Necessity. Doctor Called it a&#13;
Miracle.&#13;
, All women ought to know the wonderful effects of&#13;
taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound even on&#13;
those who seem hopelessly ill. Here are three actual cases:&#13;
Harrisbura, Penn.—w When I was single I suffered&#13;
a *reat deal from female weakness because&#13;
my work compelled me to stand all day. I took&#13;
Lydia £ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for that&#13;
and was made stronger by its use. After I was&#13;
married I took the Compound again for a female&#13;
trouble and after three months F passed what the&#13;
doctor called a growth. He said it was a miracle&#13;
that it came away as one generally goes under&#13;
the knife to have them removed. I never want to&#13;
be without your Compound in the house."—Mrs,&#13;
FRAXK KNOBL, 1642 Fulton St, Harrisburg, Perm.&#13;
Hardly Able to Move.&#13;
Albert Lea, Minn.—-"For about ft year I had sharp pains across&#13;
my back and hips and was hardly able to move around the house.&#13;
Mr head would ache and I was dizzy and had no appetite. After&#13;
taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and liver Pills, I&#13;
am feeling stronger than for years. I have ft little boy eight months&#13;
old and am doing my work all alone. I would not be without your&#13;
remedies in the house as there are none like them.'1—Mrs. ft K&#13;
YOST, 611 Water St, Albert Lea, Minn,&#13;
Three Doctor* Gave Her U p .&#13;
Pittsburg. Penn.—u Your medicine has helped&#13;
me wonderrully. When I was a girlJS years old I&#13;
was always siddrand delicate and suffered from&#13;
irregularities. Turee doctors gave me up and said&#13;
I would go into consumption. I took Lydia E.&#13;
Plnkhftort Vegetable Compound and with the third&#13;
bottle began to feel better. I soon became regular&#13;
and I cot strong and shortly after I was married.&#13;
Now I have two nice stout healthy children and am&#13;
able to work hard every day."—Mrs. CLUCBNTIMAI&#13;
Dc*RKrjKt,34 Gardner 8t,Troy Hill, Pittsburg, PennJ&#13;
*An women are lmrltsd towrite to Use t j d U B. Plakham Me*leiae&#13;
Cm* LJBB, Xftsft* for special ftdviee,-it will 1st eonfldesatlal.&#13;
1&#13;
v&#13;
Il^^fe&#13;
# * • '&#13;
^ :&#13;
* &amp;&#13;
&amp;V&#13;
*-&gt;-&gt; ^5^:¾ &amp; • • $?m&#13;
»;.&#13;
-* • \&#13;
r * ^ - * # v / » • • ; . * . ^ .&#13;
F**&#13;
Jlfe&#13;
. - • ^&#13;
•&gt;4Uj&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
i m w v o w w c «%w*&#13;
I \ n « t Contents 15 Fluid&#13;
9&lt;&gt;o DROPS&#13;
«s&#13;
AJXOHOJ.-3 PER CENT&#13;
A Vegetable rYepamfUft£&gt;rAssimnatingtue&#13;
Food and Regulating&#13;
the Storaactoand Bowels of&#13;
*0&#13;
fc*el&#13;
IF&#13;
Si,&#13;
«qcO&#13;
83&#13;
ll INFANTS -XHILORfcS&#13;
Promotes Digestion,Ch«rfulness&#13;
and Rest.Coatains neither&#13;
Opiiuu.Morphine uor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
fraf*ifQM. OcSMVEL PfTCSOf&#13;
**!?&amp;£"*'&#13;
WermfUeJ&#13;
CJariMadSugar&#13;
WwUcrynusi rlmwr&#13;
A perfect Remedy forCoiisftpatioft.&#13;
.SonrStoinaeh.Diarrhi&gt;ea,&#13;
Worms. Feverishiiess and&#13;
L O S S O F S I J B E P .&#13;
fac-Simile Signature at&#13;
THE CRNTAURCOMPAKT,&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
VI it m o n t h s «»I«t&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper&#13;
CUSTOM For Infanta and Children*&#13;
Mothers Know That&#13;
Genuine Castoria&#13;
Always&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of W&#13;
In&#13;
Use&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA T**« OIWTMJft OOMMMV, MtW VO»« «fTV.&#13;
•JV '.I - ' 'I,&#13;
DRINK HOT WATER AND RID&#13;
JOINTS OF RHEUMATIC RUST&#13;
---#.&#13;
(Conducted by the National Woman's&#13;
Christum Temperance Union.) Why rheumatism and lumbago sufferers should drink phosphated&#13;
hot water each morning before breakfast&#13;
DECREASE IN LIQUOR OUTPUT.&#13;
E f f e c t i v e a n s w e r to the c h a r g e made&#13;
by t h e liquor i n t e r e s t s that "Prohibition&#13;
doea not prohibit," ia furnished&#13;
by t h e report of C o m m i s s i o n e r Oeborn&#13;
of t h e internal r e v e n u e d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
for t h e fiscal year e n d i n g J u n e 1, 1915.&#13;
A c c o r d i n g to this report the manufact&#13;
u r e of both distilled and f e r m e n t e d&#13;
liquors h a s very materially d e c r e a s e d .&#13;
T h e production of distilled liquors,&#13;
e x c l u s i v e of fruit brandies, w a s 42,-&#13;
477,492.8 gallons less than for the prec&#13;
e d i n g year. T h e figures for 1914 were&#13;
174,611,645 g a l l o n s , and for 1915, 132,-&#13;
134,152.2. There haB been a decrease&#13;
of 6,358,744 in the n u m b e r of barrels&#13;
Of beer manufactured, the n u m b e r ot&#13;
barrels for 1944 being 66,105,445 and&#13;
for 1915, 59,746,701.&#13;
F o r t h e first three m o n t h s of this&#13;
fiscal year, for w h i c h figures h a v e&#13;
b e e n m a d e public, t h e r e is a l s o a sati&#13;
s f a c t o r y d e c r e a s e in the output of distilled&#13;
a n d f e r m e n t e d liquors as comp&#13;
a r e d w i t h t h e c o r r e s p o n d i n g t h r e e&#13;
m o n t h s of the previous year. Of ferm&#13;
e n t e d liquors the output for the first&#13;
t h r e e m o n t h s of the n e w fiscal y e a r&#13;
w a s 17,458,565 barrels, as c o m p a r e d&#13;
w i t h 19,181,605 for t h e s a m e m o n t h s&#13;
l a s t year. Of distilled liquors there&#13;
w e r e w i t h d r a w n during the first three&#13;
m o n t h s of t h e current fiscal y e a r 27,-&#13;
903,829 g a l l o n s , and for l a s t year 38,-&#13;
456,420 g a l l o n s .&#13;
RUST&#13;
O F&#13;
IRON/*&#13;
V&#13;
i&#13;
RUST or&#13;
HEUMATISM&#13;
-- K&#13;
'£**&#13;
No Treating. W h e r e t h e Money Goes.&#13;
"Flubdub is a Jolly sort of a chap. Teacher—If a farmer sold&#13;
A l w a y s a s k s you how the world 1B bushels of w h e a t for ¢1.17 a bu&#13;
treating you." what would he g e t ?&#13;
"But h e n e v e r offers to buy." B o y — A n a u t o m o b i l e .&#13;
1,479&#13;
sbel,&#13;
Efficiency built the Panama Canal, after inefficiency failed.&#13;
The efficiency of the Panama Canal doubled the effectiveness&#13;
of the V. S. Navy without adding a ship to it. It&#13;
took over 8,000 miies out of the trip from New York to&#13;
San Francisco and changed the highway between London&#13;
and Australia from Suez to Panama.&#13;
Efficiency insures against lost motion—it produces the utmost&#13;
service out of equipment and yields the finest product, at&#13;
the least cost. Certain-teed&#13;
Roofing&#13;
is an efficiency product&#13;
Every advantage that men, money and machinery can offer is used&#13;
to increase the production, maintain the quality and lower the cost.&#13;
Each of the General's enormous mills is advantageously located&#13;
to serve the ends of efficient manufacture and quick distribution.&#13;
Each is equipped with the most up-to-date machinery. Raw&#13;
materials are purchased in enormous quantities and far ahead of&#13;
the needs ©^manufacturing, thus guarding against increased&#13;
cost due to idle machinery. This also insures favorable buying,&#13;
and the pick of the market.&#13;
Expert chemists at each mill are employed to select and blend the&#13;
asphalts, and every roll of CERTAIN-TEED is made under&#13;
their watchful care.&#13;
CERTAIN-TEED resists the drying-out process so destructive&#13;
t*&gt; ordinary roofing, because the felt is thoroughly saturated with a&#13;
blend of soft asphalts, prepared under the formula of the General's&#13;
board of expert chemists. It is then coated with a blend of harder&#13;
asphalts, which keeps the inner saturation soft.- This makes a&#13;
roofing more pliable, and more impervious to the elements than&#13;
the harder, drier kind.&#13;
CERTAIN-TEED is made in roDs; also in slate-surfaced shingles.&#13;
There is a type of CERTAINTEED&#13;
for every kind of building,&#13;
with fiat or pitched roofs, from the&#13;
largest sky-scraper to the smallest&#13;
residence or out-building.&#13;
CERTAIN-TEED is guaranteed for&#13;
5, 10 or 15 years, according to pry&#13;
( 1 , 2 or 3). Experience proves that&#13;
it lasts longer.&#13;
General Roofing&#13;
IVortY*.&#13;
ALCOHOL AFFECTS A R T E R I E 8 .&#13;
T h e s t a t e m e n t t h a t "a m a n is a s&#13;
old a s h i s arteries" i s a s t r u e a s it is&#13;
familiar. T h e normal h e a l t h y artery&#13;
is e n d o w e d w i t h a w o n d e r f u l a m o u n t&#13;
of e l a s t i c i t y , s o t h a t it i s e a s i l y capable&#13;
of a c c o m m o d a t i n g v a r y i n g quant&#13;
i t i e s of blood a c c o r d i n g t o t h e req&#13;
u i r e m e n t s of the o c c a s i o n . W h e n the&#13;
heart p u m p s a n e w supply of blood&#13;
into the arteries, t h e y i m m e d i a t e l y exp&#13;
a n d t o r e c e i v e t h e additional blood,&#13;
a n d t h e n quickly c o n t r a c t again In&#13;
order to p a s s It on t h r o u g h t h e circul&#13;
a t o r y s y s t e m . H e r e a g a i n w e witn&#13;
e s s t h e hardening effects of alcohol,&#13;
w h i c h c a u s e s ati e v e r Increasing loss&#13;
of elasticity. T h e a r t e r i e s b e c o m e&#13;
hard and brittle, and In t h e c a s e of&#13;
strain are liable t o break, and t h u s&#13;
c a u s e a h e m o r r h a g e , s m a l l or large.&#13;
T h i s condition of t h e a r t e r i e s is k n o w n&#13;
a s a r t e r i o s c l e r o s i s ; and if a n artery&#13;
b u r s t s in the brain, t h e r e s u l t Is usu&#13;
a l l y a s t r o k e of a p o p l e x y , c a u s i n g&#13;
m o r e or l e s s p a r a l y s i s of o n e side of&#13;
t h e body. T h e e s c a p i n g blood forms&#13;
a clot, w h i c h s o p r e s s e s upon t h e&#13;
n e r v e cells as t o put t h e m out of&#13;
action, at least, for a t i m e , if not&#13;
p e r m a n e n t l y . It Is not n e c e s s a r y t o&#13;
s a y a p o p l e x y Is one of the s e r i o u s dise&#13;
a s e s , and It Is u n c o m m o n for a pers&#13;
o n to s u r v i v e a third s t r o k e . — D r . A.&#13;
B. Olsen.&#13;
J u s t a s coal, w h e n It burns, l e a v e s&#13;
b e h i n d a certain a m o u n t of incombustible&#13;
m a t e r i a l in the form of a s h e s , s o&#13;
t h e food and drink t a k e n day after day&#13;
l e a v e s in the a l i m e n t a r y canal a cert&#13;
a i n a m o u n t of indigestible material,&#13;
w h i c h if n o t c o m p l e t e l y e l i m i n a t e d&#13;
e a c h day, b e c o m e s food for t h e millions&#13;
of bacteria w h i c h infest t h e bowe&#13;
l s . F r o m this m a s s of left-over w a s t e&#13;
material, t o x i n s a n d ptomaine-like pois&#13;
o n s , called uric acid, is formed a n d&#13;
t h e n s u c k e d into the blood w h e r e It&#13;
c o n t i n u e s to circulate, collecting grain&#13;
by grain in t h e joints of the body&#13;
m u c h like rust c o l l e c t s on the h i n g e&#13;
a s s h o w n above.&#13;
Men and w o m e n w h o suffer from&#13;
l u m b a g o , r h e u m a t i s m or sore, stiff,&#13;
a c h i n g joints s h o u l d b e g i n drinking&#13;
p h o s p h a t e d hot w a t e r , not as a m e a n s&#13;
to m a g i c relief from pain, but to prev&#13;
e n t m o r e uric acid forming in t h e&#13;
s y s t e m . Before e a t i n g breakfast each&#13;
morning, drink a g l a s s of real hot&#13;
w a t e r with a teaspoonful of l i m e s t o n e&#13;
p h o s p h a t e in it. This will first neutrflltse&#13;
and then w a s h out n* the stomach,&#13;
liver, k i d n e y s and b o w e l s t h e previous&#13;
day's a c c u m u l a t i o n of t o x i n s a n d&#13;
p o i s o n s ; thus, c l e a n s i n g , s w e e t e n i n g ,&#13;
and f r e s h e n i n g t h e entire alimentarycanal,&#13;
e a c h morning, before p u t t i n g&#13;
more food into t h e s t o m a c h .&#13;
A quarter pound of l i m e s t o n e phosp&#13;
h a t e costB very little at t h e drug.&#13;
s t o r e hut is sufficient t o m a k e a n y&#13;
rheumatic cr l u m b a g o sufferer an en»&#13;
thusiaat on the m o r n i n g inside bath*.&#13;
Millions of people keep their joiiitS&gt;&lt;&#13;
free from t h e s e rheumatic acids b y&#13;
practicing this daily internal s a n i t a -&#13;
tion. A glass of hot w a t e r w i t h a teaspoonful&#13;
of l i m e s t o n e phosphate, drank&#13;
before breakfast, is wonderfully i n v i g -&#13;
orating; besides, it is an e x c e l l e n t&#13;
health m e a s u r e b e c a u s e it c l e a n s e s t h e&#13;
a l i m e n t a r y organs of all the w a s t e ,&#13;
g a s e s and sour f e r m e n t a t i o n s , m a k i n g&#13;
one look and feel clean, s w e e t a o 4 -&#13;
fresh all day. /*'&#13;
T h o s e who try this for o n e V f s t&#13;
may find t h e m s e l v e s f r e e front nfttfcv&#13;
h e a d a c h e s , c o n s t i p a t i o n , b i l i o u s S*-&#13;
tacks, saliowtiesa^ nasty fertftth. and&#13;
stomach aclditv.&#13;
3.&#13;
*&amp;*:•££••" i&#13;
P e o p l e w h o a l w a y s say what t h e y&#13;
think h a v e few friends.&#13;
Men and Women&#13;
Women as well as men are madf miserable&#13;
by kidney and bladder trouble. Dr.&#13;
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney&#13;
remedy, bs highly recommended by thousands.&#13;
Swamp-Root stands the hlghem for the&#13;
reason that so many people say It lias&#13;
proved to be Just the remedy needed In&#13;
thousands of even the most distressing&#13;
cases.&#13;
At druggists in 50c. and $1 00 sizes. You&#13;
may receive a sample size bottle of&#13;
Swamp-Root by Parcel Post, also a&#13;
pamphlet telling" you about It. Address&#13;
Dr. Kilmer &amp; Co., Blnghamton. N Y..&#13;
and enclose ten cents, also mention this&#13;
paper.&#13;
Prompt Relief&#13;
from the all-too-common ills of&#13;
the digestive organs — weak&#13;
stomach, torpid liver and inactive&#13;
bowels—is found in the&#13;
always safe, sure, quick-acting&#13;
BEECHAIVTS&#13;
PILLS&#13;
Urf M« S*U of Any M«Kci»» m tfc* Wo UL&#13;
5eU trwrwbvr*. la bo**a, 10*,, 26c.&#13;
;&gt;1&#13;
There's nothing like an obstacle for&#13;
g e t t i n g In a m a n s way.&#13;
Learn That Fascinating Art Hl«B PaiMiBf. be«t trade on earth lacreaa* foot&#13;
tmWk, W«taaeto rou ID 8months. Booktotf&#13;
Dm$L it, Wml—ir Sefceol Lettering, Toledo, i&#13;
PERIL IN MODERATE DRINKING.&#13;
D o c t o r Ploetz, editor of t h e A r c h l y&#13;
fur Rassen-und G e s e l l s c h a f t s b i o l o g i e ,&#13;
d e c l a r e s t h a t "it Is just t h e a v e r a g e&#13;
m o d e r a t e u s e of a l c o h o l w h i c h injures&#13;
t h e r a c e m o r e t h a n g e n u i n e drunkenn&#13;
e s s , s i n c e there is h e r e r e l a t i v e l y n o&#13;
e l i m i n a t i o n through s t e r i l i t y or infant&#13;
m o r t a l i t y a s is t h e c a s e w i t h t h e hard&#13;
drinker. Many w h o i m a g i n e t h e m -&#13;
s e l v e s in t h e c a t e g o r y of t h e w h o l l y&#13;
m o d e r a t e m u s t a c t u a l l y b e p l a c e d in a&#13;
l o w e r category. P r o m t h e s t a n d p o i n t&#13;
of r a c e h y g i e n e , a n a b s o l u t e end of&#13;
t h e drinking of a l c o h o l Is t h e m o s t desirable.&#13;
T h e g r e a t e s t n e e d is t h a t&#13;
t h e a v e r a g e 'moderate u s e ' should disa&#13;
p p e a r — t h a t is, d r u n k e n n e s s Is s e c -&#13;
o n d a r y . "&#13;
WITHOUT SALOON REVENUE.&#13;
Cadiz, the county seat of Harrison&#13;
county. Ohio, has been dry for nineteen&#13;
years and is said to be the wealthiest&#13;
town of Its else in the country*&#13;
If the wealth of Cadiz were divided&#13;
j equally to population, each man, woman&#13;
and child would hare $2,500. The&#13;
latest estimate of the wealth in the&#13;
three banks and the three building&#13;
and loan associations is $2,300,000.&#13;
Cadiz pays $23,000 annually for church&#13;
support and $17,000 for schools, be*&#13;
sides large sums for a library of 8,000&#13;
volumes, and a 40-acre park with&#13;
pavilion, grandstand, lake, race track,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Dm* Marise after B x y e n r c ta CalS,&#13;
Cutting Winds and Dust. It Restore*,&#13;
Refreshes and Promotes Eye Health,&#13;
Good for all E y e s that Need Care.&#13;
Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago,&#13;
Sends B y e Book on request.&#13;
All potatoes h a v e eyes, and s o m e&#13;
h a v e specs.&#13;
ToBuildUp&#13;
After Grippe, Colds&#13;
Bad Blood&#13;
T a k e a blood c l e a n s e r and alterative&#13;
that starts t h e liver and s t o m a c h into&#13;
v i g o r o u s action, called Dr. P i e r c e ' s&#13;
Golden Medical Discovery b e c a u s e of&#13;
o n e of its principal I n g r e d i e n t s — t h e&#13;
Golden Seal plant. It a s s i s t s t h e b o d y&#13;
to m a n u f a c t u r e rich red blood w h i c h&#13;
f e e d s t h e h e a r t — n e r v e s — b r a i n and&#13;
o r g a n s of t h e body, / h e organs w o r k&#13;
s m o o t h l y like m a c h i n e r y running in&#13;
oil. You feel clean, s t r o n g and strenuous.&#13;
B u y 'Medical D i s c o v e r y " tod&#13;
a y and in a f e w d a y s y o u will k n o w&#13;
t h a t the bad bloou is p a s s i n g out, a n d&#13;
n e w , rich, p u r e blood is filling&#13;
r e i n s and a r t e r i e s .&#13;
MFaBcntorrgyA LtoL wWiOs*O**L l l^ay: factory tor MSBftM&#13;
SUBS * co., itTa. r&#13;
IreetFrom&#13;
_oar&#13;
•l*&amp;. ,*&lt;.'*••&#13;
PATENTS:« Wat&#13;
ngton, D.&lt;&#13;
referaoc&#13;
W. N, U., DETROIT, NO. 13-191«.&#13;
It Is e a s i e r for s o m e men to m i l e&#13;
in a saloon than after reaching h o m e .&#13;
BACKACHE, LUMBAGO&#13;
Uric acid causes backache, paln#&#13;
here and there, rheumatism, gout,&#13;
gravel, neuralgia and sciatica. It was&#13;
Dr. Pierce who discovered a new&#13;
agent, called "Anurlc," which will&#13;
throw out and completely eradieatt)&#13;
this uric acid from the system. "Anuric"&#13;
is 37 times more potent than&#13;
ilthia, and consequently you need no*&#13;
longer fear muscular or articular rheu*&#13;
matlsm or gout, or many other dis-t&#13;
eases which are dopendent on uri©\&#13;
acid within the body.&#13;
Tf you feel that tired, worn-out^&#13;
feeling, backache, neuralgia, or If jow&#13;
sleep is disturbed by too frequent urination,&#13;
go to your best drug store and&#13;
ask for Doctor Pierce's Anuric Tablets,&#13;
full treatment 60c, or send M&gt;&#13;
cents for a trial pa&#13;
Tablets to Dr. Pierce,&#13;
• N. T.&#13;
''.'&gt;'.i &lt;&#13;
'M-4&#13;
-m&#13;
H»1&#13;
:.t\&#13;
G e n&#13;
w h i s t l e s to blow&#13;
they b e w&lt;&#13;
Throw Off Colds sod Treves* Grip.&#13;
W W B roe feel a eoldeoainc on. take LAXATTVB&#13;
haOMO QUiyifcm. I t r w o m w w ot . ^ , - - , - . - , _ To kc&#13;
Pierce's&#13;
liver,&#13;
About e v e r y t e n years an old joke | Only a&#13;
is given a n e w l e a s e of life. of his go""*&#13;
Company&#13;
c.&#13;
We are (^rtam-teed distributors, write us&#13;
KECHCftt PECK *&#13;
sfes^V;^&#13;
.&lt;• .&#13;
- 1 ^&#13;
for information.&#13;
IT&#13;
UP AGAINST MODERN BUSINESS.&#13;
It isn't the crank who is putting the&#13;
liquor traffic out of business. It's the&#13;
business man, the railroad man, the&#13;
banker, the lawyer, the merchant, the&#13;
men who have to depend upon someone&#13;
else for efficiency in the various&#13;
departments of the important works.&#13;
The liquor traffic is up against the&#13;
modern businesr age. It is up against&#13;
an enemy that, it cannot throttle or&#13;
buy or browbeat or Muff, and it might&#13;
at well save wVii It can and go out of&#13;
.—Wichita Deacon.&#13;
i%'nnirv / n v hy &gt;avinn the ';&#13;
['.ml \\ Skinner &lt;m caeh pack ,&#13;
SKINNER'S&#13;
t h . i t f . i K . - ! » u ••'&lt;!, i ••!&#13;
&gt; . U , v&#13;
I •*" • &gt; .&#13;
) \ \ I&#13;
L * £ &amp;&#13;
-.-^-&#13;
m •v»a ^ ^&#13;
~-'J- ••» • ; &lt; • _ * •&#13;
»&lt;?.* *•»&#13;
£,r '#?&#13;
%&amp;; '•,,&#13;
&gt;r? a s w&#13;
V Piockccy DUpatch&#13;
r ^&#13;
K &gt; ? M *&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
pinckney J)Ippatch&#13;
Entered at t h e Poetoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich , aa Second Class Mailer&#13;
fc&amp;:&#13;
SI&#13;
&lt;&gt;'&gt;:'&#13;
••Exchange&#13;
D o e - *•.&#13;
1 *-*•'&#13;
1 ^ ^ . -&#13;
paid i" • ..&#13;
' l * i n c k i : i i y&#13;
G . W . T h h&#13;
1-:: r&#13;
-&#13;
ri^&#13;
Bank&#13;
Ua,:;,-&#13;
1Gp &lt;s: •&gt;&#13;
Mich.&#13;
P f o p&#13;
M n . L . £ , Smith w u a Howell&#13;
riiitor Saturday.&#13;
Will Millar transacted boaiaaaa&#13;
in Howell Monday,&#13;
Mre. J o h n Fitizoiromona visited&#13;
Ypailanti relatives Monday.&#13;
S u b s c r i p t s , $ 1 . Per tear t» Ad,aBce| M i 8 E i l i l Auderaou spent S Q D -&#13;
|day with F . D. Johnaen.&#13;
Mrb "Will ('urlott viaited Dexter&#13;
frienda t h e laat of the week.&#13;
Thomas Covie returned t o his&#13;
C. J. SIBLEY, EDITOR M O POBLISHCT&#13;
.V lveit:,- . ' ;i". i*. r i ) : i &lt; ktJOWQ o u&#13;
Curds of 'liiituk!*, rillv ^vu:.-,,&#13;
F.e&amp;oluaor..? uf C'-odoletict-, oue tioiinr.&#13;
I ycal X o t u w . In L*t*al col a nans fivei , , »•&gt; • -. i i \ i 3&#13;
; 1 -.-i ;„*..,»;™ D o m e t t W tutoiore Lake Monday.&#13;
-,-111 per Law [itr faeh insertion. &gt; *^ *- «r&#13;
All msuun uiiteded to benefit the ^*r 1 Geo. Roche ie mo?iug into Mra.&#13;
feonnl or biisiowi latere* iJ anv individ- - ^ , t l&#13;
Dai will L, pnbli*h«d »i r*g«LAr "wlywiiw. -^agen ti rooina, recently ocoupy&#13;
iag raiw. by W. A. Havens&#13;
Aaauouwuaait of witertwinmMoto, «ta., ]&#13;
maot be paid fr&gt;r »\ i^r**8T Local Notice j b G. Jaekeon and K. C\ Clinton&#13;
rdS^". , ,1 tranaacted businesB in LauaiQLr&#13;
ObiU»rv aiid mju-riag*: noucee a r e pub- £&gt;&#13;
lUhed free 0* oW**. | the first of the week.&#13;
Poetry nuwt b e p a i d f&lt; r ;u i h e r a l e of&#13;
flvt» c*Hits p « r lintt.&#13;
I Q&#13;
' " — )&#13;
LASGOW O R O S .&#13;
Hetei For Selliii Good D-Goofls Cheap&#13;
JACKSON, MICHIGAN&#13;
for Painless Dentistry, See&#13;
ji-&#13;
Or. W. 7. ft/v^Af&#13;
//? The Dolan Stock j&#13;
PINCKNEY Ml CMS AN&#13;
J o h n Tiplady of OhiUoa epant&#13;
S u n d a y here.&#13;
I Mrs. W C. H e n d e e is visitiag&#13;
relatives at Howell.&#13;
VV. E. Mur^kiy spent t h e first&#13;
of the week in Defrtntv&#13;
S. W. G u t h r i e is spending a&#13;
few days in Jackson on business.&#13;
Mjp Koy Merrils a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
of H a m b u r g are viaiting here,&#13;
F. Reason and wife of Detroit&#13;
pent the first of the week here.&#13;
J o h n Ooniisker of Detroit&#13;
visited relatives here over Sunday&#13;
Gladys Pool" is spending a few&#13;
days with her sister. Mrs, A. If.&#13;
Gilchris'&#13;
Mry. I' Kenned v visited her&#13;
fr;eter ;u Di-troit a fi-w d a \ 8 i h e&#13;
p:iH? week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrn. ( G. Me\er and&#13;
L&gt;i ( ' L. Sigler Mud Witt- are in&#13;
Detroit to-day.&#13;
Lai i Tupper, who has been attending&#13;
school at BIL^ llapids is&#13;
home for a few weeks,&#13;
The Auction of Clarence Stackable&#13;
will be postponed until! Saturday&#13;
t h e 25th.&#13;
Fr. H a n k a r d of Detroit was t h e&#13;
guest of Fr. Ooyle last T h u r s d a y&#13;
night.&#13;
Mias F a n n i e Swarthout of F l i n t&#13;
•pent t h e week end with bar parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Ray Brogan of Chilsou s p s i t&#13;
S a t u d a y and Sunday with frienda&#13;
here.&#13;
Victor Johnson of Detroit apt&amp;t&#13;
S u n d a y with his parents. M r . and&#13;
Mrs. F . D. Johnson.&#13;
A n u m b e r from this place attended&#13;
the telephone meeting at&#13;
Howell Monday}&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Will&#13;
Tiplady of Webster S n a d a y&#13;
March 19, a son.&#13;
Mrs. F . N. Burgess and daughters&#13;
were Jackson visitors last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
V&#13;
Mrs. G. A. Sigler returned home&#13;
after spending several weeks with&#13;
Lansing rtdalives.&#13;
Miss Gladys Chubb spent several&#13;
days last week at the heme of&#13;
M rs. Fred Swart houi.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dauforth&#13;
of Flint viaited her mother, Mre.&#13;
Emma Moran over Sunday.&#13;
The " F - A u t o - S t o p - I u n " has a&#13;
new a n d veiy appropriate sign&#13;
placed in front of the building.&#13;
(Our 3rd&#13;
I Floor&#13;
i The&#13;
I St&#13;
Where Prices \&#13;
Are Low i s *&#13;
Carpets. Curlciinst&#13;
VA&#13;
i&#13;
» 1 2 . 0 0&#13;
$18.00,&#13;
$13-50&#13;
Best Place to buy&#13;
oves Furniture, etc.&#13;
Dining Room Furniture&#13;
Plain, solid oak Tables, size top 42 inchetsd feet&#13;
long. Sale Price&#13;
Quartered oak top, size 45 inches x 6 teet Ion?&#13;
Sale price&#13;
Plain top, 45 inches x 6 feet. Sale price&#13;
48-inch t o p x 8 feet, quartered oak, and all styles of&#13;
pcdeital. Prices from $20 to $84&#13;
Brass B e d s&#13;
3 A n*\v lot of Brass Beds in the newest styles.&#13;
Prices from - $15.00 to S28.00 j )&#13;
Iron Beds in all styles and finishes. Prices from $4.50 t o $ 1 5 . 4&#13;
Rockers t&#13;
£ Large Leather Rockers in all styles, brown or black leather. 5&#13;
I Prices from SiR.oo to $30. 0&#13;
* Small Rockers with leather seats and without&#13;
Prices from . . . - - - S3.00 to $18,&#13;
J China C l o s e t s and Buffets&#13;
China Closets. Prices from - $18.00 to $31.00&#13;
p Buffets. Prices from - - $22.50 to $50,00&#13;
d T h e Buffets are all puartered oak and have a fine finish. YA&#13;
Dining Room Chairs&#13;
!rom iCl t o &gt; 2 S . O u ;t nnt&#13;
0 We have a fine lot of Chairs to choofce from. Plain&#13;
J quartered, with leather scat« or without, Price,- range i&#13;
;ak or&#13;
L&gt;ibrary Tables&#13;
CHiartered Sawed Library Tables with magazine racks and al&#13;
oilier &gt;t\'!o&gt; and finishes. Price,- from &gt;q.o&lt;: in S25.no&#13;
Stoves&#13;
*z&#13;
r i e n d s c a n i&gt;u\&#13;
'•TtnvLhin^ w i n v a n ^ i \ \&#13;
t h e m -—v\."- •* •* v&lt; '•'•" ]&gt;h[ i-&#13;
M A K K A N M". »'. ^ • ' ; ' ' •* •''•''•'&#13;
laisieB. Chapel!&#13;
» t o c k b P i d &lt; 5 e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Mr Felix Courtney of-Piueborj;.' Mr. and Mrs, P. IL Swarthout&#13;
Mich,, spent a few days t h e past j attended the funeral of Mr, and&#13;
Mrs. J . M. liUnchard of Dexter&#13;
Moudav,&#13;
week with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs, Ciias Doody aud children&#13;
spent one da_v the past week with&#13;
her sister Mr.i K. Berry of Slockb&#13;
i i d g e .&#13;
Mis, P. M, Gi\-iv( a:ui&#13;
te •stoc : ) ! ' i ( !&#13;
Grand Trunk iim« Tabi^&#13;
For tit*- conv,."! ••••&lt;:•.&#13;
u I&#13;
e&gt;.&#13;
.- 1.&#13;
: c&#13;
lanirhvisitt-&#13;
4 1 rel'iw&#13;
• i • ,.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Nash returned!&#13;
home Thursday from a three&#13;
ii.ouMis visit with relat i ves in '•&#13;
I.)el rent ;.t,(i ilowell.&#13;
2 F&lt;ound Oak sto\cs and range.---a complete line at lowest prices, R&#13;
Reed Baby Carriage *1&#13;
And Reed Sulkv C a r t - and Other Style- K&#13;
Mn 11) &gt;2o 5&#13;
u MIIKN' ^..arts trom Si,50 10 S5.00 m&#13;
4 barge Rugs For t h e Floor p&#13;
R In All Size- and Prices 0&#13;
S Axminster Rugs, [j to x 12 It Prices from s i ^ to £30. J&#13;
0 Wilton \ ' c h e t , 9 ft. \ 12 ft. $36.00 8&#13;
| j Wilton ^'ehxl, ^ tt, 3 \ m ik. *-, -^32.00&#13;
I&#13;
m Reed Baby ( arriages, brown nr -r»u . Prices iron&#13;
B Sulky Carts from&#13;
barge Rugs For the Floor&#13;
In All Size- and Priccs&#13;
(8'Tapestry Rugs, 0 ft x 12 ft&#13;
\ Tapestry Rugs, * ft. 3 \ 10&#13;
S 1 5 0 0 i-Aid S 1 8 . 0 0&#13;
* r 1 •&#13;
OB.ti __1J2 . 0 0&#13;
M M&#13;
[' \)it- w a s&#13;
I;: s tow nsh&#13;
t"P.W!l a s ; ! , ! '&#13;
j - t o s e i vt- a&#13;
r ^ u k c o u r t .&#13;
called at t h e home&#13;
Mrs W. I P Ornfoo!&#13;
f'veiiii^ on ' k--'1.&#13;
of&#13;
Trains Ed.st&#13;
:" JFo. 46—«.:34 ». «n.&#13;
;Ko. 48—4:44 p. m&#13;
^»»»v»y»v»»v»v&#13;
igler &amp;&#13;
kin the&#13;
m&lt;&#13;
inert&#13;
1 fit i n&#13;
UK*&#13;
r e u ( T 1 i p. v e ^&#13;
Mr. find&#13;
ast Friday&#13;
way back from&#13;
Pi'1.:. 1 ie"'\ ^a-re 1 ra . 1 •; ine; i n a&#13;
IIMW Cheverle*t car for which Mr.&#13;
IGripvrS' !ui« tljH agency.&#13;
i An Mitei tainment will be given&#13;
.at tin- Pinckney Opera House,&#13;
; Mone]a\ eveniuq'. May 1st..&#13;
I nnder the nuspiees of the Pastor's&#13;
; class of the Onnckl. Sunday School&#13;
Mr J o h n Moore of Gregory,&#13;
aged &lt;b, who has been ailing for&#13;
!some time passed away last Monday&#13;
m o m m y . The funeral eer-&#13;
. viee.s will be held Thursday a t&#13;
! 10 o'clock. Fie leaves two sons (0&#13;
i mourn his loss.&#13;
&lt; * • •&#13;
*.**&#13;
\\ : ','. teiar, of ( k&#13;
1't-rcv Mcrtenson left Tuesday&#13;
n.iorr.ir.c; fiv Ohio. Indiaua and&#13;
other parts in th^ interest of t h e&#13;
Kvjox-f! a i : is Pack in e: Co,&#13;
Mrs. E . -P Hansen aud son of&#13;
A\ Sparta, Mich., is visiting her part-&#13;
nts. Mr. and Mrs, S. W. (Cithrie.&#13;
a few week?.&#13;
Mrs. Chas, \ auKureii of Lansiny&#13;
i" visiting at 1 ho home of her&#13;
parents Mr and Mrs. G, W .&#13;
Tee pie.&#13;
Mrs F e i r G Fick a n d c h i l d r e n&#13;
have returned to Detroit aftv r&#13;
ipendinp some time at t h e home&#13;
of H, A. Fick.&#13;
Victor Johnson and Walter&#13;
Clinton will leave for Big Rapids&#13;
-the laBt of the week, where t h e y ' T T&#13;
T ' ^ - Superstitions.&#13;
» l a IIH1I:I t h e 'eoor'tc b f t l i c o o in \ - c r y&#13;
Will attend berris I n s t i t u t e . m n M y o M r .l i r , , , - , „ 0 , , 0 o f t l l 0 x C ,.&#13;
W \i- r&gt; j • • • . tunt the ^tn'&gt;-t '•!" .1 m;ia killed i&gt;\- .1&#13;
, W . Barnard \a moving into V , , . , . r ., , ,&#13;
^ tip"!", r u l e s .in i l l - li":in o f tltt- l.ciisr&#13;
t h e rooms recently occupied by J . dint slow ij-;a 1 . ^.^-^ him «&gt;r diia-c&#13;
Elliott, a n d \V. K. K e n n e d y will! a»rt t o -1 1 ^^ ''k,. t,. i,eu- victims, n i&gt;&#13;
^_ • . ., 1 '. 1 , clc'-'i-trvtl t!):it I'mvi'lonfr provide- tor&#13;
move into the honae occupied by t b o t i ^ , i , s (1;Mlv NV;l|)ts (() t h o ; u n ( i ,m t&#13;
Mr, Barnard. , of 1 rwy^v (_' shilling n &lt;l:iy—thm is&#13;
'lias, M. otickle. a former resi- , ... , . .. . „„ ,,&#13;
mjK'PS In- w i l l ::»«( l»e illlv&gt;\V«*i *UOtiH'.T&#13;
deot of this p h c e dierl at h i s victim for uw . :• i:.-it*inf tbo (lcsh&#13;
home at CUrkaon, N. Y. at 11 A. o f n u ? o r l s S U N " - &lt; " ' '&lt;• ^ye °»*e great&#13;
., March 1 . . Pneumonia beiny ! , ^ ^ n s t first 1)c ^ . , . , , ,.„ t b e ^ , , ,&#13;
t%« canae of hi* death. Farther m kto ijiirit win hnum th« m«n wbu&#13;
ot hia-death wilt ba otoen « M a « U a a , »nd ho is i.kri&gt;to tw turn&#13;
fc' , . ... . . J ^ j i l M a a l l g v i B t U o a a t t w o i M . j&#13;
Obj«ct Les»on.&#13;
Tent her--Wlieu t&gt;otli liands are up&#13;
what time is1 ItV Jolmnv—Time to np-&#13;
Pfrciit. mfi'am.—Pliilndelpbia T-cnl^p-r.&#13;
adooaot&#13;
The thin surt'aec ot ^as-oiir^: on the top side might make&#13;
the owner think the rest underneath was the real article. Rut&#13;
he'd not :&lt;o vcrv far before ''Knnning Out '&#13;
So it is with certain kinds o!" clothes, borne men buy&#13;
solely from the exterior. T h e \ see a suit that looks the part&#13;
of perfection, and without investigating what's underneath.&#13;
spend their money only to find the"garment- soon ''Running&#13;
Out'' of style shapliness and &lt;b;-ability.&#13;
Satisfaction Depends&#13;
Upon Genuineness&#13;
and when ordering your nev. -p-aagau.d summer clothes, bene,&#13;
the safe side by having th-M.*. made expresjy tor von bv&#13;
•3d Y. fpice&#13;
S. W. GUTHRIE. Agt&#13;
K V i&#13;
iMtri*^&#13;
W:~&#13;
A ^' &amp;* «?.*&#13;
!5T&#13;
p » ;&#13;
•:.. *'n??~ i%&gt;:&#13;
•P9v\I&#13;
»&gt;*' '**?&gt;" •jWy#&#13;
5 ^:*r^&#13;
j*rcr» • ? * * - &gt; ' {** %J**Z&#13;
m&#13;
: ' - « ' * •&#13;
'-a,^w W*.&#13;
-r^n«&#13;
' «&#13;
tr-i&amp;i&#13;
- ^ ^&#13;
MP^&#13;
^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
. * U ftf.fL'B •-)&#13;
:oy acre* 4&#13;
&gt;n acres ,"&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
R)i:SA!.K &lt;&gt;K RXCHAN&lt;;K&#13;
DK (I. J.FtAK-o.s•, Finckiiey&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
o i ; SAl.KI&#13;
r u n ; ^ u o d b u i l d i n ^ h&#13;
!X.l a c r i ' 5 , g o o d MJII&#13;
I II t i l l . W i l t I'dis.&#13;
ui y $ lit 11 I T :a-iv&#13;
luiiK ti r u t . K. A&#13;
plfc'Ut '&#13;
too! jdenljr (),&#13;
'I; Kind.-) [ji e r u p t&#13;
d o \ s n a u d halnnC'&#13;
I low l e u , (let'^i.rv .&#13;
'&gt; K K N T - - Weirlc &gt;•(! -jiitrcrr, or |el by&#13;
lielda; an *l) acre f a i u j . J . C \ M o r t e n s o n&#13;
"&gt;U7 H i 11, A u u A r b o r&#13;
)•'• &gt;R SA f.K&#13;
T&lt; ) ILKNT I:&#13;
I &gt;&#13;
K&lt; K SAf.K Taui&#13;
; o u i f o h o i c e h a y in b u r u .&#13;
J . K- M . - i r i i n .&#13;
Mr«. :b.&#13;
-.' d r y Oak&#13;
&lt;i. W. C l a r k&#13;
e 11 n r, «! j o Young I&gt;ar-&#13;
•ck . I H M ' V lluw, eligible t*» regitfer&#13;
i'hnor O r e g n r j KicJj«vDge ti f «&#13;
a 4 F. A. Barton.&#13;
FOR SALK -Two Flo I stein Heifers.&#13;
VVm. Caikev.&#13;
FOR SALK -IfouseHnd two lots. Would&#13;
t;tkf good young learn of horses, harnes^&#13;
and wagon in p:irt payment, if taken&#13;
. K,r,». 0 . (;. Hovi, Pincknev&#13;
FOK SALIC-G-od Work Team, l i a r .&#13;
nens and wngou. Enquire of&#13;
Mi*. Alice Hoft', Piuckney&#13;
Phon ft(i F '20,&#13;
F o R .SALE- Good haute and barn and&#13;
12 ;icre? of Innd, in tiie village r f Pinvk-&#13;
"*.v- , Mrs. H. D, Grieves&#13;
WAXTKO Mnu pn»t -&lt; with hoj'M-Mul&#13;
UL,'..' t ' - i i i "stock Cone! ii inn Powder in&#13;
•: ' . O n j - M - n I • i ; - t v . ^ 1 i P r y - j j jn&gt;r n i o i i l l i&#13;
A d d i o ; -&#13;
i'i i&#13;
-tri:,l lid i:i! ;i t"&gt;rii i-&#13;
! - , i&#13;
V&#13;
?&#13;
FARM C O - O P E R A T I O N .&#13;
In O&amp;io In SOIDO of tue wide&#13;
a w a k e couutiea farmers have&#13;
united to retain, by lav*-, officer*&#13;
wbo^cs business it is TO M'ray all&#13;
orchards every ^ r i n g . Tnia ib&#13;
wholly p r e v e n t n e . They spray&#13;
when the iree.6 are d:ae&gt;L, and&#13;
they iirviT spray on a Miuny, hoi&#13;
day w u h a Jiiiuid spray hiucg ii&#13;
burns ilie plant to do so. This&#13;
ottn.-er k u o v s lio\s- and wben to&#13;
s[jniy and v\ aii'b spi-it;. - arc cf&#13;
tecuvo for each kiud of laseei.&#13;
For instance^ poisons \vblcJi arc&#13;
effective for o-.c sort &gt;&gt;i pest do&#13;
not Jinn su;.i;!H'-,r or boriji^ orstiekiiic;&#13;
liisec;-. in thid wa&gt; a&#13;
competent or expert uian cam-*&#13;
his salary and the t a n n e r need&#13;
not trouble IJLS liead with these&#13;
details.&#13;
FUNNY MONEY IN CHINA.&#13;
— ••• • n&lt; ~&#13;
Civttin9 or Making Change 1« • &amp;or«&#13;
Trial to « Foreigner.&#13;
A d o i u r r;i oi.:,- m o n e y in (_'h]iit*s.e&#13;
ea&gt;h \ H ' , ; l i s , ,-jiiicen r v j u n d s .&#13;
l u (,'luMitcJ ii. \VJIK'1J la a &amp;uia 11 \ i l b i o ' '&#13;
'••.-tr2 8 ^ : »,&gt;&#13;
m% &amp;' • » * • ,:¾&#13;
| w h e r o v b i i r ; • -\ &gt;, ,1&#13;
1 ^Olli-J; : : i o e „' \( . r b vr,&#13;
| a BUiitil p e i l o i - r ,----11&#13;
1 S U * n e I'M'" ! ' i M i l - ' »0.&#13;
! O f l U r l l , 1 l , T ' J ' _ &gt; OlJ 1.&#13;
", tH&#13;
\\ ,.&#13;
'el ^ i"&#13;
• t - '&#13;
• » • .&#13;
iilll&#13;
li)., ^fr 11 . 1 . ! '&#13;
ff '! '&#13;
».#&#13;
. ( l i d&#13;
e-.&#13;
1 0 a v e i '&lt;&lt;.' • ' i i r l p e o e i c r it&#13;
"&gt;, 3&gt;4&gt;^i«*«iHjH6»&lt;$&gt;*i»Vf «;«£« j ^ j ^ - K ^ i ^ ^ ^ w e n j ^ . ;&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mr. aud Mr«. Mnrtin Audersou&#13;
calWl 012 Mrs. Nick Barley T h u r s -&#13;
day.&#13;
Mrs, L. T. Miller and little&#13;
daughter visited at L. T. Lamborne'a&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
A large crowd nttoniled tbe L.&#13;
A. 8. Rt John Robert's last Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mra. W a k o r Miller nnd&#13;
daughter were Fowlerville callers&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mr. nud Mrs. H o m e r Wasson&#13;
auJ children of Plauifield spent&#13;
Sunday at Bert Robert's.&#13;
Woo. B^air and Frank Watterp&#13;
are still under the doctor's care.&#13;
A nambar from here attended&#13;
the musical entertainment a&#13;
Plainfiekl Friday evening.&#13;
Arthur and Ward Mitchell&#13;
spout Sunday rtt A. F. Ward's.&#13;
pieee Ho turner! 1 &lt;,\rr .• ccj o^-r av 1&#13;
tested, it v. :iji 1,- ib'ie.o '!••'&#13;
was sii rely made ; .;• i oi . r. '•: &gt;&lt;.. '[ ..&#13;
j&gt;t.ddler ^a\ e i •' -- :'••&gt;- • u:: .. •; 'i&#13;
tb.at he would O'-i. liikc ,'. '1 o&#13;
asked him v, In, a i d be expijn &lt; •&lt;'. ' .&#13;
he had never seen any sucb u. . . '&#13;
that it mi^'bL ! o :-;i.| so I ;;i, . . , , .&#13;
up some coppei -&#13;
In ail his lit L. tiie peddler 11;• • 1 u ,.&#13;
seen a piece of silver luune}. Tin \&#13;
are thousands mni rliousands o! p..''.'!-1&#13;
Ill China '.I'lr.so toumfda] dc;tline-: :,e •&#13;
er anio; rit t1- i•!i o:-_-,h lo laiye it [n.&#13;
into silver, who uiv i'ori:, ;^:'ovv &lt;;!-i KJO&#13;
pass to tbeir re ,;:-.! o, :111&lt; &gt; Li L e,L-: !ai&#13;
iiig seen a pi&lt; ce of sil ver.&#13;
All C h h u is sii^pioions al.oiji m;,&#13;
Every time You pat down a dime or a&#13;
pltve of sliver the other person tests il&#13;
before he will take it, ringing it on tb'&#13;
counter or on the pavement. You can't&#13;
give a m e r c h a n t tho right a m o u n t of&#13;
change a n d walk off. He won't let&#13;
you leave until he ha«* tested every&#13;
piece, a n d he a l w a y s gives back one or&#13;
two pieces. H e wouldn't think very&#13;
much of himself as a merchant if be&#13;
didn't refuse some of your money.&#13;
If you buy something In one p a r t of&#13;
a store, get your chmige and walk to&#13;
another counter and buy something&#13;
else and give t h e change that has just&#13;
been given you the second clerk en&#13;
general principles will refuse part of it.&#13;
Pefore 3011 buy anything your motu y&#13;
.ias to have the once over. Sometimes&#13;
it. i.s maddening to hnve to wait while&#13;
your money is tested. One day I rush&#13;
cd up to catcb a train with just a min&#13;
uto to spare. One of my dollars wabad,&#13;
and before change could be mad'-&#13;
the train bad rumbled off into Ibe si&#13;
lent night without inc. But In a few&#13;
minutes the sileia e was b r o k e n - bro&#13;
ken beyond repair—by an hnpuUiV"&#13;
young m a n 0,000 miles from home who&#13;
put his v.-hole soul into one miub'v&#13;
Missouri effort..--Homer f.'rov in I.e.-&#13;
lie's.&#13;
ii&#13;
if "M&#13;
n*m,&#13;
&lt;:. in t&#13;
i !i&#13;
M&#13;
£&#13;
IP&#13;
&gt;!' &lt;/* 111'&#13;
^ ]&#13;
f^A&#13;
7&#13;
'!.. I'lil&#13;
il V&#13;
''•I'liimnmmmM&#13;
rr,&#13;
S' /&#13;
i!&#13;
m&#13;
8¾¾&#13;
CUABWTEfO TAIUORI^&#13;
1 1&#13;
GUARANTEED TAILORING&#13;
Spring Suits and Overeoato&#13;
Best Ever, at&#13;
MONKS BRO'S &lt; W&#13;
V LOST C H A N C E S ,&#13;
i i . Fi.L&#13;
A p r i l F o o l .&#13;
Lbe .'ipri! fou, , , i k ^r^{2jgjgr2J£M2M£Mr^^^&#13;
^ . 1 1 ICiaacLs O f&#13;
Furniture Repairing •'c&#13;
:&#13;
clxa-xcls |3-.&#13;
Oh, the t/rnised f o u n d a t i o n s&#13;
of c h a r a c t e r w h ' c h line our h u -&#13;
m a n street and m a k e the c i t y&#13;
of life so t r a g i c a l ! Oh, t h e&#13;
b o d i l y v i g o r w h i c h has never&#13;
done any s t r o n g w o r k f o r God&#13;
or m a n ! — P h i l l i p s B r o o k s .&#13;
poi.s.-r&#13;
Scoibu i'i a&#13;
Ai r i i " - :&#13;
' V . ' w k . "&#13;
•illy IMe &gt; ^&#13;
• v .&#13;
^&gt; '•'M' 1 si. door west '•&#13;
1 &gt;irrkcl cv Dunl)ar's!&#13;
r^?*j , ^ ) / ^ - , ^&#13;
IfYon Are Beaf Bead This l | g&#13;
, ,e : ' , ' l i b - - ; J -' i- o a j i 1 -,' : 1- j t ]&#13;
n .&#13;
A V O I D S P R I N G C O L D S&#13;
Sudden changes, high winds, shitting&#13;
seasons cause colds and grippe,&#13;
and htese spring colds are annoying&#13;
and dangerous, and likely to turn&#13;
into a chronic summer cough. In&#13;
BUCh cases take a treatment of Dr.&#13;
King'a New Discovery, a pleasant&#13;
laxative taf syrup. It soothes the&#13;
cough, checks the cold and helps&#13;
break up an attack of grippe. Its al-&#13;
TO RID CHILD OF WORMS ready prepared, no mixing or fussing.&#13;
Don't scold the nervous, fretful Just aak your druggist for a bottle of&#13;
child. Often its due to worms. Get.! Dr. King's New Discovery. Tested&#13;
rid of these by giving one-half to oneja^l tried for over 40 years&#13;
•H"W-M-:-:":"!-:"i-&gt;x-;-!-*:»!-!-4-!-H~HH&lt;&#13;
Beaver Talc:.&#13;
- "-• ' ' o r I!' ;i Ciiciiiiilier Pickle Contracts 1 no 1 ,1 - -&#13;
o u t fr-o&#13;
( i i r , n,&#13;
(In I,, U' he t'.ii!&gt; a&#13;
biiiii.-lu.-d.&#13;
A n A r a i t u, ! i i (&#13;
- n -&#13;
, , 0&#13;
-I i n n&#13;
, ( • • i &gt; i ) .&#13;
.,1 v e r ^^n 1&#13;
. - p a 1 r 11 it&#13;
lime lie is&#13;
ur , -&#13;
\&#13;
•roAinu' cucurn-&#13;
• h i'&gt;eii of 1 9 1 6&#13;
f 10111 our IVprein&#13;
l i e&#13;
.-^ k i J 1 d i &gt; l .11&#13;
Ui&#13;
1- e a j i&#13;
C " i , v &lt; p&#13;
O !'. 1!&#13;
I -&#13;
1 : ( I '&#13;
1 I I (.'&#13;
I !)&#13;
, lozenge Kickapoo Worm Killer, a lax&#13;
,M ative worm candy. Give only plain,&#13;
n, 'nourishing food, lots of out door ex-&#13;
T ! erclse and lHit to bed early. Watch '&#13;
ty stools and continue giving Kickapoo&#13;
'd t ^ o r m Lozenges, they will positively&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
oir&#13;
W '&#13;
'A i&#13;
b " ^ ; i i n e s t o r y ,&#13;
-- • w i i o 1 u i v b o a v e i&#13;
IIKII b e I w e e n l i i r&#13;
,-1 - l a - o - . 'l'lM.1 la*&#13;
t l i i - b e a d r u b l i e ' l&#13;
a • .' ; - ] l o i u i d tie&#13;
"1 - l*or,d ; i ! i d 1 l o i '&#13;
l i e&#13;
.- ; 1 - : O K ie :&#13;
uif&lt;v now b'» lint&#13;
b e n ' a a v e N. I', .MoitciiBon a t&#13;
^ivMliyiio're n&lt;-t &lt;1 j^rireR. We are&#13;
tjMVU;: irom «i-vt'Ui&gt;'-tive cents to&#13;
oi;e cV»llar URII a# hnU por UisU&#13;
\Ov -iintll [ooklers ac8(il4{jiN£.&#13;
1 :• ;. l \ -five e e i i t * tOfJH&gt;^&#13;
i\ ;•( \- ! i ' i n is Prttf-kfciy O&#13;
J e a / k n O I I . M i c h&#13;
-! 11&#13;
• 1:0 a r r m o v e the worm: 25 0 at dnigcints.&#13;
A .1&#13;
South Marion&#13;
YV •V&#13;
. ' : . e e&#13;
:H&#13;
&lt;; —&#13;
A GOO-0 ,!P READER SELDOM BE&#13;
TR&amp;Yo HIS DEAFNESS Tf ' STRiN&#13;
GER. 'Vi'O'O' rKKi: 11.. -ka-r. v :&#13;
SCHOOL OF LIP LANGUAGE, ijf.&#13;
KfiNSAS CITY, WISSOURi. ^&#13;
Hi-,&#13;
V '. i! t&#13;
: T i ' i ^&#13;
iln&gt;&#13;
t&#13;
Good Eurniture&#13;
For Sale&#13;
11-""; :'",• Flu'.!&gt;.::: ; r r n s i o e !&#13;
ue-s in Ho well V&#13;
H e n • y He.'iv ;, u i a&#13;
.Marion visit-. '1 ^^ . (T. Dmkf&#13;
family Friflfi\'.&#13;
Mr. unci ^ttft. Guy Ulftir&#13;
.M \\ L &gt; a r&#13;
; e \ a&#13;
N .V'"ir'&#13;
, 0 0 1 )&#13;
e r ':&#13;
, \ ' \&#13;
"11 ' * ,&#13;
Krif&#13;
OUR PUBLIC FORUM&#13;
a" N.&#13;
I a 1 n. I&#13;
were&#13;
1] a C h e i s . !&#13;
M&#13;
,1..-1&#13;
Cheap&#13;
quests of teititives at Fowlerville&#13;
Shtnrdny and Sunday.&#13;
Miss Hfl/M Bruff mi Cohoctah&#13;
spent a few days Ust week with&#13;
\Y. H B1 a n 1 a n &lt; i and w 1 f e.&#13;
N. Pacey knd r aniily, &gt;[rs I. J.&#13;
Abbott, Mr, and Mcs. J o h n Gardner.&#13;
Mr. Mrs. Chris Brogau and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Blafr were&#13;
pleasantly entertained at the home&#13;
•f Mr. aod Mrs. W. FT. Chatnhers&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mtv. Nora (Calloway visited "Irviufr&#13;
Abbott and family one da\&#13;
Unc y-l't Dining Tabic (Walnut 1&#13;
Side-board. Walnut Book-case&#13;
with Writing Desk, Light Wood&#13;
Bed-room Suit (Dresser has long&#13;
Chcval Mirror.) Silk Covered Sofa&#13;
Walnut frame. Silk covered Chair.&#13;
Walnut frame. Paniesota Rocker&#13;
Walnut frame- The above 3 pieces&#13;
all match. Oak Rocker with Cobbler&#13;
&gt;eat. Dak Rocker with uphol-l last week&#13;
stered seal, lar^c Chorrv Rocker, i Ray Brogan of ('hilaon is spend&#13;
all in Gonel Condition. One good in;: the week with (J. Brogan and *&#13;
Kiy;hl-da;. Clock, hall-hour Mrikc.&#13;
) . ' 1 ua0.' an i 00 1 alivu&#13;
a net tCt-a a a: Fjadie,- Aitl at duo&#13;
Lec*5 Sal ui day.&#13;
Rev Camluirn of J'inckuey attended&#13;
the quarterly meeting&#13;
Thursday and conducted the&#13;
afternoon aesnion with a very interesting&#13;
&gt;eruieuj. Dr. Baldwin&#13;
hid charge of the morn nij; and&#13;
evening session.&#13;
Mrs. Cha.s. Hartsuff entertained&#13;
the Missionary society for dinnt r&#13;
irtot Wednesday. A large crowd&#13;
was present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gee. Marshall&#13;
entertained y company of frieuda&#13;
HI a &gt;[:&gt;: o'clock dinner o a t n n l a y .&#13;
Le*» fladies wili work t h e . \"an&#13;
W. W. Barnard&#13;
Keep Your Skin Clear and Healthy.&#13;
There is only one way to have a&#13;
clear, healthy complexion and that is&#13;
to keep the bowels active and regular&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills will make&#13;
your complexion healthy and clear,&#13;
move the bowels gently, stimulate&#13;
the liver, cleans the system and purb&#13;
fy the blood. A splendid spring medicine.&#13;
26c. at your dMfitaft.&#13;
Hon; p k r r tip-ir North F^aka- this&#13;
family. ° : ^ ( % : r l h " -Hn v v o r ! f..r Sre-&#13;
Mr. aral Mrs. Alva Howell of P h p ; i HnrlVs Mo-id^y.&#13;
Stockbridye spent the week end Mr, ami Mrs, S. G&#13;
at the home of Elmer \ ac J i n re n. spent a few da&gt;«» at W. Pickell'a&#13;
Mr. and Mrs.. W. IT. Docking l a s t w ^ k .&#13;
eatettained a few fiieuds at din- Mrs- Avi* K e n u e d y is s p e n d i n g&#13;
uer Thursday in honor of thei r a few days At Fred Marshall's.&#13;
24tI: wetlclini: anniversary. M r d 0 e a t i e Whitehead visited&#13;
Mr. H n b b a r d has moved his MTB. Will Marshall Thursday,&#13;
family into the tenuant house on g r m a P y p e f W Jnoksou wag « 1&#13;
•« over S n n d s y risitnr li^re&#13;
Senator Morris Sheppard&#13;
ON P R O H I B I T I O N .&#13;
It is the mission of a newspaper to give the n&#13;
The reader is entitled to Information on both ttdat of&#13;
economic issues and eipectally on those quejttoxu&#13;
are before the public for solution, for it is the dtttf&#13;
every citizen to carefully study the problems Of -f&#13;
meet. We shall present from time to time the Ttewi&#13;
men who are recognized authority on important questl&#13;
and who are responsible for their utterances. The ri&#13;
of this paper will be expressed through the edi&#13;
column. United States Senator Morris Sheppard. tfci&#13;
chosen leader of the prohibition forces in presenting tkM&#13;
affirmative side of National prohibition to the Senatig&#13;
said in part;&#13;
on of this prohlblUoa •nseadaent is the most solemn da&#13;
that has confronted Congrees-«{Me tbe 4esih of stovery. It will determ&#13;
whether this nation is capable Of tATOkiBff Ms&#13;
an evil which at least half the 90»Q)ttl0l&#13;
and to mako what Constitutional chtntes&#13;
extermination. It will determine whether the monf&#13;
the dominant ones. It will determine whether&#13;
w« need not deceive ourselves. The issue is plai%&#13;
not tolerate the llQnor traffic.&#13;
"Not only will he who votes against the iubmJMps\ of this&#13;
keep the people of the states, acting through legiattiarts, or&#13;
from exercising their fundamental prerogative of deciding w'&#13;
and what local, but he will also deny the right of petition to&#13;
fellow citizens. 8ev,Dnty per cent of th* territory of this&#13;
under prohibitory law and over 60 per cent of the American&#13;
this prohibition territory. A committee or more than two&#13;
women from every section of the Republic, representing thronj&amp;Vt)&#13;
mii organizations probably twenty million people, marched to tfc#&#13;
the Capitol on a freezing day last December and presented ^&#13;
: j . » ,&#13;
Will Chamber's farai.&#13;
^lobson for the House and myself for the S&#13;
fSrlm M- [i^cr°eusnst ryg.i veI nt htphAe mfaecrei coafn a pbeiftiipnleg aD eccheamncbee r to 1 i n u n a j p e n e t r a t l n f c0}&amp;t t n e y ^ ^ t n e fry o t a&#13;
the cry for a clean United States upon th&#13;
and inspiring sight my eyes have ever seen....&#13;
hundreds and thousands of miles they had&#13;
and at great personal sacrifice to demonstrate&#13;
And I tall you thai I would rather have&#13;
crated men and women to present t h *&#13;
hold any office la this Republic. It is&#13;
people represented by that wonderful c&#13;
or forty million more In the detarmi&#13;
be tolerated on a atsgle lnoh -of Ame&#13;
«ay that a majority of 4he&#13;
J land and a&#13;
their reqi&#13;
ie liauer traffic t r o s&#13;
tunlese sttet&#13;
it.lt.&#13;
•vX&gt;.l&#13;
* * y&#13;
i..'.u.&#13;
/ ^&#13;
i'-." "«H:&#13;
"S,*- '1&#13;
'%»?;.:ft - 'ei-Tfii * :V&gt;&#13;
• +, ••&#13;
:&lt;-.'x&#13;
# "&#13;
N •^a'T1&#13;
H^v &gt;:&gt;V %*.»••** * f ,&#13;
&gt;\v-.a&#13;
Hjv- - i *&#13;
-a*.,&#13;
" , - S L - • ' . . ..•&#13;
. . ..'..?* • a ;••,.•&#13;
'-o^o s'.i- • :» - " a&#13;
; ^ :&#13;
;•••€%&gt;&#13;
r*s&#13;
*M&#13;
?*3&amp; * « . $ •&#13;
4 »&#13;
c &lt; { * *&#13;
- V -Jar '***$£•&#13;
«&#13;
A3teC&#13;
;Vv.^.&#13;
*r*s&#13;
*'. J w v v*&gt;: *?"\&#13;
?*&gt;t '•**%&#13;
• * % *Wm-&#13;
%*:&#13;
cv3r w&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
m&#13;
•&amp;*z&#13;
l PRIDE Of&#13;
MEXICO NOT HURT&#13;
United States Troops Never&#13;
Intended To Occupy&#13;
Any City.&#13;
LEA0IN6 TROOPS TO&#13;
• DOWN MEXICAN BANDITRY&#13;
CARTRIDGES STORED IN&#13;
MOUNTAINS rOR VILLA&#13;
VHIa Intends to Make The&#13;
American Expeditionary&#13;
Force A Joke"&#13;
El Pa^o, Texas - T h e nrst pha.se of&#13;
ihe Aaierivja.xi expedition u u o Mexico&#13;
—the rush along \'ilia's dun trail lo&#13;
the emlan^t-rt-u Murmun colonies, \sas&#13;
an accjnjpli&gt;hed !'..ct - completed, according&#13;
to reports reaching the Co&#13;
lumbu.s base, without the firing of a&#13;
hostile shot by the Americans.&#13;
T h e second phase already was heginning,&#13;
it was indicated as the A I I H T&#13;
Icans turned s o m e w h e r e from Casus&#13;
BRIGADIER G E N E R A L PERSHING.&#13;
who k n o w s every toot of the ground."&#13;
The rewards which have been offered&#13;
for Villa, alive or dead, in Air.&#13;
Carcia's opinion a-v trie best nope&#13;
of ending the bandits career.&#13;
"The news of t h e s e rewards will&#13;
G i w d e s lo resume their night m a r c h - ! f l a 6 n through the region," he said,&#13;
e s toward the rough mountain slopes, | . . a n d j should be very much surprised&#13;
where it is known Francisco Villa al-iif [hey do not bring some result."&#13;
ready h a s preceded t h e m with more ^. n«-~~ . &gt; i&#13;
,. * „„ , , I The Carranza consul h a s a plan&#13;
than 100 miles start. U a r n m g tha ,Q f W s o w u w h i c h h e e s .&amp; thQ&#13;
pthaisss s ewciotnhdo uta cft iginih itnhge cahgaasien smt igbhatn dnitost ! b e s t w a y t 0 c a p t u r e Yi ] l a_&#13;
was implied in a new and more stringent&#13;
censorship imposed at Columbus.&#13;
Further leakage of military news, the&#13;
censor said frankly to the American&#13;
press, would be likely to cost soldiers'&#13;
lives.&#13;
Pride Not Hurt.&#13;
"General Gutierrez," he said, "told&#13;
me that he expected to have 15,(100&#13;
•men on Villa's trail within a week.&#13;
jThen there are 4,000 to 5,000 American&#13;
troops. 1 do not believe that all&#13;
i h e s e thousands of m e n with all their&#13;
equipment is needed. W h a t is needed&#13;
is about five c o l u m n s of 500 picked&#13;
W h e n W a s h i n g t o n announced t h a t : m e n apiece, all well mounted and carrying&#13;
the least possible amount of&#13;
equipment. T h e s e columns should be&#13;
,$JM A m e r i c a n columns did nqt intend&#13;
t o dCtiOp? cities, a m e n a c e to Mex;-&#13;
I' e«B national pride w a s removed. T h c ! j n sufficiently close touch to be able&#13;
Carran*a garrisons, which have b e e n ; t o render a s s i s t a n c e to any one qf&#13;
passed by the marching A m e r i c a n s i them that Villa a t t a c k e d . If they&#13;
and which therefore are now in the | m 0 v e d fast and were the right men&#13;
A m e r i c a n s ' rear on their flanks, con- t n P y w o u i d have a good chance to&#13;
Unued tranquil, so reports to 1C1 Paso n a D villa bv the heels."&#13;
indicated.&#13;
m-&#13;
General Gabriel Gavira, at Juarez,&#13;
commanding the territory through&#13;
•which for three days the Americans&#13;
have been penetrating, himself an-&#13;
That for a time the situareported&#13;
to him had been&#13;
-^ ..,..,— .- and even serious With evi-&#13;
^4lfew1 *rallef he said the crisis had passed.&#13;
This crisis it is believed had&#13;
reached its night last night, when&#13;
couriers dashing into Casas Grandes&#13;
announced with careless enthusiasm&#13;
that the American troops would enter&#13;
that city by midnight. General Gavira&#13;
wired immediate orders to his troop*.&#13;
not to permit tins.&#13;
Dawn showed the long lines of cavfcareaa&#13;
Just outside Colon ia, Dub&#13;
Rush Capture of Villa.&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n — E v e r y effort is being&#13;
made by the administration to bring&#13;
to a speedy conclusion the chase into&#13;
Mexico after Villa. Orders have been&#13;
sent to Brigadier General Pershing to&#13;
lose no time in rounding up the bandit&#13;
chief. Reports of a disturbing&#13;
character which have been received&#13;
from the border have convinced officials&#13;
that the longer the American&#13;
forces are in Mexico the graver is&#13;
the danger of serious trouble with&#13;
the entire nation below the border.&#13;
From authoritative sources the information&#13;
is obtained that the situation&#13;
is more delicate gf present than&#13;
• n . ; • . . - • •&#13;
it has been at any time since the&#13;
troopers demounted and in t r oops crossed the border. Anti-Carranza&#13;
agitators along the border,&#13;
deliberately misconstruing the purposes&#13;
of the expedition, have sent reports&#13;
throughout northern Mexico lo&#13;
the effect that the action taken bv&#13;
lla )n Western Chihuahua.&#13;
Villa was located with some degree.&#13;
of deflniteness, if weight of evidence&#13;
co, unts in pinning down his rapid ,w T. ,. , ^., . tv. . , sh ilMftjLs . „F rom several, sources cons*t.-.t u- the Lmted Mates is the forerunner of intervention.&#13;
Advantage is being taken by those&#13;
agitators of the fact that Carranza&#13;
has acquiesced in the expedition lo&#13;
tionalists received messages, all of&#13;
which placed him in approximately&#13;
the same portion of western Chihuahua.&#13;
These dispatches had him near- ,&#13;
ly due south of the American col ! m a k e [i appear that he is being made&#13;
umns' present known positions, and t h e t 0 Q l o f t h e American government&#13;
close to the Sierra-Tarahumare moun- ; H o w l o n * h e w i l 1 o e a b l e i n f a c e °r&#13;
taiua, t o close to them in fact, that t h e s * reports to hold his forces iu&#13;
if his reputation as a fox holds good l i n e 1S a question which grows more&#13;
during t h e American c h a s e he should .serious daily. S t r e n u o u s efforts are&#13;
b e a b l e to m a k e a puzzling disappear- b e l n &amp; m a d e b&gt;' t h e 8 t a t « department&#13;
ance in these ranges with a few t 0 counteract these reports. It was&#13;
hOHTB* hard riding. By all accounts a t t b e suggestion of the department&#13;
lie it more than 100 miles ahead of ;&#13;
t h a t t h e president had Senator La&#13;
t h a Americana, about the same dist- toilette introduce in the senate the&#13;
ance h e has been out of their reach I concurrent resolution assuring the&#13;
for a week, but with one possibly Mexican people on behalf of congress&#13;
§ important difference, that while here- t h a t u n d e r n o circumstances does the&#13;
tofore the Americans have been rid-1 American government contemplate&#13;
in* o n a somewhat cold, trail, they j intervention or interference with the&#13;
are a o w neartng ground which Villa , eternal affairs of Mexico. As soon&#13;
recently paased over and where they l a s t h U resolution has been acted on&#13;
xaa* h*va practical opportunity t o &gt; * ^ 6 b c n S t - c ° P i e s o f u w i n ** s e n t&#13;
r of tae r»w4~Mexicans, ! t 0 American consuls in Mexico for&#13;
•tight receive val- j distribution.&#13;
JOB. " I The administration appears extremely&#13;
anxious that every possible&#13;
avenue of publicity should be used&#13;
by the American consuls in Mexico&#13;
to circulate in Mexico the true pur&#13;
poses of the expedition.&#13;
Owing to the fact that 90 per cent&#13;
of the Mexican people are unable to&#13;
read English or write, these efforts&#13;
will meet with doubtful success. Reports&#13;
were received at the state do-&#13;
&amp;&#13;
pUH7 taat Villa k gathering&#13;
mefi ftjti preparing to resist the Amerietoa&#13;
*•*• received in coastitutionait&#13;
f | S a t i | | a a * * ^ h e w a * t T e i J **iA to&#13;
'jllSfar J M M * rounda of cartridges&#13;
a ^ a M m ; many of home mannfac-&#13;
^tgrt aacreted la the mountains where&#13;
h e ira* expected to make a ctand.&#13;
totht that Vitta wouid do any such&#13;
tldng waa axpreased, however, by An-&#13;
WRITER GETS HONOR&#13;
A M E R I C A N N E W S P A P E R CORRE&#13;
R E S P O N D E N T D E C O R A T E D FOR&#13;
B R A V E R Y ON B A T T L E F I E L D&#13;
MEDALS ARE NOT FAVORED&#13;
GaroJaV tfee Mexican consul Ipartmpnt are understood to have been&#13;
hot*, ItWjCJaimed that Villa intends ! f a r from reassurinc.&#13;
to-aaaa^^^to American expeditionary I M e a n t i m e a l l&#13;
Jlr. Garcia declared&#13;
bandit had&#13;
the Amerfmeans&#13;
possible are&#13;
being taken from a military standpoint&#13;
to hasten the wora of the Pershing&#13;
expedition. Villa is believed to&#13;
be in the vicinity of mountains to the&#13;
south and w e s t of Casas Grandes. ReaaM,&#13;
"who I ports to the war department are undtatrtet,&#13;
derstood to s U t e that Colonel Dodd&#13;
thai i has established some sort of contact&#13;
with outposts of the Villa forces and&#13;
the main column which entered from&#13;
Columbus and based at La Quna de&#13;
feismaB is rushing southward to&#13;
alUh&#13;
Special Permission of Congress Necos&#13;
sary for American to Accept Deco&#13;
ration From Foreign State—Many&#13;
Offered but Few Arc Permitted.&#13;
By GEORGE C L I N T O N .&#13;
Washington.—Since the war In Europe&#13;
started thousands upon thousands&#13;
of decorations of various kinds&#13;
have been given to the Boldiers of kaiser,&#13;
king, president or sultan. A few&#13;
Americans, there are only a few in&#13;
the service of foreign potentates, also&#13;
have been decorated, some of them&#13;
for conspicuous personal gallantry.&#13;
One non-combatanf American newspa&#13;
per man has been given a decoration&#13;
in recognition of bravery on the field.&#13;
No American who Is In the employ&#13;
of the government of the United&#13;
States is allowed to receive any decoration&#13;
from a foreign state without&#13;
special permission of congress. It&#13;
happened that the newspaper man&#13;
who was given the decoration for bravery&#13;
on the battlefield is connected&#13;
with a news gathering association&#13;
which has a rule of its own that none&#13;
of its employees shall accept a decoration&#13;
from a foreign government. Because&#13;
of the special e'reumstances In&#13;
the case, this rule was foregone in the&#13;
case in hand and the correspondent,&#13;
who had shown courage on a battlefield&#13;
In Poland, was allowed to receive&#13;
and to wear the ribbon and&#13;
medal given in recognition of bis high&#13;
conduct In the face of danger&#13;
For AM Kinds of 8ervlces.&#13;
In the state department there is a&#13;
case which virtually Is filled with alt&#13;
klndB of decorations, watches, fobs&#13;
and other things which It was the intention&#13;
of foreign governments to present&#13;
to American officials.&#13;
The presents of kingdoms, empires&#13;
or republics which are now 1n the&#13;
care of the state department were given&#13;
for all kinds of services. Most of&#13;
those for whom they were Intended&#13;
were ambassadors, ministers, consuls,&#13;
consular agents, or military and naval&#13;
attaches stationed In foreign parts.&#13;
Congress once In a while has granted&#13;
permission to Individuals who are In&#13;
the state Rervlce to receive decorations&#13;
and on one or two occasions It&#13;
has disposed of a hundred or so of&#13;
the decorations at once hy giving genera!&#13;
permission to take them and&#13;
wear them. The gifts now In the possession&#13;
of the state department represent&#13;
the accumulation of a year or&#13;
two and there they wil] stay until&#13;
congress acts&#13;
A Little Shop Talk.&#13;
Once every four years In Washington&#13;
it is perhaps permissible for&#13;
the newspaper men to talk shop.&#13;
There are five Washington chron&#13;
Iclers now who are having their&#13;
troubles. They are the members of&#13;
the standing committee of correspond&#13;
ents. Their names and those of the&#13;
papers which they represent are Richard&#13;
V. Oluahan, New York Times; Le»&#13;
roy T. Vernon, Chicago News; H. B.&#13;
C. Bryant, Raleigh News and Observer;&#13;
Earl Godwin, Washington Star,&#13;
and William B. Brigham. Boston Transcript&#13;
There are to be held this year three&#13;
political national conveLtlons—Democratic,&#13;
Republican and Progressive.&#13;
While tbe managers, if they may so&#13;
be called, of the conventions have&#13;
final power in tbe matter they act In&#13;
the matter of assignment of seats in&#13;
the press stand largely on the recommendations&#13;
of the standing committee&#13;
of Washington correspondents&#13;
Of course this committee doea not attempt&#13;
to do anything more than to see&#13;
to it if it can that the newspapers and&#13;
the press associations get what they&#13;
are entitled to In the matter of seats&#13;
at the press tables.&#13;
The standing committee of correspondents&#13;
has other duties to perform.&#13;
The convention seat duty is only a&#13;
matter of concern once in four years.&#13;
The committee baa constant work&#13;
through the years. A new committee&#13;
is elected Just prior to the convening&#13;
of each incoming congresa The chief&#13;
duty of the members is to pass on the&#13;
applications of the persons who desire&#13;
admission to tbe press galleries&#13;
during the sessions of congress&#13;
Only for the Workers-&#13;
It might be said here that oo one&#13;
Is allowed In the gallery eitber In&#13;
house or senate who is not a bona Ode&#13;
newspaper correspondent engaged In&#13;
bis work of collecting and sending out&#13;
news from the capitol No senator or&#13;
representative ever tries to gat admission&#13;
to tbe gallery for the parpoae of&#13;
hearing the debate, eltbar far himself&#13;
or Tor his friends. If ha should at*&#13;
tempt to get a seat in aha taUary or to&#13;
get a friend a seat tfcara, his desire&#13;
woaid be thwarted, a a i tfca proper&#13;
mttteas of nongraanj sssajal uphold&#13;
in their&#13;
action in abutting out from the gat&#13;
lery even so high a personage as s&#13;
member of congress of thu United&#13;
Stains.&#13;
lo the city of Waahington there are&#13;
about 220 newspaper corre»poudeuu&#13;
who are entitled to admiaalou to to i&#13;
press galleries. They represent oewb&#13;
papers located in towns from Califor&#13;
uia to Maine and from Wabhingion to&#13;
Florida In addition to iheae corre&#13;
bpouueots there are hundreds of oth&#13;
ers wno are engaged simply lo writing&#13;
magazine stories, impressions of legia&#13;
lutioQ and books Correspondent*&#13;
wOuse *ork is along these lines are&#13;
not admitted to the press gallery.&#13;
The press galleries, under the rules&#13;
of congress, are under the control ot&#13;
the standing committee of correspond&#13;
ents. subject to the approval of the&#13;
speaker of the house of representatives&#13;
and the supervision and control of the&#13;
benate committee on rules. It is oot&#13;
once in a decade that either house or&#13;
senate tries to effect any change tn&#13;
the system of government of the press&#13;
galleries which has been established&#13;
oy the standing committee of newspaper&#13;
men&#13;
Getting the News.&#13;
Thus far this year ^President&#13;
Wilson has not resumed his form&#13;
er semi weekly confeTeuces, cr better,&#13;
perhaps, conversations with&#13;
Washington newspaper correspond&#13;
ents. It was the custom of the correspondents&#13;
to call on the president&#13;
on Tuesday morninf and again on&#13;
Thursday afternoon to get from him j&#13;
such Impressions as they could con |&#13;
cernlng matters of national moment. !&#13;
The war problem is responsible tor [&#13;
the fact that these meetings between •&#13;
the writers and the chief executive&#13;
have not been renewed. i&#13;
In times of diplomatic anxiety when ;&#13;
the task of a great nation is to main- '&#13;
tain its neutrality, it is almost Inevitable&#13;
that questions should concern&#13;
themselves with the matters most in&#13;
the minds of the people. Diplomacy&#13;
is a delicate subject, and tt is probablo&#13;
that Mr. Wilson came to the conclusion&#13;
that it was better to call tbe conference&#13;
off rather than to make it possible&#13;
that some misundertandlng of&#13;
the government's position might be&#13;
made possible through an Internationa*&#13;
misconstruction of what was&#13;
said.&#13;
When Mr. Wilson first came into office&#13;
he was guarded and apparently&#13;
fearful lest he be misquoted. He&#13;
gained confidence after a while and&#13;
talked more freely to newspaper men.&#13;
giving them an insight into the workings&#13;
of his mind and a certain intimacy&#13;
with his plans fcr forwarding&#13;
legislation to which hlr party was&#13;
pledged. He always was careful, however,&#13;
not to say anything i'j a proposal&#13;
form which, as coming from him&#13;
would, In newspaper parlance, "make&#13;
tbe first page."&#13;
One morning at a White House conference&#13;
at which some thirty correspondents&#13;
were present things were&#13;
drifting along rather aimlessly when&#13;
the president suddenly said that a pernicious&#13;
lobby was at work in Washington.&#13;
Then he added that he had&#13;
datly evidence of the existence of Buch&#13;
a lobby, and he also said in effect&#13;
that It was useless for interested&#13;
ones to say that evil influences were&#13;
not being exerted to defeat perfectly&#13;
proper legislation.&#13;
Virtually this was the first time that&#13;
Mr. Wilson bad given the correspondents&#13;
a real story. It was early in his&#13;
administration. When the president&#13;
had said what he did, it was instantly&#13;
suggested to him that if he would&#13;
allow himself to be quoted It would&#13;
help things much. Then Mr. Wilson&#13;
FilGfl PRICES&#13;
And Good Demand for AH Farm&#13;
Products.&#13;
It is no new experience for settlers&#13;
located in a fertile country such a.n&#13;
Western Canada, where lands may be&#13;
bought at very reasonable prices, to&#13;
harvest a crop that in one season pays&#13;
the entire cost of their farm. Undoubtedly&#13;
this was the experience of many&#13;
farmers during 1915, but one instance&#13;
may be quoted. A settler who came&#13;
to Canada from the United States&#13;
j some years ago decided to add to his&#13;
; holdings by buying an adjoining quarter&#13;
section near his home at Warner,&#13;
at $20.00 an acre, with terms spread&#13;
over a period of years. He got th«j&#13;
land into a good state of cultivation&#13;
and last spring put the whole quarter&#13;
section in wheat. When the crop waa&#13;
, threshed he found that it only took&#13;
half the wheat on the farm to pay the&#13;
I whole purchase price of it; in short&#13;
! a single year's crop paid the cost of&#13;
! the land, paid all the expenses of opi&#13;
eration and left him a handsome surj&#13;
plus as profit. This settler had some&#13;
| adjoining land, and his whole wheat&#13;
j crop for the season amounted to&#13;
'• over 18,000 bushels. He is now plan-&#13;
! ning to obtain some sheep and invest&#13;
his profits in live stock which will a-s-&#13;
' sure him a good living irrespective of&#13;
, what the season may happen to be.&#13;
Canada's financial position is excellent.&#13;
All speculation has been eliminated,&#13;
and trading is done on a cash&#13;
basis, with restricted credit.&#13;
Detailed figures of Canada's trade&#13;
for twelve months ending October 31&#13;
show how the war is forcing Canadian&#13;
trade into new channels. One of the&#13;
most extraordinary changes is in commerce&#13;
with the United States. A&#13;
couple of years ago Canada imported&#13;
from the United States two or three&#13;
hundred million dollars' worth of&#13;
goods more than she exported. The&#13;
balance of trade was all with the&#13;
Unite States. The balance is rapidly&#13;
disappearing, and the present outlook&#13;
is that by the end of this year&#13;
Canada will have exported to the&#13;
United States mor than she has imported.&#13;
The figures for the past four years&#13;
are illuminating. They are as follows:&#13;
Exports.&#13;
1912 $145,721,650&#13;
1913 179,050,796&#13;
1914 213,493,406&#13;
1915 314,118,774&#13;
Four years ago, in 1912, the balance&#13;
of trade in favor of the United&#13;
States was no less than two hundred&#13;
and sixty-seven millions, and this&#13;
year, the balance is reduced to only&#13;
thirty-two millions. The figures are&#13;
extraordinary and reflect the changed&#13;
and new conditions in Canada. It&#13;
looks as if for the first time in nearly&#13;
half a century this year Canada will&#13;
sell more to the United States than&#13;
she will buy from the Americans.—&#13;
Advertisement.&#13;
Imports.&#13;
$412,057,022&#13;
442,341,840&#13;
421,074.528&#13;
346,569,924&#13;
Queries.&#13;
Why isn't &lt;he dog sr.sr a aky-terrier?&#13;
Why isn't a man weighed down with&#13;
years under age?&#13;
Why can't we hear the bed tick in&#13;
turned to a stenographer and dictated j the silent watches of the night v&#13;
a statement on the lobby matter and J&#13;
gave it to the press.&#13;
Started Big Investigation.&#13;
When the charge that a lobby bad&#13;
been at work and waa at work waa&#13;
published, many of the senators and&#13;
representatives made light of the accusation&#13;
and said that Mr. Wilson&#13;
would have to work to prove what he&#13;
had said. Within a few hours the&#13;
president undertook to prove his&#13;
charge and the lobby investigation of&#13;
comparatively recent history was on.&#13;
It is not too mnch to say that the&#13;
old-time lobbyist, the pernicious type,&#13;
baa been absent from Waahington for&#13;
some time, although he keens up hit&#13;
work from a distance.&#13;
A good deal baa been written from&#13;
time to time about iobbiea. It baa&#13;
come to be recognised and proof has&#13;
been adduced this winter of the fact&#13;
that the letter lobby is more efficacious&#13;
than a personal lobby, and ordinarily&#13;
it haa little that is pernicioua&#13;
about i t&#13;
The letter lobby consists in the receipt&#13;
of letters and telegrams by senators&#13;
and representatives from their&#13;
constituents urging them to support&#13;
this bill or that bill or to oppose this&#13;
bill or that bill. When the letters&#13;
and telegrams come In in huge numbers,&#13;
as frequently they do. they hare&#13;
a marked effect&#13;
The canteen was "letter written'&#13;
out of the army; tbe pure-food taw&#13;
was paaaad largely by aid of letters&#13;
written to senators *nd representatives,&#13;
and a good many other acts have&#13;
found a place on the statute books&#13;
that wonM h a t e faffed if the people&#13;
had aot -tahan their aaaa la&#13;
CHILD'S TONGUE&#13;
if cross, feverish, constipated,&#13;
give "California Syrup&#13;
of Figs."&#13;
A laxative today saves a sick child&#13;
tomorrow. Children aimply will not&#13;
take the time from play to empty the:?&#13;
bowels, which become clogged up with&#13;
waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach&#13;
sour.&#13;
Look at the tongue, mother! If coatad,&#13;
or your child la listless, cross, feverish,&#13;
breath bad, restless, doesn't eat&#13;
heartily, full of cold or has sore throat&#13;
or any other children's ailment, give a&#13;
teaspoonful of "California Syrup of&#13;
Figs," then don't worry, because it la&#13;
perfectly harmless, and in a few hours&#13;
all this constipation poison, sour bile&#13;
and fermenting waste will gently&#13;
move out of the bowels, and you have&#13;
a well, playful child again. A thorough&#13;
"inside cleansing" ia ofttimes all&#13;
that is necessary. It should be the&#13;
first treatment given in any sickness.&#13;
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.&#13;
Ask at the store for a 60-cent bottle ot&#13;
"California Syrup of Figs," which haa&#13;
fun directions for babies, children of&#13;
all ages and for grown-ups plainly&#13;
arintad o s the bottle. Adv.&#13;
A ahaaty aa earth is worth mora&#13;
than a castle i* taa air.&#13;
i&#13;
w&#13;
#*tf&#13;
» r&#13;
The Citu of&#13;
Numbered&#13;
Daus&#13;
By. F K A N C I S l Y N D E&#13;
Illustrations by C. D. Rhoda&#13;
MMMtM + MMt'&#13;
Copyright tiy Charlw Scnbucr'ii tkma&#13;
•&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
_ 6 —&#13;
Broulllard. chief, engineer of the Niquoia&#13;
irrigation dam, meets J. W e s l e y Cortw&#13;
r i g h t a n d hia daughter. Genevieve, and&#13;
e x p l a i n s t h e reclamation work to them.&#13;
C o r t w r i g h t t*ea In the project a big&#13;
r h a n c e to m a k e money. The financier tells&#13;
G e n e v i e v e that t h e engineer "Will come&#13;
down and hook himself If t h e ball la well&#13;
covered." Cortwright o r g a n i z e s a COOJ- tany a n d obtain a g o v e r n m e n t c o n t r a c t s&#13;
o furnish power and material for t h e&#13;
dam construction. A busy city s p r i n g s&#13;
up about the site. Steve M a s s l n g a l e&#13;
t h r e a t e n s to s t a r t a gold rush If Brouil-&#13;
HkTd does not Influence President Ford to&#13;
build a railroad branch to t h e place, t h u s&#13;
opening a n , eaay market for t h e ore from&#13;
«&gt;• "Little U u s a n " mine. On a visit to&#13;
A a a j M a a s i n g a i e a t h e r father's mtno&#13;
Broulllard finds s h e u n d e r s t a n d s him better&#13;
t h a n h e h a d t h o u g h t . He tells h e r of&#13;
his need for m o n e y to pay off his dead&#13;
l a t h e r ' s debts a n d that to be free he&#13;
Would sacrifice a n y t h i n g s a v e his love for&#13;
on« w o m a n . T h o u g h his influence is vital&#13;
to t h e building of the railroad extension&#13;
• h e tells him to be true to himself. He&#13;
decides for it. Mirapolis. the city of n u m -&#13;
bered days, booms. Cortwright persuades&#13;
Broulllard to become c o n s u l t i n g engineer&#13;
of t h e consolidated electric power c o m -&#13;
p a n y In return for $KiO.O(X&gt; stock. r*- What do you think of a highaalaried&#13;
government employee&#13;
who would "sell out" his public&#13;
trust for private gain—even&#13;
If he did so in order to win happlnesi&#13;
for the girl he loved?&#13;
Isn't this country suffering right&#13;
now from too much of just that&#13;
sort of thing ?&#13;
CHAPTER IX&#13;
The Speedway&#13;
It was tn the days after he had&#13;
found on his desk a long envelope inclosing&#13;
a certificate for a thousand&#13;
shares of stock In the Niquoia Electric&#13;
Power, Lighting and Traction company&#13;
that Brouillard began to lose his nickname&#13;
of "Heirs-Fire" among his workmen,&#13;
with the promise of attaining, In&#13;
due time, to the more affectionate&#13;
title of "the Little Big Boss."&#13;
At the envelope-opening mote ent.&#13;
however, he was threatened with an&#13;
attack of heart failure. It was scarcely&#13;
believable. But a hastily sought Interview&#13;
with the company's president&#13;
cleared the air of all the incredibilities.&#13;
"Why, my dear Broulllard! what in&#13;
Sam Hill do you take us for?" was the&#13;
genial retort when the young engineer&#13;
had made his deprecatory protest&#13;
"Did you think we were going to cut&#13;
the melon and hand you out a piece of&#13;
the rind? Not so, my dear boy; we&#13;
are not built on any such narrow-gauge&#13;
lines. That's what we are willing to&#13;
pay for a good, reliable government&#13;
brake. It's going to be your business&#13;
to see to It that the reclamation service&#13;
gets exactly what its contract calls&#13;
for. kilowatt for kilowatt"&#13;
"I'd do that, anyhow, as chief of construction&#13;
on the dam."&#13;
"You mean you would try to do t t&#13;
As an officer of the power company,&#13;
you can do It; as an official kicker on&#13;
the outside, yon couldn't fease us a&#13;
particle. What? You'd put us out of&#13;
holiness? Not much, you wouldn't;&#13;
we'd play politics with you and s e t a&#13;
man for year job who wouldn't kick."&#13;
"Well," said the Inheritor of sudden&#13;
wealth, still matching the promoter's&#13;
mood, "you won't get me fired now,&#13;
that's one comfort When will yon&#13;
want my expert opinion on your auxiliary&#13;
dam?"&#13;
"On our dam, you mean. Oh, any&#13;
time toon; say tomorrow or Friday—&#13;
or Saturday, if that hurries yon too&#13;
math. We sha'n't want to go to work&#13;
on tt before Monday."&#13;
Being himself an exponent of the&#13;
modern theory that the way to do&#13;
things is to do them now, Brouillard&#13;
accepted the hurry order without comment&#13;
Celerity, swiftness of accomplishment&#13;
that was almost magical,&#13;
had become the Mlrapolitan order of&#13;
the day. Plans conceived overnight ;&#13;
leaped to their expositions in things&#13;
done as if the determination to do&#13;
them had been all that was necessary&#13;
to their realisation.&#13;
"You shall have the report tomorrow,"&#13;
said t h e newly created consulting&#13;
engineer, "hat yon can't go to&#13;
work Monday. The labor market is&#13;
empty, and I'm taking It for granted&#13;
that you're not going to stampede my&#13;
ahorelers and concrete men."&#13;
"Oh, no." concluded the city bander,&#13;
"We sbs/nt do that You'll admit—in&#13;
your capacity of government watch&#13;
dog—that we hare played fair in that&#13;
We have imported every workwe've&#13;
needed, and we shall Ismmore.&#13;
That's one thing/&#13;
us can afford to do—hull the&#13;
market And it won't be necessary;&#13;
we have a trainload of Italians and&#13;
Bulgarians on the way to Quesedo today,&#13;
and they ought lo be here by&#13;
Monday."&#13;
"You are a wonder, Mr. Cortwright,"&#13;
was Brouillard'B tribute to the worker&#13;
of modern miracles, and he went his&#13;
way to ride to the upper end of the&#13;
valley for the exploring purpose.&#13;
On the Monday, as President Cortwright&#13;
had so confidently predicted,&#13;
the train load of laborers had marched&#13;
in over the War Arrow trail and the&#13;
work on the auxiliary power dam was&#13;
begun. On the Tuesday a small army&#13;
of linemen arrived to set the poles&#13;
and to string the wires for the lighting&#13;
of the town. On the Wednesday&#13;
there were fresh accessions to the&#13;
army of builders, ajid the freighters on&#13;
the Quesado trail reported a steady&#13;
stream of artisans pouring In to rush&#13;
the city-making.&#13;
On the Thursday the grading and&#13;
paving of Chigringo avenue was begun,&#13;
and, true to his promise. Mr. Cortwright&#13;
was leaving a right of way in&#13;
the street for the future trolley&#13;
tracks. And it was during this eventful&#13;
week that the distant thunder of&#13;
the dynamite brought the welcome&#13;
tidings of the pushing of the railroad&#13;
grade over the mountain barrier. Also&#13;
—but this was an item of minor importance—&#13;
it was on the Saturday of&#13;
this week that the second tier of forms&#13;
was erected on the great dam and the&#13;
stripped first section of the massive&#13;
gray foot-wall of concrete raised ttJlit&#13;
in mute but eloquent protest | | i | t t j&#13;
the feverish activities of the SBtBjfdsV f&#13;
workers. If the protest were a tht*Jf£&#13;
it was far removed. Many things&#13;
might happen before the gray wall&#13;
should rise high enough to cast its&#13;
shadow, and the shadow of the coming&#13;
end, over the miraculous city of the&#13;
plain.&#13;
It was Brouillard himself who put&#13;
this thought into words on the Sunday&#13;
when he and Grislow were looking&#13;
over the work of form raising and finding&#13;
It good.&#13;
"Catching you, too, is it, Victor?"&#13;
queried the hydrographer, dropping&#13;
easily into his attitude of affable cynicism.&#13;
"I thought it would. But tell&#13;
me, what are some of the things that&#13;
i may happen?"&#13;
"It's easy to predict two of them;&#13;
I Some people will make a pot of money&#13;
and some will lose out."&#13;
Grislow nodded. "Of course you&#13;
don't take any stock in the rumor that&#13;
the government will call a halt?"&#13;
Brouillard was shaking his head&#13;
slowly.&#13;
"I don't pretend to have opinions&#13;
any more, Grtzzy. I'm living from day&#13;
to day. if the tall should get big&#13;
enough to wag the dog—"&#13;
They were in the middle of the high&#13;
staging upon which the puddlers&#13;
worked while filling the forms and&#13;
Grislow stopped short.&#13;
"What's come over you, lately, Victor?&#13;
I won't say you're half-hearted,&#13;
but you're certainly not the same&#13;
driver you were a few weeks ago, before&#13;
the men quit calling you 'Hell's&#13;
Fire.'"&#13;
Broulllard smiled grimly. "It's going&#13;
to be a long job, Grlzzy. Perhaps&#13;
I saw that I couldn't hope to keep&#13;
keyed up to concert pitch all the way&#13;
through. Call it that, anyway. I've&#13;
promised to motor Miss Cortwright to&#13;
the upper dam this afternoon, and it's&#13;
time to go and do i t "&#13;
It was not until they were climbing&#13;
down from the staging at the Jack's&#13;
Mountain approach that Grislow acquired&#13;
the ultimate courage of his convictions.&#13;
"Going motoring, you said—with&#13;
Miss Genevieve. That's another&#13;
change. Tm beginning to believe in&#13;
your seven-year hypothesis. You are&#13;
no longer a woman-hater."&#13;
"Oh, bally I There are times when&#13;
yon make me feel as If I had eaten too&#13;
much dinner, Gristy! This is one of&#13;
them. Put It In words; get It out of&#13;
your system."&#13;
"It needs only three words: Yon are&#13;
hypnotized. A month ago this citybuilding&#13;
fake looked as crazy to you&#13;
as it still does to those of us who&#13;
havent been invited to sit down and&#13;
take a hand tn Mr. Cortwright's little&#13;
game. Now yon seem to have gone&#13;
over to the other side. Yon hobnob&#13;
with Cortwright and do office work for&#13;
him. You know his fake is a fake;&#13;
and yet I overheard yon boosting it&#13;
the other night in Poodles' dining&#13;
room to a tableful of money maniacs&#13;
as If Cortwright were giving you a&#13;
rake-off."&#13;
Brouillard stiffened himself with s&#13;
jerk as he paced beside his accuser,&#13;
but he kept his temper.&#13;
"You're an old friend, Ghlsxy. and a&#13;
mighty good one—as I have had occasion&#13;
to prove. It is your privilege to&#13;
ease your mind. Is that all?"&#13;
"No. You a r e letting Genericve&#13;
Cortwright make a fool of you. tf you&#13;
were only half sane you'd see that *he&#13;
is a confirmed trophy hunter. WLy,&#13;
she even gets down to young Griffithand&#13;
uses him to dig out Information&#13;
about you. 8he—"&#13;
"Hold on, Murray: there's a limit&#13;
and you 11 bear with me if I say that&#13;
yon are working up to tt now." Brouillard's&#13;
jaw was set and the lines between&#13;
his eyes were deepening. "J&#13;
doaVsjurw what yon are'drtvtng a t&#13;
but you'd better call tt o i l I can take&#13;
care of myself."&#13;
"If 1 thought you could—tf 1 only&#13;
thought you could," said Grislow&#13;
musingly. "But the Indications all&#13;
lean the other way. It would be al)&#13;
right if you wanted to marry ber and&#13;
she wanted you to; but you don't—and&#13;
she doeen t And, besides, there's&#13;
Amy; you owe ber something, don't&#13;
you—or don't you? You needn't grit&#13;
your teeth that way. You are only&#13;
getting a part of what is coming to&#13;
you. 'Faithful are the wounds of a |&#13;
friend,' you know."&#13;
"Yes. And when the psalmist had&#13;
admitted that, he immediately asked&#13;
the Lord not to let their precious&#13;
balms break bis head. You're ail right.&#13;
Grlzzy, but I'll pull through." Then,&#13;
with a determined wrenching aside of&#13;
the subject: "Are you going up on&#13;
Chigringo this afternoon?"&#13;
"J thought 1 would—yes. What&#13;
shall I tell Miss Massingale when she&#13;
asks about you?"&#13;
"You will probably tell her the first&#13;
Idiotic thing that comes Into the back&#13;
part of your head. And if you tell her&#13;
anything pifflous about me I'll lay for&#13;
you some dark night with a pick&#13;
handle."&#13;
Grislow laughed reminlscently. "She&#13;
won't ask," he said.&#13;
"Why not?"&#13;
"Because the last time she did it I&#13;
told her your scalp was dangling at&#13;
Miss Genevieve's belt."&#13;
Th«T had .reached the door of the&#13;
quarters and Broulllard spun&#13;
nmd with a shoulder grip&#13;
emly half playful.&#13;
I believed you said any such&#13;
thing as that I'd murder you!" he exploded.&#13;
"Perhaps you'll go and tell&#13;
her that—you red-headed blastoderm^"&#13;
"Sure," said the blastoderm, and&#13;
they went apart, each to his dunnage&#13;
k i t&#13;
I&#13;
There were a dozen business blocks&#13;
under construction In Mlrapolis, with&#13;
a proportional number of dwellings&#13;
and suburban villas at various stages&#13;
in the race toward completion, when&#13;
it began to dawn upon the collective&#13;
consciousness of a daily increasing&#13;
citizenry that something was missing.&#13;
Garner, the real estate plunger from&#13;
Kansas City, first gave the missing&#13;
quantity its name. The distant thunder&#13;
of the blasts heralding the approach&#13;
of the railroad had ceased between&#13;
two days.&#13;
Up to the period of the silenced dynamite&#13;
thunderinga new industries&#13;
were projected daily, and investors,&#13;
tolled in over the high mountain trails&#13;
or across the Buckskin in dust-encrusted&#13;
automobiles by methods best&#13;
known to a gray-mustached adept in&#13;
the art of promotion, thronged the&#13;
lobby of the Hotel Metropole and&#13;
bought and sold Mirapolis "corners"&#13;
or "lnsides" on a steadily-ascending&#13;
scale of prices.&#13;
A strange mania for holding on, for&#13;
permanency, seemed to bave become&#13;
epidemic. Many of the working men&#13;
were securing homes on the instalment&#13;
plan. A good few of the villas&#13;
could boast parquetry floors and tiled&#13;
bathrooms. One coterie of Chicagoans&#13;
decided to build a six-storied office&#13;
building, with a ground Boor comer&#13;
for the Niquoia National bank with&#13;
modern conveniences and that the&#13;
chosen building material should be of&#13;
nothing less permanent than monolithic&#13;
concrete.&#13;
In harmony with the same spirit the&#13;
newly incorporated Buckskin Gold&#13;
Mining and Milling company plowed&#13;
deep furrows to bed-rock across and&#13;
back until the face of Jack's mountain&#13;
was rigxagged and scarred like a veteran&#13;
of many battles.&#13;
In keeping was the energy with&#13;
which Mr. Cortwright and his municipal&#13;
colleagues laid water mains, strung&#13;
electric wires, drove the paving contractors,&#13;
and pushed the trolley line to&#13;
the stage at which It lacked only the&#13;
rails and the cars awaiting shipment&#13;
by the railroad.&#13;
This was the situstion on the day&#13;
when Garner, sharp-eared listener at&#13;
the keyhole of opportunity, missing&#13;
the dynamite rumblings, sent a cipher&#13;
wire of inquiry to the East, got a&#13;
"rush" reply, and began warily to unload&#13;
hts Mlrapolitan holdings. Being&#13;
a man of business, he ducked to cover&#13;
first and talked afterward; but by the&#13;
time his hint had grown to rumor size&#13;
Mr. Cortwright had sent for Brouil&#13;
lard.&#13;
"Pull up a chair and have a cigar,"&#13;
said the great man when Brouillard&#13;
had penetrated to the nerve-center of&#13;
the Mlrapolitan activities In the Metropole&#13;
suite and the two stenographers&#13;
had been curtly dismissed. "Have&#13;
you heard the talk of the street? There&#13;
1s a rumor that the railroad grading&#13;
has been stopped."&#13;
Broulllard. busy with the work of&#13;
setting the third series of forms on&#13;
his great wall, had heard nothing.&#13;
"I've noticed that they haven't been&#13;
fc.asting for two or three days. But&#13;
that may mean nothing more than a&#13;
delayed shipment of dynamite," was&#13;
hts rejoinder.&#13;
"Is togs* had devilish had." The&#13;
promoter was Piaoied sMflrSTb 11»&#13;
pivot chair, and the sandy-gray eyes&#13;
dwindled to pin points, "We are up&#13;
against it that's all. Read that" and&#13;
the promoter handed a telegram&#13;
across the desk.&#13;
The wire was from Chicago, was&#13;
signed "Ackerman," and was still&#13;
damp from the receiving operator's&#13;
copying press. It read:&#13;
"Work on P. S-W.'s Buckskin ex&#13;
tension has been suspended for the&#13;
present. Reason assigned, shrinkage&#13;
lo securities and uncertainty of business&#13;
outlook In Niquoia."&#13;
Mr. Cortwright's frown figured as a&#13;
fleshly mask of irritability. "Let&#13;
once get out that the railroad peop&#13;
don't believe in the future of Mirapolis&#13;
and we're done."&#13;
Brouillard's retort was the expression&#13;
of an upflash of sanity.&#13;
J "Mirapolis has no future; It has&#13;
! only an exceedingly precarious present."&#13;
For a moment the sandy-gray eyes&#13;
became inscrutable. Then the mass&#13;
of irritation slid aside, revealing the&#13;
face which Mr. J. Wesley Cortwright&#13;
ordinarily presented to his world —&#13;
the face of imperturbable good nature.&#13;
"You're right, Brouillard; Mirapolis&#13;
is only a good joke, after all. Some-&#13;
•times I get bamfoozled into the idea&#13;
that it isn't—that it's the real thing.&#13;
That's bad for the nerves But about&#13;
this railroad fizzle; I don't relish the&#13;
notion of having our little joke sprung&#13;
on us before we're ready to laugh, do&#13;
you? What do you think?"&#13;
"It is not my turn to think, Mr. Cortwright."&#13;
"Oh, yes, it is; very pointedly. You're&#13;
one of us, to a certain extent; and if&#13;
you were not you would still be interested.&#13;
A smash just now would hamper&#13;
the reclamation service like the&#13;
mischief; the entire works shut down;&#13;
no cement, no lumber, no power;&#13;
everything tied up in the courts until&#13;
the last creditor quits taking appeals&#13;
Oh, no. Brouillard; you don't want to&#13;
see the end of the world come before&#13;
it's due."&#13;
It was the consulting engineer of&#13;
the power company rather than the&#13;
reclamation service chief who rose&#13;
and went to the window to look down&#13;
upon the morning briskness of Chi&#13;
gringo avenue. And it was the man&#13;
who saw one hundred thousand dollars,&#13;
the price of freedom, slipping&#13;
away from him who turned after a&#13;
minute or two of the absent street gazing&#13;
and said: "What do you want me j&#13;
to do, Mr. Cortwright? I did put my '&#13;
shoulder to the wheel when Ford was&#13;
here. I told him if 1 were In his place&#13;
I'd take the long chance and build the&#13;
extension."&#13;
"Did you—and before you had a '&#13;
stake In the game? That was a white&#13;
man's boost, right! Think you could&#13;
manage to get Ford on the wire and&#13;
encourage him a little more?"&#13;
"It isn't Ford; it is the New York&#13;
bankers. You can read that between&#13;
the lines in your man Ackerman's telegram."&#13;
The stock gentleman In the pivot&#13;
chair thrust out bis Jaw and tilted his&#13;
freshly lighted cigar to the aggressive&#13;
angle.&#13;
"Say, Brouillard, we've got to throw&#13;
a fresh piece of bait into the cage,&#13;
something that will make the railroad&#13;
crowd sit up and take notice. By&#13;
George, if those gold hunters up on&#13;
Jack's mountain would only stumble&#13;
across something big enough to adver&#13;
Use—"&#13;
Broulllard started as If the wishful&#13;
magic had been a blow. Like a hot&#13;
wave from a furnace mouth it swept&#13;
over him—the sudden realization that&#13;
the means, the one all-powerful, earth&#13;
moving lever the promoter was so&#13;
anxiously seeking, lay In his hands.&#13;
"The Buckskin people, yes," he said,&#13;
making talk as the rifleman digs a pit&#13;
to hold his own on the firing line. "If&#13;
they should happen to uncover a gold&#13;
reef Just now It would simplify matters&#13;
Immensely for Mirapolis. wouldn't&#13;
It? The railroad would come on, then,&#13;
without a shadow of doubt All the&#13;
bankers in New York couldn't bold it&#13;
back."&#13;
Now came Mr. Cortwright's turn to&#13;
get up and walk to one of the windows.&#13;
"Come here," he called curtly, with&#13;
a quick finger crook for the engineer,&#13;
and when Broulllard joined him:&#13;
"Can you size up that little aassrae&#13;
over yonder?"&#13;
The "caucus" was a knot ef exotted&#13;
men blocking the sidewalk la free* of&#13;
Garner's real estate office on the opposite&#13;
side of the street The purpose&#13;
of the excited ones was not difficult to&#13;
divine. They were all trying te crowd&#13;
Into the Kansas City man's place of&#13;
business st once.&#13;
For sick heafrche, bad breath,&#13;
Sour Stomach and&#13;
constipation. is&#13;
Get a 10-cen{ box now&#13;
No odds hoef bad your liver, stomach&#13;
or bowels; How much your head&#13;
aches, how miserable and uncomfortable&#13;
you are ttom constipation, indigestion,&#13;
biliousness and sluggish bowels&#13;
you always'get the desired results&#13;
with Cascareif.&#13;
Don't let your stomach, liver afld&#13;
bowels make! you miserable. Take&#13;
Cascarets to-aight; put an end to the&#13;
headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness,&#13;
sick, sour, gassy stomach,&#13;
backache and all other distress;&#13;
cleanse your inside organs of ail the&#13;
bile, gases and constipated matter&#13;
which is producing the misery.&#13;
A 10-cent box means health, happiness&#13;
and a clear head for months.&#13;
No more days of gloom and distress&#13;
if you will take a Cascaret now and&#13;
then. All stores sell Cascarets. Don't&#13;
forget the children—their little lnsides&#13;
need a cleansing, too. Adv.&#13;
Its Meaning.&#13;
Is there anything in that cipher?"&#13;
"Well, it probably was not devised&#13;
merely for naught.''&#13;
M a n y Children a r e SickJy,&#13;
Mother Gray'* Sweet Powders for Children&#13;
Break up Cold» In 24 hour*, relieve Feverish-&#13;
• ess, Headache, Stomach Trouble*, Teething-&#13;
Disorders, move and regulate the bowels, and&#13;
Destroy Worms. They are s o pleasant to take&#13;
children like them. U»ed by mothers for28rears.&#13;
All ilruggistH, 25o. Hample FREE. Addresd,&#13;
Mother Urny Co., Le Hoy, N Y.&#13;
American Sea Poet.&#13;
Now that John Masetield has come&#13;
tc be the poetic interpreter of life at&#13;
Hf.'d to his generation of Britons. It is&#13;
interesting to see an American poet.&#13;
Lincoln Cclcoid, rising to be tuotausfe*&#13;
for his countrymen. Beginning hts&#13;
career an a vessel navigating Cape&#13;
Horn, he comes cf five generations of&#13;
seagoing Maine folk. Mia boyhood&#13;
was spent en a ship sailing the seven&#13;
seas, so 1 hat now, when he comes to&#13;
write a poem on "The Vision of War,"&#13;
or when he discusses, before clubs ;&gt;f&#13;
literary and '-ivic-s.. irlted men, "Some&#13;
of the Fallacies of American Democracy,"&#13;
it is not a product of the urban&#13;
graded school which never-*4as&#13;
been out of sight of land who Is insist&#13;
Ing. Father in it a man who has "&#13;
the world," an that phrase is moa&#13;
curately though not popularly used-^&#13;
Christian Science Monitor.&#13;
^&#13;
I ifcei&#13;
Nearly 150,000 Crop Reporters.&#13;
Nearly 150,000 volunteer crop reporters&#13;
and special correspondents are&#13;
now aiding the bureau of crop estimates&#13;
of the United States depart'&#13;
meat of agriculture in the preparation&#13;
of Its estimates of crops and live stock&#13;
production of the country,&#13;
to t h e annual report of'&#13;
which has just been Issued.&#13;
tual number of tbes*&#13;
ants is 14 7,327. In addition there are&#13;
151 paid employee* in the service of&#13;
tb bureau. The total appropriation&#13;
for the work for the fiscal year ending&#13;
June ?,0, mi5, was $27c,o80.—Dun's&#13;
Review.&#13;
•i h&#13;
MORE THAN EVER&#13;
Increased Capacity for Work 8lnos&#13;
Lesving Off Coffee.&#13;
What steps will Broulllard&#13;
and Cortwright take to stop the&#13;
threatened panio and ssve thsmsetvss—&#13;
or do you think they&#13;
will be able to get out of the&#13;
mesa without losing their investments?&#13;
» • * • i * • » « - . — , * . . « .&#13;
(TO BK C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
Many former coffee drinkers who&#13;
have mental work to perform day after&#13;
day. have found a better capacity&#13;
and greater endurance by using Pot&gt;&#13;
tum instead of coffee. An BUaoM^^&#13;
woman writes: '*''"'&#13;
"I had drank coffee for about&#13;
years, and finally had what the&#13;
called 'coffee heart' I was nerro&#13;
extremely despondent; had little sasav&#13;
tal or physical strength left; had kidney&#13;
trouble and constipmtJesL&#13;
"The first noticeable benefit which*&#13;
mOaasd tha et£x«an. tron coffee to&#13;
pBSjtsjgft * i » flsj tssswayed action of&#13;
tha&#13;
and my nerved&#13;
"Than i&#13;
and the d&#13;
showed&#13;
mental streagtsX,&#13;
ST, L~l&#13;
'»?/•&#13;
8uepiclous Ms*.&#13;
"Unless my plans are frustrated,"&#13;
says Ike Van Quentin. "I shall marry&#13;
a small, slender girl, who has a big.&#13;
fat sister. Then I will hare&#13;
able assurance that t h a clothes 1&#13;
my fiancee in are her own,"&#13;
"I formerly did mantal work aw*%ftg*t&#13;
to give it up osi account of&#13;
since using Postim I&#13;
mental labor wtch less tsttaejdi?&#13;
given by Postua C*. sstisfs*'&#13;
Mich. /£./•'•"&#13;
Poetum cosnea la tw»&#13;
Poetum Cereal tha&#13;
moat ha well bosrsd. lift:&#13;
dissolve*&#13;
tar,&#13;
a dell&#13;
M e t i s * .&#13;
"%fi&gt; «£&#13;
i* &gt;* "ij ,.•,'» »&#13;
&amp;J&#13;
* * • • « * .&#13;
"*&lt;%.. &gt; , » • ' , 3¾¾&#13;
?V a- IV-&#13;
• i ^ V ^&#13;
'•k'.-i:. *&gt;&#13;
:.*&amp;&#13;
s^v'**; &amp; w&#13;
uWy M&#13;
. * • * . &gt; * • • " . .&#13;
i ^ e ^ . " . ^ v &gt; ' " f^iSSfi?/;; ' l™^^. *"v&#13;
.«*! M .^^HKSB3 Vi?^:&#13;
• " * * '&#13;
• •ASrti'.'.U'Ji . . . —- J&#13;
•'••si' •"•, / i' i *&#13;
-aSW**^ &gt; ! ? . *&#13;
, - - • • &gt; . • • • . ' •&#13;
- ^ : —&#13;
1-1.- ,&#13;
Arriving Daily&#13;
Agency for Superior Grain Drills, Oliver Plow&#13;
and Cultivators.&#13;
Some Bargains in Second Hand Farm Tools.&#13;
Special Prices on F u r n i t u r e .&#13;
Call and sec us,&#13;
*&gt;'*i&#13;
M&#13;
»-* DINKE&gt;b &amp; DUNBAR g { *&#13;
'8888888880885^ .v i::':: : ' : . ^ . ^ '&#13;
^ - / K ^ ' - * ' J * r ^ T H K M * ! : * ' v r ^ . * : - . * - '. .»'!*". 't' "V;.:*&#13;
&amp;'"'&#13;
*•*T*"•T&#13;
Aew ilrWe/ Typewriter !&#13;
j ^ ' a - -&#13;
pwF.v'1*"'-'^'-'&#13;
IT NOW!&#13;
^:aa&#13;
i** -- ' M ^ | - T h e new-day ;i(l\iUH'o&gt; tli;ii (-iiinr alone mi thi&gt; machine&#13;
1¾¾^ '. : . ¾ ¾ 1 ^ a ^ controlled by Oliver. F,v*on uin* own previous models&#13;
i ^ ^ r . - S ^ % * m o u s ^ n ^ 1 0 ^ (^y—"over had the Optional Duplex Shift.&#13;
| P ^ * ^ f e ^ f \ « puts the whole: control of ^iletteis and characters in the&#13;
P&amp; • . ' ' 3 ' M , w , f i n g e r s of the right and I.-ft hands. And it lots you&#13;
S%Le* ^^¾^¾¾^ them all with only 2s keys, ihe W M to opovan' of anv&#13;
'.oMLstajilard typewriter made&#13;
18"Operates c'•:" •" •• k-- -n^.; -j ..., -,,r"7""7"?&#13;
^7Sii:iVo. ''5''•'./:'• ^0'' ° ^ / r,; -•• *••• -^ •-.&#13;
Y*Ks|||tie crowning typewriter t r i u m p t h IS H F R E '&#13;
• i i - i f e J U S t O U t — ; t ! i d 1 •&lt; »1 ti' ••- W a t ' s nM',*!'.' P \ I , - ; , ' \ | ( .,-* &gt;;: ji&#13;
&gt;&#13;
fiers lia\p e s t r i \ - .&#13;
Lnd O l i ' . e r h a -&#13;
^ y ^ $ &amp; ^ o r l &lt; l i t s v;.&gt;e&#13;
t r u l y ir w e 1 ;&#13;
'. &gt; •; i&#13;
l i&#13;
^¾1&#13;
^ T l t l u K u :&#13;
'b.,-&#13;
-¾ "'K. ^ .&#13;
ftfrmemhor thi&gt; i'l-aee-ii^w ()J:&#13;
i S ' t l t P ,Errea1&lt;'&gt;f &gt;;i:»a *'\:1!' _!/-,.•&#13;
P X f ^ r p S t * ] ( | | . l l l i o u r p r e v i i n i v - j „•.•];:.: eitioi,.-&#13;
, l i t i n ^ ^ j o m i f c j ' «.i»;e.-'or. '^.-outie.:- i'outi-V.&#13;
.!.ii:Owffj$n!ft^:'\ c • .s-il ;,il a - -&#13;
Mfcer^ew-&lt;»v f ^ H ^ s .&#13;
^¢¢1^ h^ve decided to s* II it ; » ,-\ ^ryour CCTN wlicrr&#13;
^^^fftmofispayment plan — '7 :-r&gt;*• ,z J'JJ XoW everv&#13;
f4!ftn easily afford to have the worlds crack visible&#13;
&gt;Wilh the famous PRINTYPK. that writes like print&#13;
^ F U E E if desired.&#13;
write for full Details. S ^ t o w ^ i&#13;
1 of writing machines See why typists.&#13;
'and individuals everywhe v are flocking to the&#13;
lit mail a postal a t onoe. yo obligation. It's&#13;
astefctell yon about it. Seeing Is believing—&#13;
^ ^ A T C H OFFICE and seo for vo\irself&#13;
+&#13;
wwaap.RACf&#13;
RCPUtUCAN LEADERS LOOK FOR&#13;
PRACTICAL BUSINESS MAN&#13;
TO HEAO TICKET.&#13;
COLEMAN DU PONT NAMED&#13;
AS LIKELY CANDIDATE&#13;
Delaware Man H a t Splendid Reputation&#13;
a t a Self-Made L a a d e r In&#13;
Cenrtructlve Bualnesc.&#13;
With the RepubUcan convention only&#13;
a b.cant twelve weeks away, th©&#13;
moBt i&gt;opular topic of conversation in&#13;
i.ottiica] circles theee daye concerns&#13;
iku G. O. P.'s choice of a candidate&#13;
; ru.ii ugainst Wilson.&#13;
The Republicans will probably go&#13;
Wack t o old principles and look for a&#13;
.-. nd id ate who will command the eup-&#13;
;.on ui t h e same a r m y ol' voters who&#13;
• lecttd McKinley, wkeii u wave of&#13;
.liiriuuc common sense ewept t h e&#13;
-. jiuy, a n d business m e n by t h e&#13;
•. n i l . I'.S of thousands m a r c h t d t h e&#13;
-\:&gt;-c-,s demanding a practienl goveru-&#13;
It is interesting to note t h a t&#13;
• uie of General Coleman du Pont,&#13;
\a\\zre, has been repeatedly menjer.&#13;
tly a s the man eminently&#13;
To those&#13;
"^mmp-&#13;
• ^ U II ^ 1 I ' . H I I&#13;
WEEK END MENU.&#13;
SATtJUDAY-BREAXFABT&#13;
•ltced Peach**.&#13;
rravaUd Beef (Smgked).&#13;
What* Wheat (Hmtk J a m&#13;
Oaffce, MUk or Cocoa.&#13;
B«et au&lt;S J2«s 8*4a4.&#13;
Crca.m Cheeee and Bran Bread&#13;
S&amp;ndwlohea.&#13;
CblUed Cantaloupe. Cocoa Spent*&#13;
Cake.&#13;
Bnltormilk, Milk or iced T w .&#13;
DINNER.&#13;
Ro**t Brejiat or Bhouldci ot Vtnl&#13;
Btufie&amp;&#13;
Browned 8u*i«t or White Potateea&#13;
L,lm&amp; Beans. Sliced Tomatoes.&#13;
Lettuce *nd French Dreaalns:.&#13;
Chilled Watermelou.&#13;
"wo Men&#13;
Cured LaGrippe&#13;
in (jnt,&#13;
l L . 'J l :&#13;
- - *'-&#13;
, r .&#13;
^&#13;
;..;•'d!:». v'. ' - r thi'- nomination.&#13;
\. iio \(.&lt;ij\\ t:[)un ti&gt;' !.'(A-1 nmeuti'JM^^]&#13;
•j. ''.-:^ busnic-H.-J cviux /n&#13;
tin. &gt;; J;)&gt;:•; , i^ion o; a tva-in^i b '&#13;
man, the n a m e oi General da Poot^&#13;
ries a strong appeal, for there is n o&#13;
man more qualified to handh: tin- big&#13;
'.-j'obhTijs of today than this ; a m t selfmade&#13;
leader in constructive bvisine^s.&#13;
.Moreover, both the public and privaterecord&#13;
of General du Pont wi'l stand&#13;
up well under t h e searchlight of political&#13;
opposition.&#13;
True and Tried. COCOA Sponge Cake. - Beat four&#13;
eggs to a froiU, sift two cupfuls&#13;
of KUifur and two heaping tnbh--&#13;
s.p«.-oufuls oi* «.-ocoa together, then add&#13;
t j egijs; bc.t!, add a teaspoonful of&#13;
vanilla; sift four times two cupfuls o -&#13;
flour AVitli two teaspoonfuls of bakbig&#13;
powder and a pinch of salt; mix weii;&#13;
beat to boiling one cupful Of milk and&#13;
add to ir UtUii-i' the -^b.e of a- walnut;&#13;
• the mixture au»l&#13;
.: t-.jr t\\ i &gt; ioa '&lt; c^.&#13;
u- 'l'ids &lt; 'aln • Si:'t&#13;
"Last winter I suffered w i t h &amp; terrible&#13;
cold and a caae of l a «rlp»e,:»&#13;
writes E. C. .Rhode* of MiddleFon. Oa.&#13;
"When g e t t i n g well ot la grippe I still&#13;
bad a hacking- cough a n d for sever**&#13;
months could g e t n o relief. Finally&#13;
I began talcing Foley's Honey a n d&#13;
Tar a n d soon I w a s well of both&#13;
cough a n d cold a n d it never re»&#13;
turned."&#13;
F. G. Prevo, Bedford, lnd., w r i t e s ;&#13;
"Alter h a v i n e » a n a t t a c k of l a grippe&#13;
it Teft me w i t h a severe cough and"&#13;
I tried t-v^rything:. I lost In weight&#13;
and got EO thin i t looked as though&#13;
I wouM never g e t well. I tried&#13;
Foh.-v'h Hunyy and T a r Compound and&#13;
two bottler cured me. X am now well&#13;
*.nd hack to normal weight.'1&#13;
Foley's Honey and T*r Compound la&#13;
a healing family remedy and seldom&#13;
falls to relieve coughs, colds, croup,&#13;
whooping cough, r a w a n d inflamed*&#13;
t h m a t , tight and sore chest, i r r i t a t -&#13;
ed tickling throat a n d bronchial&#13;
CUUtfhS,&#13;
"fop Sale Everywhere"&#13;
: i : i i i v&#13;
'.I.'- --.'-.I- iL a n i - V&#13;
-• un-Ued i:' desired,&#13;
( • - [ • o t j i i t i i l .-,lid ;l h a l f&#13;
ji:&lt;t riio!!L:,h to give&#13;
pread A (hi&#13;
let i o . i i , ihi&#13;
b(:Ut. T h i s i -• t-rii&#13;
tLetvlh-L-.: .:;•&#13;
w i t h ...:::•&#13;
Tf&gt;at a b o i i t M (,.1&#13;
of milk a n d add&#13;
the right con^i-deni-v to&#13;
a little vanilla.&#13;
Silver (*aUe. i-'our cupfuls butter.&#13;
one cupful sugar, ont'-hali' i-upfui milk,&#13;
two cii[tfuis tluur, -iftod \"\i(h three&#13;
teaspoonfuls of liaising [•owder. Pinch&#13;
of salt, whit(j&gt; of .'"'ir eggs beaten stiff.&#13;
Mix t'linic u-: aolo :do\ folding whites&#13;
in at the hi-i. &lt;&gt;!;,••:'&lt;-UPli tt^aspoonful&#13;
of almond extno-t may lie added if desired.&#13;
Jhike In a moderate &gt;&gt;von about&#13;
fofty-lh'e minufo-.&#13;
Egoless Sour ('ream ( ' a k o - O n c i-upfnl&#13;
sugar e i t h e r jjraimlnted or brownh&#13;
one ctipfnl sour cre:\m (if separated&#13;
erenm use oncfinlf &lt;-npful fllMng, other&#13;
half with water), mie R'aspoonful aoda&#13;
stln-etl iti cream, rtavortrji?; on« tablespoonful&#13;
cocoa sifted with euougk flour&#13;
to make cake consistency. This 1» Inexpensive&#13;
but delicious.&#13;
Cocoanut Cake.--Mix together one&#13;
half pound of dour. oue-four»h pound&#13;
•acta of butter a n d sugar i n d t w o&#13;
qggj a n d &gt; small cupful of milk and&#13;
one taldespoonful of baking powder.&#13;
Wlien well mixed put In a c i ^ f u i o r&#13;
wore of grated coconnut. B a k e In&#13;
aninll b u t t w w l tins in n moderately&#13;
quick oven.&#13;
His Golf Prixe.&#13;
W'heu ihe Duke of York w a s living la&#13;
Edinburgh in bV^i he was mid that a&#13;
GENERAL COLEMAN DU PONT.&#13;
Coleman du Pont was born in Kentucky&#13;
and started his working life in&#13;
the mines of the Wue Grass State. He&#13;
stands today as one of t h e few successful&#13;
men who have acquired their&#13;
positions by methods that will M.and&#13;
scrutiny. He h a s been a producer—&#13;
not a ctock jobber. He lias never an&#13;
tagonized any class of people. Capital&#13;
and Labor alike admire him.&#13;
"Without self-advertisement h^ does&#13;
more charity than do most men. He is&#13;
an ardent advocate of good roads and&#13;
believes that a really perfect pystem&#13;
of highways will enhance the farmer's&#13;
income and reduce t h e cost, of living&#13;
(0 the cities. He has built roads and&#13;
given t h e m to his state, always with a&#13;
certain -d lu.iio&#13;
was I lie best ::&lt;,}, i i&#13;
and him. ; he did-1 .&#13;
chose as part leaning&#13;
a hU-M' &gt;1;ike&#13;
over t h e money&#13;
forth with bull: a&#13;
dnkc placed a stoin&#13;
'••rest hedrir.'-: tlic&#13;
Pure,"&#13;
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i.ihT J a m e s 11 •&#13;
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to . Patersoue, who&#13;
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sound&#13;
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adaptation of the jav to use In the&#13;
case of oerrffin .-arnivom, like the otter—&#13;
a big w«a-et ;hat. h a s acquired&#13;
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dark horses' tor t h e Republican&#13;
nomination. They point t o t h e fart&#13;
that his success in life&gt; would eliminate&#13;
any a e e d for a friendly Colonel&#13;
Houae, or a n y other financial influence&#13;
standing ever behind the presidential&#13;
chair. N o r would h e be compelled t o&#13;
take order* from any m a n o r g r o u p of&#13;
men.&#13;
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General du Pont are pointing t o i« hia&#13;
knowledge of mllttary affairs. For&#13;
airteen y e a r s h e h a s been identified&#13;
with t h e soldiery of hi* s t a t e and is&#13;
thoroughly alive t o t h e necessity for&#13;
preparedn**s8 TTe h a s also h a d&#13;
practical training in politics, having&#13;
been r. dolefaf-e tM n_BWnber oi&#13;
M A I C anu &gt;&gt;auou*i UiaTtfaUktoia, uud&#13;
RHEUMATIC PAIN S T O P P E D&#13;
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'•o-s-a .-tiffr.esr-: a:id p.eoliizirc; &lt;xiin of&#13;
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to t h e painful p a r t . Just apply a s ,&#13;
directed fo t h e sore spots. In a :&#13;
short t i m e t h e pain c i r e s way to n ;&#13;
tingling s( -n sat ion of comfort and ;&#13;
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wonderful relief since I u s e d your lin j&#13;
imont on m y knee. T o think, o n e&#13;
application gave m e relief. Sorry T&#13;
h a r n ' t s p a c e t o tell you t h e history.&#13;
Thankinjr. you f o r w h a t y o u r r e m e d y&#13;
h a s done for mo. " — J a m e s S. Fergtw&#13;
so, P h i l a d a , P a . S l o a n ' s L i n i m e n t&#13;
gills p a i n . 25c, a t d r u g g i s t s .&#13;
serving a s a m e m b e r of t h e Republican&#13;
National committee for many years.&#13;
It it the splendid bnttaftis training&#13;
of General du Pont that is patatl&amp;f&#13;
the way for htm to tk* nomination.&#13;
For it is conceded on all&#13;
sides that the biggest problems of this&#13;
country a t t h e close of t h e European&#13;
war will b e business problems, a n d&#13;
t h e r e a r e few m e n a m o n g thoRe mentioned,&#13;
who have had h i s «• xpericn.ee&#13;
in coping with such lmpc n-ohlcms.&#13;
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b a t t e r t h e n&#13;
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A n t i - P a i n P i l l s&#13;
U e e d b y t h o u s a n d s&#13;
f e r a g e n « r » t i c n&#13;
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neuralgic puius need&#13;
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rtd&#13;
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are the&#13;
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only ttilii*; tnu&#13;
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head in ftft^m niinuic.* ; env* also&#13;
talMn th«ni I'OI i ht.nr.at a-.ii. )-.raflaebe,&#13;
pains in the b;«.e-t, o.-ntl.anhe,&#13;
•araekc and pairs in to«- bewsis and&#13;
limb*. I have ftr.iiid nothing to&#13;
•qual th«m mid tliey are »'t that i s&#13;
•lalaaad for tb-ir.."&#13;
J. W. SJClx'iK, Ehi«« Rininas, Mo.&#13;
At ail druQgliti—25 dcft«6 25 c«nta.&#13;
Never «el«l in bulk. i&#13;
MILE* MEOICAL CO., Elkhart. In«.&#13;
DO YOU know of anyone&#13;
who is oM enough to&#13;
read, who has not seen that&#13;
sign at a railroad crossing?&#13;
If everyone has w e n it at some&#13;
time or other, then why doesn't&#13;
the railroad l e t ihe aign rot&#13;
away? W h y does the railroad&#13;
company c o n t i n u e to keep&#13;
those signs at every crossing P&#13;
Mayfce you think, Kr. Merchant*&#13;
" Most everybody knows my&#13;
store, I don't have to advertise.*&#13;
Your store and your goods need&#13;
more advertising than the railroads&#13;
nerd do to warn people&#13;
to "Look O^t for the Cars.*&#13;
Ncthinp; is rver corrf'r'-^d in the&#13;
advc.tisinr wer-d.&#13;
The Depr.rtrrent 1::~-CG s.Te a&#13;
V"".V rc("d c-Tarnr.'e — - they are&#13;
•tir.v.r.i; n d verri T' r: ^ - — an d&#13;
If it p.ays to :-r. r. fr-- .a _'.o aaand&#13;
about Chris't-r.s 'ir-..-, it ccrtr-&#13;
lr.ly TT'ill pr..y yr '.i to v~n a d -&#13;
vrrtiseTnentsr.bout s!l the tima&gt;&#13;
-.-'d b - r i - r r - .&#13;
r a&#13;
It'&amp; just businesi that's aH, to&#13;
x\DVERTISE ia&#13;
THIS PAPER&#13;
OVER 6 5 YEARS'&#13;
PERIENCE&#13;
^alctiy urtrUtB onr eptukm &lt;rw WT&#13;
»n»#ntirtn HfroSt^fjMfWtafcia. rn»«i»ni»r»&#13;
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t ^-¾ ^•hi. • ^ ^</text>
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                <text>March 22, 1916 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Wednesday, March 2"th, 191(: No. 11&#13;
EXCHANGE&#13;
CLIPPINGS&#13;
r«r-&#13;
-"••\ i r ^&#13;
.'J -s "&lt;-._'&#13;
femft of I n t e r e s t from&#13;
\er§hbopIn3 T o w n s&#13;
nsilanti —The Michigan&#13;
Obituary&#13;
A n o t h e r v e i e i a u of t h e Civil&#13;
W a r hue r e s p o n d e d t o t h e iaat roll&#13;
call w i t h t h e d e a t h of Cfaaa. H .&#13;
S t i c k l e , who after a liotjuriug III—&#13;
ness, d i e d i o C l a r k a o n , N . Y.,&#13;
M a r c h 17, 191b, a g e d 77 y e a r s . H e&#13;
leaves two b r o t h r r s , R o b e r t of&#13;
Lad- C'Urksou, W i l l i a m of R o c h e s t e r ,&#13;
1&#13;
POR SPRING 1916&#13;
We are Showing a Very Large Assortment&#13;
Ladies' Suits, Co,&#13;
- i&#13;
d o m p a n y r e p o r t s t h e b i g g e s t aI1'-t o u e ftifiter&gt; ^'l '8 - &amp; P. C o r l e t t&#13;
b . - i ' i u b b -.-ver e n j o y e d by i h e c o n - a t w h o s e h o m e h e died.&#13;
c t : u . X u t L.-*-• lasi i h r e e m o n t h s M r . S t i c k l e w a s b o m in C o u r -&#13;
t n e y Lave sold 1CXMJ0J feet of, UB, L i v i n g s t o n C o , N. Y., S e p t .&#13;
Skirts and %&#13;
/ • i » f.*"-"t&#13;
O L i , #&#13;
All&#13;
r m&#13;
d a d ,&#13;
V c ! ) h l i ' i f - l ; . -&#13;
n; ;v&#13;
: L i a !&#13;
L a d d e r s m o i \ t h a n du&#13;
game t i m e .. ye:ir anro. -K?&#13;
Howell- •••Adam H a l l&#13;
to t h i s office, a c u r i o s i t y&#13;
d a y iu t h ^ lorm of a n a:&#13;
p o c k e t kniiV with a&#13;
i n c h e s lorn: a n d v.d&gt;jn open&#13;
knifA wab&#13;
i n c h e s ioa.'.&#13;
in Sheffield&#13;
b n njjht&#13;
sixty-fhre.- j&#13;
Setchfjeid, a&#13;
of M r . Hall.&#13;
t c r n e y A b " •&#13;
CnA '/ *'.ji.f&#13;
C c . i n t y ' ' v i&#13;
ID '; ^ t b n r&#13;
fiVfeU'IIl,&#13;
th*&#13;
j r u i i ^ ' i&#13;
2'2, 1838, t h e o l d e s t BOO of C h r s t c -&#13;
p h e r an 1 S a r a Lobdel l S u c k l e .&#13;
O n A u g . 11, 1S'*»'2 he enlisted in&#13;
W e d n e s - C o . A, l-40t.h Rer/Aneut, N . Y.&#13;
n t V o l . l i e p a r t i c i p a t e d iu t h e&#13;
Vi. b a t t l e s of F r e d r i c k y b u r g G e t t y s -&#13;
iie b u r g , T h e Wilderutrsei, L a u r e l&#13;
,,1 f H i d , S p o t s o l v a u i a , C o u r t H o i b e&#13;
......V JinMi- &lt;d N o r t h Arm ttiver, Told&#13;
vs-ji.s H a r b o r an 1 o t h e r s . l b - WHS t a k e n&#13;
(-:,1-1 y p r i s o n e r of w a r winie LOiardiii^&#13;
New and U-to-Date. Not an old uat^eii'c&#13;
mar the beautv of the Ladies Der&gt;arfnient&#13;
to&#13;
: o c r t r v&#13;
'"(.&gt; ! J v \\ i.'. \a til&#13;
b r o t h e r - in-ia'-v&#13;
Libby&#13;
W A d m 11. K. ai&#13;
le prison pen:-;&#13;
and Belle 18&#13;
i-: was Kept.&#13;
OL S a i s b n r ^ ,&#13;
lor nine&#13;
Very Beautiful&#13;
Tailored Suits&#13;
Fasd'iioia.-d from v&gt;&#13;
LAMa&#13;
; o w&#13;
. ' . O l l S&#13;
l O - r d b v&#13;
h 2&lt;'--At.&#13;
i o d a y '&lt;•-&#13;
t o l A -&#13;
s p r i n _ r&#13;
ie o h l ca.K' : s&#13;
. t - _ r * ; i ^ h&#13;
o r m t h s Willi »car&lt;-e!y food to s u s -&#13;
Lai i i i b \ A ft el1 i -a'd) i o ^ iioin^&#13;
u' :.a i v y p h ' d d f- .a1:1 whic!: :-'fv&#13;
hi' ; d('af. Af tin- c!o-e' of : in- w a r&#13;
lie was !neiorab!\ di.-char^ed.&#13;
•jeediirdy&#13;
'.eriab&#13;
oeautiltij rr.;&#13;
here na-s been a dirl'e i n ),^ •. 1&#13;
CJIC(* of opinion r»a^aidiULr t h ^ , l l , j 1 't ^'l&#13;
ma t t e r in various pa r t s P.f n--1&#13;
wthte, 6ome b e l i r v i n ^ t h a t a prim&#13;
a r y was neceBsai'v und^r r h - rec&#13;
e n t l y Hmeucled law*, T h e r u i i u ^&#13;
was m a d e for M a y o r J a m e s W.&#13;
M a r c h of B a t t l e C r e * k . - - E x .&#13;
H i l l s d a l e - F w l • ' M e l a y h a t&#13;
b e f n appointee! p o s t m a s t e r at tliis&#13;
p l a c e .&#13;
i H n n [! i a&#13;
odu. Ai r&#13;
m a n a_n&#13;
Ch^piAH^, f.^ur years&#13;
v."; i ri&#13;
M i n S&#13;
In New, Plain&#13;
and Noveity Effect&#13;
Ilaiirwinel;' t di'a'f.'d ,;n.!&#13;
\ ery attrLiCL;\a;.&#13;
movefile? !n&#13;
Sprino Coats&#13;
^ ^&#13;
i e -&#13;
Hansorne P^aln&#13;
Cloths and Uniqise&#13;
CheckbandPiaids&#13;
- . . 1 . ; •'. • :,n'... .;:d\ • - \ '&#13;
M i \&#13;
later bhe died leaving an infant&#13;
son William. On D e c . -&gt;7, 1871&#13;
he m a r r i e d Miaa F r a n c i s D a r w i n&#13;
of Pincktiey, Mich,, whose d e a t h&#13;
o c c u r r e d &gt;larch 'JO, 191 L\&#13;
T h e fuu«ral vwi# beld M o n d a y&#13;
a f t e r u o o u at t h e h o m e of s i t t e r ,&#13;
Mr*. E . P . C o r l e t t , Kev. A i l t n of&#13;
v&#13;
Bli*8 tieid T h e w&amp;ur w o r k s i B r o c k P ° r t a i l l i R e v M a c k o f&#13;
p r o p o s i t i o n was uuowtnl u n d * r by K ^ k w a otliciating. - T h e H r o c k -&#13;
* m a j o r i t y of i : U . i p o r t R « p u W t o .&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e - M r s . F r e d O r i e v e&#13;
f*31 o n t h e ice M o n d a y , w h i c h&#13;
I ' t o t l e r e d h e r u n c o n s c i o u s for a&#13;
w k i l e . F o r t u n a t e l y n o b o n e s w«re&#13;
b r o k e n . - J ^ r i e f S u n .&#13;
Notice to Democrats&#13;
N e w and Elegant spring Skirts and Waists&#13;
T h e y a r e correct in b t \ i e . T h e y &gt;»rc b t i o m u i ^ . n u r i v ,a.»de. Mad«' from ii,c IIIUM.&#13;
beautiful m a t e r i a l s a m i they a r e n o t e x p e n s i v e .&#13;
New spring Goods in Every Department&#13;
G00DN0W &amp; GARTRELL Howell. Mich.&#13;
The Store rJ^o Please&#13;
^&#13;
«&#13;
» •&#13;
Obituary&#13;
T h e d e a t h of W a r r e n \Y. B u r -&#13;
gese, u f o r m e r l y well k n o w n L i v&#13;
i n ^ e t o n c o u n t y y o u n g m a n a n d&#13;
t e a c h e r i n t h e d i s t r i c t school some&#13;
t h i r t y y e a r s a g o , o c e n r e d at nig&#13;
r e s i d e n c e in Ohe&amp;iiuiug, March 17.&#13;
M i c h i g a n u e ^ e r h a d a D e m o -&#13;
c r a t i c w o r k e r w h o h a s d o n * m o r e&#13;
for t h e D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y Uiftu&#13;
E d w i n Q. W o o d . H i s work h a s&#13;
been a c o m t &amp; n t sacrifice of t i m e&#13;
e n e r g y a n d m o n e y . M i c h i g a n&#13;
D e m o c r a t s have never achi eved&#13;
such success a s d u r i n g his in c u m -&#13;
bvuey of t h e office of N a t i o n a l i«»« buaineso T u e s d a y .&#13;
c o m m i t i r e m a n . F b ' is a c a n d i - R e a d ^ ^ u r p h y A d a c k s o n ' s&#13;
d a t e for re-eUction Rt rh* p r i m a r y on d,rd, pa^re '\\\* *.v*ek-&#13;
A p r i l ;&gt;rd. Now is »n o p p o r t u n i t y ' ] i 0 r n '•) W, (:. Miilvr a n d&#13;
y&#13;
* * i&#13;
People Yoif Know&#13;
(A A. B e n n e t t whs in dar-kson&#13;
T h e deceased w a s b o r n i n t h e&#13;
t o w n s h i p of l l a m b u r - S e p t . 21 for real D e m o c r a t s i« show t h e i r T u e s d a y ^ v n&#13;
1750. H e wa^ a son rf M r . a n d&#13;
M r s . (Anester Bur^r.-.-, early s-At&#13;
l e r s i:i tin-1 ' n ' v : n h ' j i . W a r r e n -,n&#13;
N * i fe&#13;
10 ; H J ' ( i i '&#13;
Rp!n*°c'ial e)ii &lt;d&#13;
n i i i V :•&gt;-,;&#13;
a r r iiiL;' a t yonn.; - n a n h o o d t a u j i e&#13;
s c h o o l in d i e district schoolj , nf&#13;
tla: c o n n t y for a n u m b e r of year&gt;.&#13;
O - t n b e r ii", 1 S7L* he was u n i t e d in&#13;
m a r r a i ^ e to Miss W e l t h a D u n n i n g&#13;
. d a u g h t e r of M r . a n d M r s . C e p h n s&#13;
D u n n i n g of H a m b u r g , w h o s u r -&#13;
v i v e s .&#13;
M r . B u r g e s s move d t o S a g i n a w&#13;
c o n t y s o m e y e a r s a g o a n d l a t e r&#13;
o&#13;
y n i i s&#13;
: "! An.-- from \ nn v •&#13;
ii v.-n nwt so 'v* t:&#13;
ni r n " c&lt; &gt;mm 'i n ii &gt;&#13;
r \ (Vi iiac-' indme-.&#13;
'c\ vour 1 ovalt\ and&#13;
n " nif&gt; and tri^d pai&#13;
tl'o!'is, ft&#13;
i lfl r&lt;-&lt; o f 1 :V,:i{-'V&#13;
) 1 1&#13;
E. L . M e l : .&#13;
I.jiy, ^ \ i:-.. o n&#13;
Mrs. M. D .&#13;
a n i w u e:&#13;
• i n&#13;
•c:&#13;
\&#13;
Mpil d a \ s . :-&#13;
b r i d g e "&gt;n..':'&#13;
Mrs. D-iM !&#13;
D u r a n d w^:;--&#13;
of r e l a t i w s !&#13;
M r s . Aria&#13;
s p e n t arvt-'.rii;&#13;
t h e b*me of&#13;
WAV.&#13;
M r s . CilKS. \"a&#13;
s i n g h a s been s p e m i i n .&#13;
week with In-:- onrei&#13;
M&#13;
K-.i&#13;
1 s o n&#13;
f H o w ° i i&#13;
w^ek a t&#13;
U P l a c e -&#13;
i of L a n -&#13;
1 he past&#13;
Mr. n n d&#13;
Another Business Change&#13;
A n o t h e r b u s i n e s s c h a n g e ro:&gt;k&#13;
s e r v e d t h e c o u n t y a s sheriff for : place- in I b n c k n e y last, wrtek. w h e n&#13;
f o u r y e a r s a n d was a m e m b e r of : S. \ \ . ( i u t b r i e w h o p u r c h a s e d t h e&#13;
t h « c o u n t y a u d i t o r s a t t h e t i m e of stock of D r y G o o d s a n d G r o c e r i e s&#13;
bis d e a t h ! . o f W. W. B a r n a r d la«t f*ll t r a d e d M r s - G - w - ^ e e p l e .&#13;
B e s i d e s h i s wife a u d c h i l d r e n , t h e s a m e to O E B o o t h for a l a r g e i S p e c i a l ( ' o m m t i u i c a y o n f o r&#13;
dec«&amp;fted is s u r v i v e d b y o n e b r o t h - fruit farm a t S h e l b y M i c h i g a n , a l - , L o d g e F . &lt;v A . M. X o . 7o, I u e s -&#13;
• r , fced four siatera. T h e fnueral t k o u g h Mr. &amp; a t h r i e hau only b e e n j J * y t v e u i n g , A p r i l itfa. W o r k in&#13;
we* fc%ki from t h e h m i t e S a s d a j ! h e r e o n l y a a b o r t t i m e , he a n d h i t ] F . O. D e g r * « .&#13;
a f t e r n o o n , fail b r o r t i e r a n d l i t t e r s ; f a m i l y have m a d e m a n y frienc}«l C . A . B t n c e t t , w h o h a i W e n&#13;
a t t e n d i n g . h e r e w h o r a g r e t t h e i r ^ o i n g a w a y . r O M t a g t h e hotel d n r i a g t h e&#13;
T b « g o o d i a r e b e i n g i n v o i c e d wfaatr, will m o v e i n t o t h e G e o ,&#13;
I I P k L &gt; now, a n d Mr. ( i n t h r i e a n d family ' IWaaon b u i l d i n g t h e 6r»t of n * x t&#13;
J« J » u n U r C n . e x p e c t t o d e p a r t for t h e i r n e w | aawath a a d will r u n a pool room&#13;
W i l l b a a t t h e P i n c k n e y H o t e i h o n w t h e laat.of t h e week o » l y .&#13;
F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y , M a r . 3 1 aTid T h e L a d i e a o f t h e M . E . ( n n r c h&#13;
ApnlUL A l l e y e s o o t r e c t l j fit-^ Sure. w\\\ bold t l w i r A n n u a l T o w n - m e e * -&#13;
I m a H o n l r e e . J - C H U R C H | y r a n t C T t j » t i r o o m i , M o n d a y , April Hrd.&#13;
We Rlways Suggest&#13;
To Patrons Wlio&#13;
Demand High-Brads&#13;
GHOGOLflTES&#13;
"MMQimtituttgaV&#13;
Pinekney, Mich*&#13;
ri;w» •- - * - ^ • "'&gt;-Hs'&#13;
, &lt;m*mMm •^km&#13;
JSl&#13;
1&#13;
.*t.&#13;
•K&#13;
'^*WWmi'. **•"!-*•&#13;
.- • • ; • • • • ' • : ? ? . • • '&#13;
• &gt; ^ - .&#13;
t*.^';*'"u"'^&#13;
"^AS*#^ * . •&#13;
'^':&#13;
• r . i,i'Hi.&gt;&gt; ^ -&#13;
l&amp;'S'l^alfeESliWi&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
HOW MRS. BEAN&#13;
MET THE CRISIS&#13;
Carried Safely Through Change&#13;
of Life by Lydia £. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound.&#13;
ONE BEA&#13;
*3 aivd 5Krub _&#13;
TKcirTare and Cultivatioiv&#13;
Nashville, Term.—"When I was going&#13;
through the Change of Life I had a tu-&#13;
•jinor &amp;s large as u&#13;
child's head. The&#13;
doctor said it was&#13;
three years coming&#13;
and gave me medicine&#13;
for it until I&#13;
was called a w a y&#13;
from the city for&#13;
s o m e t i m e . Of&#13;
course I could not&#13;
go to him then, BO&#13;
my sister-in-law told&#13;
ime that she thought&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
would cure it. It helped both&#13;
the Change of Life and the tumor and&#13;
when I got home I did not need the doctor.&#13;
I took the Pinkham remedies until the&#13;
tumor was gone, the doctor said, and I&#13;
have not felt it since. I tell every one&#13;
how I was cured If this letter will&#13;
help others you are welcome to use it."&#13;
—Mr*. E. H. B E A N , 526 Joseph Avenue,&#13;
Nashville, "Tenn.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
a pure remedy containing the&#13;
extractive properties of good old fashioned&#13;
roots and herbs, meets the needs&#13;
of woman's system at this critical period&#13;
of her life. Try i t&#13;
I f t h e r e i s a n y s y m p t o m i n y o u r&#13;
c a s e w h i c h p u z z l e s y o u , w r i t e t o&#13;
t h e L y d i a E . P i n k h a m M e d i c i n e&#13;
Co., L y n n , M a s s .&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
Cut out cathartics and purgatives.&#13;
brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Tryj&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
Purely vegetable. Act&#13;
gently on the liver,&#13;
eliminate bile, and&#13;
soothe the delicate,,&#13;
membrane of the^&#13;
bowel. C u r e ,&#13;
Constipation,&#13;
Biliousness,&#13;
Sick Head* ache sad Iniljesticn, as millions know.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
SPRING IN THE GARDEN&#13;
They are&#13;
Will reduce Inflamed, Strained,&#13;
S w o l l e n T e n d o n s , Ligaments,&#13;
or Muscles. Stops the lameness and&#13;
pain from a Splint, Side B o n e or&#13;
B o n e Spavin. No blister, no hair&#13;
gone and horse can be used. $2 a&#13;
bottle at drug^istt or delivered. Describe&#13;
your case for special instructions&#13;
and interesting horse B o o k 2 M Free.&#13;
ABSQRBINE, JRM&#13;
t n c antiseptic liniment for j manure helps&#13;
i By E. VAN BENTHUYSEN.&#13;
Just as soon as the lilac and other&#13;
spring-flowering shrubs have done&#13;
blooming, prune them. Cut back to a&#13;
' strong eye or shoot, preserving the&#13;
! characteristic form of the shrub&#13;
Fight green lice with tobacco tea&#13;
and ihe rose slug with lime water.&#13;
Or try dusting air-slaked lime on the&#13;
infested rose bushes.&#13;
I'se a sharp knife or scissors when&#13;
gathering flowers. Early in the morn&#13;
lng ia the best time, and the blooms&#13;
not quite developed will last longest.&#13;
Keen the stems of the newly cut flowera&#13;
deep in water before arranging In&#13;
bouquets.&#13;
Make a place for the petunia. It is&#13;
one of the most accommodating of&#13;
| plants. It makes a fine showing rap-&#13;
Idly, grows easily and takes root rap-&#13;
Idly If there is a corner on the home&#13;
grounds you haven't planned for try&#13;
this year to grow petunias. Prepare&#13;
the soil carefully, scatter petunia&#13;
seeds upon it, water with a fine hose&#13;
and watch the seeds grow. Look out&#13;
for the big weeds, the little ones will&#13;
be smothered by the rapid growth of&#13;
the petunias.&#13;
If Jack Frost has found some tender&#13;
seedling, place It out of the sun Immediately.&#13;
Spray with very cold water&#13;
and shade from the sun's rays.&#13;
Gladioli must be planted every two&#13;
weeks for succession. The plants are&#13;
beautiful and when placed among&#13;
roses or with a background of shrubbery&#13;
are a brilliant spot In the garden.&#13;
Cannas like very rich soil and plenty&#13;
of water during the growing season.&#13;
Plant two feet apart, if they are the&#13;
tall-growing sort, the dwarf kind can&#13;
be planted closer. As the seed pods&#13;
form, cut them off. A mulch of atrawy&#13;
to conserve the water&#13;
mankind, reduces Strained, T o r n Liga&#13;
(Dents. Swollen Glands. Veins or Muscle*:&#13;
Heals Cuts, Sores. Ulcer*. AUays pain. Pric* £.00 a harden dealer* or deHrervd. Book "Siidencc" free.&#13;
F. Y9UM, f. D. F, 310 TsspM Strut, Sprites* Not,&#13;
that Is given them.&#13;
PROPAGATING BY CUTTING&#13;
Shade Trees.&#13;
Cuttings of the varieties of which&#13;
the numbers are short can be Inserted&#13;
now. These may be obtained from the&#13;
old plants lifted from the beds in the&#13;
autumn, or a few tops may be taken&#13;
off the strongest of the young plants.&#13;
Inserted in light, sandy soil they will&#13;
soon root on a shelf in a warm house-&#13;
Cuttings of iresine, coleus, ageratum,&#13;
heliotrope, verbena, fuchsia, fibrousrooted&#13;
begonia, etc., when required in&#13;
quantity should be inserted in a bed&#13;
of sand made up in a propagating&#13;
frame with bottom heat. Three inches&#13;
of sand will be sufficient and if this&#13;
is made firm, well supplied with water&#13;
and a bottom heat of 7;" to 80 degrees&#13;
m a i n l i n e d , many of the cuttings will&#13;
be rooted in a week and ready for&#13;
potting up singly in small pots.&#13;
Remaining in the sand such a short&#13;
time, they can be dibbled in close together.&#13;
Lobelias, altermantheras, and mesembryanthemums&#13;
can also be increased&#13;
by the thousands in this way.&#13;
Provided there is good stock of old&#13;
plants on hand, March is soon enough&#13;
to commence propagating.&#13;
Early In February dahlia tubers, of&#13;
which a large stock is required, may&#13;
be brought into the propagating house.&#13;
Placed on the stage, partly burying the&#13;
tubers in leaf mold, plenty of shoots&#13;
will soon push out. When these are&#13;
about three inches In length they&#13;
should be taken off with a slight heel&#13;
and if inserted in a sand bed they will&#13;
soon root.&#13;
Another method successfully adapted&#13;
for rooting dahlias. Is to make up&#13;
a hotbed a yard in height, place a&#13;
frame on this and plunge the pots&#13;
of cuttings where there is a nice bottom&#13;
heat.&#13;
A list of the quantities of plants&#13;
required should be made and the numbers&#13;
entered as they are rooted. This&#13;
may have much trouble when the time&#13;
comes for planting out.&#13;
for a fine&#13;
complexion you must ao something more&#13;
than use cosmetics. You must&#13;
keep the blood pure, the liver&#13;
and kidneys active and the&#13;
bowels regular. You must also&#13;
correct the digestive ills that&#13;
cause muddy skin and dull eyes.&#13;
By W. R. GILBERT,&#13;
Where thousands of plants are grown&#13;
for positions in the open air during&#13;
the summer, this is an important&#13;
operation from March onward. Considerable&#13;
forethought and knowledge&#13;
of the work are necessary to obtain the&#13;
plants in suitable condition and in sufficient&#13;
numbers, when the time for&#13;
planting out arrives.&#13;
Although decried by some, the scarlet&#13;
geranium still has hosts of admir-&#13;
TRY AMARANTHUS&#13;
The amaranthus is a much neglected&#13;
plant. It can be made more&#13;
effective than the canna or the caladiuxn.&#13;
With its color schemes in red,&#13;
and red and yellow, red, yellow and&#13;
green can very easily be worked out&#13;
Give It a trial.&#13;
Good Judge.&#13;
"I take great pride in my ability to&#13;
judge human nature." said Ike Van&#13;
Quentin. *A few months ago I let a&#13;
friend have $10 and I was confident at&#13;
era, especially since the introduction [ the time be would not pay it back. And&#13;
of the variety—Paul CrampeL he didn't"—Kansas City Star.&#13;
offer you the needed help. They&#13;
are mild in action, but quickly&#13;
strengthen the stomach, gently&#13;
stimulate the liver and regulate&#13;
the bowels. They put the&#13;
body in good condition so the&#13;
organs work a? nature intended&#13;
Backed by sixty years of&#13;
usefulness, Beecham s Pills are worth&#13;
vCu.nducted by the National Woman'i&#13;
ChribUctu Temi&gt;erfcUice Union.)&#13;
PROHIBITION GOVERNORS.&#13;
Each of the seven states which out&#13;
lawed the liquor traffic January 1 ie&#13;
fortunate in having a governor who&#13;
is heartily in favor of prohibition and&#13;
will uphold the law.&#13;
Governor Carlson of Colorado sayt&#13;
he will enforce it even to the extent&#13;
of calling upon the state militia. Gov&#13;
ernor Lester of Washington urges ar&#13;
appropriation of $50,000 to be used&#13;
in enforcement. Governor Withy&#13;
combe of Oregon expresses contidenct&#13;
that an overwhelming majority of the&#13;
citizens of the state mean to see thai&#13;
the provisions of the law are lived up&#13;
to and that they may count upon his&#13;
help to the utmost. Governor Alex&#13;
ander's YlgorouB championship of the&#13;
statutory prohibition law of Idaho is&#13;
well known, and his personal influence&#13;
was used to secure the referendum on&#13;
the constitutional amendment to be&#13;
taken next November.&#13;
When Governor Hay of Arkansas&#13;
signed the prohibition bill, he said: "1&#13;
believe the most manly act of my life,&#13;
an act that will mean much to me, to&#13;
my conscience, to my wife, to my two&#13;
little boys, and to the people of the&#13;
state to which I owe so much, was the&#13;
act I performed when I placed my signature&#13;
to the bill which gave Arkansas&#13;
state-wide prohibition."&#13;
The'*attitude of Governor Clarke of&#13;
Iowa is indicated by his remarks when&#13;
he signed the* measure repealing the&#13;
mulct law and putting into effect statewide&#13;
prohibition: "The banishment of&#13;
the saloon ought to mean the emancipation&#13;
of many a laboring man, the&#13;
joy of the wife in his home, better&#13;
conditions and a better outlook on life&#13;
for his child."&#13;
South Carolina's governor in his&#13;
N e w Year's greeting declared that,&#13;
"With the help of God and the sup&gt;&#13;
port of the people the prohibition law&#13;
shall be rigidly enforced so long aa&#13;
I am governor."&#13;
M a n y School C h i l d r e n A r e S l o k l y .&#13;
CTnl'ireu who i\rr. d e l i c a t e , feverish a n d cross&#13;
will tfei i m m o l a t e relief rrom Atother G r a y ' *&#13;
tsweri Puwdera for Children. They defease t h e&#13;
ttLoui»(-'h, &amp;&lt;-L on ihe liver, a n d a r e r e c o m m e n d e d&#13;
for euaj;&gt;iu.loin%T cbl.dr»-n. A p l e a s a n t r e m e d y&#13;
for wormn. Uned by m o t h e r * for Jfg y e a r s . Ail&#13;
Dn;KK"*i»&lt; '&lt;&amp;«-•• dam pie F B K £ . AddretM, Mother&#13;
Uray Co., Lc Buy, N". Y.&#13;
Halt a loaf is better thau the average&#13;
ham sandwich.&#13;
AN APPRECIATIVE LETTER.&#13;
Mr. M. A. Page, Osceola, Wis., under&#13;
date of Feb. 16, 1916, writes:&#13;
Some years a g i I waa troubled with&#13;
oiy kidneys and was advised to tqr&#13;
K U WW&#13;
years liuv* I&#13;
lined taktag tfeese&#13;
Pills and I have had&#13;
no trouble with my&#13;
kidneyB since. I&#13;
waa pretty bad for&#13;
ten or twelve years&#13;
prior to taking your&#13;
Mr. M A. Page t r e a t m e n t &gt; a n d w i u&#13;
say that I have been in good health&#13;
since and able to do considerable&#13;
work at the advanced age of seventytwo.&#13;
I am glad you induced me to&#13;
continue their use at the time, as I&#13;
am cured.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills, 50c per box at&#13;
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y. Dodd's Dyspepsia Tablet*&#13;
for indigestion have been proved.&#13;
50c per box.—Adv.&#13;
The length of silk in the cocoon of&#13;
a silkworm Is about a third of a mile.&#13;
FOR ITCHING SCALP&#13;
WATCH YOUR LIBRARY.&#13;
While getting ready to inaugurate a&#13;
prize essay contest, a W. C. T. U.&#13;
woman investigated the public local&#13;
library to Bee what the children would&#13;
find in the way of reference books,&#13;
and discovered that of ten books on&#13;
the temperance shelf seven were&#13;
against total abstinence and prohibition.&#13;
Among these were "Religion&#13;
and Drink," "Drink, Temperance and&#13;
Legislation," "A Text Book of True&#13;
Temperance," "Alcohol the Sanction&#13;
for Its Use," "Prohibition, the Enemy&#13;
of Temperance," "Prohibition, Its Relation&#13;
to Temperance," "Good Morals&#13;
and Sound Government." The local&#13;
union immediately called the attention&#13;
of the library board to the inconsistency&#13;
of permitting the liquor interests&#13;
to teach intemperance through&#13;
the city library, when the law expressly&#13;
provides that the children shall be&#13;
taught in the schools the evil effects&#13;
of drinking liquor.&#13;
And Falling Hair Use Cuticura Soap&#13;
and Ointmsnt. Trial Free.&#13;
When the scalp is itching because of&#13;
dandruff and eczema a shampoo with&#13;
Cuticura Soap and hot water will be&#13;
found thoroughly cleansing and soothing,&#13;
especially if shampoo is preceded&#13;
by a gentle application of Cuticura&#13;
Ointment to the scalp skin.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
On an average, the fog nuisance&#13;
costs Loudon about $25,000,000 a year.&#13;
FRECKLES&#13;
N o w l a Lh6 T i m e t o G e t R i d of t h a t *&#13;
Ugly Mpota.&#13;
There'* no longer Ihe allfhteat need of&#13;
feeling aahamed of your frecklea. aa t h e&#13;
prescription. othine—double s t r e n g t h — la&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d to remove iheae homely epota.&#13;
Simply j e t an ounc* of othine—double&#13;
•trongth—from your drug-giat, and apply a&#13;
tittle of It night and m o r n i n g and you&#13;
•hould toon aee t h a t even the worst freckles&#13;
have begun to &lt;31aapp«-ar, while the lighter&#13;
onea have vanlahed entirely. It ia aeldom&#13;
that more than one ounce la needed to completely&#13;
clear the akin a n d gain a beautiful&#13;
clear complexion. .&#13;
Be t u r e to aatc for toe double s t r e n g t h&#13;
othine, aa thta ia sold under g u a r a n t e e of&#13;
money back If It falls to remove freckles.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
The man who undervalues himself is&#13;
never overrated by others.&#13;
SHINGLING HIS OWN ROOF.&#13;
Chaplain McCabe once told the&#13;
story of a drinking man, who, being&#13;
in a saloon late at night, heard the&#13;
wife of the saloonkeeper Bay to her&#13;
husband:&#13;
"Send that fellow home; it's late."&#13;
"No, never mind." replied the husband,&#13;
"he is shingling our house for&#13;
us."&#13;
The idea lodged In the mind of the&#13;
drunkard, and he did not return to&#13;
the saloon for six months. When&#13;
passing the saloonkeeper on the&#13;
street, the latter said:&#13;
"Why don't you come round to my&#13;
place any more?"&#13;
"Thank you for your kind hospitality,"&#13;
replied the former rictim,&#13;
T v e been shingling my own roof&#13;
lately."&#13;
RUSSIA IS PRESSING.&#13;
If America is to lead the Tan of civilization&#13;
into the promised land of prohibition,&#13;
she must make haste. Autocratic&#13;
Russia has shouldered her out&#13;
of the front rank, and it is high time&#13;
for the voice of the people to apeak—&#13;
to speak overwhelmingly, and to speak&#13;
where the voice of the people is heard.&#13;
Wall Kept Ground*. Spacious and A t t r a c t * *&#13;
W H Y T H E SCREENST&#13;
Why are saloons and the patrons of&#13;
saloons invariably opposed to the removal&#13;
of screens from these places of&#13;
business? A man does not object to&#13;
being seen in a grocery or in a dry&#13;
goods store—why, if the dramshop Is&#13;
a good thing in the community, is he&#13;
ashamed to he seen in a saloon?&#13;
PROSPERITY IN KOKOMO.&#13;
Kokomo. a dry city of Indiana, is&#13;
having the most prosperous times in&#13;
its history. No empty buildhugs, and&#13;
such a demand for homes that the&#13;
business men have arranged to build&#13;
at least two hundred at once. Frier&#13;
of the biggest firms agree to. erect tt&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
NOT RECOGNIZED&#13;
An examining physieian for one of tht&#13;
prominent Life insurance Companies, in&#13;
an interview of the aubject, made the astonishing&#13;
statement that one reason why&#13;
so many applicants for insurance are rejected&#13;
ia because kidney trouble is so common&#13;
to the American people, and the&#13;
large majority of those whose applications&#13;
are declined do not even suspect that&#13;
they have the disease.&#13;
According to this it would seem that a&#13;
medicine for the kidneys, possessing real&#13;
healing and curative properties, would be&#13;
a blessing to thousands.&#13;
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the well&#13;
known kidney, liver and bladder remedy,&#13;
is remarkably successful in sickness caused&#13;
by kidney and bladder troubles. It is mild&#13;
and gentle in its action and its healing influence&#13;
is soon noticed in most cases.&#13;
There is no other remedy like Swamp-&#13;
Root. It will surely and affectively overcome&#13;
kidney, liver and bladder troubles—&#13;
and you can depend upon it. Go to any&#13;
drug store and get a bottle so as to start&#13;
treatment today. You will soon sat s&#13;
marked improvement.&#13;
However, if you wish first to test thta&#13;
peat preparation tend ton cents to Dr.&#13;
Kilmer &amp; Co., Binghamton, X. Y., for a&#13;
sample bottle. When writing be sure and&#13;
mention this paper.—Adv.&#13;
A man without charity is a rogue.&#13;
FOR THAT SORE&#13;
RAW THROAT&#13;
KeBcf i s Every Rob&#13;
Try this—results are certain: Just Est an oris-inal yellow box of true&#13;
ustarine and rub It on your neck and&#13;
upper chest. Do it to-night and that&#13;
sore, raw feeiinff will be aone in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
Nothing- cures so quickly as trust&#13;
Mustarlne which costs but a trifle, yet&#13;
Is so wonderfully grood that thousands&#13;
praise It for Asthma, Pleurisy, Bronchitis,&#13;
Rheumatism and Neuralgia.&#13;
Get the sr«nulne, made by the B e s r&#13;
Medicine Co, Rochester. N. T.&#13;
Japan is producing artificial coffee.&#13;
Public Officials' Bonds.&#13;
We bond more people than any&#13;
other company in the world. Maintain&#13;
a special department for bonding public&#13;
officials. Agents everywhere. Write&#13;
for rates to Official Bond Department.&#13;
National S a r e t y Oosnpany. M&#13;
W e s t S t . New T o r *&#13;
Surety Ce." ' AT1&#13;
&amp;\&#13;
*f*T ft&#13;
# .&#13;
~ il&#13;
s-"; JL2* X&#13;
^ffi&amp;&gt;v&gt; -&#13;
•;£ W&#13;
:T\&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Another Testimonial&#13;
Tur CALUMET&#13;
BAKING&#13;
POWDER&#13;
The President's&#13;
Wedding Cake&#13;
LAYING A FOUNDATION FOR SWiNE HERD&#13;
-i ttxx&gt;a&amp;^£&amp;j&amp;£&amp;^^&#13;
prepared by Mrs.&#13;
Marian Cole Fisher&#13;
and M i s s P a n s y&#13;
Bo wen, both of whom&#13;
are known throughout&#13;
the United States&#13;
as experts i n D o -&#13;
mestic Science work.&#13;
This Wilson - Gait&#13;
Wedding Cake was&#13;
worthy of the occasion&#13;
in every respect&#13;
C a l u m e t B a k i n g&#13;
Powder was used in&#13;
its preparation and&#13;
b o t h t h e a b o v e&#13;
named ladies heartily&#13;
recommend Calumet&#13;
Baking Powder for&#13;
its purity, w h o l e -&#13;
someness, economy&#13;
and never-failing results.&#13;
These ladies&#13;
use Calumet exclusively&#13;
in all their work.&#13;
Rncswsd High** Award World'a&#13;
Purs Food Exposition, Chicago;&#13;
Pari* Exposition, Francs, March,&#13;
1912,&#13;
Champion Poland-China Sow.&#13;
K B Z r S A L L W O O L SUITS Sold Dtaftct F r o m&#13;
iTaetory t o W e t n r f o r 8 1 0 . 0 0 write to onr&#13;
factory for *»mple* t&gt;nd information. 4. tAUBVM,&#13;
U U i CO., 141 Y TTM STJUirT, nHUtSTLTHU, TL.&#13;
A woman can keep a secret all right&#13;
if it la a good joke on herself.&#13;
( P r e p a i d by tho United S t a t e s Department&#13;
of Agriculture.)&#13;
The brood sow Is the first animal to&#13;
select In laying a foundation for a&#13;
herd. The better she Is the greater&#13;
the chances for success. A good brood&#13;
sow must possess depth and length of&#13;
body, a good heart girth, smooth&#13;
shoulders, well-sprung ribs, and long,&#13;
deep, well-turned hams. Her sides&#13;
should be long, deep, and straight. A&#13;
slightly arched, or straight, broad&#13;
back Is much desired, as It is much&#13;
stronger than a low back. The back&#13;
should carry its width and the side&#13;
lines should be straight. She should&#13;
stand up well on her toes and have&#13;
smooth, straight Joints with hard but&#13;
not coarse bone, and must have feminine&#13;
characteristics, which are indicated&#13;
by a rather small head and ear,&#13;
a fully developed, even udder, and absence&#13;
of shields in the shoulders. A&#13;
brood BOW should show early maturing&#13;
qualities and have sufficient capacity&#13;
to do the work for which nhe Is&#13;
intended. A smooth coat of fine hair&#13;
and a broad bead with sufficient&#13;
weight for tier age are good indications&#13;
of early maturity, if selecting&#13;
more than one sow, uniformity of the&#13;
lot is desirable and important. The&#13;
nearer alike the sows the more probability&#13;
of the pigs being uniform.&#13;
In selecting the herd boar the same&#13;
points are essential, except that the&#13;
animal should show masculinity. A&#13;
strong, broad head and neck, sufficient&#13;
bone, with strong, straight pasterns,&#13;
hock, and knee Joints, are important&#13;
He should show early maturing&#13;
characteristics, and have well-developed&#13;
testicles. Shields, or thick&#13;
plates of skin, should not show on the&#13;
sides of the shoulder before he is one&#13;
year of age. A strong, slightly arched&#13;
back, with large heart girth, is essential&#13;
in a first-class boar, for he must&#13;
have room for the vital organs, namely,&#13;
heart, lungs, etc. Remember that&#13;
the boar is at least half of the herd&#13;
as far as breeding is concerned, and&#13;
he Is usually more, so his selection&#13;
cannot command any too much care&#13;
or patience. Get a good boar and he&#13;
will pay you well&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver,&#13;
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for&#13;
a laxative—three for a cathartic—Adv.&#13;
Half the sheep are really goats.&#13;
To look one's best and feel one's&#13;
best is to enjoy an Inside bath each&#13;
morning to flush from the system the&#13;
previous day's waste, sour fermentations&#13;
and poisonous toxins before it is&#13;
absorbed into the blood. Just as coal,&#13;
when it burns, leaves behind a certain&#13;
amount of incombustible material in&#13;
the form of ashes, so the food and&#13;
drink taken each day leave in the alimentary&#13;
organs a certain amount of&#13;
indigestible material, which if not&#13;
eliminated, form toxins and poisons&#13;
which are then sucked into the blood&#13;
through the very ducts which are intended&#13;
to suck In only nourishment to&#13;
sustain the body.&#13;
If you want to see the g!ow of&#13;
healthy bloom In your cheeks, to see&#13;
your skin get clearer and clearer, you&#13;
are told to drink every morning upon&#13;
arising, a glass of hot water with a&#13;
teaspoonful of limestone phosphate&#13;
in it, which is a harmless means of&#13;
washing the waste material and toxins&#13;
from the stomach, liver, kidneys and&#13;
bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and i&#13;
purifying the entire alimentary tract,&#13;
before putting more food Into the stomach.&#13;
Girls and women with sallow skins,&#13;
liver spots, pimples or pallid complexions,&#13;
also those who wake up with a&#13;
coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath,&#13;
others who are bothered with headaches,&#13;
bilious spells, acid stomach or&#13;
constipation should begin this phosphated&#13;
hot water drinking and are assured&#13;
of very pronounced results in&#13;
one or two weeks.&#13;
A quarter pound of limestone phosphate&#13;
costs very little at the drug&#13;
store but is sufficient to demonstrate*&#13;
that just as soap and hot water&#13;
cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin&#13;
on the outside, so hot water and limestone&#13;
phosphate act on the inside organs.&#13;
We must always consider that&#13;
internal sanitation is vastly more important&#13;
than outside cleanliness, because&#13;
the skin pores do not absorb&#13;
impurities Into the blood, while the&#13;
bowel pores do.&#13;
Women who desire to enhance the&#13;
beauty of their complexion should just&#13;
try this for a week and notice results.&#13;
H O R S E S A L E D I S T E M P E R&#13;
You k n o w t h a t w h a t y o u s e l l or b u y t h r o u g h t h e s a l e s&#13;
h a s a b o u t o n e c h a n c e In fifty to e s c a p e S A L E N T A B L B&#13;
D I S T E M P E R . " S P O H t f ' S " Is y o u r t r u e p r o t e c t i o n , y o u r&#13;
o n l y s a f e g u a r d , for a s s u r e a s y o u t r r a t a l l y o u r h o r s e s&#13;
w i t h it. y o u w i l l s o o n be rid of t h e d i s e a s e . It a c t s a s a&#13;
s u r e p r e v e n t i v e , ' no m a t t e r h o w t h e y a r e " e x p o s e d . "&#13;
50 c e n t s a n d $1 a b o t t l e ; |fi a n d $10 d o z e n b o t t l e s , HI a l l&#13;
g o o d d r u g g i s t s , h o r s e g o o d s h o u s e s , or d e l i v e r e d by t h e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e r s .&#13;
ttPOHN M E D I C A L CO., C h r m i i t i , ( i o n h e n , I n d . . I . S. A.&#13;
H e e d n o t j e e r s ; t h ^ y c a n n o t h u r t .&#13;
A L L E N ' S FOOT-KAHE F O R T H E&#13;
i T R O O P S&#13;
Many w a r zone hospitals h a v e ordered&#13;
( Allen's F o o t - E a s e , the antiseptic powder,&#13;
. for U M a m o n g the troops. S h a k e n into&#13;
[ the s h o e s and used In the foot-bath.&#13;
Allen's F o o t - E a s e plves rept and comfort 1 and m a k e s w a l k i n g a delight. Sold e v e r y -&#13;
: where, 25c. T r y It today. Adv.&#13;
OPIUM HABIT TREATED&#13;
At f i l V K M s S A N f T A R I l B f , S t a m f o r d , Co a n .&#13;
Write for Information.&#13;
PATENTS W i t i o i K. C o l e m a n ,&#13;
Puient Lnw&gt;-»r.\Viiiihmgu&gt;n,&#13;
D.C Advloe »nd book* fi^e.&#13;
Bate* reasonable. Htfibest reference*. B««i services.&#13;
F; f 4 - _ _ Women &lt;» money making wars. f'ost- i r t e e n &amp;*« pam ioc. wjTeeil c•ta Bros , Arusa. Ca.Lt&#13;
Duroc-Jersey Sow.&#13;
A five-pound package ol&#13;
Alabastine, the beautiful wall&#13;
tint, is mixed with two quart?&#13;
of cold water, stir for about&#13;
one minute, 11AM11I11 lim is&#13;
ready to apply. •&#13;
N e w and individual shades or tint!&#13;
can be obtained by combining regular&#13;
tints.&#13;
A n d when you consider that y o u obtain&#13;
the most beautiful, m e l l o w , nature colors,&#13;
viz., soft buffs, delicate greens, and exquisite&#13;
blues, or any thadt y o u wish b y combining&#13;
shades of Alabastine, then you'll kn&amp;w w h y&#13;
Alabastine is one of the most popular wall&#13;
decorations with millions of Painters and&#13;
Householders, Decorators and W o m e n f o l k ,&#13;
w h o take a pride in their h o m e s the w i d t&#13;
world over.&#13;
Write for Free Book&#13;
"Thm Mytttry of the Lo*t Woman"&#13;
and Free Color Scheme Cards&#13;
GIVE CHARCOAL TO TURKEYS&#13;
Breeder Will Notice improvement in&#13;
Weight and Quality of the Fowls&#13;
at Killing Time.&#13;
j A very successful turkey raiser rec-&#13;
\ ommends feeding dally a quart&#13;
| of finely powdered charcoal to each&#13;
; dozen turkeys confined for fattening.&#13;
; To test the value of this for yourself&#13;
select an equal number of unii&#13;
, formly developed turkeys, feed them&#13;
j meal, oata and boiled potatoes, give&#13;
j them milk {sweet or sour), but give&#13;
! one gToap charcoal; then notice the&#13;
j difference in weight and quality at&#13;
{ killing time. This is the kind of way&#13;
; to know what is good practice.&#13;
TIME TO RIGHT-UP DISORDER&#13;
Considerable Leisure During Winter&#13;
When Repairs and Improvements&#13;
Can Be Made on Farm.&#13;
The winter season, instead of being&#13;
one of disorder on the farm,&#13;
should be devoted to righting-up the&#13;
disorder that is acquired through the&#13;
more active seasons of labor and&#13;
work.&#13;
There is considerable leisure time&#13;
through the winter that can be used&#13;
in repairs, adding new fixtures and&#13;
improvements.&#13;
Keep up appearances about the&#13;
homestead.&#13;
Avoid Scrub Stock.&#13;
No well-bred farmer ever contents&#13;
himself with scrub stock or poor cropa.&#13;
Special Stencil Offer&#13;
Sandb am for border deafen*. 1» tbe retakr »*y tber&#13;
wenUcmrm rroas Mc to St.00 each. Our free hook teifc&#13;
fom sow rem c u n* meme)h for your room atacticallr free&#13;
«f caarre. Onr Color gcbeate Card* mtfeat colon thai&#13;
karaMcto for jroor w a n Yon taosM fane oar tree bee*&#13;
and oar free Color traran Carta. Writ* for cbem&#13;
Provide Extra Devices.&#13;
Make up a few extra eveners, whiffletreea&#13;
and neckyokes of sound clear&#13;
hickory, oak or ash, iron them, paint&#13;
them and hang them up In the toolhouse.&#13;
The Alabastine Co,&#13;
ssi&#13;
ttkerad&#13;
A Dairy Mystery.&#13;
It has always been a mystery how&#13;
any intelligent dairyman could see&#13;
profit in lopping off $40 a year income&#13;
from a special-bred dairy cow&#13;
In order to secure s scrub beef calf.&#13;
Care of the Ax.&#13;
A hard-bittrd ax will break easily&#13;
on frosty mornings. Warm it by the&#13;
stove before using i t&#13;
A winter imperialist—Old King Coal.&#13;
BACKACHE ANDICTDNEYS&#13;
Dear Mr. Editor:&#13;
For the benefit of others, I gladly&#13;
give this statement regarding the&#13;
merits of "Anuric." Am nearly 76&#13;
years of age. I suffered from backache,&#13;
weak back, rheumatism, and&#13;
could not control the excretion of the&#13;
kidneys. I can safely say that "Anuric,"&#13;
the new discovery of Dr. Pierce,&#13;
of Invalids' Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y., has&#13;
done me more real good than anything&#13;
I have ever taken for these ailments.&#13;
Signed—Mm. N. M. Flint.&#13;
NOTE:—A new remedy, called "Anuric,"&#13;
has been discovered by Dr.&#13;
Pierce. It cures backache, headache&#13;
and the darting pains and aches of&#13;
rheumatism, kidney and bladder&#13;
troubles. This "Anuric" is 37 times&#13;
more potent than lithia. and dlssol Tes&#13;
uric acid, as hot water does sugar.&#13;
W. N. U., D E T R O I T , NO. 14-1916.&#13;
IN THE SPRING&#13;
Now is the time to bring to your aid&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery&#13;
(in tablet or liquid form). This wonderful&#13;
remedy helps to restore stomach&#13;
to Its natural health and strength&#13;
and to secure proper flow of the digestive&#13;
juices, a good appetite and full&#13;
digestion of the food you eat. It invigorates&#13;
the liver, regulates the bowels&#13;
and purifies and enriches the blood.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery&#13;
is absolutely free from alcohol and&#13;
injurious drugs. Its ingredients printed&#13;
on wrapper. You can be certain it&#13;
is a true blood-maker, tissue-builder,&#13;
and a restorative nerve tonic and that&#13;
it will produce no evil after-effect.&#13;
Thousands—probably many of your&#13;
neighbors—are willing to recommend&#13;
"Golden Medical Discovery" because&#13;
it has made them stronger in body,&#13;
brain and nerve.&#13;
Test Seed for Vitality.&#13;
Test your different kinds of seeds&#13;
for vitality. This can be done in a&#13;
shallow box containing earth and set&#13;
behind the kitchen stove.&#13;
Lead the Hired Man.&#13;
The fanner who leads will get a&#13;
great deal more work out of his hired&#13;
man than the one who nags and&#13;
drives.&#13;
No Place for Machinery.&#13;
The orchard ia not a good place to&#13;
store tans machinery—unless it has&#13;
s root But did you ever see an or-&#13;
&lt;sfaard with s roof?&#13;
GALLSTONES&#13;
B3&amp;N6£FREE&#13;
Paint Is Cheep Insurance,&#13;
Paint ia the cheapest insurance you&#13;
can get against the wear sad tear of&#13;
the weather upon buildings and&#13;
Maks-Up of ©airy Cow.&#13;
The dairy eow should have ample&#13;
heart girth and great capacity, with&#13;
fan aright&#13;
Name of Farm on Sign.&#13;
The name of the farm on a nest&#13;
sign, shows the owner is not ashamed&#13;
of the place. Now is a good time to&#13;
put it up.&#13;
Hire s Horse Occasionally.&#13;
It is better to hire s boras occasionally&#13;
than to keep one that is used&#13;
only once in s while though it eats&#13;
an the while.&#13;
Test the teed Corn.&#13;
Now ia the time to test the asad&#13;
corn. When tha weather is bad aad&#13;
work cannot be done in the fields tas&#13;
jgs^e^hdl ^BaSeaaaje essaaaeje* asses* #^hasBV^kssl flVssiA awBt«eae ^aaaaeskai&#13;
p s a j Q O D s y O B H e 7 W wflewsjessjsM WSBWW B O O T S H E W discarded ao they will not bays a&#13;
to prodwhs their ktaf,&#13;
Wanted 50,000&#13;
Farm Hands&#13;
of txptrlMct at sacs ss Ids fans* sf&#13;
Western Canada&#13;
and Ontario&#13;
i&#13;
To replace the young farmers who&#13;
have enlisted for the war. Good wages&#13;
and full season's work assured.&#13;
There is no danger or&#13;
possibility of Conscription&#13;
In Canada.&#13;
- „ , . '• i » | ^ j y ~ - » — '•» i» i ii »• m » ' ' " ' &gt;*fc»X»»«li w * » &gt; i - - . -.«.,*«••-»•—»—&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
''*\ v&#13;
p i n c k n e y £ ) i p p a i c h E1*&lt;^^&#13;
E n t e r e d a t t h e I'oatoifice a t P i n c k -&#13;
ney, M i d : na S e c o n d C l a w M a i l e r&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchapqe Bank&#13;
siBUr,&#13;
Clair lieaaoii of Detroit&#13;
Sunday here&#13;
- - - - - Mrd. Jennie Barton spent&#13;
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER dav in Ann Arbor&#13;
next Monday, April&#13;
s p e n t&#13;
Fri-&#13;
Siiljscrijdiou, $ 1 . Fer i&gt;ar ;u Ad ranee&#13;
D ooS A iictl Jr.-&#13;
it)Lr But;in&lt;&#13;
«J p c :• - t.:: t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposit**&#13;
r a (. ? - 11: n known ou&#13;
PIncknay&#13;
G . W . T L L ^ L f c&#13;
(V!?ch.&#13;
f r o p&#13;
A'1 vtjrU,- :&#13;
Cajrd* of Th»uk*, ally c«ruui.&#13;
Ketolutiooti uf Ooad»l«iit-K, ou« dollar.&#13;
Local Notio*», in Ixx-ai tolamnu five&#13;
:*»ut p«r line per «Mb iaovruou.&#13;
A.II m&amp;tU*r lafcradftd to b*aefi* fb« personal&#13;
or b w i a m intarwt of ao* Lo&lt;ii*idaal&#13;
will b&lt;* pabfab«i at r«g»Uir advertiielug&#13;
ratal.&#13;
laiMDMBMni ot •Dtorfeinutftta, etc.,&#13;
ma* be p*ld lor at rftgvfcar Lo#al Notft*&#13;
Otattuwj »ad autrrift^o nutieee ire pub-&#13;
IAjb«d frt« of ofcarg••&#13;
PosSr/ mail fee p»U for at the rat* of&#13;
fire «saoU per HJM.&#13;
^ r Painless Dentistry, $te&#13;
Dr. W. 7. MTV^A*&#13;
Miss Eila Black spent Thursday&#13;
in Jackeon.&#13;
Fellowship Rally at the Cong'l&#13;
church to-night.&#13;
Mrs. Robt, Tiplady spent the&#13;
week end in Toledo.&#13;
Mrs. M. J. Reason is visiting&#13;
In The Man Block relatives in daeksou.&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN] Mrs. D. Smith and Mabel spent&#13;
m^m^mmmmmmmmmm^mmi^^m^m^* Tuesday in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. H. S. Avers of Detroit&#13;
was a recent Pinckney visitor.&#13;
Bernard Smith of.Detroit spent&#13;
the past week at home of Mr.S.H.&#13;
Carr.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Barton and Mrs.&#13;
Geo. Pearson were in Ann Arbor&#13;
Friday-&#13;
Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason of&#13;
Detroit spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. R. ('handler and children&#13;
of Kalamazoo are vi&amp;iting relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
H. S. Avers and wife of Detroit&#13;
are visiting her mother. Mrs S,&#13;
Nash this week.&#13;
Mr. Hiekley of Farmington&#13;
was in this locality the first of the&#13;
week looking for a farm.&#13;
Mian Bernardine Lynch of&#13;
Kalamazoo is spending the week&#13;
with her parents Mr- and Mrs. C. I O U R K n e r u N cav/ iuiv&#13;
a n v i h m o vuii van Li'ive&#13;
t h e m — c w v n i vuvr pii'--&#13;
t &lt; &gt; 'jf i" a j ) i'. •&#13;
M A K I i -\ \ •, i ' i D i N I Ml ~ ' V •: AN&#13;
Lvn en.&#13;
Me- Geo. i'eardun spam Friday&#13;
i!i Ann Arbor.&#13;
JhfcMoDitt Nowliu of Arkon, 0 . ,&#13;
apent Saturday kerc-&#13;
Mrs. 1). Smith apent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday in Stockbridge.&#13;
Fiiotoft &lt;fc Read unleaded a carload&#13;
of Fords last Saturday.&#13;
Beulah Burgees and Mabel&#13;
Smith spent last Friday iu Howel!&#13;
Lela Monks of Lansing is&#13;
spending a few days with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Mrs. A. Monks spent the past&#13;
week with Mrs. K A. Berry of&#13;
Sockbridge.&#13;
Vergiline Teeple- ai Jackson&#13;
spent the past week with relatives&#13;
in Jackson.&#13;
Clauds Monks .and Thomas&#13;
Moran both of Detroit spent&#13;
Suaday here.&#13;
Clyde Sibley spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with his parents in&#13;
Springport.&#13;
We were misinformed last week&#13;
us'to W. VV. Barnard renting the&#13;
Richards rooms.&#13;
Miss Josephine Culhane of&#13;
Ithaca is spending the week here&#13;
with her parents.&#13;
Mrs, F. L. Brown of Chitago&#13;
spent the first of the we«k with&#13;
Mrs.jSarah Brown.&#13;
Mrs. N Vaughan spent a few&#13;
days the past week with relatives&#13;
at Jackson. Michigan.&#13;
Mrs. Ella Haywood and children&#13;
of Din-arid are spending a few&#13;
days with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs W. Stevens of Stockbridge&#13;
spent the week end with her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Floyd Jackson.&#13;
Mrs, Claude Dan forth and&#13;
daughter are spending a few&#13;
weeks with her mother, Mrs. E.&#13;
Moran.&#13;
Mrs. F. G -lacksou visited relatives&#13;
in Fowlerville the past week&#13;
and also attended the 0 . E. &amp;.&#13;
Banquet there,&#13;
Lon Monks find lister Minnie&#13;
have rented the roams back of the&#13;
Dispatch office and will move into&#13;
the same at once.&#13;
Henrv Isbaiu and fannlv -John&#13;
1Q LASGOW pROS.&#13;
Noted Fir SeiJine Good J D G o o d s Cheap&#13;
JACKSON. MICHIGAN&#13;
!&#13;
-i&#13;
| New Spring Wool j&#13;
8 Dress Fabrics&#13;
Attractively&#13;
Priced&#13;
i - •&#13;
&amp; wearer.&#13;
I Designs that sparkle with originality, you will be inter-&#13;
6 4»sted. LOO, in the prices,&#13;
The new Wool Dress Fabrics are more bcantilul, more&#13;
charming and in greater variety than thih popular &gt;tore has&#13;
ever shown before&#13;
Materials thai are putte different m design, materials&#13;
:iat were woven to please the eye and give service to the&#13;
I&#13;
!&#13;
i&#13;
54-inch All Wool Poplin Suiting; in all staple shades for Si-50&#13;
Splendid line of Silk Poplins for suits or dresses tor Si.25&#13;
Black and white check, just the thing for Spring Suits&#13;
at $i.oo and $1.50 a yard&#13;
42-inch Epirgle, a pretty corded material, for $ 1 0 0&#13;
A nice line of French Serges at 76c, $1 and $1.25 J&#13;
58-inch Palm Beach Suiting •- $ 1 , 2 5 8&#13;
We aro showing a complete line of coatings in checks, stripes 0&#13;
or mixtures from $125 to ¢3.00 a yard B&#13;
Wo have a good line of cream wools for Spring wear j&#13;
at soc, 65c. 80c. 5i.no, ^1.50 and $1.75 yard 5 2&#13;
54-inch White Chinchilla Coatins" at $a.2;&gt; S&#13;
i Two Snappy Nov-1&#13;
I elties for Girls {&#13;
These pretty new outdoor costumes can be de&#13;
j veloped frotn the choice materials in our Dress- (roods&#13;
j Department with the help of Butteri:k Pattern-. I&#13;
DaisieB Chapeli&#13;
Stockbridge,&#13;
Miss Mars L:&gt;chia^ returned to . j CnMkt.-r and family spent a very&#13;
e t&lt;' joy &amp; h] e evening n\ tlie how^e of&#13;
Robert Kelly recently.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Millard. Darrow&#13;
S self as well*as for the youngster&#13;
Don't miss rej&#13;
and fabrics. EvervthmLr that i^ attravti1. lor \our-&#13;
:CS&gt;:&#13;
he: ho:r.e *t Toledo, Friday after&#13;
spending the winter with, her&#13;
M i c h i A a n 3'3'M:'' -^li's Kobt, iipiady.&#13;
Grand Trim* time TabU&#13;
('. K. B o o t h a n d s o n . C i a r e B C c ' o f C i n c i c a t t i . O h i o a n n o u n c e t h e&#13;
of S h e i b v are here this week t a k - | birth of t h e i r son. f ^ n ! -Taines&#13;
in_: i u v e n t o r v of \ he stock of uroods ,' D a r r o w on March 2l!nd., I'.'T).&#13;
or Mi \r&#13;
T r a i l l ' YJ&lt;;\&#13;
N o . 4G—^ :,'•» \ ;t. '1:&#13;
N o . 4 8 — V 4 1 p. •&#13;
. , • ' • "&#13;
: •. . 4 :&#13;
i * n - v V *. 1&#13;
- U i « . rj&#13;
- - : 5 T ' - n'&#13;
%»»»»»»»%%^»%%»»%»»»^»%»»%\%%»»»»&lt;&#13;
TI. v. wm 1 r, w. •r\ &gt;l I ' R . »H »«&#13;
^¾^¾&#13;
recently secured of &gt;. &gt;\\ Guthrie&#13;
, Mr Booth will retiivn to Shelby&#13;
1 the iaat of this week and move his&#13;
' is'iiods and family here.&#13;
A special election is beine; talked&#13;
of for the purpose of bonding&#13;
&lt;&lt; the township of Hamburg for&#13;
* • ^20.0^* to bnilcr more n'ood roads.&#13;
Th° project was considered too&#13;
i ,ate ' 0 onu_: V »e f 01 the voters j&#13;
Drs. Sigfer &amp; Sigler&#13;
fj-u-&#13;
Ai c.-:.&#13;
(.lay !•: i i^:&#13;
PINCKNK^&#13;
*&lt;&amp;i- i&#13;
*&#13;
at t a e reLm'.ar s o r i n g election.&#13;
! h e SctiOol C o m m ^ s i o n e r s n ^ -&#13;
^t'.-t&gt; thLi: &gt;'&lt;•;; &gt;'--\ [ -nmj-.es of&#13;
r-r.-1 i ^r^'hi.- *n ;, (•{: r&#13;
1:^ r: i s ? ;:. A j r i c u it ure&#13;
I'. v, ..1 ;nak,- th is p a r t&#13;
ov.-: ji; act ica, rr.\.l y o u can&#13;
\ u;: rhool&#13;
to&#13;
of&#13;
Miss M a r y H u d s o n , w h o is&#13;
t e a c h i n g i t Hollanri. Mich., is&#13;
s p e n d i n g t h e week with h e r pare&#13;
n t s M r . a n d M r s . C. M. H u d s o n .&#13;
As before a o n o n n c e d , t h e B u t -&#13;
t e l m a n O i c h e s t r a , of J a c k s o n ,&#13;
will pive H, concert ;it t h e Opftra&#13;
H o u s e . Wed.. M a y IT, nnd-nr tlv' j&#13;
a u s p i c e s of t h e L a d i e s Aid of t h e !&#13;
S). E . r h u r c h . N e g o t i a t i o n s have !&#13;
h'T-u e,:;der wax for a Ionic t i m - t o ;&#13;
brin^' tiie (Jrrdiestra liere, a n d ;&#13;
l o v r ; - r&gt;f ur.^ic will be - N d tiintthi'dr&#13;
--rvlces have at hist been seen&#13;
:': M and a !H; .&gt; fixed fm' t hei r 1&#13;
ap]&gt; •; rft!ic-e j&#13;
Tl," P U M H U I ^ n d I I a e d r , ; r u ;&#13;
Announcement!&#13;
I a-ec;&#13;
Ktv.&#13;
»»»V»»»»»* »/*»»».•»'W^-w^ ^^^%v%^^v«&#13;
Tbe Advertised&#13;
Article&#13;
feesttU wkit* tto&#13;
• „ M ' . - e : : f t :&#13;
m n a " ' o :&#13;
:ui."S we&#13;
^atu:davp&#13;
e r r e n t a - - of urer-j f a r m e r s club met S a t n r d a v , March&#13;
L.U&#13;
,&lt;\:: seeds. \2?&gt; at the home of Mr. and Mrs,&#13;
of Car: Bowen. fife|M. Twitched. owiu£ to the bad&#13;
•I this village, burned j roads, there wen* not very ruanx&#13;
ormn-. The family'aide to aftend but those who were&#13;
lave puu&#13;
o w n e r ! I n&#13;
G&lt; -&gt;d&#13;
1 &gt;hall t&#13;
ti\ solicit a&#13;
a n d o"et acijuainterl.&#13;
1 nisiru.-ss a n d thereli&#13;
prices on a;i hniid&#13;
o;&#13;
no&#13;
(j]'( a v r&#13;
-narv&#13;
C T&#13;
Br,, an- 1 V,&#13;
a'" •. &gt; v.,- 1 . c&#13;
)J,L. K&gt;&#13;
c&#13;
c&#13;
ivri&#13;
i.' r v&#13;
:ir- 1 n t; n a&#13;
~&gt;\v&#13;
ci' ir.i - - r ?&#13;
w,s abrmt to eat breakfast r h e n it j present i&gt;-r;ort fi "fine time. Mrs.&#13;
WHS discovered that the upper j Hinckley and Mrs. Schoenhals&#13;
part of the building was on fire, favored the club with instrumental&#13;
The housA wa* §001« consumed solos. Topic for n*xt meeting,&#13;
with alt the household goods.'"Choice a o l Care of Household&#13;
The family consisted of the par-' Utengii-.*' di*cu--edi by Mrs S. E.&#13;
ents a i d four children. The house j Swart u out and Mrs. S. E. \"an&#13;
was owned bvSaaford Beason and H o n e Next meelin&lt;' will bp held&#13;
xas no^ insured. Mr. Bowen was 'at :h* home of Mr. and Mr* fi.&#13;
not at home having gone to Pon&#13;
tiac to visit a tick brother.&#13;
G. Psrimater the last Saturday in&#13;
Aprtl. Sect'y.&#13;
C E. BOOTH, PROP.&#13;
Profit-Hharing S"&#13;
5^.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
»**.•*•*«*.&#13;
• II11))1 j j l Ul |&#13;
w a ^ ' . i K ^ W j ^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
KOK SAf.K * ili K \ ( . ' l l A . \ ( ; t - M&#13;
Chubbs Corners&#13;
1 JUJUuCc L lI I I u i T J ~ ' ' '&#13;
»'J ii L ! ' S •'&#13;
-j)&lt;.U I L i n - i,VC'K N M I I J&#13;
Sir. ami Mi- Imilev&#13;
m&#13;
I M r u i t&#13;
;i r » a i ( -&#13;
J)R- ( J.J .Pi-;A Kd o.\, ih'nck ne&gt;&#13;
. 4§$&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
•&lt;&gt;f: S A L K&#13;
( ' n m !&#13;
m e k &lt; I n&#13;
Th&lt; LV \\U.&gt; a l a m ' r&#13;
[in Staekable miction&#13;
1 In !.11.-=• a n d ivili .-(.^.:11. t i .&#13;
ivuli .Mi»nta;.'ii' A' &gt; i ' - ; i ! r i ' ,&#13;
a Lit la.ia in t a t&#13;
S a i u i i lav&#13;
i i u i l ; u.ood b u i l d i n g :e; i I eii-eiv&#13;
i^U ««'I C5 ; I'O, «j &gt;r Ji&#13;
-,^ •'••«&lt; . - : i - h : r o h&#13;
oujv &amp;J0 {;«-r ai;re; ih'uu a m j b o u n c e&#13;
time. P. \ . fjowlm, «&#13;
l i i e i u . W i&#13;
I leda it Kmu i&#13;
i P i n t k m v&#13;
_ | W a l t e r C o o k&#13;
[&gt;iMULjr | LIIL tir-.l vt' t i n&#13;
Hum i-k.&#13;
Mm. F r a n k Ei.-tde visited rcluuvein&#13;
Lansing lust week.&#13;
c .-] Jell I • n i H W l V i U&#13;
oi' Piuckm _\ -pent&#13;
week with Kobe IT&#13;
r t - ^ u r v .&#13;
# ^ a * £ 0 * c r t f « r « . j.C. Monensou&#13;
.507 Hi!), Ann Aibor.&#13;
Mrs. Peter Coniway&#13;
M r s ' I V l t r CUULW ty, .Jtrl o.j&#13;
yearb am! imom' dbuin --do! of&#13;
I \ ' K ' : . " r - \ p H l S I i ! a w e , . M t i m l r t V&#13;
[iiorii.:!; af'.m Swires a«f -mm&#13;
h u m m m , u'ltn :ienrt U'IKH --. Mm.&#13;
C o m wan h a s hvee! in tins v a o u i m&#13;
for rhe [jam m i r t y tivt- y e m - ^h*&#13;
ieavta to m o u r n ner hjo&gt;. a Lin--&#13;
b a n d , t k r e e HUUH, G i d o r d Cociwmy&#13;
of H o w e l l , M a r i o n ( ' I I U W ' H V of&#13;
B a n c r o f t a n J Kuel C o m w a y of&#13;
A o n A r b o r , HM.I c u e ^rHinUon,&#13;
Clifford. T h e r u r e n d will be&#13;
heid today OUB o'clock :.7 t i o&#13;
house, Rev. J o n ^ a officiate u c&#13;
I Bs^ia^cy^r^ieaiig^^a^jis^ a^^^r^s/ei^&#13;
§&#13;
i&#13;
1&#13;
of*:-.&#13;
- . * • : * '&#13;
&lt; ill S A L K m a n ? « ii, '&lt;' k;iv in Ljcn.&#13;
•i. ir. \ i&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
ST A T U of M l C U l U A H ; T h e I'roaaitt C o u r t fur&#13;
th*» C o u n t r e l Livii «at'&gt;n. A t a. e^soion of&#13;
i'&lt; ) KKNT I,&#13;
r o K - \ : . [ • ••: tii'.v O a k&#13;
&lt;-. W. ( l u r k&#13;
OJ: - A I i'&#13;
' 'C k .) CI ; l ' V&#13;
P K II.- t;i ; -&#13;
F O P S A I . P&#13;
ami 'J vi-:r .&gt;!,'&#13;
Price I't/rt-: ,ri:i!i&#13;
K c l ; S A I . K&#13;
1 : i a : r i i i v , i&#13;
IM H I , &lt;•; i^ ,;. k- 1« r e g n i e i ' .&#13;
" ' • • ' 1 - k u ' L V J ; ; r I' i" 6&#13;
f F . A . B a r t o n&#13;
^ i v«-' v l ' r &lt;M&lt;1 I ro!t&gt;toin c o w&#13;
' 1 &lt;-'--••;:. t ; - ' i f e r , d u e si-mi&#13;
^i . ( .'. ! [ c u d e c&#13;
u n u j . ' a a i d Co:irt. h s l d a t t i e F r u b a t e Office in t h e ViJ.&#13;
.. • la«&lt;e ot H o w e i l , in B»id c u u n t y , uu tlie libih d a y of&#13;
March A. D. JSI1«.&#13;
l-*fO««iU l l o x . l i t l U K l i A. bTOWJt, h i . i . ' r o l&#13;
|( I i i'robato. In tbe m a i l e r ol tiie eaiate ot&#13;
I .1. I.IAVAIID VAN' H O K N . M l u o r&#13;
Wiliia L. Lj.'oiit* jjuiirtiatu, h a v i n g liJed ii.&#13;
m i d c o u r t V j - petit Ux; pi a v i u ^ l^r l i c e n s e to .-oil&#13;
thr iutt-re^t i i .-.iid esi:t!(j :;i (.•crrulu n-al csnUf&#13;
tht-rcin klesci i'---'&#13;
It is O r d e r e d , Tb;U tljr -Jitii d a / of April&#13;
Y o n u g P m " - -^. Jt&gt; iOl*j, at tea oYiyrk io tau f o r e i i u o n , «t said&#13;
urobate ofllce. b ^ and is h e r e b y npfxjiiueil for&#13;
L i t t / i a ^ BAid p e t i t i o n »nd thiit all i er»"ti» i u t c ^ a t&#13;
ed t n eaid catftte »pp«ar before i-aid c o u r t , at said | b a c k I f n o t s a t i s f i e d&#13;
t m e a n d place, to «bo\v c a u s e why J. l a r a a e t&lt; :&#13;
stll Ibf iatcre.-l oi.^ftid t-stuii- in na" i r e a l e s t a t e ' •&#13;
fL^uld DOI !&gt;r g r a n t e d .&#13;
It la f u r t h e r ord«rod t h a t p u b l i c notici? tbera&amp;i&#13;
1* ^iven by ptiblicaiioo of a copy of t L i s o r d e r , for&#13;
t k r e e anrceaeive weeks p r e v i o u s t o s a i d d a y « i&#13;
b e a r i n g in t h e P i n c k n e v D I B I ' A T C H ;I ntw»|&gt;upex&#13;
r»r-:r11-.• *'. and -•:vculated In HBM c o u n t y / * t j&#13;
K f G E N E A. S T C W i :&#13;
COLDS QUICKLY RELIEVED&#13;
Many people cough and coughfrom&#13;
the beginning or fall right&#13;
through to .spring Others get cold&#13;
ajter cold. Take Dr. King's New&#13;
DUcorery tuid you will get almost&#13;
immediate relief. It checks your&#13;
cold, stops the racking, raoplng, tts-&#13;
«?ue-tearing cough, heals the infiam&#13;
mation, soothes t h e raw tubes. Easy&#13;
to take, Antiseptic and Healing Get&#13;
a 50c bottle of T&gt;T. King's New Discovery&#13;
to-day. "It is certainly a&#13;
good medicine and I keep a bottle&#13;
of it continually ou hand" writes W.&#13;
C. Jesaeman, Franconia, N. H Money&#13;
c=us&#13;
Groceries&#13;
"'f_e u s VN'IICJI \-( n.i v, i 1' 'i In. h e h&gt;cs[ i n G r o c e r i e s o r&#13;
M e n ' s furni-hir&#13;
\ \ t&#13;
s&#13;
e g u a r a n t e e itie :oweii pn-:«s. (}Ud!it&gt; c o n s i d e r e d , t h a t i t&#13;
'.&gt; possible ior a n y iniii m dfli\'e&gt;* x^oda on&#13;
Rubber Boots&#13;
Ku bber boo is a r e in c^ood d e m a n d these d a y s . R e r a e m b t r&#13;
u i e G o o d r i c h Hipresb are the* beat t o b e b o u g h t . W e h a v e&#13;
t h e m ,n Hluck. R e d ami W h i t e a n d all a r e g u a r a n t e e d .&#13;
Suits&#13;
Vr'&#13;
O,&#13;
m u r a;; ie1- \'p-:1.-'&#13;
f r o n i A [,tict&gt;&lt; •!),&#13;
•i ml i-uL b u i l d i t )&#13;
: t c r c , ' : n e - ' n i i . '&#13;
TlHjuil-H of M r s .&#13;
•' ."&lt;-v, A It•••: • !-'io-t farm&#13;
••* l'i: CIN .':'•%•. n e iniie&#13;
a, u-&gt;c; i'a-cuu'ut bai'i.»&#13;
;v . r vs.-1-. \, el!-, .!-!() pt r&#13;
k'wu, balaacf t.ai lime.&#13;
&gt;. &lt;.'. Nasb. J'jiickn«v.&#13;
F O R SAL!-: -(^a-irmiy , f Closci- l i e&#13;
;I!SD some- Swet'iiiNb select seed am*.&#13;
II. E. Ktllv.&#13;
Judge of Probate&#13;
»mi i l ' i a j F M . ' M l l n . N , tr.-- nroi.-av &lt;••..-: :- •&#13;
O the Co'.iQty of Liringnton,&#13;
A: a rwv-saiui. i^i'sai'l court l.i-.ld :it t:j'~ Pr, -ae1&#13;
oiliiv iu [be Village oi' Howell in aaid Count T, on&#13;
in'', i-wh Jay oi March, A. I&gt;, 191b.&#13;
Present, Hon. itugene A. Stowe, .1 el-*&lt;• o:&#13;
Probate. In the matter of the estate ol&#13;
JOHN MOO HI'&#13;
1-. A. Hewlett taTia^ filed in said court lua&#13;
1'i-tiliou praying that a t**rtaia instrument in&#13;
writing pufportiuf to be the la«t will aud t»atam&#13;
« at o7 eafd lecaaaed, uow on file in said court&#13;
be admitted to probate, and that tho adminlatra-&#13;
[Ion Of said eetate be crafted to himself or&#13;
tnuie other suitable p'l^on.&#13;
An Island W i l d e r n e a a .&#13;
A n d r o s lsiai.-!, iiiin:.,' t h e M a h a o i u s ,&#13;
is n i n e t y nii'.is in Vn:rth a n d t w e n t y&#13;
to f o r t y n.ib.'i m i./r&gt;';i.lm, a n d m o s t of&#13;
il.s exten.si'.m a r t a litis n e v e r b e e n ex&#13;
p]'::''**!. ' t i •&gt; a n ui!l)roln'ii ^Yil'Ienies^,&#13;
iiilnii'ir.-vi .--ileiy i-;. nbo^i '.&gt;,'&gt;*AJ nr-n^e--.&#13;
It i:.i- ^:'-.M! !'--r-.'3t.s, ^ • -: i i • &gt; m j i»fi;c[ rated&#13;
by w h i m ni'-n. b u t n.u l-eitl e!'!"&lt;&gt;rt b a s&#13;
bet'ii inttd'-- :•:&gt; exnioit i!-&gt; ri^sourete,.&#13;
O u r s a m p l e s tor S p r i n g a n d S u m m e r SuH» a r e o n h a n d a n d&#13;
irr r e a d y tu r a k e y o u r m e a s u r e a n y d a y y o u c a l l .&#13;
Vegetables&#13;
TO RID C H I L D OF WORMS&#13;
Don't SCOkl the nervollS, fretful , i f i , o r d e r e d t b a t t b e vi#t day of A,,ril. A.&#13;
C l l l i d . O f t e n i t s d n e t o W O r m S . G e t [ u. 191»; a t t e i o'clock in tbe l o r e n o o n , at said prorid&#13;
of these by giving one-half to onel , , a | 1 ' of1'-u" t)r u m l :J horvhy ".'•i,°^u',"i f o r&#13;
lozenge Kickapoo Worm Killer, a lax : '"i a "! 1 ^a "1 i'e t , t u ":'&#13;
ative worci candy. Give only plain, i l i* nn-tuer ordered thut i-uinic UOIK-*- thTeof&#13;
n n n W e h l n n f^s^A i ^ + ^ ^ P ~..* i „ « „ ' b«; :'iven by pubiiefttion of a copy&#13;
n o u r i s h i n g f o o d , l o t s Of OUt d o o r e X e j o r i a ^ ^ c e e s i ^ ^ e ^ p r e i m i :&#13;
e r c i s e a n d p u t t o b o d e a r l y . W a t c h h e a r i n g in t h e P I N , K X ! V D I - J - A T C I I , " npw-pap*-'.&#13;
Btoola and continue giving Kickapoo : rr^: "' -»"'1 &lt;ircuiun-.! i!; ..aid cotmty. ef'&#13;
^ ' o r m Lo2cnges, tiny will positively KI'OKNI: A, S V WI:&#13;
remove the worms. 25c. a t druggists,' Jadge ol P r o t * U .&#13;
A Social Warning.&#13;
"What tiff you imini," to do with all&#13;
the money you oxnrwt to m.iko'.'" a^kwl&#13;
M i s s i"?;.''-!:n»-.&#13;
" I ' m £'&gt;b::f U&gt; h : ' . ' - n tim- lea;&lt;c ;anl&#13;
entei'ltiiii -t:ni; tt'-on1 y," n&lt;•;•1;&lt;•&lt; 1 t;a*&#13;
price In•&gt;':.• i'-.'".&#13;
"Yc&lt;, b m i-: '"•)" ni"-! .' a:'- y •&lt;: a r»-&#13;
reinierijm ;. • .u : -"':' - - a i1 &gt;" •; ''litir t b'U&#13;
t U i i ? o r d e r : IK) r . M t l . V U 1 - " J . ' - ' i - i i ' W : ! i r . i h i e t o V o U f&#13;
for t t i r c c f r ' i c c e e s i v e \&lt;. cex&lt; pr»-\ ions- t o s a i d d a y &gt;jf » p a r t i &lt; ' - . " A1- .1—].i;j__;t'»ii S t a r .&#13;
Fresh v e g e t a b l e s including&#13;
celerv e a c h S a t u r d a v .&#13;
- L e t t u c e onion*, radishea a n d&#13;
Cream&#13;
We will test y o u r cream&#13;
c o m e n i e n t for \r ou,&#13;
Yonrg&#13;
W e d n e s d a y s or a n y d a y m o r e&#13;
A child tait&amp;s Dr. Miles' Laxative Tab-&#13;
\mt» » i t h o u t thinlrlntf ^f ' m ^ i c i t i e '&#13;
MONKS BROS.&#13;
M^saaeMj^s/s/asMsaM^&#13;
(r-^V Gregory Cucfliiitier Pickle Coafracls&#13;
Public Confidence: Gnce secured is oi peculiar \ a l u c to t h e merc&#13;
h a n t I t is t h e main opening m -access a n d&#13;
a t t r a c t s a p a t r o n a g e ' cm' s;i i-mo.-lic 1-ir&#13;
steads* and c o n t i n u o u - .&#13;
We think we i m s c won the crmtidencc o! a ^ood mans* people, m *&gt;::r c:: rt ' • aii; -&#13;
ply t h e m with ;udicn&gt;u-.ly ^elected mercharniiee. W h e n we t h i n k a r e d u c : : 'JI; or r-rtc-•&#13;
ncc.c&gt;sar&gt;' to m o s e certain nievchandi&lt; c quickly. \vc t a k e the lo-s '-hemrtuhy &lt;om ('nmiher&#13;
tl;c nd\-eni&gt;iii's t h r o u c h ihe low prices, our profit.&#13;
THIS WEEK:&#13;
We have many odds and ends in Ladies, Men's&#13;
aud Children's Shoes, that will be sold regardless of&#13;
cost.&#13;
Our lot of Mens Rubber Boots to ciose out&#13;
at $2.50 per pair&#13;
All Fuvuiture and Rugs ordered through our&#13;
Catalogues, during;the month^of April will be sold&#13;
at one per cent above cost freight added.&#13;
OUR SATURDAY AND MONDAY&#13;
GROCERY SPECIALS-&#13;
! Willi;;::, M a c ;iilo u-ituio rela- _ ' " ' K r a c t f i .;&gt;' - r o - : : , ^ miounil&#13;
i v ^ in mi- vieinity l .r -ei,H M / 1 K ) ' ^ r pick le fnr : tm sr-noii of \%lt&#13;
r c U j ] , ( l , t ,, I,,. i,om( in Ilellniiv, m a y now b*-&gt; had frrnn o u r r e p r e -&#13;
Miei*. ia-t week, s e n l a t i v e N. V Mortetiaon a t&#13;
Mi,. limn W h i t m e a h i« -, mo- ^ ^ a t i y i M c r e a a n l p r i c e . W e *m&#13;
, ,iv, -lav. m t h hm tl.cr am! P»y'"tf from aev M„ty.five cenla lo&#13;
1,,-,,^0 .-. ' H..- expects . . . , , , , 1 - . n t i i n i ^&gt;"- d o h n r a u d n half p e r bushel&#13;
m i,- . u.d-k m JMi'.m, f o r ^^[[ ?iMv* n c r o r U m ^ to&#13;
. . \t r • i *ly'* : , l ) d thr. t v-tic" , e r i f s foi iarLje&#13;
M ' , a n a M m , J a v l . l a c e - a n . ' *»&#13;
,,, . , , I 1m1 I\ n o x - I i a i ! is l a c k i n g ^'c&#13;
J a c k s o n , Mien&#13;
.! a. M'jen •- w a- i &gt;'A JI m M' &gt;n[j"( ;o&#13;
&lt; ;-:.;i-:a in in- m a : -u I M " . I n 1-^.7 . - ^ b - 1 1 Z E C l X X C i S O f "&#13;
n, •,;...! swiu In.-, {jaia-hm 1.. IIUVVLII.&#13;
-/, a. , : m \ h \'- "1 f"r • -&lt;• \a in! \'ea r-&#13;
;,?;,, -.-. e -. :. ' i:. -•' 111'' \ ' ' 1 ' • I u :n 1 i: 1 a i^«— -«••* - i,. i - ,::;,.;, , X--IE- jbcicl^.sixc3.s&#13;
! - • : . . •:.: ; n ii';. 'I- t u l n v. i, '-.&gt;-\ &lt; • L. • • 111« •'&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
\i&#13;
&gt;h&lt;3;'&gt; I -I door weal&#13;
• ;,.;.' March L'ot,... Ii'lb. a* Din-kel k.y I J a n b a r «&#13;
:!n . _ ' T o v e i l - ,&#13;
1" , a !• am (iuir !e iia- ' i' i n -utterin_&#13;
''••:; l; ;, , in-eri n„r ..ickm —.&#13;
In 1 s'&gt;7 he w;n marm-il t - Mi--&#13;
Fiai.i--;:.1 millam, 1 &lt;&lt; l l m nnimi&#13;
v&gt;r.,-, p.,-;, three eeiliir.-n. jam;... f o l i c e a n d Dcci'we. Are. U s i n ^&#13;
den, me! Ihauik. A lh i i njln&#13;
HEAR WITHOUT EARS&#13;
i * •&#13;
i :&#13;
;. : ra-e jifc h i - *'•'&#13;
h e r ' a; til! \ na !': m&#13;
'i \ ' e ; i l ' . a _ " ' ! e&#13;
ne' .-i'in aiei iir.i&#13;
i . 11, r •; . ,'if v. : : ;• • •:&#13;
. • '• , m, e..&#13;
. , 1 , . 1 1 1 - ' M i ,&#13;
; ~ ! \ ' ' M I - - l i e :, •&#13;
i i &gt; \ '&lt; II e . ; I I , - &lt; r ; i r ' i i ,&#13;
- ; - iijen m in - a - - . t w .&#13;
-n ; * m- i.!. a in r a :. c c»,ie&#13;
JJOe Coffee&#13;
25c Coffee&#13;
Table Talk&#13;
Gold Medal Flour&#13;
Pinckney Flour&#13;
Rese Bud&#13;
27e 8 lbs. Oat*&#13;
23c Best Tea&#13;
22c* Tea Dust&#13;
85c Good Bread Flour&#13;
77c Jackson's Choice&#13;
25c&#13;
15c&#13;
15c&#13;
80c&#13;
83c&#13;
90c&#13;
j , ' - ,a i .&lt; !' v l ci - vi i r, ;,e ii ( M-i&#13;
' ;.i -raiim. March :.'•'&#13;
\ m •&#13;
v,,: n&#13;
'mm . - ,&#13;
k ::&#13;
i &gt;e. -:, m n'&#13;
w , ;&#13;
i i c . i&#13;
" r e • '&#13;
L i p R e a d i n g i n P l a c e , of&#13;
t h e D i c t a S f a p h&#13;
"i M e 1 , . . • • ' • i' i ; -' ' ;' 1;&lt; " '.It r • W .&#13;
,i . c &gt;:, v ;•«•) t i ^.n . 'I ("•]-. m '•! i n a a&#13;
•• i , . m m * , - - K '&#13;
A 1 - - n m m - •: ••&#13;
-i ' h r e •,:,.&#13;
l e a - o* ii--&#13;
. I P 1 ' i : : » ' \ m " - : I , o a H&#13;
-.i-&gt;:n.e. ^^''• _; • i .a r:&lt; nl f s» re.^u 11 &gt;&#13;
i . ( / ' -- . . &lt; ' m ; . ; t ' i t i ; a . : . &gt; f •••&#13;
1 ale -. a t " Kiievan ,sr-.-p i&#13;
... K-- ri i 'u • 1! a -i i.'-eil- of p e a p ; -&#13;
ru*. bete :,--._ a m l.ikinj u p L i ;&#13;
* eeia • .nhiiuon.ii benefits&#13;
^ i - i anlernltind what tin;&#13;
;1; t h e «ct.,-- t in -:.:.^.-^ m tbe moving jpi r tur en.&#13;
,, , - i . , i , , i Vfl', i v , a;aier.-iaral wfiat people a r e s a r&#13;
I&gt;;UC&gt;: - h l i r i l i , l a v . . I " h i i &gt; o h u ! ( l ' , "&#13;
itar |ti-' .t- tar aw*v tis you csn hee them.&#13;
' ^ • • ' • • i : - - . f1"' n-inHi..- v.ere 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ , , ^ ^ : . , ^ ^ ^ ^ , ^ ^ , ^ fangt of&#13;
t n / , - t in reiiieterv .'it W d harmvilie. ; t | i e ,,,, S e n ( ( n,( r m ) n e y , bat Hieotion&#13;
— i tbis piper and ntnte whether or not you&#13;
are death. All particulars will be Mtit&#13;
AN I D E A L SPRING L A X A T I V E , , 1 . , , ^ , , , , , . : , ^ . ^ , . ^&#13;
von •ib'sMutelv £r^ *nr! witn no ext&gt;«iM* to&#13;
A srood and time tried r e m e d j i» i . u * t L. &gt; t T • i&#13;
Dr. Kind's New Life Pilto. The tfl»t *"" Acdrew, School r»f lap L»n? ii«f e,&#13;
dose will move the aluggtah bowlea, ' Kanv«. Ciir, Missouri.&#13;
atlmuhvte t b e liver and clear t h e&#13;
m t e m of w&amp;ate blood Impurities.;&#13;
Ton owe i t t o yourself to clear t h e&#13;
ayafcem of body poiaotM, accumulated N o ' l n &lt; 1 «*d -&#13;
dttriajr t h * winter. Dr. K k i r ' a New ) Tbe niau who hixnaelf trareJa in the&#13;
Life PiUn wUi do it. 25c. a t voor way bis child should go w * t f t h i v e&#13;
Drwtrdst. % half the trotible.--Chrlitlaa Herald.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
S O I ffilEl CANADA&#13;
In it a labile nt F e b r u a r y&#13;
the Wadena i }iiiui.)&#13;
115&#13;
Oats&#13;
Sushc&#13;
Per Acre.&#13;
a&#13;
iMih, 191b,&#13;
i'ionetjr Journal&#13;
has the loliowing&#13;
U-iier from WtSlt-&#13;
rii Canada written&#13;
by Walu-r Gloedeu,&#13;
who 18 renewing&#13;
his subscription to his home paper:&#13;
The times we are having 'p here&#13;
ure very £ood m bpitw of the war. 1&#13;
have had very good crops this fall&#13;
and we are having very good markets&#13;
for it all. Wheat went from 30 to 60&#13;
bu. to the acre, oats from 50 to 100 bu.&#13;
to the acre. I had an 18-acre field of&#13;
oats which yielded me 115 bu. per acre&#13;
by machine measure, so 1 think this&#13;
is a pretty prosperous country. I&#13;
have purchased another quarter section,&#13;
which makes me now the owner&#13;
of three-quarters of a section of&#13;
land. The weather was very nice this&#13;
fall up to Christmas, then we had quite&#13;
severe weather, but at the present&#13;
time it is very nice again."&#13;
THREE BRITISH&#13;
SEAPLANES ARE&#13;
MISSING IN RAID&#13;
British Destroyers Sink Two&#13;
German Armed Patrol&#13;
Vessels&#13;
GERMAN TRAWLERS TOOK&#13;
FLIGHT FROM BRITISH&#13;
Large German And British&#13;
Squadrons Were Reported&#13;
In The North Sea&#13;
NEW WAR SECRETARY&#13;
SUBMITS URGENT BILL&#13;
"I lived many years in Alberta; filed&#13;
a homestead in the Edmonton district;&#13;
own property in&#13;
several parts of Alberta.&#13;
I found it&#13;
one of the best&#13;
countries I ever&#13;
One of the&#13;
Best Countries&#13;
I Ever Saw.&#13;
saw; Its banking system Is better than&#13;
that of the United States; one quarter&#13;
section I own, with about $4,000.00&#13;
worth of improvements, pays 118.00 a&#13;
year taxes. All tax is on the land; implements&#13;
and personals are not taxed.&#13;
I was secretary-treasurer of Aspelund&#13;
school district for two years. My duties&#13;
were to assess all the land In the&#13;
district, collect the tax, expend it ($1,-&#13;
000.00 a year), hire a teacher, etc., for&#13;
PANCKO VILLA&#13;
MAKES GOOD&#13;
HIS ESCAPE&#13;
Breaks Through Line Of General&#13;
Carranza's Forces And&#13;
Heads For Mountains&#13;
AMERICAN TROOPS ARE&#13;
250 MILES INTO MEXICO&#13;
Villa Appears To Be Victor In&#13;
An Engagement With Troops&#13;
Of De Facto Government&#13;
YOUTDLDMETHETRUTH&#13;
JMTTHEPEOPLE&#13;
TO KNOW IT" J - &lt; \&#13;
The following unsolicited letter has&#13;
been received from Mr. J. F. Ward of&#13;
Donalda, Alberta, it is a plain statement&#13;
of conditions as :&gt;Ir. Ward has&#13;
fcund them:&#13;
"It is with pleasure&#13;
I drop a line to&#13;
j you. We had a&#13;
• •&#13;
A Settler's&#13;
Plain L e t t e r .&#13;
Off of 05 acres, oats ajii&#13;
\&#13;
London - Three British aeroplanes&#13;
which took part in a raid on German&#13;
airship sheds in Schleswig-Holstein&#13;
are missing. Two German patrol vessels&#13;
were sunk and a British destroyer&#13;
is believed to have been lost.&#13;
The following official statement was&#13;
issued Sunday night:&#13;
"An attack by British seaplanes was&#13;
delivered upon German airship sheds „ ,&#13;
in Schleswig-Holstein, eastward of the u p t 0 1 0 ' 0 0 0 ' &amp; * c r e t a r y ot War Baker&#13;
N E W T O N D. B A K E R&#13;
Washington- Because of extra expenditures&#13;
for the Mexlcon expedition&#13;
and the cost of recruiting the army&#13;
Island of Sylt.&#13;
"The seaplanes were conveyed to&#13;
their rendezvous close to the German&#13;
coast by an escorting force of light&#13;
cruisers and destroyers under Commodore&#13;
Tyrwhitt.&#13;
"Three of the seaplanes which took&#13;
part in the attack are missing.&#13;
"The destroyer Medusa was in collision&#13;
with the destroyer Laverlck,&#13;
and it is feared that in the stormy&#13;
weather which prevailed the Medusa&#13;
may have been lost, but no misglv&#13;
submitted urgent deficiency estimates&#13;
of ¢8,870,094 to the house to cover the&#13;
remainder of the fiscal year.&#13;
CROSS-CHANNEL BOAT SUNK&#13;
W a t Torpedoed in the English Chann&#13;
«l: 436 A b o a r d .&#13;
London—Of a total of 25 Americans&#13;
who were passengers on the British&#13;
the sum*of $25.00 a year. Some econ- , i n g s a r e f e it as to the safety of the omy, eh! channel liner Sussex when she was&#13;
"All school and road taxes are expended&#13;
in the districts where they are&#13;
collected. There are no other taxes.&#13;
Land titles are guaranteed by the government&#13;
and an abstract costs fifty&#13;
cents. Half of the population of Alberta&#13;
are Americans or from Eastern&#13;
Canada. (Sgd.) WILL TRUCKENMILLER."&#13;
Advertisement.&#13;
MADE GREAT BY ADVERSITY&#13;
torpedoed off the French coast, one&#13;
is known to have been killed, 13 are&#13;
missing and 11 are reported saved.&#13;
Two of the rescued Americans are so&#13;
badly injured that they may die. The&#13;
total death list is expected to mount&#13;
to between SO and 80. The majority&#13;
of the victims are said to have been&#13;
women and children.&#13;
London—The cross-channel steam-&#13;
M i t f o r t u n e and Poverty Have Been&#13;
Means of Urging Men to Great&#13;
Accomplishments.&#13;
Adverse circumstances are frequently&#13;
among the foes that, being&#13;
vanquished, bestow a blessing, Rev. J.&#13;
Frank Thompson writes in the Universalist&#13;
Leader. It was a good&#13;
thing for the world that the loss of&#13;
his fortune induced Thackeray to&#13;
become a writer, English literature&#13;
is indebted for the "Pilgrim's Progress"&#13;
to the imprisonment that compelled&#13;
Hunvan to choose between&#13;
mental inenhtry and madness. M&#13;
Hawthorne had not lost his position&#13;
In the customhouse he might nevpr i&#13;
have written "The Scarlet Letter" and ;&#13;
the books that followed it. Through j&#13;
physical blindness Milton gained ar |&#13;
increase of spiritual vision. In the •&#13;
sorrow of exile, and the lofty roedita- '&#13;
tions which were the only solace, 1&#13;
Dante found the inspiration of his&#13;
poem. It was while dwelling on the&#13;
Isle of Patmos, with convicts as his I&#13;
only companions, that John received&#13;
his revelation. Willingness to suffer&#13;
for the truth which he proclaimed&#13;
gave to the letters sent by&#13;
Paul from his Roman dungeon a power&#13;
beyond that of the essays which ;&#13;
Seneca wrote upon his golden table. ;&#13;
It was through resisting the tempta- i&#13;
tion to save his life at the cost of {&#13;
his mission that Jesus added to the I&#13;
-~isdom it his teaching the perfect {&#13;
example which had made him "The&#13;
Light of the World." i&#13;
crsw.&#13;
"Two German armed patrol vessels&#13;
were sunk by our destroyers.&#13;
"No detailed report has yet been&#13;
i received, but from Danish press mes-&#13;
I sages it would appear that this opera-&#13;
! tion which was carried out within the&#13;
' enemy's waters, achieved its object."&#13;
I&#13;
Rout German Squadron.&#13;
Ixmdon—"According to the Politiken,&#13;
large British and German squad- e r Sussex, which "was damaged by&#13;
rons were observed along the west an explosion" in the English channel&#13;
'coast of Jutland, off Esbjarg a n d ' h a s been towed into a French port,&#13;
France. Ship captains arriving at l h e name of which is undisclosed, says&#13;
j Esbjarg report that they met a large a dispatch to the Central News from&#13;
German flotilla, consisting of five Folkestone.&#13;
i cruisers and twenty torpedo boats. London—The cross channel passen-&#13;
: Fishing boats report that they saw ger steamer Sussex, from Folkesstone&#13;
l enty British torpedo boats near for Dieppe, France, was torpedoed&#13;
ninavandsbuk, and that one Danish Friday afternoon by a submarine, acfrtwler&#13;
nearly collided with a British cording to reports. First reports said&#13;
battleship, the vessel sank but later dispatches&#13;
"It is supposed that the British flo- said she was still afloat and that all&#13;
; tilla attacked and put the German on board had been saved.&#13;
: squadion to flight. The captain of T h e central News agency says the&#13;
! the steamer Simbria says he met a b o a t carried 386 passengers and a&#13;
; Gem an flotilla going southward and c r e w o f 5 0 | mostly French. Only a&#13;
later two German trawlers arrived on f e w o f t n e passengers were British.&#13;
the scene, Suddenly a British squad&#13;
ron, composed of ten torpedo boat^,&#13;
appeared and attacked the trawlers,&#13;
which took flight and in flames ran&#13;
for Sylt island, whither it was impossible&#13;
for the Brittsh to pursue, as&#13;
the German fortress of Sylt opened&#13;
fire.&#13;
THE SAGINAW GRAFT CASES&#13;
Prosecutor to Be Instructed to B r i n g&#13;
Suits Against Bondsmen.&#13;
Saginaw—It is expected that instructions&#13;
will cause Prosecutor Bird&#13;
J. Vincent to bring action against all&#13;
county treasurers involved and bonds-&#13;
At both the American embassy and&#13;
the consulate general there were reports&#13;
that the Sussex had been torpedoed,&#13;
but neither had received any&#13;
details,&#13;
The Sussex left Folkstone at 1:20&#13;
Friday afternoon, flying the French&#13;
flag, and met with mis-hap somewhere&#13;
in the channel at 7 o'clock Friday&#13;
night. When thp alarm was sent out&#13;
a number of vessels in the vicinity&#13;
hurried to her assistance, while others&#13;
rushed under full steam from Dieppe&#13;
harbor.&#13;
The Sussex is owned by the French&#13;
state railroads, but is managed by&#13;
the Brighton railroad. Before the&#13;
war she was employed in the night&#13;
service between New Haven and&#13;
San Antonio, Tex. FraneiBco Villa&#13;
has escaped from the Mexican troop.s&#13;
that had checked him near Namiquipa&#13;
and three columns of American cavalry&#13;
are pursuing him. Already they&#13;
are almost 250 miles south of the border,&#13;
and unless Mexican forces bring&#13;
the elusive bandit to a stand, this distance&#13;
will be greatly Increased by the&#13;
close of the week. Villa's success In&#13;
extricating himself from the dangerous&#13;
position Into which he had been&#13;
driven by the American punitive force&#13;
was related in a detailed report by&#13;
General Pershing that reached General&#13;
Funston here. General Funston&#13;
forwarded the report to Washington&#13;
without making public any but the essential&#13;
features.&#13;
Pershing Divides Forces.&#13;
Colonel Dodd is commanding the&#13;
advanced columns that are riding&#13;
hard after Villa and his men, and&#13;
General Pershing has divided his&#13;
forces so as to provide supporting&#13;
columns alon$ the thinly stretched&#13;
lines of communications from his&#13;
most advanced base at El. Valle.&#13;
From El. Valle, another line is being&#13;
maintained back to Caaas Grades,&#13;
from where communication with the&#13;
border is maintained.&#13;
General Pershing himself is somewhere&#13;
south of Casas Grandes directing&#13;
the work of holding together his&#13;
forces and directing so far as possible&#13;
the operations of Colonel Dodd. Cavalry&#13;
is being used along the lines communicating&#13;
with El Valle, where a detachment&#13;
of infantry is stationed.&#13;
Three aeroplanes are at El Valle&#13;
and will be used in scouting as soon&#13;
as the high winds that have been&#13;
sweeping that part of Mexico for almost&#13;
a week subside. These winds,&#13;
according to General Pershing, have&#13;
made effective assistance by the aeroplanes&#13;
impossible. Of the eight machines&#13;
that went into Mexico, two are&#13;
still out of commission. They were&#13;
damaged in the flights from Columbus&#13;
to Casas Grandes.&#13;
V i l l a the Victor.&#13;
Details of the operations about&#13;
Namiquipa that concluded with the&#13;
escape of Villa were not revealed, but&#13;
there is little reason to believe that&#13;
he was badly whipped, or even weakened&#13;
by the fighting directed against&#13;
him by the de facto government&#13;
troops. Reports last week from Mexican&#13;
sources Indicated he had been&#13;
severely defeated by the Carranza&#13;
forces and a few reports stated that&#13;
American troops had participated in&#13;
the action.&#13;
FIRE BURNS SALT PLANT&#13;
gocd year.&#13;
wheat, 1 got over 2«fiM&#13;
wheat and oats. Oats&#13;
50 to 100 bushels per tCTt, ft&amp;tt&#13;
from 25 to 52 per acre. Just see «J&lt;*&#13;
being here one year and have over 70J&gt;&#13;
bushels of wheat. It is now over $1.00&#13;
per bushel. Oats is 42 cents, and going&#13;
up. You told me the truth, and I&#13;
want the people of Toledo to know it.&#13;
Hogs are 8% cents; cattle are high.&#13;
Canada is good enough for me. I have&#13;
5 good horses. I sold 2 good colts, 2&#13;
cows and 18 head of hogs and killed 2.&#13;
1 have 6 hogs left. I got 400 bushels&#13;
of potatoes off an acre and a good&#13;
garden last summer, fine celery and&#13;
good onions. One neighbor had over&#13;
1,200 bushels of wheat, and sold over&#13;
$700 oi hogs and 2,000 bushels of oats.&#13;
This is a. great country. If you should&#13;
tell the people of Toledo of this It&#13;
would get some of them thinking. The&#13;
soil is a rich black loam, and a pleasure&#13;
to work it.&#13;
"We have a good farm. We have ft&#13;
flowing well with soft water. It is&#13;
the best water in the country. Some&#13;
people think they got to go to war&#13;
when they come out here. They need&#13;
not be afraid of war. There is no war&#13;
tax on land; only school tax, $12.00&#13;
on 160 acres, and road tax of two&#13;
days with your team. I tell you the&#13;
truth, there Is no land in or around&#13;
Toledo as good as our land here in Alberta.&#13;
If anybody wants to write us.&#13;
give them our address.&#13;
"We have had nice weather. We*&#13;
have had it quite cold for one week,&#13;
but no rain and sleet, and the sun&#13;
shines nearly every day, and It is hot&#13;
in the sun. Coal is $2.25 per ton. The&#13;
people are very nice and good here.&#13;
We are well enjoying tho West.&#13;
The horses and cows are feeding on&#13;
the prairies all the winter. We Just&#13;
have two horses in the stable to gc to&#13;
town with. Yours truly, (Sgd.) J. F.&#13;
WARD, Donalda, Alberta, Feb. 9. 1916."&#13;
"I was born in&#13;
Wisconsin, b u t&#13;
moved with my&#13;
S t a t e m e n t of 9teve&#13;
Schweitzberger&#13;
parents when a boy to Stephen Co..&#13;
Iowa. I was there farming for 50&#13;
years. I sold my land there for over&#13;
$200 an acre. I moved to Saskatchewan,&#13;
and located near Briercrest in&#13;
the spring of 1912. I bought a half&#13;
section of land. I have good neighbors.&#13;
I feel quite at home here the*&#13;
same as in Iowa, We have perfect&#13;
safety and no trouble in living up to&#13;
the laws in force. My taxes are about&#13;
$65 a year on the half section for everything.&#13;
I have had splendid crops.&#13;
Wheat in 1915 yielded me over 50&#13;
bushels to the acre. That is more than&#13;
I have ever had in Iowa, and yet theland&#13;
there costs four tiroes as much&#13;
as it does here. The man who comes&#13;
here now and buys land at $50 an acre&#13;
or less gets a bargain. (Sgd.) S.&#13;
Schweitzberger, February 9th, 19IS."&#13;
Advertisement.&#13;
men and Commercial National bank&#13;
and bondsmen, to compel payment to Dieppe, but after the outbreak of hostile&#13;
county of interest money lost to t.ilities, her run was changed from&#13;
Folkestone to Dieppe.&#13;
The Slacker.&#13;
A Wisconsin senator said in a re- j&#13;
cent address:&#13;
"I support our government's foreign I&#13;
policies, and all the attacks on those J&#13;
policies seem to me as weak and flab- J&#13;
by as the slacker's excuse for not en- !&#13;
listing. |&#13;
"A slacker, you know, pave two ex- I&#13;
cusea for holding back. They appeared&#13;
on the recruiting agent's card, as follows:&#13;
*• 'First— Weak eyesight, and cennot&#13;
Me hit way to enlist-&#13;
** 'Second—His varicose veins and&#13;
no confidence in the government'"&#13;
GRAND RAPIDS HAS FIRE&#13;
CrisweH F u r n i t u r e Company Loss I t&#13;
Placed at $100,000.&#13;
; • ' &gt; &gt; • • * "&#13;
-?••&gt;*•&#13;
Thought He was Home.&#13;
"Did yon give this man the third de&#13;
greaf* asked the police officer.&#13;
"Yen. We browbeat and badgered&#13;
him with every question we could&#13;
think of"&#13;
"What dM be do*"&#13;
"He dosed off and merely murmured&#13;
ttow aad then. 'Yet, my dear; you're&#13;
perfectly right.'"&#13;
• he SwHerevore.&#13;
- W l y d o y o u cftfl that fellow Nero?&#13;
• very Mad heart."&#13;
vsettaist"&#13;
the taxpayers in handling deposits,&#13;
also against the city and its treasurers&#13;
and bondsmen to compel payment&#13;
to the county of interest lost through&#13;
alleged delinquency of city treasurers&#13;
in making tax settlements with&#13;
county treasurers.&#13;
He is also instructed to take whatever&#13;
legal steps are necessary to secure&#13;
repayment to the county of any j Grand Rapids—Fire originating from&#13;
illegal compensation received by su- an unknown cause in the CrisweH&#13;
pervisorB during the past 19 years for Furniture company's plant on North&#13;
more than six days of committee ser- Monroe avenue, had caused loss esvice&#13;
a year. Another report to be timated at $100,000. The plant adjoins&#13;
signed, deals with payments made to those of other furniture companies&#13;
County Physician Emil P. W. Ricfater and large business blocks, and fireand&#13;
his predecessor, Dr. J. N. Kemp, men were endeavoring to confine the&#13;
for personal treatment of contagious blaze to the CrisweH building.&#13;
cases while they were in office, and&#13;
condemns the practice ag "against&#13;
public policy" and will probably recommend&#13;
that matter be referred to ' ,&#13;
the prosecutor.&#13;
Shanghai, China—Twenty-six cases&#13;
Washington—The war department containing 390 shells and »0,000 pistol&#13;
announced that 1,269 recruits had cartridfea, which were being conveybeen&#13;
enlisted in the first ten daya of «*" tTom t h e international settlement&#13;
the campaign to increase the army m the direction of the Kiang Nan&#13;
to war strength. The total for five »™**n*l *» Shanghai, were seised by&#13;
days of this week was 710, as against' t n « P°Hc«- A protest against the eels-&#13;
559 for five days of last week. The ttre *** n**4® b * t w o Germans who&#13;
report covered 44 out of S4 recruiting produced a document sealed by the&#13;
districts, t h e remaining ten districts minister of marine, but as they had BO&#13;
may Increase the total for the week ' municipal permit the docmnent&#13;
to 100 or M0. J vatid-&#13;
The Loss I t Roughly&#13;
$200,000.&#13;
E t t i m a t e d at&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
Wyandotte—One-fourth of the buildings&#13;
of the mammoth plant of the&#13;
Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing company&#13;
in Wyandotte are in ruins as the&#13;
result of a fire. The loss is roughly&#13;
estimated at $200,000. It was the biggest&#13;
fire of Wyandotte's history, outtrivalfng&#13;
the ship-yard fire one year&#13;
and a half ago. As the firemen battled&#13;
the flames their lives were endangered&#13;
from frequent explosions&#13;
which sent parts of the burning buildings&#13;
skyward. Shortly after the fire&#13;
was discovered in the salt drying room&#13;
in the storage department it had&#13;
gained tremendous headway before&#13;
the fire department arrived. Within&#13;
an hour the flames had spread to&#13;
the alum and the machinery departments&#13;
and all three departments were&#13;
in total ruins.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Rome—It is reported here that&#13;
Chile has decided to seize Austrian&#13;
and German ships unless Germany&#13;
restores to her $12,000,000 which was&#13;
depocited in Germany before the war&#13;
for the conversion of Chilean paper&#13;
currency, Germany is purposely retaining&#13;
the deposit with the object of&#13;
averting the seizure of the ships, but&#13;
Chile has decided to hasten the payment&#13;
of the deposit, which has already&#13;
depreciated la value 2B par&#13;
neat&#13;
Invents Multiple Phonograph.&#13;
Efforts to play several phonographs&#13;
simultaneously in order tc increase&#13;
the volume of sound have hitherto&#13;
proved failures, owing to the impossibility&#13;
of exactly synchronizing them,&#13;
and the slightest difference in speed&#13;
results in jarring discord. According&#13;
to Popular Mechanics a Frenchman&#13;
has just brought out a phonograph in&#13;
which several disks can be played at&#13;
once. They are placed one above the&#13;
others one on vertical driving axis&#13;
which, of course, turns them all at the&#13;
same speed. Each disk ias its own&#13;
needle and reproducer . All the sound&#13;
goes into a common horn by means&#13;
of connecting arms pivoted at the&#13;
large ends.&#13;
Costa Rica's Proud Position.&#13;
Costa Rica is unique among modera&#13;
nations, inasmuch as it has mora&#13;
teachers than soldiers. The standing&#13;
army is only 500 strong, while t h e&#13;
teacher* in active service number&#13;
about 2,000. For nearly forty-flva&#13;
years the country has enjoyed internal&#13;
peace and the executive power has&#13;
been transferred regularly by elections&#13;
every four years.&#13;
His Hobby.&#13;
"Did yon ever see one of these hairleas&#13;
Mexican dogs, Bill r* asked one of&#13;
a pair i f tramps by the roadside.&#13;
"Naw, I ain't.*' answered his pal.&#13;
"an* wot*s mora. I don't want to. The&#13;
only kind o' dogs I'm Interested in la&#13;
the toothless&#13;
Baa should aerer marry a&#13;
Hell prshahly be rat&#13;
a aa the&#13;
• • j * - *&#13;
&gt;V"&#13;
Vv&#13;
1-&#13;
"%•'*•'•&#13;
' -?&amp;:&#13;
S&amp;,&#13;
* • * • '&#13;
•J*K *, ' * » . « * . «&#13;
PINCKNEY D I S P A T C H&#13;
fgSMMIMMMMMMMM&#13;
The Citu of&#13;
Numbered&#13;
Daus&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
•Iih:?rjl:wu by CD.Rhodes&#13;
Copyright by Ch*rlea Scribacr'a Sou*&#13;
SYN0PS18.&#13;
Broulllard, chief engineer of the Nlquota&#13;
Irrigation dam, meets J. Wealey Cortwright&#13;
and h:a daughter, Genevieve, and&#13;
explains the reclamation work to them,&#13;
Cortwrlght sees in the project a big&#13;
:hance to make money. Cortwright organizes&#13;
a company and obtains government&#13;
contracts to furnish power and material&#13;
for the dam construction. A busy&#13;
rity springs up about the site. Steve Mastingale&#13;
threatens to tstart a gold rush if&#13;
Broulllard does not Influence President&#13;
Ford to build a railroad branch to the&#13;
place, thus opening an easy market for&#13;
the ore from the "Little §u*an" mine. On&#13;
» vlait to Amy Massingale at her father's&#13;
rolne Broulllard tells her of his need for&#13;
money to pay off his dead father's debt*&#13;
*nd that to be free he would sacrifice&#13;
anything save his love for one woman.&#13;
Though hia influence is vital to the building&#13;
of the railroad extension she tells him&#13;
to be true to himself. He decides for it.&#13;
Mirapolis. the city of numbered days,&#13;
booms. Cortwrlght persuades Broulllard&#13;
to become consulting engineer of the consolidated&#13;
electric power company in return&#13;
for $100,000 stock. Rumors that the&#13;
government will call a halt on the dam&#13;
cause Grislow to tell Broulllard that he la&#13;
leaning to the Cortwrlght side to make&#13;
the city permanent. Broulllard denies it.&#13;
Permanent building.In Mirapolis arid a&#13;
real estate boom are in full swing when&#13;
the stoppage of work on the railroad&#13;
threatens a panic. Broulllard spreads the&#13;
Massingale story of placer gold in the&#13;
river beri and starts a gold rush.&#13;
Look here, young m a n , w o u l d&#13;
you c o m m i t a shady deed In order&#13;
t o save your sweetheart a&#13;
lot of financial w o r r y — i f you&#13;
knew y o u w o u l d n ' t get Into&#13;
t r o u b l e , but If you knew also&#13;
that t h e deed would cause o t h -&#13;
$ er men to lose money?&#13;
' &gt;++++++++++++++++++++++++•++++++•++*&#13;
C H A P T E R X — C o n t i n u e d .&#13;
"It looks like a run on a bank." said&#13;
Broulllard.&#13;
"It is," was the crisp reply. "Garner&#13;
has beaten everybody else to the home&#13;
plate, but he couldn't fceep his mouth&#13;
shut. He's been talking, and every&#13;
man In that mob is a potential panic&#13;
breeder. That thing has got to be&#13;
nipped in the bud, right now!"&#13;
"Yes," Broulllard agreed. He was&#13;
still wrestling with his own besetment&#13;
—the prompting which Involved a deliberate&#13;
plunge where up to the present&#13;
crisis he had been merely wading&#13;
in the shallows. A little thing stung&#13;
him alive to the Imperative call of the&#13;
moment—the sight of Amy Massingale&#13;
walking down the street with Tig&#13;
Smith, the Triangle-Circle foreman. It&#13;
was of the death of her hopes that he&#13;
was thinking when he said coolly:&#13;
•"You have sized it up precisely, Mr.&#13;
Cortwright; that la a panic in the making,&#13;
and the bubble won't stand for&#13;
very much pricking. Give me a free&#13;
band with your check book for a few&#13;
minutes and I'll try to stop it."&#13;
It spoke volumes for the millionaire&#13;
promoter^ quick discernment and decision&#13;
that he asked no questions. "Do&#13;
it," he snapped. "I'll cover you for&#13;
whatever it takes. Don't wait; that&#13;
crowd is getting bigger every minute."&#13;
Broulllard ran downstairs and across&#13;
the street. It was no part of his intention&#13;
to stop and speak to Amy Massingale&#13;
and the ranchman, but he did&#13;
it, and even walked a little way with&#13;
them before he turned back to elbow&#13;
his way through the sidewalk throne&#13;
and into Garner's dingy little office.&#13;
"You are selling Mirapolis holdings&#13;
short today, Garner?" he asked when&#13;
be had pushed through the crowd to&#13;
the speculator's desk. And when Garner&#13;
laughed and said there were no&#13;
takers be placed his order promptly.&#13;
"You may bid in ton me, at yesterday's&#13;
prices, anything within the city limits&#13;
—not options, you understand, but the&#13;
real thing. Bring your papers over to&#13;
my office after banking hours and&#13;
well close for whatever you've been&#13;
able to pick up."&#13;
He said it quietly, but there could&#13;
be no privacy at such a time and In&#13;
such a place.&#13;
"What's that. Mr. Broulllard?" demanded&#13;
one in the counter jam.&#13;
"You're giving Garner a blank card to&#13;
buy for your account? Say, that's&#13;
plenty good enough for me. Garner,&#13;
sancel my order to sell, will you?&#13;
When the chief engineer of the government&#13;
water works believes in Miripolis&#13;
futures and bets his money on&#13;
em. I'm not selling."&#13;
The excitement was already dying&#13;
Sown and the crowd was melting away&#13;
!roxn Garner's sidewalk when Broulllard&#13;
rejoined Mr. Cortwright in the&#13;
tecond-fioor room across the street&#13;
"Well, it's done," be announced&#13;
ihortly. adding: "It's only a stopgap.&#13;
To make the bluff good, you've&#13;
cot to have the railroad."&#13;
"That's the talk.** laid the promoter,&#13;
fsligfctift* tha cigar which the few&#13;
minutea of crucial suspense bad extin&#13;
guiahed. And then, without warning&#13;
"You're carrying something up your&#13;
sleeve, Broulllard. What is it?"&#13;
"It is the one thing you need. Mr&#13;
Cortwright. It 1 could get my own&#13;
consent to use it 1 could bring the&#13;
railroad here in spite of those New&#13;
Yorkers who seem to have an attack&#13;
of cold feet."&#13;
Mr. J. Wesley Cortwrlght's heslta&#13;
lion was so brief as to be almost Imperceptible.&#13;
"1 suppose that is your&#13;
way of saying that your share in the&#13;
table stakes isn't big enough. All&#13;
right; the game can't stop In the mid&#13;
die of a bat. How much is it going&#13;
to cost ua to stay in?"&#13;
"The cost isn't precisely In the kind&#13;
of figures that you understand best,&#13;
Mr. Cortwright," Broulllard said half&#13;
muslngiy. Then, with sudden vehemence:&#13;
"It is altogether a question of&#13;
motive with me, Mr. Cortwright; of a&#13;
motive which you couldn't understand&#13;
in a thousand years. If that motive&#13;
prevails, you get your railroad and a&#13;
little longer lease of life. If it doesn't,&#13;
Mirapolis will go to the devil some few&#13;
weeks or months ahead ol its schedule&#13;
—and I'll take my punishment with&#13;
the remainder of the fools—and the&#13;
knaves."&#13;
He was on his feet and moving toward&#13;
t h e door of exit when t h e promoter&#13;
got his breath.&#13;
"Here, hold on, Broulllard—for&#13;
heaven's sake, don't go oft and leave&#13;
it up in the air that way!" he protested.&#13;
But the corridor door had opened&#13;
and closed and Broulllard was gone.&#13;
Two hours later Mirapolis the phrenetic&#13;
had a new thrill, a shock so electrifying&#13;
that the rumor of the rail*&#13;
road's halting decision sank into insignificance&#13;
and was forgotten. The suddenly-&#13;
evoked excitement focussed in a&#13;
crowd besieging the window of the&#13;
principal jewelry shop—focussed more&#13;
definitely upon a square of white paper&#13;
in the window in the center of&#13;
which was displayed a little heap of&#13;
virgin gold in small nuggets and coarse&#13;
grains.&#13;
While the crowds in the street were&#13;
still struggling and fighting to get&#13;
near enough to read the labeling placard,&#13;
the Daily Spotlight came out&#13;
with an extra which was all headlines,&#13;
the telegraph wires to the East were&#13;
buzzing, and the town had gone mad.&#13;
The gold specimen—so said the placard&#13;
and the news extra—had been&#13;
washed from one of the bars in the&#13;
Nlquoia.&#13;
By three o'clock the madness had&#13;
culminated in the complete stoppage&#13;
of all work ?.mong the town builders&#13;
and on the great dam as well, and&#13;
gold-crazed mobs were frantically digging&#13;
and panning on every bar in the&#13;
river from the valley outlet to the&#13;
power dam five miles away.&#13;
CHAPTER XI&#13;
Bedlam&#13;
It was between two and three&#13;
o'clock in the afternoon of the day in&#13;
which Mirapolis went placer mad&#13;
when word came to the reclamation&#13;
service headquarters that the power&#13;
was cut off and that there were no&#13;
longer men enough at the mixers and&#13;
on the forms to keep the work going&#13;
If the power should come on again.&#13;
Handley. the new fourth assistant,&#13;
brought the news, dropping heavily into&#13;
a chair and shoving his hat to the*&#13;
back of his head to mop his seamed&#13;
and sun-browned face.&#13;
"Why the devil didn't you fellows&#13;
turn out?" he demanded savagely of&#13;
Leshington, Anson and Grislow, who&#13;
were lounging in the office and very&#13;
pointedly waiting for the lightning to&#13;
strike. "Gassman and I have done&#13;
everything but commit cold-blooded&#13;
murder to hold the men on the job.&#13;
Where's the boss?"&#13;
Nobody knew, and Grislow, at least&#13;
was visibly disturbed at the question.&#13;
It was Ansou who seemed to have the&#13;
latest Information about Broulllard.&#13;
"He came In about eleven o'clock,&#13;
rummaged for a minute or two in that&#13;
drawer you've got your foot on, Gristy,&#13;
and then went out again. Anybody&#13;
seen him since V&#13;
There was a silence to answer the&#13;
query, and the hydrographer righted&#13;
his chair abruptly and closed the&#13;
opened drawer be had been utilising&#13;
for a foot-rest He had a long memory&#13;
for trifles, and at the mention of&#13;
the drawer a disquieting picture had&#13;
flashed itself upon the mental screen.&#13;
There were two figures in the picture.&#13;
Broulllard and himself, and Broulllard&#13;
was to3Sing the little buekskln sack&#13;
of gold nuggets into the drawer, where&#13;
it had lain undisturbed ever since-—until&#13;
now.&#13;
Morover, Grlslow's news of Broulllard.&#13;
if he had seen fit to publish i t&#13;
was later than Anson's. At one o'clock,&#13;
or thereabout the chief had come into&#13;
the mapping room for a glance at&#13;
the letters on his desk. One of the let&#13;
ters—a note in a square envelope—he&#13;
had thrust Into his pocket before going&#13;
out.&#13;
"It looks as if the chief had gone&#13;
with the crowd," said Leshington when&#13;
the silence had grown almost portentous,&#13;
"though that wouldn't be like htm.&#13;
Has anybody found out yet who&#13;
off t h e gold-mounted skyi&#13;
Grislow raine out or bin Drown etudv&#13;
with a tart. "Levy won't '-11 wLo&#13;
gave him those nuggma to put In bib&#13;
window. 1 tried him. All he will day&#13;
la that the man who lett the bainplo&#13;
Is perfectly reliable and that ho dictated&#13;
the eAact wording of the placard&#13;
that did the business."&#13;
"i saw Harlan, of the Spotlight, half&#13;
an hour ago,'' cut In Anson. "He&#13;
plumb raving crazy, like everybody&#13;
else, but there is something faintly&#13;
resembling method in bis madness He&#13;
figures it that we government people&#13;
are out of a job permanently; that&#13;
with the discovery of these placers—&#13;
or, rather, with the practically certain&#13;
rediscovery of them by the mob—Mir&#13;
apolia will Jump to the front rank as&#13;
a gold camp, and the reclamation t&gt;ervice&#13;
will have to call a halt on the Buckskin&#13;
project."&#13;
Leshington's long, plain-song face&#13;
grew wooden. "You say 'practically&#13;
certain.' The question is: Will they&#13;
be rediscovered? Bet any of you a&#13;
box of Poodles' Flor de near Havana.s&#13;
that it's some new kind of a flip-flap&#13;
invented by J. Wealey and his boomers.&#13;
What do you say?"&#13;
"Good Lord!" growled Handley.&#13;
"They didn't need any new stunts&#13;
They had the world by the ear, as It&#13;
waa."&#13;
"That's all right," returned Leshington;&#13;
"maybe they didn't. 1 heard a&#13;
thing or two over at Bongras' last&#13;
night that set me guessing. There was&#13;
a piece of gossip coming up the pike&#13;
about the railroad pulling out of the&#13;
game, or, rather, that it had already&#13;
pulled o u t "&#13;
Once more silence fell upon the&#13;
group In the mapping room, and this&#13;
time it was Grislow who broke i t&#13;
"I suppose Harlan is getting ready&#13;
to exploit the new sensation right?"&#13;
he suggested, and Anson nodded.&#13;
"You can trust Harlan for that.&#13;
He's got the valley wire subsidized,&#13;
and he is waiting for the first man to&#13;
come in with the news of the sure&#13;
thing and the location of it. Whnn ha&#13;
gets the facts he'll touch off the fireworks,&#13;
and the world will be invited&#13;
to take a running jump for the new&#13;
Tonopah."&#13;
"It's time somebody was getting&#13;
busy," snarled Handley. "There are&#13;
a hundred tons of fresh concrete lying&#13;
in the forms,-Just as they were dumped&#13;
—with no puddlers—to say nothing of&#13;
half as much freezing to solid rock&#13;
right now in the mixers and on the&#13;
telphers."&#13;
Grislow got up and reached for his&#13;
coat and hat.&#13;
"I'm going out to hunt for the boss,''&#13;
he said, "and you fellows had better&#13;
do the same. If this is one of Cortwrlght's&#13;
flip-flaps, and Broulllard happened&#13;
to be in the way, I wouldn't put&#13;
it beyond J. Wesley to work some kind&#13;
of a disappearing racket on the human&#13;
obstacle."&#13;
The suggestion was carried out immediately&#13;
by the three to whom It was&#13;
made, but for a reason of his own the&#13;
hydrographer contrived to be the last&#13;
to leave the mapping room. When be&#13;
found himself alone he returned hastily&#13;
to the desk and pulled out the&#13;
drawer of portents, rummaging in It&#13;
until he waa fully convinced that the&#13;
little buckskin bag of nuggets was&#13;
gone. Then, Instead of following the&#13;
others, be took a fieldglass from its&#13;
case on the wall and went to the south&#13;
window to focus it upon the Massingale&#13;
cabin, standing out clear-cut and&#13;
distinct in the afternoon sunlight&#13;
The powerful glass brought out two&#13;
figures on the cabin porch, a woman&#13;
and a man. The woman was standing&#13;
and the man wa» sitting on the step.&#13;
Grislow lowered the glass and slid the&#13;
telescoping sun tubes home with a&#13;
snap.&#13;
"Good God!" he mused, "It's unbelievable!&#13;
He deliberately turns this&#13;
thing loose on us down here and then&#13;
takes an afternoon off to go and make&#13;
love to a girl! He's crazy; it's the&#13;
seven-year devil he talks about And&#13;
nobody can help him; nobody-—unless&#13;
Amy can. Lord, Lord!"&#13;
face like a wooden iaia£e and euys&#13;
'Little girl, you need a mother—or a&#13;
husband, I bavjij't made up my mmd&#13;
which.' When he docs make up hia&#13;
nimd I'm going to shriek and ruu&#13;
away."&#13;
"And you flirt!" he protested re&#13;
proachfully. "'Now itll me about the&#13;
'Little Susan;' Is the Bluegrass farm&#13;
looming up comfortably on the eastern&#13;
edge of things?"&#13;
In a twinkling her frivolous mood&#13;
vanished.&#13;
"Ob, we are prosperous, desperately&#13;
prosperous. We have all the improve&#13;
ments you can see and a lot that you&#13;
can't see. And our pay roll—-it fairly&#13;
frightens me when 1 make it up on the&#13;
Saturdays."&#13;
"1 see," be nodded. "All going out&#13;
and nothing coming In. Hut the money&#13;
Is all here, safely stacked up m the&#13;
ore bins. You'll get it ail out when&#13;
the railroad comes."&#13;
"That is another thing—a thing 1&#13;
haven't dared tell Lather and Stevle.&#13;
When I was in Mirapolis this morning&#13;
I'heard that the railroad wasn't&#13;
coming, after all; or, rather, Tig had&#13;
heard it and he told mo. We were dig&#13;
ging for facts when you met us on&#13;
Chigringo avenue—trying to find out If&#13;
the rumor were true."&#13;
"It means a great deal to you.&#13;
doesn't It?" he said evasively.&#13;
"It means everything—a thousand&#13;
times more now than it did before."&#13;
Hia quick glance up into the sud&#13;
denly sobered eyes of the girl standing&#13;
on the step above him was a voiceless&#13;
query and she answered i t&#13;
"We had no working capital, as I&#13;
think you must have known. Once a&#13;
month father or Stevie would make up&#13;
a few pack-saddle loads of the richest&#13;
ore and freight them over the&#13;
mountains to Red Butte. That was&#13;
how we got along. But when you sent&#13;
me word by Tig that the railroad com&#13;
a&gt;any had decided to build the extension,&#13;
there was — there was — a&#13;
chance.&#13;
"Yes," he encouraged.&#13;
"A chance that the day of little&#13;
TAKE SALTS TO FLUSH&#13;
KIDNEYS IF BACK HURTS&#13;
6ay8 Too Much Meat Forms Uric Acta&#13;
W h i c h Clogs t h e Kidneys and&#13;
I r r i t a t e s t h e Blucider.&#13;
Most folks forget that the kidneys,&#13;
iikt; the howela, get biuggibh and clogged&#13;
and need a flushing occasionally,&#13;
else we have backache and dull misery&#13;
in the kidney region, severe headaches,&#13;
rheumatic twinges, torpid liver,&#13;
acid stomach, sleeplessness and all&#13;
sorts of bladder disorders.&#13;
You simply must keep your kidneys&#13;
active and clean, and the moment you&#13;
feel an ache or pain in the kidney&#13;
region, get about four ounces of Jad&#13;
Salts from any good drug store here,&#13;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of&#13;
water before breakfast for a few uaya&#13;
and your kidneys will then act tine.&#13;
This famous salts is made from t h e&#13;
acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined&#13;
with lithia, and is harmless to&#13;
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate&#13;
them to normal activity. It also neutralizes&#13;
the acids in the urine so it&#13;
no longer irritates, thus ending bladder&#13;
disorders.&#13;
Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive;&#13;
makes a delightful effervescent Uthiawater&#13;
drink which everybody should&#13;
take now and then to keep their kidneys&#13;
clean, thus avoiding serious con&gt;&#13;
plications.&#13;
A well-known local druggist says he&#13;
sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe&#13;
in overcoming kidney trouble&#13;
while it is only trouble.—Adv.&#13;
St. Kilda Is the only place In Great&#13;
Britain where wild sheep exist.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s&#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;
cnnuren, anu see uuu. .&#13;
_ In Use for Over 30 Years.&#13;
things was past and the day of big j Children Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s C a s t o r k&#13;
things was come. Mr. Cortwright and "&#13;
some of his associates had been trying&#13;
to buy tn interest in the 'Little Susan.'&#13;
Father let them in on some sort of a&#13;
stock arrangement that 1 don't unde.-&#13;
stand and then made himself person&#13;
He Could Take a H i n t .&#13;
Old Andy Jimson's wife had been&#13;
dead less than three months when&#13;
Andy began to "take notice" of t h e&#13;
Widow Magley. Soon after this fact&#13;
ally responsible for a dreadful lot of i had become apparent someone asked&#13;
CHAPTER XII&#13;
Epochal&#13;
At the other extremity of the trajectory&#13;
of Grlslow's telltale fieldglass&#13;
Broulllard was sunning himself luxuriously&#13;
on the porch step at the Massingale&#13;
house and making up for lost&#13;
time—counting all time lost wben It&#13;
spoiled absence from the woman be&#13;
loved. But Miss Massingale was In&#13;
a charmingly frivolous frame of mind.&#13;
"That is the fourth different excuse&#13;
you have invented for cutting me out&#13;
of your visiting list not counting the&#13;
repetitions," she gibed, when he had&#13;
finally fallen back upon the time demands&#13;
of his work to account for his&#13;
late neglect of her. "If 1 wanted to&#13;
be hateful I might insist that you&#13;
haven't given the true reason y e t "&#13;
"Perhaps I will give it before I go."&#13;
he parried. "But just now f'd much&#13;
rather talk about something else. Tell&#13;
me about yourself. What have you&#13;
been doing all these days wben I&#13;
haven't been able to keep tab on you?'&#13;
"Flirting—flirting desperately with&#13;
Tig, with Mr. Anson and Mr. Grislow.&#13;
and that nice boy of youro, Herbert&#13;
Griffith, and with—no. not with Mr.&#13;
Leshington; he scares me--makes a&#13;
borrowed money."&#13;
"Borrowed of Mr. Cortwright?"&#13;
queried Broulllard.&#13;
"No; of the bank. Neither Stevie&#13;
nor ! knew about it until after it was&#13;
done, and even then father wouldn't&#13;
explain. He has been like a man out&#13;
of his mind since Mr. Cortwrlght got&#13;
hold of him—everything is rose-colored.&#13;
But you see bow it all depends&#13;
upon the railroad."&#13;
"Not so much upon the railroad now&#13;
as upon some other things," said&#13;
Broulllard enigmatically "You say&#13;
your father has borrowed of the bank&#13;
—is Mr. Cortwrlght mixed up in the&#13;
loan in any way 7"&#13;
"Yes; he arranged it In some way&#13;
for father—I don't know Just bow. All&#13;
I know is that father is responsible,&#13;
and that if the railroad doesn't come&#13;
he will lose everything."&#13;
Broulllard gave a low whistle. "1&#13;
don't wonder that the quitting rumor&#13;
made you nervous. But 1 think I can&#13;
lift one of your burdens. What you&#13;
heard in town this morning is a fact:&#13;
the railroad people have stopped work&#13;
on the Buckskin extension. Don't&#13;
faint—they are going to begin again&#13;
right away."&#13;
"Oh!" she gasped. "Are you sure5&#13;
How can you be sure?"&#13;
"I've given the order," he said&#13;
gravely, "an order they can't disregard.&#13;
Let's go back a bit and I'll explain.&#13;
Do you remember.my telling&#13;
you that your brother had tried to&#13;
bribe me to use my influence with Mr.&#13;
Ford?"&#13;
"As if I should ever be able to forget&#13;
It!" she protested.&#13;
"Well, that wasn't all that he did—&#13;
he threatened to turn the valley Into&#13;
a placer camp, to disorganize our&#13;
working force, even stop or definitely&#13;
postpone the building of the dam."&#13;
"And you—you believed this?" she&#13;
asked faintly.&#13;
"I was compelled to believe i t He&#13;
let me pan out the proof for myself."&#13;
"It is dreadful—dreadful!" she murmured.&#13;
"You believed him, and for&#13;
that reason you used your Influence&#13;
with Mr. Ford?"&#13;
He got up and took her in his arms.&#13;
and she suffered him.&#13;
"A few days ago. little girl. I couldn't&#13;
have told you. But now I can, I am&#13;
a free man—or I can be whenever 1&#13;
choose to say the word. I did it for&#13;
love's sake."&#13;
She was pushing him away, and the&#13;
great horror in her eyes waa unmistakable&#13;
now.&#13;
"Oh!" she panted, "is love a thing&#13;
to be cheapened like that? And your&#13;
freedom—how have you made a hundred&#13;
thousand dollars in these few&#13;
weeks? Oh. Victor, is it clean money?"&#13;
Andy how he was "coming on" with&#13;
the widow.&#13;
"We'v.- quit," said Andy tersely.&#13;
"That so? How did that happen?"&#13;
"Well, hy heck, when a feller up an'&#13;
asks a woman to marry him an' she&#13;
comes at him with a dipper o' hot water&#13;
to throw over him, an' sicks her&#13;
dog on him an' rails him nine dlff'ent&#13;
names un' threatens to hoss-whlp him,&#13;
he'll take a hint if he ain't an idjit an'&#13;
I took the hint an' left. Some folks&#13;
c a n t take a hint, but I kin, by heckl"&#13;
Diseases of Autolsts.&#13;
When the bicycle was In the limelight,&#13;
and the daily papers would publish&#13;
most anything connected with the&#13;
subject that came to them, the doctors&#13;
began to discover, or rather Invent,&#13;
many new and fearsome diseases&#13;
that they claimed to result from riding&#13;
the wheel The doctors got their&#13;
names into the papers, but the diseases&#13;
never materi .llzed. Now, some&#13;
enterprising member of the medical&#13;
fraternity haB discovered a peculiar&#13;
knee trouble that he claims to result&#13;
from continued use of the clutch and&#13;
brake pedals. It will probably Join&#13;
"kiphosis biclarum" in oblivion after&#13;
i it serves its purpose as a newspaper&#13;
! Item.—Scientific American.&#13;
( f&lt;+++++++++++^+++++++++++++++++++++\&#13;
After what he has done in his X&#13;
efforts to please her. how will&#13;
Breulllsrd square himself with&#13;
Amy for what ahe considers his jj&#13;
dishonorable act?&#13;
i r » r r r f f r r r r n — f f r f f f r » n » i j j , j i&#13;
(TO Btt CONT1NU4GD.I&#13;
Ever Eat&#13;
Grape-Nuts?&#13;
There's a vast army of&#13;
physical a n d mental&#13;
workers who do.&#13;
One reason—its delicious&#13;
nut-like flavour.&#13;
Another — it is easily&#13;
and quickly digested —&#13;
generally in about o n e&#13;
hour.&#13;
But the big reason is—&#13;
Grape-Nuts, besides having&#13;
1 "~&lt;nua taste, tupplies&#13;
all tbe rich nutriment&#13;
of whole wheat and&#13;
malted barley, including&#13;
the "vital** mineral salts&#13;
necessary for building&#13;
brain, nerve and muscle.&#13;
Always ready to eat&#13;
direct from the package,&#13;
Grape-NutJ with cream&#13;
or good milk is a well r&#13;
balanced ration—the utmost&#13;
in sound nourishment&#13;
There's a Reason"&#13;
—•old by Grocers.&#13;
i. " V ' . ' ' . '&#13;
; 1 -•*.&#13;
re-;".'* '.C.j&#13;
i^f---"-'"&#13;
;V$H&#13;
»&gt;.,J&#13;
F'.'v*:'-&#13;
i&#13;
• »&#13;
.¾ }&#13;
* »&#13;
f i&#13;
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i^_,-;V' ...&#13;
' |#hV' ^&#13;
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Call aad &gt;cc us,&#13;
Superior Grain Drill9, in all sizes, alio repair&#13;
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mzwuomzm r-*^w&lt;: •fzz-'+L-c^^i.'&amp;c-&#13;
I Newspapers and Writers&#13;
I The Iiidiaiiapulia N^ws, said to&#13;
bo the lettdio^ paper of ladiautt,&#13;
jaad which hats u circulation of&#13;
i 1^-5,UUU copies daily, baa aunouuei&#13;
ed that it h a t accepted i u laat&#13;
i liquor advertJBeiucnt.&#13;
The Tbompiioijtown, Fa. Globe&#13;
i recently turned down a thousand&#13;
jdollar liquor advertisement in&#13;
1 order to lire up to its policy of&#13;
j no-liquor adrertising.&#13;
1 The New York T r i b u n e after&#13;
j April 1 next will refuse to carry&#13;
jUie advertising- of any alcoholic&#13;
lliquorb.&#13;
i \&#13;
Tbe Mississippi legislature h a s&#13;
'enacted a law barring liquor ads-&#13;
ertibin^ from that state&#13;
' Shop Talk" is t h e bright&#13;
•monthly publication isoUfcu by t h e&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS&#13;
ITEMS IN BRIEF&#13;
His Sixteen Year*9&#13;
Suffering Now Ended&#13;
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Terlne still Rntfafe.&#13;
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, l i ^ "&#13;
i : i r ! : ' t&#13;
S i ) . '&#13;
ii-!'' .-&#13;
1 e j ! ) ': I&#13;
• I ' l l&#13;
h&#13;
;! s. 0 , 1 1 0 : ]&#13;
: tf-V-&#13;
: : i i r i ' i '&#13;
. i J i : :&#13;
.Ti&#13;
M&#13;
\!r^ O. lh h&#13;
iur--&#13;
ih&#13;
» i - 1 •••/.••&#13;
1&#13;
,l- i : n&#13;
, • 1 " \ \&#13;
;ib-&#13;
: &gt; ( ) ' '&#13;
JS&#13;
!: »A&#13;
• t : i r - T&#13;
) write&#13;
• W a i f&#13;
• » • - ; a&#13;
N«w» of AM K i n d * G a t h e r e d F r o m&#13;
V a r i o u s P o i n t s In t h e S t a t e a n d S o&#13;
R e d u c e d In Size T h a t I t W i l l Appeal&#13;
to AN CI«*«ea of R e a d e r s .&#13;
S. N e w k i r k , 'iti, A n n A r b o r , d i e d m&#13;
tiome of b i a d a u g b t e r , M r s . M c L a r e n&#13;
In C h e l s e a .&#13;
Dr. H . A. B a r b e r , a g e d 73, a a d a vet- j&#13;
e r a n 'of t h e civil w a r , i s d e a d a t f&#13;
H a s t i n g s . D r . C. B. B a r b e r of H a s t i n g b j&#13;
is a Bon. j&#13;
M r s , E l l a D i a m o n d , a g e d 64, wiiu&#13;
b a d b e e n in t h e h o t e l b u s i n e s s in&#13;
-Michigan tor tovty-t'wi: y e a r s ( died a t&#13;
T h o m p s o n vi lie.&#13;
C'laude U'uy, A n u Arbwr, w a a h i t by&#13;
a n automobile- driveji by D r . C. v.&#13;
B u e h l i n g . l i e w a s t h r o w n I'orty feel,&#13;
but n o t s e r i o u s l y h i n t .&#13;
B e c a u s e ; h ill h e a l t h i i . BarKiiiaii,&#13;
Jc^nesiielU a i r u j f r , (;o!ninitt(j d s u i e i d e :&#13;
u; baiiyinK'. J ^ . body w a s found sev- I&#13;
v a l hoia-s ui'teT h e e n d e d h i s lite. !&#13;
N. B e l k . n e a r .Uuskegon i n i a t c o ; : u '&#13;
' 1&#13;
t a n &lt;.&gt;i ^j.roliin.- fur i-.erosene w h e n at- j&#13;
t e m p t i n g t o r e v i v e a lire w h i c h h e h a d :&#13;
s t a r t e d . L i t t l e h o p e is h r ! d o u t f o r L'&lt; !&#13;
r e c o v t r y . ;&#13;
Whib-' r m i ' i i n ^ frurn t : , e ;u,A.Sc •&#13;
a f i e r lii w a s seej] roljbins.'- a .croeejy ,&#13;
s t o r e Lit G r a n d I t a p i d s , a n u n i d e n t i f i e d&#13;
m a n w a s .-.true!., a n d killed by a . e v ! : -&#13;
i^an Cen'.ra! t r a i n . \&#13;
T b a t b e t h o u g h ; w i - e t h e a c t i o n (f&#13;
1 'ni: ,e:&gt;it&gt; vi .Miciii^an in ijrovidin^&#13;
a iion-'(.u: ^ i l - ' u r y c o u r s e of m i l i t a r y :&#13;
travuiiy, w .-.-• t h e ojjinion e.vpre^&#13;
"I can say with the greatest of&#13;
pleasure that Foley Kidney Pills were&#13;
the only thins: that save mo relief&#13;
in sixteen years."&#13;
Mr. G. w . Henderson of Dingle.&#13;
Miss* says more than that, too. Hu&#13;
fufferal with cystitis (inflammation&#13;
Of thobladder). I t went on until ha&#13;
retched the point where he had dizzy,&#13;
w«ak spells, and sometimes he would&#13;
almost faJM with pain. Of course,&#13;
he doctortsL V s a t off to the mineral&#13;
springs iiJUkAnmk w&amp;ters of Glfferent&#13;
kinds, w l M l mSmnmr cost him &amp;&#13;
large sw£jk^V!im* MiU no&#13;
m a a c n t gfJHsx I w f f OOSSJSSI S&gt; frier&#13;
w h o i ecoulfl*SSi4s F W&#13;
anU a f t e r usinfrJ«Wk «V"&lt;&#13;
his p a i n s a r e a n M&#13;
e o u n d l y a l l n i g h t . . ^ v,, *&gt;..&#13;
W h e n k i d n e y a n d b l a M s * - t | » u b l e&#13;
c o m e s on y o u a n d y o u suffer tii«jj)alns&#13;
and acliea i t c a u s e s , h a v e i r r e g u l a r ,&#13;
p a i n f u l s e c r e t i o n s a n d a b u r n i n g s e n -&#13;
sation, l a k e F o l e y ' s K i d n e y Pills u t&#13;
once a n d y o u w i l l e c h o Mr. H e n d e r -&#13;
3011'ri s e n t i m e n t s .&#13;
"Fop Sale Evepywherc"&#13;
(} lv&#13;
or&#13;
,^ay;i a&#13;
X.&#13;
or ( j f i&#13;
!!&#13;
1&#13;
a 1 • v : i e&#13;
*+X+,¥++,+i*:Y^+r^+r+l&lt;+&gt;-^+!r+.r^&#13;
WHI&#13;
i{ u t i s a s .&#13;
- ' a ;.••'] i n .&#13;
h.&#13;
0;V,&#13;
iiii.-&#13;
• t i •&#13;
U I O I ,&#13;
i f i l l \)J&#13;
- V . "&#13;
K-.e&#13;
•1 . . , .&#13;
1 ; :&#13;
•• . !J 1 O i ^ ,&#13;
I ' l i e ifuro'tnd&#13;
PigiH a r u j&#13;
i^jtreMp fractured.&#13;
W'i.i&#13;
t : . i ' b a 111 rJ e-- 1::: '.j&#13;
l i o n ! * ' j 101'i.i. iM - ! 0&#13;
S i ' " : V.'a.-: 0 \ ' •!•••(.'&#13;
t'ron: tin; e:i'.;i; t.&#13;
c o n d i t i o n .&#13;
i ' a d t i b 1 by a m a c h i n e to c o n w y&#13;
h u ^ e bio- 1..- u: it•(- en .\ln&gt;l.:e^on lar:e.&#13;
C h a r l e s J'umcio;. w a s )Jiilb"i into tin.1&#13;
w a t e r s . H i s left e a r w a s ,1 off, i n s&#13;
! at&#13;
s a ::; (Uon ui.&lt; :&#13;
T&lt; i h a . lialidi&#13;
!,.• by : h e • :.:&#13;
imi i s in a M&#13;
F o r N e u r a l g i a , n o t h i n g i s&#13;
b e t t e r t h a n&#13;
Dr. Miles'&#13;
A n t i - P a i n Pills&#13;
U s e d b y t h o u s a n d s&#13;
f o r a g e n e r a ' i ^ ' - p .&#13;
T h o s e w : : n have : v \ ' 1 f r o m&#13;
n e u r a l g i c JJ n i i • --- n e n : ::• ; be told&#13;
h o w r i c c t - -&lt;.: . :'. i- •• ::? r e -&#13;
lief. T h e r;,.- "••. . . .1 of&#13;
n e u r a l g i a : v &lt; 'd'-k-s'&#13;
•-^Anti-I', '". ! ' . .. " r e -&#13;
lieved '•::'.'&lt;'•• ' • , u : a u y&#13;
y e a r s , : : ' : • •' 0'*C' &gt;inr i&#13;
h o ' . n - e : . ' , i • - ' - . '&#13;
M::- r, - .&#13;
bi'ol.en a n d h i s left ICJ.'&#13;
^•^•^•^•-^•^•^•-^-^•-i^f*&#13;
The Pure Bred Percheon Stallion&#13;
X o . S176-+. W e i g h t 1M00&#13;
Will make the season of&#13;
1916 a t 5r5 to insure ,\ marc&#13;
with foal-*Mares not returned&#13;
regular to the horse will&#13;
b« held for service fee. AH&#13;
care will be taken t o prevent&#13;
accidents, b u t will not be responsible&#13;
should a n y happea.&#13;
Parties disposing of mares&#13;
before condition is known will&#13;
be held for service fee. Service&#13;
fee due March iat, 1017.&#13;
Edmonton, i* a beautiful black with rb.e best of feet .md l e ^&#13;
and a fin0 disposition. Farmers will do WFII 10 see this hor^-c&#13;
before brrcdin^.&#13;
T\M) new buildings at St. Joseph,&#13;
costing $:'.'.Goo. will be erected j&#13;
on the property of the Catholic parish. ;&#13;
They will be a new rectory and a res- !&#13;
WATCH CHILD FOR WORMS idenee for the instructors of the pare- 1&#13;
Worms cap child's strength, rob cjj|aj sci,O0i&#13;
Ghlld of food aad make cliUd frMful „ t . s h l p v i»pVW1(iorf -(, .. u.Pm t irritated, nervous. Watch stool and1 Beit Abhie&gt; ue%«pdorr, »0. a fora*&#13;
first feign or suspicion of worm*; m e r ^wspaper m au, member of sevgiv&#13;
« one-haU to one loaenge Kieka-1 «l'al Masonic orders, died at tlie home&#13;
poo Worm Killer, a candy warm re- j of lu* parents in Grand Rapid*, uc&#13;
mover. Giv«B immediate result*, isj waR stricken with typhoid fever iu&#13;
laxative. Paralyzes and remove* the j oshkosh, Wis.&#13;
Ti.v.-y i,A.&lt;- - : •&#13;
l i t . i d ;.. :.' if&#13;
t a k e n t i . f ;&#13;
a c h e , !•&amp;: . - . , &lt; : .&#13;
e u r n .-he :.;.&#13;
l l m b r .&#13;
e q u a l t i . ' :n ;• ' • ' c:*imed r..:- &lt;&#13;
J. Vi. i-Kr.i i. (e&#13;
A t «11 d n jjii- &gt; - - : ^ :'&#13;
M I L E S M E D I C A L C C&#13;
. s' A . i ' M ' a ! n&#13;
m e t h e&#13;
-. ,y g-ooJ.&#13;
; ;...k .;; my&#13;
•; e also&#13;
. . ^ : i d -&#13;
&gt;• ! ••- &gt; a n d&#13;
.• i.::iff t o&#13;
1.- . , : t h a t l i&#13;
&gt;-. 1 ir.tfs, M o .&#13;
• * s 25 c e n t j .&#13;
!u.lk. 1&#13;
E ' x h a r t , Ind.&#13;
Hello! You with Coughs&#13;
Here's Speedy Relief&#13;
worm*, improves digestion and general&#13;
heaJtii of child. Continue giving&#13;
Kiclrapco Worm Killer until all signs&#13;
of worms are gone. 2r&gt;c. at your&#13;
Drsgjrfet.&#13;
W E A K A N D STRONG.&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
1&#13;
t i&#13;
GEO. ROCHE. Pinckney. Mich. I&#13;
:^^-+::^:-+::-+^+^^^-4.::^:-^:^:^.-^ +&#13;
T h e r e a r e m e n of s t r e n g t h a n d&#13;
T m e n of w e a k n e s s . W e m e e t&#13;
T them b o t h in e v e r y w a l k of life.&#13;
Their b i r t h o r e d u c a t i o n or g e n -&#13;
eral s u r r o u n d i n g s m a y be t h e&#13;
l a m e , b u t a n o t i b l y s h a r p line&#13;
divides t h o s e w h o govern t h e i r&#13;
inclinations ' r e m t h o s e w h o s e&#13;
inclinations govern t h e m . On&#13;
the c n e side v.c see s t r e n g t h ,&#13;
r.Tcorr.pl:r-hrr.ent a n d value, on&#13;
the o t h e r v . e a k n c s s , s p a s m o d i c&#13;
.: nd h: rhrrt.trd effort rind inefficiency.&#13;
D A N G E R S OF D R A F T&#13;
X&#13;
J.&#13;
+ V&#13;
X&#13;
John Anderson, thirty-four years of&#13;
age, was instantly killed by a Chicago&#13;
&lt;SL- Noun Western freight train&#13;
near Iron .oountain wlien he attemined&#13;
to board the train and was thrown j&#13;
under the wheels. 1&#13;
John Mc.Mulleu, 104. h dead at his |&#13;
homo hi Lal-e Odessa. .Mr. McMullen&#13;
celebrated his last anniversary in ;&#13;
July and the entire village turned out j&#13;
to h^lp him observe. He was a bo\-l&#13;
hood friend of President McKinley. ,&#13;
A. Soszjiiirki, who went away from I&#13;
Granu Rapids more Than a year ago ;&#13;
for Soranton, Pa., who was givep u^ |&#13;
by his friends as dead, is a prisoner&#13;
in a detention camp in Cochraue, On:...&#13;
according to word received by (ira;)h :&#13;
Rapid? relatives.&#13;
The arrest, of John Kakkala, woodsman,&#13;
•••ioared up the mystery ¢.:-- .&#13;
. . . . . r ^&#13;
rour.h&#13;
Mr.NV&#13;
t e a ':,•-&#13;
conl'e.;&#13;
witr.c&#13;
'••(• v r r&#13;
. « • , !&#13;
ho ; . ' i a c l : or. Mis--&#13;
'v - f ::iy y e a r old&#13;
..: ; \ - r : ; : n o ]J^]-\r-.&#13;
: 1 sheriff Sonsiha&#13;
:--.1 V.T;S s e n t e n c e d&#13;
. :*;fi nenitejiitiary.&#13;
Pr.&#13;
We're&#13;
Shouting&#13;
Mrnfis feel h^st when \\t&lt; i\r&lt; hoi&#13;
attfl perspiring, just when they {ire&#13;
most da-nsrerous and the result is&#13;
Xeuralgia, Stiff Neck. Sore Muscles&#13;
or sometimes an attack of rheumatism.&#13;
In such cases applj* Sloan's&#13;
Liniment. It Ktimulates circulation&#13;
to the sore an-rl painful part. The&#13;
blood flows freedy and in a *horf&#13;
ttene the stiffness and pam leaves.&#13;
Those suffering from Neuralgia or&#13;
Xeuralgic Headache will find one or&#13;
two applications of Sloan's Liniment&#13;
will give grateful relief. The&#13;
agonizing pain gives way to a lingling&#13;
aensation of comfort and warmth&#13;
and quiet rest and s-leep is possible.&#13;
Good for Neuritis too. Price 25c,&#13;
at your Pruirjrist.&#13;
An Arab Legend.&#13;
" T h e r e !s 1-:'":-e - • p o r - h;;&#13;
on 1^ poorer."&#13;
A poor Ai':i h :-. a s&#13;
t h e r e is&#13;
•a :.i on a&#13;
' a t u e r .i Inch of Rain.&#13;
ininfall ii'iovc f&gt;-.t&#13;
S U » tS« raeklfis »«d bAcking. raice kho&#13;
•kleam* b«U tk« tsrsaSM wits Foley'* Honey&#13;
and Tar Ceonwvarf.&#13;
" J u s t l i k e oil on t r o u b l e ! w a t e r s . "&#13;
i s t h e w a y o n e g r a t e f u l w o m a n d e -&#13;
s c r i b e s t h e benefit of F o l e y ' s H o n e y&#13;
a n d T a r C o m p o u n d .&#13;
I t s p r e a d s a soothing1 , h e a l i n g c o m -&#13;
i n g o v e r t h e r a w inflamed t h r o a t — i :&#13;
l o o s e n s t h e h a c k — r a i s e s t':o j.niegr.:&#13;
— a n d r e a l i y w o r k s w o n d o r f .&#13;
"Why liack, h.ack, h a c k — d r h ' i n s&#13;
e v e r y b o d y a l m o s t crazy, usin.tr u;&gt;&#13;
y o u r s t r e n g t h , w e a k e n i n g y o u r v i t a l -&#13;
i t y and. i n v i t i n g s e r i o u s s i c k n e s s&#13;
w h e n t h e r e ' s speedy, s o o t h i n g , s u r a&#13;
relief i n f o l e y ' s H o n e y a n d T a r Comp&#13;
o u n d .&#13;
" A f t e r u s i n g medicine from tlie doctor,&#13;
w i t h o u t r e s u l t s , for m y g'randc&#13;
h i l d r e n , w h o . W e r e v i s i t i n g mo," says&#13;
Mr. J. A. S h a n k s , Of L e w i s b u r g , Ind..&#13;
*' I had to j?et u p and j?pt a bottle or&#13;
P u l o y ' s H o n e y a n d T a r Compo':r,.l our&#13;
of ray s t o r e nr.d g i v e th.^m. A f i - r .1&#13;
lt-tt' ( k i f s w e r e given ti^.;.' &lt;v.-•:-,:. 11&#13;
fleep a n d s l e p t tl'.routrkout T&#13;
w i r h o u t c o u g h i n g . I h:ive&#13;
F o l e y ' s H o n e y a n d T a r Coir.•?.:.• un.] f&#13;
ir.ori:- t h a n e i g h t y ^ r , : or. ..1 ^.1^-^:&#13;
Vct-hll find Folcyhs K-:r. y :••:. 1 7 ;&#13;
j,r vr,r.r drnc-^i-ts. Fe turc * : tx&#13;
.: r f-'e.lov's a n d s e c t h a t :: \ :-,-' :!'&#13;
y(•!'•-'v.- riaokage. Xot.V, ing c&gt; J v.-:']V&#13;
t V e v : e r k 1 h a - t ]*ul( -y'^; 7Ton, y ., h J T r&#13;
wii1. ho. He, oOc a n a fl.uO t}L-j-.it&#13;
FG» Sale Ev^ywh'irf*'&#13;
V , I ,&#13;
4&#13;
handful of ,1.1&#13;
hi^-h clifT to oat them and -.lit&#13;
threw the s t o n o over a h.&#13;
dat'-s :::..1 went up on :;&#13;
,s In&#13;
h a n d&#13;
i n &lt; - i i e v&#13;
W;isl.&#13;
Mr.- : .a&#13;
;n&#13;
,!Ii(i e : i u r ; i i t 1 h e m .&#13;
'"' s a i d h e .&#13;
stuiieV:"&#13;
'N\'hv (hi v o u c a t c h&#13;
V*-\&#13;
r**'*/&#13;
**$;:&#13;
# M l tb« e»Mll«nt (jualkr&#13;
^ - r irtitfrg. W« doA&#13;
mm « M I t k t Job may U,&#13;
# 1 mm •iuipyed to turn h&#13;
em M f«ttr Mdafactfon. 1/&#13;
ftX « « 1 1 tell y o u s o&#13;
Let Hi Convince You&#13;
W e i g h t y S u b j e c t .&#13;
Mr. V&lt;':-&lt;( t'lie\ -&lt;n«i jili iti.i'-e luv&#13;
I ' U i t s 1&gt;V ill* V " " l : d i:f ' l i e : . : ; / ; . r Cl»l&#13;
n i i i l i t .&#13;
Mrs. \ t«ie: H H V . HI.*III\ &lt;»f »tiiii^ »!»&lt;!&#13;
tl»**y » 0 &lt;• i&lt;i ll»t* piMiiid '.-&#13;
"'»iic. de-.-ir." V&lt;»IIU«M&gt; Sl.tlOMi1r.11.&#13;
H&gt;« Q r « * t ^ t H a n d i c a p .&#13;
F i r a t g o l f e r — W L a t « y u u r h a n d i c a p ?&#13;
S r e o n d ( i o l f e r — B e i n g &lt;»bliged t o "work&#13;
for n jivlnir.--rMtroit F r e e T r e a s .&#13;
s h u t .jtit below&#13;
'•ir&lt;»&#13;
my da\&#13;
"P.ecfiijse, O bivit her." .'lUswcrtHl a&#13;
weak voice, "I have nut eaten these&#13;
three days, and Alhdi has sent these&#13;
stones lo save my life."&#13;
"Fi-aitio l»e to AlhtU," answered the&#13;
first man. "for lie has sared me also.&#13;
for here is one j«.»oiv.r than I."&#13;
And U»i 1» tweu went into the citr.&#13;
fna4da information.&#13;
"Now, w1f^* we u»ii*t look »round *&#13;
little before buying an nuton&gt;obile."&#13;
"Fortunately, we voii-r have lo go to&#13;
that 4rouble. I have had ejtlled to my&#13;
S l . l . M V . e t ) " i -,&#13;
inch of 1:,;:•,,"&#13;
J u l y in Inilhi'&#13;
Ohi-i :111.1 N. '&#13;
o f 1).1.- ; v : .1 ,-T&#13;
li^-ri ['( s ., : v &gt;-&#13;
for The h ii:r:i&#13;
! e: hot;w. &lt;'nliforni::.&#13;
,,-.:^ ;!l:&lt;l Xebruskil r :&#13;
...e:"is :iu Inrretise of&#13;
.:• \- iir-jt &lt;rop. L v e r v&#13;
.--hove t h r e e i n c h e s ii,&#13;
" hh;&lt;ii-. K i i n s n s . l o w : ;&#13;
•-v.: ;'.-:','as:«.:s (lie v a h v&#13;
by &gt;birMX)0.&lt;Wi. T h e s , ;&#13;
.•lie,! by V.. J . CrJlSoe&#13;
f &lt;-;eopr:-l]'iiy.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
.Mr&#13;
i l n y : i ;&#13;
Kv;i&#13;
!HLr l i e r&#13;
' l'.in&gt;s a 1111 J'amiiy -pent Sun -&#13;
tne lnuji-' of Klrner Vanl^n'oii.&#13;
I &gt;&lt;K*knj_Lr of ^ p*:ihtni • 1- visit,&#13;
parent- t'hi- w eek.&#13;
\ViJl Sb«»Jian an I wife- Rj&gt;ent&#13;
;»« i»eei, S n n , ] a v w ;ijj relatives at Pinckney&#13;
b.ieet to I *&#13;
Hollow Shafts.&#13;
h'&lt;y .'ireto! e\ iH-rhnontx it iian&#13;
pr-»ve;l !h:;t :i &lt;o|i«l .-.&gt; umu snl... .&#13;
iHMidiiii; strains is 1,0 stronger than Hi Mr*». \ \ m. W b itn is 011 t h e gifk.&#13;
hollow diiiv t onstxicenily till iron j \\g\&#13;
shafts jire iLuuie hollow, ant) the steel&#13;
Rhirfts* whii-li drive i1«Keivws of Rltf&gt;ani-' H^ymoD«] a n d M a r g a r e t H r o g a n&#13;
Khlps lnive :i hole hoitxl &lt;own the oen visited » t t h e ho!fi4- of M a x L o i -&#13;
ter so lhat the weight u»iy l»e rediu-ed1. j wirl^fe ]*gt Friday.&#13;
o«nny Wtdd«noa. SMe«vvei'rraall fFrroomm tluiiai vviiccimnittyv at-&#13;
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suuill suui of in(»wey t«' defray the ex-&#13;
]&gt;ense»s of the f. yst, if any uiojn»y was '&#13;
left over it went toward the furnishing i&#13;
©f the new home.- Exchange. \&#13;
rellin:&#13;
the workl.*'&#13;
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car?*'&#13;
"The niiont." - boni^vllle&#13;
Jnurnni&#13;
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••&gt;^&gt;-V&gt;f. w- &amp; ^ ¾ ¾ f ' •*&#13;
^''•-•v1:""" !£ - Xl^WttLR ''"^~Tf—«-*-—-- -&#13;
1 ¾ ¾ ^ ^ h&gt;'^^SflBBlfc^^-.' V •• •&#13;
• ; # » &gt; *&#13;
ri*f&#13;
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T , . ' : . &gt; . . ^ ;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch March 29, 1916</text>
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                <text>March 29, 1916 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>_ _ _ I _&#13;
V o l . X X X I Y Pinckney, L i v i n g s t o n Courtly, Michigan, W e d n e s d a y , April 5th ]9h&gt; No. 1 *&#13;
fc.&#13;
* .&#13;
Republicans Elect Three&#13;
Leading Officers.&#13;
For tht&gt; tii'nt, ti_j&lt;^ in Vi nits the&#13;
Republicans captured the three&#13;
lead ID L^ officios by quiu.-1 a majority.&#13;
I t was nuite a s u r p r i s e to the&#13;
DemoOrritB, who have always been&#13;
i n the majority in this section .&#13;
The following .-;hnwo the number&#13;
of votes catst for ^na): candidal e :&#13;
For Supervisor.&#13;
W _ . 0. Miher, 171&#13;
{Jrregoyv DevereauM, \]1&#13;
Clerk, "&#13;
W. J. Dunbuc 117, D. W. M a r t a ,&#13;
121; Treasurer, A l - e r J. Hall 108,&#13;
L e o LaY'.y l'J'h H i g h w a y Comm&#13;
i s s i o n ^ Jas. Smith F7'&gt;; J u s -&#13;
tice of the Peace (to nil vacancy);&#13;
Wales Lelaud 11U, W. A. Can-179;.&#13;
( F u l l t e r m ) Gov Hall 142, J. IT.:&#13;
Doyle 1 of&gt;: Overseer of Highway*, continued&#13;
J o h n Chr.mb.v-f; 13 I, Casper \ olmer&#13;
165: M^iriij.-r id Board of Review,&#13;
Fred Burgess ; ldd, Oeorge&#13;
Bland 16;V Ai! tour democratic&#13;
constables were H^cted oy •&lt;. majority&#13;
of 2U.&#13;
A Little Child is Lost.&#13;
A. little child between the age&#13;
of two aud three years, belonging&#13;
to Mr. and Mrb. Philya Challisi&#13;
living north of Brighton, strayed j&#13;
from their home Thursday afternoon&#13;
and has not been seen siuce. i&#13;
The little one was left sitting on [&#13;
the doorsteps while the other&#13;
children were playing about. I t&#13;
had only been out about an hour&#13;
w h t n they missed it. Search at&#13;
once bewail, but only its little&#13;
footprints leading down to a pond j&#13;
and then returning aud ^oing in&#13;
the opposite direction svere all the&#13;
clue that could be found. A hundred&#13;
men searched all night with,&#13;
no success, Friday, the boy scouts j&#13;
were called out and the search j&#13;
i.'tn* search is still £0- 1&#13;
t i* i&#13;
nu' o n o u t as y e t n o trHce nan -&#13;
jynii f o u n d or t h ; ' c h i l d .&#13;
Public Confidence: cJ i &gt; i: e&#13;
c h u n&#13;
- ' (.:&#13;
•&lt; UL't'.i i -&#13;
K I : c&#13;
We ihink vveliavo won the o ;u!idc:uv o.&#13;
ply them with judiciously -elected men&#13;
necessary to n u n c ccnain :ccrch;.ndc.- • ,uvk!&#13;
•,.-]' tile advertising through ih&#13;
W&#13;
ilie :n«ii."!&#13;
n u r o n u ^ u&#13;
v. 'Oi'rui'ju-.&#13;
' . ' : ' . ' U . • &gt; \&#13;
ie:l 'Cc t h ' l&#13;
.;a." '. -&#13;
j [.&gt;'' nun.' &lt; &gt;i&#13;
^ n . i e i n o :&#13;
.) j r&#13;
IK&#13;
! o ;&#13;
' W -&#13;
• j \ V e s&#13;
Smith-Dinkel Handy&#13;
wadding occu:&#13;
1&#13;
A small, si in pi&#13;
red at tbe home of Mr. and Mrs&#13;
David Smith of Pinckney, Wednesday&#13;
afternoon, April oth, 'it&#13;
half past two o'clock, when their&#13;
daughter, Mabel Estelle, was united&#13;
iu marriage to Kugene Dink el&#13;
of the same place They were unattended&#13;
aud wer« married beneath&#13;
an Jirch of vines tmd&#13;
flowers.&#13;
Rev. Littlejohu of Howell per-&#13;
Obituary&#13;
hila Handall was born&#13;
1&gt;50, in the township of&#13;
aud was the youngest daughter of&#13;
of a family of six children- four&#13;
daughters and two sons--of Dr.&#13;
and Mrs. R s d Kandall, one of&#13;
Livingston county's oldest pionoers.&#13;
Li la passed away from thit&gt; life&#13;
March 27th. B)ln, b^ing at the&#13;
time of her departure *'&gt;•""&gt; years,&#13;
7 mouths and ~(&gt; days of age.&#13;
Nov. 2oth, 1 ^7(J, she was united&#13;
in marriage to Peter W. ('utiiway&#13;
of H a m b u r g aud to this union was&#13;
b o m one son, Ruell of Ann Arbor.&#13;
T H I S WEEK:&#13;
We have many odds and ends&#13;
and Children's Shoes, that will be&#13;
cost.&#13;
in Ladies. Men's&#13;
*oId reiranHess of&#13;
Our lot of Mens Rubber Boots to close out&#13;
at $2.50 per pair&#13;
All Furniture and Rugs ordered through our&#13;
Catalogues, during the month of April will be sold&#13;
at ten per cent above cost, freight added.&#13;
OUR SATURDAY GROCERY SPECIALSformed&#13;
the ceremony, using the&#13;
ring service. The wedding March j As Mrs. Coniway haa resided at'&#13;
was rendered by Miss Dorothy i her late home or in its immediate]&#13;
Wallace. Tbe bride was attired: vicinity all her married life audi&#13;
beautifully iu a gown of white! being prominent in social circles,;&#13;
•rape de chine artistically tritntned her sterrrog character, kindness j&#13;
In pink rosebuds and wore a cor- &amp; n d hospitality need no comment&#13;
eage boquet of pink Bweet peas I a s she was highly respected by all&#13;
and lillies of the valley. A de-t that knew her.&#13;
licioufl three-course dinner was j She was a charter member of&#13;
•erved, the eolor scheme being j the Pinckney Hive of the Lady&#13;
pink and white. The table waej Maccabees and u*xm ite dissolvecenterejt&#13;
with pink roges, and) ment, united with the Hamburg&#13;
8 lbs. Oats&#13;
Best Tea&#13;
Tea Dust&#13;
Good Bread Flour&#13;
25c&#13;
45c&#13;
15c&#13;
80c&#13;
:i()c Coffee 27 c&#13;
25c Coffee 23c&#13;
Table Talk 22c&#13;
5) Bars Lenox Soap 25e&#13;
pink crepe paper WAS effectively&#13;
used. Mr. and Mrs. Dinkel lefl&#13;
for a short trip to Detroit and&#13;
othor places.&#13;
hr-&#13;
« . . .&#13;
* • « * ' - * -&#13;
« , : ' ••£»•&#13;
smSpiS^f " -.*" Sfe^ &lt;%V;&#13;
Hmmpt' ^*•&gt;- J* ? W£'&amp;: •1S^K1^&gt;^; ^ &gt;--'*; - • °»..-v-.' Bma&amp;,«'*^- .&#13;
BK^,' L.-J"&#13;
VZ&amp;'tS-Sl&amp;fr&#13;
VSffi •'*!$&amp; mmm 11^¾¾^^^-1^¾&#13;
*&#13;
• *&#13;
Burfess-Hendee&#13;
Miss Benhh Buagesi anrl Mr-&#13;
Lynn Hendee, both highly respected&#13;
young people of this place,&#13;
were married this afternoon at the&#13;
home of the bride's parents, Rer.&#13;
Camburn of jhe M. E. Church,&#13;
officiating. They were attended&#13;
by Lyle Hendee, brother of the&#13;
groom and Miss Florence Burgess&#13;
sister of the bride. The wedding&#13;
marsh was rendered by Miss Laura&#13;
Barges*. They wiil leave ton if b I&#13;
lor a short wedding trip. The&#13;
Dispatch joins their maay friends&#13;
iterations.&#13;
Hive, always being a faithfull and&#13;
punctual attendant as long a her&#13;
health permitted. She was also a&#13;
member of the Eastern Star Lodge&#13;
at Pinckney.&#13;
To mourn the loss of a loving&#13;
wife, ^mother, sieter and friend*&#13;
there is a sad husband, a sou, one&#13;
grand-chile!,two brothers, Guilford&#13;
of Howell and Jdarvin of Bancroft&#13;
and her rumerous frieede.&#13;
Free from th« world's tem(&gt;tatio m.&#13;
Free from all physical pain,&#13;
Frte from ail tear* and torrowa,&#13;
Our IOM is but ber gnia,&#13;
IVarett compnaion bow we shall&#13;
miM jou,&#13;
From yo&lt;ir ace untamed «ph«*rf,&#13;
riut ia tfc* Brtintiful Home »*• kuow&#13;
y&lt;»u «re dwelling,&#13;
Whkh ia b«Uer far tb»n }.ei&gt;.&#13;
Resolntions&#13;
*R^&#13;
ial for Easter&#13;
Ladies' and Gent's Suits, cleaned,&#13;
qreseed and repaired.' Bring&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
To all who, by word or deed,&#13;
isted us during the illness »nd&#13;
departure of oar dear wife and&#13;
mother, and especially to theme&#13;
&amp;v ~ • -&#13;
• * - r&#13;
your work to my room at tbe «o«rtribatmg the beantifal rtoral&#13;
hotel Thanking yon in adrance &lt;f****K* t o ** ^»&lt;&gt;ir, and to Ber.&#13;
for your patronage this s p n n r I : J « » for his thoughtful I words&#13;
flolicat ymif patronage. °^ o«i*o***iosi. *« tendar our sin-&#13;
Parry Morrison. c*1?e K^itude; and whs* the cup&#13;
of sorrow shall be pasaas) ta ^yon,&#13;
" Ws»te&lt;l-A l i r . eorraaponckat **' yon each be rendamd tha[&#13;
i . the rieinity of UkaU«d, W#b- ^ k l m l ^ • s y t h y .&#13;
attar and Parkers Cornora. Sta- ^ , ^ 0 1 ^ ^ ^&#13;
tsoaary aod eUaaped onveiopes M r 4 o d M r * RlMfI Coww»&gt;*^&#13;
wtUhe fnmished, also sabacrip- ]&#13;
tel&gt;iapstah. Pinckney Dispatch.. New Jin* of Spring hats aud&#13;
«ape At Mcnka Bros. Adr.&#13;
It has pleased tbe Supreme&#13;
Kuler of the Universe to call from I&#13;
our Chapter our beloved Sister&#13;
Lila Coniway. She has complet^&#13;
ed her pilgrimuge here, and a&#13;
blighter world has opened to her&#13;
where beyond the cares aud sor-;&#13;
rows of this life, there is peace&#13;
and rest,—Therefore, be it Uesolved:-&#13;
That we may hope that,&#13;
the influence of her life, shaped ;&#13;
and molded by the teachings of j&#13;
our beanlifnl Order, may be felt !&#13;
to such a degree that we niay|&#13;
truly say, "Though dead &amp;he yet. j&#13;
lives." Resolved.—That we extend&#13;
eur sincere syrnparhy to the&#13;
friends of thU departed sister,&#13;
and that our Charter be draped j&#13;
for the period of 30 days. {&#13;
Nettie M. Vaughn \&#13;
Ltal Sigler&#13;
Mary F. Read&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Remnants&#13;
In Going Over Our Stock&#13;
We find patterns that arc sold&#13;
we call remnant?.&#13;
short, these 44re what&#13;
We have put these in bundles and have p u t a price&#13;
wd\ below COM. on them.&#13;
West&#13;
for&#13;
You will find patterns &gt;uitable tor&#13;
rooms, bed rooms, etc., some have borders.&#13;
kitchens, living&#13;
Loyd Weilman will work&#13;
Charlie Hauson »hi* summer.&#13;
Tks Ladies Aid will meat with.&#13;
Mrs. Bark as Thursday afternoon.&#13;
Mrs W. H. Miller and Miaa&#13;
Wsrda Miller ealiad at Mra. J as&#13;
Catrtti last Satunlsv.&#13;
Mrs. Phil Smith and thre«&#13;
daaghters visited her father&#13;
laaco the firat of the we«k.&#13;
There are not many. x&gt; it will pay \&lt;&gt;M to c*ill aj sooo&#13;
AS you read this ad, if you have a rr&gt;om or two that don't&#13;
require the better paper.&#13;
Theec are all TQIJ patterns ami not a bunch of junk.&#13;
in&#13;
C. 3-. 3-CET&#13;
PlncWney, Mich*&#13;
Read Dancer's Ad this week.&#13;
foto*** .„ .•»..&#13;
.«A&gt; ir • .-'-.A..-jr.&#13;
. " &amp; • ;*4*j^^r"&#13;
mlfar-j K \ " iil^JMhiWii .». I lCi|.bMPJ i ^ S ^ j&#13;
•r&#13;
S-.-i„&#13;
• • * ; m •*±.&#13;
m&#13;
-&amp;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
? * # * . • ;&#13;
v . •*';&#13;
,-v-V&#13;
*V&#13;
ONE BEA&#13;
i*B0&gt;rs aivd Shrubb&#13;
Their Care arvd Cuttivaiiorv&#13;
,* t V i T W ^&#13;
Japanese Anemone or Wind Flower.&#13;
APRIL IN BIRDLAND&#13;
By L. M. B E N N I N G T O N .&#13;
This month the birds mate, and&#13;
many new ones come from the South.&#13;
This month the boys and girls wander&#13;
all over the woods and fields looking&#13;
for the bluets, the violets, hepaticaa&#13;
and spring beauties.&#13;
This spring I hope they will not pick&#13;
too many of our wild flowers, because&#13;
it is feared that i time there will&#13;
not be many of our beautilul native&#13;
blossoms to gather.&#13;
They have been ruthlessly plucked&#13;
and thrown aside tor so many years&#13;
by thoughtless children that a great&#13;
many o* the most beautiful and valuable&#13;
species have run out of existence.&#13;
In their walks in the woods this&#13;
spring it would be very Interesting&#13;
to the boys and girls to take up the&#13;
st.dy of wild flowers and the study&#13;
GARDEN FOR BUSY WOMAN&#13;
By E. V A N B E N T H U Y S E N .&#13;
Every woman ought to have a garden.&#13;
The change that takes a woman&#13;
out of doors away from the routine&#13;
of housework is a good one. it affords&#13;
health, happiness and a positive relief&#13;
to the overworked muscles and tired&#13;
brain of the woman who spends most&#13;
of her day indoors. There is health&#13;
for both body and brain in working&#13;
in a garden.&#13;
There are a great many flowers that&#13;
require very little care and give wonderful&#13;
returns for the little time expended.&#13;
My advice to the woman who&#13;
has not much time to give to her garden&#13;
is to plant only the flowers that&#13;
will give the best result for her limited&#13;
care.&#13;
No lover of flowers can afford to be&#13;
without a corner for sweet peas. They&#13;
bloom in wonderful profusion and&#13;
their beauty and fragrance are too well&#13;
known to need comment. Plant &amp;s&#13;
early in the season as possible, and&#13;
sow the seeds about an inch apart.&#13;
Cover with about two inches of soil&#13;
and tamp the soil down firmly. Keep&#13;
the roots well covered as they gTow,&#13;
as shallow planted sweet peas often&#13;
fail in hot weather. Provide Borne&#13;
brush for them to grow on, water profusely&#13;
and enjoy their beauty.&#13;
Allow a corner for poppies Also&#13;
space for a few china asters, like our&#13;
grandmothers grew. Nothing is easier&#13;
to grow, nothing blooms more profusely.&#13;
Few plants are richer in color&#13;
or bloom later in the season.&#13;
The gillyflower is a fragrant oldtimer&#13;
worthy of our attention. This&#13;
is a late bloomer, like the aster. Plant&#13;
SWAMP-ROOT SAVES&#13;
KIDNEY SUFFERERS&#13;
You naturally fee! secure when you know&#13;
that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great&#13;
kidney, hver and bladder remedy, IB absolutely&#13;
pure and contains no harmful or&#13;
habit producing drugs.&#13;
The same standard of purity, strength&#13;
and excellence, prescribed by Dr. Kilmer&#13;
many years ago, m maintained in every&#13;
bottle of Swamp-Root.&#13;
Swamp-Root is scientifically compounded&#13;
from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant&#13;
and is taken m teaepoonful dotted. It&#13;
la not recommended for everything. According&#13;
to verified testimony it is nature'i&#13;
great helper in relieving and overcoming&#13;
kidney, liver and bladder troubles.&#13;
If you suffer, don't delay another day.&#13;
Go to your nearest druggiat now and get&#13;
a bottle. All drug stores sell it in two&#13;
•izea—fifty cents a*d one dollar.&#13;
However, if you wish first to try thia&#13;
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.&#13;
Kilmer &amp; Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a&#13;
sample bottle. When writing be iure and&#13;
mention thi* paper.—Adv.&#13;
Large Duck Farm on Long Island&#13;
E d i t o r i a l Confession.&#13;
"Better interview this Lady Eglantine,"&#13;
suggested the managing editor&#13;
of the New York Daily Squash.&#13;
"Why, she's a hen. A hen can't do&#13;
anything but cackle."&#13;
"Well, we've printed worse inter&#13;
views. Go ahead."&#13;
A n A u t o m a t i c Food Shelter That Holds&#13;
Four Quarts of Chicken Feed and&#13;
Supplies It as Required to the Birds.&#13;
of birds, and they ^ould learn to love&#13;
the woodland b&amp;auties quite as well as&#13;
their cwn stems and plants, and too&#13;
well to pick them and let them die in a&#13;
few hours.&#13;
This spring the kingfisher comes&#13;
back to his favorite haunts, and we&#13;
hear him as from a limb overhanging&#13;
the river, with a harsh, loud cry he&#13;
drops down and seises the yellow belly&#13;
OB which he has had his eye so long,&#13;
awaking the opportunity to secure a&#13;
good dinner in this way.&#13;
The phoebe, whicl. we all know and&#13;
lore to hear in the early springtime,&#13;
commences to build the last of this&#13;
month. Their nests are found under&#13;
the eaves, bridges or ol. barns, and&#13;
•on made of grass, fine moss and hair&#13;
plastered together with mud and lined&#13;
with »0ft feathers and wool. The&#13;
phosbe's call Is "Phoe— e— be! Phoe—&#13;
' When robins are mated, they baild&#13;
from the middle of April to the first&#13;
Of May. near our dwelling house*,, in&#13;
th« apple orchard, in t i e pear trees.&#13;
asd oa grape arbors, and in the vines&#13;
Of the pfasfa, provided the rats are not&#13;
loo Bttmeror*.&#13;
. lasMn* are •ery domestic, often&#13;
foartng three broods in a season.&#13;
'.DOYteg tkit month we have the&#13;
thrash, whosa song is a rest for&#13;
He begins to sing early&#13;
It sso sssfoAkg, sad us voice can bo&#13;
» 1 others, raging out lis*&#13;
The highest prices are paid for&#13;
ducks marketed early in the spring,&#13;
the price decreasing as the season advances&#13;
and the supply becomes more&#13;
abundant. The demand for "green"&#13;
ducks, which is the term used to describe&#13;
those grown rapidly and marketed&#13;
when only eight to twelve week9&#13;
old, wlien -hey weigh about four and&#13;
one-half to six pounds, has been built&#13;
up in large cities in the East and on&#13;
the Pacific coast. There is very little&#13;
demand for such ducks in small&#13;
cities and towns. Many farmers market&#13;
their ducks in the fall as spring&#13;
ducks at a lower price per bird than&#13;
is received for green ducks in the&#13;
spring.&#13;
Ducks may be dressed by dry plck-&#13;
! ing, by scalding, or by steaming. Their&#13;
I condition is best Judged by the amount&#13;
of flesh on their backs. The methods&#13;
used in dry picking poultry are also&#13;
I used with ducks, although the latter&#13;
are harder to pick. The ducks are genj&#13;
erally killed by sticking in the mouth&#13;
I or through the throat with a knife&#13;
which has a narrow blade about four&#13;
inches long, and then stunned by a&#13;
blow on the back of the head with a&#13;
short club; or the knife may be inserted&#13;
just back of the eye. To facilitate&#13;
handling in scalding and picking, a&#13;
hook is run into the duck's mouth,&#13;
coming out through the nostril The&#13;
long tail feathers are left on the ducks,&#13;
the wings are picked to the first Joint&#13;
and the neck half way to the head.&#13;
Long pinfeathers are removed with a&#13;
dull knife, and the down sometimes is&#13;
rubbed off with the moistened hand,&#13;
burned with alcohol or shaved with a&#13;
very sharp knife.&#13;
Ducks may be steamed and picked,&#13;
thus saving the feathers without artificial&#13;
drying, and as duck feathers are&#13;
of considerable value, their Bale is&#13;
quite an important item. The wing&#13;
and tail feather3 are pulled and thrown&#13;
to one side before steaming the ducks.&#13;
Six or eight ducks, which have been&#13;
stuck and hung up to bleed, are placed&#13;
on hooks in the top of a steam box or&#13;
barrel which can be made airtight, and&#13;
steamed until the soft feathers on the&#13;
breast come off easily. The length of&#13;
time to leave them in the box depends&#13;
on the temperature of the steam, varying&#13;
vfrom one-half to two minutes.&#13;
After the ducks are picked they are&#13;
usually washed and put in ice water&#13;
for an hour or two to cool and plump&#13;
Each layer of ducks is packed flat In&#13;
ice. usually with the keels or breasts&#13;
down, in barrels, or in boxes holding&#13;
one dozen each.&#13;
It costs from five to six cents apiece&#13;
to pick ducks, but the body feathers&#13;
and down usually are saved, as white&#13;
feathers bring from 40 to 50 cents a&#13;
REDUCE POULTRY FEED COST&#13;
Fowls T h r i v e on Clover, Alfalfa, Beet*,&#13;
Turnips and Other Vegetables&#13;
— A l l Easy Crops.&#13;
£ f * \ r *&#13;
Snapdragons Easy to Grow and Effective&#13;
for the Busy Woman's Garden.&#13;
the double ones, they are very pretty&#13;
and are an excellent flower for cutting.&#13;
They come in white, pink, red,&#13;
and a dull purplish bins.&#13;
Plan to have a garden this year, no&#13;
matter how little time yon think yon&#13;
have to give to i t Your health will&#13;
4M SO much better tor the time spent&#13;
out of doors that yoa will find yon will&#13;
harry up the work In the bouse to&#13;
get out to yovr garden.&#13;
The cost of feed can be considerably&#13;
cut down by raising corn, and&#13;
also by raising roots and general&#13;
green crops. It will pay Lo have a&#13;
patch of clover, or alfalfa; to have&#13;
a bed of beets, m e of turnips, one of&#13;
cabbage, one of potatoes, and one of&#13;
onlonc Poultry relish and thrive on&#13;
all of these. They are crjpc tLat can&#13;
be attended to during leisure times,&#13;
and will make a gocd showing in the&#13;
coEt of breeding.&#13;
Boiled Meat Gravy.&#13;
When you boil meat a good gravy&#13;
can be made from the liquor. Melt a&#13;
tablespoonfur of butter, add a tablespoonful&#13;
of flour; beat until brown;&#13;
add the meat liquor and let boil a few&#13;
minutes; flavor to taste.&#13;
Poor Plaos for Alfalfa.&#13;
D o s t sow alfalfa seed on Tory recently&#13;
plowed land.&#13;
pound when cured. Each duck yields&#13;
about two ounces of marketable feathers.&#13;
Scalded feathers may also be&#13;
dried and sold&#13;
The feed cost of growing Pekin&#13;
ducks to ten weeks of age, when they&#13;
weigh from five to six pounds, is estimated&#13;
at from five to six cents a&#13;
pound. Green ducks are marketed&#13;
from April to November and bring&#13;
from 12 to 30 cents a pound when sold&#13;
to commission men at wholesale.&#13;
Disbudding and Summer Pruning.&#13;
Disbudding and pinching back of the&#13;
young shoots of fruit trees are the only&#13;
hope of those who have neglected to&#13;
prune properly during the fall and winter&#13;
and yet wish to control somewhat&#13;
the shape and fruiting habits of the&#13;
trees for the coming season. On the&#13;
other hand, many expert growers who&#13;
have properly attended to pruning,&#13;
study their trees carefully in the summer&#13;
and by disbudding and pinching&#13;
are able still further to control their&#13;
growth. Some experts starting with&#13;
very young trees rely almost wholly&#13;
on disbudding and pinching, because&#13;
they say that it is more logical to direct&#13;
the strength of the tree than to&#13;
allow it to waste Its energies in forming&#13;
wood which only has to be cut off&#13;
by a pruning knii'e. These processes,&#13;
however, call for even greater care&#13;
than ordinary pruning because, of&#13;
course, it is easier to injure a growing&#13;
tree than to deal with a dormant one&#13;
In the case of older trees, however,&#13;
disbudding and pinching, of course, are&#13;
not substitutes for pruning and getting&#13;
rid of old wood. Once a tree has established&#13;
old wood, disbudding simply&#13;
controls the development of new&#13;
shoots and the saw or pruning hook&#13;
alone will dispose of interfering&#13;
branches or old growth.&#13;
Disbudding should begin when the&#13;
young buds are large enough to be&#13;
pinched out with the thumb and finger.&#13;
The process should be repeated rather&#13;
than an attempt made to take off many&#13;
buds at a time. The buds which are&#13;
left should remain where they will&#13;
grow up and close up the open tree&#13;
spaces and bring about a more com- ;&#13;
pact form Disbudding is often prac- ,&#13;
ticed on fruit trees grown under glass, i&#13;
where the branches must necessarily&#13;
be kept within a very small area and&#13;
where conservation of the vigor of the&#13;
tree is of great importance. Disbudding&#13;
is often practiced with advantage&#13;
on apples, peaches, pears and other&#13;
fruit trees and vines.&#13;
Complete information on pruning&#13;
and disbudding may be secured by&#13;
writing the editor of the Division of&#13;
Publications of the United States department&#13;
of agriculture, asking for&#13;
Farmers' Bulletin No. 181.&#13;
SOIL ADAPTED TO ALFALFA&#13;
In Regions of Heavy Rainfall Natural&#13;
Drainage M w t Be Provided—&#13;
Few Good Plana,&#13;
In the humid sections of the country&#13;
it is especially important to provide&#13;
a well-drained soil for alfalfa. In&#13;
the irrigated districts the problem of&#13;
drainage to prevent or reduce the accumulation&#13;
of alkali Is often serious.&#13;
In the regions of heavy rainfall natural&#13;
drainage must be provided. It has&#13;
been found that alfalfa requires much&#13;
more complete drainage of the soil&#13;
than do other field crops.&#13;
Where the underdrains are unable&#13;
to carry off the rainfall rapidly enough&#13;
for prompt drainage, it is sometimes&#13;
the practice to backfurrow. leaving&#13;
the dead furrows.at intervals of a rod&#13;
or less. This permits the water to ran&#13;
off quickly in the event of heavy rains.&#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 y ~ ssyy&gt; *&#13;
Signature of C^u^/% fCMcJuAt&#13;
In Use for Over 30 Years.&#13;
Children Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s Caatoria&#13;
Scarcity of Drugs.&#13;
The scarcity and high prices of many&#13;
popular drugs, has caused a decrease&#13;
in medicine taking, says a London&#13;
chemist. "This result of the war,"&#13;
says a medical man, "is all for the&#13;
best. People get into a habit of taking&#13;
medicines to relieve some little&#13;
disorder which nature would more effectually&#13;
cure it they only exercised&#13;
a little patience. Once the habit is&#13;
formed it cannot be given up. If high&#13;
prices compel people to give up their&#13;
favorite medicines, the war will do&#13;
real service to the health of the community."&#13;
Trench Frost Bite.&#13;
An article in the Lancet discusses&#13;
the so-called "frost bite" from which&#13;
many soldiers suffered while fighting&#13;
in the trenches in Flanders last winter.&#13;
It is characterized by swelling,&#13;
pain, and disturbance of sensation in&#13;
the part affected, but not by the necrosis&#13;
or death of the tissues which&#13;
occurs in true frost bite. The names&#13;
"frigorism" and "frigidism" have been&#13;
suggested for it. The conditions&#13;
causing it are cold, wet and interference&#13;
with the circulation in the leg&#13;
and foot by tight puttees and boots. A&#13;
very thin layer of moderately dry air&#13;
between the skin and the external&#13;
cold water or ice enables the heat of&#13;
the circulating blood to keep the parts&#13;
free from "frigorism," and this can be&#13;
obtained by wearing bags of very soft&#13;
thin oilskin on the lower limbs. In&#13;
conjunction with woolen socks. Nothing&#13;
tight must be worn around the leg.&#13;
W I S E H O S T E S S&#13;
W o n H e - Guests to Postum.&#13;
A Voffstabis Worth Growing.&#13;
Swiss chard hi becoming a Tory popular&#13;
vogotahU&#13;
"Three great coffee drinkers were&#13;
my old school friend and her two&#13;
daughters.&#13;
"They were always complaining and&#13;
taking medicine. I determined to give&#13;
them Postum instead of coffee when&#13;
they visited me. so without saying&#13;
anything to them about it, I made a&#13;
big pot of Postum the first morning.&#13;
"Before the meal was half over,&#13;
each one passed up her cup to be refilled,&#13;
remarking how fine the 'coffee'&#13;
was. The mother asked for a third&#13;
cup and inquired as to the brand of&#13;
coffee I used. 1 didn't answer her&#13;
question just then, for I heard her say&#13;
a while before that she didn't like Postum&#13;
unless it was more than half&#13;
coffee. •&#13;
"After breakfast I told her that the&#13;
'coffee' she liked so well at breakfast&#13;
was pure Postum, and the reason she&#13;
liked it was because it was properly&#13;
made.&#13;
"I have been brought up from a&#13;
nervous, wretched invalid, to a fine&#13;
condition of physical health by leaving&#13;
off coffee and using Postum.&#13;
"I am doing all I can to help the&#13;
world from coffee slavery to Postum&#13;
freedom, and have earned the gratitude&#13;
of many, many friends.** Name&#13;
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Postum comes in two forms:&#13;
Postum Cere*l—the original form—&#13;
must be well boiled. 15c and 25c&#13;
Pkgs.&#13;
Instant Postum—a soluble p o w d e r -&#13;
dissolves quickly in a cop of hot water,&#13;
and, with cream and sugar, makes&#13;
a delldons beverage instantly. H e&#13;
and Mc tins.&#13;
Both forms are equally oeBetoes sad&#13;
ahowt the ssase per&#13;
There's a Bessoa** for&#13;
-'• :&amp; J&#13;
i&#13;
&lt;&#13;
4 I&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
;«-^r {&#13;
* ~ ;^--* ^ ¾&#13;
" • " • J . " — M . ••M&#13;
A 5 * :&#13;
-¾¾. .-feHaattHi*&#13;
ItfV.'-*' .. .=r&#13;
* - * , \ ' * ^ ' A L . : ' • • " t r . • • ' •• . " - " , . ' • ' ^ 1 *- v ' ' •••*. --.: r./-, ':&lt;--ytl (i**T" ' • • ' " ' T r r v ^ , »..:yT&#13;
WWPIPWBPBPP&#13;
» ' - • * " • - *"«-)•..' T^*r. y&#13;
&gt; / J : ^ '-y-ja&#13;
*£,&#13;
: * * •&#13;
PJNCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ELDERLY WOMEN!NO JUNKETING I P&#13;
SAFEGUARDED&#13;
Tell Others How They Were&#13;
Carried Safely Through&#13;
Change of Life,&#13;
Durand, Wis.—**I am the mother of&#13;
fourteen children and I owe nay Life to&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Com- rid. When I was&#13;
a n d h a d t h e&#13;
C h a n g e of Life,&#13;
a f r i e n d recommended&#13;
it and it&#13;
gave me such relief&#13;
from my bad feelings&#13;
that I t o o k&#13;
several bottles. I&#13;
am now well and&#13;
healthy and recommend&#13;
your Compound to other ladies."&#13;
—Mrs. MARY RIDGWAY, Durand, Wis.&#13;
A M a s s a c h u s e t t s W o m a n W r i t e s :&#13;
Blackstone, Mass. — " M y troubles&#13;
were from my age, and I felt awfully&#13;
sick for three years. I had hot flashes&#13;
often and frequently suffered from&#13;
pains. I took Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound and now am welL''&#13;
—Mrs. PIERRE COUKNOYER, Box 239,&#13;
Blackstone, Mass.&#13;
* Such warning symptoms as sense of&#13;
suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches,&#13;
dread of impending evil, timidity,&#13;
sounds in the ears, palpitation of the&#13;
heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities,&#13;
constipation, variable appetite,&#13;
weakness and dizziness, should be needed&#13;
by middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pinkham'&#13;
8 Vegetable Compound has carried&#13;
many woman safely through this crisis.&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Curt&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS never&#13;
faiL Purely vegeta*&#13;
ble — act surely&#13;
but gently on&#13;
the liver.&#13;
Stop after&#13;
dinner distress—&#13;
cure&#13;
indigestion,1&#13;
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
v&lt;?zr&#13;
. PARKER'S&#13;
HAIR BALSAM&#13;
A toilet preparation of merit&#13;
Help* to «r»dic*M dandruff.&#13;
~ ~ rotor and&#13;
BaaatrtoGraror PaaW Hair.&#13;
tOcaodliaWt;rD rmxtaav&#13;
In the Trenches.&#13;
Gaston—Mon dleu! and what Bhall&#13;
we do if the water freezes?&#13;
Sandy—Sit down, ye fool!—Lampoon.&#13;
I&gt;r. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the&#13;
•riginal little liver pills put up 40 years&#13;
ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.&#13;
U N I T E D 8 T A T E 3 TROOPS PUR&#13;
S U I N G V I L L A IN M E X I C O&#13;
H A V E H A R D TASK.&#13;
BANDITS ARE VERY SLIPPERY&#13;
Experience of Soldiers In Rounding Up&#13;
Mexican Outlaws 24 Years A90 is&#13;
Recalled—Artillery Now Mainstay&#13;
of Every Army in Field.&#13;
By GEORGE CLINTON.&#13;
Washington.—Tbe American soldiers&#13;
across tbe border axe not on&#13;
Junketing benL it is said here to be&#13;
the hope and the prayer of the army&#13;
officials that the Villa followers will&#13;
stay together and that tbe pursuers&#13;
can hit them bard once and then capture&#13;
those who survive the blow. The&#13;
danger, as Washington views it, is&#13;
that the bandits will separate and carry&#13;
on guerrilla warfare in detached&#13;
bands. The other and greater danger&#13;
is that the troopers must be followed&#13;
into Mexico by a huge army ready to&#13;
take the field against all the soldiers&#13;
which Mexico can throw against&#13;
them.&#13;
When Gen. Leonard Wood's cbief&#13;
of staff spoke out in meeting to say&#13;
that if intervention in Mexico is&#13;
forced an army of 500,000 American&#13;
soldiers will be necessary to complete&#13;
the job, it furnished pretty good* evidence&#13;
that all army officers are not&#13;
muzzled.&#13;
Intervention apparently is not the&#13;
intention of the administration. What&#13;
will amount to intervention, however,&#13;
Washington says, will be necessary&#13;
if the Carranza groups Join the Villa&#13;
groups and the groups of the other ten&#13;
or a dozen Mexican leaders. Colonel&#13;
Glenn K. is said voiced the belief of&#13;
the officers of the war college who&#13;
have made the Mexican situation a&#13;
study for some years.&#13;
Bandits Hard to Catch.&#13;
Recently it was told how long it&#13;
took the United States troops, and&#13;
there were a good many of them in&#13;
the field, to round up 350 bandits operating&#13;
on this Bide of the border in&#13;
1892. So certain were the bandits of&#13;
security from capture, because of the&#13;
nature of the country in which they&#13;
were operating, that they would approach&#13;
close to the camps of the&#13;
American forces, taunt them and then&#13;
disappear into the jungles and other&#13;
hiding places, confident that their retreat&#13;
was safe.&#13;
There are some officers now In&#13;
Texas who took part in the longdrawn&#13;
out campaign against Mexican&#13;
bandits 24 years ago. Your correspondent&#13;
was in the field at that time&#13;
with D troop of the Third cavalry. He&#13;
was acting as a correspondent for a&#13;
Chicago newspaper. Personal witness&#13;
can be borne that the troops in&#13;
the field at that time constantly were&#13;
alert to duty, were constantly in the&#13;
saddle, scouring great sections of desert&#13;
country, doing everything and&#13;
willing to dare everything to effect&#13;
the capture of the renegades. It was&#13;
the nature of the country and nothing&#13;
DOAN'SV,1"M&#13;
CO. BUFFALO. * Y.&#13;
It may be what people don't know j&#13;
about a popular man that makes him )&#13;
popular. I&#13;
»— j else except, of course, the sympathy&#13;
j which some of the civilian populace&#13;
felt with the bandits, which made the&#13;
chase such a prolonged one.&#13;
Some of the war department officials&#13;
fear that, although a much larger&#13;
American force will be In the field on&#13;
the present occasion than was the&#13;
case 24 years ago. the circumstances&#13;
of the former campaign will be repeated&#13;
and that one hunt may resolve itself&#13;
into many hunts, each to be prosecuted&#13;
separately and each to be carried&#13;
to a successful outcome before&#13;
the end sought can be reached.&#13;
One night in March, 1892, D troop of&#13;
the Third cavalry, in t h e field against&#13;
bandit followers of Caterino E. Garza,&#13;
waa encamped at the Palito Blanco&#13;
ranch in Nueces county, Texas. ~ The&#13;
camp was not far removed from the&#13;
edge of the chaparral, which was many&#13;
miles thick at this point, extending Its&#13;
tangle of thorny domain well down towards&#13;
t h e edge of the Rio Grande&#13;
river.&#13;
So daring were the renegades and&#13;
to firm waa their belief that they could&#13;
escape capture no matter how venturesome&#13;
they were, that they came&#13;
dose to t h e camp at night, climbed&#13;
into meequlte trees and signaled wits&#13;
lanterns to one another across the&#13;
camp of tbe troopers. There was no&#13;
roasrm for tbe signaling sad tt was&#13;
done sbnpiy to taunt the American soldiers,&#13;
who would leave camp on tbe&#13;
instant of tbe appearance of tbe first&#13;
llgbt and make a determined effort to&#13;
capture tbe intrude* a, who simply&#13;
slipped away Into tbe blackness of the&#13;
night and tbe thinness of tbe chaparral.&#13;
Every once in a while scouts wonM&#13;
come Into camp and report tbe appearance&#13;
of bandits at this place or&#13;
that place. Instantly tbe troopers&#13;
t and start on tbe trail,&#13;
invariably they&#13;
Stop That Ache! j&#13;
Don t worry about a bad back.&#13;
Get rid of it. Probably your kidneys&#13;
are out of order. Resume sensible&#13;
habits and help the kidneys.&#13;
Then, kidney backache will go;&#13;
also the dizzy spells, lameness, stiffness,&#13;
tired feelings, nervousness,&#13;
rheumatic pains and bladder troubles.&#13;
t?se Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
Thousands recommend them.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
Mrs. ChaR. Harder,&#13;
310 Mackinaw&#13;
St.. Durand. fcflch..&#13;
says: "I had pain&#13;
in my loins a n d&#13;
over my kidneys.&#13;
It was very severe&#13;
if I caught cold,&#13;
for It w a s sure t o&#13;
settle in m y back&#13;
and then I could&#13;
hardly straighten&#13;
If I overexerted&#13;
vself or did any&#13;
eavy 1 I f t I D S&#13;
through the day. I felt tired and worn&#13;
out at night. I used Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills and they completely cured me.**&#13;
YOU aas&#13;
to aid&#13;
fiver is&#13;
ordered or your&#13;
ma BEECHAM'S&#13;
j atill in a c t i v e service, a r c ; Col. Josept&#13;
I T. Dickrnan, cuoirntu'iding t b e Seconc&#13;
j cavalry; Lieut. Col. John W. Heard&#13;
I now atatiuued m T e x a s ; Col. Georgt&#13;
! A. Dodd, now on the trail in Mexico,&#13;
Col. John T. Knight and o t h e r s Out&#13;
of t h e officers m o t t active in the our&#13;
suit of the Garza o u t h i waa Cant&#13;
George F. Chabe, who now Is a bri^a&#13;
dler genera.1 on the retired list.&#13;
Artillery Arm of the Service.&#13;
While the main dependence of the&#13;
advance guaxda of the American&#13;
forces in Mexico will be the cavalry&#13;
because horsemen move light&#13;
ly and quickly, tbere will be ever&#13;
abreast of the mounted troops batterlee&#13;
of field artillery, for artillery of&#13;
this kind has come to be one of the&#13;
mainstays, perhaps the mainstay, ol&#13;
the armies of the world-&#13;
Information recently has been forth&#13;
coming in Washington concerning the&#13;
development of the artillery arm ol&#13;
the service, and it Is certain if preparedness&#13;
measures are enacted into&#13;
law that the increase in tbe artillery&#13;
will ^e much greater proportionately&#13;
than the increase in any other branch&#13;
of the service.&#13;
"The engagement quickly resolved&#13;
itself into an artillery duel." The&#13;
words quoted appear in scores of dispatches&#13;
from the scenes of the conflict&#13;
in -Europe. It is an artillery&#13;
war largely. The word "battery" la&#13;
read by Americans probably five times&#13;
where the other words, regiment or&#13;
battalion, are read once.&#13;
There are batteries of horse artillery,&#13;
batteries of light field artillery,&#13;
mountain batteries, siege batteries,&#13;
and sea coast batteries, although the&#13;
last named may be eliminated from&#13;
discussion because thus far, save for&#13;
some operations in the far East, and&#13;
a short engagement on the Belgian&#13;
coast, they have cut little figure in&#13;
the fighting.&#13;
The great arm of tbe artillery service&#13;
is the light battery, for in it lies&#13;
the chief artillery strength of the&#13;
armies. The field guns of the American&#13;
army as formed into batteries and&#13;
as equipped for conflict are virtually&#13;
on the same basis as the light artillery&#13;
of the other armies of the world.&#13;
When tho field details of tbe American&#13;
artillery are known, the composition&#13;
of batteries, the allotment of am&#13;
munition, the complement of cannoneers,&#13;
caissons and other adjuncts,&#13;
it is possible to get definite information&#13;
of the conditions in the armies&#13;
now fighting in Europe.&#13;
In virtually all the armies of the&#13;
world there are four guns to a battery,&#13;
a change from the days of the&#13;
muzzle-loading fieldpiece, when there&#13;
were six and occasionally eight guns&#13;
to each battery. Tbe breechloader,&#13;
with its method of taking up the recoil&#13;
and with the ease of its manipula&#13;
tion, burns up ammunition at the rate&#13;
of twenty-five shots a minute. This&#13;
is something to be thought on. It&#13;
means that a shell with its dread&#13;
charge of lyddite or other high exploslves&#13;
leaves the muzzle of each piece&#13;
every two and a half seconds or thereabouts.&#13;
They are firing today from the field&#13;
artillery twenty-five shots in tbe time&#13;
that it took to fire one in the old days,&#13;
but the havoc today is not twenty-five&#13;
times as great, because soldiers have&#13;
been taught and forced to take to&#13;
cover.&#13;
A United States standard light battery&#13;
of field artillery, and it will stand&#13;
as a type, at war strength has a total&#13;
of five commissioned officers and 171&#13;
enlisted men. There are 60 drivers&#13;
and 65 cannoneers, four gunner corporals&#13;
and 13 caissons, one store wagon&#13;
and limber and four field wagons,&#13;
a total of 112 draft wagons, 45 saddle&#13;
horses and 16 mules, making 172 animals.&#13;
The ammunition is the thing. There&#13;
are in the caisson body 70 rounds and&#13;
in the limber chest 36 rounds, while in&#13;
the "emergency tube%" on each gun&#13;
there a r e four rounds. So that in each&#13;
gun section there a r e 106 rounds of&#13;
"fixed" or made ammunition in the&#13;
caisson, 36 rounds in the gun limber&#13;
and four rounds in the ammunition&#13;
tubes on t h e gun carriage. In each of&#13;
the four caisson sections there a r e 212&#13;
rounds.&#13;
Thus with a field battery of light artillery&#13;
there are 1,432 rounds on the firing&#13;
line and on wheels close by under&#13;
cover. That figures out 2&amp;8 shots to s&#13;
rifle. With the ammunition train there&#13;
are, or should be, four wagons each&#13;
with 106 rounds, and a t t h e advance&#13;
supply depot 1,856 rounds, or 464 shots&#13;
a rifle, raising the ammunition supply&#13;
on the firing line, in t h e combat train&#13;
dose at band, in the ammunition train&#13;
on tbe road and at the advanced sappry&#13;
depot to »2S rounds a gun.&#13;
No one knows definitely as yet just&#13;
what tbe military-preparedness bill aa&#13;
it finally passes congress will provide&#13;
for the artillery arm of tbe service. As&#13;
things seem today, there is aa appearance&#13;
of an increased strength In tbe&#13;
ranks of the anUpraparedness members.&#13;
If appearances are not deeeitfai&#13;
it s s ems likely therefore that a conv&#13;
finaUy effected bstwei&#13;
«01&#13;
T Hopes Women Will j&#13;
Adopt This Habit j&#13;
As Well As Men I&#13;
Glass of hot water each morning&#13;
helps us look and feel&#13;
clean, sweet, fresh.&#13;
Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and&#13;
vivacious—a good clear skin; a natural,&#13;
rosy complexion and freedom&#13;
from Illness are assured only by clean,&#13;
healthy blood. If only every woman&#13;
and likewise every man could realise&#13;
the wonders of drinking phosphated&#13;
hot water each morning, what a gratifying&#13;
change would take place.&#13;
Instead of the thousands of sickly,&#13;
anaemic-looking men, women and&#13;
girls with pasty or muddy complexions;&#13;
inatead of the multitudes of&#13;
"nerve wrecks," "rundowns," "brain&#13;
fags" and pessimists we should see a&#13;
virile, optimistic tbrong of rosycheeked&#13;
yeople everywhere.&#13;
An Inside bath Is had by drinking,&#13;
each morning before breakfast, a glass&#13;
of real hot water with a teaapoonful&#13;
of limestone phosphate in It to wash&#13;
from the stomach, liver, kidneys and&#13;
ten yards of bowels the previous day's&#13;
indigestible waste, sour fermentations&#13;
and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening&#13;
and freshening tbe entire alimentary&#13;
canal before putting more food&#13;
into the stomach.&#13;
Those subject to sick headache, biliousness,&#13;
nasty breath, rheumatism,&#13;
colds; and particularly those who&#13;
have a pallid, sallow complexion and&#13;
who are constipated very often, are&#13;
urged to obtain a quarter pound of&#13;
limestone phosphate from any druggist&#13;
or a t the store which will cost&#13;
but a trifle but is sufficient to demonstrate&#13;
the quick and remarkable&#13;
change in both health and appearance&#13;
awaiting those who practice internal&#13;
! sanitation. We must remember that&#13;
inside cleanliness is more important&#13;
than outside, because the skin does&#13;
not absorb impurities to contaminate&#13;
the blood, while tbe pores in the thirty&#13;
feet of bowels do.—Adv.&#13;
SKINNERS&#13;
Macaroni or&#13;
Spaghetti&#13;
The Quality Food—the&#13;
tastiest, most healthful&#13;
and most economical&#13;
food that can grace your&#13;
table.&#13;
At All Good&#13;
Grocers'&#13;
Save t h e s i g n a t u r e of&#13;
P a u l F . Skinner&#13;
on each package a n d obtain a&#13;
set of Oneida Community&#13;
Par Plate Silverware free.&#13;
W r i t e u s for full p a r t i c u l a r s —&#13;
no obligation — a n d w e will&#13;
send y o u also a beautiful 36-&#13;
page book of recipes—all free.&#13;
W r i t e t o d a y .&#13;
S K I N N E R M F G . CO.&#13;
OMAHA, N E R&#13;
Th» Largest Macaroni Factory In America&#13;
CWMFOKXIA (near I.OR AIIK« ;&lt;•*&gt;&lt;, *uv p a r i&#13;
:,!j-aiTp oritntrf-Union gruvf s.r '.vihanxti.&#13;
$1,000 per UCM'. Also L'oulpii &lt; CA(rc 1 Ki&gt;&gt;rairii-&#13;
5Cu-acrt-. ho&gt;r. Kinin. nursery fruit ranch.&#13;
fLS 000 Owner, 'H15 W. 'itiih I'l.. Lo»Angelrn.&#13;
MFaEcNto'Sry A LtoL .W WeO*rOeLr SlUorIT SSIO S.OolOd DiWrercitt* Ftor ooumr factory for samples »nd information, i •AUBCMI auaa A U».. m v ;TU suticrr mujjuuj'uu, tk.&#13;
VY. N. U., D E T R O I T , NO. 15-1916.&#13;
Co!. Churchill and His Father.&#13;
Winston Chruchill is bound to remind&#13;
those old enough to remember&#13;
of his father, Lord Randolph, a man&#13;
who made everybody Bit up in joy or&#13;
wrath, but who never achieved much&#13;
of anything except mischief, brilliant&#13;
and interesting but erratic and unconvincing.—&#13;
Hartford Times.&#13;
Vassar Students Work.&#13;
Recent reports at Vassar college&#13;
show that fifty students are working&#13;
their way through college, and that&#13;
96 of them have earned some money&#13;
lor that purpose Two girls earned&#13;
$175 and $190 running a book and furniture&#13;
exchange Tutoring at 75 centB&#13;
an hour is another good source of in&#13;
come. Some of the girls work in the&#13;
candy kitchen and at other occupations&#13;
of the kind.&#13;
CLEAR RED PIMPLY FACES&#13;
Red Hands, Red Scalp W i t h Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment. Trial Free.&#13;
The soap to cleanse and purify, the&#13;
Ointment to soothe and heal. Nothing&#13;
better, quicker, Bafer, surer at any&#13;
price for skin troubles of young or&#13;
old that itch, burn, crust, scale, tor&#13;
ture or disfigure. Besides, they meet&#13;
every want In toilet preparations.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard. Cuticura. Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
NEW TREATMENT&#13;
FOR ASTHMA&#13;
Relief in Every Rub&#13;
To quickly ease the s t r u g g l e for&#13;
breath, stop the wheezing and bring&#13;
'. MeBsed relief, ask sour druggist for&#13;
an original yellow box of true Mustar-&#13;
Ine which costs about 25 cents.&#13;
Apply plentifully night and morning,&#13;
and remember to rub up and down only,&#13;
over the entire che*t from the throat&#13;
to the stomach. True Mustarine is&#13;
made by the Hepv Medicine C o , Rochester,&#13;
NT. Y It Is also fine for Rheumatism,&#13;
1 umbago and Neuralgia. Get&#13;
the genuine.&#13;
A Reminder.&#13;
Healer—This is the b«r*t parrot we&#13;
have, but 1 wouldn't sell him without&#13;
letting you know his one fault; hell&#13;
grumble terribly If his food doesn't&#13;
suit him.&#13;
Miss Fitz—I'll take him: it will&#13;
seem quite like having a man In th«»&#13;
house.&#13;
Cause and Supply.&#13;
"What a fire-eater Jiggins is!"&#13;
"Yes; accounts for his constant supply&#13;
of hot air."&#13;
When a young man proposes to a&#13;
girl she may refer him to her f a t h e r -&#13;
merely as a matter of form.&#13;
Sudden Death&#13;
Cam* by Dbease •* tW Kdwji&#13;
The close connection between the&#13;
heart and t h e kidneys is well known&#13;
nowadays. When kidneys are diseased,&#13;
arterial tension is Increased and the&#13;
heart functions are attacked. When&#13;
the kidneys no longer pour forth waste,&#13;
uremic poisoninf occurs and the person&#13;
diem, and t h e cause is often given&#13;
as heart disease, or disease of brain&#13;
or longs.&#13;
It it a good insurance against such&#13;
a risk to send 10 cents for a large&#13;
trial package of "Anuric~—the latest&#13;
discovery of Dr. Pierce, When you&#13;
safer from backache, frequent or&#13;
scanty urine, rheumatic pains here or&#13;
there, or that constant tired, worn-out&#13;
feeling, get "Anurlc- at the druggist.&#13;
ITs S? times more potent than lltaia.&#13;
dlesorves arte a d d as hot water does&#13;
Public Officials' Bonds.&#13;
We bond more people than any&#13;
other company in the world. Maintain&#13;
a special department for bonding pub-&#13;
1 lie officials. Agents everywhere. Write&#13;
for rates to Official Bond Department.&#13;
National Surety Company. 90&#13;
West St., New York City. "Americas&#13;
! Leading Surety Co." Adv.&#13;
No matter what a man has done, the&#13;
world soon forgets him unless he&#13;
keeps right on doing.&#13;
After Grip Then—&#13;
Fever?&#13;
This is the time of year to look&#13;
out for trouble! We feel vteak—our&#13;
blood seems hot—no appetite,—It's&#13;
I time to clean house! This is when&#13;
t b e blood is clogged and we suffer&#13;
from what is commonly called a cold*&#13;
Dr Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery&#13;
purines the blood and entirely&#13;
eradicates the poisons that breed and&#13;
feed disease. Pure blood is essential&#13;
to good health. The weak, run-down,&#13;
debilitated condition which so many&#13;
people experience Is commonly the effect&#13;
of impure blood. "Medical Discovery"&#13;
not only cleanses the blood of impurities,&#13;
but increases the activity of&#13;
the blood-making glanda, and enriches*&#13;
the body with pure, rich mood.&#13;
for the svppty of&#13;
; " * • * ' * ' ' • • " • ' .&#13;
±2 ?'y ^--&#13;
• *&#13;
f, *v&#13;
;f'.&#13;
^&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Pinckney £)i^patch&#13;
Sub&gt;crij&gt;tJou, $ 1 . F e r Year m Advaut*}&#13;
Does Cou'^e: VH' Bttuk&#13;
ing Buahi-Di.&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid OL all Time Depoaita&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TLtrLt&#13;
Mich&#13;
P r o p&#13;
rinow r: on&#13;
for Painless dentistry, See&#13;
. v l V c l l . : . . . . a .1.-- :• .;\&#13;
ijolicanoi..&#13;
Oardfc of TuacKr, lifi/ JCLU.-.&#13;
RtuoJjlinua of Condolence, one doiiar.&#13;
Local Nouctts, in Local columns tivt&#13;
: t u t per line per eacii i u t e r u o n .&#13;
All malier intended to beuefit the perbonal&#13;
or busineas jnterett ui auy individual&#13;
will t&gt;e published at regular a d v e r t i s -&#13;
ing rate*.&#13;
Aonounceiueui o ' entertiiininenta, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for u: regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obiluaxjr and marriage noucea are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry mu#t be paid for at ihe rate of&#13;
fire cents per l i n t .&#13;
Or. W. 7. tonght&#13;
In The Dehn Block&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIGAN&#13;
tO U R F r i e n d s can buy&#13;
a n y t h i n g you can give&#13;
them - e x c e p t v t m r phot&#13;
o g r a p h .&#13;
MAKE AN A i V O I M M L N i U i U A \&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e . V i r c h i ^ a n&#13;
VY, L Murphy a petit Moaday&#13;
I in Detroit.&#13;
Eutered at the Postoffice at Piuck-j Mre C. Pmctwtr. * u!t»rking&#13;
uey, MicL.; Hi Second Clabfi Matter, for ^rr UootLi&#13;
™ : ' • • Monkb. Broa pav ca© for sour&#13;
C ,. SIBLEY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER e c - b a n d c r e a m . '&#13;
Oi'o Diakei waa iu Detroit ou&#13;
buaineaa last week.&#13;
M. J. Kettacm bpem the r i m of&#13;
tha week in Chicago.&#13;
Norbert JLavey of Jackson spent&#13;
Sunday with relative* here.&#13;
Boy'a bints with 2 pair trousers&#13;
at $4; $5 50, and $8.00 at Dancer*.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieves visited&#13;
Plainfield relatives the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Henrietta Smith of Detroit&#13;
is visiting Mr. and Mrs. M.&#13;
1&gt;. Markham.&#13;
The Miaeea blanche Martin and&#13;
Norma Curlett were Jaokaon&#13;
visitors Friday.&#13;
Walter Reason of the l \ of M.&#13;
spent the first of the week with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. M. J. Reason and son&#13;
Gerald spent a few days last weak&#13;
with relatives in Jackson.&#13;
Roy Moran of Ann Arbor "visited&#13;
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Moran the first of the week&#13;
Mrs. j^laude Dauforth and&#13;
daughter tire spending the week&#13;
with her sister, Mrs. FredTeeple&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Moran and daughter&#13;
Madeleine, visited relative* in&#13;
Detroit t£e latter part of last week.&#13;
C. A. Bennett has purchased an&#13;
automobile of Flintoft &amp; Read&#13;
which he will use iu connection&#13;
with his livery business.&#13;
An exchange remarks; When a&#13;
married uan goes borne hungry&#13;
Ed. L'hipman of Plainfield is&#13;
critically ill.&#13;
! H. B. Gardner spent Saturday&#13;
; in Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. V. Lynch spent Monday&#13;
in .Taokson.&#13;
Eugene Dinkei spent Monday&#13;
in Jackson.&#13;
Roy Merrills and family spent&#13;
Sunday here.&#13;
Leo Monks and Ross Read were&#13;
in Stockbridge today.&#13;
Miss Nellie Gardne* spent&#13;
Monday in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. P. D. Murphy spent tbe&#13;
first of the weok in Gregory&#13;
Miss Florence Topper visited&#13;
relatives in Flint the past week.&#13;
Mrs. LeOonte Myer, of Ovid,&#13;
N Y., is visiting Mrs. Sarah Nash.&#13;
The stores in Pinckney began&#13;
opening evenings Menday night.&#13;
Mrs £ . L. Mclntyre spent a&#13;
few days the past week in Detroit.&#13;
Ed. Parnam and wife were Detroit&#13;
visitors a couple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Thomas Shehan and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Will Steptoe of&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
late at uight, he always gets a&#13;
piece of tongue and roast.&#13;
Hermau \ edder and Lester&#13;
Swarthout visited friends and relatives&#13;
in \psilanti and Detroit&#13;
the latter part of the week.&#13;
The Annual meeting of the&#13;
North Hamburg Mite society will&#13;
be held at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs, David Van Horn, Thursday&#13;
April 18th.&#13;
The High School baae ball team&#13;
ha6 been organized for the coming&#13;
season, with Lester Swart&#13;
Miss llah MoCali of Detroit ia i kout as captain and Herman Ved&#13;
visiting at Ihe home of H. D.&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Tab!*&#13;
F o r t h ' *' Mi'fn.i'Mcc ii . - .•.3 i' *&#13;
Miss Elaine McClear spent&#13;
^turdft) with Alice and Kathleen&#13;
Roche.&#13;
Mrs. Chap. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Louis were Jackson visitors&#13;
Satnrdfiv.&#13;
der as manager&#13;
S W. Gnthne and family left&#13;
Saturday morning, for their future&#13;
home at Shelby. Robert will remain&#13;
here for some time helping&#13;
Mr. Booth at the Btore'&#13;
Miss M.'iry Hudson who has&#13;
been visi! ng h^r pai^n'r here the&#13;
Eugene Reason of Detroit and j past week, retnrne 1 to her school&#13;
Walter Reason of Ann Arbor I at Holland, Mich., Monday, her&#13;
Trains East&#13;
N o . 46—K :34 ft. m.&#13;
N o . 48—4:44 p. m&#13;
IT— » &gt;? a. m.&#13;
» » % % » » » % % » » % » » % » » * » » « » » » » » % % % % » » » * j&#13;
H. y. M C I M:, M. M I '&#13;
Drs. Sigier &amp; Stgler |&#13;
Pivvs I f 1^&#13;
All call* prorop&#13;
day or ni|jhi. &lt;&gt;ffi(-o&#13;
spent Monday here.&#13;
Mrs. E. H. Fox aud daughter&#13;
visited relatives in Pontiac and&#13;
Detroit the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Ben White of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday with her mother,&#13;
Mrs, D-rereaux of Jackson.&#13;
Mr. and .Mrs. V. Leavey. Mrs.&#13;
•T. D. tVhi;^ of Howell spent Sunda}&#13;
with their daughter Mrs. M.&#13;
H Nil- of Jackson.&#13;
Mrs delude L:-tvey returned&#13;
home Saturday from Chicago, 111.-&#13;
after spending the past few weeks I&#13;
with her daughter.&#13;
Mrs. R. Vhandler and children&#13;
ami Bernardine Lynch returned&#13;
to Kaluaazoo Monday after&#13;
s p n d i n g (be past week with rel- j&#13;
atives here&#13;
There will be&#13;
here from the 14th th the 16th at&#13;
the M. E. and Cong'l churches and&#13;
will be held in connection with&#13;
sister, accompanying her HS far as&#13;
Jackson,&#13;
Rev. Mood\ of Leslie delivered&#13;
R fine sermon fit the Cong'l. church&#13;
last Wednesday evening, he being&#13;
the ouiy one of the team of four,&#13;
that exper^d, that put in an appearance.&#13;
On Thursday. March oOth, at&#13;
the komQ of Mi-s Blanche Martin,&#13;
t.eu of Pinckney's most musically&#13;
incdried youn_r ladies, met and&#13;
organized a music club, known as&#13;
| the B Shftrp Club. Miss Kice,&#13;
Miss Martin, rvlrp. Geo. Pearson,&#13;
Mrs. Fred Swartbont. Mrs. Myron&#13;
Dunning. Miss Cnrlett, Mrs. Wm&#13;
H. Gardner. Miss Harris. Miss&#13;
Josephine Harris and Miss Gaidner&#13;
Tl^e officers elected were:&#13;
I Miss Kice, President. Miss Marta&#13;
gospel team in Vice President and Mies Gardner.&#13;
Secretary and treasurer Colore&#13;
and flowers were chosen, also&#13;
tbr motto, " B Natural, B. Sharp,&#13;
the union aerrices that are to be I buJ nt ver 1» F l i t " The ol &gt;.ieci of&#13;
held the following week. On the the club pniKipullv is tc» study&#13;
16th, Mrs. Etta 8. Shaw of the W. the lives and composition* of the&#13;
C T C , # rand Rapids, will give! great composers For the April&#13;
an erang^lietic temperance address] meeting. Miss Kice was chosen&#13;
in tee •&gt;arly part of the eremogj leader and Mrs. Swarthout will&#13;
service. .v.-t R? h »-i-.-^.&#13;
Q LASGOW n R O S .&#13;
Noted For Sellini Good 1 3 Goods Cheap&#13;
JACKSON, MICHIGAN r MDWc 5&amp;S\UOTV &amp;.d^us&#13;
Dress-Up Week \ i I n o u r g a r m e n t d e p a r t m e n t w e ' v e p n u ' i d e d&#13;
a feast of f a s h i o n t h a t will c h a r m you w i t h its v a r i -&#13;
m ety of colors, f a b r i c s a n d d e s i g n s T h e s m a r t e s t 4&#13;
8 stvles of t h e s e a s o n hold full swav. 8&#13;
# 5&#13;
S P o r t h e f r u g a l housewife, t h e f a s h i o n a b l e S&#13;
4 m o t h e r , a n d t h e m o d i s h d a u g h t e r , t h e r e is a m p l e (j&#13;
8 r a n g e in o u r s p l e n d i d a r r a y of c o a t s a n d s u i t s t&#13;
a s u r e a s a t i s f a c t o r y selection.&#13;
5 Feel free to c o m e a n d i n s p e c t o u r offerings, J&#13;
g t r v on a n y of t h e m o d e l s , a n d e x a m i n e t h e w o r k m a n - 5&#13;
o ins&#13;
h i p a n d q u a l i t y of t h e f a b r i c s . Y&#13;
shall rule.&#13;
our j u d g e m e n t J&#13;
1 | Dainty, Delight-j&#13;
ful* Different&#13;
Our Spring Showing is just that.&#13;
The styles are dainty, the fit is&#13;
delightful, and the models are&#13;
different from all others.&#13;
J T h e d e s i g n e r s of D o r o t h y D o d d S h o e s&#13;
8 excelled all p r e v i o u s efforts t h i s S p r i n g . W e&#13;
4 s h o w n as m a n y new, d a i n t y styles w i t h so m u c h&#13;
8 a n d real b e a u t y .&#13;
K T h e f i t t i n g q u a l i t i e s of D o r o t h y D o d d S h o e s&#13;
9 a n d L o w S h o e s a r e k n o w n t o t h o u s a n d s of w o m e n .&#13;
4 T h i s s e a s o n t h e r e are new f e a t u r e s t h a t m a k e t h e m&#13;
6 lit b e t t e r t h a n ever.&#13;
j T h e r e is a "different l o o k " to Don&gt;thv&gt; t h a t&#13;
j is a t once n o t i c e a b l e . T h e r e are no o t h e r s like t h e m .&#13;
J Y o u are given style, exclusi\ e n e - s a n d fashion of v o u r&#13;
5 o w n w h e n you b u y here.&#13;
4 T h e i r high a n d l o w s h o e s are r e a s o n a b l y&#13;
have&#13;
have&#13;
^ n a p&#13;
priced at $3.5(1 to 5&gt;$&#13;
W e are l o o k i n g f o r w a r d w i t h p l e a s u r e t o \ c u r visit.&#13;
Here is a regular fact:&#13;
For the same price you are asked&#13;
to pay for ready-made clothes&#13;
manufactured six or eight month?&#13;
ago, you can buy strictly custom -&#13;
tailored clothes made right to&#13;
today's fashions by&#13;
I want you to put yQUf&#13;
best foot forward. I t is a&#13;
matter of pride with rae fce&gt;&#13;
have patrons recognized as&#13;
the best dressed men in town.&#13;
Ed. V. Price &amp; Co.,&#13;
Chicane&#13;
Wc "will prove thi&gt;&#13;
C.fc. B O O T H A$t&#13;
. • • • • - • &gt; * • #&#13;
&amp;^Mmz^&amp;m&amp;v&amp;m^£mzm&amp;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
F O K S J V L K 'J'J l''ilamb&#13;
labl or Apr&#13;
horse difaf!.&#13;
rA &gt;K S A L K - ( Hu- &gt;&#13;
old hurbc.&#13;
F O R S A L E C,o&lt;.&lt;i&#13;
FOP. .SALE 'JO ac.&#13;
! i u : i ; K°od ''t^il'i&#13;
t h e m . W i l l fjibtunly&#13;
$41' per acre .&#13;
loug dine, K.&#13;
T O R E N T - Work&#13;
tielda7 a u SO a c r e t&#13;
—.—&#13;
F O K HA I..K Sjine&#13;
T O R E N T R&lt;,ouu&gt;.&#13;
F O L &gt; A l . L A lew&#13;
*K-Ji\.&#13;
F G J : S A J . h Tnuje&#13;
MCK J e r s f v J Ao;-, (.-&#13;
iJ :i j u e (• i ^ , , y K \&#13;
a J&#13;
L- W o o l F w «.-.-, d L. &lt;_&#13;
n ;-.(j h c u v y VVL-:».&#13;
A ^ . (jrrej tit.-r&#13;
&lt;i A'.id /lie •'/• v ;&#13;
t Aartk M c K l U U n .&#13;
*-'&gt;•,&gt;• ..f.L'. ^ p i g s .&#13;
A . J . &lt;. • ' a f f u r v .&#13;
t'5 ; - •- : * " p l i - m v&#13;
"^ ~ :::.i! j ' - e i - i r of&#13;
.'i. j-:irjdc&gt; &lt;'t e r u p t&#13;
( i o v t u a n l L.iJ;iuce&#13;
A . i l u ^ i e t i , &lt; J r e ^ i r v .&#13;
•&#13;
/d i-.'.are.-, ur let by&#13;
: m , J . C Moi Lenson&#13;
•&gt;' . f l i l l , A n u A r b o r .&#13;
e i i u u e hay in baru.&#13;
J . R. M a n i a .&#13;
l o q u i r e of&#13;
M r s . I ) . R i c h : u d B .&#13;
e. J ; A (•*' d r y O a k&#13;
'A. U'. Clark.&#13;
11 ••.'.. ! " Y ' . ' u n y I Mi r-&#13;
;-:iAe in register.&#13;
F . A. Rurleu.&#13;
Chubbs Corners&#13;
Mlfia Dest ( A. rti-&gt; ot Cn- \ c . IIK!&#13;
ir, v i a i l i f j j ML- : ,&lt;.LAI '„ M ' i \' . V\&#13;
A i i I bu U .&#13;
M ; M M d . A i r r t I\ii:Ui.- of -lack&#13;
sun spent Itibt week w i ^ Li !JP('&#13;
biiaier Mrb. .hid. Huibei.&#13;
M r M - C r o f o o t Of P i U C k ^ e - A 8 [ J L 1 U !&#13;
the tirbt of Irtdt week at t h e&#13;
of Jbk W. Allibou.&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
t i o t ' it-&#13;
R o b e r t Eutwibit) ap6LA liie Week&#13;
eud in H i g h l a n d , Mich.&#13;
Lot an titirt bpent F r i d a y even&#13;
i o g with M. Iloiael.&#13;
Mibti H u t h F r o s t »peut the week&#13;
e n d in A n n A r b o r .&#13;
J o h n W h i t e haa m o v e d h i s&#13;
family o n a farm n e a r H o w e l l .&#13;
Mibfl E l i z a b e t h H a r r i s is s p e n d -&#13;
ing t h e week in Howell.&#13;
^ . lA&#13;
lison&#13;
t h e i r&#13;
F O K S A I . K F i v e y e a r o l d H o i A e i o e u w&#13;
a n d ti y e j r old H o l e t e i n heift r, d u e WKJII.&#13;
I*r ice r c a r n a l ) ' e . W . (A H e n d e e&#13;
F O R S A L E - TOO H'.TOS. A l b e r t F r o s t furai&#13;
fi&gt;Ur t n i l e s w o t of P i n o k n e v , o n e m i l e&#13;
fr&lt;&gt;m A n d e r s o n *&#13;
•.nd i.tit b u i l d i n g s&#13;
i, in,use. B a s e m e n t b a r r j&#13;
u o wells, $ 4 0 I , e r&#13;
jiere. c-ne-i.ttlf ilowii, balance en lace.&#13;
Iuquire of Mrs. S. (A Xasiu i'inckne v.&#13;
FOR SALE-Qinutity of Clover Hyy&#13;
ylso some Sweedish select seed oats.&#13;
R. E. Kellv.&#13;
S?&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
TATE of Mil.'JllUAN; Tti* l'ro:)»te Uourl for&#13;
W A T C H CHJLD'S C O U G H&#13;
Cold*, running of nose, continued&#13;
irritation of t h e mucous membrane&#13;
If neglected may mean Catarrh late&#13;
r Don't take the chances—do&#13;
something for your child! Children&#13;
will not take every medicine, b u t '&#13;
taey will take Dr. King's New D i ^ '&#13;
covery and without bribing or teasing.&#13;
Its a sweet pleasant Tar Syrup&#13;
and so effective. Juat laxative enough&#13;
to eliminate t h e waste poison*. Almost&#13;
t h e firet dose helps. Always pre&#13;
pared, no mixing or fussing. Just&#13;
ask your druggist for Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery. I t will safeguard&#13;
your child against serious ailments&#13;
resulting from colds.&#13;
M ibbcb A d a a u d Nora, CjorLuu&#13;
a p a n Suuiia.\ w u i : theu- [JHO/I-A&#13;
h a r e&#13;
Cari (iritfin of Mui !•..-&gt; :^ apt-' 'Iiti^&#13;
j H couple . :f weeks H: A \&#13;
H o l m e a ' , al.s') v; siting n'rir-i&#13;
tiveo L i r e .&#13;
[^. K. Clui'ft ruul fa, a A .&#13;
riuudny ID S t o c k b i id^e.&#13;
W i r t lveb tiLS&lt;.i family of 1&#13;
b p e u t t h e week e n d with&#13;
tiittuy frieudb iiere.&#13;
A b a n t t w e n t y m e m b e r b of t h e&#13;
Elard S h e l l S u u d a y S c h o o l cla^s&#13;
m e t wiih M r . a n d Mrb. S t e p h e n&#13;
H a d l e y laet M o n d a y e v e n i n g .&#13;
M r e G e o . M a r s h h l l g a v e a&#13;
k i t c h e n s h o w e r Ubt StiturdtiV&#13;
a f t e r n o o n in h o n o r of Mib-d M a r -&#13;
j o r i e G o o d w i n .&#13;
T h e Mibbeb M a r i o n Hnd M a g g i e&#13;
Ho!mew a n d K i r l Griffin vibif.e'1.&#13;
at Geo. MaibhaH'e T u e a d a v 1Kb'&#13;
the County (f Livii gef&gt;o. At H eeesioo of&#13;
ftaid Couit, lu-lri at tUe Probate Cfllce in the ViJl&#13;
«26 of Howell, in said county, on the :2v b dav of&#13;
March A. It. ;9l«.&#13;
Present: IICN. I.UGEKK .K. STOWK. .lurt^roi&#13;
J'roLat;'. I:1 t!,e matier of tl'e estate ot&#13;
i. LDW AKL» VAN UOltN. Miuor&#13;
Willi- 1,. Lyonn K; 'r 'i ;"fi, liaviQ(» tiled in&#13;
euid court • i.&gt; petitioi: ;,: , irv_; (,,r I K - T ? ' 1 to sell&#13;
th' inter^sl oi sail] ^."i :u ;r: i."r»;,iii r&gt; »t eetate&#13;
therein deecriliert.&#13;
It i« &lt;irde'-ed I'lut the liith day o: April&#13;
A. 1» tMI'i, ai t. n M elorK u&gt; ttie forenoon, at BBid&#13;
protiatc oflitf, W and is hereby appointed for&#13;
bearing enid jutitiou and that all person* inter*st&#13;
ed tn said estate apj»e&amp;r before eaid court, at said&#13;
t me and idace, toebow cause why ;t license to&#13;
eell tb* iotere-it of ?aid estate in -i«(i real estate&#13;
et Ould not tx' trranlod .&#13;
It ie furtuer ordered Lb»t public notice Miereol&#13;
be c l ' « n bjt|tubliratlon of a copy of this order, for&#13;
thrtt* successive weeks |&gt;revioti&amp; to p&amp;id diy et&#13;
hearing; in the Pinckney DISPATCH ;t nevespaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said couaty. '$V.i&#13;
KTOENE A. S T C W E&#13;
Judge erf Probate.&#13;
STATE OF MIOHIOAiN, liie JToLale &lt; &lt;uir! fo.&#13;
tne County of Lirlugbtuii,&#13;
At a session of said court held at tl;&gt; Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell In said (Antity. on&#13;
the 27th day of March. .\ I&gt;. 101t,.&#13;
Present,'Hon.. fcugi-ne A. Stove, A .. '1 _ &lt; nf&#13;
Probate, in the matter of the f&gt;?tate e!&#13;
.T(A^ M AIKE&#13;
!•'. 4. T'^nvlr t I avi;-:,- t,le-i \r&gt;f c;e, ! • " ' hi.-&#13;
petition pray in/ t;:',: a f-rta.ii .:i-*r;inir:,' it&#13;
writing, pur; (•! tii; : tu he thi \ &lt;~\ \y\'.\ IIIKI fr--Israeli&#13;
t of fHid ;ioren-icd, Tiorv on ;:le i:i -aid M^.T'&#13;
be fidmAtKt f" :&gt;r. Iir.ti , .,ncl i l i a t - t i c ' 'nun'-i ,ation&#13;
' f -:.M e-M'f !— _" .1 ' ' • ' ' • IK'UF^V "•&#13;
tonic other »!.i:,aHe ;&gt;• 1« &gt;:,&#13;
North Lake&#13;
W a r r e n D a n i e l s of C h e l s e a&#13;
s p e n t 3 Q U ( ^ a y w ^ ^ ^^s P a r e n t s&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . &amp; W. D a m e Id.&#13;
Mr. a n d Mrs. P . K. N o a h wer;-&#13;
S u n d a y visitors at t h e h o m e of&#13;
F l o y d a n d wife of U n i d i l l a .&#13;
, Mrs. J o h n D u n b a r of P i n c k u e y&#13;
r e t u r n e d t o h e r h o m e S u n d a y after&#13;
s p e n d i n g a week with b e r sister&#13;
M r s . M a r y G i l b e r t .&#13;
M r s . O P . N o a h is s p ^ n d i n ^&#13;
several d a y s with h e r s i s t e r at&#13;
C a r s o n C i t y .&#13;
Mrs. J a m e s H a n k e r d a n d&#13;
a r e g e t t i n g a l o n g nicely. | d a u g h t e r J o h a n n a a n d H e r b e r t&#13;
Miss M a r t h a F a r r e l w h o h a s | H u d s o n s p e n t 8 unci ay at t h e borne&#13;
been sick a long t i m e is very a ' j ()f T h o m a s S t a n d f i e k i of L y n d o n&#13;
t h e p r e s e n t w r i t i n g . | F m l H u d d 0 1 l h ( i b h C c e p t e ( i a&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Clayton C a r p e n t e r is h o m e for&#13;
t h e s u m m e r .&#13;
T h e w h o o p i n g c o u g h p a t i e n t s&#13;
M r s . C l a r e n c e St&amp;ckable is called&#13;
from h o m e by t h e death of a&#13;
relative,&#13;
Mrs. C h a r l e s B u r r o u g h s of&#13;
H o w e l l visited h e r p a r e n t s , M i .&#13;
and Mrs. W m . P e t e r s of P e t t e y s -&#13;
ville t h e last of t h e week.&#13;
B e r t N a s h is w r e s t l i n g with t h e&#13;
grip.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mrs. J o e R c b e r t s s p e n t t h e&#13;
ft-eek end with h e r p a r e n t s near&#13;
W e b b e r v i l l e .&#13;
M r a n d M r s . R a a m n s J e n s e n&#13;
and family visited at&#13;
position with t h e C h e l s e a E l e c t r i c&#13;
light cfc power Co. a n d b e g a n work&#13;
M o n d a y .&#13;
M i l d r e d Daniels r e t u r n e d to&#13;
A l b i o n Monda&gt; after s p e n d i n g&#13;
he:' vacatiou with h e r p a r e n t s h e r e&#13;
Russel B t i g g s of t h e G l e n n&#13;
B r o o k S t o c k F a r m s p e n t S u n d a y&#13;
at t h e h o m e of F r e d B o l l i n g e r .&#13;
K d w a r d C r a u n a a n d wife of&#13;
U n a d i l l a were calierf of Mrs.&#13;
M a r y G i l b e r t S a t u r d a y&#13;
Fisherman's LucJc&#13;
No one can have done much fishing&#13;
without realizing that there is an insolvable&#13;
mystery—in fact, there are&#13;
Jonn H u t t - ' several insolvable mysteries—connect-&#13;
: ed with "fisherman's hick."&#13;
For example, it two men sit in or&gt;po-&#13;
P a u i i u e Burie-) of D.tudy spent 3 jtc c m ] . H r * a boat and use precisely&#13;
ffiflh s S 1 udft\ •&#13;
I t l ^ e l ' i " , c - u ; It l i t t l i e ' , ' ' . - t &lt;-^;, ( i f A | . r . i . \ .&#13;
D. l.^lCat U-n o'clock \:i : i.e loreroon, at s:ud , ; obate&#13;
oflke. lie and :- 'wre'ti .tiv-ninfe'l i',,r&#13;
beariTitr paid ON it; n.&#13;
It \n ti!: aier ordered tb«; |';,:c;.,- n,''ui iiii-reo&#13;
be :dven by publicatinr, n* n (••&gt;;• cf 'hip ordc&#13;
for thr;&gt;e t.ucccsaive week- provion*. f &lt; sa.d ciav r&#13;
heacin*, in tfU' I'INCKSK^ IJI-T-ATCII, n :;&gt;•*-^^:-,^&#13;
printed and circulate A •, n said county. • ":&#13;
E I L I A M A. fcirwi:&#13;
Jndg% of Probata&#13;
P I L L S B E S T FOR L I V E R&#13;
Because the&gt; contain the beat&#13;
liver medicines, no matter how bitter&#13;
or nauseating for t h e swe&amp;t sugar&#13;
coating hide* the taste. Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills contain ingredients&#13;
that put the liver working, m o r e the&#13;
bowels freely. No gripe, no nausea,&#13;
aid digestion. Jnst try a bottle of&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills and notice&#13;
how much bettor yont fpel 2 ' r at&#13;
your Drupplst.&#13;
t h r week e n d wiih h e r _r rand-pare&#13;
n t s here.&#13;
J o e Roberts, a n d fauiilx CAiter-&#13;
- ! ttnned C h a r l i e B a r k e r a n d J e s t e r&#13;
'i C r a m e r of D e ! : o : [ over SnudRy.&#13;
! | M I A . \Y. S. C'askey aud M rs.&#13;
I M a r t i n A n d e r s o n called on M r s ,&#13;
I A m y \"an K e u r e u T h u r s d a y last.&#13;
M r s . dim Allison called on M r s .&#13;
the same tackle, bait, etc., and are&#13;
fishing /*vitL eqv.al skill, one of them&#13;
will cntch a dozen fish, while the other&#13;
won't h2.vo a bite. They change&#13;
places anil perhaps change rods. The&#13;
lucky man •till catches, the unlucky&#13;
one doesn't.&#13;
Some men vr,;i have aonormal iuck&#13;
seme days, and at other times they&#13;
can get 'nary a bite." Why can some&#13;
men step forward, jab any old kind&#13;
of bait or. a hook, fang it carelessly&#13;
into the water and draw up a mess of&#13;
1 big fish, while other?, fishing scientifir&#13;
e t u n a e d ' c a l ] ^- ^ ° 1 c v c n c a t r '! l a m * n n o w ? W t '&#13;
are told that there is a reason for&#13;
s p e n d i n g , everything—a logical explanation that&#13;
some time v i s i t i n g relatives in can be found.&#13;
E r w i n S w i n k last week.&#13;
Mrs, Miiford Milan&#13;
h o m e Snturdftv after&#13;
F o w l e r v i l l e a n d TIowt-11. Who «• step in "Hit'.-Ay for "A a&#13;
South Marion&#13;
' 1 . a : i ' i&#13;
explain that vorld old mystery know::&#13;
,3 •'•fisherman's lack'" Will any uf&#13;
ur r.^ad^rs?—Philaflclphi.'t Pros-.&#13;
m ms&amp;$fe§mm Mr1 rijgreftffayr^rr? rfc'TMfrJfiiriirfiLfallr'r^PP' fr • rr^r'l^r^frf fr3 •^^ft^fr'ffflPriffPtfllPfr1 Ir^prr1^&#13;
Satisfied&#13;
Customers&#13;
-ma&#13;
Are the Best A s s e t s&#13;
any Firm can Claim&#13;
Keeping this in mind wv always aim t o f u r -&#13;
nish our customers the 1;est ^oods to be had at reasonable&#13;
prices.&#13;
We have our Spring Hate and Caps read}- for&#13;
vour inspection and VOA should make an effort to&#13;
see them.&#13;
Come in and leave your order for that Spring&#13;
Suit, remember we guarantee a fit and satisfaction.&#13;
Fruits in Stock every&#13;
Vegetables Saturday&#13;
Day&#13;
Highest price possible for your cream Wedne;&#13;
days or any dav more convenient for you-&#13;
Cash for Butter or eggs*&#13;
Yours&#13;
MONKS BROS.&#13;
isffi3siaaa3&amp;iJ3@fais[3i5i]&#13;
Look About You.&#13;
It i&gt; V • (,,(1,-: A.! h " ,\ JIlU'M '•&gt;]:(' ' :&lt; ',&#13;
l e a r n b,\ . 1; A\ . i t i n ^ ' h e n a i . i t ^ i ' A&#13;
ser.'aU'.'ii. .A . mi walk in the st.eet&#13;
or ride in the car you piol; up a .surprising&#13;
amount of information. Our&#13;
felluw beings aro iiitensely interchtlng,&#13;
and they are &lt;•(•n.-tuntly tea&lt;'hing u-&gt;&#13;
something or other. Do not lt*t y*mr&#13;
knowledge stagnate. Put it to sonic&#13;
practical use.&#13;
Tig«r Superstitions.&#13;
In India the people believe in very&#13;
many old fairy tales. One of the^e i«&#13;
that the gho-A of a man killed by a&#13;
tiger rides &lt;-w the head of the bea-^t&#13;
(hut slew kin: 1 1 v.arn him of daager !&#13;
;,: I to gvAde him to new victims. 1! i- '&#13;
(leA.ired th'it PreA'iileti- e jir'i\idp&gt; forj&#13;
the tiger's daily want- to the ;ii.Ma!ii' I&#13;
of 1 rape,.. (2 shilling-; a d a y - t h a t i-'&#13;
to .-ay. if a tiger kills a calf worth 0&#13;
rupees l;r- will not bo allowed another (&#13;
victim for five d.vo-v Eating the flesh I&#13;
of a tiger i:s supposed to give one great I&#13;
courage and alertness, but the whls- j&#13;
kers must first be singed off the beast&#13;
or his spirit will haunt the man who&#13;
fed off him, and he I* likely to be turned&#13;
into a tiger in the next world.&#13;
CiicoDilier Pickle Contracts&#13;
CouiractH fir' k,'«o«nnL: c u c u m -&#13;
ber pickle for t h e beaaou of 1910&#13;
may now do h a d from o u r r e p r e -&#13;
s e n t a t i v e N. P . M o r t e n s o n a t&#13;
y reatlyincreafled p r i c e s We a r e&#13;
paytDf; Iron] seventy-five c e n t s t o&#13;
o n e d o l l a r a n d a half p e r b u s h e l&#13;
for giuHli pickles a c c o r d i n g to&#13;
size a n d thirty-five c e n t e for l a r g e .&#13;
T h e K n c x - H a i n « P a c k i n g C o&#13;
J a c k s o n , M i c h&#13;
i U l lECincis Of"&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
Shop back of Drug Store&#13;
HEAR WITHOUT EARS&#13;
Got an Answer. ,&#13;
Professor (discussing organic and in- [&#13;
organic kingdoms)—Now, if I should f ~ , . . ,^, , . _ . , . M&#13;
. V , , u -i ; r o h c &amp; a n d D e c t i v t A r c U s l n i i&#13;
shut my eyes—so—and drop my head— °&#13;
svo,— ' laidn ds ,-,yre mi awina s ap ecrlfoedc.t ly Custti Ill ,m oyvoeu, |&#13;
I ierp. Then what do you call me?&#13;
Bright rapil—A clodhopper. slr.—Eoatc-&#13;
i Trnr.scr'pt.&#13;
b i p R c c a d l n ^ i n P l a c e o f&#13;
t h e D i c t a g r a p h&#13;
T&#13;
Uses the Safe and&#13;
Sure Thing at Home&#13;
P. A. Eflrd, ConejD. CaAf., nritos as&#13;
follows:—"I have :&lt;Ad Foley's Honey&#13;
.Compound and also other lines&#13;
"fc" «nedicine3 for a number of&#13;
never use anything' but&#13;
ley and Tar Compound for&#13;
or myself, as I find it pro-&#13;
HS best results, always cures&#13;
colds anfl sore chest and does&#13;
not contain opiates or other harmful&#13;
d r a n . "&#13;
Unthinking and careless people neglect&#13;
their ooughs awl colds, not reali«-&#13;
lns how they weaken the system and&#13;
lower the vital resistance to such grave&#13;
diseases a s bronchitis, pleurisy and&#13;
even pneumonia.&#13;
For promptly averting serioun results&#13;
from a cold. t»*e Foley's Honev&#13;
and Tar Compound. It spreads a healing;&#13;
soothing influence over raw inflamed&#13;
surfaces, eases tishtnepw and&#13;
soreness ox chest helps cronp. whoop-&#13;
Ins; oouch stuffy wheesy brcathln«%&#13;
bronohjal and la arippe courhs.&#13;
» w # Wmw.9 mm im a ftfcsai.&#13;
For Sale Bverywhere*&#13;
Mrs. J o h n ( r a r d n e r visited relatives&#13;
in H o w e l l T h u r s d a y a n d&#13;
F r i d a y .&#13;
M r . B u s h of Plaiiifield is visiti&#13;
n g a t t h e h o m e of G . D&#13;
Met G a l l u p a n d family s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y with f r i e n d s in W e s t&#13;
M a r i o n .&#13;
M r s . B e r n a r d M e C l u s k e y of X .&#13;
H a m b u r g s p e n t t h e first of t h e&#13;
week w i t h C. B r o g a n .&#13;
E . V t n B a r e n a n d family s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y with r e l a t i v e s n e a r&#13;
G r e g o r y .&#13;
T a e Misse.i K i t a n d V e r o n i c a&#13;
B r o g a n of H o w e l l s p e n t a few&#13;
d a t a last week a t t h e h o m e of C&#13;
P r o l a n&#13;
Effective Bravado.&#13;
I.nrd Cromer's ip:Ak airi d .ri r i: v1-:&#13;
! methods in clcnl!:^ v. ith nn IUgvprinr,&#13;
rising mv illustrated by the follo^'lng&#13;
inc'iilent: There " ere rumors of a na-&#13;
1 tive rising, fjilru w i s almost oiv-nlv&#13;
• disaffected, mrl the I'ritlsh gflrrison&#13;
B l a n d . ' was smiill. FIA lordship, however,&#13;
cause! it to he known that a regiment&#13;
was on the wny froTiv India, but he&#13;
wap careful not to explain that it consisted&#13;
of slek le,ri\e and time expired&#13;
inei. nnd bandsmen. All the nble&#13;
bodied soldiers in garrison were order&#13;
ed to pnrarte aP over the town in small&#13;
parties, and the natives did not take In&#13;
the fact that they were a sort of stage&#13;
army—the same men over and over&#13;
Offain. The last straw was when Lord&#13;
Cromer coolly put on flnnnels and pub&#13;
licly played game nfter jrnme of ten&#13;
nia. Thi* Ann I piece of bravado nip&#13;
ped tbe threatened rising in t h e bud -&#13;
London Express&#13;
Pat and the Lava.&#13;
.A IrishiiiHi:. having returned from&#13;
Italy, where ho had b^en with his mastcA&#13;
was asked in tbc kitchen, "Now,&#13;
then, Pat, what Is the lava I hear the&#13;
master talking about?"&#13;
"Only a drop of tl|e crater," wns&#13;
Pot's reply.&#13;
(' i S I I&#13;
t h r e w -&#13;
met hoc:&#13;
lira out&#13;
'V&#13;
,,1.- oi p&lt;"\(p;»' Mi '.- !- on•&#13;
;d! dciivors'ilicn. This&#13;
«;id juirktv .-104aired '&#13;
NV.-;. :.i. Ab-^luU'ly tiie only thing of it*&#13;
kindir, the country. Our proposition is&#13;
entirely original. We guarantee results,&#13;
it w'ui aauze yo,i. Cost is triQin^. Set&#13;
wh.it NTew Internationa' Eocyciop«edia&#13;
HMVV . n Lip Resiling. FTunareas of people&#13;
with normnl hearing are taking up Lip&#13;
Heading f..-r the many additional benefit!*&#13;
Perfectly Valid Reason. ^niried. Yo;i enn .understand what the&#13;
Owner of New Auto—I passed your , ( . . 4, ^ - - .&#13;
1. 4. J I « ~ r » u VL*~~A n n . . , a c t o r s a r e Klaying I U t h e m o v i d g I p i c t u r e s .&#13;
bouse yesterday. Old Friend—Wny I . . , , , ,&#13;
«Mn't yon stop? Owner of New Anlo ' ^ U C M n " " ^ " t a n d what neople are say-&#13;
- I didn't know bow.-Indlantpolis i l"K just a* far away a* you can see tbem.&#13;
Newa. I The eye understands beyond the range oi&#13;
^ e ^ r Send no raooey, but •eation&#13;
Unshrinkable Material. , this paper and state whether or act you&#13;
"Isn't that lawyer n rather ertrmva- !&#13;
gant mnnr*&#13;
"By no mean*!&#13;
tare death. All particulars srill be sent&#13;
I've known him to&#13;
make one snK last for Roreral y e t n T&#13;
If y..a a r n n,r.:&#13;
Dr. m m ' I A M I I&#13;
! t&gt;r«'.n t o tnfi«&#13;
T n M f l i&#13;
von abiioluU&gt;ly free and with 00 expe—e to&#13;
yim. Atldresi, School of Lip Laoguafe,&#13;
KsnMis City, Missouri.&#13;
Flesh of the Beaver.&#13;
The flesh of the foreqoarters of tbe&#13;
bearer has something of the flaror of&#13;
beef, while that nf the btadqaarter*&#13;
l a s a fishy ta*te.&#13;
Standard Time.&#13;
8taudmd time was established by&#13;
agreement in 1885, primarily for t h e&#13;
benefit of the rattrot'fls.&#13;
•&#13;
PJNCKNEY DISPATCH . • V&#13;
THE GRAND OLD&#13;
OLDEST COLLEGE MAN OF MICHIGAN&#13;
PRESIDENT DEAD&#13;
JAMES B U R R I L L A N G E L L D I E D&#13;
P E A C E F U L L Y IN HIS L O V E D&#13;
C A M P U S H O M E .&#13;
HONOR CROWNED. BELOVED&#13;
Began Life Aa a Wcrkcr en H I *&#13;
Father'* Farm and Rose to W o r l d -&#13;
Wide Fame sind Honor.&#13;
Ann Arbor The peaceful passing&#13;
at noon Saturday o! Dr. Jtimeb Burritl&#13;
Angel, president o m e n : us of Michigan&#13;
Vriiver?U.&gt; , made the civilized join in&#13;
mourning a disungultftied educator,&#13;
diplomat and author. Dr. Angel: was&#13;
taken sick shortly after the celebration&#13;
of his elghty^evenifl birthday anniversary&#13;
on Jan. 7, at which lime he&#13;
insisted on personally answering the&#13;
hundreds of congratulatory telegrams&#13;
and letters received from friends. The&#13;
strain to which his eyes were subjected&#13;
in this taak caused him to lose&#13;
his sight and he gradually grew weaker&#13;
until the end came. Several times&#13;
within the past few weeks his physician&#13;
believed that he had but a few&#13;
hours to live, but he rallied after each&#13;
attack.&#13;
As one of t h e foremost educators of&#13;
h i s time, Dr. J a m e s Burrill Angell had&#13;
the incidental distinction of being the&#13;
oldest college president in point of&#13;
service in the United States. With&#13;
hie combined t e r m s as head of the&#13;
University of Vermont and the University&#13;
of Michigan, he had been a&#13;
college president for 48 yearn. He&#13;
was a pioneer in the great system of&#13;
s t a t e universities and co-education, j For t h e Cadillac local option elec-&#13;
He conferred degrees on nearly 25,000 ' tion 497 men registered, breaking all&#13;
graduates, 2.000 of whom were , local records.&#13;
"women. I Edwin Sanderson, 85 y e a r s old, first&#13;
white person born in Augusta township,&#13;
died at the home of daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Irvin Rowley, of Detroit.&#13;
Sixty-one cases of tuberculosis, a&#13;
majority of them in Port Huron, have&#13;
been reported to the Red Cross society's&#13;
visiting nurse within the past&#13;
month.&#13;
A local telephone war is t h r e a t e n e d&#13;
in Charlotte on the grounds t h a t the&#13;
rentals charged by the Michigan State&#13;
Telephone Co. are illegal under the&#13;
DR. J A M E S B U R R I L L A N G E L L .&#13;
Ann Arbor—Since the day of Dr.&#13;
Angell'a r e t i r e m e n t from the presidency&#13;
of the University of Michigan,&#13;
February 17, 1909, he ha.s failed in&#13;
strength, but there was never a word&#13;
of complaint against the- weariness&#13;
t h a t c a m e upon him—only hi-s step&#13;
became feeble and the once rugged&#13;
color fled from his face. T h e mind&#13;
alone until recent weeks was as&#13;
brighit and as active a s in the days of&#13;
his g r e a t e s t power.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Born in Scituate, R. I., Jan. 7, 1828,&#13;
J a m e s Angell served during his early&#13;
manhood as a farm hand on his father's&#13;
estate and attended Brown university,&#13;
At 24 years he was invited&#13;
to become a professor of modern&#13;
languages in the university. Among&#13;
students in his classes were Richard&#13;
Olney and John Hay,&#13;
After five years in Vermont Dr,&#13;
Angell gave way to insistent calls&#13;
from Michigan and accepted the presidency&#13;
of the state university in 1871&#13;
As a diplomat, Dr. Angell gained , c i t &gt;' charter.&#13;
international distinction. He was sent&#13;
by President Hayes as minister to&#13;
China in 1880-81. During this time ho&#13;
acted as commissioner in negotiating&#13;
important treaties. He was appointed&#13;
by President McKinley as minister to&#13;
Advances amounting to 10 per cent&#13;
or more a r e announced in the wages&#13;
of m a s t e r s of ships sailing for the&#13;
Pittsburg Steamship Co,, the lake&#13;
wing of the stsel trust.&#13;
The Port Huron Ministerial asaociaalso&#13;
Included appointments to the international&#13;
commission on Canadian&#13;
fisheries and chairmanship of the Canadian-&#13;
American commission on deep&#13;
waterways from the great lakes to&#13;
the sea,&#13;
Turkey in 1897. His public service ] t i o n w j u co-operate with t h e Business&#13;
Men's association in outlining plans&#13;
for beautifying tbe city, officials of&#13;
the association announce,&#13;
Michigan members of t h e house&#13;
were registered sev^j? to six against&#13;
the literacy test for Immigrants in the&#13;
final roll call on the immigration bill,&#13;
Thursday night. The bill was adopted.&#13;
Aa the result of the report of auditors&#13;
who made a special audit of Genessee&#13;
county's books, found many ercounty&#13;
worth-&#13;
SCHOOL HEAD TAKES HIS LIFE&#13;
Was Superintendent of Lansing School&#13;
for 10 Years.&#13;
1 rors and declared the entire&#13;
Lansing was shocked to learn ^ a t b o o ^ e p i n g system almost&#13;
Edward P. Cummings, superintendent i,&#13;
of schools for 10 years in that city, '&#13;
t*o ok, h. i,s l,i,f-e Fc ri,d. ay m. ttuh e 0S4t rat.f, ord, • Andrew McRoberts, .8 years old, . . , ~,v, w , L. ,, . , , „ „ hotel, Chi cago. TH, e recent.l, y re.t urned, M, i•c—h ig* an Cen.t.ra, l. , «p asseng, er engi&gt;n,e„e,.r from a t, r,i p "t o F„,l ori,d, a, wh. ere h. e h, ad, for 30 Jy ears, died of a*p oplexy m Margone&#13;
for his health. Last December,&#13;
Mr. Cummings accidentally shot himself&#13;
a t his h o m e while cleaning a shotfun&#13;
.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS&#13;
shall just as the funeral of his sister,&#13;
Mrs. Daniel Webster, was about to be&#13;
held.&#13;
Within ten days after his return&#13;
from his wedding. Robert Bailey Randall,&#13;
prominent Saginaw young man,&#13;
died of typhoid fever. He was married&#13;
F e b r u a r y 12 to Miss Hazel Mc-&#13;
While a deputy sheriff was t a k i n g i Corkle.&#13;
him to Dowagiac to face a c h a r g e of , Miss Miriam Hubbard, a daughter&#13;
burglary, Joseph Leonard, 25, leaped ; of t h e late Elbert Hubbard, is one of&#13;
to his death from a swiftly moving t h e consulting editors of t h e Inlander,&#13;
G. R. &amp; I. t r a i n n e a r Matteawan. j the literary magapine of t h e Univer-&#13;
The body of Fred E, Boyer, 34, of | «tty of Michigan, which h a s been re-&#13;
T h r e e Rivera. Mich., was found on - v i v * d t h i s month,&#13;
t h e Pere M a r q u e t t e track*. One leg i Police officials in all Michigan cities&#13;
w a s found a t Grand Blanc, five miles&#13;
south of Flint, w h e r e it had been c a r&#13;
ried by t h e train.&#13;
William Alan, Pennfield farm hand,&#13;
convicted of c h a r g e s m a d e by a 14-&#13;
year-old girl, has been sentenced by&#13;
have been asked to aid relatives in&#13;
finding Mary Schleich, 17 years old,&#13;
who disappeared from t h e home of her&#13;
brother, Valley Schleich, 121 Delaware&#13;
street, W e s t Saginaw.&#13;
T o e Masonic Temple association of&#13;
Judge North to s e r v e not less t h a n Detroit has c o m p u t e d negotiations&#13;
five, n o r m o r e t h a n 15 y e a r s in Jack- \ for the purchase of p r o p e r t y as th«&#13;
son prison with recommendation of site for a new Masonic t e m p l e to cost&#13;
ten years. i $1,000,000 and which will be t h e finest&#13;
Charles Coverts, 16, of Flint, w a s j s t r u c t u r e of its kind in the world.&#13;
found chilled near Flint river. He Beggars a r e becoming less n u m e r&#13;
had a t t e m p t e d to lead a cow across ous in Detroit every day, according to&#13;
F a y bridge, which i s flooded, and the J u s t i c e Sellers. MI believe it is on&#13;
current of the scream carried them account of t h e prosperity of t h e city.&#13;
d o w n stream. Covert drifted ashore,&#13;
but the cow drowned.&#13;
One person in every 79 residents&#13;
of Detroit has tuberculosis. There a m&#13;
than 8,100 cases In Detroit at&#13;
Serial hundred and fiftysight&#13;
persons died of tuberculosis In&#13;
Detroit b u t year. Thar* were mere, dicate the bt&#13;
but the? w e r e s o t reported. i Flint's history&#13;
Beggars are victims of hard times and&#13;
there are no hard times in Detroit"&#13;
Building records for the first quar&#13;
t e r of 1916 show 2S4 permits for new&#13;
structures issued by Flint's city clerk&#13;
ae against €2 during the first three&#13;
months w e t year. This is taken to indicate&#13;
the busiest building year in&#13;
DENIES THAT MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
VILLA IS HURT&#13;
THAT HE HAS NOT EVEN BEEN&#13;
ENGAGED WITH AMERICAN&#13;
TROOPS.&#13;
NOT HIS TROOPS IN BATTLE&#13;
It 1« Believed That Col. Oodd Attacked&#13;
General Cano's Troops&#13;
Last Week and Not Villa's.&#13;
El Paso, Tex. While the latest advices&#13;
from tbe American punitive expedition&#13;
into Mexico confirm the assertion&#13;
t h a t Francisco Villa is wounded&#13;
and fleeing ahead of the Americans,&#13;
t h e r e is a persistent report In&#13;
El Paso, credited by many persons,&#13;
that Villa is not woanded and t h a t&#13;
he has not even been engaged by t h e&#13;
American forces.&#13;
Those who belong to this "echool&#13;
of thought" along the border say they&#13;
received messages from Americans in&#13;
i Chihuahua stating t h a t General Luis&#13;
j H e r r e r a , recently suspected of disloy-&#13;
| alty to General Carranza, has permitted&#13;
his forces to join those of General&#13;
Cano, west of Chihuahua city,&#13;
and t h a t General Cano and" his Carranzistas&#13;
have revolted and are fighting&#13;
t h e Americans; t h a t it was this&#13;
force and not the force of Villa with&#13;
which Colonel Dodd engaged near&#13;
Guerrero, and that Villa is now close&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
D E T R O I T - C a t t l e : Receipts, 24S7.&#13;
Seat heavy ateers, *S&lt;iu,9; beat handy&#13;
weight butcher steers, $750^7.75,&#13;
mixed steerb and heifers, $7&lt;&amp;-7.25;&#13;
handy light buichera, $6.76(^7, light&#13;
butchers, $6.5006.75; Lxwt cowa, $ 6 0&#13;
6.50; butcher cows, $5.50©)5.76; common&#13;
cows, $4.50®5; c a n n e r s , $4®&#13;
4.60; b e s t ' h e a v y bulls, $6@6.25; bologna&#13;
bull*, $5.5005.75; stock bulls,&#13;
$5.25@5.75; feeders, $6,500)7.25;&#13;
atockers, $5.25@6.25; milkers and&#13;
springers, $40&lt;&amp;90.&#13;
Calves—Receipts, 1,005. Best $10®&#13;
10.50; medium and common, $6(^9.&#13;
Sheep and Lamb—Receipts, 742.&#13;
(Conducted by the NaUionaJ Womuft'l&#13;
Chrl*tla.n Temperance Union.)&#13;
S C I E N T I F I C I N S T R U C T I O N .&#13;
In 1897 two leading professors of&#13;
Germany sent to the men of that country&#13;
a pronouncement favoring total abstinence.&#13;
It contained this declaration;&#13;
"Science h a s shown t h a t alcohol,&#13;
even in m o d e r a t e quantities, causes&#13;
i *&#13;
%&#13;
disturbance In brain action, paralyzes/&#13;
Best lambs, $11.65: fair lambs, $10.5U the critical capacity, power of will, the*.?&#13;
ethical and esthetic sense, and lowers^&#13;
Belf-control. For this reason we*&#13;
should realize that it is a poison and&#13;
no longer to be classed with foods."&#13;
The document received nine signatures.&#13;
Ten years later it was Bent out&#13;
@11.25; light to common Iambi, $8.50&#13;
©10; yearlings, $10; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $7&lt;g'8.25; culls and common,&#13;
$5@6.50.&#13;
Hogs—-Receipts, 8,946. One third&#13;
of t h e receipts in the hog d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
weighed 120 and under and they were I again and received 800 signatures of&#13;
very dull at $8@8.40. Mixed grades German medical men, 116 of whom&#13;
brought. $9.25&amp;9.40. i w e r e professors.&#13;
I In 1913 a great antialcoholic m e e t i n g&#13;
was held in the P r u s s i a n house of dep- I&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Receipts of cat uties, Berlin. The honorary president&#13;
and heifers, mixed, $7.50@8; steers&#13;
to the City of Chihuahua arranging to and heifers, fair to good. $7@7.50;&#13;
tie, 150 c a r s ; market s t r o n g ; choice j W a s the German chancellor, Dr. von&#13;
to prime native shipping steers, $9@ ! Bethmann-Hollweg, and on the commit-&#13;
9.65; fair to good, $8.40® 8.75; plain t e e of honor all the P r u s s i a n ministers&#13;
and coarse. I7.85@~8.25. Canadian \ w e r e represented and h u n d r e d s of emsteers,&#13;
1,300 to 1.450 pounds, $8.25© i inent men of the empire. Doctor Jen-&#13;
8.75; Canadian steers, 1,250 to 1,350 | gen, inspector general of the Berlin&#13;
pounds, $8©8.50; light butcher steers ; schools, called forth much applause&#13;
and heifers, $7.50@7.75; yearlings, dry-]-when h e said that "the education of&#13;
fed, $8.75©9.50; best handy steers, youth is absolutely impossible with-&#13;
$8.25©8.75; good butchering steers ' out an antlalcohol element in it."&#13;
Since then such instruction h a s been&#13;
attack the s t a t e capital.&#13;
General Cano Loyal to Carranza.&#13;
Juarez officials deny these reports,&#13;
declaring t h a t General Cano is still&#13;
loyal to t h e first chief; t h a t he is co-&#13;
| operating with the Americans and&#13;
j that General H e r r e r a is not only loyi&#13;
al, but is in the field after Villa.&#13;
| Andres Garcia, the Carranza consul&#13;
here, admits that nothing has been&#13;
; heard from General Cano for more&#13;
than a week. In the early days of&#13;
the chase after Villa, both Consul&#13;
Garcia and General Gavira, the com-&#13;
! madder at Juarez, made public several&#13;
telegrams they said they had rej&#13;
ceived from Cano telling of fights he&#13;
had bad with the Villa forces. These&#13;
j telegrams stopped abruptly about 10&#13;
j days ago,&#13;
The only direct information from&#13;
', Namiquipa since then has been a paragraph&#13;
in a dispatch from General&#13;
j l e i s h i n g in which it was stated that&#13;
half the garrison at the -town had disappeared&#13;
and that it wa3 suspected&#13;
some of them had joined Villa.&#13;
Villa In Need of Money.&#13;
That Villa is without funds became&#13;
known here when reliable reportB told&#13;
of an appeal he had sent but recently&#13;
to one ef his former lieutenants&#13;
living in New Mexico, not far from EJ&#13;
Paso, begging the man to send $1,500&#13;
to Mrs. Villa No. 2, in Los Angeles.&#13;
He stated, it is said, that he had no&#13;
money to send her, and that his brother,&#13;
Hippolito, got away with all that&#13;
the family possessed, when ho fled&#13;
J u a r e z and El Paso for Cuba,&#13;
prime fat heifers, $7.50©8.25; light&#13;
m a d e a part of the regular course in&#13;
t h e public schools of Germany, and&#13;
common heifers, $6.2506.75; best fat i entire courses in t h a t subject a r e ofcows,&#13;
$7©7.25; butcher cows, $6.25@ i fered by t h e great universities.&#13;
6.75; cutters $4.50©5; c a n n e r s , $3.50©&#13;
3.75; fancy bulls, $7@7.50; butchering&#13;
bulls, $6.5007; sausage bulls,&#13;
$6.25 # 6 . 5 0 ; light bulls, $0@5.50;&#13;
stackers, $5.50@6.75; feeders, $71*?&#13;
7.25; milkers and springers, $60©85.&#13;
FOE OF THE COLLEGES.&#13;
Of all t h e foes of young manhood&#13;
on t h e American college campus, alcohol&#13;
is t h e most subtle and destructive.&#13;
It is peculiarly fitting t h a t t h e&#13;
Hogs; Receipts, 80&#13;
5© 10c lower; heavy,&#13;
c a r s ; market J American college student of today,&#13;
$10.25©10.35; wiser and better informed than hia&#13;
yorkers, $10".-20©10.25; pigs, $909.25. predecessors, should give battle to his&#13;
S h e e p : Receipts 50 c a r s ; market ; a n c i e n t a n d merciless adversary. If&#13;
gravestones were placed on our college&#13;
grounds to those slain in t h e flush&#13;
of young manhood by intoxicating&#13;
drink, the acres of verdant lawn&#13;
around even our best institutions&#13;
would become vast cemeteries ghastly&#13;
with thick-strewn headstones. With a&#13;
j devilish instinct for maximum destruc-&#13;
Grain, Eta. j tiveness, this demon of the campus&#13;
D E T R O I T — W h e a t : Cash No 2 red, j seems to pick out for degradation the&#13;
$1.18 1-4; May opened without change j gayest, the loveliest, t h e most talentat&#13;
$1.17 3-4, advanced to $1.19 3-4 and ed, and to re-enforce his assault by en&#13;
15c lower; top lambs, $11.75011.85;&#13;
yearlings, $10@10.50; wethers, $9©&#13;
9.45; ewes, $8©8.50.&#13;
Calves; Receipts, 900; market 25c&#13;
lower; tops, $10.15© 10.20; fair to&#13;
good, $9.50010; grassers, $&lt;1@5.&#13;
closed at 1.19 12; July opened at&#13;
$1.14 1-2 and closed at $1,16 1-2; No&#13;
1 white, $1.13 1-4.&#13;
Corn—Cash No 3, 73c; No 3 yellow,&#13;
75 l-2c; No 4 yellow, 71 1-2©72 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 48c; No 3 white,&#13;
47c; No 4 white, 45@45 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 92c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt&#13;
shipment, $3,65; April, $8.75; May,&#13;
$3.75,&#13;
Seeds — Prime spot red clover,&#13;
$10.75; prime alsike, $9.25; prime&#13;
timothy, $3.50.&#13;
Hay—No 1 timothy, $18 ©18.50;&#13;
standard timothy, $17@17.50; light&#13;
listing the social and generous instincts&#13;
which constitute the very&#13;
qharm of youth, Opening always t h e&#13;
gate to passion and appetite, he is t h e&#13;
aggressive ally of everything which&#13;
degrades college life, the promoter of&#13;
\ r a g e d i e s innumerable on every campus,&#13;
t h e tireless enemy of virtue, purity,&#13;
diligence and intellectual developm&#13;
e n t — H e n r y Louis Smith, P r e s i d e n t&#13;
Washington and Lee University.&#13;
GOOD LINE OF BUSINESS.&#13;
It was at a campaign meeting in&#13;
Ohio. The speaker said t h a t West Virgania&#13;
had profited financially by vot-&#13;
THE "PORK" BARREL&#13;
Rivers and Harbors Appropriation&#13;
Bill Is Startling.&#13;
Washington—Ten rivers with a&#13;
combined tonnage of less t h a n 3,000,-&#13;
000 annually would receive more than&#13;
half of the $39,000,000 carried In the&#13;
omnibus rivers and harbors appropriation&#13;
bill now under consideration&#13;
in t h e house of representatives. The&#13;
remaining half is divided among 250&#13;
projects, of which 20 ocean and Great&#13;
Lakes harbors alone produce over&#13;
300,000,000 tons of freight annually.&#13;
T h e s e startling figures, indicating&#13;
where most of t h e w a t e r w a y s pork ia&#13;
dispensed, w e r e produced by Rep.&#13;
J a m e s A. F r e a r , of Wisconsin, in a&#13;
speech in opposition t o the bill. Mr.&#13;
F r e a r offered a substitute whereby&#13;
the appropriation would be reduced&#13;
to $15,000,000, all to be spent in t h e&#13;
maintenance of harbors and waterways&#13;
actually contributing to commerce.&#13;
mixed, $17017.50; No 2 timothy, $15 | ing dry. A man in t h e audience dis-&#13;
©15.50; No 1 mixed, $14@15; No 2 i puted this statement. H e said t h a t&#13;
mixed, $10©12; No 1 clover, $12© | h e was a salesman, t h a t he visited&#13;
13; rye straw, $7.5008; wheat and j every county seat in W e s t Virginia,&#13;
oat straw, $6.50@7 per ton in carlota, and t h a t his business h a d fallen off&#13;
Deroit. ! considerably since t h e s t a t e went dry.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper s a c k s , ' Another man spoke up and said t h a t&#13;
per 196 lbs, jobbing lots: First patent, he was a salesman and " m a d e " W e s t&#13;
$6.50; second patent. $6; straight, | Virginia regularly and t h a t his busi-&#13;
$5.70; spring patent, $6.70; rye flour, I ness had increased since the state be-&#13;
$6 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $28; standard middlings, $20;&#13;
fine midlings, $30; 'coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$30; cracked corn, $31.60; corn and&#13;
oat chop, $28 per ton.&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
Chicago—Dr. Theodore B. Sachs,&#13;
widely known as an expert in tuberculosis,&#13;
killed himself with poison at&#13;
the Edwards sanitarium at Naperville,&#13;
111. T h i s is the W.ast development&#13;
in a political n g h t teat has&#13;
shaken Chicago and which has attracted&#13;
unusual attention in medical&#13;
circles all over the country.&#13;
Milwaukee, W i s — Chester Lorraln,&#13;
24 years old, who posed as Keith Edward&#13;
Delrymple, heir to a $400,000&#13;
estate at Port Allegheny, Pa., was&#13;
sentenced to state prison for flte&#13;
y u a n for paealag worthless check*.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Strawberries—Louisiana, $3.25&amp;3.3S&#13;
per 24-qt case; Florida, 30©35c per&#13;
q t&#13;
Apples — Greenings, $2.50 ©3.50;&#13;
Spy, $3.5004; Baldwins, $30)3.50;&#13;
Steele Reds, $404.50 per bbl; western.&#13;
$1.75®2 per box.&#13;
Cabbages— $2®2.25* per bbl.&#13;
Mushroom**—40045c per lb.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 11 1-2© 12c;&#13;
heavy, 1 0 0 1 1 c per lb.&#13;
Asparagus—50055c per lb; section,&#13;
$1.7502 per box.&#13;
Maple Sugar—New, 15© 16c per lb;&#13;
syrup, $101.10 per gaL&#13;
Tomatoes — Hothouse, 2 5 0 2 S c per&#13;
lb; Florida, $2.50®2.40 per crate.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Best. 1 5 0 1 5 l-2c;&#13;
choice, 14© 14 l-2c; ordinary, 1 2 0&#13;
13c per lb.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes^—Jersey, kiln-dried,&#13;
$ 1 3 0 ® 1 S 5 per c r a t e and $1.1001.20&#13;
per hamper.&#13;
Hooey—Choice to fancy new whitt&#13;
comb, 1 0 0 1 7 c ; amber, 1 0 0 1 1 c ; extracted,&#13;
9 0 1 0 c per lb.&#13;
Potatoes—Carlota on track, $1,050&#13;
1.01 for white and 9 c 0 $ l for red per&#13;
bn; russets, $1.O50L1O per bu.&#13;
Lettuce—Hothouse. 7 0 1 c per hi;&#13;
head tefteea. Florida, $2 75 per hamper;&#13;
Texas, HJO01.7S per hamper.&#13;
Tallow—Ne 1« t e ; N o 2. ?e per lb&#13;
came dry. He asked t h e fellow who&#13;
reported a falling off w h a t his line&#13;
was and t h e latter reluctantly admitted&#13;
t h a t he sold u n d e r t a k e r s ' supplies,&#13;
at which t h e crowd yelled. T h e man&#13;
who declared t h a t prohibition had&#13;
helped his business explained he sold&#13;
furniture.&#13;
S&#13;
SURELY A MISTAKE!&#13;
"Smoky" Hobbs of Columbus was&#13;
fined $400 and given six months for Illegal&#13;
Belling of liquor. What? In&#13;
Columbus? Surely must be a mistake.&#13;
Bootleggers only ply their trade i n&#13;
dry towns. That's why the benevolent&#13;
w e t s run saloons, to kedfc}&#13;
men from bootlegging In dry&#13;
Tut, tut! Yea, it must be a mis1&#13;
Caldwell Press.&#13;
* .*&#13;
PROHIBITION AND BUSINESS.&#13;
Endorsement of the value of a prohibition&#13;
law aa an aid t o general bua$» .;&#13;
neea prosperity was recently stgnasV ^&#13;
by men representing the leading Indus*&#13;
tries of Steubenvtlle, 0 . , among otherf*&#13;
two paper companies, a glass company,&#13;
two foundries, two d a y companies,&#13;
a tin plate company and a pottery&#13;
concern.&#13;
HARD TO UNDERSTAND;&#13;
Just w h y anyone should ever suppose&#13;
f a s t because the people of any&#13;
city stop buying boose they will&#13;
petronismg tbe&#13;
i s bard&#13;
wrngmmmmm&#13;
. • . &gt; • * ' ! • ' &gt; : • - &lt; * . • . ; . J - - v inp •? •POWPVPVPHII ill Wf " •*••• ' - • • • • " J V&#13;
• * ' " k T-T^H1'^&#13;
fl&gt;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
J P M B&#13;
The Cito of&#13;
Numbered&#13;
Daus&#13;
Bu F R A N C I S LYNDE&#13;
Illustration* by C. D. Rhodes&#13;
• M M M H M M M U tf&#13;
i&#13;
Copyrighc by Charles Scribncx'b Sons&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
Brouillard, chief engineer of the Nlquola&#13;
irrigation dam. meets J. Wesley Cort-&#13;
Wright tttid his daughter, Genevieve. ttU'i&#13;
explains the reclamation work to them.&#13;
Cortwrlght sees in the project a big&#13;
chance to make money, organizes a company&#13;
and obtains government contracts to&#13;
furnish power and material for the dam&#13;
construction. A busy city apringu up&#13;
about the site. Steve Massingale threatens&#13;
to start a gold rush if Brouillard does&#13;
do€B not influence President Ford to build&#13;
a railroad branch to the place, thus opening&#13;
an easy market for the ore from the&#13;
"Little Susan" mine. On a visit to Amy&#13;
Massingale at her father's mine Brouillard&#13;
tells her of his need for money to pay&#13;
off his dead father's debts and that to be&#13;
free he would sacrifice anything save his&#13;
love for one woman. Though his influence&#13;
is vital to the building of the railroad extension&#13;
she tells him to be true to himself.&#13;
He decides for it. Mirapolls, the&#13;
city of numbered days, booms. Cortwrlght&#13;
persuades Brouillard to become consulting&#13;
engineer of the consolidated electric&#13;
power company in return for $100,000 stock.&#13;
Permanent building in Mirapolls and a&#13;
real estate boom are in full swing when&#13;
the stoppage of work on the railroad&#13;
threatens a panic. Brouillard spreads the&#13;
Massingale story of placer gold in the&#13;
river bed and starts a gold rush. The gold&#13;
rush promises to stop the reclamation&#13;
project. Amy tells Brouillard that her father&#13;
has Incorporated the "Little Susan"&#13;
»&lt;rid in In Cortv right's clutches financially.&#13;
He tells her he lias made $100,000 and&#13;
declares his love.&#13;
*&#13;
t&#13;
• ••&#13;
. » . . » . . » . . » • - • . - • &lt; • • &gt; • • • - • — • • •&#13;
Just imagine feelings of a man&#13;
who has blunted his conscience&#13;
and turned a questionable trick&#13;
in finance ln ord•• r to please the&#13;
girl he loves, and tr«n has been&#13;
severjly judgsr1 by the young&#13;
lady when she discovered his&#13;
handiwork. What stepo will&#13;
Brouillard t a l e to square himself&#13;
in Amy's eyes?&#13;
• • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • - - * - . • • - • . . » . . « . . • . . # . . » . . « . . » . . . . ,&#13;
i i&#13;
• i&#13;
i i&#13;
• • » « • • • • • * 1&#13;
CHAPTER XII—Continued.&#13;
' " . - ' «&#13;
fz-z&#13;
He was abashed, confounded; and at&#13;
the bottom of t h e tangle of conflicting&#13;
emotions t h e r e was a dull glow of&#13;
resentment.&#13;
"I did it, a s I say—for love of you,&#13;
Amy; and now I nave done a much&#13;
m o r e serious thing—for the s a m e reason."&#13;
"Tell m e , " Bhe said, with a quick&#13;
catching of h e r breath.&#13;
"Your brother p u t a weapon in my&#13;
hands, and I have used it. T h e r e w a s&#13;
one sure way to m a k e t h e railroad&#13;
people get busy again. They couldn't&#13;
sit still if all t h e world were trying&#13;
to g e t to a n e w gold camp, to which&#13;
they already have a line graded a n d&#13;
nearly ready for t h e steel."&#13;
"And you h a v e — ? "&#13;
He nodded.&#13;
She had r e t r e a t e d to take h e r form&#13;
e r position, leaning against t h e porch&#13;
post, with h e r hands behind h e r , a n d&#13;
she had grown suddenly calm.&#13;
"Don't look at me that way, Amy,"&#13;
he pleaded. "You wanted something—&#13;
and I wanted to give .it to you. T h a t&#13;
w a s all—as God hears me. it waB all.&#13;
You believe that. Amy? It will break&#13;
my heart if you don't believe it."&#13;
* She shook h e r head sadly.&#13;
You don't understand, a n d 1 can't&#13;
m a k e you u n d a r s t a n d — t h a t is t h e k e e n&#13;
misery of it. If this ruthless thing you&#13;
tried to do had succeeded, I should b e&#13;
t h e most wretched woman in t h e&#13;
world."&#13;
^f it had succeeded? It has succeeded.&#13;
Didn't I say Just now that&#13;
the town was crazy with excitement&#13;
when I left to come up here?"&#13;
^ A e girl was shaking her head again.&#13;
' ^ o d sometimes saves us in spite of&#13;
lives," she said gravely. "The&#13;
ent will die out There are no&#13;
placers In the Nlquola- The bars have&#13;
been prospected again and again."&#13;
CHAPTER X11I&#13;
if «•*•» sad Dangen&#13;
as:&#13;
Brouillard turned on his heel and&#13;
choked back the sudden malediction&#13;
that rose to his lips. She had called&#13;
Mirapolls a city of knaves and dupes;&#13;
surely, he himself was the simplest of&#13;
the dupes,&#13;
"I see—after so long a time." he&#13;
west OIL "Tour brother merely 'salt-&#13;
«T a few shovelfuls of sand for my&#13;
especial benefit Great heavens, but&#13;
I was an easy mark!"&#13;
"Don't!" the cried, and the tears&#13;
taVfcar vole* cat him to the heart—&#13;
"4am\ make it harder for me than It&#13;
fcas to be. I have told you only what&#13;
l &gt; t fcearf my father say. tlmo mad&#13;
that there is no fold in the N l&#13;
you ssaatat&#13;
Be&#13;
his way to his j n a u wunout caring&#13;
much for the consequences to o t h e r s ;&#13;
but tell ine--haven't you been doing&#13;
the sanue t h i n g ? "&#13;
""Yet you condone In your brother&#13;
what you condemn in me,'' ht&gt; complained.&#13;
"My brother la my brother; and you&#13;
are—let me tell you bomethlng, Victor:&#13;
God helping me, I shall be no&#13;
man's evil genius, and yours least of&#13;
all. You broke down t h e barriers a&#13;
few minutes ago a n d you know what&#13;
l a i n my heart. But 1 can take It out&#13;
of my heart if t h e man who put It&#13;
t h e r e is not true to himself."&#13;
Brouillard was silent for a little&#13;
space, and when he spoko again It was&#13;
as one awaking from a troubled dream.&#13;
"] know. There Is a change. 1 a m&#13;
not t h e same man 1 was a few years,&#13;
or even a tew months ago. I have lost&#13;
s o m e t h i n g ; 1 have not t h e s a m e&#13;
p r o m p t i n g s ; things that 1 UBed to&#13;
loathe no longer shock me. And t h e r e&#13;
is no cause. Nothing different h a s&#13;
broken into my life save t h e best of&#13;
all things—a great love. And you tell&#13;
me that t h e love is unworthy."&#13;
"No, I didn't say t h a t ; 1 only meant&#13;
t h a t you had misconceived It. Love&#13;
Is t h e truest, finest thing we know.&#13;
It can never be t h e tool of evil; it m a y&#13;
even breathe n,ew life into t h e benumbed&#13;
conscience."&#13;
Again a silence c a m e a n d s a t between&#13;
t h e m ; and. a s before. It was t h e&#13;
man who broke it.&#13;
"You lead me to a conclusion t h a t&#13;
I refuse to accept, Amy; t h a t I a m&#13;
dominated by some influence which Is&#13;
s t r o n g e r than love."&#13;
"You are," s h e said simply.&#13;
" W h a t is i t ? "&#13;
" E n v i r o n m e n t . "&#13;
" T h a t is t h e most humiliating thing&#13;
you have said today."&#13;
"No. However much others may be&#13;
deluded. I am sure you can see Mlrapolis&#13;
in its true light. The very a i r you&#13;
b r e a t h e down there is poisoned. T h e&#13;
taint is In t h e blood. Mr. Cortwrlght&#13;
and h i s fellow bandits call it t h e 'Miracle&#13;
City,' but t h e poor w r e t c h e s on&#13;
lower Chigrlngo avenue laugh a n d call&#13;
it Gomorrah."&#13;
" J u s t a t t h e present moment it Is a&#13;
city of fools—and I, t h e king of t h e&#13;
fools, have made it so." said Brouillard&#13;
gloomily. From h i s seat on t h e porch&#13;
s t e p he w a s frowning down upon t h e&#13;
outspread scene in t h e valley, where&#13;
the triangular shadow of J a c k ' s mountain&#13;
was creeping slowly across to t h e&#13;
foot of Chigrlngo Something in t h e&#13;
measured eye-sweep brought him to&#13;
his feet with a hasty exclamation:&#13;
"Good Lord! t h e machinery h a s&#13;
stopped! They've knocked off work&#13;
on t h e d a m ! "&#13;
"Why n o t ? " she said. "Did you imagine&#13;
that your workmen were any&#13;
less human than other people?"&#13;
"No, of course n o t ; t h a t is, I—but&#13;
I haven't any time to go into t h a t&#13;
now. Is your telephone line up h e r e&#13;
in operation?"&#13;
"No, n o t y e t "&#13;
"Then I must burn t h e wind getting&#13;
down there. By J o v e ! if those unspeakable&#13;
idiots have gone off a n d&#13;
left t h e concrete to freeze w h e r e v e r it&#13;
h a p p e n s to be—"&#13;
"One moment," she replied, while he&#13;
w a s reaching for h i s hat. " T h i s n e w&#13;
m a d n e s s will have spent itself by&#13;
nightfall—it m u s t And yet I h a v e&#13;
t h e queerest shivery feeling, a s If&#13;
something dreadful were going to happen.&#13;
Can't you contrive to g e t word&#13;
to m e , some way—after it is all&#13;
o v e r ? I wish you could."&#13;
"IT1 do it," h e promised. "I'll come&#13;
up after supper."&#13;
"No, don't do t h a t You will be&#13;
needed a t t h e d a m . T h e r e will be&#13;
trouble, with a town full of disappointed&#13;
gold-hunters, and liquor t o be h a d .&#13;
W a i t a minute." S h e r a n 4&amp;to t h e&#13;
h o u s e a n d came o u t with t w o little&#13;
paper-covered cylinders with fuses&#13;
projecting. " T a k e t h e s e ; they a r e&#13;
Bengal lights—some of t h e fireworks&#13;
t h a t T i g bought in R e d Butte for t h e&#13;
F o u r t h . Light t h e blue one w h e n you&#13;
a r e ready to send m e m y m e s s a g e&#13;
of cheer. I shall b e w a t c h i n g for i t "&#13;
"And t h e o t h e r ? " h e asked.&#13;
"It is a red l i g h t t h e signal of w a r&#13;
and t u m u l t s a n d danger. If you light&#13;
I t I shall k n o w — "&#13;
H e nodded, dropped t h e p a p e r cylinders&#13;
into h i s p o c k e t a n d a m o m e n i&#13;
l a t e r w a s racing down t h e trail t o&#13;
t a k e his place a t t h e helm of t h e a b a o&#13;
doned ship of t h e industries.&#13;
Brouillard descended upon h i s d i s&#13;
h e a r t e n e d subordinates like a whirl&#13;
wind of invincible energy, electrifyinf&#13;
everybody Into i n s t a n t action. Gaasm&#13;
a n was told off t o bring t h e Indiana,&#13;
who alone w e r e loyally indifferent t o&#13;
t h e gold erase, down from t h e crushers.&#13;
Anson was dispatched t o i m p r e s s&#13;
t h e w a i t e r s a n d bellboys from t h e&#13;
Metropole; Leshington was s e n t t o t h e&#13;
shops a n d t h e bank t o t u r n o u t t h e&#13;
c l e r k s ; Orislow a n d Handley w e r e&#13;
ordered t o t a k e c h a r g e of t h e makeshift&#13;
concrete h a n d l e r s a s fast a s t h e y&#13;
materialised, squadci: «r t h e m a n d driving&#13;
t h e work of wreck clearing for&#13;
e v e r y m a n a n d m i n u t e they could&#13;
command, with Oaasman a n d B e n d e r&#13;
t o a c t a s foremen.&#13;
POT himself, Brouillard reserved t h e&#13;
m o a t hazardous of t h e r e c r u i t i n g expedient*.&#13;
T h e lower a v e n u e had a l r e a d y&#13;
a double, rank of dive*,&#13;
might tm found, and for once in ihelr&#13;
lives they should be suowu how othermen&#13;
earned money.&#13;
"Shove it tor every umiuie of daylight&#13;
there is left," he ordered, t r a p -&#13;
ping out his commands 10 his staff&#13;
while he was tilling the magazine of&#13;
his Winchester. -'Fuddle what material&#13;
there is m the forma, dump the&#13;
telpher buckets, where they stand, and&#13;
clean out the mixers; t h a t ' s the size&#13;
of t h e job, and it's got to be done.&#13;
J u m p to it, Grizzy. you and Handley,&#13;
and we'll try to fill your gangs the&#13;
best way we can."&#13;
•'You'll be up on the stagings yourself,&#13;
won't you?" asked G n s l o w . struggling&#13;
Into his working coat&#13;
"After a bit. I'm going down to the&#13;
lower avenue to turn out the crooks&#13;
and diamond wearers. It's time the&gt;&#13;
were learning how to earn an honest&#13;
dollar."&#13;
"You'll get yourself killed up," grumbled&#13;
Leshington. "Work is t h e 'one&#13;
thing you won't get out of that crowd."&#13;
"Watch me," rasped t h e chief, and&#13;
he was gone a s soon as he had said it.&#13;
S t r a n g e things and s t r e n u o u s happened&#13;
in the lower end of t h e Nlquoia&#13;
valley during t h e few hours of&#13;
daylight that remained. First, climb&#13;
ing nervously to t h e puddlers' staging&#13;
on t h e great dam, and led by Poodles&#13;
himself, came t h e Metropole quota of&#13;
waiters, scullions, cooks and porters,&#13;
willing but skill-less. After them, and&#13;
herded by Leshington. c a m e a dapper&#13;
crew of office men and clerks to snatch&#13;
up t h e puddling spades a n d to soil&#13;
t h e i r clothes and blister their hands&#13;
in emptying t h e concrete buckets Mr&#13;
Cortwright's contribution came a s a&#13;
dropping fire; a handful of tree-cutters&#13;
from t h e sawmills, a few picked up&#13;
h e r e a n d t h e r e in t h e deserted town,&#13;
an automobile load of power-company&#13;
employees shot down from t h e generating&#13;
plant a t racing speed.&#13;
Last, b u t by no m e a n s least In nura&#13;
bers, c a m e t h e h u m a n derelicts from&#13;
the lower avenue; men in frock-coats;&#13;
men in cowboy jeans taking it as a&#13;
huge joke; men with foreign faces and&#13;
lowering brows and with s t r a n g e oaths&#13;
In their m o u t h s ; a n d behind t h e motley&#13;
t h r o n g a n d m a r s h a l i n g it to a&#13;
quickstep, Brouillard and Tig Smith.&#13;
It w a s hot work and heavy for the&#13;
strangely assorted crew, and Brouillard&#13;
drove it to t h e limit, bribing, cajoling&#13;
or threatening, patrolling t h e&#13;
long line of staging to encourage the&#13;
a w k w a r d puddlers, or side-stepping&#13;
swiftly to t h e mixers to bring back a&#13;
d e t a c h m e n t of skulkers at the rifle's&#13;
muzzle. And by nightfall the thing&#13;
was done, with t h e loss reduced to a&#13;
minimum and t h e makeshift laborers&#13;
dropping out in squads and groups,&#13;
some laughing, some swearing, and all&#13;
too weary a n d toil-worn to be dangerous.&#13;
"Give us a Job if we come back&#13;
tomorrow, Mr. Brouillard?" called out&#13;
the king of t h e gamblers In passing;&#13;
and t h e cry was taken up by others In&#13;
grim jest.&#13;
" T h u s endeth t h e first lesson," said&#13;
Qrislow, when t h e engineering corps&#13;
was reassembling at the h e a d q u a r t e r s&#13;
p r e p a r a t o r y to a descent upon t h e supper&#13;
table. But Brouillard w a s dumb&#13;
and haggard, and when h e had hung&#13;
his rifle a n d cartridge belt on their&#13;
pegs behind h i s desk, h e went out,&#13;
leaving unbroken t h e silence which&#13;
had greeted h i s entrance.&#13;
" T h e boss is taking it pretty hard,"&#13;
said young Griffith to no o n e in particular,&#13;
and it w a s Leshington who&#13;
took h i m up savagely and invited him&#13;
to hold h i s tongue.&#13;
" T h e least said is t h e soonest&#13;
mended—at a funeral," w a s t h e form&#13;
the first assistant's rebuke took. "You&#13;
take my advice and don't mess or&#13;
meddle with t h e chief until h e ' s had&#13;
time to work this thing o u t of hla system."&#13;
T h e shouts of t h e mob w e r e ringing&#13;
in Brouillard's ears when h e strode dejectedly&#13;
into t h e deserted maproom.&#13;
and t h e cries were rising with a n e w&#13;
note a n d in fresher frenzies a little&#13;
later w h e n Grislow came in. T h e hyd&#13;
r o g r a p h e r ' s blue eyes w e r e hard a n d&#13;
his voice h a d a t a n g of b i t t e r n e s s in&#13;
it w h e n h e said: "Well, you've done i t&#13;
T h r e e m e n have Just come In with a&#13;
double handful of nuggets, and Mirapolls&#13;
m a k e s i t s bow t o t h e world a t&#13;
large a s t h e newest a n d richest o f&#13;
t h e gold camps."&#13;
Brouillard h a d been humped over&#13;
his desk, and h e sprang up with a c r y&#13;
like t h a t of a wounded animal.&#13;
"It c a n ' t b e ; Grizty, I tell you IT&#13;
can't b e ! Steve Massingale planted&#13;
t h a t gold t h a t I washed out—played&#13;
m e for a fool to g e t me to work for&#13;
t h e railroad. I didn't know it until—&#13;
until—"&#13;
"Until Amy Massingale told you&#13;
about i t this afternoon," cut in t h e&#13;
m a p m a k e r shrewdly. " T h a t ' s all right.&#13;
The b a r Steve took you t o was barren&#13;
enough; they tell me t h a t every cubic&#13;
foot of it h a s been washed over in&#13;
d i s h p a n s a n d skillets in t h e past few&#13;
hours. But you know t h e big bend opposite&#13;
t h e Quadjenal hills; t h e river&#13;
h a s built t h a t bend out of i t s own&#13;
washings, a n d t h e bulletin over a t t h e&#13;
Spotlight office says t h a t t h e entire&#13;
peninsula is o n e huge bank of goldb&#13;
e a r i n g grave!."&#13;
At t h e word Brouillard staggered a s&#13;
from t h e impact of a b u l l e t Then h e&#13;
crossed t h e room slowly, groping h i s&#13;
way t o w a r d t h e peg w h e r e t h e coat h e&#13;
ted wore m the afternoon was hang*&#13;
taw. Orlstew saw him take&#13;
out or the pocket of t h e coat, and the&#13;
next mom*'!:: the door opened and&#13;
closed and the hyd rugra;;her was lef!&#13;
alone&#13;
Having Deen planned before there&#13;
was a city to be considered, t h e government&#13;
buildings inclosed three sides&#13;
uf a small opeu square, facing toward&#13;
the great dam. !n the middle of chi;&#13;
open space Brouillard stopped. Kicked&#13;
up a lrale mound or earth, and stood&#13;
the two paper cylinders un n. tide by&#13;
side.&#13;
'J'h«- tempered glow fmrn (he city&#13;
electrics made a t o n twilight m the&#13;
little plaza; lie could see t h e wrapper&#13;
color's of t h e two signal tires quite&#13;
well. A sharp attack of indecision hart&#13;
prompted him to place both ol them on&#13;
the tiny mound With the match in&#13;
his hand, he was still undecided Amy&#13;
Mj.ssingale's words came back to him&#13;
as he hesitated. "Light the blue one&#13;
when you a r e ready to send me my&#13;
m e s s a g e of cheer . . ." On the lips&#13;
of a n o t h e r woman the words might&#13;
have taken a materialistic m e a n i n g ;&#13;
the miraculous gold discovery would&#13;
bring t h e railroad, and the railroad&#13;
would rescue the Massingale mine and&#13;
restore the Massingale fortunes.&#13;
He looked up at t h e dark bulk of&#13;
Chigringo, unrelieved even by the tiny&#13;
fleck of lamplight which he had so&#13;
often called his guiding star. "Take&#13;
me out of your mind and heart and say&#13;
which you will have, little girl," he&#13;
whispered, sending t h e words out into&#13;
the void of night. But only the din&#13;
and clamor of a city gone wild with&#13;
enthusiasm came to a n s w e r him. Somewhere&#13;
on t h e avenue a band was playing;&#13;
men were shouting themselves&#13;
hoarse In excitement, and above t h e&#13;
shouting c a m e t h e staccato crackling&#13;
of pistols and guns fired in air.&#13;
He struck t h e match and stooped&#13;
over t h e blue cylinder. "This is your&#13;
message of cheer, whether you take it&#13;
t h a t way or not," he went on, whispering&#13;
again to t h e silent void. But when&#13;
the fuse of t h e blue light w a s fairly&#13;
fizzing he suddenly pinched it out and&#13;
held t h e match to the other.&#13;
Up on t h e high bench of t h e great&#13;
mountain Amy Massingale w a s pacing&#13;
to and fro on the puncheon-floored&#13;
porch of t h e home cabin. T h e girl's&#13;
gaze never wandered far from a dark&#13;
area in t h e western edge of t h e town—&#13;
the semicircle cut into t h e dotting&#13;
lights and m a r k i n g t h e site of t h e gove&#13;
r n m e n t reservation. It w a s when a&#13;
tiny stream of sparks shot up in t h e&#13;
center of t h e dark area that s h e&#13;
stopped and held her breath. Then,&#13;
when a blinding flare followed to prick&#13;
out t h e headquarters, t h e commissary&#13;
and t h e mess house, s h e sank in a de&#13;
spairing little heap on t h e floor, with&#13;
her face hidden in her h a n d s and t h e&#13;
quick sobs Bhaking h e r like an ague&#13;
chill. It was Brouillard's signal, but&#13;
it was not t h e signal of peace; it w a s&#13;
the blood-red of revolution a n d strife&#13;
and turmoil.&#13;
CHAPTER XIV&#13;
The Feast of Hurrahs&#13;
HE sir&#13;
nnnnq&#13;
U i t w d J&#13;
And Likes the Laws in Western&#13;
Canada.&#13;
There&#13;
War T&#13;
Call&#13;
Is&#13;
ax&#13;
ed&#13;
No&#13;
So-&#13;
"I lived near L e e , Illinois, for 4*;&#13;
years. I came to S a s k a t c h e w a n m the&#13;
spring of iy 12 a n d bought land near&#13;
Bnercrest. I have farmed this land,&#13;
1G3U acres, ever since. I have had&#13;
grand crops, in lfcM I h a d 100 acres&#13;
of wheat that yielded 40 bushels to&#13;
the acre. I sold this w h e a t a t $1.5 J&#13;
per bushel. I like t h e country and my&#13;
neighbours. M y&#13;
taxes on each quarter&#13;
section (161.)&#13;
a c r e s ) a r e about&#13;
¢32 a year. Thi*&#13;
covers municipal t a x , school t a x , hail&#13;
insurance tax—everything. There is&#13;
no w a r t a x so-called. I like t h e laws&#13;
in force here. T h e r e is no compulsion&#13;
to me in a n y way. I a m just a s Independent&#13;
here a s I w a s in Illinois, a n d&#13;
I feel that my family a n d I a r e just a s&#13;
well protected by t h e laws of the province&#13;
as we were in our old home In Illinois.&#13;
W h a t I earn h e r e Is my own.&#13;
I have seven children a n d they t a k e&#13;
their places a t school, In sports a n d&#13;
at all public g a t h e r i n g s t h e s a m e aa&#13;
the Canadian born.&#13;
(Sgd.) M. P. T y s d a l .&#13;
" F e b r u a r y 9th, 1916."&#13;
We reprint t h e following article*&#13;
complete, without comment, from t h e&#13;
latest number of t h e " S a s k a t c h e w a n&#13;
Farmer," a n agricultural paper published&#13;
at Moose J a w , S a s k a t c h e w a n :&#13;
" T h e a t t e m p t to&#13;
c h e c k emigration&#13;
from t h e United&#13;
S t a t e s to our prairie&#13;
provinces by&#13;
publishing alarming&#13;
Former Iowa&#13;
Farmers Are&#13;
Dcing Well&#13;
in Canada.&#13;
Mirapolis t h e marvelous w a s a hustling,&#13;
roaring, wide-open mining camp&#13;
of t w e n t y thousand souls by t h e time&#13;
the railroad, straining every nerve and&#13;
crowding three shifts into t h e 24-hour&#13;
day. pushed its rails along t h e foothill&#13;
bench of Chigringo, tossed up Its temporary&#13;
station buildings, and signaled&#13;
Its opening for business by running a&#13;
m a m m o t h excursion from t h e cities of&#13;
the immediate East.&#13;
Busy as it was, t h e city took time&#13;
to celebrate fittingly t h e event which&#13;
linked it to t h e outer world. By proclamation&#13;
Mayor Cortwrlght declared a&#13;
holiday. T h e r e were lavish displays&#13;
of bunting, a n impromptu t r a d e s parade,&#13;
speeches from t h e plaza bandstand,&#13;
free lunches a n d free liquor—&#13;
a day of boisterous, hilarious triumph-&#13;
Ings. with. Incidentally, much buying&#13;
and selling a n d many t r a n s f e r s of t h e&#13;
precious "front foot" o r choice "corner."&#13;
Yielding to pressure, which w a s no&#13;
less i m p e r a t i v e from below than from&#13;
above, Brouillard h a d consented to&#13;
suspend work on the g r e a t dam during&#13;
t h e day of triumphs, a n d t h e reclamation&#13;
service force, smaller now t h a n&#13;
a t a n y time since t h e beginning of t h e&#13;
undertaking, w e n t t o swell t h e crowds&#13;
on Chigringo avenue. Mr. Cortwrlght&#13;
had been inexorable, a n d Brouillard&#13;
found himself discomfortlngly emphasised&#13;
a s c h a i r m a n of t h e civic reception&#13;
committee.&#13;
It w a s after his part of t h e speechmaking,&#13;
a n d while t h e plaza crowds&#13;
were still bellowing t h e i r approval of&#13;
the modest forensic effort, t h a t h a&#13;
went t o sit beside Miss Cortwrlght in&#13;
t h e t e m p o r a r y grand stand, mopping&#13;
his face a n d otherwise exhibiting t h e&#13;
after effects of t h e unfamiliar s t r a i n .&#13;
ing s t a t e m e n t s about t h e enormous&#13;
war taxes t h a t a r e being paid here—&#13;
$500 on a q u a r t e r section yearly—&#13;
about forcing young m e n to enlist for&#13;
the war; about t h e cold, no crops and&#13;
any old story that by i t s e x t r a v a g a n t&#13;
boldness might influence men and&#13;
women from v e n t u r i n g n o r t h to Canada,&#13;
is really in t h e list of curios t o&#13;
our people. Knowing t h e country, we&#13;
can hardly take it seriously. Our gove&#13;
r n m e n t s , however, dominion and provincial,&#13;
a r e taking steps t o expose t h e&#13;
false s t a t e m e n t s t h a t a r e being made,&#13;
and thereby keep t h e channel open for&#13;
continuing t h e s t r e a m of settlers t h a t&#13;
has been flowing to us for t h e past&#13;
decade,—Advertisement.&#13;
A Hero's Nightmare.&#13;
Wounded Soldier (to m a n in next&#13;
cot)—Charlie, I Just 'ad a most ' o r n -&#13;
ble dream. I d r e a m t 1 eard t h e whistle&#13;
to charge, and I w a s a "conscientious&#13;
objector!"&#13;
STOP EATING MEAT IF&#13;
KIDNEYS OR BACK HURT&#13;
Take a Glass of Salts to Clean Kidneys&#13;
If Bladder Bothers You—&#13;
Meat Forms Uric Acid.&#13;
(TO Bt»-CONTlNtTRDj&#13;
Victor Brouillard knows that&#13;
h» cannot w i n Amy Massing*!*&#13;
until he pulls from his feat the&#13;
mire of -his flranclai •Hekery.&#13;
How w i l l he extricate himself&#13;
w!th a clean conscience and a&#13;
pocketful of mot.ey—or can ha&#13;
d« It?&#13;
Eating meat regularly eventually&#13;
produces kidney trouble in some form&#13;
or other, says a well-known authority,&#13;
because the uric acid in meat excites&#13;
the kidneys, they become overworked;&#13;
get sluggish; clog up and cause ail&#13;
sorts of distress, particularly backache&#13;
and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic&#13;
twinges, severe headaches, acid&#13;
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,&#13;
sleeplessness, bladder and uninary irritation.&#13;
The moment your back hurts or kidneys&#13;
aren't acting right, or if bladder&#13;
bothers you, get about four ounces of&#13;
Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;&#13;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of&#13;
water before breakfast for a few days&#13;
and your kidneys will then act fine.&#13;
This famous salts is made from the&#13;
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined&#13;
with llthia, and has been used&#13;
for generations to fluch clogged kid*&#13;
neys and stimulate them to normal&#13;
activity; also to neutralJze the acids in&#13;
the urine so it no longer irritates, thus&#13;
ending bladder disorders.&#13;
Jad Salts cannot Injure anyone:&#13;
makes a delightful effervescent litalawater&#13;
drink which millions of men and&#13;
I women take now and then to keep the&#13;
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus&#13;
avoiding serious kidney disease.—Adv.&#13;
Sustaining His Credit.&#13;
Knicker—Does S u b b u b s pay h i s&#13;
d e b t s ?&#13;
liocker—Yes, h e r e t u r n s t h e snow&#13;
shovel in spring and borrows t h e lawn&#13;
mower.&#13;
Tills Will latere** Mother*.&#13;
Mother Qr»y'» Sweet Powder* for Chtldree&#13;
for FereriahoeM. Beadache. Bad Stomach,&#13;
Teething Disorder*, mo-** aad regulate the&#13;
bowels and dftfttroy worsts. Ther break np&#13;
Colds in Sff htmra. They are eo pleaaaat to take&#13;
children like them. Used by Mothers far «&#13;
rears. All Drngjcteta, sfe. «aa»pie FUSB. A4-&#13;
dxasfttXotlMrGray Oa^ I*Boy, V. T.&#13;
The prtece of Wale* mas&#13;
ated mtc the) craft of lUaotttT&#13;
tatt*-&#13;
• W V ;&#13;
. 1-,&#13;
J*»&#13;
Pw-r-.^&#13;
• • * /&#13;
X%$$'&#13;
1 •j'-.s-'-'Vjj!&#13;
i . , ^ • -.&#13;
*4t&#13;
W^&#13;
',• if.&#13;
r-:y -a&#13;
•-" *V'.&gt;-'rtf-.¾ * &gt; *&#13;
^•m'r\-l\t-\i&lt;i• \•:m%&gt;&amp;k&#13;
•&gt;QfcM&amp;&#13;
? ' * • : -&#13;
iS^ " H&#13;
:£«SA5&amp; i t A ' - . .&#13;
-1¾¾. a,&gt;. •&#13;
*m "^yffjgy-.M'J'W" »,',' . l &lt; M j y &gt; m » i &gt; ' i ^ \&lt;f« •»»«)* 'py-*?, "**»*&lt;Hli|*HMP»»M ;»'»»'.*? &lt;•&#13;
•? &lt;&#13;
M&#13;
$&#13;
, • &gt; • ; .&#13;
BM.&#13;
is .&#13;
iSfr-'f&#13;
-*&#13;
ih&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I&#13;
|&#13;
!&#13;
v • i'* **&#13;
They Mean Business.&#13;
\l. W N o r t o n J r . called u Jarj^e&#13;
and enthubih-btic m e e t m ^ of milk&#13;
produci-rui t o o r d e r hi The c o u r t&#13;
house, A p r i l lbi, p. IU. for t h e p u r -&#13;
pose of f o r m i n g a co aryaui/action,&#13;
A r e p o r t by M r . N o r t o n on p r t 6 -&#13;
e n t price for feed a n d milk, d i d&#13;
oo! i^ive t h e far mens a n y aemia&#13;
n n u . d b iu t h e way of d i v i d e n d s - - -&#13;
iu fact we fcre ^ e t t i u g n o m o r e t o -&#13;
dav tliHii we d i d five o r «ix y e a r s&#13;
a^o. w h i l e i w r r y t h i o g else b u t&#13;
milk s e e m s ti&gt; be s o a r i n g . We&#13;
ar'' nor even allowed t o figure on&#13;
fa a: re. p r i c e s a s we d o n o t &lt;^et&#13;
b u t a few d a y s in a d v a n c e .&#13;
Tin- whole m e e t i n g was in a&#13;
s'ate of rebellion u^aiust such u n -&#13;
fair b u s i n e s s m e t h o d s , a::d rote ae&#13;
a unit w h e n asked if they were iu&#13;
frivor of o r g a n i s a t i o n . K ( \ U e t d&#13;
And Mow This&#13;
Ringing Message&#13;
*&#13;
* Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
?i t h i s m o v e m e n t for c v ^ a n i / a t i o n&#13;
j ^ \ t o CMntrm m i l k p r i c e - .&#13;
"*" ! t h e m a n t o tVar va&#13;
.IK1. :&gt;V'ked.&#13;
u - | ) i i i 1&#13;
The Teq):,- H.Mwa:&#13;
'IT cash.&#13;
1 : - '" I ' ' O&#13;
* j a, _et t h " b e n c h t if&#13;
" f a Jiow d.id tin- \v,aa&lt;.&#13;
I) •: H •:' 11 i n a \ o w&#13;
M r&#13;
1 1 .&#13;
Re&lt;-g"&#13;
who&#13;
V \}0(- 11 P. _r&#13;
o; h e r&#13;
j o u :i. * ) &gt; - • • a&#13;
A Cash Drscount of 10 per cent&#13;
n\ s;;i|ii»i]"'! n a i&#13;
• o&#13;
Wll&#13;
I Oil:&#13;
1)-.: &lt;la&lt;iuctcal i'r&lt; 'i'-1 ~l-]'&#13;
nf -dl kinds, C - : T&#13;
• r o o d s i - \ ; r | i l ' J&#13;
:dt, L Meal U(&#13;
Food.&#13;
not*&#13;
Wo'expect r\ cry otii&#13;
n the next d(&gt; 'lavs.&#13;
•tt ciccnmv :-nd&#13;
1&#13;
* : jt-M.'iu' . s i a m i h c ; ! rm&#13;
S [ .-:; &lt; av ' |i r ' r a . ' . r, *a&#13;
+ i (• •.rJ' • - faiav a r : wit h&#13;
«fi • K! i i \) f r e . VV i': i " i1 Wit*, fl v .&#13;
T i l e f o | iowiliLT offjCH! ,S 'A&#13;
a J i h e&#13;
.'. I a&#13;
O H&#13;
. „ i *&#13;
T.-&gt; ; *&#13;
K K ' n t&#13;
h e , :i'-r)ib^r ^&#13;
i ' • '&#13;
:: +-"-i r 1 \'&#13;
at J n&#13;
w e ^ t ' ) \&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
• u-(\ t i j n e p a r e HIL fo;t i d - - t o l i e&#13;
r-U'lllP;] l i v &gt;V.&lt;&lt; n e x ' m e e t&#13;
I . I, p&#13;
)&#13;
J O : ! oy v,&#13;
m e m b e r s :&#13;
'rehidenr. \V . \', Hiei!''. r is&#13;
\ d r e P r e s i d e n t , VV. J . W i r y&#13;
S^e\' a n d Trefis . I I H V B o r d e n&#13;
I C x e c U t i v - &lt; 0 ! ! i , H ( '. K ^ ' l . S .&#13;
. V! u n s e ; : H W. N M I I O D , a r&#13;
t&#13;
The Pure Bred Percheon Stallion&#13;
Caster Readiness&#13;
For Men&#13;
PancerV; c l o t h i n g r e p r e s e n t s truthfully w h a t ? m e n of&#13;
P i n c k n e y believe -prosperity, a l e r t n e s s a n d sound e c o n o m y .&#13;
V o v a r e p u t t i n g u p a good frani i a n d y o u k n o w u - -&#13;
w h e n y o u a r e a t t i r e d in Dancer'ti c l o t h i n g . Y o u c a n ' t La c a w a y&#13;
from t h e s t u b b o r n fact t h a t you feel m o r e confident wheo. you&#13;
are dressed in clothing thai \ o i t k n o w t o t)e r i ^ h t . v~!&#13;
You icel gotjd in a D a i r&#13;
eer's Mil i.. Y o u a • • ! : i L •&gt;&#13;
'ollm'e^ when t h e label shows&#13;
J'hc rrai-'ia is t h a t *or&#13;
yt'.ir^ we h a w : Y . M selling&#13;
the finest r e a d \ ' - r o - w e a r stiits&#13;
a n d o\'ereoais we could find&#13;
•&#13;
W e h a v e k e p t a b r c s t of t h e&#13;
times in style*. W e h a v e&#13;
r e p r e s e n t e d q u a l i t y fairly.&#13;
W e h a v e done o u r level best&#13;
' o see t h a t no m a n ever left&#13;
our store with a D a n c e r - n i t&#13;
t h a t he would ever lie disSAt&#13;
isfied with.&#13;
er a n a niui-.e i n v i n : r * ! o n l a. n&#13;
^ p. ^] t l W t'.'ie.lur 1 »1 f ! l f l l l l l h h) HI'&#13;
: ket.s of t in* si at*-.&#13;
Xo. S17(w. Weiirht ll&gt;00&#13;
w&#13;
Will m a k e t h e &gt;ea.vjn ol&#13;
i q i 6 a t S i 5 to insure a m a r e&#13;
with foal M a r e s not. r e t u r n -&#13;
ed regular t o t h e horse will&#13;
be held for s-crvice fee. All&#13;
care will b e t a k e n t o p r e v e n t&#13;
a c c i d e n t s , b u t will n o t b e responsible&#13;
should a n y h a p p e n .&#13;
P a r t i e s disposing of m a r e s&#13;
before condition is k n o w n will&#13;
be held for s e n d e e fee. Service&#13;
fee d u e M a r c h i s t , 1017.&#13;
E d m o n t o n , is a beautiful black with t h e best of feet a n d legs&#13;
a n d a fine disposition. F a r m e r s will d o well to see this horse&#13;
before breeding.&#13;
THE ACHES OF HOUSE CLEANIN&#13;
j The pain and eoreneae caused by&#13;
1 bruises, over-exertion and a-training&#13;
{during hon&amp;o cleaning time a r e&#13;
I soothed away by Sloan's JUniruent,&#13;
j No need to suffer this agony. Just&#13;
apply Sloan's Liniment to the sore&#13;
spots, rub only a little. In a short&#13;
time t h e pain leaves, you rest comfortably&#13;
and &amp;nJoy a refreshing sleep.&#13;
One gTatetul nser writes: "Sloan*&#13;
Liniment 1B worth its weight in gold,&#13;
Keep a bottle on hand, use it agalnst&#13;
all SoreneBB, Neuralgia and&#13;
Bruises. Kill* y&gt;ain. 25c. at your&#13;
Druggist&#13;
r 1 1 ' K O k M !&#13;
A r e p u t a t i o n fur reliability&#13;
1 hai 1 an he acquired f y&#13;
amy organization onlv by&#13;
y e a r s of 'aithfull service h a s&#13;
been o u r r e w a r d .&#13;
GEO. ROCHE. Pinckney. Mich.&#13;
I&#13;
^ / ^&#13;
•%&lt;&amp;&gt;*.:&#13;
Salvage Wheat&#13;
For Cattle, Hogs, Sheep&#13;
and Poultry&#13;
S a l v a g e W h e a t is r e r c o m m e n d e d b y Agriculture College*&#13;
a n d successful! feeders a s . b e i n g e q u a l t o t h e u n d a m -&#13;
a g t d b e r r y t h e feeding v a l u e is u n i m p a i r e d R e d u c e ? v o u r&#13;
feed expense. E x p e c t C a r S o o n a n d Will S e l l&#13;
a t $ 2 3 a ton. Bring b a g s a n d g e t a load.&#13;
We al-H expect a car of Bran and Middlings soon&#13;
Will make price on Bran $2*&gt;, Flour Middlings $30&#13;
per ton,&#13;
C . M . Hudson.&#13;
Pinckney Flour Mills.&#13;
England's Smallest House.&#13;
j The smallest bouse hi Grcflt Britain&#13;
J Is lu the (juiiint old f»wn ut &lt;.'onway,&#13;
j north Walos. This bouse is 300 years&#13;
old a n d '-uusists nf t w o rooms, one&#13;
I above the other, each of which is just&#13;
1 two yards square. The upstairs room,&#13;
whieh is reached hy mounthifc a tiny&#13;
1 ladder, has In It a four foot bed and a&#13;
i w&amp;shstand, leaving but little raom f&lt;&gt;r&#13;
1 the occupant to more nlx&gt;ut.&#13;
The Earliest Map».&#13;
i It was Muaontr the Kgyptians that the&#13;
\ first maps appeared. They were wooden&#13;
tablets on whieh laud arid sea,&#13;
roads and rirers, were fairly accurately&#13;
outlined. The evidence of such maps&#13;
U not. only furnished 1n the old Egyptian&#13;
papyrus rolls, but some of the&#13;
actual maps have been discovered. It&#13;
WAR once contended that the Greeks&#13;
were the inventors of the a r t of cartography,&#13;
but it has been proved that&#13;
the Kjfyptians «nd Babylonians antedated&#13;
them in this respect some 2,000&#13;
! years or more. r&#13;
Ptchmann'i Prank.&#13;
\f. de PacbnuHUi"* Ueylvwrd eceen-&#13;
1 trieitie« a r e notorious, a u d he is t h e&#13;
| hero of pcores of amu.sinjr sayings a n d&#13;
} *torieR. One of t h e l a t t e r tellf IMDW in&#13;
New York he once tvent a n d h a d a&#13;
piano lesson from a lady w h o advertised&#13;
first class tuition a t 2 ' cents ft&#13;
lesson— A rgona nt.&#13;
Prosperity, Alertness,&#13;
Sound Economy&#13;
P i n c k n e y man of action in business, in t h e proie*sions&#13;
,md t r a d e s , wear D a n c e r ' s clothes because because it b e s p e a k s&#13;
their p r o s p e r i t y . T h e i r clothes look fresh a n d stylish. T h e y&#13;
are alert m e n T h e y d e m a n d alert looking g a r m e n t s . T h e y&#13;
d e m a n d such c l o t h e s a s a r e p r o d u c e d b y such j^reat clothing&#13;
m a k e r s a s M i c h a e l S t e r n s &amp; C o . , E d e r h e i m e r Stein a n d limilar&#13;
c o n c e r n s - all b a c k e d by D a n c e r s . O u r r o o m y d i p l a y racks&#13;
are p a c k e d with n e w spring s u i t s . P r o b a b l y you h a v e a l r e a d y&#13;
fairly definite ideas of t h e snit y o u w a n t . I t costs you n o t h i n g&#13;
to look ours over. S p r i n g S u i t s , $ 1 0 t o $ 2 5&#13;
We will p a y a n y one fare b o t h way? with a p u r c h a s e of&#13;
$15 bui( o r b e t t e r .&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; CO. Stockbndge.&#13;
O'&#13;
Every Child to Know&#13;
How Flour is Made&#13;
K r a n d R a p i d s , M a r c h 1 1 t h : — T h a t&#13;
S t a t e m e n t o f t h e : O w n e r s h i p&#13;
M a n a g e m e n t , C i r c u l a t l c m . E t c ,&#13;
'f 1'incKnw DispH'k,, published&#13;
- je&#13;
I&#13;
.:- ®&#13;
V ' ^&#13;
4r r^v.;-^&#13;
'i &gt;'-*^Kia&#13;
LWtt^iii^^immal i^*&#13;
'•^*&#13;
j&#13;
""*i&#13;
&lt;- '&amp;&#13;
Tf&#13;
. V&#13;
V K^B^&gt;-'&#13;
^ K -&#13;
J&#13;
i&#13;
e v e r y school c h i l d in M i c h i g a n i ' A I ? ^ m &gt; " ^ *&#13;
m a y w a i v e p r a c t i c a l i n s t r u c t i o n ; Kiitor, r. j . sibley, l&gt;in&lt;knev, Mich&#13;
in floor m i l l i n y is t h e p l a n of t h t v M«n''ninj? Kdiior, ( . j . sibiev, Pinelc.&#13;
M i c h i g a n M i l l e r s Aggociation a c - ! n e -v '&gt; r i c h -&#13;
enrdinte to S t e p h e n J . M o D o n a l d ' £ , , b , i t , , e r - r- J - s 'hiey, Pincknev, ^ ^&#13;
or G r a n d R a p i d , w h o baa t h e ! J ™ " ^ ^ T""™ ***&amp;*&#13;
work 10 c h a r g e ; 1^ ?\ " ^ ^ ] ]*r ^ ¾&#13;
*»"' i ° r n , °™ o f 'O1*1 *wc&gt;nnt of bond*, , D ( ^ K £ $&#13;
U e m o n g t r a t t o n c h a r t s a u d e a - , ge«, .»r other Mivuritien: n \y v*v*!w''*'&#13;
peciallp p r e p a r e d t r e a t i ne on mill - j N"**!!, Mich. r j , S I R L E Y .&#13;
i n g processpR will b e f u r n i s h e r l ! S * " r n , n " ^ s «h ^ribed before me this&#13;
1st day ,,f April, ]«»]«.&#13;
Wife— Tom. you don't treat ro« tf&gt;&#13;
j \cjp half as often HS yon used to. H u b&#13;
j — AfsrrMtsr«. mr &lt;le«r. njftke* neotaatry&#13;
the practice u' fritrld rM-onomv.—Bo«»on&#13;
TrMnsefipt.&#13;
Make (he ni&lt;wt of time; It jflMea&#13;
t-wnr so tn*t. But mofhnd teacher yon J&#13;
to jrain lime.—(Jootlie&#13;
True to Hit.&#13;
I'm nlwav« (be ifoat,"&#13;
That n l»e*^use yoiire alwaja hntfree&#13;
to all p u b l i c a n d p a r o c h i a j&#13;
•choolg. w h e t h e r o r n o t d o m e s t i c !&#13;
•cieBca la t a n g h t .&#13;
T h e n a e d of t h w « i n B t r n c t i o n i |&#13;
i i a p p a r e n t from t h e l a r ^ e noml&gt;-&#13;
er of r e i j u e s t i for i n f o r r a a t i o a&#13;
received a a d t h a aiiort conraa f n r -&#13;
n i i h e d b y th«&gt; M i l l a r t J U i o c i a t i o n&#13;
ia t h e first of a a a r i e s of e d u c a t i o n -&#13;
al a c t i v i t i e s t o b e p r o m o t e d b y&#13;
t h i s o r g a n i z a t i o n .&#13;
• chW takes Dr. IT He* Laxative Ta*. * * — f 0 1 * • • * &gt; ? • T i y it | « a t &lt;m6+&#13;
am wtlbpat thtakUii or 'xawlidaa,- . 7°* ^^ u ft*P»flr ••rpriaed.&#13;
W. II. (HOF(H)T,&#13;
Xotar? !»nblir.f I,iv. Co. xwk.&#13;
[ \\y ('omm'mkm ^tpirp- Aj&gt;rii 7, 10181&#13;
tcM+mm Curta* a r Mahay Rafundad.&#13;
Thto m r a A t M koe* wiia a r a r y&#13;
•ox Qf or. Hotaot'c. Bciama OUit- m € M ^ ^ ^ ^° *W«w««« whatha*&#13;
U* a h&amp;y, caiM or a«ed. No mattar&#13;
tow long; flUadaat tka eaa# t*e m r .&#13;
aAtan h^fl* Mod. Cat &lt;mt thteatrfo&#13;
S.^lZf*!™1 *4 ^' t«* a bor of Dr.&#13;
Hbtaoft'a Ecaama OlntmeaK, « M H&#13;
tm «5«te4 aaA If j&lt;m are not faHj-&#13;
" '% tae dnniat or maker wi»&#13;
• j , i&#13;
&lt;L 1L.</text>
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                <text>April 05, 1916 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>C.J. Sibley</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>P i n c k n e y , L i v i n g s t o n C o u n t y , M i c h i g a n , W e d n e s d a y , A p r i l 1 2 t h 1 9 1 6 N o . 1 3&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
ELECTION&#13;
S h a l l W e B o n d P u t n a m T o w n -&#13;
s h i p f o r t h e S u m of $ 3 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
f o r S t a t e . R e w a r d R o a d s ?&#13;
D e m a n d having been duly made&#13;
upon tke Township Board of t h e&#13;
Township o£ Patriam, County of&#13;
Livingston, S t a t e of Michigan, by&#13;
written application signed by t h e&#13;
required n u m b e r of freeholders of&#13;
•aid Township of P u t n a m and&#13;
dated March 25th, 1916, said written&#13;
d e m a n d r e q u i r i n g t h e said&#13;
T o w n s h i p Board to Bubmit to t h e&#13;
qualified electors of said Township&#13;
the question of bonding said&#13;
Township for t h e sum of Twenty&#13;
Thousand ($20,000.00) Dollars for&#13;
the purpose of building State reward&#13;
highways; Therefore, notice&#13;
ia hereby given, t h a t a epecial&#13;
Township Meeting will be held&#13;
Livingston Tidings&#13;
Becomes a Weekly&#13;
Howell, Mich., April oth.—&#13;
By the adoption of the city delivery&#13;
for Howellr _the Livingston&#13;
Tidings, which has for a long t i m e&#13;
given its readers t h e news while&#13;
it was news, t h r e e times a week&#13;
is forced to line up as a weekly.&#13;
Thin step is made imperative by&#13;
discriminating legislation at t h e&#13;
postoffice d e p a r t m e n t at W a s k -&#13;
ington. By virtae of the lawi&#13;
made to govern t h e mailing of&#13;
publications in postoflices, p u b -&#13;
lishers will be p e r m i t t e d to mail&#13;
weekly papers in city delivery&#13;
offices by thu payment of p o u n d&#13;
rates, b u t t h e paper which p a b -&#13;
liahea a twice a week or t h r e e&#13;
times a week paper is compelled&#13;
by the law to affix a one c e n t&#13;
s t a m p on every paper mailed in&#13;
the city for delivery. W i t h a t h r e e&#13;
times a week publication our readers&#13;
can see t h a t for every city&#13;
EXCHANGE&#13;
CLIPPINGS&#13;
I t e m s o f I n t e r e s t f r o m&#13;
N e i g h b o r i n g T o w n s&#13;
at the Town Hall in t h e village of&#13;
Pinckney within said T o w n s h i p - i s u b s c r i b e r it would cost us for&#13;
t h a t being the usual voting place postage alone II.5G per year, t h r e e&#13;
of said Township of P u t n a m , and parers per for 52 weeks amountat&#13;
the aforeeaid time and place to that sum, nor is that all. I n&#13;
there will be submitted to the&#13;
qualified Electors of said Township&#13;
of P u t n a m , to be determiued&#13;
by them, the question whether&#13;
t h e township of P u t n a m shall be&#13;
order to mail them to our large&#13;
list of readers, we would be obliged&#13;
to lick one cent postage s t a m p s&#13;
until we were black in the face.&#13;
As yet the date of publication,&#13;
—Livingston Tidings.&#13;
bonded for said amount and p u r - \ h h &lt; i n o t b e e n s e t &gt; bat the paper&#13;
pose, or whether it shall not be) w i l 1 fje doubled in si/.© and perbonded.&#13;
The said voting&gt;hall be , h t i P f i I a t t e r m a d e j a r g e r than that.&#13;
by ballott, and such ballott shall&#13;
contain the following:&#13;
Shall the T o w n s h i p be bended&#13;
for S2O,O0U0O? &lt;Yes)&#13;
Shall the T o w n s h i p be bonded&#13;
for $20,000.()0^ ( N o )&#13;
Dated at P u t n a m Township this&#13;
11th dav of April A. D. 1910.&#13;
\YM. T. D U N B A R ,&#13;
Township Clerk,&#13;
P u t n a m T o w n s h i p&#13;
$12,000 was voted to bond the&#13;
t o w n s h i p of H a m b u r g for new&#13;
state roads.&#13;
At t h e annual town meeting of&#13;
Scio township it was voted to pay&#13;
a bounty of 20c each on crows,&#13;
hawks and large owls, a n d it was&#13;
also voted to raise $50 for that&#13;
purpose.—Dexter Leader.&#13;
J s s t last year the village of&#13;
N o r t h Bramsh voted n o t to bond&#13;
for a system of water works and&#13;
last Wednesday m o r n i n g a fire&#13;
t h a t de stroyed $40,000 worth of&#13;
property visited that village. They&#13;
didn't believe in preparedness.—&#13;
S o u t h L y o n Herald.&#13;
I t ie believed that t h e new law&#13;
r e q u i r i n g avgreater degree of preparation&#13;
before certificates may&#13;
be granted to new teachers may&#13;
b r i n g a b o u t for a s h o r t time a&#13;
shortage of them. I t provides&#13;
that no person who has net taught&#13;
at least five mouths can receive a !&#13;
certificate without having had six j&#13;
weeks normal training-—Brief'&#13;
1 b u n . ,&#13;
Low Prices: W i t h u s is t h e r u l e , n o t t h e&#13;
e x c e p t i o n , a n d e v e r y d a y&#13;
p r o v e s t h e efficiency of t h e&#13;
p l a n w h i c h w e a d o p t e d w h e n&#13;
w e c o m m e n c e d b u s i n e s s , a n d&#13;
w h i c h is n o w s o well u n d e r -&#13;
s t o o d b y o u r p a t r o n s ,&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Teachers' Examination&#13;
Teachers' Examination will be&#13;
held at the Howell H i g h School&#13;
building, April 27.28th. B l u e&#13;
books will be used by third grade&#13;
applicants and pink books by&#13;
second and first grades E x a m i n -&#13;
ation will begin at &gt;:'i0.&#13;
H u g h G. Aldrich, Com. of Schools.&#13;
Registration Notice!&#13;
To the Electors of the Township&#13;
of P u t n a m :&#13;
Notice is hereby given to the&#13;
Stockbridge Party&#13;
Enjoy Auto Trip&#13;
Special Meetings&#13;
Special meetings will be held at&#13;
the Congregational and M. E.&#13;
Churches, b e g i o i a g t h i s week Saturday&#13;
n i ^ h t a f 7 o'clock. A Gospel&#13;
team of t h r e e froin t h e Agricultural&#13;
College Y, M**C. JL,' criil&#13;
be uere for Saturday a n d S u n d a y .&#13;
Evening meetings will be held iu&#13;
the Methodist church until Tuesday&#13;
and in the Congregational&#13;
from Wednesday until Eaetex&#13;
Bulletin&#13;
Ladies' Shoes- former _&#13;
prices $ 2 . 0 0 and $ 2 . 5 0 4 old styles" to §0 at $1.25&#13;
Mens Shoes "broken lots*&#13;
$ 3 and $ 3 . 5 0 values&#13;
to close at $ 2 . 2 5&#13;
36 only, Ladies' Shirt&#13;
Waists, the 1.50 kind-&#13;
"no exchange" 9 8 c&#13;
9 Bars Lenox Soap 35e&#13;
Table Talk Coffee 22c&#13;
8 lbs Oats 25c 30c Coffee 27c&#13;
Get our low prices on Flour-&#13;
Saturday, April 15th.&#13;
evening.&#13;
Traveling a distance of 1.560&#13;
qualified Electors of the T o w n - ' m i l e s , using nisety-two and one&#13;
ehip of P u t n a m , County of Liv-; q u a r t e r gallons of gasoliue and&#13;
ingston, Staff- of Michigan, t h a t , two cud a half gallons of oil and&#13;
a meeting of t h t Board of Regia- riding into St. P e t e r s b n r g on the&#13;
tration will be held at t h e Town&#13;
Fifty Boys Wanted&#13;
T h i s year we want at least fifty&#13;
boys in t h e 'Boys' Corn Club."&#13;
Will you be one of them ? We&#13;
are going to give twenty dollars&#13;
in cash prizes for the best yields&#13;
and the beet samples exhibited&#13;
R e m e m b e r the Fair Associations&#13;
4&#13;
same air pumped into their tires&#13;
Hall within said Township on at Stockbridge, Mich., was t h e ex-&#13;
Saturday, the 22nd day of A p r i l , perience of an auto party travel- \ give special prizes to boys who&#13;
1918, for the purpose of register- ing in a Ford, which reached t h e ' e x h i b i t c o m . Any boy under&#13;
ing t h e names of all such persons city yesterday. twenty years old ie eligible. See&#13;
who shall be possessed of the nee-1. The party consisted of F . [{. the. School Commissioner for furessary&#13;
qualification of electors and | Ellsworth and son and H a r r y and ther instructions. T h i s year is&#13;
who may apply for that purpose. George Leavey. D u r i n g the trip apt to be a banner corn year, bet-&#13;
A n d in accordance with Section which covered a period of fourteen \ ter &lt;**t in line. H. C. A L D R I C H ,&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Remnants )&#13;
4 of Article •) of the Constitution days, two full days were devoted&#13;
of the State of Michigan and A?t., to fishing an 1 h u n t i n g alligators&#13;
200 of the Public Aots of 1W9, in Florida waters;&#13;
the board of Registration of said All enjoyed the trip very m u d : ,&#13;
township will register ihe names and were very favorably impressed&#13;
of all women possessing tho qual- with St, P e t e r s b u r g as a regoit&#13;
ilicationq of male electors who citv Th&lt;&#13;
w a k e P E R S O N A L A P P L I C A - k h ; , j e n r o n t P&#13;
ure.&#13;
County School Cominissiener. In Going.Over Our S t o c k&#13;
rs&#13;
T I O N for such registration, prov&#13;
was no mishap ot any&#13;
•not even a punr-tvided&#13;
that all such applicants&#13;
must own property assessed for • ' taxes somewhere within thej Publication Day Charraed&#13;
county above warned, except that * 5J&#13;
any women otherwise qaalified After this week the P i a c k n e y&#13;
f o r p i d '&#13;
:he prir&#13;
ra iUa&#13;
.mi pv&gt;&#13;
is (IUH,&#13;
l !ii.- \T&gt; \ he .-t;asou&#13;
.Seed- ':Vi-\ 'lin u U o&#13;
lime of need. S-r.v&#13;
ami le'tuce, too,&#13;
printer what, "ere&#13;
build yourself an om »n&#13;
r e m e m b e : the printer&#13;
fed. Sow several rows&#13;
peaa and pay la«t yea:&#13;
please. Dig np the earth 'round&#13;
each strawberry vine and if you&#13;
&gt;• r' h&#13;
e e r ] ,&#13;
the&#13;
Go&#13;
and&#13;
be&#13;
WVs'nd pat "era.- ih:&#13;
w . !: remnants.&#13;
We have pi'.:. "h&lt; -••. i&#13;
w.iV beluw cost on !. hrm.&#13;
. x -,- -lion, these, are what&#13;
i h a v put a pr e&#13;
mufi&#13;
of&#13;
18 p a p e r&#13;
i-arl\&#13;
.:' -¾&#13;
who ownes prop rty within said Dispatch will be published T h u r s -&#13;
county jointly with her husband d instead of Wednesday, in I wAnt the P.nckney Dispatch drop&#13;
or other person, or who ownes , . . i T m * * . *•&#13;
p r o p e r t y within, said county on , r ( l e r t o ^ l v e u e m o r f l t l m ^ t o K ^ 1 « » a l m e ' P l K n l P O x n e Po t »^oes to,&#13;
contract and pays the, taxes there- m o r e u "w *- I t wiU alto fii^o us! put ui the hash and renoembor t h e&#13;
on shall be entitled to registration more time to set ads., that do not1 Pointer is short of cash. Fix o p&#13;
Said board of Registration will come in till Wedaesday m o r n m g . ! a hill or so of beaus anfl with ye&#13;
be in sesaioa on the day a a d place ' &gt; — _&#13;
aforesaid, from nine o'clock in the&#13;
foreaoon until five o'clock in the&#13;
afternoon, for t h e porpose aforesaid.&#13;
D*t*&amp; April l l t b . 1916.&#13;
W . J . D i i a b t t , C l s r k&#13;
of P s t s t w I c w n a k i p .&#13;
"v/ou will linn fiatterns - u i t a b k for k i t c h m s , living&#13;
room.-, bed room^. '..-tr*., &gt;omc K.IN'C border-:.&#13;
There afe not many. «J it will pay' you to call as soon&#13;
. - von read this ad, if ycu have i room nr two t h a t doit!.f£&#13;
require the bettei; paper. ' ^&#13;
«&#13;
These are a!! T9f5 p a t t e r n and nor a bunch of j u n k .&#13;
editor divide your means. Of&#13;
Through t h e gnerosity of p u b l i c ' watermelons you'll need a p a t c h -&#13;
Spirited citizens of O r s s s Luke, 4 t h e editor's pants need one t o !&#13;
sTchiooJl b- on. drin'g ^h as fbl,te!je0llnli !5 boug^hJti mmm, t c b . Pay- opl Jy our subsj criptio,nn&#13;
and will be given to the school, to j then plant your corn and yon H&#13;
be used as a play g r o u n d a n d a ' raise a big crop a s s u r e as y o u r ' r e [&#13;
p i W f c p a r k . bom,—BtUTiUa E a t t T p r ^ o .&#13;
S&#13;
V-&#13;
.•:-&gt;,•, • * -^jj&#13;
*v*&#13;
i - v . 4 , * ' -^ 14.' •**-••'-C/-V • ~ l &gt; ; . !&#13;
J^-tf vet? a n , ' *-* ^..-^- • •••J.-A&#13;
T M W M K M I I X W » &gt; » . » qssK^ssmm mmm *ew&#13;
PINCKNF.Y DISPATCH&#13;
i-&#13;
K.-&#13;
N£&#13;
¥#'•&#13;
&amp;g •&#13;
i&amp; 2«^%&#13;
:¾&#13;
\ * t •&#13;
PROVE* SWAMP-ROOT&#13;
AIDS WEAK KIDNEYS&#13;
PIG IS KNOWN AS A "MORTGAGE-LIFTER"&#13;
The symptoms oi kidney and bladder&#13;
flkpnbles are oiten very distressing and&#13;
Wave t h e sybteni in a -fun dov, n condition.&#13;
The kidnev* seem to Biiff -r moat, &amp;» ai&#13;
moat every victim cuatpiairia oi lame back&#13;
and urinary trouble* wmeh should not be&#13;
•effected, a* thew; darker signals otteo&#13;
h a d to dangerous kidney trouble*.&#13;
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root which SOOD&#13;
l f f l l and btrcngthens tLe kidneys ia a&#13;
splendid kidney, liver and bladder remedy,&#13;
and, be: rig an herbal compound has a gen&#13;
tie heahng tftVct on the kidneys, which is&#13;
almost iiniurdmtely noticed ID mosi cases&#13;
»V thote who use it.&#13;
A trial will convince anyone who may&#13;
be in need of it Better get a bottle horn&#13;
yOBT neart-M drug store, t n d i i a r t treataoent&#13;
at unce.&#13;
However, if you wish fir?* to teat this Er«t preparation cend ten cents to Dr&#13;
Imer &amp;. Co., Hmghamton, N. Y., fur a&#13;
•ample bottle When writing b* sure uud&#13;
mention thin paper.—Adv.&#13;
A p h y s i c i a n should n e v e r a t t e n d ih&gt;&#13;
f u n e r a l of a n e x - p a t i e n t ; it l o o k s t o o&#13;
m u c h like a tailor c a r r y i n g i n s work&#13;
home.&#13;
A Good-Sized Profitable Litter.&#13;
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.&#13;
Pierce's Pleasant lMletx. They regulate&#13;
liver, bowelfc and stomach. Adv.&#13;
The Usual Way.&#13;
Jack—How did you come to get In&#13;
lerested i:i" that novel you a r e read&#13;
tug?&#13;
Marie I liked t h e WHY it ended&#13;
TENDER SKINNED BABIES&#13;
With Rashea and Irritations Fine&#13;
Comfort in Cuticura. Trial Free.&#13;
Baby's tender skin requires mild,&#13;
•OOthing properties such as a r e found&#13;
fa the Cuticura Soap and Ointment.&#13;
Cuticura Soap ia so sweet, pure and&#13;
Cleansing and Cuticura Ointment so&#13;
toothing a n d healing, especially when&#13;
baby's skin is irritated and rashy.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
Drying Films for the Movies.&#13;
The drying of photographic films h&gt;&#13;
the ordinary method Is a alow process&#13;
and is the caufie of much delay in the&#13;
manufacture of the long s n i p s required&#13;
for moving pictures. To reduce&#13;
the time of production one of the MR&#13;
film companies has introduced an elec&#13;
trical apparatus that greatly fact H&#13;
tate6 the process. The wet films are&#13;
wound spirally en large drumB 27 feet&#13;
fa dfametrr, which are introduced into&#13;
A ca&amp;log t h a t baa a 3,000-watt air&#13;
heater sot " In the, back. T h e cur&#13;
ftnt !ft turned on, the drum Is stead-&#13;
" 0 y revolved by a small electric motor,&#13;
with t h e result thai t h e film la&#13;
flow thoroughly dried in almost one&#13;
fourth the time previously required&#13;
which v a r i t s from one to ten hours,&#13;
According to the humidity of the at-&#13;
Iphere.&#13;
The Chinese Flag.&#13;
The Rag of t h e Chinese republic,&#13;
five horizontal bars of different colors.&#13;
to represent the five chief races of the&#13;
country, h a s been displaced by a new&#13;
imperial flag, which resembles th^&#13;
onion jack of England, and in whir:.&#13;
fptir small rectangular pieces of ye&#13;
tow, black, white and blue represent&#13;
the Mongols. Mohammedans. Tibetans&#13;
and Manchus, respectively, while two&#13;
Superimposed crosses of red. one vertical,&#13;
the other diagonal, s t a n d s for t h e&#13;
Chinese- race proper, t h e entire flag&#13;
being that of t h e "empire of Chung&#13;
Hua."&#13;
H A N D Y H U S B A N D&#13;
Knew H o w to Get Part of the Breakf&#13;
a s t&#13;
aP&#13;
" 'I k J O W one dish I c a n p r e p a r e for&#13;
breakfast a s well as a n y cook on&#13;
earth,' said my h u s b a n d one morning&#13;
when t h e cook was ill a n d h e h a d volunteered&#13;
t o help get breakfast. He&#13;
appeared with h i s dish a n d I discovered&#13;
it w a s Grape-Nuts which, of&#13;
course, w a s easy, to prepare for it w a s&#13;
perfectly cooked a t t h e factory, b u t it&#13;
was a good illustration of t h e convenience&#13;
of b a r i n g Grape Nuts about.&#13;
"We took up Grape-Nuts immedi&#13;
• t e i y after returning from a five years'&#13;
•ojourn in a hot country. O u r stomachs&#13;
were fa bad condition a n d we&#13;
Were in poor health generally.&#13;
&lt;,* "£? » d a T &lt;** two we liked Qrape-&#13;
•fcuts b e t t e r than any o t h e r kind of&#13;
food on t h e tablfi. VCe both gained&#13;
ttaadlly in health and strength, and&#13;
this was caused by Grape-Nuts and&#13;
Postum.&#13;
"A friend of e a r s bad a similar experience.&#13;
Sbe w a s seriously ill with&#13;
iBdtfestktn and could find nothing to&#13;
t a t that would not give her h e a r t b u r n&#13;
•Jad palpitation, especially at n i g h t&#13;
"8be found that a small dish, of&#13;
Orape-Net* with cream m a d e her a&#13;
v eettarartory topper and gave h e r s&#13;
POM fallible n i g h t s vast In a abort&#13;
feral pounds tn&#13;
' Name given by&#13;
C r e s t Mich.&#13;
»ere lettevr A a s *&#13;
The pig's place on t h e farm cannot&#13;
he filled by any other animal. He is&#13;
not only profitable when grown a s a&#13;
crop In himself, but some very important&#13;
places rilled by him come&#13;
from his ability to make use of feeds&#13;
that would otherwise be lost. T h u s&#13;
he saves waste and utilizes materials&#13;
around t h e farm which only he can&#13;
use and converts these into a marketable&#13;
product and cash. T h e pig is&#13;
known as the "mortgage-lifter," and&#13;
this appellation Is certainly well deserved.&#13;
Because of t h e pig's ability to utilize&#13;
t h e grain droppings from s t e e r s ,&#13;
the pig often makes steer-feeding operations&#13;
profitable that would not&#13;
1 prove so without his aid. Mumford&#13;
reports in a summary of ten different&#13;
| experiments t h a t t h e gains made by&#13;
' pigs fed following steers paid from&#13;
0.94 per cent to 16.67 per cent of t h e&#13;
feed given t h e steers. These pigs were&#13;
thrifty shotes a n d did not receive additional&#13;
feed.&#13;
Considering t h e relative economy of&#13;
the different kinds of live stock, the&#13;
pig takes a place among the most economical.&#13;
For t h e whole fattening pe-&#13;
. riod the ox requires 1,109 pounds of&#13;
i dry feed to produce 100 pounds gain;&#13;
, the sheep, 912 pounds, and t h e pig, 420&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Among t h e classes of farm animals&#13;
the pig ranks second as a producer of&#13;
human food from a given amount of&#13;
digestible m a t t e r consumed. The milch&#13;
cow leads in h e r power to convert&#13;
crops of t h e field Into human food,&#13;
with t h e pig second, poultry following,&#13;
and the steer and sheep coming lowest.&#13;
! Feeding pigs on the farm h a s another&#13;
value, and that Is In relation to&#13;
so'il fertility. T h e man who feeds biB&#13;
g-ain to pigs sells a very small&#13;
amount of fertilizing elements off of&#13;
t h e farm as compared with the o a e&#13;
who sells grain. Furthermore, in us&#13;
ing forage or pasture crops t h e value&#13;
of t h e m a n u r e scattered over t h e field&#13;
is considerable,&#13;
' Swine fanning, like other branches&#13;
of live-stock farming, gives employment&#13;
t o la: ,r during the entire voar,&#13;
and enables the farmer to keep .i1-ed&#13;
labor throughout t h e year and ';oes&#13;
not congest It at har/est time. I U P&#13;
• og is the only . - ¾ animal that ^an&#13;
.-tafely harvest t h e orn crop, M J this&#13;
practice is gainm* 4&amp;&gt; ^und from year&#13;
to / e a r among the *w^st progressive&#13;
farmers, resulting in 9 ^ t i e -^ \ in&lt;j of&#13;
labor to t h t .. ^ ! " j p - » g- ,wt» ais&#13;
own '*rj&#13;
• &gt; « r G; - . ' Busy.&#13;
L i .!&gt;•- . .r - "K./ard may be&#13;
i made '&lt; v ^ , r / fresh "pgctables&#13;
r r ' h e family tabic -&gt;t but&#13;
Slight c\ HPP if t v " c&lt;, • crops&#13;
a r e sin o p sskr&gt;!y gr- ^ n ; - i- ih_&#13;
area occ • icd n!1 *'ie ti &lt;•&lt;• iVn*&gt;'e&#13;
! who wou' ':sv-"?ai-g9 a r&lt; r* f ' t did&#13;
not work t'1'- year n 11 often cultivate&#13;
a garden c :. i l " { roub.e and&#13;
; expense and then a low the soil to lie&#13;
idle from t h e time the 4rtt crop mat&#13;
u r e s until t h e end of the season.&#13;
i Wuere a t w o or three crop system is&#13;
used in connection with vegetables&#13;
adapted to small areas, a space no&#13;
larger than 25 by 70 feet will produce&#13;
erough fresh vegetables for a small&#13;
family. Corn, melons, cucumbers and&#13;
potatoes and other crops which require&#13;
a large area should not be grown&#13;
in a garden of this size. Half an acre&#13;
properly cultivated with a careful crop&#13;
rotation m a y easily produce flQu&#13;
worth of various garden crops in a&#13;
year.&#13;
When to Work Soil.&#13;
If t h e garden w a s not broken In t h e&#13;
fall it should be plowed in the spring&#13;
as soon as t h e frost Is out of t h e&#13;
ground. Small a r e a s may be worked&#13;
with a spade, pushing t h e blade in to&#13;
its full depth and turning t h e soil&#13;
to break up t h e clods. Heavy soils&#13;
should nevvjr be worked when wet.&#13;
Overzealous g a r d e n e r s , ready to seize&#13;
the first warm spell as a favorable opportunity&#13;
to go out and work the&#13;
heavy clay soil before it is dry, a r e&#13;
not only wasting their e n e r g y , but a r e&#13;
doing a damage to t h e soil from which&#13;
it will take years for it to recover.&#13;
To d e t e r m i n e when heavy soils a r e&#13;
ready for plowing a handful of earth&#13;
should be collected from t h e surface&#13;
and t h e fingers tightly closed on it. If&#13;
the ball of compacted earth is&#13;
dry enough for cultivation it will fall&#13;
apart when t h e hand is opened.&#13;
How to Fertilize.&#13;
The soil in the average backyard&#13;
is not only lacking in plant food, but&#13;
also h a s been packed until it is hard&#13;
and unyialding. To loosen up aucb&#13;
soil and make it suitable for garden&#13;
produce requires that careful attention&#13;
be given to its preparation. After&#13;
spadlug t h e Inclosure thoroughly, t h e&#13;
upper three Inches should be made&#13;
fine with the use or hoe and rake.&#13;
S t o a t s and rubbish should be removed&#13;
a i d clods of dirt broken. T h e surface&#13;
should be marked off for planting in&#13;
conformity with t h e general plan of&#13;
the garden.&#13;
Barnyard or stable m a n u r e is t h e&#13;
best fertilizer because It furnishes&#13;
both plant food and humus. An appli&#13;
cation at the rate of from 20 to 30 tons&#13;
to t h e acre of well rotted manure .s&#13;
vory satisfactory. This should be appi&#13;
&gt;d after plowing or worked with a&#13;
i spade, and distributed evenly over&#13;
I t h e surface and later worked in with a&#13;
I ' &lt;~~ or rake On many soils It la adv&#13;
able to apply commercial fertilizer,&#13;
e pec ally phosphate, in addition to&#13;
Jit m a n u r e . An application of 300 to&#13;
HOu , unds of acid phosphate to t h e&#13;
acre is usually sufficient. If additional&#13;
potash Is needed, which is often t h e&#13;
case with sandy soils, this may be economl&#13;
ally supplied in t h e form of&#13;
wor,(l ashes. If tl.t wood a s h e s a r e uneach^&#13;
d they should be distributed&#13;
rver t h e garden, using 1,000 pounds to&#13;
che acre. If they have been wet, or&#13;
leached, 2,000 pounds should be used.&#13;
An application of 100 pounds to t h e&#13;
acre of n i t r a t e pf soda m a y be used In&#13;
the spring to start t h e plants before&#13;
nitrogen in t h e m a n u r e h a s become&#13;
available.&#13;
(Conducted by the National Womnn'a&#13;
Christian Temperance t'rilun^&#13;
ON T H E D O W N G R A D E .&#13;
F o r a decade while prohibition a r e a&#13;
was steadily spreading, t h e statistics&#13;
of t h e federal government showed t h e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e r s of intoxicants paying&#13;
taxes on a constantly enlarging quantity&#13;
of their products. And it aurely&#13;
did make a hard u u t lor a prohibitionist&#13;
to crack -to explain t h e reason&#13;
why t h o liquor trade got better while&#13;
saloons were all t h e time growing&#13;
fewer. - T h e Continent.&#13;
Not such a hard n u t when it la&#13;
known t h a t all liquor on which t h e&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t tax h a s been paid is officially&#13;
reported a s 'consumed,'' and&#13;
that during the decade referred to&#13;
l a r g e quantities were forced out of&#13;
the bonded warehouses by the time&#13;
limit and stored in private warehouses&#13;
awaiting a constantly decreasing de&#13;
mand.&#13;
"But," continues the Continent, with&#13;
p e r t i n e n t emphasis, " w h a t e v e r was&#13;
the real secret of that paradox, the necessity&#13;
of explaining it has now quite&#13;
gone by. It is a fact n o more. T h e&#13;
business of brewing a n d distilling is&#13;
at last on a toboggan slide which nobody&#13;
c a n deny. T h e report of t h e commissioner&#13;
of internal r e v e n u e for 1915,&#13;
just issued, shows a decline in both&#13;
beer making and whisky making,&#13;
which d e m o n s t r a t e s t h a t prohibition&#13;
is n o w prohibiting with a vengeance&#13;
plainly m a r k i n g t h e beginning of the&#13;
end. T h e 1914 report already showed&#13;
some shortage in t h e whisky business;&#13;
from t h e year before t h e r e w a s a decline&#13;
of 15,000,000 gallons. But t h e&#13;
n e w r e p o r t proves how falling bodies&#13;
a r e accelerated a s t h e y fall, for t h e&#13;
decline in t h e year Just past is 41,000,-&#13;
C00 gallons—from 181,000,000 to 140,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
" E v e n m o r e significant is the recorded&#13;
item t h a t within t h e year 198 distilleries&#13;
quit business out of 743 such&#13;
institutions in t h e United States. And&#13;
m e a n w h i l e t h e quantity of beer made&#13;
in t h i s country decreased from 66,000,-&#13;
000 b a r r e l s to 59,000,000. This is, for&#13;
t h e b r e w e r s , their first setback, b u t it&#13;
furnishes sufficient notice that they&#13;
a r e tickoted for t h e s a m e downgrade&#13;
t h a t their distilling brethren a r e emb&#13;
a r k e d on. T h e cry, is Going down!'&#13;
for t h e whole crew of 'em."&#13;
A L C O H O L A N D P N E U M O N I A .&#13;
Dr. W. A. Evans conducts a department,&#13;
"How to Keep Well," in Chicago&#13;
Daily Tribune. Giving advice recently&#13;
concerning m e a s u r e s for t h e&#13;
prevention of colds a n d pneumonia he&#13;
said:&#13;
"Now is t h e time to get e n the water&#13;
wagon and to stay there. Whisky&#13;
and every other form of alcoholic&#13;
drink is a pneumonia begetter. Alcohol&#13;
lowers the fighting defenses of t h e&#13;
h u m a n body against all forms of disease,&#13;
hut especially a g a i n s t pneumonia.&#13;
This h a s been proved b y careful scientific&#13;
testa. It is a universally recognized&#13;
clinical fact. T h i s Is one of t h e&#13;
points on which the laboratory m e n&#13;
and t h e practicing physicians a r e in&#13;
full accord. If an ordinary man gets&#13;
p n e u m o n i a chances a r e t h r e e to o n e&#13;
t h a t he will get well. Whisky drinke&#13;
r s who g e t pneumonia do n o t have a&#13;
t h r e e - t o o n e chance for life."&#13;
CONSTRUCTION OF NEST BOX SEEDING AND PLANTING TIME&#13;
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ i ,&#13;
In Cold Climates It Must Be Tight Farmer Who Starts Just Little Behind&#13;
snd W a r m Bnouoti to Keep Lay- Is Almost Sure to Remain So&#13;
ing Hens Comfortable. . During Entire Season.&#13;
» • /&#13;
Where poultry houses a r e too small&#13;
to accommodate all t h e fixtures comfortably,&#13;
some poultrymen practice&#13;
t h e plan of having t h e nest boxes out&#13;
side of t h e partition wall T h e nest&#13;
box is m a d e 15 Inches wide a n d t h e&#13;
same In height and as long a s desired&#13;
P a r t i t i o n s are placed to allow 12 t o&#13;
15 inches for each nest, according to&#13;
t h e size of t h e breed kept T h e nest&#13;
box It attached to t h e outside of the&#13;
house with strong hooks and screw&#13;
•yea. The cover is hinged, and fitted&#13;
with a pitch sufficient to shed water.&#13;
and is covered with roofing paper.&#13;
In cold climates the entire construction&#13;
of t h e neat box must be tight and&#13;
warm enough to keep the laying bens&#13;
comfortably when on t h e nest In hot&#13;
weather t h e neat box cover can be&#13;
slightly elevated to afford a ventlla&#13;
tloo. In some eases this plan of neat&#13;
hot is quite a convenience at v e i l aa&#13;
i s a r i n * of room.&#13;
It Is quite an item to get all the&#13;
work done in good season on t h e farm&#13;
Especially is this true of seeding and&#13;
planting&#13;
Or course, there is d a n g e r of being&#13;
too early and t h e getting of t h e *w»ed&#13;
in t h e rround mnUe it is cold and&#13;
wet; at the same time, in a great&#13;
many cases* t h e i t r m a r who starts In&#13;
the spring s little behind will nesrly&#13;
always be Just s little behind all&#13;
through t h e season, and this means,&#13;
no m a t t e r how bard b e may work, a&#13;
failure to secure t h e best results in&#13;
t h e end.&#13;
Put on t h e think cap a t t h e begin&#13;
nlng of t h e season and wear It right&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e y«ar. i&#13;
Economy in Feed&#13;
Improvement fn breed means economy&#13;
In feed, not lees reed but better&#13;
returns in proportion to the amount of&#13;
food consumed.&#13;
RUSSIA D R Y FOR A L L T I M E .&#13;
In a debate before t h e Russian&#13;
d u m a t h e minister of finance, M. Bark,&#13;
m a d e this significant declaration:&#13;
"I deem It necessary t o declare categorically&#13;
t h a t a l l suspicions ascribing&#13;
to t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n y intention of&#13;
r e s u m i n g t h e state sale of liquors a r e&#13;
unfounded. I declare categorically&#13;
t h a t t h e government will encourage&#13;
t e m p e r a n c e after t h e w a r , also, a n d&#13;
t h a t a n y return t o t h e old s t a t e of affairs&#13;
ia impossible. Proof of t h i s intention&#13;
is t h e fact t h a t t h e governm&#13;
e n t is now engaged In d r a w i n g qp&#13;
a bill, o n lines suggested by forty-five&#13;
m e m b e r s of t h e duma, for t h e maint&#13;
e n a n c e of t e m p e r a n c e for all time.&#13;
T h i s bill already h a s m e t with t h e&#13;
s y m p a t h y of t h e entire council of mini&#13;
s t e r s , a n d vodka, in accordance with&#13;
t h e czar's wish, a s expressed to me,&#13;
will b e totally prohibited forever."&#13;
GIRL COULD&#13;
JPLWOII&#13;
How She Was Relieved from&#13;
Pain by Lydia EL Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound.&#13;
Taunton, M a s s . — " I had pains in both&#13;
aides and when my periods came I had&#13;
t o s t a y a t homo&#13;
from work and suffer&#13;
a l o n g t i m e .&#13;
One d a y a woman&#13;
came t o our house&#13;
a n d a s k e d m y&#13;
m o t h e r w h y I w a s&#13;
suffering. Mother&#13;
told h e r t h a t I suffered&#13;
every m o n t h&#13;
aw} she said, ' W h y&#13;
d o n ' t y o u b u y a&#13;
bottle of Lydia E.&#13;
P i n k h a m ' s Vegetable Compound? ' My&#13;
mother bought it and the n e x t month I&#13;
w a s so well t h a t I worked all the month&#13;
without staying a t home a day. I a m&#13;
in good health now and have told lots of&#13;
girls about i t " — M i s a C L A R I C E M O E I N ,&#13;
22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass.&#13;
Thousands of girls suffer in silence&#13;
every month r a t h e r than consult a physician.&#13;
If girls who are troubled with&#13;
painful or irregular periods, backache,&#13;
headache, dragging-down sensations,&#13;
fainting spells or indigestion would t a k e&#13;
Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
a safe and pure remedy made&#13;
from roots and herbs, much sufferings&#13;
might be avoided.&#13;
Write to Lydia E . Pinkham Medicine&#13;
Co., Lynn, Mass. (confidential) for free&#13;
advice which will prove helpfuL&#13;
ASTHMA&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOGG^ *STHMA REMEDY&#13;
tor tne prompt rollst or Asthma&#13;
and Hay Fsvsr Ask your druefllat&#13;
for It. 28 oonte snd on« dollar.&#13;
Writ* 'or F R I I SAMPLf.&#13;
Northrop &amp; Lyman Co.,tnc,Buffato,ll Y&#13;
D£rii LO;GG S&#13;
• t t t 1 - REMEDY&#13;
A Notice.&#13;
"Am J t h e first girl you ever&#13;
kissed'"'&#13;
"Well, I'm not an expert, but I&#13;
didn't think 1 made such a poor job&#13;
of it as that."&#13;
Many Children are Sickly.&#13;
Mother Qray'a Sweet Powder* for Children&#13;
Break up Col da in 24 hours, reliere Feverishneaa,&#13;
Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething&#13;
Disorders, more and r e f l a t e the bo we la, ana&#13;
Destroy Worms. They are so pleasant to take&#13;
All ilrujrplBtft, 25c. Rumple FREE Address,&#13;
Mother Ui;iy Co., Le Roy, N Y.&#13;
About the only satisfaction most&#13;
married women have lb they a r e not&#13;
spinsters.&#13;
It Never Came Back j&#13;
Backache Sufferer! Thousands will |&#13;
tell you what wonderful relief they&#13;
hare had from Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
Not only relief, but lasting cures. If&#13;
you are lame in the morning, have&#13;
headache, diay spells and irregular&#13;
kidney action, don't wait. Use Doan's&#13;
Kidney Pills, the best recommended&#13;
special kidney remedy.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
Mrs. H a r r y Blanchard,&#13;
near Cherry St.,&#13;
E v a r t , Mich., s a y • :&#13;
"Overwork weakened&#13;
m y kidneys a n d bladder&#13;
a n d I was confined&#13;
to bed. My back ttAt&#13;
a s though It w a s broken&#13;
a n d t h e kidney secretions&#13;
distressed me&#13;
terribly. I waa driven&#13;
a l m o s t frantic w i t h&#13;
pain a n d a t times h a d&#13;
such bad dizzy spells,&#13;
I could hardly see.&#13;
T h e doctor failed t o&#13;
help me a n d finally I&#13;
usad Doan's Kldnev&#13;
Pills. They cured n a a "&#13;
Oat D M I ' I at Amy Stan. SB* m Bsv D O A N ' S %»MV&#13;
fOtTDUMaVBUKN CO, BUFFALO. M. T.&#13;
BRCNGS M O R B I D C H A N G E 8 .&#13;
T h a t indulgence in Intoxicating beverages,&#13;
even t o a d e g r e e s h o r t of the&#13;
conditions of i n t e m p e r a n c e and inebriety,&#13;
is calculated t o b r i n g about morbid&#13;
c h a n g e s in the human body, and&#13;
t o lead t o mental and physical deterioration,&#13;
is a fact which i s only too&#13;
patent t o every practitioner of medicine.—&#13;
The L a n c e t&#13;
E F F E C T I N N E W D R Y S T A T E S .&#13;
While some of t h e merchants tn the&#13;
newly dry states are loath to admit&#13;
as yet that increased business i s d o e&#13;
to prohibition all agree that at least&#13;
the expected calamities have not materialised,&#13;
unless t h e loss l a police&#13;
and court business c a n be considered&#13;
a calamity.&#13;
e l Sorts&#13;
Your Liver&#13;
Is Clogged Up&#13;
Taafs Why You're&#13;
—Haws No Appetite&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
will p u t yon right&#13;
in a few di&#13;
T h e y d&#13;
their duty.&#13;
Cure Con&#13;
stipation, ^,,__&#13;
BUkraanesa, Indigestion and Sick Headache&#13;
Genuine moat beat Signature&#13;
GALLSTONES&#13;
FREE AveM&#13;
^5*L&#13;
4' *&#13;
:*%&#13;
. * : &lt;&#13;
I&#13;
i\&#13;
.*&lt;*}&amp;••&#13;
^••.''V'j&#13;
i J * + 4*4u»*&gt;' /&#13;
••&#13;
&lt;&gt;••:&#13;
^5^&#13;
^ • ; \&#13;
'•— ^-T' ' *^*'&#13;
T' »&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Beiywhere&#13;
You Go&#13;
Everywhere&#13;
They Know&#13;
Alabastine&#13;
Glass of Hot Water&#13;
Before Breakfast&#13;
a Splendid Habit&#13;
Open sluices of the system each&#13;
morning and wash away the&#13;
poisonous, stagnant matter.&#13;
F)R 35 years Alabastine has&#13;
been the choice of housewives&#13;
who take particular&#13;
pnde in the decoration of&#13;
their homes.&#13;
For 35 years Alabastine has&#13;
been sold everywhere by paint,&#13;
hardware, drug, and general&#13;
stores. It is known by dealers&#13;
and users a1 ike as the"tint beautiful"&#13;
for wails and ceilings.&#13;
Alabastine is a dry powder that&#13;
mtxca perfectly in cold water. You&#13;
can apply it yourself or your local&#13;
painter will do the work reasonably.&#13;
Be sure that you get Alabastine&#13;
brought on the job in properly&#13;
labeled packages.&#13;
F r e e Color P l a n s&#13;
The beat decorators advise the use&#13;
of stencils to produce contrasting&#13;
wall and ceiling borders. Ordinarily,&#13;
stencils cost from 50 cents to&#13;
$3.00 each: but if you will write for&#13;
the free Alabastine Packet," containing&#13;
hand colored proofs of 12 of&#13;
the very latest stencil effects, w e&#13;
will tell you how you can have&#13;
ydur choice of these and 500&#13;
others at practically no expense.&#13;
Write today for this abtoluUty&#13;
free decorating service.&#13;
Alabastine Co.&#13;
3tt GtasffBa 1« Graad Rapist, Mick.&#13;
H e r s Failed H i m .&#13;
"So poor Tom died of heart fail&#13;
Hre."&#13;
"Yes; his girl jilted him and he&#13;
committed suicide."—Boston Evening&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
SAVED MINISTER'S LIFE.&#13;
Rev. W. H. Warner, Route 2, Myers-&#13;
Tille, Md., writes: My trouble was&#13;
sciatica. My back was affected and&#13;
took the form of lumbago. I also had&#13;
neuralgia, cramps&#13;
in my muscles,&#13;
pressure or sharp&#13;
pain on the top of&#13;
my head, and nervous&#13;
dizzy spells. I&#13;
had other symptoms&#13;
showing my&#13;
Rev.W. H.Warner kidneys were at&#13;
fault, so I took Dodd's Kidney Pills.&#13;
They were the means of saving my life.&#13;
On Feb. 16th, 1916,1 write to say that&#13;
undoubtedly your medicine restored&#13;
m e to perfect health.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills, 50c per box at&#13;
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. T. Dodd's Dyspepsia Tablets&#13;
for Indigestion have been proved.&#13;
60c per box.—Adv.&#13;
You will never be accused of cheating&#13;
at cards as long as you lose.&#13;
ASK F O R A N D GET 5K1NNER3 THE HIGHEST QUALITY MACARONI Save the trademark signature of Paul F.&#13;
Skinner from all packages and exchange free&#13;
for Oneida Community Silverware. Write&#13;
today for free 36-page recipe book and full&#13;
information.&#13;
SKINNER MFG. CO , OMAHA, U.SJL&#13;
LAMEST MACARONI Fi -TORY IN AMEMCA&#13;
Those of us who are accustomed to&#13;
feel dull and heavy when we arise;&#13;
splitting headache, stuffy from a cold,&#13;
foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stom&#13;
ach, lame back, can. instead, both&#13;
look and feel as fresh as a daisy aiwa&gt;*&#13;
by washing the poison* and toxins&#13;
from the body with phoaphated hoi&#13;
water each morning.&#13;
We should drink, before breakfast,&#13;
a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful&#13;
of limestone phosphate in&#13;
it to flush from the stomach, liver,&#13;
kidneys and ten yards of bowels the&#13;
previous day's indigestible waste, sour&#13;
bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing,&#13;
sweetening and purifying the entire&#13;
alimentary canal before putting&#13;
more food Into the stomach.&#13;
The action of limestone phosphate&#13;
and hot water on an empty stomach&#13;
is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans&#13;
out all the sour fermentations, gases,&#13;
waste and acidity and gives one a&#13;
splendid appetite for breakfast and it&#13;
is said to be but a little while until&#13;
the roses begin to appear in the&#13;
cheeks. A quarter pound of limestone&#13;
phosphate will cost very little at&#13;
your druggist or from the store, but&#13;
is sufficient to make anyone who is&#13;
bothered with biliousness, constipa&#13;
tion, stomach trouble or rheumatism&#13;
a real enthusiast on the subject of internal&#13;
sanitation. Try it and you are&#13;
assured that you will look better and&#13;
feel better in every way shortly.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
The highwayman who requests his&#13;
victim to throw up his hands and&#13;
throw down his arms simultaneously&#13;
is asking too much.&#13;
FRECiCLES&#13;
N o w I s t h e T i m e to G e t Rid of T h e s e&#13;
U g l y Spots.&#13;
There's no longer the slightest need of&#13;
I feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the&#13;
prescription othlne—double strength—!•&#13;
guaranteed to remove these homely spots.&#13;
: Simply get an ounce of othlne—doubls 1 strength—from your druggist, and apply a&#13;
little of It night and morning and you&#13;
should soon see that even the worst freckles&#13;
, have begun to disappear, while the lighter&#13;
ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom&#13;
that more than one ounce is needed to completely&#13;
clear the skin and gain a beautiful&#13;
clear complexion.&#13;
1 Be sure to ask for the double strength&#13;
' othlne, as this Is sold under guarantee of&#13;
money back if it falls to remove freckles.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
The true poet is able to distinguish&#13;
between the fire of genius in his bo&#13;
\ som and the gnawing of hunger in his&#13;
stomach.&#13;
FOR PLEURISY, BRONCHITIS&#13;
AND SORE THROAT&#13;
Readers are advised not to dose the&#13;
stomach. The best way to quickly&#13;
overcome soreness in the throat or&#13;
chest is to rub on true Mustarine, which&#13;
ail druggists keep on hand in the original&#13;
yellow box for about 25 cents.&#13;
It is quicker and more efficient than&#13;
any liniment Rub it on at night and&#13;
blessed relief comes by morning. True&#13;
Mustarine is made by Begy Medicine&#13;
Co., Rochester, N. Y. It stops Rheumatic&#13;
pains and Neuralgia almost like&#13;
magic. There's blessed relief In every&#13;
rub. It stops pain and congestion&#13;
And many a man has lost his thou-&#13;
I sands through pursuing another bun-&#13;
! dred.&#13;
PATENTS W a t i s i E . Ce.Iema.11,&#13;
Pateat Lawyer,Waabinanon,&#13;
D.C. Adrtca and books five.&#13;
Bates reasonable. Highest&#13;
I A L L W O O L B U T T S 8e*a D f r e e t f r a n&#13;
rawtorr t o w c a n r f o r 910AO Write to oar&#13;
aetory for slsiuiBxp lesm an dt Irnafoirnm antiouni.a aJusUrtassutT, SPfAi,.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 16-1916.&#13;
LAMES CAM WEAR 8IIOE8&#13;
One size smaller after using Allen's Foot-&#13;
! Kase, the antiseptic powder for the feet&#13;
: Shaken into shoes and used in foot-bath,&#13;
j Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight shoes feel&#13;
easy, and gives instant relief to corns and&#13;
bunions. Try It today. Sold everywhere,&#13;
: 26c. For FREE *Val package, Address,&#13;
Alien &amp; Olmsted, Le hof. &gt;&lt;". T. Adv.&#13;
Men whose only books are women's&#13;
looks are students of folly. Wanted 50,000&#13;
Farm Hands&#13;
of experience at once OH the f arms of&#13;
Western Canada&#13;
and Ontario&#13;
THE PEACE MEET&#13;
HELD IN DETROIT&#13;
T H E S P E A K E R S O P P O S E D A N Y&#13;
P R E P A R A T I O N F O R W A R E U T&#13;
• • P A S S E D T H E P L A T E . "&#13;
PROF. BERLE SHOUTS GRAFT'&#13;
T h e r e W a s a G r e a t C r o w d O u t to&#13;
H e a r the S p e a k e r s N o w o n a T o u r&#13;
of C i t c a P r e a c h i n g P c * c o&#13;
vs. W a r .&#13;
Detroit The Detroit Opera House&#13;
was packed Sunday afternoon with&#13;
people who came to listen io speakers&#13;
who oppose preparedness and an&#13;
overflow meeting wa.b held in the&#13;
Campus Maruus. "Democracy&#13;
Agalnbt Militarism" read a huge tiign&#13;
stretched across the btage of the&#13;
opera house, as the keynote of ihe&#13;
"Truth About Preparedness."&#13;
Henry Ford and his wife sat mod&#13;
estly hidden in a box at the principal&#13;
meeting. Society women distributed&#13;
circulars of Congressman Tavener's&#13;
speech on the "Cost of War." Siereoptican&#13;
slides and motion picturewere&#13;
shown. Workingmen in the gal&#13;
leries led frequent rounds of applause.&#13;
Harold Jarvis sang&#13;
The speakers at the mass meeting&#13;
are on a tour of 12 lar^e cities where&#13;
similar mass meetings have been arranged&#13;
by local committees. They&#13;
have announced that their tour is "an&#13;
answer to the challenge of President&#13;
Wilao-n that all who oppose the policy&#13;
of a larger army and navy should&#13;
hire a hall and tell it to the people cf&#13;
the land."&#13;
"This meeting Is not anti-preparednes?,&#13;
but anti-militarism," said Rev.&#13;
Eugene Rodman Shippen, the chairm&#13;
a ^ in his introductory remarks.&#13;
"We seek the best interests of the&#13;
American union, rather than the profit&#13;
of the military circle which is bringing&#13;
Europe into ruin.&#13;
"This meeting is a protest against&#13;
the hysteria of fear which many&#13;
agencies have cultivated so systematically&#13;
and against the frenzy of warfare&#13;
which may threaten our lives,&#13;
our liberty and our proper pursuit of&#13;
happiness."&#13;
Dr. A. A. Berle of Tufts college,&#13;
Boston, was the first speaker, He&#13;
was followed by Rabbi Stephan S.&#13;
Wise of New York and Amos Pinchot&#13;
who subsequently briefly addressed&#13;
the overflow meeting in the open air.&#13;
The crowd listened respectfully but&#13;
asked numerous questions. There&#13;
were other speakers following the&#13;
principal ones. The chief arguments&#13;
of some of the speakers were: "The&#13;
war frenzy if a disease." "It is the&#13;
greed of the munition manufacturers&#13;
that is fighting peace," "When there&#13;
Is no more poverty people will not&#13;
want to fight."&#13;
Rabbi Wise disclosed: "1 am against&#13;
militarism now, because if we continue&#13;
to prepare, another war will be&#13;
inevitable, and it will be the first of&#13;
a series, a world orgy of fite, disaster&#13;
and blood. God forbid that the shame&#13;
of a perpetuation of war should lie&#13;
on the conscience of the American&#13;
people."&#13;
Dr. Berle charged graft, saying:&#13;
"Let us not allow feverish madness&#13;
to endanger our liberties and place&#13;
ourselves in the hands of the militarists&#13;
who are now rgsnized to graft&#13;
upon the puttie* ^J^ *nd fatten&#13;
their bank • c c ^ i j j f j f&#13;
Pinchot aBjtjr?,' . - e r statements&#13;
said this: "R«BW«ber, war is of the&#13;
people and it is by the people. But&#13;
war is never for the people. Consider,&#13;
in Europe $1,000,000,000 is being&#13;
spent every IB days in the destruction&#13;
of war."&#13;
Dr. Wise then made an appeal for&#13;
funds, declaring that while traveling&#13;
expenses were guaranteed to the party,&#13;
that there was no surplus funds&#13;
for printing or other expenses. Collection&#13;
plates were passed around and&#13;
about $300 collected.&#13;
,&lt;3^^k2?U\&#13;
* •&#13;
C * - - - . '&#13;
Hot Contents 15 Fluid Drachma&#13;
-ire&#13;
&gt; &gt;&#13;
1*&#13;
:t2-e&#13;
r » f 8&#13;
&lt; »&#13;
140Q&#13;
•a&#13;
• Qoo DROPS &gt;&#13;
41liuU«iuii'iluiii&lt;ilii:&lt;lllillii|i&gt;lUlim&lt;iIJ|iliulliiuil&gt;il'«iili»liiirk.i:iii&lt;'iiii&#13;
li&lt;li»l&lt;:,|lltw(IIIINNW&#13;
ALCOHOL- 3 P E R C E N T&#13;
A Vegetable PivpaialkKifcrAssiniiJatin&amp;&#13;
Utefiwd and Ht^ulating&#13;
the Storoadssaiid Bowels of mm&#13;
ProawUs Digesfion,Gurerfulness&#13;
and RVst. Contains neither&#13;
Opiiun.Mofphine iiorMLur.al.&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
&amp;qp* ofQktDcSufi/a Pfranmt&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation.&#13;
Sot irStouiach. Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worais. Feverijihrtew and Loss OF SLEEP.&#13;
Fat-Simile Signature of&#13;
III | | » , . ^ I ^ I H H H I ^&#13;
THE CfcKTALTR COMPANY,&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
GASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
Mothers Know That&#13;
Genuine Castoria&#13;
Always&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A i d n i D i i t l i s o l d&#13;
3 ¾ H o s t s r J 5 &lt; 1 ^&#13;
Rxact Copy of Wr*pp*t&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA T M t C K N T A O a SXMBMkWY. NCW * • • « OfTS.&#13;
Just a W a y T h e y H a v e .&#13;
"Say, conductor," remarked the inquisitive&#13;
passenger, "in speaking of&#13;
time, which ia proper, 'a quarter to six&#13;
or 'a quarter of six'?"&#13;
"I'm sure I don't know," replied the&#13;
railroad man. "I always say '5:45.'"&#13;
Public Officials' Bonds.&#13;
We bond more people than any&#13;
other company in the world. Maintain&#13;
a special department for bonding public&#13;
officials. Agents everywhere. Write&#13;
for rates to Official Bond Department,&#13;
National Surety Company, 90&#13;
West St., New York City. "America's&#13;
Leading Surety Co." Adv.&#13;
After a woman has been married&#13;
about so long there Is nothing less&#13;
interesting to her than being kissed&#13;
by her husband.&#13;
New Strength for Lame Backs&#13;
and Worn-out Condition*&#13;
Dear Mr. Editor:&#13;
I suffered from lame back and a&#13;
tired, worn-out feeling. Was unable to&#13;
stand erect and scarcely able to get&#13;
around. It would usually come on at&#13;
first with crick in small of my back.&#13;
I took Anuric Tablets and my back&#13;
commenced to get better. I did not&#13;
have to walk doubled over as I did&#13;
before using the "Anuric." It is the&#13;
best remedy I have ever taken for&#13;
what it is intended t o relieve.&#13;
A. G. DRAKL.&#13;
NOTE:—When your kidneys ret&#13;
sluggish and clop, &lt; ou suffer from&#13;
backache, 8ick-he» dacLe riizzy spelU.,&#13;
or the twinges and paiu.s of loin) i g o ,&#13;
rheumatism and gout. Anuric" I • the&#13;
most powerful c&amp;ent in dissolving&#13;
arlc acid, as hot water m e ^ u sugar.&#13;
ABk the druggist for "Anfcrte,*' put&#13;
up by Dr. Pierce, in 50-c*nt packages.&#13;
Cause of It.&#13;
"Mrs. Softed will call her busban4&#13;
'my lamb,' "&#13;
*No wonder he looks so sheepish.*&#13;
THICK, SWOLLEN 8LMDS&#13;
that make a horse W h e e z e , ^YIBBBBBBV&#13;
Roar, have T h i c k W i n d tt^^m&#13;
or C h o k e - d o w n , can be ^pL&#13;
reduced with W I S&#13;
QfgsgggS Qifc also other Bunches or Swellings. N o Dilator*&#13;
n o hair gone, and horte kept at work. Economical—&#13;
only a few drops required ataosaw&#13;
plication. $2 per bottle delivered tssfc 1 1 tM&gt;&#13;
ABSORBING, JR., the antiseptic liniment Im&#13;
mankind, reduces Cysts, Went, * Painful,&#13;
Swollen Veins and Ulcers. $1 and $2 a bottle St&#13;
dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" tree&#13;
Mf. F.YOUNft. P. D. F., 110 TsoaltlL tsHsftsM, fetes*,&#13;
FROM GIRLHOOD TO OLD&#13;
AGE WOMEN ARE HELPS)&#13;
At the first symptoms of any 4#»&#13;
rangement of the feminine organists&#13;
at any period of life the one safe, really&#13;
helpful remedy is Dr. Pierce's Favortta&#13;
Prescription for every conceivable ail*&#13;
ment and disease of a womanly natora&#13;
It is a woman's tempera&amp;ea&#13;
and its tngredieoU art&#13;
wrapper.&#13;
Dr. P^eroa* Favorite Preeertpttoh t*&#13;
a tores friead ,to women in timet ot&#13;
t*ial and at times of pain when the&#13;
orgmat are not performing their ftme»&#13;
tioat. For headache, backache, hat&#13;
flashes, catarrhal conditions, beating&#13;
down sensations, mental depresstoa,&#13;
doziness, fainting spells, womea&#13;
should never fall to take this tried tad&#13;
Lrue women's medicin*.&#13;
Watch Your Colts For Coughs, Colds a"*f Dlatemper, and at the first ayisraw&#13;
torns of any such a sm^nt, jive small doses of that woe*&#13;
derful rt-r&gt; now thf most used In existence. rpoH.vs imraepER COMPOUND&#13;
60 cents n ^ fi a b&lt;u •'• j:&gt; and $10 the dosea. of %.wf&#13;
drutcfcist. harness deaie'r, or delivered by&#13;
§ P O U M M L U I A L C O , Cskeanlats, G w s w s w 1 » * * U. S. Am&#13;
To replace the young farmers who&#13;
have enlisted for the war. Good wages&#13;
and full season's work assurefe&#13;
There is no danger or&#13;
possibility of Conscription&#13;
in Canada.&#13;
KafarsDces reoumad from aB appHcauts. For special raflway rates and other information apply tr&#13;
M. V. MeKINNIS, 178 Jeftereea Aveu, Detroit. Mick.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Healthful Sleep&#13;
Chicago- Senator Warren G. Harding,&#13;
of Chip, was pelected temporary&#13;
chairman, of the Republican national&#13;
convention by. unanimous vote of tbe&#13;
committee on arrar.gajajeAs of the Republican&#13;
national confmlftee Friday on&#13;
the first ballot ' • )&#13;
- - - - - - r w — prolongation&#13;
of life. During sleep Nature renews the vital&#13;
forces cf the body and restores the energy.&#13;
Sleeplessness is one of the evil results of indigestion.&#13;
To avoid it; keep the stomach well, the liver active and&#13;
the bowels regular. The health of these organs&#13;
Tok&gt;do. O.—Tba street railway&#13;
strike came to an end Sunday when&#13;
the car men. v.t a bi# meeting in C.&#13;
L. I*. hall, voted to acrept the terms&#13;
which officials of the Toledo Railway!".&#13;
&amp; Li*?ht company asfd representatives&#13;
of the union had approved earlier in&#13;
the day. Cars will be^in running&#13;
again in the mornir.f.&#13;
Is Assured by&#13;
B ^ W a p g l s A harmless vegetable remedy, which&#13;
acts imnsediat* on the stomach, liver, bowels and kidneys,&#13;
tomng and putting them in good working onier.&#13;
Millions cf peopje sleep well and keep well because, at&#13;
the. nrst uniavoraWe symptom, they begin to take&#13;
NANS PILLS Direction* of Special Value ** W«&#13;
Sold by drtiRjist* (hrosajhout ts*a •Ot,&#13;
. • ..si&#13;
*&lt;«*»&amp;#33 ***^mmm*mfmm^!mmmm&#13;
• V** /&#13;
"•-At&#13;
* • - ^ : ^ ^ : ^ ^ ^ - ^ -&#13;
L*£&#13;
n&#13;
v&#13;
-**-&#13;
&amp; *&#13;
£**•*•&#13;
3&#13;
Pmclraey Dispatch&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
P i n e k n e y J)ippatch&#13;
Emered at the PostoSice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich.. as Second Class Matter&#13;
Sullen;-ln&gt;ii, $1. Per "ii-ar ;H AU&gt;aucd&#13;
Does a (&#13;
lug Buni'j ; ^ t - .&#13;
rd'. r&gt;&#13;
.'(.•:.' j ' t " !*.!u- TUT t-:ic.'i&#13;
. H'^.tj..- k rr&gt;w u&#13;
B*jy'i twa-pent t u i t i $3,50 to&#13;
$8 at Dancers. Adv.&#13;
Harold Swartbont is in Jackson&#13;
today.&#13;
C. G. Mayer was a Howell visxtor&#13;
last Thuraday.&#13;
Raymond Leavey of Stockbridge&#13;
was home Sunday.&#13;
on j Mrs. Addle Potterton is visiting&#13;
I Jackson relatives.&#13;
Duane Lavey was a Howell 1&#13;
pain on&#13;
3 p e r c t n t&#13;
1 on H!1 Tiai;- ! b-pos&#13;
" P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T C E P L b&#13;
M i c h&#13;
rop&#13;
A &lt; .1«&lt;tr11 s&#13;
1 -V.' :-. ~/. L-'Aukr, i'tay ~&lt;"j\-.&#13;
l U ' s - ' l . , : » : . ' t_&gt;f C u r 11 j I c : i.«- r -11- d'.::sr&#13;
L o o . col•jujri; hive&#13;
i-^-ruju. visitor Monday.&#13;
A . , u i v . i c . .ai(-:i&lt;-it'd i.- o^uciit. t n t p e r - '&#13;
iiu, v. : i . i; • - .0' i &gt;!•&lt;.-,. -.. 1 t J ..:i: ridve-'tist- !&#13;
i rig r^ata.&#13;
A n ni/'j LC eiQ';iii 0. e n t e r a l , rundnio. e t c . ,&#13;
HJUit be yz'.:\ l\i: a', re^ul-u- L»ftu N o t i c e&#13;
r a l e s .&#13;
Ob i l \ u r v and ui:i 'i-iiij.'i' n&gt;" ' i C f - Ji."'.* 1) a b&#13;
lislved free of charge.&#13;
l J ; e i r y mu.a be pnid&#13;
t v e d a b (&gt;IT line.&#13;
a . tr c rale cT&#13;
mm&#13;
Fer Painless Denftstry, See —&#13;
Dr&lt; #. 1. Wright&#13;
In The Do fan Block&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN&#13;
1. a r. &gt;uv&#13;
you can give*&#13;
O U R F r i e n d s&#13;
any L hi no&#13;
t h e m — e x c e p t v o u r phr.&#13;
tofjraph.&#13;
MAKli A•; Vri'ON P'LS a p w&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t © c k b r i d &amp; e &lt; M i c h i g a n&#13;
•*—iSSP&#13;
Grand TrurHc Time Table&#13;
For tli*'' " .p.v^nionce M ;r " ? * ^ * t *&#13;
Trains lias:&#13;
No. 48—-f :44 p. m. N.&#13;
TYrr^ V;&gt;ft&#13;
7— *;S* a. m&#13;
•'.7-7-L7 P m.&#13;
' A. H. Fiintoft apect Saturday&#13;
111 Detroit.&#13;
E. H. Byer visit*d in Yptilanti&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Father Coyle ia driving a aew&#13;
Overland runabout.&#13;
Rose Read and Ro^er Carr were&#13;
in Detroit Monday.&#13;
John Mclntyre of Howell was&#13;
in town Saturday.&#13;
Miae Madeleine Morau visited&#13;
frifinda in Jackson Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Read was a Detroit&#13;
visitor several days laafe wee k&#13;
Mre. Fred Read of Detroit ia a&#13;
guest at the home of Thomaa&#13;
Read.&#13;
J as. liplady Jr. af Detroit&#13;
visited hie parents here several&#13;
days last week.&#13;
E. C, Sibley of Springport visited&#13;
hie brother C, J. &gt;Sihley of&#13;
this place overSuuday.&#13;
Dr. C. M. Silver and family of&#13;
Laneiug were week end guests at&#13;
the ho.-jie of h:.g parents.&#13;
Mr. nnd Mrs. Fred Swaitijout&#13;
i spent Sunday at the home of her&#13;
j parents near Howell.&#13;
, Mr. ai.d Mrs. S. K. Swarthout&#13;
I spent th^ latter part of UR'. we#*k&#13;
i with r- l^.tives at Piri^)it-n.&#13;
I K.iitor A. K. Pieree and wife of&#13;
South Lyons called on frientls;&#13;
; iiere the first of the week.&#13;
I Harry Avers air] fnnrdv of iJe- !&#13;
I trcit were over Sunday L,MI S:^ at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Sarnh Nftsh,&#13;
1&#13;
Rev. and Mrd. A. C-trahnrn at.,&#13;
tended a meetine of (ho conntr!&#13;
\V. A* Havens of Stockbridge&#13;
was in town today.&#13;
C. M. Hudson was in Jackson&#13;
on business Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. C. G. Meyer is visiting&#13;
relatives in Adrian.&#13;
Henr&gt; Kice and family speut&#13;
Sunday in Brighton.&#13;
John Dinkel trangacted busiaeas&#13;
in Jackaon Saturday.&#13;
You'll aave on carpet* and rugt&#13;
at Dancef'i Stockbridge. Adv.&#13;
Mia* Martha Nicholi and Biiaa&#13;
Blanche Marti• wara in Howell&#13;
Taeeday.&#13;
Taare will be ipaaial Eaatar&#13;
axerciaea at the Cosg'l ohareh&#13;
Sanday eraainir April 23rd.&#13;
Roy Baker of near Lakalaad&#13;
hai aold hit farm la Dr. B. W.&#13;
Longnecker of Aadaraan, lad.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Deveaeaox&#13;
were Jackaon viaitoai Satorc3ay,&#13;
Uhl Smith of Ann Arbor waa&#13;
the guest of Miss Floreaee Bargees&#13;
over Sunday,&#13;
Owing to making repairs on the&#13;
preaf, tbe Dispatch is a day lata&#13;
this weak.&#13;
The council held a very interesting&#13;
meeting last Monday night&#13;
whea they voted not to allow a&#13;
pool room in this village.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Dougherty of Chatham,&#13;
Out., is visiting a few days&#13;
Rt the home of her sister, Mrs&#13;
Wm. Kennedy Sr&#13;
It cost Washtenaw county $215.&#13;
'"&gt;."&gt; at oc a bead for rats killed in&#13;
that county from i\,~t August to&#13;
March Pi&#13;
L A S 6 0 W r &gt; K O S .&#13;
NrtBJl For Sellim Gold t^Goofls Cheap&#13;
J A C K S O N , M I C H I G A N&#13;
1&#13;
" Spring Styles&#13;
K£b±*£.&#13;
s&#13;
Suits, Frocks, Blouses, and&#13;
SportApparei, collected from&#13;
the most authoritative sources&#13;
presented in a display which&#13;
accurately mirrors the season's&#13;
styles, s Season after season we step forward as Fashion Head- 9&#13;
quartera. S e a u f l f o l , B e c o m i n g , P r a c t i c a l this 4&#13;
•urns op the reason for the prestige and growing clientele of j j&#13;
tkiff store. S&#13;
The few weeks preceeding Easter should be the busiest £&#13;
of tfce Spring seasow. Smart women are choosing their Easter&#13;
appare! now.&#13;
A Rape Collection of&#13;
Spring Suits .1 Women who arc interested in the distinctive features in J&#13;
fashions—the original ideas that one sees carried out hotv and j&#13;
there is exclusive apparel—should see our individually distinc- #&#13;
tive Sprmg Suits. 6&#13;
Among other things we are showing Poplins in tai* and m&#13;
Belgian blue, daifitily embroidered in self-color; FCngHsh Serge J&#13;
Cloth Suits I. A in na\^- and tan; also Gabardines Poplins and the &gt;rmirt Checks. Zk&#13;
P Many elaborate models with innumerable odd touches and A&#13;
i others plam tailored. Price ran^e—&#13;
i $18, $25 $27.50 to $35&#13;
!&#13;
•s. A.&#13;
i t&#13;
P«ih.fV r.f D e t r o i t&#13;
• pel:.&#13;
Pv&#13;
m e !?ist w e e k&#13;
•vinter at t h e&#13;
K. Ujirwin&#13;
: Hi; i d:-iu,i;h-&#13;
! i e r - i s t e i.&#13;
' • K R&#13;
^r ministerial aasociniii on HI H owe!&#13;
H»»%u\»»»H\%%»%n^w%vn^»»»« Monday,&#13;
H. F.Vf^i.i:!:, .M. r&gt;. a i.. ="rr,r.f n,« i&gt;&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sigler&#13;
Mrs. E.t-E. Mnn.sfi^ld and&#13;
of Niagara Pells, ar^ vi&gt;;itin^&#13;
the home of her parents, Mr&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Kenuedv Sr.&#13;
;OTI&#13;
M&#13;
i e t u r n&#13;
; 'A f t f r ^&#13;
i;''mic of her son.&#13;
Mi- H. K Vu&#13;
tv;'.-,vif i^aLIsir;_; '&#13;
Mrs. l\ P. Darw&#13;
Ther*- will i;f&#13;
,' S.T.H Ivervi'i'nr'&#13;
HCJUSO. Fr: i'.y (••,'&#13;
at 7:oO.&#13;
R. CI iUt.ON \lf\.&gt; Si,'it! 1'is f;;r!!:&#13;
here to Will LiVlwidge of Auderpon&#13;
hud. will sell his personal&#13;
property hi ai;ction . in the'near&#13;
futnre.&#13;
Pvoy Moran. b£ Ann Arbor in&#13;
Silk Suits&#13;
J i'affc.'ci aiid hl;'a,'jiililkc: arid the tf.atsshhiioonnaable GGrri » rle L.ondrcs&#13;
5 S u i t s in hhick'. f a n , iKrv_v b l u e a n d r r ^ ' d a .^rccsr, \ : r \ ' e f t c c t i v c&#13;
^ a n d ur.u.-iialb' good a t t h e p r P i . A i-cuit'-'ui a&gt;^oi'tmcnt w i t h&#13;
m l : a s h i n n &gt; latent l o u c h e -&#13;
\&#13;
UL'&#13;
the;* and&#13;
i'"' Operb&#13;
Anri! ! 1&#13;
to ^&gt;35 f&#13;
v * ^&#13;
'"v.T-r.rl %&amp;b^teJ;S.frl^&amp;&amp;i&#13;
t&gt; home for a f e d " " ^ vacntion. He&#13;
All C»1!.H&#13;
PINCKNKY&#13;
" Office&#13;
and will work for Dr.^JHafil Monks of.&#13;
Howe!! tae latter part of this we;-k&#13;
Zip Frost ha-'i tb* misfortune ' during the Utr^rs abs*»nee.&#13;
Fftru.in^ton has the chr.mpion i&#13;
e^^ eater of the comity in the i&#13;
person of A. .dau?:ei, who on a,'&#13;
bet afe 'JO bii^H nt. one stj"fin;j. ;&#13;
- - M&gt;.;n St.&#13;
VI', IIIGAN&#13;
M i'H alia Pan^aorn whn ha?&#13;
'rs^tt&#13;
fir*•!$,•*£- '•.&#13;
wlulQ rnftiufcj wDod n^-ar Silver&#13;
Lake last Fri lay to strike hia&#13;
hnnd on lhc' i^nzz s^x, entting hip&#13;
tintrer^ eererr ]y.&#13;
Or. A. lT4rt:o!I is. raovin&lt; into&#13;
the A. !J . Ve'dd^f bouse thi*« week been sp^aai^u thn wjat^r n* th»&#13;
find C. A. Bennett is moving into l home of AlUui Oai-penrnv iHturnv&#13;
» v ^ ^ v &gt; % v % w ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ % ^ % % ^ U GPO, p^,ason hn.il-Jinif recently i »d to l.^r hom^« t^av Ar.&#13;
—-._ . •"—: : : i occupied by Mr. Gnrtrell.&#13;
Loci* Monk? of ttif* firm of&#13;
Monks Bros, of this place WAs^rrbp.rn airain showed ovideuce&#13;
quite agreeably surprised last of their .u\**d tWPn^ U\ runniuy&#13;
Saturday, when hf* received noti^* R\P&lt;,V with thw H - ^ Friday after&#13;
of an appointment as rural mail noon. !h*y ran from the dopot&#13;
carrier on one ofMhe ronf-n out thmagli (owu aud ou to Anderaon&#13;
of Howell, a vacancy being caused 'before they w^re stopped Ko&#13;
there by one of the rural carriers eerioni damage was done,&#13;
accepting a position an the city Brown, GrooerT of PaM-willi*&#13;
dehrery. Mr. Moaki had tak-a w U J r w u ib9W^ou ih9 f0 iio w iag&#13;
1&#13;
la*' weAk.&#13;
'j'he v:on bvloe^mjj to the&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
a,xcLs&#13;
"The&#13;
StimDson"&#13;
Sb»J&gt;tKick of Dmg Store&#13;
m ~&#13;
Wake Up!&#13;
Old Man. and let mt make&#13;
a suit fcr you. \m\ will&#13;
;hfr. liarc ?ome;hiac i.o be&#13;
prosd cW-a»ncl your d'iends&#13;
will be qlacl to b^ &lt;ccn in&#13;
yatir crmp.-viy.&#13;
I want you to put your&#13;
best foot forward. It is&#13;
matter of pride with rac&#13;
have patrons recognized as&#13;
Ac best dressed men in townfirj-&#13;
Clfiaiuj aid Pressing&#13;
V t o d &lt; J e n t &gt; S u i t s&#13;
anri n m « H ***** e " ° i n * h ° D *boM ' c«W t l n r a l i t Moielaf, April 17;&#13;
a n d p r e s s e d two rears ago and eince that tim* i W I L - . A _ _: \ V ^ _ » *&#13;
i E c a u o o a b l c . L e a v e&#13;
j»*r work with&#13;
W. B. »ARROW. ^ ^ - • • . ' ^ f ! . ? * ' "'V&#13;
"?*&lt;,•'-?*&#13;
years affo and eince that time i ¥ d r i h H a a b a r g M &lt; 1 ohabbe&#13;
haa baan aetmg aa • • U t i t o t e • • ; i k , r a a r i , Mamday aad I r m t a d a r&#13;
oae of the rantaa . a r e . Ha ax- ^ , t a d p o r U f # ^ # - ^&#13;
pact, to e o » * M e * work a W a t j . ^ . ^ . ^ , Caeiefcej&gt; afa&#13;
taa imi W Maf. ^ a d a e a i a f a.&#13;
Here is * regular fact&#13;
For the wrnc price you ir» ktked&#13;
to pay for ready -ra«dc aoth&gt; £ ^ ^ \/ P n c e £ ^ C o&#13;
•anuficturcd six or eight month- *'&#13;
afo, you am buy strictly cu«tom Chicago&#13;
tapered clothes ntAd* right to&#13;
todby. feahxmc by W c ^ 1 1 P r n T C ^&#13;
C.E. BOOTH AH&#13;
^ r . O A &gt; V ' / ^ !&#13;
^"»V ' ^ ' ^ » t « * » « - . # • » ' ,&#13;
( * _&#13;
' , &amp; ' • &lt;&#13;
*• . )—n,-;' , •«.&#13;
* - • • # " : • • " :&#13;
j f ^ - f ' . - e e - -&#13;
• - • * * ' :&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
F O K S A X E - S e e d Corn, \Yhiu» C a p Vcl&#13;
; low D e n t . J . H . Sider, P i n e kney&#13;
H A V I N G Soid M y F a r m - 1 offer for bale&#13;
several bead of choice, uaiiya aud grade&#13;
Milch Cows, ulao 3 Ouroc iSow*.&#13;
a*Jt R a v Baker. P h o o e ."-)U I 1-1&#13;
KOK SACK - Hay Work H u r t * , wt 1-iUO.&#13;
i n j u i i e of Alfred Monka.&#13;
North Lake Morth Hamburg&#13;
D a m . l I U H l j m . d e a b u . i r W Mi** F r a n c Daa™S visited&#13;
trip to P i n c k a e y S a t u r d a y friends m Detroit t h e p a s t week.&#13;
Mr. uud M r s C. M. C a r p e n t e r&#13;
a t t e n d e d the funeral of her aunt,&#13;
near Ann Ar|y&gt;r. Just wi'i.'k&#13;
FOK 3ALK -240 K ^ i n c i b a a^ . ) . J ; I rotxd&#13;
condition. j&gt;o uv. \ o u a .BuilvM, &lt;,]j^Lilly&#13;
*lsed.&#13;
F o K S A L h -v.&#13;
Jamb last ul&#13;
horse cl.c:i (-.&#13;
F O K BALK •&#13;
old Fioist.&#13;
FOK SALE C&#13;
Mrs,. &lt; it-*.. Kcad ,&#13;
I). J. Bennett, v.'ife and dauiri i&#13;
i:&gt;- W'-MJ Kwes, titie to&#13;
C .' ,\ i.vj heavy work&#13;
O. M, O - e i - e r ^&#13;
t- e , ;d and one 1-fr&#13;
M r . and Mrs. Geo. Webi&gt; were&#13;
Dexter visitor* Sunday.&#13;
-Robert MoJSiel of G r e g o r y called&#13;
on friends here Scmdav. ,, » ., ,,, ,, , . ., ^&#13;
iUji a-at h. \V. Kounsifi".- and wile g&#13;
Mr. and Mra. Geo. Fuller opui.t j o j ; &lt; ;,.,,„.,_ ,V ,.R , S u i m a v « u e ^ at l § {&#13;
Sunday at the home of Mr. an, j t h ( . h f ^ t ; u f M r a n ( 1 a l i ^ K&#13;
Mra. r rank Barton. J B e n u e "&#13;
Mibti P e a t ! Mohrlook ot'Cutiie•&gt;. [&#13;
spent part of lturt week with Mi&#13;
Satisfied&#13;
Customers&#13;
A. J . Guff to. v.&#13;
F O K S A L E ' F i v e year u'A H .Latin ,:&gt;,.v&#13;
a n d '2 yeur L»1«.1 il'd^lt-in tu-ifVr, due ^,oii.&#13;
Price reusoanble. W • '. Heud&lt;*e&#13;
F O K S A L E — Q u - t u m y of Clover H a y&#13;
alsu soai^ Swetsdi*h hidtci tjeed oats.&#13;
K. E Kellv.&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
STATS of MICtiltiaA'; The Praoata Caart for&#13;
ta« Couotr ct L l r i i n t n a , Al a aaaalas of&#13;
aald Court, held at the Probate Cfflce in tha VI*.&#13;
la?e or Howell, in said county, on the 881J1 d » of&#13;
March A. D. l»lfi,&#13;
Mary Uilbeii and family.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Orla Tyler of&#13;
Glenn Brook Stack farm move*.&#13;
i-'i-aak jK'Kiud^r. I their house hold ^oods to Chelsea&#13;
'ow and H oi-s. Saturday where they expeci to&#13;
make their home.&#13;
Miss Veva Hadlev was entertained&#13;
at the home of M r . ano&#13;
Mrs. J o h n H i n c k e y T u e s d a y&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mrs. E . Daniels spent the w«ek&#13;
end with her sister Mra. B,. J o h n -&#13;
son of Chelsea.&#13;
M r . a n d M « . P . E. Noah at.&#13;
taodad tha Gaodwi&amp;.Lae wadding&#13;
in L j n d o n W a d s e a d a j .&#13;
M r . aod Mrs. J . Aiken of I n -&#13;
diana ara apauding aoma time at&#13;
H e r ' . N i t v i&#13;
' d u o 1 MI ^ oai'i&#13;
.uili - . . n d e r AL&lt;&#13;
South Marion&#13;
i l i \ 1. J. Abbott a n d Mr-. N&#13;
P a y visited relatives in Powlor-&#13;
\iilti Sctturdav and S u n d a v .&#13;
Mrs. Vr. (r. Dinkel M^K'nt e,ue&#13;
day last week witii H e n r y J^ose&#13;
and wife of N. Marion.&#13;
Mrs. J. P . H a r r i s a n d s o n&#13;
, E u g e n e of £ . AJ a r i o n imd P a u l&#13;
B i o g a n of Chiison Bpeot S u n d a y&#13;
a t -the h o m e of Chris B r o g a n .&#13;
N. Pac»-y is ti&gt;e o w n e r of a new&#13;
F o r d t o u r i n g car.&#13;
M a r g a r e t B r o g a n . s p e n t F r i d a y&#13;
in P i n c k n e y .&#13;
Proeeai; HON. LUOWIK A. SCOWY, i u d e t A i , A V , « .&#13;
Probate, fu the matter of thentate «f I D W f f a r m a &lt; f a .&#13;
J. KDWAOJJ VAM H 0 a 5 . M J » *&#13;
Willis L. Lyons guardian, hat fug filed in&#13;
said court U» petttloo, pra^lag for I!c«B§a to B«B&#13;
fhclatereet oisald ©state JD e*rf»ia r&gt;mk eetate&#13;
therein dtesf.ribe&lt;&gt;.&#13;
1» !» Ordered, Thai the 2Uh day ot April&#13;
A. r&gt; 197*,&amp;&lt; fen eVIorS in v.ie toreaoua, at e id&#13;
urcbite oTBce. *e na'l is UeruLj appointed for&#13;
hearinjj anM petitioc acd th.it al! pers;um ialofit&#13;
ed tr- m\d cerate appear !&gt;t;l&lt;jre aald conrt, at aa*d&#13;
t rre and p2acj&lt;», to ahow can»-j why it Uecaeo to&#13;
s»;ll the interest of said c*tuir in He&lt;t real estat«&#13;
stOaldoot in'granted.&#13;
It is further ordered that public autico Ihereul&#13;
t&gt;e ^ivea by publiratlon of a copy of this order, for&#13;
tUrro aucoea^ive weeks previous to said day -.»1&#13;
hearinciB the PlDckney ntaraiCH a newspaper&#13;
priateaand circulated In eaidconaly. 0*13&#13;
KUQBNE A. 8TOWE&#13;
Jidg* of Probata.&#13;
Q T A T E 0 1 ' M1CHIUAS, (tie r r e i * ' ('&gt;, j r t for&#13;
the Count/ of Livln^tut&#13;
Al a session of aai t r n . r t hf&gt;!d at \&lt;\*. I'rrbate&#13;
Office in the Vtllap*1 of \\i~ ' • i in said C'jnntv, on&#13;
ihp -"Tth day of Marc1: A ;&gt;,lo;&lt;.,&#13;
Present, Hon. Ku,-fr •• V. Mov&gt;, .'j'lpe of&#13;
Probate. In th" matter 0 i&lt;e f&gt;.-iut&lt;&gt; &lt;.-.&#13;
.•0:1 ,\ \; /V,!.&#13;
i &gt; if o w l - " i a&lt;.n^' :!••; lr: b „ . j (-,,::: iiiy&#13;
t a i o ' i j TM; in»? t h a t A . • •'.'t.iiii j n Jt ruracii* &lt;n&#13;
w r i t i n _•. puj i&gt;ortiii2 to W iV,- ',i&gt;t w'!j JJJK! teetar;&#13;
U'Ut of fii'd 1»«&lt;:e.cC'l, r.o-.» on :i!f : i ; a i o I.OI it&#13;
l)«» a d m i t t e d to ;&gt;rr&gt;t&gt;a(f,-.»nd :.':»( 'b« ; mit. Isti «•&#13;
&lt;ton o f ^iid w t ^ i e he „-ia '&gt;. 1 t" m.,!Si 1 &gt;.-r&#13;
tf.nv-' "&lt; hpr ~-iit:it»l" ••• r»o.n,&#13;
Anderson&#13;
S y d n e y Spioizt of Leslie i r a s&#13;
home t h e last of the w e e k .&#13;
M a l a c h y R o c h e of F o v lerville&#13;
visited r e l a t i v e s h e r e F r i d a y and&#13;
S a t u r d a y .&#13;
tor. a n d Mrs. F l o y d Boise&#13;
moved b a c k from Unadilla last&#13;
Mrs. E . T . McClear a n d son&#13;
Gerald s p e n t t h e week e n d w i t h&#13;
relatives in pittckney,&#13;
C. E. F r o s t and family a r e&#13;
nicely settled in their new h o m e&#13;
on tl\e Allison farm.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mrs. L. T. LamtH&gt;rn \* visiting&#13;
her d a u g h t e r s iu Pinckney&#13;
Mr K n h n of Mi!r'.-rti r^turnt-d&#13;
hotne S a t u n l a y nftrr vi-irin^ ti,.&#13;
Roberta l-'iro.-. and fnu:i!it?$ :^i H e&#13;
paht week.&#13;
3fr. and Mr&amp;, \\\. S. (JHSK*V&#13;
called on Kd Cbipman T h u r s d t y&#13;
last.&#13;
Rosael Baker of Detroir is 5»&#13;
iting J o e Roberta and family&#13;
Mr. and Mra. Isliaoi of P! i .it&#13;
hold spent Tbnrsday at the N\ *&#13;
ter's Bros,&#13;
Mrs. doe Roberts cat tad ..t L.&#13;
T. Lauiborn's TLursdny&#13;
F Beatrice Lamborn&#13;
Are the Best A s s e t&#13;
any Pirm can Claim&#13;
K c e p : n ^ 1::)- .u m : n d we. n l w i t y s a i m t o f u r&#13;
fiiMi oLir cu.-tnirn.-r-&gt; t i V 'h.;j.^t ^'oodft t o ht h a d a t r e a s -&#13;
o n a b l e p r i c e s .&#13;
W e h a v e o u r S p r i n g I L i t s a n d C a p s r e a d y for&#13;
v u u r i n s p e ' c t i o n a n d yce.i s h o u l d i n a k e a n e S o r t t o&#13;
see t h e m .&#13;
C o m e in a n d leave y o u r o r d e r f o r t h a t S p r i n g&#13;
S u i t , r e m e m b e r w e g u a r a n t e e a fit a n d s a t i s f a c t i o n .&#13;
Fruits In Stock every Day&#13;
Vegetables Saturday&#13;
H i g h e s t p r i c e p o s s i b l e for y o u r c r e a m W e d n e s -&#13;
d a y :•;• a n v d a v m o r e c o n v e n i e n t t o r y o u -&#13;
C o b for B u t t e r o r e-^cr^»&#13;
Y o u r s&#13;
MONKS BROS.&#13;
a"a®aiarajae/si3fiB?a!SHBB!Hffi&#13;
*^&gt;&#13;
5 p e 111^&#13;
biit.&#13;
litftriu :&#13;
- era&#13;
'.tl a ' •&#13;
Hie* ,, o&#13;
-i I [•'., iu&#13;
for ',,:•&#13;
h&gt;\ir.:.&lt;&#13;
pr.n'.f"!&#13;
* MI l,v&#13;
•,ad ro n' v&#13;
• i . n ; o&#13;
: :-.c.-i'&#13;
4,,. 1 .lay&#13;
: , ' • : • - ; - a ; . •&#13;
i-:'v&gt; ,I-»NI. ,\, bi v:&#13;
JudLg* of Probata.&#13;
E n o c h H a n e s an old pioneer&#13;
resident died at his h o m e hero I Snuefiv at Joe Roberts.&#13;
Mcmday after a l i n g e r i n g illness&#13;
T h e deceased wa» hi tire ninety i&#13;
fourth year of his age and until NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS&#13;
the past y e a r enjnyed gvyxl&#13;
health.&#13;
Adrian L a \ e y&#13;
.&gt;]&gt;eii i hi^i \vt •]•; liore.&#13;
Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
TLe biggest a r ^ u ' e - u t \ et pr&lt; •&#13;
denied in favor of Letting bona&#13;
t'UK (vi:»'\-; j&gt;f,j jtij- lL,ai]ri &gt;n.^t as C{tlieU1 y ng&#13;
! [iOiitjible is t&lt;&gt; b'.j fetnri ! i• i-» week&#13;
D&#13;
' K ;C&#13;
T h e T e e p l c Um'&#13;
l o r c a s h .&#13;
ii. c S t ' h e r e a f t e r w ,n ^eJ&#13;
i l e l&#13;
^ o&#13;
• l O ' I&#13;
iiiondn L&lt;'dwidi,"&#13;
rruid parent-;. Mr. and M :&gt;&#13;
[\ &gt;&#13;
i-i!&lt;. d i n'jht in 1 he run&#13;
P i L L S BEST FOR L I V E R&#13;
Because they contain th-; bestir1 , Bi'o^nn nf Sontlr .Mavi'ei&#13;
liver LDcditico«, no matter how bitter&#13;
or nauseating for the- sweet sugar&#13;
coating hides the Usto. Dr. King's; ICahi Cea ^ i(ia&lt; has • j •, j-- u a , o&#13;
New Life Pills coata.rn ingredients &lt; i , , .1 , . ,&#13;
' team arid oe«ra\i ^;or;;. on toe t,,\vr,?uin. Aiso&#13;
\v&lt;'&lt;: l\,&#13;
Holly HrrHid.&#13;
A: ra-- t uv&#13;
v.tt.'d to |,ri&gt;- n&#13;
e e W ; ) 0 do I unae-f&#13;
t h a t p u t t h e l i v e r w o r k i n g , m o v e t h e&#13;
b o i r e l s f r e e l y , X o g r i p e , n o n a u s e a , i W i l l R t ) ; h e f a r i i i .&#13;
a i d d i g e s t i o n . Jucjt t r y a b o t t l e o i&#13;
D r , K i n g ' s N e w L u e P i l l s p.nd n o t i c e&#13;
:.- t i i f . - m s i&#13;
; n c t- * i i J ^&#13;
. at,v of 1:&#13;
i r a i s o&#13;
r tlu'&#13;
A Cash Drscount of 10 per cent&#13;
how much bettor yon feel.&#13;
your Druggist.&#13;
For Croup--Mothers--&#13;
Always Keep This Handy&#13;
i&#13;
T h « d a y of tlx« Croup soar* to C7er&#13;
for t h o a a p a r a r t » who w i s e l y k»ep&#13;
V o l a y ' t H o n e y a n d T a r C o m p o u n d iu&#13;
t h a n o m a r e a d y f o r l n t t a a t uaa.&#13;
Mrs. C h a s . T^eita, A l a n ' s MiUs. Ta..&#13;
writ.-:s: '"1 h a v e u.s^d F o l e y ' s H o n e y nnd&#13;
T a r C o m p o u n d for t h e p a s t eleven y e a r s&#13;
nnd would r^t. hp w i t h o u t it. I t "har,&#13;
savofl nv^ rr.ir.y a doctor's t i l l for co!ds&#13;
n/.».I c r o u p . "&#13;
If t^wn.rfl n ' -b.'+",-; 11 thr* V.ltl^ crr.T&#13;
proTV ho.ir.-io ar.'i r r o u p y , if t h e i r brenl-hir*:£&#13;
borori."" ; n-h.•:&gt;--43v a :^1 -OifCy, g'lvc&#13;
J.h?m Fe:&lt;- --•'s TT'»::r/ind T. 1 *CompounrL&#13;
Ma'..v a r.e-r-iM. v. &gt;-,'.-,--r :-. e-; h^tn a b l e to&#13;
v-rr-i cfi' r&gt;n r- • •••;.- •",.' :-[yr-f--:-.cxiic c r o u p&#13;
(.»lenn (tardimi' a ..;! iar;:d,\&#13;
a t ' Siockhrirlire wer- S'.i:day i^ie-'-&#13;
; of K. -\. Sproe*. and Ce.niir.&#13;
(ii'O (i'reiiit'i' arai c !:&gt;&gt;o:. Mar&#13;
jorie B r e n n a n of D-^roi1 v e o&#13;
over S u n d a y visdi)3-.-^ a1 lie- hoim&#13;
of G M Greiner,&#13;
Born to .Mr. and. M r s . Car&#13;
Bowen S a t u r d a y , A p r i l 7th a son&#13;
' i.&#13;
."rT'1^ vrduniion fe&#13;
iiiif):-ev'-'tnfr:t fund i\w:.&#13;
&gt;T 0 s'riia",t ioa h&lt;r M: e*&#13;
? e pair fa ad .--^, MIt !i T.^yo&#13;
w #&#13;
" • f.acrj&#13;
; ; i d i e&#13;
e - p e r&#13;
^ I ; W R y&#13;
Fhaald&#13;
I V : ! . !j&#13;
OlU e&#13;
F n o d ,&#13;
n o t t a&#13;
de-(iuctc^i ire)in all ^ ( o . i &lt; i&#13;
K i n t h , C o a i s a; i&#13;
W'fc1 e x p e c t e^ ery&#13;
r, t h e n e x t 30 d:iv-&#13;
\Cv:pt ( j a s U i i n e a i u . A&#13;
C a l f M e a l a n d S t o c k "&#13;
&lt; M-lt-c a c c o u n t s&#13;
R e s tc Keep Your S k i n Stear a.nd Healthy.&#13;
The*e is only one way t/&gt; have a.&#13;
clear, healthy complexion and that La&#13;
to kee-p the bowels active and regular&#13;
Dr. King'e New Life Pills will make&#13;
yoar complexion h-ealthy and clear,&#13;
aiove the bowels gently, stimulate&#13;
the liver, cleans the aysten and puri* Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
fy the blood. A splendid spring rued-&#13;
Mr. a n d M*s. F r e d W y l i e a;jd iaine. 25c. at your druggist.&#13;
sons visitod a t J. H. C o n n o r ' s of; _ _ _ _ _&#13;
W P u t n a m S u n d a y .&#13;
Detroit p a r t i e s wer*' h'-rr ia&gt;*&#13;
week looking at T P. C e C l e a r '&#13;
f rm Mr. McClear is&#13;
v. You I&#13;
w hi'. .^&#13;
r'r.iiik&#13;
v.c&#13;
U I \ i ! . S f O f !&#13;
,::1 !-;»• t h e hor.r-,-&#13;
\'-?.*..:&lt; crotTp, rriv.-'&#13;
,"JI"1 T;&lt;r (.'.-inivoii^i n t&#13;
l r ; i . - ••' , - - ^ :&#13;
a u r * . a&gt;It "Will 01.---. ;;;&lt;"• "lOir- j-nrYeren&#13;
qaickV.-, c::&lt;" *l:r» t h &gt; i : rh.okir.rr phlo/rm.&#13;
n n i M-K.'n tl-wv v-il! h^vo r.i-;• l ro.ithiKg&#13;
a n d po-7i:ofvil uuiot *.arp.&#13;
•frwwfiyery U s e r I s a P r t c i d .&#13;
* * P o r . S a l e - E v e r y w h e r e »»&#13;
trading' his farm for city pi-j^-riy&#13;
Mr?*. E A. S p r o u t s p e i c on*'&#13;
day last w c o k in S t o c k - b r i o , "&#13;
Cha-s. F r o s t and family T;V,a&gt;d&#13;
at A l b e r t F r o s t ' s S u n d a y .&#13;
Mr. P o w e r s moved h i s family&#13;
herf from G r e g o r y last. vr&gt;-vk. He&#13;
Ring W e i g h e d a P o u n d&#13;
;f rhi.' lwru'e^t iin?:s is t!.'&#13;
v.-,e; pre--eatef] to rrr\-;tl--:.&#13;
u Pier;---' ei iSffS ^y ^"?no c;i:&#13;
S : e ; 1 ":•..:.'•; - i'e. I t TvT;rg!jP'l ^ e&#13;
1' ,• ! , , . - ' 1 CO ? Ui&gt; "/llltr 0 :•:;&#13;
. ! ' - , - . , '..; •'.;'"!! n t T \ - h i C . ,\.&#13;
,.,1,n&gt; - " . ' . • ••'" 1-U.* k ^ t ^ p v (&gt;&#13;
'"-:;(,• i i^.ei. benvlii,;- ti.&#13;
;•; .i - C :i-;Tn:i ft tl&lt;e .. ri.is e&#13;
^ W&amp;&amp;-0&#13;
; [ 1 : L- ^ • .&#13;
s l i O " - u&#13;
i . a i l 0 " . - n i , e&#13;
M , C , l e : ^ • •:•.&#13;
MH- ^(:,t«- &gt;r C',('.J'n''ntft. s»MTi*f»}J*ed 1);&#13;
I;; I. e i , - ; , ,-;,,| ..)r:f.e« o f r b e V b i r c l&#13;
js+ -:,.&gt;. ;i-.ri ej,,, &gt;&gt;r: iiie nf Pr.in'.r,:;&#13;
Pic.&lt;.'«'. " i r v r i i , - ^'..i-. ' .ih.e'.l :if. SJ.&#13;
e-'-e. — VCj^Ui.'i.rl'M! I V o t&#13;
«3&#13;
OontiRCtB for yrowinif cue fi ra&#13;
ber rdtkra for :be §r**c*\ of Jdlfi&#13;
-H-J-H-X-J-W-I-l-!-:'&#13;
LABOR. £ I&#13;
tlMl~'..'..W.a.'.»*.&#13;
Bihv now b * had from our repre- - p&#13;
sentatirp X. T Morta-^mi a* ••&#13;
greatly lacreased ariw«. We a ^ ;; T h t - ^ ^ m a r k # &lt; J u p o n o u r&#13;
p a y i n g fpom iPVf»ntT-five afrits to " for#Haad§, wpfttan apo« «wr&#13;
ona dollar n n d , half p«r bunhel •• ^ ^ ^ , e ^ J j J g&#13;
for anaall piekUs noaording to ;; wmv— )• •m) mast aai&#13;
and tbirftj-Ava o^ntf for Urt;f. \ ts hanarabla aad&#13;
T h « Kacx.fcUrrii PwkkMl C« : ; » * " * « * * " - T , CaatrK&#13;
JaekaM^iob Til l i t l U l H t t l M j&#13;
Backfire a t t h e I n s t r u c t o r .&#13;
T h e KiiCiii-u :'^&lt;,iU!i!iH^it w a g ; W r i t e&#13;
n short. t!!r*nis» us'iii? t&lt;'-it vvoixls whivh,&#13;
you h a v e n e v e r u s e d t»efore. T h i s is&#13;
w h a t a f r o s h m n n n e c o n i p l i p h e d :&#13;
"One ot tie iJiojjyncTOaics ff thl»&#13;
tyfograjjbical expedWon Is tfiat the&#13;
u^nftUy otiose aaajoatcr Js compiled t»&#13;
TBoIHfy and tra*aa&gt;oaTi&amp; Into tuaful&#13;
form by bebemotbiaii, fc Met, afoMit&#13;
•yilphean rotofe, *be fffe iaair^i ©f&#13;
n * QttJ»4rape*rM&#13;
lba&gt;patraaav k MOW u k i a f a&#13;
to ety ai^aif —Ha fraaj&#13;
•1&#13;
If In Need&#13;
* Of New Farm Tools&#13;
C a l l a n d see- u s ,&#13;
Suparior Gram Drills, in ali sizes, also repairs for same.&#13;
Oliver and Gale Plows a n d Tillage I m p l e m e n t s .&#13;
Single and T e e m Harness, and Horse C o l l a r s&#13;
Prat's Babv Chie Food and Poultry' food, E t c .&#13;
D1NK&amp;L* St D U N B A R&#13;
/-&#13;
-:-^:^1¾^^&#13;
.• *»Kf'&#13;
.:..-.%•.»!*»*.' . • ^ . - - . ^ J i t ^ ' J W *M«» l « M « U M ) M M f f M M ^ &gt; e » »&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
•*&#13;
FOR TARIFF BOARD&#13;
W A Y S A N D M E A N S C O M M I T T E E&#13;
GIVES S A N C T I O N TO T H E&#13;
RAINEY BILL.&#13;
PLAN TO ELIMINATE POLITICS&#13;
Intention of Measure 1» to Keep the&#13;
Tariff Out of Party Strife—Studies&#13;
• f Commission Intended to Be of&#13;
Profit to Congress.&#13;
By GEORGE CLINTON.&#13;
Washington.—A tariff eommlauion&#13;
bill, having the sanction of the majority&#13;
of the ways and means committee,&#13;
has been Introduced into congress&#13;
and it 1H a aafe prediction that it will&#13;
be passed because it is known virtually&#13;
definitely that a majority of the&#13;
members of both houses will support&#13;
it. The bill was drawn by Representative&#13;
Rftiney of Illinois.&#13;
President Wilson recently announced&#13;
that he was in favor of the passage&#13;
by the present congress of a bill creating&#13;
a tariff commission. The measure&#13;
in its present form provides for a&#13;
commission of six members with salaries&#13;
of % 10,000 a year each and It is&#13;
especially provided that not more&#13;
than three members shall belong to&#13;
the same political party.&#13;
In a statement made by the framer&#13;
of the bill, and authorized by the majority&#13;
of the ways and means committee,&#13;
the following appears:&#13;
"This would mean three Democrats&#13;
and three Republicans. From the political&#13;
standpoint, the membership of&#13;
the committee would be equally balanced&#13;
between the parties which favor&#13;
different methods of imposing tariffs.&#13;
The bill requires the chairman and&#13;
the vice-chairman to be selected biennially.&#13;
This makes it Impossible to&#13;
install in these important offices for a&#13;
long term members who happen to&#13;
belong to the political party in power&#13;
when the appointment is made. In&#13;
the first instance members are appointed&#13;
for two, four, six. eight, ten&#13;
and twelve years respectively. As&#13;
their terms expire, however, their successors&#13;
are appointed for twelve&#13;
years."&#13;
Keep Tariff Out of Politic*.&#13;
It is urged by some members of&#13;
congress that this specific division of&#13;
the commission Into a membership of&#13;
Republicans and Democrats as out*&#13;
lined by the framer of the bill perhaps&#13;
may not be possible as things develop.&#13;
It is said that Inasmuch as the&#13;
measure provides simply that not&#13;
more than three members of the commission&#13;
shall belong to any one party&#13;
It will be possible to appoint three&#13;
Democrats or three Republicans and&#13;
then for Instance to appoint a Progressive,&#13;
a Prohibitionist, a Socialist&#13;
It Is the intention of the measure,&#13;
however, to keep the tariff out of polltics&#13;
and if the president shall exercise&#13;
Judgment in the appointment of mem&#13;
bers it can be made a commission nonpoHtical&#13;
In its nature no matter what&#13;
parties are represented.&#13;
Ever since the tariff commission&#13;
plan first was suggested the idea has&#13;
been to Becure a membership which&#13;
would consider the tariff as a business&#13;
proposition and not as a political one.&#13;
It is expected that business men and&#13;
students of economics will be appointed&#13;
to the commission. An Ideal&#13;
commission, as members of all parties&#13;
view It, would be one which would&#13;
study business conditions throughout&#13;
the country, would determine actually&#13;
which Industries need protection and&#13;
which do not, and then would act accordingly.&#13;
It must not be supposed&#13;
for a moment, however, that this bill&#13;
or any other bill which has been&#13;
framed in the past has for its object&#13;
the appointment of a commission&#13;
which shall concern Itself directly&#13;
with tariff legislation.&#13;
If this measure passes congress, as&#13;
it is presumed that it will, the commission&#13;
will be empowered to act only&#13;
In an advisory capacity to congress.&#13;
It will make studies of conditions here,&#13;
there and everywhere, and then will&#13;
lay Its reports before the president&#13;
and the congress of the United 8tates.&#13;
There is nothing in the proposed law,&#13;
and there can be nothing In it which&#13;
will In any way take sway from congress&#13;
the right to legislate as it&#13;
chooses In tariff matters.&#13;
and the natural expansion of its us»&#13;
fulness in saving life and properly at&#13;
sea demand application of ihe art ot&#13;
flying to search for derelicts and (or&#13;
carrying aid to ships and meti in dis&#13;
tress at sea"&#13;
It was only recently that the liresaving&#13;
corps of the United States,&#13;
which is composed of men who patrol&#13;
the beaches and the rocky headlands&#13;
and who go to sea in small bouts at&#13;
the risk of their own lives to rescue&#13;
those In danger, was put upon a foot&#13;
lag similar to that occupied by the&#13;
revenue cutter service and In a measure&#13;
by that occupied by the army and&#13;
navy. For years the llfesavers at&#13;
small pay haa risked everything for&#13;
the saving of the property and the&#13;
lives of others and yet when they were&#13;
old and uaftt for service they were&#13;
turned out without pensions and without&#13;
any provision whatsoever for their&#13;
declining years.&#13;
Pay After Retirement.&#13;
FRENCH STAND&#13;
FURIOUS ASSAULTS&#13;
C R O W N PRINCE'S A R M Y M A D E&#13;
T E R R I F I C D R I V E 8 TO GAIN&#13;
G R O U N D .&#13;
ENORMOUS LOSS OF TEUTONS&#13;
The Attack By the German* Was&#13;
Centered Against Two Sectors&#13;
the Western Bank of&#13;
the River.&#13;
WISCONSIN GETS&#13;
A BIG SURPRISE&#13;
on&#13;
Paris The village of Bethincourt,&#13;
forming the apex of the salient of the&#13;
All this has been changed now and western bank of the Meuse, against&#13;
Aero Corps to Help Coart Guard.&#13;
Congress may act to provide aeroplanes&#13;
as aids to the life-saving and&#13;
the revenue cutter services of the&#13;
United States, two services which recently&#13;
have been merged into one under&#13;
the name of the coast guard.&#13;
Department officials are now en&#13;
gatsd in perfecting a bill which will be&#13;
Introduced into congress for the creayen&#13;
of a coast guard aerial corps. Byron&#13;
R. Newton, assistant secretary of&#13;
the treasury, who has jurisdiction over&#13;
the coast guards, says on this matter:&#13;
"I favor any legislation which will&#13;
provide for the development of the&#13;
coast guard to a higher degree of etV&#13;
the lifesav*ng service has been made&#13;
a part of the revenue cutter service&#13;
and the two together are called the&#13;
coast guard. The men who dare all&#13;
to help others can retire after a certain&#13;
length of service and then they&#13;
receive retired pay. For yearB attempts&#13;
were male to Induce congress&#13;
to render assistance to the service&#13;
which always wes ready to give its&#13;
help to others, but every attempt to do&#13;
anything for the men who fronted&#13;
wave and storm at the call of duty&#13;
failed until a short time ago, when&#13;
congress finally consented to act.&#13;
If an aero coast guard service Is&#13;
sanctioned by congress it will mean&#13;
added dangers for the members of the&#13;
coast guard. When a vessel reports&#13;
by wireless that it Is in distress somewhere&#13;
off the coaBt it !s the instant&#13;
duty of a revenue cutter to put out&#13;
to the rescue. It frequently happens&#13;
that the cutter men cannot quickly locate&#13;
the distressed ship because wave&#13;
and wind and tide have changed its&#13;
position, "t is believed that by the&#13;
use of aeroplanes of the sea plane type&#13;
vessels In distress more quickly can&#13;
be located and help more quickly reo&#13;
dered.&#13;
It is believed also to be a part o£ the&#13;
plan to equip some of the life-saving&#13;
stations on the coast with aeroplanes.&#13;
The thought 1B that an aeroplane putting&#13;
seaward can pass a line over a&#13;
stranded ship more accurately and&#13;
quickly than It can be done by means&#13;
of the mortars on shore which are&#13;
now used to throw a projectile with&#13;
a line attached to Bhips on the rocks&#13;
or fast in the sand.&#13;
The coast guard as It is constituted&#13;
Is Uncle Sam's most recently organized&#13;
service. Of course the revenue&#13;
cutter and the life-saving services as&#13;
distinct bodies have existed for years,&#13;
but now they have been welded.&#13;
State, War and Navy Club.&#13;
Officials and employees of the state,&#13;
war and navy departments have organized&#13;
a social club which will have&#13;
membership reaching into the thousands.&#13;
The department of the interior&#13;
set a club example two years ago, and&#13;
It seems likely that it will be followed&#13;
by all the other departments of government&#13;
The Home club of Mr. Lanes&#13;
department has been a huge ruccess.&#13;
It Is said that Washington, In proportion&#13;
to its population, has more&#13;
social clubs than any other city in&#13;
the Union, but the organizations for&#13;
instruction and to promote sociability&#13;
among the officials and clerks, ar*&#13;
a departure in club life. Through ah&#13;
the years of Washington's existence&#13;
as the nation's capital nothing of the&#13;
kind ever has been tried before, and&#13;
this is regarded as an amazing fact&#13;
by those who now see the possibilities&#13;
in the case.&#13;
The organization which the state,&#13;
war and navy departments have set&#13;
out to form has not yet been named.&#13;
That it will take a definite name, following&#13;
the example of the interior department's&#13;
organization, which is&#13;
called the Home club, there Is no&#13;
doubt The state, war and navy workers&#13;
are determined to put their club&#13;
on a firm basis from the start and to&#13;
make it a club after the manner of&#13;
university clubs and other organizations&#13;
which all the big cities contain.&#13;
Will Erect a Building.&#13;
A corporation has been formed, and&#13;
the employees of the three departments&#13;
have purchased stock at a modest&#13;
figure. The money will be used&#13;
to erect and equip a building to be&#13;
used as the home of the club, one&#13;
where the employees can gather for&#13;
purposes of entertainment and instruction.&#13;
The Home club of the Interior&#13;
department has leased a fine&#13;
residence on Lafayette square which&#13;
formerly was the Persian legation,&#13;
but It is the intention of the newly&#13;
formed society to own its own building.&#13;
Cabinet officers are much interested&#13;
in the forming of these social organ!-&#13;
cations In the departments of which&#13;
they are the chiefs, tt is said that&#13;
the government already has benefit*&#13;
ted, from the fact that the workers&#13;
In the interior department through&#13;
the club life, have become better acquainted&#13;
with one another, and there*&#13;
fore have exchanged views of working&#13;
conditions and concerning means&#13;
which the Germans have been pounding&#13;
for four days with heavy artillery&#13;
and with frequent infantry attacks,&#13;
was evacuated by the French Sunday&#13;
the new lines withstood the most furious&#13;
assaultB which have been made&#13;
by the crown prince's army in many&#13;
days.&#13;
As now established, the French line&#13;
in this sector runs from the Avocourt&#13;
redoubt along the wooded slopes to&#13;
the west of Hill 304, follows the&#13;
Forges creek to the northeast of Haucourt&#13;
and joins the positions already&#13;
PROSPERITY&#13;
900 Million Dollars in New Wealth&#13;
Added in 1915.&#13;
R O B E R T M A R I O N LA F O L L E T T E .&#13;
Milwaukee—One of the biggest sur-&#13;
DENY RAILROAD PERMISSION&#13;
held to the south of the crossing 0f p r i s e s l n t h e political history of Wisthe&#13;
Bethincourt-Epsnes and Bethin- c o n s l n w a s aPrung when the fin figcourt-&#13;
Chattancouri roads. u r e s l n t n e v o t e f°r delegates to the&#13;
The evacuation of Bethincourt, in republican national convention were&#13;
itself only a small ruined village, has totaled and showed that Senator Rohad&#13;
the effect of flattening the point b e r t M L* Follette, heretofore considof&#13;
the salient, although the success- e r e d beaten, would control the Wisful&#13;
holding by the French of the line c°nsin delegation by two votes. The&#13;
just south of the village leaves a still delegation will stand: Progressives&#13;
very pronounced salient projecting 1 4 i conservatives 12.&#13;
into the German lines, with the two •&#13;
very important hills, 304, east of Haucourt,&#13;
and Le Mort Homme, southeast&#13;
of Bethincourt, within it.&#13;
Bethincourt lies in the Forges valley&#13;
at its junction with a valley running&#13;
into the Forges valley from the&#13;
south and was at the mercy of the&#13;
German guas on the hills at three&#13;
sides. The new French line skirt?&#13;
the higher ground to the south.&#13;
From the incomplete information&#13;
now available it&#13;
the violent German attack on the&#13;
western side of the river, made simultaneously&#13;
with two extremely heavy&#13;
assaults on the eastern bank, thus&#13;
practically covering the whole Verdun&#13;
front, was undertaken by the Germans&#13;
as soon as they&#13;
"Please Rectify False Statements,"&#13;
Says General Agullar.&#13;
Queretaro, Mexico—The Mexican&#13;
government has not given the American&#13;
government permission to use&#13;
Mexican railways for any purpose&#13;
seems probable that whatever, said General Candido Aguilar,&#13;
Mexican minister of foreign relations,&#13;
after a meeting of the Carranza&#13;
cabinet.&#13;
At the cabinet meeting, General&#13;
Carranza and his advisers discussed&#13;
the modifications suggested by the&#13;
learned of the United States in the recent proposals&#13;
withdrawal from Bethincourt in the for an agreement for crossing the&#13;
hope of finding the new French line frontier between the United States&#13;
in this sector not yet strong enough and Mexico by the armed forces of&#13;
to resist them. the respective governments. The lateBt&#13;
Sunday's attack was centered proposals of the Washington state deagainst&#13;
two sectors on the western partment were received here Friday,&#13;
bank of the river, one extending from having been sent by Eliseo Arredonthe&#13;
Bols Avocourt to the Forges do, Mexican minister designate to the&#13;
stream and the other from L#e Mort-! United States.&#13;
Homme to Cumieres. ' General Aguilar denied vigorously&#13;
stories published ln the American&#13;
press to the effect that the Carranza&#13;
government had given permission to&#13;
the United States army forces to use&#13;
Negro Mexican railways for transportation&#13;
of foodstuffs and supplies.&#13;
"Please rectify these falBe statements,"&#13;
said General Aguilar to the&#13;
Associated Press. "The Mexican government&#13;
has not given the American&#13;
government permission to use Mexican&#13;
railways for any purpose whatever."&#13;
Canada as a whole has enjoyed wonderful&#13;
prosperity in 1915, from the&#13;
products of the farm, the orchard and&#13;
the centres of industry. No country&#13;
wrote a brighter page of history in&#13;
agricultural and industrial development&#13;
during 1915 than Canada. Nearly&#13;
a billion buBhelB of grain produced.&#13;
Taxes in Western Canada average $24&#13;
and will not exceed $35 per quarter&#13;
section, which includes all taxes. No&#13;
taxes on improvements.&#13;
When Western Canada was faced&#13;
with her enormous harvest last fall&#13;
the military authorities decided that&#13;
soldiers in Canada could give the Empire&#13;
no better service for the time&#13;
being than to assist in harvesting the&#13;
crops. For tnat reason leave of absence&#13;
was given to soldiers who&#13;
wished to work ln the harvest fields,&#13;
and their labor was an important factor&#13;
in harvesting the big crops successfully.&#13;
The necessity for increasing the agricultural&#13;
production is commanding&#13;
even more attention ln 1916, and it Is&#13;
now announced that soldiers in Canada&#13;
may obtain leave of absence from&#13;
their military duties in the spring for&#13;
a certain length of time to enable&#13;
them to plant the seed for the crops&#13;
ln every Province of the Dominion.&#13;
The fact that the Government recognizes&#13;
the seeding and harvesting of&#13;
Canada's crops as being of the first&#13;
importance is perhaps the best evidence&#13;
that conscription or any increase&#13;
of taxes which would reduce&#13;
the agricultural activity of Canada&#13;
will never be considered by the authorities.&#13;
Owing to the number who have enlisted&#13;
for overseas service it has been&#13;
found necessary to secure farm labor&#13;
in the United States. It is hoped that&#13;
fifty thousand can be secured.—Advertisement.&#13;
AMERICAN SOLDIER IS KILLED&#13;
Rich Woman Weds Bootblack.&#13;
The number of marriages contracted&#13;
since the war by women of enemy nationality&#13;
with Frenchmen has become&#13;
so great that the government has&#13;
decided to ask parliament to pass a&#13;
bill the result of which will be to deprive&#13;
all such foreign brides of the&#13;
benflts of the present French marriage&#13;
laws.&#13;
The latter confer on the woman marrying&#13;
a Frenchman the status and all&#13;
the privileges of a citizen of French&#13;
nationality, Including exemption from&#13;
any measure which might otherwise be&#13;
taken against her as an "undesirable.''&#13;
A German woman of means married&#13;
in August laBt a'bootblack living in&#13;
the Porte-Maillot quarter of Paris, on&#13;
whom she settled a small annuity as&#13;
the price of his name and the immunity&#13;
it bestowed on her. The couple&#13;
never lived together.—New York Sun.&#13;
Sheriff Trying to Arrest 16&#13;
Soldiers During Street Disturbance&#13;
KKJa One.&#13;
Del Rio, Texas—Private John Wade,&#13;
of C company, Twenty-fourth infantry,&#13;
a Negro regiment&gt; was killed when&#13;
two rangers and Sheriff Almond attempted&#13;
to arrest 16 Negro soldiers&#13;
who had created a disturbance in a&#13;
hou^e in the restricted district&#13;
Three Negroes are aaid to have attacked&#13;
the officers while the latter&#13;
were taking them to the Jail. Wade&#13;
jumped on Ranger Barler, according&#13;
to stories told by witnesses, pressed&#13;
him to the ground, and clubbed him&#13;
on the head with the butt of his re-&#13;
LORD ROBERT CECIL REPLIES&#13;
Says German Chancellor's Speech&#13;
All "Boah."&#13;
la&#13;
London—Lord Robert Cecil, minister&#13;
of war trade, made a sharp reply&#13;
volver. Lying on his back, Barler t o t n e 8 P e e c n in the reichstag of Dr.&#13;
drew his pistol and fired over his v o n Bethmann-Hollweg, the German&#13;
shoulder. Wade was killed. Imperial chancellor.&#13;
Protest* against the preeence of' Conversing with American con-ethe&#13;
Negro soldiers and requests for 8 p o n d e n t s o n behalf of the foreign oftheir&#13;
removal were being prepared t o ; f l c e ' ^ ^ R°bert said the suggestion&#13;
be sent to the war department. j t n a t Germany might abandon her sub-&#13;
A portion of the Twenty-fourth In- m a r i n e warfare if Great Britain refantry&#13;
has been stationed here three l a x e d n e r f o o d blockade, was hardly&#13;
weeks. i likely to be entertained by Great&#13;
A coroner's Jury returned a verdict B r i t a i n . which had no faith that any&#13;
that Wade was killed by Ranger Bar- \ PronaiBe made by Germany regarding&#13;
ler who was acting in self-defense 18ubmarine warfare would be kept&#13;
and In the discharge of his duties.&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
As the result of the report of audi-&#13;
Germany slackened her submarine&#13;
; warfare for some time when the operations&#13;
of the British navy deprived&#13;
I her of the necessary number of sub-&#13;
I marines," said Lord Robert, "but has&#13;
now begun It a«ain. I am confident&#13;
Harvey L. Davis, 61, convicted of&#13;
conducting a resort ln his Pontlac hokeep&#13;
any promise."&#13;
tor. who made a special audit of Gen-1 t h a t Germany cannot be trusted to&#13;
essee county's books, found many errors&#13;
and declared the entire county&#13;
bookkeeping system almost worthl&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
cifSicy. The evolution of the serrices [ t 0 improve the servlci&#13;
New York—The 1916 city directory&#13;
tel, was sentenced to serve from one j placed in circulation contains 105.324&#13;
to five years at Jackson prison. He more names of individuals than the&#13;
stated he wished to be taken there 1915 issue. According to the census&#13;
at once and have it over with. Davis; made during the course of compilation&#13;
was a pillar of a local Methodist [ New York now hai a population of 5,-&#13;
church, county truant officer. J 528,571 persons.&#13;
SALTS IF BACKACHY OR&#13;
KIDNEYS TROUBLE YOU&#13;
Eat Leas Meat If Your Kidneys Aren't&#13;
Acting Right or If Back Hurts or&#13;
Bladder Bothers You.&#13;
When you wake up with backache&#13;
and dull misery in the kidney region&#13;
it generally means you have been eating&#13;
too much meat, says a well-known&#13;
authority. Meat formarUric acid which&#13;
overworks the kidneys in their effort&#13;
to filter it from the blood and they become&#13;
sort of paralyzed and loggy.&#13;
When your kidneys get sluggish and&#13;
clog you must relieve them like you&#13;
relieve your bowels; removing all the&#13;
body's urinous waste, else you have&#13;
backache, sick headache, dizzy spells;&#13;
your stomach sours, tongue is coated,&#13;
and when the weather is bad you have&#13;
rheumatic twinges. The urine is&#13;
cloudy, full of sediment channels often&#13;
get sore, water scalds and you are&#13;
obliged to seek relief two or three&#13;
times during the night&#13;
Either consult a good, reliable phfSjIV&#13;
clan at once or get from your pharos*&#13;
cist about four ounces of Jad SaUm&#13;
take a tablespoonful ln a glass ot&#13;
water before breakfast for a few day*&#13;
and your kidneys will then act fine.&#13;
This famous salts is made from the&#13;
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined&#13;
with lithia, and haa been used&#13;
for generations to clean and stimulate&#13;
sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize&#13;
acids in the urine so it no longer lrrf*&#13;
tates, thus ending bladder weakneis,&#13;
Jad Salts is a life saver for regular&#13;
meat eaters. It is Inexpensive, cannot&#13;
injure and makes a delightful, effervescent&#13;
llthia-water drink.—Adv.&#13;
. «&#13;
After a woman of thirty has been&#13;
a widow for about six weeks she it&#13;
positive that all her married female&#13;
friends envy her.&#13;
A schoolboy wants to know how&#13;
many square rods it takes to make a&#13;
wiseacre.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
/ • :&#13;
•1x- :f&#13;
The City of Numbered Days&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
Copyright by CharU* S c r f e M ^&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
—»—&#13;
Broutllard, chief engineer of the Niquoia&#13;
irrigation dam, meet* J. Wealey Cartwright&#13;
and hia daughter, Genevieve, and&#13;
explains the reclamation work to them.&#13;
Cortwright t e e s a big chance to make&#13;
money, o r g a n i s e s a company and obtains&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t contracts to furnish power&#13;
a n d material. Steve Masaingale t h r e a t e n s&#13;
to start a gold ruah If Broulllard doea not&#13;
Influence President Ford to build a railroad&#13;
branch to the place, thus opening&#13;
a n easy m a r k e t for the ore from the "Little&#13;
S u s a n " mine. On a visit to Amy Maseingale&#13;
at her father's mine Broulllard&#13;
tella IHT of his need for money to pay off&#13;
hl8 dead father's debts. She tells him to&#13;
be true to himself. He decides for the extension&#13;
Mliapolla, the city of numbered&#13;
clays, booms. Cortwright persuades Broulllard&#13;
to become consulting engineer of the&#13;
consolidated electric power company in ret&#13;
u r n Tor $100,000 stock. Stoppage of work&#13;
on the railroad t h r e a t e n s a panic, Broulllard&#13;
spreads the Masslngale story of&#13;
placer gold in the river bed and s t a r t s a&#13;
gold rush. The gold rush promises to stop&#13;
the rec:Hmatlon project. Amy tells Broulllard&#13;
that her father has incorporated the&#13;
"Little S u s a n " and is in Cortwrlght's&#13;
clutches financially. He tells her he has&#13;
made $100,000 a n d declares his love. Amy&#13;
loves him but shows him that he has become&#13;
demoralised. Masaingale's placer&#13;
gold find was a fraud, but a real find Is&#13;
m a d e&#13;
Suppose, young man, that the&#13;
brother of the girl you loved got&#13;
himself Into very serious trouble&#13;
and that she could be saved&#13;
much sorrow and he very severe&#13;
punishment only If you gave up&#13;
the Seat job you ever had and&#13;
cleared out of the state. Would&#13;
you make the sacrifice?&#13;
&gt;+*++-++-++*^++*^+&lt;i&#13;
CHAPTER XIV—Continued.&#13;
"\ didn't know you could be so convincing."&#13;
was MISB Genevieve's com&#13;
ment. "It was splendid! Nobody will&#13;
ever believe that you are going to go&#13;
on building your dam and threatening&#13;
to drown us, after fcbls."&#13;
"What did I aay?" queried Broulllard,&#13;
having, at the moment, only the&#13;
haziest possible Idea of what he had&#13;
said.&#13;
"As If you didn't know!" she&#13;
laughed. "You congratulated every&#13;
body. And the funny thing about It Is&#13;
that you didn't say a single word about&#13;
the Niquoia dam."&#13;
"Didn't 1? That shows how com&#13;
pletely your father has converted me.&#13;
how helplessly I am carried along on&#13;
the torrent of events."&#13;
"But you are not," she said accusingly.&#13;
"Deep down in your Inner consciousness&#13;
you don't believe a little bit&#13;
in Mlrapolis. You are only playing tbe&#13;
game with the rest of us, Mr. Broulllard."&#13;
Gorman. Mr. Cortwrlght's ablest&#13;
trumpeter In the real-estate booming,&#13;
was holding the plaza crowd spell&#13;
bound with prophetic outlining of tbe&#13;
Mlrapolitan future.&#13;
In the middle distance and backgrounding&#13;
the buildings on the opposite&#13;
side of the plara, rose the false&#13;
work of the great dam—a standing forest&#13;
of sawed timbers, whose afternoon&#13;
shadows were already pointing like a&#13;
many-flngered fate toward the city of&#13;
the plain. But, though the face of the&#13;
speaker was toward the shadowing forest,&#13;
his words ignored it. "The snowcapped&#13;
Timayonis." "tbe mighty Chigringo,"&#13;
and "the golden-veined slopes&#13;
of Jack's mountain" all came In for enlogistic&#13;
mention; but the massive wall&#13;
of concrete, with Its bristling parapet&#13;
of timbers, had no part In the orator's&#13;
flamboyant descriptive.&#13;
Broulllard loved Amy Masslngale&#13;
with a passion which, however blind It&#13;
might be on the side of the higher&#13;
moralities, was still keen-sighted&#13;
enough to assure him that every&#13;
plunge be made in the Mirapolltan&#13;
whirlpool was sweeping him farther&#13;
away from her.&#13;
He had transferred the power company's&#13;
stock, minus a single share to&#13;
cover his official standing on the&#13;
power company's board, to Cortwright&#13;
and had opened an account at the Niquoia&#13;
National. The ninety-nine thousand&#13;
nine hundred dollars had since&#13;
p e w n by speculative accretions to the&#13;
Ultnded eighth of a million which all&#13;
meters agree In calling the stepping&#13;
je to fortune-&#13;
Re had regarded thfi money—was&#13;
still regarding It—as a loan; hia lever&#13;
with which to pry out something which&#13;
he could really call his own But more&#13;
and more possession and use were dull*&#13;
Ing the keen edge of accountability&#13;
and there were momenta of insight&#13;
when the grim Irony of taking tbe&#13;
price of h c = r \a pay an honor debt&#13;
forced 'teelf upon him. At such momenta&#13;
be plunged more recklessly, In&#13;
one of them taking stock In a golddredge&#13;
company which waa to wash&#13;
nuggets by the wholesale out of the&#13;
Qoadjenal Dead, fo soother buying yet&#13;
oilier options ta the newest suburb of&#13;
sHrapotta&#13;
With «»e waning of the day of celebrations&#13;
the temper of the street&#13;
thrcngs was changing. It Is only the&#13;
people of the Latinized cities who can&#13;
take the carnival spirit lightly; in&#13;
other blood liberty grows to license&#13;
and tbe thin veneer of civilized restraints&#13;
quickly disappears. From&#13;
early dawn the saloons and dives had&#13;
been adding fuel to tbe flames, and&#13;
light-heartedness and good-natured&#13;
horseplay were giving way to sardonic&#13;
humor and brutality.&#13;
In the short faring through the&#13;
crowded street from the plaza to the&#13;
Metropole corner Broulllard saw and&#13;
heard things to make his blood boil&#13;
Twice before he reached Bongras' cafe&#13;
entrance the engineer shouldered his&#13;
way to the rescue of some badgered&#13;
nucleus of excursionists, and jn each&#13;
Instance there were frightened women&#13;
to be hurriedly spirited away to the&#13;
nearest place of seclusion and safety.&#13;
It was In front of Bongras' that&#13;
Broulllard came upon Rev. Hugh Castner,&#13;
the hot-hearted young zealot who&#13;
had been flung Into Mlrapolis on the&#13;
crest of the tidal wave of mining excitement.&#13;
Though Hosford—who had&#13;
not been effaced, as Mr. Cortwright&#13;
had promised he should be—and the&#13;
men of his clique called the young&#13;
missionary a meddlesome visionary,&#13;
ho stood in the stature of a man, and&#13;
lower Chlgringo avenue loved him and&#13;
swore by him now and then when somo&#13;
poor soul, hastily summoned, was to&#13;
be eased off Into eternity.&#13;
When Broulllard caught sight of him&#13;
Castner was looking out over the&#13;
seething street caldron from hlB commanding&#13;
height of six feet of athletic&#13;
man stature, his strong face a mask&#13;
of bitter humiliation and concern.&#13;
"Broulllard, this Is simply hideous!"&#13;
he exclaimed. "If this devils' carnival&#13;
goes on until nightfall we shall hare a&#13;
revival of the old Roman Saturnalia&#13;
at Its worst!" Then, with a swift blow&#13;
at the heart of the matter: "You're&#13;
the man I've been wanting to see; you&#13;
are pretty close in with the Cortwright&#13;
Junta—is it true that free whisky has&#13;
been dealt out to the crowd over the&#13;
bar In the Niquoia building?"&#13;
Broulllard said that he did not know,&#13;
which was true, and that he could not&#13;
believe It possible, which was not true.&#13;
"The Cortwright people are as anxious&#13;
to have the celebration pass off peaceably&#13;
as even you can be," he assured&#13;
the young missionary, trying to buttress&#13;
the thing which waa not true.&#13;
"When riot comes In at the door, business&#13;
flies out at the window; and,&#13;
after ail. this feast of hurrahs is merely&#13;
another bid for business."&#13;
But Castner was shaking his head.&#13;
"I can't answer for Mr. Cortwright&#13;
personally. He and Handley and&#13;
Schermerhorn and a few of the others&#13;
seem to stand for respectability of a&#13;
sort But, Mr. Broulllard, I want to&#13;
tell you this: somebody in authority&#13;
is grafting upon the vice of this community,&#13;
not only today but all the&#13;
time."&#13;
"The community Is certainly vicious&#13;
enough to warrant any charge you can&#13;
make," admitted Broulllard. Then he&#13;
changed the topic abruptly. "Have you&#13;
seen Miss Masslngale since noon?"&#13;
"Yes; I saw her with Smith, the&#13;
cattleman, at the other end of the avenue&#13;
about an hour ago."&#13;
"Heavens!" gritted the engineer.&#13;
"Didn't Smith know better than to&#13;
take her down there at such a time as&#13;
this?"&#13;
The young missionary was frowning&#13;
thoughtfully. "1 think It was the&#13;
other way about Her brother has been&#13;
drinking again, and I took It for granted&#13;
that she and Smith were looking&#13;
for him."&#13;
Broulllard buttoned his coat and&#13;
pulled his soft hat over his eyes.&#13;
"I'm going to look for her," he said.&#13;
"Will you come slongTM&#13;
Castner nodded, and together they&#13;
put their shoulders to the crowd. Again&#13;
end again the engineer and his companion&#13;
had to intervene by word sod&#13;
blow to protect the helpless In the&#13;
half-drunken, gibe-flinging crush, and&#13;
In these sallies Castner bore hit part&#13;
like a man, expostulating first and hitting&#13;
out afterward In a fashion that&#13;
left no doubt In the mind of his antagonist&#13;
of the moment&#13;
"It waa little lest thsn s crime to&#13;
turn your laborers loose on the town&#13;
on inch an occasion as this." said Castner,&#13;
dealing out hit words as frankly&#13;
and openly as he did his blows.&#13;
Broulllard throggadL&#13;
"If I hadnt given them ti?» 4ay&#13;
they would have taken It without leave&#13;
You'll have to pass the responsibility&#13;
on to someone higher up."&#13;
The militant one accepted the challenge&#13;
promptly.&#13;
"It lies altimately at the door ot&#13;
those whose Insatiate greed baa built&#13;
this new Gomorrah In the shadow of&#13;
your dam." He wheeled suddenly and&#13;
flung a long arm toward ire hair nn&#13;
lahed structure filling the gap between&#13;
the western shoulders of Chlgringo&#13;
and Jack's mountain. "There stands&#13;
the proof of God's wisdom In hiding&#13;
the future from mankind. Mr Broull&#13;
lard. Because a little section of bu&#13;
manity here behind that great wall&#13;
knows the end of its hopes, and the&#13;
manner and time of that end. it becomes&#13;
demon-ridden, irreclaimable!"&#13;
At another time the engineer might&#13;
have felt the force of the tersely eloquent&#13;
summing up of the accusation&#13;
against the Mirapolltan attitude. Rut&#13;
now he was looking anxiously for Amy&#13;
Masslngale or her escort, or both of&#13;
them.&#13;
"Surely Smith wouldn't let her stay&#13;
down here a minute longer than it&#13;
took to get her away," he said Impatiently&#13;
as a pair of drunken Cornish&#13;
men reeled out of Haley's place and&#13;
usurped the sidewalk. "Where was It&#13;
you saw them, Castner?"&#13;
"They were in front of 'Pegleg&#13;
John's,' in .the next block. Miss Mas&#13;
singale was waiting for Smith, who&#13;
was Just coming out of Peglegs den&#13;
shaking his head. I put two and two&#13;
together and guessed they were look&#13;
ing for Stephen."&#13;
"If they went there Miss Amy had&#13;
her reasons. Let's try It," said Brouil&#13;
lard, and he was half-way across the&#13;
street when Castner overtook him&#13;
There was a dance hall next door to&#13;
Pegleg John's barrel house and gam&#13;
bllng rooms, and, though the daylight&#13;
was still strong enough to make tbe&#13;
electrics garishly unnecessary the&#13;
orgy was in full swing, the raucous&#13;
clanging of a piano and the shuffle&#13;
and stamp of many feet drowning the&#13;
monotonous cries of the sidewalk&#13;
"barker," who was Inviting all and&#13;
sundry to enter and Join the dancers.&#13;
Castner would have stopped to ques&#13;
tlon the "barker"—was, in fact, trying&#13;
to make himself heard—when the&#13;
sharp crash of a pistol shot dominated&#13;
the clamor of the piano and the stamping&#13;
feet Broulllard made a quick dash&#13;
for the open door of the neighboring&#13;
barrel house, and Castner was so good&#13;
a second that they burst In as one&#13;
man.&#13;
The dingy Interior of Pegleg John s.&#13;
which was merely a barrel-lined vest!&#13;
bule leading to the gambling rooms&#13;
beyond, staged a tragedy. A handsome&#13;
young giant, out of whose face sudden&#13;
agony had driven the brooding passion&#13;
of intoxication, lay, loose-flung&#13;
on the sawdust-covered floor, with&#13;
Amy Masslngale kneeling In stricken,&#13;
tearless misery beside him. Almost&#13;
within arm's reach Van Bruce Cortwright&#13;
the slayer, was wrestling stubbornly&#13;
with Tig Smith and the fat&#13;
armed barkeeper, who were trying to&#13;
disarm him, his heavy face a mask of&#13;
irresponsible rage and his lips bub&#13;
bllng Imprecations.&#13;
"Turn me loose." he gritted. "I'll flx&#13;
him so he won't give the governor's&#13;
snap away! He'll pipe the story of&#13;
the Coronlda grant off to the papers?&#13;
—not If 1 kill him till he's too dead to&#13;
bury, 1 guess."&#13;
Castner Ignored the wrestling three&#13;
and dropped quickly on his knees be&#13;
side Stephen Masslngale, bracing the&#13;
misery-stricken girl with the needed&#13;
word of hope and directing her In low&#13;
tones how to help him search for the&#13;
wound.&#13;
But Broulllard hurled himself with&#13;
an oath upon young Cortwright and it&#13;
was be, and neither the cattleman nor&#13;
the fat-armed barkeeper, who wrenched&#13;
the weapon out of Cortwrlght's grasp&#13;
and with It menaced the babbling mur&#13;
derer Into silence.&#13;
CHAPTER XV&#13;
Quicksands&#13;
A short week after the reclamation&#13;
service headquarters had been moved&#13;
from the log-built offices on the gov&#13;
ernment reservation to the com modi&#13;
out and airy suite on tbe sixth floor of&#13;
the Niquoia budding Broulllard re&#13;
ceived the summons which he bad&#13;
been expecting ever since the night&#13;
of rioting and lawlessness which bad&#13;
marked the close of the railroad cele&#13;
oration.&#13;
"Mr. Cortwright would like to tee&#13;
yon tn hit rooms at the Metropole.'&#13;
was tbe message the office boy brought,&#13;
and Broulllard closed hit desk with t&#13;
snap and followed the boy to Boagrtt&#13;
The shrewd-eyed tyrant of Mlrapolis&#13;
was In his shirt sleeves, busily die&#13;
tattng to two stenographers alternate&#13;
ly, when the engineer entered the third&#13;
room of the series; hut the work waa&#13;
suspended and the stenographers were&#13;
aeni away aa soon as Brodlllard was&#13;
announced&#13;
"Well," waa the aiilllonalre'B greet&#13;
Ing. you waited io bu ueni tor. didn't&#13;
you ?'&#13;
"Why not?"' aald Erouillard shortly.&#13;
"I have cuy work to do and you bare&#13;
yours "&#13;
"Aud tbe two Joba are at opposite&#13;
enda of the string, you d say Never&#13;
mind; we can't afford to throw each&#13;
other down, and Juat now you can&#13;
tell me a few things that I want to&#13;
know. How la young Masaingale get&#13;
ting along''1&#13;
"As well as could be expected Car&#13;
ruthera-lhe doctor aaya he is oui of&#13;
danger"&#13;
"H'Hi. It baa been handed In to mt&#13;
two or three tlmea lately thai the old&#13;
man la oat gunning for Van Bruce or&#13;
tor me. Any truth In that?"&#13;
"I think not. Masaingale la a Ken&#13;
tuckian, and 1 fancy he ia quite caps&#13;
ble of potting either one or both of&#13;
you for the attack on hts son Hut so&#13;
far he has done nothing-has hardly&#13;
left Steve's bedside."&#13;
Mr. J. Wealey Cortwright flung him&#13;
self back In hia luxurious awing chair&#13;
and clasped hia pudgy hands over iht&#13;
top of his head where the reddish gray&#13;
hair was thinning reluctantly&#13;
"I've been putting it off to see which&#13;
way the cat was going to Jump," be ad&#13;
mitted. "If young Maaaiugale is out of&#13;
danger, it la time to get action. What&#13;
was the quarrel about, between btm&#13;
and Van Bruce?"&#13;
"It occurs to me trnt your son would&#13;
be a better source of Information,&#13;
said Broulllard, evading.&#13;
"Van Bruce has told me all he re&#13;
members—which Isfl't much, owing to&#13;
his own beastly condition at the time&#13;
He says young Masslngale was threat&#13;
ening something—something In con&#13;
nection with the Corontda grant—and&#13;
that he got the insane idea into hta&#13;
head that the only way to atop the&#13;
threat was by killing Masslngale."&#13;
The sandy-gray eyes of the million&#13;
aire promoter were shifting while be&#13;
spoke, but Broulllard fixed and held&#13;
them before he said: "Why should&#13;
Masslngale threaten your son. Mr&#13;
Cortwright?"&#13;
"I don't know," denied the promoter,&#13;
and he said It without flinching a hair's&#13;
breadth.&#13;
"Then I ran tell you," waa the equal&#13;
ly steady rejoinder. "Some time ago&#13;
you lent David Masslngale, through the&#13;
bank, a pretty large Bum of money for&#13;
development expenses on the 'Little&#13;
Susan, taking a mortgage on every&#13;
thing in sight to cover tbe loan. But&#13;
when the railroad was an assured fact&#13;
he learned that the Red Butte smelt&#13;
ers wouldn't take his ore. giving some&#13;
technical reason which he knew to be&#13;
a mere excuse."&#13;
Mr. Cortwright nodded. "So far you&#13;
might be reading It out of a book."&#13;
"In consequence, David Masslngale&#13;
finds himself In a fair way to become&#13;
a broken man by the simplest of com&#13;
mercial processes. Tbe bank holds his&#13;
notes, which will presently have to be&#13;
paid. If he can't pay, the bank comes&#13;
back on you as his Indorscr, and you&#13;
fall back on your mortgage and take&#13;
the mine. Isn't that about the Blze of&#13;
It?"&#13;
"It Is exactly the size ot it I do&#13;
want tbe 'Little Susan' and I've got a&#13;
good friend or two in the Red Butte&#13;
smelters who will help me get It."&#13;
Brouillard's black eyes were snapping,&#13;
but his voice was quite steady&#13;
when he said: "Thank you. That&#13;
brings us down to the mention of the&#13;
Coronlda grant and Stephen Masslc&#13;
gale's threat—which your son can't re&#13;
member."&#13;
"Rtght-o," said Mr. Cortwright. still&#13;
with predetermined geniality. "What&#13;
was the threat?"&#13;
"1 don't know, but the guessing list&#13;
is open to everybody. There was once&#13;
a grant of many square miles of mountain&#13;
and desert somewhere in thit re&#13;
glon made to one Don Estacio de Hon&#13;
tarrtba Coronlda, Like those of most&#13;
of the great Spanish land grants, the&#13;
boundaries of this one were loosely&#13;
described and—*&#13;
Mr. Cortwright held up a fat hand&#13;
"I know what you're going to say.&#13;
But we went into all that at Washing&#13;
ton before we ever invested a single&#13;
dollar in this valley. As you may or&#13;
may not know, the reclamation serv&#13;
ice bureau tried to choke us off. But&#13;
when it came down to brass tacks.&#13;
they lacked a witness. We may be tn&#13;
the bed of your proposed lake, but&#13;
we're safely on Coronlda land."&#13;
"So you say,M said Broulllard quietly,&#13;
"and on the strength of that you havt&#13;
been guaranteeing titles. Just there&#13;
is where Masslngale conies In. I imagine.&#13;
He has spent twenty years or&#13;
more in this region, and be knows&#13;
every landmark tn It. What tf he&#13;
should be able to put a lighted match&#13;
to your pile of kindling. Mr. Cortwright&#13;
r&#13;
IN WESTERN CANADA&#13;
-He Who Will and Does Work Will&#13;
Not Want."&#13;
—&#13;
Does not&#13;
Fear&#13;
Oppressions.&#13;
As in the United biates it Is said,&#13;
that the Mennonlieo in Canada are&#13;
very much oppressed, and have to nuf&#13;
fer from a great deal (on account of&#13;
the War in Europe) and I have been&#13;
requested to write something about&#13;
this, 1 will do so.&#13;
I came with my parents A. D 1874,&#13;
from Southern Russia&#13;
to America,&#13;
South Dakota, and&#13;
A. D. 1907 I came&#13;
with my family&#13;
here to Western Canada, here we have&#13;
found a healthy climate; the acre&#13;
yields on an average more and wheat&#13;
is better than in South Dakota. What&#13;
concerns the Government, up to now&#13;
we have had a good one, have been&#13;
able to live according to our creed and&#13;
have not been oppressed in any way,&#13;
and I believe: All Mennonites. who&#13;
live according to the fundamental beliefs&#13;
of the Mennonkes and to Gods&#13;
word, as their guide, will agree with&#13;
me.&#13;
He, who, here in Canada, will and&#13;
does work, will not want. So much as&#13;
an answer.&#13;
Remain your friend,&#13;
(3gd.) DIEDRICH GOOSSEN.&#13;
Very few farmers cultivate the habit&#13;
of keeping careful accounts of their&#13;
receipts and expenditures, showing at&#13;
the end of the year a balance, either&#13;
for or against. The farme* of Western&#13;
Canada is no exception to this. It is&#13;
felt if more careful book-keeping were&#13;
resorted to there that much better re-&#13;
— • »i suits would be ob-&#13;
Statlstica! State- t a i n e d and Bhown&#13;
ment Shows a Divi- There la the case&#13;
dend of 68% In&#13;
1915.&#13;
of the Crowfoot&#13;
Farming Co., of&#13;
Crowfoot, Alberta.&#13;
It has Just issued a certified statement&#13;
of its operations for the years 1912,&#13;
1913, 1914 and 1916. This Company&#13;
has had for the past few years about&#13;
1300 acres in wheat and between 200&#13;
and 250 In oats. The total operating&#13;
and general expenses for 1912, Including&#13;
Interest at 6^c and depreciation at&#13;
15%, were $12,587, for 1913 $17,506, for&#13;
1914 $18,729, and for 1915, $29,804.43.&#13;
Expense per acre of land In crop was&#13;
$7.80 in 1912, $11.57 In 1913, $11.70 In&#13;
1914, and $17.87 In 1915. Total receipts&#13;
were $15,531 In 1912, $30,661 In&#13;
1913, $31,589.87 In 1914, and $62,520.26&#13;
In 1915. The percentage earned upon&#13;
capital Invested was 6½% in 1912,&#13;
30% in 1913, 23 1-3 in 1914. and 50% In&#13;
1915, in which year It paid a cash dividend&#13;
of 58%.&#13;
The Company's statement shows&#13;
that the average dates of finishing&#13;
seeding was April 20th; the average&#13;
date commenced cutting was August&#13;
18th.—Advertisement.&#13;
SELLING RED CROSS SEALS&#13;
Six States and Seventy Cities Winners&#13;
of Pennants and Honors in Second&#13;
Competition.&#13;
Six states and seventy cities are announced&#13;
by the American Red Cross&#13;
as winners of pennants and honors in&#13;
the second annual competition for selling&#13;
the largest number of Red Cross&#13;
seals per capita during the sale last&#13;
December. The total sale announced&#13;
will reach 80,000,000 seals, bringing tn&#13;
a revenue for antituberculosis work tn&#13;
the United States of $800,000.&#13;
In the competition between states,&#13;
Rhode Island won first place In states&#13;
with a population of up to 1,250,000.&#13;
the total sale being 2.29 seals per inhabitant,&#13;
while Connecticut wins second&#13;
place with a sale of 2.07 per capita.&#13;
In states with a population from&#13;
1,250,000 to 2,400,000, Minnesota wins&#13;
first prize with a sale of 1.34 per capita,&#13;
and Maryland second, with a sale&#13;
of 0.72. In the most populous states,&#13;
having a population of over 2,400,000.&#13;
New York wins first place, with a sale&#13;
of 1.8 per capita, and Wisconsin second,&#13;
with a sale of 1.46.&#13;
Does tt occur to you that thw&#13;
argument between Cortwright&#13;
and Broulllard may end with&#13;
Cortwrlght's plotting against&#13;
the young engineer and sending&#13;
him to prison on false evidence&#13;
Just to get rid of hlmf Watch&#13;
developments*&#13;
~i&#13;
4&#13;
:&#13;
1&#13;
+ 0 0 »*»*om++0++**+*»+»*o»+0&lt;+++*&lt;++d &gt;&#13;
ITO US CONTINUJ£D.j&#13;
Fernando Po'a Changes.&#13;
The Spanish island of Fernando Po.&#13;
the destined receptacle of the German&#13;
fugitives from the Cameroon*, was.&#13;
until Africa possessions looked up in&#13;
quite recent times, one of those unconsidered&#13;
trifles about which nobody&#13;
worried much. Discovered by the&#13;
Portuguese navigator whose name tt&#13;
bears in 1471, it was occupied by the&#13;
Spaniards in 1778, but left derelict&#13;
In 1782. There was a British settlement&#13;
In the Island from 1827 to 1834.&#13;
utilised chiefly for observation upon&#13;
the slave traffic, and Baptist missionaries&#13;
lingered on until the Spaniards,&#13;
who came back again in 1844, expelled&#13;
them in 1858.&#13;
No Charge fer Inhaling.&#13;
•'You don't seem much worried over&#13;
the high price of gasoline.'"&#13;
-Why should I be worriedr replied&#13;
the hapless pedestrian. "I can be suffocated&#13;
on the fumes wltboot ft* ooat*&#13;
hit me a east"&#13;
f l U U B P ^ i W ^ — ^ — ^ • • ^&#13;
&amp; v&#13;
*£':&lt;?*%•&#13;
^ - - — . v . . " . . ' • » . , . , "SSflfefc&#13;
•s«S&#13;
f&#13;
&amp;3s&gt;,•••. ,&#13;
• 1&#13;
CV'&#13;
g:'1&#13;
r&#13;
; " ^&#13;
*?$*•&#13;
1*8?&#13;
* . '&#13;
a***&#13;
'^ l&#13;
fr:&#13;
.&gt;*'-".,&#13;
! ^ ' r *&#13;
PWCXNEY DISPATCH&#13;
They Let Him&#13;
Sleep Soandfy&#13;
-Bine© taking- Foley Kidney PtUa&#13;
I believe 1 a m e&amp;Urcly cured axui I&#13;
•leep soundly, a i l night," £U T.&#13;
titraynge.&#13;
T a k e t w o of Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
w i t h a g l a s s of pur© w a t e r after each&#13;
xae&amp;l a n d a t bedtime. A Quick and&#13;
easy w a y to put a atop t o your getting&#13;
u p time uiier time during th«»&#13;
n i g h t&#13;
Foley Kidney Pills also stop pain&#13;
In back: and bides, neadacht-s, stomach&#13;
troubles, disturbed fieart action,&#13;
atlff arid a c U n f ;.oirufc, and rheumatic&#13;
paina due to kidney t n d bladder «ul-&#13;
XDenta.&#13;
G a i n e s v i l l e , G a . . P.. P.. N o . 3. M r .&#13;
V.. T. St!;.yr.g-e ; ^ o &gt; : ' i-Vr l&lt; ri y e a r s&#13;
I've b e e n "J r u b l e e.&gt; s l e e p a J 1 n i g h t&#13;
w i t h o u t g e t t i n g LJI. S o m e t i m e s only a.&#13;
few r r r i n u ' t b :i.'b '" K&lt;~iriM: t o b e d I ' d&#13;
U v e i.u g' t -in, fc-'ja. 1 t r i e d e v e r y U i i n g&#13;
! i i t a r d uf t&gt;r tr.e t r o u b l e . Lust y t a r&#13;
"J t r i e d F o l e y K i d n e y P i l l s a n d a f t t r&#13;
l a k i r g " o n e K'jn\t I b e l i e v e 1 a m e n -&#13;
i r e l y e u n I s l t c p ^ o u n d i v t.11&#13;
"For Sale Eveywhere'&#13;
HEAR WITHOUT EARS&#13;
Hands Rotted&#13;
Away By Beer.&#13;
"Som« lime ago the atteutioo of&#13;
the N. Y. hospital surgeon* was&#13;
called to the large number of bartenders&#13;
who had loat several fiagerB&#13;
from both hands. T h e first&#13;
case was an employe of a Bowery&#13;
concert hall. Three fiogera from&#13;
his rifcjht baud and- two from his&#13;
left were rotted away when he&#13;
called a: Beilt-'lie UIJ^ UY -ril&#13;
begged the loctors *o „e.; :: im&#13;
what was the matter. 1\H VAS in&#13;
yood heaitb otherwise, and It took&#13;
i the doctors so:iib lithe 10 find out!&#13;
that in performing bis duties in&#13;
drawing beer for t h e thousands&#13;
that visited the garden every night&#13;
ke had littrdly rotted bis finders&#13;
away-&#13;
[EN&#13;
JGUPBOARD&#13;
p&#13;
T o I I c e a n d D t c t i v c A r e U s l n £&#13;
L i p R e a d i n g i n P l a c e , o f&#13;
t h e D i c t a g r a p h&#13;
BRKAKFAftT RELISHES.&#13;
E A C H Butter.—Any of the cheap&#13;
I&gt;eaches will lend theuibelves t o&#13;
peach butter. At this time all&#13;
peaches (should be w a s h e d before p a r&#13;
Lai;. The peaches a r e fuzzy auU dusty,&#13;
a n d If not washed the parings are not&#13;
lit to use tor sirup. To each q u a r t of&#13;
pared a n d c u t pearlies a d d one cupful&#13;
of water, one cupful of jniinuuited&#13;
bugar and one-half teaspoonful of salt;&#13;
i p a t iuto a ;&gt;orc-elaiii lined kettle nnd&#13;
J Li-iiHf to a boil quickly, t?kiui, then lx&gt;il&#13;
j alowly for one hour. Some p^aehe-J&#13;
t are more juicy thaji others. In that&#13;
i eiise they must boil lunger or less wu-&#13;
' ter used. The peach m u s t n o t sepaitxte.&#13;
T h e b u t t e r c a n be flavored with&#13;
a little ground einauioon o r spice if desired.&#13;
Sterilize t h e jane and fill while&#13;
hot.&#13;
Tear MarmaJade.—Choose nice, fine&#13;
flavored p e a r s ; p a r e , core and q u a r t e r&#13;
a n d drop into cold water. "When ready&#13;
to use "Liquor is doomed bv oar fin- drain and weigh, and to each&#13;
ancier*. The plea used to be I ^ ^ o f ftuit a l l o w *ree-fourths * *&#13;
, , pound of fc-ugar. Pour over just enough&#13;
ThoueatKlB of people tire today throwing&#13;
away all conversation. This method&#13;
ie easily and quickly acqaired thru our&#13;
cystem. Absolutely the only thing of Its&#13;
kind in tke conntry. Our proposittou i&#13;
entirely origia.il. We guarantee results,&#13;
it will amaz.e yen. Cost la trifling. 6ee&#13;
what New Internationa! Encyclopaedia&#13;
aayg on Lip Reading. ITunareaH of people&#13;
with normaJ hearing are taking up Lip t h e b i g g e s t c o s t o f OUT a d m i n i s&#13;
made that we ceuld not r u a our&#13;
municipal fciid national governments&#13;
without the income from&#13;
saloon licenses and federal income&#13;
Ux, but e a r economists have&#13;
shown that the saloon ie the&#13;
greatest piece of extravagance a&#13;
nation ever produced" Taking&#13;
care of the crime and poverty&#13;
which it directly produces entails&#13;
Heading for the ruanr additional benefit*&#13;
gained. You can understand what tke&#13;
actors are slaying in the moving |picture«.&#13;
You can understand what people are «iy- | i a l , &gt; a m l t a e c o r n a u c l w h e a t a n d '&#13;
ing JBPt at, far away AS you can bee ihem.&#13;
pound or fc-uga:&#13;
w a t e r to cover a n d simmer until tender.&#13;
Make a sirup with the sugar and&#13;
some of the w a t e r in whi&lt;-li the pears&#13;
were boiled; add t o this sirup lemons&#13;
sliced very thin, using a b o u t one lemon&#13;
to each six pounds of f r u i t Boil t h e&#13;
sirup until thick, theu add t h e years&#13;
a n d simmer until they a r e clear. P a c k&#13;
the fruit into jars and pour the sirup&#13;
over it.&#13;
Qreen Tomato B u t t e r . - S l i c e eight&#13;
pounds of green tomatoes very thin&#13;
a n d chop one o r a n g e a n d one lemon&#13;
very tine, being careful t o remove the&#13;
Boll&#13;
^X»*»*»*«KK»; Strikingly&#13;
Stylish&#13;
The eye undtrstauds beyond the mug* of j p o i s o n f o r t h e h u m a n b o d y e n -&#13;
the tar. Send no money, but mention t i C e s f r o m t h o s e w h o d r i u k ^ i t ,&#13;
fuis paper and tlate whetiier &gt;,r n&gt; t v.,u L &gt; 0 / u ^ / u V . / v v . ., , , , ,&#13;
, , „ H.OH AM • . - M I " &gt;2,(XX),(MX) ,00() t h a t o u g h t , t o b e&#13;
hie death. Ail paruculnrfc will he eent «&gt;&#13;
you absolutely free and wilh no oX)*n&gt;v U&gt; | a P e n t i n r f e e d a t t d h o u s e r e n t of&#13;
3 on. Aridre«, S') r.-.j -,f j . ; . , j , , , , , , . ^ j f f o m e u Hnd cliildren who now suf-&#13;
KantufcCiiv, .Mi.^&lt;-i;[i. | fer for the necessaries of life.&#13;
tration in police and criminalized*. B o i l together one hour, add&#13;
c o u r t s a n d a l m s h o u s e s a n d h o p i . j 6 j e pounds of , u ^ v . a small teac^nful&#13;
F _ ) of vinegar and cot&gt;k until it t&gt;e&lt;-omes a&#13;
clear, smooth mass. Tut this in jelly&#13;
b a r e l y w h i c h i t g r i n d s u p i n t o&#13;
Swagger sport coats and&#13;
suits, trim taflormades,&#13;
smart cote suits, graceful&#13;
ripple coats-each and&#13;
every one decidedly vogueare&#13;
now being shown in all&#13;
their striking stylishness.&#13;
glasses.&#13;
Peach Marmalade. - Boll together&#13;
t h r e e pounds; of sti.uar and three cupfuls&#13;
of cold water fifteen minutes. Add&#13;
twenty-four peaches &lt;ut up sum 11 and&#13;
boil &lt;iue nnd one-half h"iir«. Stir frequently,&#13;
so II« n o t r&lt;&gt; burn. P u t In&#13;
^ellv trlasseM and -cnl when &lt;-o]d.&#13;
A Conundrum.&#13;
.Why idiould :i miser envy a lock&#13;
*jtft goes t«»o fuait': Because it is constantly&#13;
gaining.&#13;
Theory and Practice.&#13;
Theory in almost always still busy (&#13;
taking a im long after practice ha&#13;
m a d e the bullseye.&#13;
A hew Model Typewriter&#13;
B U Y I T N O W !&#13;
AVOID SPRING COLDS&#13;
Sudden c h a n g e s , high winds, shift-&#13;
1 ing s e a s o n s c a u s e colds a n d grippe,&#13;
a n d h t e s e spring colds a r e annoying&#13;
and d a n g e r o u s , a n d likely t o t u r n&#13;
into a chronic s u m m e r cough. In&#13;
such cases t a k e a t r e a t m e n t of Dr.&#13;
K i n g ' s New Disco very, a p l e a s a n t&#13;
l a x a t i r e t a r s y r u p . It soothes t h e&#13;
cough, c h e c k s t h e cold a n d helps&#13;
b r e a k u p a n a t t a c k of grippe. I t s alr&#13;
e a d y prepared, n o mixing or fussing.&#13;
J u s t as»k your d r u g g i s t for a bottle of&#13;
Dr King's N e w Discovery. T e s t e d&#13;
and tried for o v e r 40 y e a r s .&#13;
Such a wide range&#13;
for individual selection, not&#13;
only in stvle but in fabrics&#13;
a8 well.&#13;
Taffetas, failles, ^ab&#13;
ardines bedford cords,&#13;
serges, shepherd and broken&#13;
check's, poplinsr. white&#13;
chinchillas,corduroys, whip&#13;
cords are some of the most&#13;
desired fabrics, and come&#13;
in both bright colors and&#13;
the more sedate tones.&#13;
LICE ON CALVES.&#13;
Hi*-.' iit'W'-dav iklvancv* thai rom*' alone mi this machineare&#13;
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                <text>April 12, 1916 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, Apn&#13;
- 7 —&#13;
20i I) 1916 No. i -v&#13;
SPECIAL |Easter Son9 ^rvice&#13;
ELECTION' at Cong'Church&#13;
M. A. C. Bqys Visit&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
•Sunday EveniBg April 23rd.&#13;
S h a l l W t B o n d P u t n i m T o w n - l V o l u n ^ y Orcheatra&#13;
whip for the. S u m o f $ 2 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
for S t a l e R e w a r d Roads?&#13;
Demand having been duly made&#13;
upon the Township Board of the&#13;
Township of Potnam, County of&#13;
Livingston, State of Michigan, by&#13;
written application signed oy the&#13;
rtquiced oumber of freeholders of&#13;
aaid Township of Putnam and&#13;
dated March 25th, 1916, said writ,&#13;
tfcn demand requiring the said&#13;
Township Board to submit to the&#13;
qualified electors of said Township&#13;
the question of bonding said&#13;
Township for the sum of Twenty&#13;
Thousand («20,000.00) Dollars for&#13;
the purpose of building State reward&#13;
highways; Therefore, notice&#13;
is hereby tjiven, that a special&#13;
Township Meeting will be held&#13;
on Saturday, the 6th- day of May,&#13;
at the Town Hall in the village of&#13;
Pinckney within said Township--&#13;
tbat being the usual voting place&#13;
Chorus , Choir&#13;
Lesson and Prayer Rev. Jones&#13;
Solo. Mrs. Fred Swarthout&#13;
Duet, Blanche Martin and&#13;
P. H. Swarthout&#13;
Collection&#13;
Ladies' Quartet&#13;
Solo . Mrs. Lola Dan forth&#13;
Chorus .. _ Choir&#13;
Duet, Mr and Mrs. F. Swarthout&#13;
Remarks _. . _ Re v . Jones&#13;
Duet Mrs. Fred Swarthout&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
Chorus . .. . Choir&#13;
Everybody cordially invited to&#13;
come.&#13;
Obituary&#13;
Enoch Hanes was born on the&#13;
^&gt;f said Township of Putnam/ and i 10th of August 1822, and while an&#13;
at the aforesaid time and place! infant was bound out to Como lore&#13;
^tw^^^l!, V.H *«'" iD ^ « ' « * Co., K. T. At&#13;
the age of nineteen he was united&#13;
in marriage to May Ingersoi. To&#13;
this union was born Daniel D&#13;
Hanes, Mary J Hanes, Amos F&#13;
Hanet, Isac Hanes, an 1 Jag. M&#13;
Hanes.&#13;
Eunice A. Hautt, his wife died&#13;
qualified Electors of said Town&#13;
•hipof Putnam, to be determined&#13;
by them, the question whether&#13;
the township of Putnam shall be&#13;
b:&gt;uded for said amount and purpose,&#13;
or whether it shall not be&#13;
bonded. The said voting shall be&#13;
by ballott, and such ballott shall&#13;
contain the following:&#13;
Shall the Township be b o n d e d ' j n 1860. Re was then united in&#13;
lor w $u2 0I,W00L0.00? &lt;Yesi „ , . „ • „ , . Vi w „ ^ &gt;hall the nTyo wnseh ip .b e ,b ond, ed.i' warr.i ac*e to ,M ,r,s . M*a rg5 a, ret ^axfor&#13;
2620,000.00V (No) I t o n : n S e P f ' l H 0 1 , T o t b ] 8 U U J O n&#13;
Dated at Putnam Towuship this i w a e ])0l'n Emma .1 rlaues, Lewis&#13;
llth day oWf AMp riJl . AD. UDN. B19A1R0., I Hauesan 1 Fraok Hanes, This&#13;
Township Clerk,&#13;
Putnam Township&#13;
I o the Elector* of the Township&#13;
of Putnam&#13;
wife died iu Febrsiary, 1652.&#13;
In September lie was united in&#13;
marriage to Mrs. Caroline Elizan&#13;
. , . y . , i beth Harlow. Registration Notice! He died April iutb, 1910 «t. the&#13;
age of ninety-three yearn and&#13;
eight months. He leaves to mourn&#13;
% i [ c ? i* h e r e b &gt; ' gi v 'e n to the ; h1 8 loses widow, three children,&#13;
qualified Elecfcor3 of the Town- -L . 4i i i - i i i&#13;
V ~ t r&gt; 4,^ &lt;&lt; i. £ T 'twenty-three yrand-chi dren and&#13;
ship of PutnRm, ( ouutv of Liv- . . . i , . , ,&#13;
ngston, State of Michigan, that • t h i r t &gt;- greai jrarvl-cbikken.&#13;
a meeting of t h t Board of Regis-: He was r. :oving and kind&#13;
trati^n will be held at the Town' band nri'i f;.ti;or.&#13;
Hall within said Township o n :&#13;
Saturday, the 22ad day of A p r i l n J i T L&#13;
1916, for the purpose of register-; 1*81*0 0* I hailKS&#13;
ing the names of all such persons&#13;
who shall be possessed of the nee&#13;
Last week three young men&#13;
from Y. M. C. A. were in town&#13;
with the bo}s. Much of their&#13;
time was spent playing- base ball&#13;
volley ball, and getting acquainted.&#13;
On F r i d a y evening the&#13;
ladies of the town furnished the&#13;
essential p a r t - the eats - for a&#13;
Father and Son Banquet in the&#13;
Opera House. About eighty men&#13;
and boys were out and after all&#13;
cake v a s disposed of the college&#13;
boys spoke on t h e following subjects:&#13;
, w. ,,, „ . .Body Building. . R a y T. Gibbs&#13;
and Mist Florence Ktce r&gt; ,- o -u- ^ - ^&#13;
Brain Building Gilbert Clegg&#13;
Character Building.Guy Nowlon&#13;
Saturday morning and afternoon&#13;
was given over to outdoor&#13;
athletics and by evening the&#13;
boys had blisters scattered over&#13;
their anatomy. Saturday evening&#13;
we thought Mr. New Ion's&#13;
face was glowing with pride but&#13;
it was just a case of sunburn&#13;
The evening meeting in the&#13;
Methodist church was well attended&#13;
by t h e ladies and a few&#13;
boys, whose presence indicated&#13;
j that someone was at least a little&#13;
interested in the young people&#13;
of the community.&#13;
Sunday morning the visitors]&#13;
attended Church services and j&#13;
visited in the Sunday Schools.&#13;
A special meeting of ihe boys&#13;
was held in the afternoon and1&#13;
all present profiled from it.&#13;
T w n t y - f o u r boy* signified their I&#13;
intentions and desire* to live&#13;
better and cleaner lives and to&#13;
&gt;tand for a greater and better&#13;
Pinckney, Ii now remains for'&#13;
the older people and business&#13;
men to stand behind the young&#13;
men and boys and make it easier ,&#13;
lor them to do ri^ht and harder \&#13;
for them 10 do wrori;:. The least j&#13;
any of us can do i&gt; to refrain1&#13;
from working asraiiw flic plan*:&#13;
of the boys.&#13;
At the InM mei-iiu' on Sunday&#13;
evening the M. A. C boys&#13;
brought home to us. our responsibility&#13;
to the VoUlJL!' people of.&#13;
tiie town. They showed us that&#13;
ou'-mo-u valuable asset, the young&#13;
communit y-have&#13;
b'&gt;en neglected. Mr. Xewlon '&#13;
promise.] that som^thinir would&#13;
be done f&lt;&gt;v the bo&gt;&#13;
, j} v e;k-ier for t !ir&gt;m 1 ) J \&#13;
have shown their desire to do&#13;
A volunteer committee discuss^rd&#13;
the situation 10 rind out what liie&#13;
Doys want and what can i&gt;edone.&#13;
A Boys' Club iia.s rven suggest&#13;
Piano Tuner, of l'd with a reading nx&gt;m and a&#13;
club room which can be used for&#13;
^116- |&#13;
Mrs. C. E. Hao^s&#13;
r)»iniei D. Hanes sud T ( &gt; Fil a k&#13;
ffi'i , i *.&#13;
We wish &gt;:. this way to thann&#13;
eseary qualification of electors and it Q R friends and neighbors for their&#13;
who may apply for that purpose, i sympathy and the many Kind&#13;
And iu accordance with Section; deeds rendered during the ,ick-&#13;
4 of Article .J of the Constitution: J : *i e i i. n ( 1 ( i n i( 1 ,,,• ^,,&#13;
« r k 5 f . » f t n » v « i , ' , . " | nesfi aud death of our dear hns- P ' " )|( nl- l»(&#13;
i,. tl:e btate of Michigan and Act I&#13;
20«5of the Public Acts of i(.K)9, i b i i c - t n i fa*hf,rthe&#13;
board of Registration of said!&#13;
township will register the names i&#13;
of «li women possessing the q u a l -&#13;
ifications of male -electors who \&#13;
maKe P E R S O N A L APPLICA- i&#13;
TIOX for sach registration, pro- i&#13;
vided that "all eneh applicants!&#13;
rnuFt own property assessed for1&#13;
taxes somewhere within the&#13;
county above named, except that i&#13;
any women otherwise qualified&#13;
who ownee prop rty within said - ,&#13;
county jointly with her husband I * a e lattor part of May. Partier ' indoor athletics and entertain&#13;
or other person, or WBO ownes: in the country should club to-! ments. Another suggestion was&#13;
property within said counvy on j gether, about four in A neighbor-' to have a municipal playground&#13;
contract and pays the taxes there-! U « « J „ „ i u« «,,n i,:. j i ~.i v * • i&#13;
i ., . v f . -i, . . " . noon, and he will hire a rig and With a director in charge.&#13;
r-at;-.-^ M. Hanes&#13;
Prank Hane6&#13;
Piano Tuning&#13;
Mr, &gt;t%nger,&#13;
Ann Arbor will be in Pineknev&#13;
on shall be entitled to registration&#13;
S-itd botfrd of Regiqtra'ion will i .. ^ . . , „&#13;
be in seaeion on the day and place I t h e Dwpatch office,&#13;
aforesaid, from nine o'clock in t h e '&#13;
forenoon nnttl five o'clock in the&#13;
afternoon, for the purpose aforesaid.&#13;
Dated April 11 tb. 1916.&#13;
W. J. Danbar, Clerk&#13;
of Putnam Townjbip&#13;
come out. Orders may be left a t ' To make&#13;
financial aid&#13;
either a success,&#13;
will oe necessary&#13;
I As a matter of fa**t. regardless&#13;
i&#13;
of the effects on the Vxrys, this&#13;
movement would be a paying in&#13;
Howell Raises High&#13;
SCnOOl T l l i t i o n . vestmen t. because it will adver •&#13;
rhe lioarrt of education at Howell, ^ t h e t o w D a n d ^ ' e f ^&#13;
voted to p]Mt-M*«bJMtooD tbelr ™ov« into t h e place where tbetr&#13;
Sidiwy Thnrtten&#13;
Sidney Thunrton, ag«l 83, lir&#13;
school course, Agriculture and boolc-&#13;
&gt; keeping will now He offered in high&#13;
school. They also voted to raise the&#13;
children have the greatest oppor&#13;
tunities-&#13;
Be«iidts financial support, t h e&#13;
tuition of foreign student* to $80 a ) c , u b w ° n l d require a capable I&#13;
:__ t i -^~ _*i^.. - i.i » T&gt;* i _ yrce»arr.. This means each foretirn stu manager; one who could not only&#13;
!SV FJZ T i Pmckney d e n t ^ ^ ^ . . ^ ^ • ) e a d t h f . , w y s b u t ^ , , e o n , d ,&#13;
y ioeM»y utwoooo Mter • , t i ) e d i 9 t r i c t i n w h i c ,h h e ^ , , ^ m l w t ! maintain order. As on* of thej&#13;
rSSSSS tabThS! Tbre i« - *—• «20- s 're r s fV" s,"fy- "u ta&#13;
* „ .. • ! « •» T. llP t o vou to do vour share.&#13;
house Friday at 2 p. m., Rev. Cam-1 . "&#13;
Hnv«i fiiUUijiiii A ckftd tak«a X&gt;r. Mfl«T LAS&amp;UV* Taa« ' _&#13;
Low Prices: W i t h LIS .- i b c r u l e , n o t t h e&#13;
e x c e p t i o n , n n d tverv d a y&#13;
p r o v e s t h - efficiency o* t h e&#13;
p ' a n \vhich we a&lt;.1 ^&gt;pte&lt;I vv hen&#13;
we c o m m e n c e d b u s i n e s s , a n d&#13;
which is n o w so well u n d e r&#13;
stood bv o u r patron%.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Bulletin&#13;
Ladies1 Shoes- former&#13;
prices $ 2 . 0 0 and $ 2 . 5 0&#13;
"old styles" to £o at $1.25&#13;
Mens Shoes "broken lots'&#13;
$ 3 and $ 3 . 5 0 values&#13;
to close at $ 2 . 2 5&#13;
3 6 only, Ladies' Shirt&#13;
Waist*, the 1.50 kind- l no exchange" 9 8 c&#13;
9 Bars Lenox Soap 25c&#13;
Table Talk Coffee 22c&#13;
8 lbs Oats 25c 30c Coffee 27c&#13;
Get our low prices on Flour-&#13;
Saturday, April 22nd.&#13;
GRAFONOLA&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
CLOSES MAY 3RD&#13;
U n l y t ' \ . .:.'?ek"S i'elt t o w ; r t h . ' be;j!:.r*Ld&#13;
.?l.^'l (irafonoiL iind (-.the:" ]&gt;rizes.&#13;
T h e r e eire IT"' f a v o n t e ^ :n t h &gt; t u n t e v u C o n -&#13;
1r&gt;tcnt&gt; have :• •*: eq-ua: , hnnce. T h e ; a ^ t t - v o&#13;
lo't-k- !n;,y p ; t \ ou in t h e Iviid. &lt;o work* h a r d r.nd&#13;
s h o w t h e o t h e r ^ t h n t vou h a v e t h e p e p t o w i n .&#13;
During the next week I will dive&#13;
a JS5-00 Special Service Clhecfc&#13;
fop all Mail Order Catalogues you or&#13;
your Friends bring to this store.&#13;
Tell your friends about this as it means a&#13;
big boost to you.&#13;
Watch for T a g Week, it will interest you.&#13;
in" - v&#13;
*SiajgKjw ^V'a. fliftMllitiaiitfl&#13;
m&#13;
jpiiPWJP^U. m i If.i| ill&#13;
jm***--;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
%». ? j -&#13;
Vv '•&#13;
•X. •'&#13;
! &amp; • - '&#13;
'i&#13;
1½&#13;
sV 9..V&#13;
arr.&#13;
••*? •&#13;
.'&gt;•"*&#13;
i*** -&#13;
(fe^frr v&gt; •&#13;
jUhtU*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
'An Ammran Human&#13;
Bmrtoa 3mprpssto&#13;
(§mk fittp Srliginwi&#13;
dntmomta anb (Say&#13;
Ig fiatel (gray&#13;
OMETHING was going&#13;
to happen in Athens;&#13;
this we knew by the&#13;
spirit of unusual activity&#13;
on the streets and&#13;
in the shops, where&#13;
everyone seemed preparing&#13;
for some festivity.&#13;
T h a t the event&#13;
was connected with the&#13;
-church was indicated by the many&#13;
"temporary stands, decorated with colored&#13;
tissue paper—which ornamented&#13;
t h e street corners, where were sold&#13;
-candles of every size—larger and hollow&#13;
a t the end to fit over a metal point&#13;
of a many-pronged church candelat&#13;
r u m , and tapering to a sharp point at&#13;
t h e other end, where they were tied in&#13;
bunches by their wicks, and hung in&#13;
t h e booths alternating, yellow and&#13;
w h i t e . At the corners hung those of&#13;
s h o u l d be there to join in their most&#13;
u n i q u e celebration,&#13;
Light flashed upon us, however,&#13;
'When we discovered in the hallway of&#13;
the hotel a calendar, in large Greek&#13;
type, which read as follows: "March&#13;
26, Thursday," and underneath in&#13;
small type in French: "April 8, Holy&#13;
T h u r s d a y , " showing that the Greek&#13;
calculation is thirteen days behind the&#13;
rest of Europe, therefore for them&#13;
E a s t e r had not yet arrived.&#13;
T h a t afternoon our discovery was&#13;
confirmed as we walked through the&#13;
old part of town, where the shops are.&#13;
T h e counter of the public baker, whose&#13;
e n o p opened to the street, was lined&#13;
with rows of round loaves of bread&#13;
a w a i t i n g the ordeal of the fiery furnace.&#13;
Each contained five bright-red,&#13;
hard-boiled eggs, pressed half-way into&#13;
t h e soft dough In the shape of a Greek&#13;
c r o s s ; all exactly alike, but each distinguished&#13;
from its neighbors by a slip&#13;
of paper sticking to the dough, which&#13;
bore the name of the housewife who&#13;
had kneaded it.&#13;
On Good Friday we directed our&#13;
-course by the dome-crowned spires of&#13;
t h e Russian church, where the queen.&#13;
t h e Bister of the czar, and the Russian&#13;
.minister, occupied opposite boxes.&#13;
At the close of the beautiful service,&#13;
the responses of which were sung by&#13;
a marvelous choir of unaccompanied&#13;
m a l e voices, the priests brought to the&#13;
front a representation of a tomb, havi&#13;
n g a half-draped figure of Christ painte&#13;
d on the top, and the sides covered&#13;
•with rich embroidery of white and&#13;
rgold.&#13;
T h e queen advanced, kissed the rep-&#13;
T e s e n t a t i o n of the dead body, and then&#13;
t h e hand of the officiating priest, from&#13;
w h o m she received a stalk of white&#13;
gillyflower, and with the Russian minu&#13;
t e r , who followed her example, left&#13;
t h e church. T h e others of the audience&#13;
c o n c l u d e d their worship in the same&#13;
m a n n e r , each bearing away a floral&#13;
r e m i n d e r of t h e coming resurrection.&#13;
T h a t night t h e s e representations of&#13;
t h e entombed Christ were borne in&#13;
s o l e m n procession from the five princ&#13;
i p a l churches, attended by the priests&#13;
"In gorgeous robes, acolyteB bearing&#13;
liaaners and colored lanterns, and followed&#13;
by the m e m b e r s of t h e parish, •&#13;
*«ech c a r r y i n g a lighted candle.&#13;
A t Intervals, the procession halted&#13;
-and a service was held; then each congregatlon&#13;
r e t u r n e d to its own church,&#13;
-•and long after all was still, in A t h e n a&#13;
t h e flickering lights of the priests of&#13;
*the C h u r c h of S t George could be seen&#13;
•winding up t h e zigzag path to their&#13;
^aanctoary on t h e top of Lykabettos,&#13;
* b e pointed hill which rises abruptly&#13;
from t h e h e a r t of Athens.&#13;
With t h e enshrining of Christ's body&#13;
to t h e t o m b on Friday a fast was beg&#13;
a n , lasting until the morning of his&#13;
I W U i t r t l r m Therefore, Saturday was&#13;
.qeletly spent until an hour or so betjore&#13;
midnight, when s t r e a m s of peorple,&#13;
each p e r s o n bearing a lighted&#13;
•candle, poured through the streets&#13;
ajgfltiif into the great square before&#13;
4fca church of the metropolitan.&#13;
T h e t r e a t edifice, Illumined by tboeof&#13;
huge candles in chaadelfers&#13;
• e i l n l s U s was packed to the&#13;
ami the square was filled to&#13;
r&#13;
overflowing with a restless sea of&#13;
twinkling lights; the windows and balconies&#13;
of the houses facing three sides&#13;
of the square were ablaze with flickering&#13;
tapers, and even t h e courses of the&#13;
church and its bell towers were outlined&#13;
by the tiny flames. The stars&#13;
above looked pale and scattered in&#13;
comparison.&#13;
The king and queen and other members&#13;
of the royal family, also government&#13;
officials and noted guests, sat&#13;
upon the edge of the platform erected&#13;
In the center of the square.&#13;
At length, the choir boys emerged&#13;
from the doors of t h e cathedral, followed&#13;
by the chanting priests, and&#13;
finally by the metropolitan himself, arrayed&#13;
in gorgeous robes, with a miter&#13;
on his head and a bishop's crook in his&#13;
hand.&#13;
The procession ascended the platform&#13;
where the venerable, kind-hearted&#13;
man, with flowing white beard,&#13;
raised his fingers in blessing over the&#13;
waiting worshipers, and the beautiful&#13;
music of the mass floated out on the&#13;
silent air.&#13;
Beside our breakfast plates, on Sunday&#13;
morning, lay a bright red Easter&#13;
egg, an emblematic gift—freely exchanged&#13;
in Greece—but the chief&#13;
event of this day of rejoicing was the&#13;
dancing of the soldiers and of the&#13;
bodyguard of the king.&#13;
The l a t t e r took place in the courtyard&#13;
of t h e royal palace, and t h e members&#13;
of t h e guard w e r e attired, a s always,&#13;
in t h e costume of Thessaly, their&#13;
native province. As we were unprepared&#13;
for the sight which met our&#13;
eyes, our first impression was t h a t an&#13;
a u t o m a t o n ballet chorus was running&#13;
down.&#13;
They wore very full-plaited skirts of&#13;
starched white linen—stopping several&#13;
Inches above t h e knee—white woolen&#13;
tights, black g a r t e r s , with cords and&#13;
tassels and red pointed shoes with&#13;
h u g e pompoms on t h e tip of t h e toes.&#13;
A white linen shirt, a zouave jacket&#13;
with long flowing sleeves of white wool&#13;
embroidered with black, and a red cap&#13;
with a long black silk tassel reaching&#13;
below t h e shoulder completed this&#13;
very unmllitary costume.&#13;
Monday was a quiet day, distinguished&#13;
only by doubled carfares and&#13;
t h e presence of n u m e r o u s peasants&#13;
from surrounding districts, wearing&#13;
attractive provincial costume.&#13;
The national independence day fell&#13;
on Holy Thursday, and being therefore&#13;
postponed w a s celebrated on&#13;
Tuesday morning. Prom o v hotel balcony&#13;
we viewed t h e procession and&#13;
a t t e n d a n t crowds. At the door of t h e&#13;
palace across the square t h e king and&#13;
queen stepped into their carriage.&#13;
They were followed in the procession&#13;
by the Crown P r i n c e Constanttne and&#13;
his wife, the sister of the kaiser, then&#13;
by Prince George and his bride, the&#13;
Bonaparte princess, whom the Greeks&#13;
welcomed with open arms, as the only&#13;
member of the royal family who Is&#13;
Greek, since the Bonaparte family&#13;
were residents of Corsica while it was&#13;
Greek territory, Napoleon being born&#13;
only a few days after its transfer to&#13;
France.&#13;
The procession, accompanied by&#13;
bands of music and a brilliant array&#13;
of mounted soldiers, proceeded to the&#13;
church of the metropolitan where&#13;
mass was held.&#13;
On the afternoon of Easter Tuesday&#13;
all eyes were turned toward Megara,&#13;
distant from Athens two hours by&#13;
train, where the far-famed peasant&#13;
dances t a k e place.&#13;
In the large public square of the&#13;
little town the women, dressed in holiday&#13;
attire, Joined hands alternately&#13;
across each other, forming long,&#13;
straight lines, and danced, first In one&#13;
direction and then in the opposite, a&#13;
performance of no Bpecial grace or&#13;
beauty, but made attractive by their&#13;
pretty faces and curious costumes, and&#13;
the great numbers of lines, tripping&#13;
one way and then the other.&#13;
Beneath the black skirts bordereC&#13;
with a broad, red band hung several&#13;
inches of handmade thread lace, from&#13;
the white petticoats, the pride of t h e&#13;
industrious wearer. The tight black&#13;
bodices and yellow head scarfs were&#13;
adorned with many loops of silver&#13;
and gold coins, the dowries of the&#13;
wearers, and some of the more wealthy,&#13;
were resplendent in trimming of gold&#13;
lace. They were pleased when we admired&#13;
the beauty of the embroidery&#13;
which their own hands had wrought&#13;
on their aprons of bright-colored silk.&#13;
The crowd of spectators encircling&#13;
the dancers was so dense that we took&#13;
refuge In a balcony t h a t overlooked&#13;
the square and gained a most comprehensive&#13;
and picturesque view. Here&#13;
and there the long lines formed into a&#13;
circle and a single man. attired in t h e&#13;
abbreviated costume of t h e Thessalonians&#13;
or in a checked gingham Jumper&#13;
with an equally short, full-ruffled Bklrt,&#13;
led the national d a n c e we had seen In&#13;
Athens, to the accompaniment of&#13;
stringed instruments.&#13;
And thus closed the E a s t e r festivities,&#13;
but not the holidays, for the pan-&#13;
Hellenic games were celebrated for&#13;
four days, beginning with Thursday—&#13;
in t h e wonderful ancient stadium, restored&#13;
to pristine glory by the munificence&#13;
of a Greek of Alexandria.&#13;
T h e games engaged in by a t h l e t e s&#13;
from all p a r t s of Greece w e r e umpired&#13;
by. Crown Prince Constantino,&#13;
while t h e royal seats, covered with&#13;
crimson v e l v e t w e r e occupied by other&#13;
m e m b e r s of the royal family.&#13;
T h e r e were t h e usual running, wrestling,&#13;
pole vaulting, h a m m e r t h r o w i n g&#13;
and shot putting, but t h e day of greatest&#13;
interest was on Sunday, when t h e&#13;
Marathon r a c e was run—begun at tl&#13;
scene of t h e battle, and covering u*&#13;
course, of the original runner, who&#13;
bore t h e news of t h e defeat of the&#13;
Persians. As t h e first man came into&#13;
sight the great middle gates were&#13;
thrown open—the only time they are&#13;
ever unlocked, and the runners finished&#13;
their M-mlle race between the&#13;
goal posts at the upper end of the&#13;
stadium, amid the deafening eh&#13;
ef the waiting&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
L : v c S t o c k .&#13;
lilVriiU': Y -Yj.U-1' Itcci&#13;
fiefat ijtru.', _. iU-i.-rs, $5.JU&gt;J.'J,&#13;
ay we.-:;., OJ;&gt; ii'-r alters, $'&#13;
Uiixt d .-.u-».-r- and a*:i.r&lt;--".-,&#13;
handy i'.£'.n ^uU'.'ic.'i, ;•&#13;
li&amp;h: jjuiehera, J o ' ^ 7 , bt-.^i c&#13;
SWAMP-ROOT FOR&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASES&#13;
$v :'5u».&#13;
,. i•„ a 7. J j ,&#13;
o v,' J , $ o. J U&#13;
butcher CUWJS, J j ' s o . - ' j ; cviuw.ou&#13;
canuers $o. J'J &amp;-T-o,&#13;
a, $b.U5&gt;;?, boiugna&#13;
U&#13;
cow*, %\:^-0,1)&#13;
bt?bt ht'avy bu&#13;
bulls, | o . b u &amp; $ j ; htock Dulls, %^'ii&#13;
i.bO; rmfcuerb, 6.75¾ 7.70; a'.ockti'a,&#13;
$6.50(^7.^5: milkers and b^r.n^ere,&#13;
$40&amp;75.&#13;
Calves-- Re-ci'ipis, 1,688. Beat gradt*&#13;
$lU^lU5l&gt;; common, lu-avy and mud&#13;
IUUIS, $ti&amp;b.6U.&#13;
Shuep -and Lambs --R^ct.pis, 1,661.&#13;
Bent Iambi, $11.501111.65, lair lambs,&#13;
$11.25¾ 11.40; light to common lamba,&#13;
$b.5U&amp;lu; clipped lambs, $'J..rjU&amp; 'J.75,&#13;
rair to good sheep, $S&lt;Li8.5U, culls&#13;
and common, $6.50&amp;7; spring lamba.&#13;
$151l 16.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 13,059. Mixed and&#13;
light yorkers, $y.50&amp; ti.6U; pi;*s. SS.26&#13;
^z 8.60.&#13;
There is only one medicine that really&#13;
stands out pre-eminent an a remedy tor&#13;
m*eaacB oi the kidneys, hver and bladder.&#13;
Or. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands th»&#13;
highest for the reason that it baa proven&#13;
to be just the remedy needed in thousands&#13;
upon thousands of *ven tne most distressing&#13;
cases. Swamp-Koot, a physician's prescription&#13;
tor special diseases, makes friends&#13;
quickly because its mild and immediate effect&#13;
ia soon realized in most cases. It i*&#13;
«. gentle, healing vegetable compound.&#13;
Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug&#13;
stores in bottles of two sues—hfty cent*&#13;
izid one dollar.&#13;
i However, it you wish first to test this&#13;
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.&#13;
Kilmer &amp; Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for ft&#13;
sample bottle. When writing be sure and&#13;
mention this paper.—Adv.&#13;
Tropical.&#13;
"1 don't believe the climate In Rua-&#13;
1 sia ia so cold as they say It is."&#13;
! "What m a k e s you think so?"&#13;
i "I've aaen the Russian baliet, and&#13;
, those costumes were never made- for&#13;
zero weather."&#13;
EAST BUFFALO -Receipts of cattle,&#13;
150 c a r s ; m a r k e t 15@25c higher;&#13;
choice to prime native steers, $9.50@&#13;
10; fair to good $8.75@9; plain and&#13;
coarse, $8.25@8.50; Canadian steers,&#13;
1,300 to 1,450 lbs. $8.50@9; do 1,250&#13;
and heifers, $7.75&lt;£8; yearlings, dryfed,&#13;
$8.75@9.50; best handy steers, $8,-&#13;
25(g)9; good butcheriixg steers a n d&#13;
heifers mixed, $7.75(g8.25; steers and&#13;
heifers, fair to good, $7.25@7.75;&#13;
prime fat heifers, $7.75@8.50; light&#13;
common heifers, $6.25@7; best fat&#13;
cows, $7@7.50; butcher cows, $6.25@&#13;
6.75; cutters, $4.50@5; canners, $3.50&#13;
@3.85; fancy bulls, $7@7.50; butchering&#13;
bulls, $6.50@7; sausage bulls,&#13;
$6.25@6.50; light bulls, $5@5.50;&#13;
stockers; good, $6.25(9)6.75; light common&#13;
stockers, $5.50@6; feeders, $7@&gt;&#13;
7.25; milkers and springers, $65@85.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 90 cars; m a r k e t&#13;
10c lower; heavy and stockers, $9.90@&#13;
10; pigs, $8.75@9.&#13;
Sheep and l a m b s : Receipts, 30 c a r s ;&#13;
market 25c higher; best wool lambs,&#13;
$11.85@12; clipped, $10^ 10.50; yearlings,&#13;
$10.50^10.75: wethers, $9.25¾)&#13;
9.50; ewes, $8.50¾ 9.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 1,500; market&#13;
strong; top, $10.75(511; fair to good,&#13;
$9.50© 10; g r a s s e r s . $4&amp;5.&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe a n d sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see t h a t it&#13;
Bears the s^?* s/tTji .~Y*&#13;
Signature of ^ ^ ^ ^ / ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
In Use for Over 30 Years.&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
Left the Mayor Gasping.&#13;
Expecting a party of friends to supper,&#13;
Major Moutarde had ordered a&#13;
hare from the local shop. The time&#13;
was at hand, but not so the h a r e .&#13;
After storming wildly at everybody ia&#13;
the house, t h e retired m a n of M a r s&#13;
stalked into the garden to cool down,&#13;
his bald head gleaming in the sunshine.&#13;
Just then, as bad luck ruled it,&#13;
Jimmy Walker, the e r r a n d boy from&#13;
the butcher's shop, passed by. The&#13;
major mistook him for the fishmonger's&#13;
messenger and yelled at him:&#13;
"Here, you rascal, what have you&#13;
done with my h a r e ? "&#13;
Jimmy, who was not noted for his&#13;
respect for his elders, glanced calmly&#13;
at the major's shining pate.&#13;
"Never touched It, old cockalorum!"&#13;
he replied, promptly. " W h a t 'ave you&#13;
done with my whiskers?"—London Answers.&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
D E T R O I T — W h e a l : Cash No 2 red,&#13;
$1.21 1-2; May opened without change&#13;
at $1.25 and declined to ¢1.22 1.2;&#13;
July opened at $1.24 and declined lo&#13;
$1,21 1-2; No 1 white, $1.16 1-2.&#13;
Corn—Cash No 3, 74 1-2c; No 3&#13;
yellow, 77c, No 4 yellow, 73 1-2®&#13;
74 l-2c&#13;
Oats—Standard, 48 1.2c; No 3&#13;
white, 47 1-2; No 4 white, 45®46c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No 2, 94 1.2c bid.&#13;
B e a n s — I m m e d i a t e and prompt shipment,&#13;
$3.65; April, $3.70; May, $3.75.&#13;
Seeds—Prime red clover, $10.25;&#13;
prime alsike, $9.35; prime timothy,&#13;
$3.60.&#13;
Ha}—No 1 timothy, $19.50@20;&#13;
s t a n d a r d timothy, $1850® 19; light&#13;
mixed, $18.50(¾ 19; No 2 timothy, $16&#13;
@17; No 1 mixed, $15@15.50; No 2&#13;
mixed, $11® 13; No 1 clover, $12®&#13;
13; rye straw $7.50@8; wheat and oat&#13;
straw, $6.50@ 7 per bu in cariots, Detroit.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 lbs, jobbing prices: First patent,&#13;
$6.50; second patent, $6.20;&#13;
straight, $5.90, spring patent, $6.80;&#13;
rye flour, $6 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lota:&#13;
Bran, $24; s t a n d a r d middlings, $25;&#13;
fine middlings $30; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$30; creacked corn, $21.50; corn and&#13;
oat chop, $28 per ton&#13;
• Turning Loose the Sunshine.&#13;
"It's a dark day," someone said to&#13;
Brother Williams, "a very dark, hopej&#13;
less day." And then the old negro&#13;
said:&#13;
" H i t s ez you look at it. But why&#13;
don't you unlock de sunshine? Ain't&#13;
you got some hid out 'round'! Stir&#13;
'roun' an' tu'n de sunshine loose! It's&#13;
dar—In yo house an' heart."&#13;
"Here," the day mourner said,&#13;
"here's a dollar for you, old man."&#13;
"Bless God!" Brother Williams aald.&#13;
"I knowed you'd t u r n loose de sunshine.&#13;
Hit wuz in yo pocket all de&#13;
time!"—Atlanta Constitution.&#13;
GOOD REPORT&#13;
Doctor Proved Value of Pott urn.&#13;
General Market*.&#13;
Grape Fruit—$2.75@3.50 per case.&#13;
Lemons—California, $3.75@4.25 per&#13;
box.&#13;
S t r a w b e r r i e s — Louisiana, $3@3.25&#13;
per 14-pt c a s e ; Florida, 30@35c per&#13;
q t&#13;
Apples—Greenings, $3@3.75; Spy,&#13;
$3.50@4; Baldwins. $3@3.50; Steele&#13;
Red«, $4®450 p e r bbl; western $1.75&#13;
Q2 per box.&#13;
Mushrooms—40®46c per lb.&#13;
C a b b a * e - - $ 2 © 2 2 5 per bbl; new, $3&#13;
per c w t&#13;
Asparagus—35@40c per lb; section,&#13;
$1,756)2 per box.&#13;
T o m a t o e s — H o t h o u s e , 25c per lb;&#13;
Florida, $2.50f^3 per crate.&#13;
Maple Sugar—New, 15® 16c per lb;&#13;
syrup, $KS&gt;1.10 per gal.&#13;
Dressed Calvea—Best, 13® 14c;&#13;
choice, 1 3 0 1 3 1.2c; ordinary, 11® 12c&#13;
per lb.&#13;
Lettuce—-Hotbed, 9® 10c per lb;&#13;
head lettuce, Florida $2.75 per ham.&#13;
per, Texas $1.75®2 per hamper.&#13;
Potatoes—Carlots on track, l i f t 1.03&#13;
for white and 96c®$1 for red per bu;&#13;
ruaeets, $1.06® 1.10 per bu.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey, klln.drled,&#13;
S1.M0L&amp;3 per crate and $1.10® 1.20&#13;
p«r hamper.&#13;
Heoey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
oomh U O l T c ; amber, 1 6 0 1 1 c ; e x&#13;
traoto* t f l t o p t r lfc.&#13;
Physicians know t h a t good food and&#13;
drink, properly selected, a r e of t h e utmost&#13;
importance, not only for t h e relief&#13;
of disease but to maintain h e a l t h&#13;
even when one is well.&#13;
A doctor writes, "I count It a pleasu&#13;
r e to say a good word for P o s t u m&#13;
with which I h a v e been enabled to relieve&#13;
so m a n y sufferers, and which I&#13;
count, with its valued companion&#13;
Grape-Nuts, one of t h e daily blessings.&#13;
"Coffee was banished from m y own&#13;
table some time ago and P o s t u m used&#13;
regularly In Its place." (Coffee la injurious&#13;
to m a n y persons, because it&#13;
contains t h e subtle, poisonous drug,&#13;
caffeine.)&#13;
"I frequently find it necessary to Instruct&#13;
patients w h e n they t a k e Postum&#13;
for the first t i m e to be quite s u r e&#13;
t h a t it is properly m a d e according to&#13;
directions, t h e n it h a s a clear, sealbrown&#13;
color and a rich, snappy taste,&#13;
a s well as h e a l t h giving qualities.&#13;
T h e above letter, received over ten&#13;
y e a r s ago, is fully confirmed by a rec&#13;
e n t letter from t h e doctor, in which&#13;
h e says:&#13;
"It Is a p l e a s u r e t o r e n d e r a good&#13;
report covering a p r o d u c t of which I&#13;
am so enthusiastic a friend.&#13;
"I am using in my home-your Postum&#13;
Cereal in both its forma And,&#13;
what is more. I am having it used In&#13;
the families of several patients tn&#13;
which there are children, and all unite&#13;
In endorsing the fine qualities of your&#13;
admirable product"&#13;
Name given by Postum Co. Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
Postum comes In two forms:&#13;
Postum Cereal—tho original form&#13;
—must be well boiled. 15c and 26c&#13;
Pkga.&#13;
Instant Postum a soluble powder—&#13;
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water,&#13;
and, with cream and sugar, makes&#13;
a delicious beverage Instantly. tOc&#13;
aadr 50c ttaa.&#13;
Both forms are equallv delteftoo* ami&#13;
cost shoot tke same per&#13;
• a AeasosT tor&#13;
far&#13;
C&gt;&#13;
.•&lt;..&gt;'. -im *~: ..l&gt;-;&#13;
y&lt;-*f ' v * * T^,&#13;
; • » |ll»y|l fa^M^W^IlWW***—Wm mtmM W M * iiW''""!^'''^.!. lUjirin^iifJS^SSJ&#13;
T^r^j&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'•* a&#13;
ASK FOR AND GsTT SKINNER'S THC H1QHS8T QUALITY EGG NOODLES Save the trademark signature of Paul F.&#13;
Skinner from all packages and exchange free&#13;
for Oneida Community Silverware, w n t r&#13;
today for free 36-page recipe book aod full&#13;
~V intormaooa.&#13;
S K I N N C R M F C C O . , O M A H A , U.S.A.&#13;
• LAMEST MACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA&#13;
n-&#13;
A Mystery.&#13;
"There's one thing I never could understand,"&#13;
aaid Blnks, laying down the&#13;
seed catalogue which he had been perusing.&#13;
"And what is that dear?" asked hiB&#13;
wife.&#13;
"I can't imagine where the artists&#13;
get the models for the pictures they&#13;
make for these catalogues."&#13;
Get the Habit of&#13;
Drinking Hot Water&#13;
Before Breakfast&#13;
8aya we can't look or feel right&#13;
with the system full&#13;
of poisons.&#13;
=il&#13;
An Apprehension.&#13;
"Do you remember the old copybook&#13;
in which you used to write 'Honesty&#13;
Is the Best Policy?' "&#13;
"Yes," replied Senator Sorghum;&#13;
"I'm afraid some of the boys had to&#13;
write that motto over and over so&#13;
often that they got a little tired of it&#13;
and tried to forget it."&#13;
Meat Makes Bad Kidneys&#13;
Too much meat is just as bad as not&#13;
enough. Such a diet is apt to load the&#13;
blood with uric acid and to injure the&#13;
kidneys. Bad backs, blue, nervous&#13;
spells, dizziness, rheumatic pains, and&#13;
bladder troubles indicate weak kidneys,&#13;
foretell danger of gravel and Bright's&#13;
disease. Don't neglect thia condition.&#13;
Use Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
•Every Picture Tell* Peter Loucks, Ninth&#13;
a3torv" ^ \ and Leelanan Sts.,&#13;
Frankfort, M i c h . .&#13;
says: "Hard work and&#13;
exposure brought on&#13;
backache. Mornings I&#13;
was so lamp and tired&#13;
I could hardly get up.&#13;
The kidney secretions&#13;
scalded In passage and&#13;
when I tried to stoop,&#13;
knifelike pains went&#13;
through me. My head&#13;
ached and I had terrible&#13;
dizzy s p e l l s .&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills&#13;
relieved me quickly&#13;
and six boxe : cured&#13;
me."&#13;
Gal Doan's at Any Store, 80c a Bex&#13;
D O A N ' S "p^JLV&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
Millions of folks bathe internally&#13;
now Instead of loading their system&#13;
with drugs. "What's an inside bath?"&#13;
you say. Well, it ia guaranteed to perform&#13;
miracles if you could believe&#13;
these hot water enthusiasts.&#13;
There axe vast numbers of men and&#13;
women who, Immediately upon arising&#13;
in the morning, drink a glass of real&#13;
hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone&#13;
phosphate in it. This is a very&#13;
excellent health measure. It Is intended&#13;
to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys&#13;
and the thirty feet of intestines&#13;
of the previous day's waste, sour bile&#13;
and indigestible material left over in&#13;
the body which, if not eliminated every&#13;
day, become food for the millions of&#13;
bacteria which Infest the bowels, the&#13;
quick result is poisons and toxins&#13;
which are then absorbed into the&#13;
blood causing headache, bilious attacks,&#13;
foul breath, bad taste, colds,&#13;
J stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleep-&#13;
! lessness, impure blood and all sorts&#13;
! of ailments.&#13;
People who feel good one day and&#13;
'•• badly the next, but who simply can&#13;
not get feeling right are urged to ob-&#13;
• tain a quarter pound of limestone&#13;
i phosphate from any druggist or store&#13;
ANOTHER REPORT&#13;
OF VILLA'S DEATH&#13;
IS T H I S O N E A M E X I C A N T R I C K&#13;
F O L L O W I N G C A R R A N Z A ' b&#13;
O I M A N D ON U. 8 ?&#13;
BANDITS ARE TREACHEROUS&#13;
Army Officer Report* the Wily Chief&#13;
Still In Hiding Which Is More&#13;
Likely Than Reported Dead.&#13;
8an Antonio, Tex.---Supplementing&#13;
his report in regard to the tight with&#13;
Villlstas, Major How*e wired Consul&#13;
Letcher at Chihuahua City that he&#13;
was positive Villa was in the mountains&#13;
southwest of Laborja, a small&#13;
town northwest of Parral.&#13;
The positive statement by Major&#13;
Howze that Villa was hiding in the&#13;
mountains near Laborja would indicate&#13;
that the story of Villa's death&#13;
is untrue, for the reason that his location&#13;
is far from the place where it&#13;
was reported his body has been&#13;
found.&#13;
General Funs-ton has received no&#13;
confirmation whatever from any&#13;
source to substantiate the story of&#13;
Villa's death. It is the belief of many&#13;
that if a body is being brought to&#13;
Chihuahua, purporting to be Villa's,&#13;
it is a trick of the Mexicans to have&#13;
an excuse for American troops to be&#13;
keeper. This will coat very little but I withdrawn from Mexico.&#13;
is sufficient to make anyone a real ! El Paso, Tex. -Pancho Villa's body&#13;
crank on the subject of internal sanitation.&#13;
Just as soap and hot water act on&#13;
the skin, cleansing, sweetening and&#13;
freshening, so limestone phosphate&#13;
and hot water act on the stomach,&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly&#13;
more important to bathe on the inside&#13;
than on the outside, because the&#13;
Bkin pores do not absorb impurities into&#13;
the blood, while the bowel pores do.&#13;
—Adv.&#13;
The Wretchedness&#13;
of Constipation&#13;
Can quickly be overcome by&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS.&#13;
Purely vegetable&#13;
—act surely and&#13;
gently on the&#13;
liver. Cure&#13;
Biliousness,&#13;
H e a d -&#13;
a c h e ,&#13;
D i z z i -&#13;
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Almost Caused a Panic.&#13;
The afternoon tea was in progress.&#13;
Music pulsated on the air; lights labored&#13;
to .shine through opaque or colored&#13;
globea. The place was crowded,&#13;
with women predominating. A dance&#13;
was in progress.&#13;
Finally the appeared.&#13;
There was nothing especially remarkable&#13;
about her. She was armed&#13;
neither by magnificence nor a defiant&#13;
manner. She was unassuming. Her&#13;
manner of presenting herself was&#13;
somewhat timid. And yet her appearance&#13;
created consternation. The&#13;
music ceased; the dancers stopped&#13;
short; two women fainted; several&#13;
men grabbed decanters and drank hurriedly;&#13;
the proprietor rushed forward&#13;
in alarm as to her sanity. There was&#13;
an uproar—a policeman was called.&#13;
She had appeared without one piece&#13;
of fur on her costume.&#13;
was taken out of its lonely grave on&#13;
a ranch near San Francisco Borja.&#13;
Chihuahua, on the American line of&#13;
march, ?nd positively identified, according&#13;
to Mexican official advices&#13;
and private messages from San Antonio,&#13;
Mexico. The bandit died from&#13;
gangrene, it is stated, a~s a result of&#13;
a wound in his left knee. If the&#13;
death of Villa, generally credited on&#13;
the border( is true, the United States&#13;
army will'immediately be withdrawn&#13;
from Mexico, the object of its entry&#13;
having been accomplished.&#13;
STILLHAMMERING AT VERDUN&#13;
Enormous Loss of 400,000 Men Is the&#13;
Cost of the Fortress.&#13;
HAIR BALSAM&#13;
A toilet preparation of merit&#13;
Help* to eradicate daadreS.&#13;
Far Raetertes Color and&#13;
leal»aat. ratnadG frioa}y aotr D Fraedga-fdim H.a ir,&#13;
P o r P l l e g Use AbeirsForaaldaBaln.&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Mosey Refaseee.&#13;
For sale by all Druggists, or seat epos receipt&#13;
of 25c postpaid. Send for free sample.&#13;
HOME REMEDY CO. South Haven, Mica,&#13;
Commercially Considered.&#13;
"Ever read Kant's 'Critique of Pure&#13;
Reason ?' "&#13;
"Yes," replied Mr, Penwiggle.&#13;
"Wonderful, isn't it?"&#13;
"I Bhould say so. That fellow must&#13;
have had an awful pull with the publishers&#13;
to get that stuff printed."&#13;
His Job.&#13;
"What position has that amateur&#13;
astronomer on your paper?"&#13;
"He? Oh, he's a star reporter."&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver,&#13;
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for&#13;
a laxative—three for a cathartic—Adv.&#13;
A Jack-knife is dangerous, but less&#13;
so than a jackpot.&#13;
The most gigantic conflict in the&#13;
history of the world, the battle of&#13;
Verdun has entered upon its ninth&#13;
week. It is in many respects without&#13;
precedent. The enormous scale&#13;
of the German preparations and&#13;
execution of the attack, the unparalleled&#13;
concentration of artillery and&#13;
the sustained ferocity of the fighting&#13;
mark the battle as one of the greatest&#13;
efforts of the war.&#13;
Verdun has been rated as one of&#13;
the strongest fortresses of Europe, a&#13;
cornerstone of the French defenses&#13;
against Germany. The evolution of&#13;
military tactics during the war, however,&#13;
and particularly the employment&#13;
by the Germans of long range howitzers&#13;
capable of reducing the greatest&#13;
forts, have done much to change&#13;
the character of the Verdun campaign&#13;
as compared with the earlier conceptions&#13;
of what sudn a struggle might&#13;
be.&#13;
In no previous battle were the&#13;
losses so high as those which have&#13;
been estimated in the fighting around&#13;
Verdun. These estimates, however,&#13;
cannot be regarded as conclusive evidence,&#13;
for neither Germany nor&#13;
France has announced its own casualties.&#13;
The French war office has declared&#13;
the Germans have lost 200,000&#13;
in killed, wounded and captured. The&#13;
Germans state semi-offlcially that the&#13;
French casualties number 150,000 kill- j&#13;
ed and wounded and that 36,000 unwounded&#13;
French prisoners have been !&#13;
taken. If these estimates are approx- '&#13;
imately correct, nearly 400,000 men&#13;
have been eliminated as fighting unitsr&#13;
Mew tc avoid&#13;
*&amp;peratwns&#13;
These Three Women Tell How They&#13;
Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of&#13;
Surgical Operations.&#13;
Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they&#13;
should be the .last resort for women who suffer with ills&#13;
peculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham&#13;
Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great number of&#13;
women after they have been recommended to submit to an&#13;
operation have been made well by Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters. AH&#13;
sick women should read them.&#13;
Marinette, Wis.—"I went to the doctor antf&#13;
he told me I must have an operation for a female&#13;
trouble, and I hated to have it done as I had been&#13;
married only a short time. I would have terrible&#13;
pains and my hands and feet were cold all the&#13;
time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-!&#13;
pound and was cured, and I feel better in every*!&#13;
way. I Rive you permission to publish my name:&#13;
because I am 80 tnankful that I feel well again."&#13;
-Mrs- FEED BEHNXE, Marinette, Wis.&#13;
Detroit^ Mich.—"When I first took Lydia'K&#13;
I Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so run down&#13;
with female troubles that I could not do anything, and our doctor&#13;
said I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly walk&#13;
without help so when I read about the Vegetable Compound and whafc&#13;
it had done for others I thought I would try it I got a bottle of&#13;
Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Sanative Wash and used them according to directions..&#13;
They helped me and today I am able to do all my work and I am weLl*&#13;
—Mrs. THOS. DWYER, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Bellevue, Pa.—" I suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible&#13;
bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and&#13;
they all told me the same story^ that I never could get well without&#13;
in operation and I just dreaded the thought of that. I also tried a&#13;
goodmany other medicines that were recommended to me and none&#13;
of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound a trial The first bottle helped, I kept&#13;
taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick anv more and I&#13;
am picking up in weight. I am 20 years old and weigh 145 pounds.&#13;
It will be the greatest pleasure to me if I can have the opportunity&#13;
to recommend it to any other suffering woman."—Miss IREN*&#13;
FBOELICHKR, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa.&#13;
If yon would like special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham&#13;
Med. Co. (confidential ),Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened*&#13;
read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence*&#13;
Valid Claim for Damages.&#13;
A Portland (Ore.) dispatcn tells of&#13;
an application for Indemnity filed under&#13;
the workmen's compensation law&#13;
of the state by a farm hand. The&#13;
blank form for the filing of claims contains&#13;
two questions, evideutly intended&#13;
to apply to Injuries sustained in milN&#13;
or factories, One of these is, "What&#13;
was the nature of the machine by&#13;
which you were injured?" The other&#13;
question is, "Was the machine in good&#13;
order at the time of your injury''" To&#13;
the first of these questions the answer&#13;
was "Cross," and to the second was&#13;
an enthusiastic, heavily written and&#13;
boldly underlined "YES." To the question,&#13;
"How were you hurt?" the answer&#13;
was, "I was kicked by a mule."—&#13;
Christian Herald.&#13;
Safety First&#13;
Indigestion, constipation, bilk&#13;
and many ailments of the dig!&#13;
organs are often the source of&#13;
illness. At the first sign of disordered&#13;
conditions take the reliable family&#13;
remedy that is always dependable —&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS Urvwt 5*1« o# Any MecUciM ia tke WotftsV&#13;
1» box**, 10c* 2 S c&#13;
STOP ITCHING INSTANTLY&#13;
With Cutlcura Soap and Ointment.&#13;
Nothing Better. Trial Free.&#13;
Bathe the affected part with Cuticura&#13;
Soap and apply the Ointment. For eczemas,&#13;
rashes, irritations, pimples, dan&lt;&#13;
druff and sore hands Cutlcura Soap&#13;
and Ointment are supreme. Nothing&#13;
better, cleaner or purer than these&#13;
super-creamy emollients at any price.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Budapest, Hungary—To relieve the&#13;
shortage of milk, 200,000 goats , are&#13;
to be brought into Budapest and distributed&#13;
among poorer householders.&#13;
The Main Thing.&#13;
"I understand they have a new&#13;
school curriculum.'"&#13;
"What's Its make?"&#13;
Children Win Art Sickly&#13;
When your child cries at night, tosses&#13;
restlessly In its sleep, ia constipated, feverish&#13;
or has symptoms of worms, you feel&#13;
worried. Mothers who vahie their own&#13;
comfort and the welfare of their children,&#13;
should never be without a box of&#13;
Mother Cray's Sweet&#13;
Powders for Children&#13;
or as* throafboot th« season.&#13;
They tend to Break&#13;
up Colds, relieve Feverishnets.&#13;
Constipation, Teething&#13;
Disorders, move and&#13;
regnlate the Bowels and&#13;
destro- Worms. These&#13;
powders are pleaaant to&#13;
take and easy for psrents&#13;
to rive. They cleanse the&#13;
stomach, act on the Liver&#13;
and rivs healthful sleep&#13;
by regulating the child's&#13;
system.&#13;
U$*d by motktrtfat 29 ytart. Sold by ah&#13;
drursrisU. 25 eta. Sample mailed FRKR.&#13;
Addreaa, Mother Gray Co- Le Roy. N. Y.&#13;
B# turm you ask for and obtain&#13;
Hotter Grij's Sweet Powders for ChHdrtn.&#13;
•nSBSnasnasasaBBn&#13;
TradeUaik.&#13;
Don't sestwt&#13;
any subalHaia.&#13;
An engagement ring on the finger is |&#13;
worth two in the pawnshop '&#13;
PATENTS ^fSSSS'iBS^:&#13;
W. N. U., D E T R O I T , NO. 1 7 - 1 9 1 *&#13;
Panama—The Panama canal was&#13;
re-opened to traffic Saturday afternoon&#13;
with the passage of IB ships,&#13;
sevan northbound and nine southbound,&#13;
including the transport Buford.&#13;
The channel through the cut was In&#13;
excellent condition and the passage&#13;
of the veaaels was without Incident&#13;
Petrograd—Czar Nicholas had the&#13;
narrowest escape from injuries] or&#13;
death he has ever experienced since&#13;
the outbreak of the war. A bomb&#13;
hurled from an Austrian aeroplane&#13;
mimed at the Russian emperor who&#13;
was reviewing troops in the little&#13;
town of Iwmntx, on the Bessarabia*&#13;
frontier, fell a few yards from where&#13;
the monarch stood aad wounded a&#13;
young Russian private standing&#13;
AILING WOMEN&#13;
NEED THIS FAMOUS&#13;
DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION&#13;
Thousands of women who are now&#13;
blessed with robust health cannot un*&#13;
dsrstand why thousands of other worn*&#13;
en continue to worry and suffer from&#13;
ailments peculiar to women when they&#13;
can obtain for a trifling sum Dr.&#13;
Pierce's Favorite Prescription which&#13;
will surely and quickly banish all&#13;
pain, distress and misery and restore&#13;
the womanly functions to health.&#13;
This prescription of Dr. Pierce's ex*&#13;
traded from roots and herbs ia a temperance&#13;
remedy.&#13;
To get rid of Irregularitlea, or catarrhal&#13;
condition, to avoid pain at oartain&#13;
times, to overcome irritability&#13;
sad was rnass, waste no time, bat gat&#13;
Or. Pierce's Favorite Presertpttoa la&#13;
or tablet term this Tory any.&#13;
€4 ANURICi » »&#13;
NEWEST IN CHEMISTRY&#13;
This is a recant discovery of Doctor&#13;
Pierce, besd of the Invalids' Hotel*&#13;
Buffalo, N. T. Experiments for&#13;
era! years proved that there u&#13;
other eliminator of uric add&#13;
rable. For those easily&#13;
symptoms of &lt;T&gt;**iimnst1on as&#13;
ache, scalding urine sad freqnont&#13;
nation, as well as ssjfljmsnt ta&#13;
urine, or if arte add la the blood&#13;
caused rheumatism, "•auric*'&#13;
quickly. In rheumatism of ties&#13;
ia gravel sad govt,&#13;
pains sad stiffness which to&#13;
aad&#13;
rapidly&#13;
Dr. Flares las&#13;
Fall trsaf sat Mo.&#13;
I; V&#13;
i&#13;
ii. V&#13;
•V. ••£&#13;
,J.&#13;
i •'')?*&#13;
vv ^ •'&#13;
J&#13;
l #&#13;
* 5 * - W&#13;
F*&gt;&#13;
.i&amp;tfjiiA.'&#13;
Pmcknev Dispatch 1&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Doaa a C o j ^ r v H i i v r Banking&#13;
Bu-jiili^-jci.&#13;
paid&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
&gt;a -ill Time Deposits&#13;
Plnckney&#13;
G . W 7 fcf L I -&#13;
Mich.&#13;
P r o p&#13;
Pinckney J)i^patch&#13;
Enterea n\ rae Poarothce at. Pinckney,&#13;
Mic:.., as Second Ciaod Matter&#13;
C J. SI8LET, EDITOR AUG PUBLISHER&#13;
Sub&lt;*enuli«u, $ 1 . Per "kVar ;u Alliance&#13;
I i U - r : i t i r. :r • w a on&#13;
For Painless Dentistry, See&#13;
Dr. ». ?. Wright&#13;
In The Do Ian Block&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN&#13;
A '1 vecllti n*&#13;
(urcU or Thaux.-, tii\y -jvw.n.&#13;
KeoOiU'ii li-a of CiiudOieace, vne Uui;ar.&#13;
Locai Notices, iu Li^di c o i u a m v u v t&#13;
_-eut [XT hue per each luatrrMOLi.&#13;
All matitrr intended to oeuefit 'a&lt;e (&gt;erttooal&#13;
or bu»iae3&amp; iacere.-:. of a a v iudivid-&#13;
Qal will be published at regular a d v e r t i s -&#13;
ing rates.&#13;
Aunuunceoieut ot enierUjaaieuLs. e t c . ,&#13;
must be paid lor m r e ^ l a r L.'H-si Notice&#13;
Obituary and m a j r i j ^ e oc&gt;i;cei x.'t* published&#13;
free of c h a r g e .&#13;
Poetrv must be paid f n 'si Uie rale of&#13;
five ceals per l i a e .&#13;
' ^ ^ ^ [ i&#13;
V tt&#13;
O T K I-&#13;
.'til'. CI&#13;
n&lt;&#13;
M \ K f. v N w r ».&#13;
Daisie B.&#13;
Stockbrdd$c,&#13;
• &gt;uv&#13;
Chapell&#13;
Michigan&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
Trains R&amp;sl&#13;
No. 46—8:34 a.m. X&#13;
No. 4*—1 44 p. in X&#13;
&lt; 7 - f : * f s. m&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sigler i;&#13;
rbv.i« .-1¾ &gt;&gt;j &gt;&#13;
All c*i-.&lt;.&#13;
day o* i.'ict^•&#13;
. ' M l .&#13;
M i .&#13;
v V&#13;
%^^%»»»»»v»v»^»»-\»^%%^%»»»»»%v»»&#13;
Louia Monk* wa* iu J a c k s o n&#13;
S a t u r d a y .&#13;
A.^W. Viuce of Detroit is t h e&#13;
fnew barber at C a n ' s shop.&#13;
Dr. Will Monks of Howell visited&#13;
relatives here Sunday.&#13;
Geo. Reason J r . and family of&#13;
Detroit were guests of relatives&#13;
here S u n d a y .&#13;
Fred Teepie and family spent&#13;
Sunday at t h e home of M r s&#13;
E m m a Morau&#13;
Miss Genevieve Alley of Dexter&#13;
spent the week end with Miss&#13;
Norma Curlett&#13;
Frails LaPiue a n d wife of&#13;
Howeli spent Sunday with friends&#13;
and reiative.s here&#13;
I(. W. Caveriy of Howen was&#13;
a visitor a' t h e Dispatch office&#13;
last week Thursday.&#13;
Agnes McCluskey of Vpsilanti&#13;
spent Saturday and S i n r l i v with&#13;
her parents of this place, |&#13;
Mrs G. I'. Merrills and dauyh-i&#13;
ter of H a m b u t j .•jpeut the past&#13;
weeiv en(1 with hey .not her here,'&#13;
Dr. A iJ. Pearson aud wifV of&#13;
H*mbur_: spent Sund&amp;'. at t h e&#13;
ho:r,- of Or. G. H Pearson and&#13;
wirV&#13;
Mr. and Mrs Fioris Morau of&#13;
Grand Rapids spent the latter&#13;
part of last week with relatives&#13;
here,&#13;
The Pmcknev H. S. Base ball&#13;
taam fcoes to South Lyon to play&#13;
their first cjime of the season Saturday&#13;
Mrs. Matt Brady a u d daughter&#13;
of Howell spent 8 a t u r d a y a n d&#13;
S u n d a y with h e r mother. M r s .&#13;
E m m a Moran.&#13;
Mr a n d M r s Geo Doody a n d&#13;
family of near North L a k e called&#13;
at t h e home of M r s . Minnie&#13;
Doody Tuesday.&#13;
Friday livening of this week,&#13;
April 21, occurs t b e r e g u h r meet.&#13;
iui? si-d t h u anunal election of&#13;
officers of t h « 0 , E. S.&#13;
^ r % ' ! d i f p d ! J r i r C) 1 I&#13;
\H ^ L l b b t&#13;
Mrs. Cnnra*;&#13;
to*:i has soM&#13;
acres&#13;
Micm&#13;
, living north of&#13;
her farm of 100&#13;
d»me» Iv'oc'iw .iptmT MoTida\&#13;
1.)^)1 : u i ' .&#13;
O V r ; &gt; L , ucltiy&#13;
Miatt McCail of Detroit&#13;
of M r.i. HurrN Browti.&#13;
Dr G J . i^ardon watt in Howell&#13;
on business laat Friday.&#13;
AJisa Martha Nichols was an&#13;
Ann Arbor visitor Thur«da&gt;.&#13;
Misd Mary Lynch ap«#nt a few&#13;
days the past week in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs Lawerence Quail of Hamburg&#13;
is spBuding A few hays h e r e .&#13;
C- E. Booth arrived from Shel-I&#13;
by last Saturday with his family&#13;
and goods.&#13;
Special meetings are being held&#13;
at the Cong1!, and M. E. chinches&#13;
this week.&#13;
Kex Ileasou of Detroit is a guest&#13;
at the home of D r . C L. S i l l e r&#13;
this week&#13;
Mr. and M r s E. G. Carpenter&#13;
spent IKS! week :n Pontiac and&#13;
Lenox.&#13;
The obituary of Mrs. Peter \"an&#13;
Keuran will be found in tbe South&#13;
Iosco news-&#13;
Dr; Pearson dehorned '12 head&#13;
of cattle for C. \". Van VViQk.ei one&#13;
day last week,&#13;
Dr. Morelv \'aui;hu and wife of&#13;
Jackson visited his mother. Mrs.&#13;
Nettie N'aughn S u n d a y .&#13;
Don't forget t h e special Easter&#13;
Services to be held at t h e Cong'l.&#13;
church, Sunday evening, April 23,&#13;
Mrs. C. Rosa and children and&#13;
Mrs. Claude Reason were guests&#13;
of K. G. Carpenter and wife Monday.&#13;
Mr and -Mrs. Harry Rosa and&#13;
famiiv of Auii Arbor were Sunday&#13;
callers at Cm- i.om^ of CJande&#13;
Reason.&#13;
Mis. H. C'ambuni anti d;i Lighter&#13;
and Mrs. E d n a Reason called at&#13;
the l;ome of Willi;, Tupper last&#13;
^'ednesria;».&#13;
Mrs. F. K Mora:: of Grand&#13;
Rapids is visiting at tiie home of&#13;
her parent;?, Mr. and Mrs, S. E.&#13;
Swarr nou t,&#13;
About twen! y dollars lias been&#13;
subscribed for the benefit of t h e&#13;
II S. Base hail team, by the business&#13;
men of Piucivuey.&#13;
Mrs G . J . Pearson visited reilatives&#13;
in Ann Arbor t n e latter&#13;
part of last week. Her two neices&#13;
Z e t a a u d Norma Meyers returning&#13;
with her S a t u r d a y .&#13;
A tine program has been arranged&#13;
for t h « Count&gt; S u n d a y&#13;
School Convention, to be held at&#13;
Brightou, Thnrtdtty and Friday,&#13;
April 27th a n d 28th.&#13;
Tbe firat dance after E t l t e r ,&#13;
will be held at t b e Pinckney&#13;
Opera Honse, Friday eveuinfe}&#13;
April 2S, for the benefit of t h e H .&#13;
S, baseball team. Music by Boos]&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
The fact that it pays to advertise&#13;
in o u r r"or Sal** columns, was&#13;
proven last week when Alfred&#13;
Monks sold the horse he advertise,&#13;
before the. papers were hardly out j&#13;
of thfl office.&#13;
The hm_' search for the missing&#13;
Brighton child was ended Satnr-&#13;
GLASGOW&#13;
Noted For Selling Good B JACKSON, MICHIGAN&#13;
)&#13;
\ Beautiful Silks&#13;
ROS.&#13;
Goods Cheap&#13;
For Easter&#13;
Meeting Bvery Demand fop&#13;
the Season&#13;
3 l&#13;
In the light ol present trade'uncertainties and especially in \&#13;
the silk industry, it i&gt; with a'^rear deal ol satisfaction that we&#13;
are able toftell our patron^ tliat we are able 10 tell our patrons&#13;
that we are amply supplied with that same high grade quality.&#13;
T h o u s a n d s of. yards of rich, new Spril l g[Silksjn the scarce and&#13;
wanted weaves and colors are here ready ror your selection. We&#13;
are, especially supplied.With the much vsanted Taltetas.&#13;
36-Inoh Oliiffon I'ini^li&#13;
r r i a f f*«Bt:tt. For separate Waists, separate Skirts] and Silk&#13;
Suits; all colors are represented, including brown, gray, navy, m&#13;
m green, wisteria, plum, turquoise, old blue, light blue* and pink J&#13;
15 aanndd bbllaacckk—aa sspolleennddiidd ceoolllhe'crntioorj:i.. pnre-rr Yca-.-rirdr' »&#13;
$1,50. $1.75 and $2.00&#13;
:*€t-Iiicli Striped Cliiffon&#13;
X ^ a f t e f a Navy w.th black stripe, green with black and A&#13;
white stripe, navy, red and greenfstripe. brown^striped, green J&#13;
mixed strij)e, ank m a n \ otlicr checks, stripes ar.d plaids — vard J&#13;
Brilliant satin finish. 40-in. \side. a beautiful qualitv in a&#13;
5 2 5 0 S&#13;
1'ine sot! tinisu :;. evening shades t •F»rs, reserl.i. old ro&gt;e. K&#13;
pcacdi. pink and Icni'":., '; iu-v are w a - r v l v ;;-:nchos wide P5&#13;
and onh' \ a r d - . ^ 1 ^ ^ *&#13;
$1.00 and $1,50&#13;
navy and black'. Priced at, ward&#13;
P r i n t € 5 d C h i i ' t o i i s Daim&#13;
eiaeat assortment ol di^i^r.s .oi-.! c.Aur&#13;
waists; 40 inches wide, vard&#13;
' ^re wasi:-t'.iv ;?-:nchc&gt; wide&#13;
5 1 . 2 5 ^&#13;
and ;&gt;eautilul a S&#13;
or c\-&lt;.-nin^ and tanc\ m&#13;
51 50 f&#13;
G e o r g e t e ( r o p e&#13;
all the wanted shadr.-. 4-)-::'aj:1es wide, vir*&#13;
n 'fi 1. 'v( eleut (|iiali[\ . in. 3)&#13;
, \ arr 5175¾&#13;
W K i t e K a d i i m i JSilk 42 u t am «&#13;
lustrous 'wasiialile • a r &lt; " 51.50 f&#13;
J^atiii H t r i p e y \ *ii'&lt;iuift(M t e in white 42- %&#13;
wi(lc- &gt;a r d SI «50 4&#13;
^ » l i e p l i e i * d C J l i e c ^ k - J S a &gt;ard wide in black and S&#13;
^•hiic. yard S1-00 and S1.25 i&#13;
F o i l l a r d . S We aia -hewing Cdier.e&gt; Bus. Shower 5&#13;
and spot proof P o n i a r d s , ah-in. wide, price.- at, &gt;d S K O O a&#13;
SALE ON&#13;
Shoes&#13;
1 c&#13;
day noon, when t h e body was1&#13;
oC'hse. o a i r h ot Bedford, i fomid rioatin- near t b e shore of !&#13;
tnrouirn Th*» a ^ n r y of Di. | the lake by Bert Westphal. T h e !&#13;
i ' ^ ™ 0 " | funeral was held at two o'clock'&#13;
Cft T h e M i w * Nornja Cnrlett,&#13;
Furniture nReeppaj inng&#13;
Shep back of Oru4 v »&#13;
Bianriie Marria, Madeline Bow&#13;
nmii. Aria (iardner, Dolores Rich&#13;
Motula\ at t h e M. II. Cbarcii.&#13;
There will bp a 'ne e tm^ of th^&#13;
LivuiLrston ( 7&gt;. milk producers at&#13;
ardsoo. Florence T a p p e r and i H o w e l l S a t a r d i v . April 22nd. at&#13;
Dorothv \ \ qllace took a t h r e e !&#13;
evening l&gt;yf&#13;
:iv v\ qiiace&#13;
tn d- li i k -- F r i d a \&#13;
moonlight.&#13;
( n a n effort to clo&gt;^ t n e two&#13;
j saloons in Dexter, a number of&#13;
^ N D P R E S S I N G | t h ^ w o a i e u o f t h f l t village induced&#13;
the coancil to boost the Iice:i*« to&#13;
*H «v-i f«. A.procured the. equip- &amp;v*-» -^ 1 * , i k , , i t r^r -., . ^ »•)&lt;*&gt; and it is sam that at least mitt f©r t h e O r y - C ' e a n i n ^ . .. . . ,&#13;
f r o c a s t ^ w e a r e i%ady t o d o I one of the iiqnor dealers of nur FUad L&gt;aiic*»r's Ad&#13;
.AirchlMOPk I n f i r a f - c J a s s o r d e r neighboring bur^r will riose hi» i and then nwoiv- to trv ta«m out.&#13;
(place ot business.—Chelsea Tri-Jothers are convinced —why not&#13;
one p. in to further [jertect t h e&#13;
organization and transact a n y&#13;
other business that may come l&gt;e- ' ^ J&#13;
fore the meeting Good speakeraj&#13;
and all members and persons i n - ;&#13;
teres ted in the production of .nilk&#13;
throughout th^ connty «re -e&lt;.|ue»ted&#13;
to \m jirei^tit. Guy Horden, Sec.&#13;
ms wepk&#13;
W. B BARROW&#13;
On Saturday, April 22ndi&#13;
We will set' all our odd siz^s in&#13;
Ladies' Shoes, consisting of $2.50 and&#13;
$3.00 Value.*.&#13;
Choice $1*00&#13;
We al&gt;o have a few odd sizes&#13;
in Children^1 Shoes which we will&#13;
sell at greatly reduced prices.&#13;
C E- B O O T H PROP.&#13;
•?&#13;
bnn.- von&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising Chubb s Corners&#13;
W A V J i-:n v ,,,,.,, &lt;, , ,&#13;
&gt;f i d i « d i &gt; n ^ '•&lt;•«,: • .1 :: «s .&#13;
M a &gt; - i . i - .1 , ' ,i :&#13;
t r v . i : 1-1.1 - • -i . v i &lt;ij •&#13;
F*'&#13;
C H . : . - i&#13;
ii v d w tF&#13;
M r , ! ' -&#13;
&lt;J-C^a U ,&#13;
F O K &gt; A ! . r -&#13;
1-('i; &gt; A I . K '!&#13;
a n d &lt;e:&lt;i 'i'^ ,&#13;
r-OK S A L K '&#13;
&gt; a u wecich"-&#13;
M&#13;
, : I _; i , . rt&#13;
i ' ' J i &gt; , l . e&#13;
South Marion&#13;
•,v&#13;
; i d !&#13;
d a, at&#13;
l-'OR ^ A i . K s^-t-ci ( ,,,11, \ \ ,.,... ( ,,,, y&lt;a&#13;
i !•• w I »ej; . . 1 . 1 1 . S :. 11- r. I "i riL'i-i^i-v&#13;
H AN' I N l . N , l , i \ | . 1 i , r [ L [ ,,;!,-&#13;
j f U ' l " l ' 1 c.'l .i ' &gt;i I' .'-,' , i ,- i:i : , •.- ,• ;i&#13;
M i A. !) i • i *• -, ., :•&gt; . .. h ;; .. - &lt; , Y I .&#13;
a I J rla •• i! i :., ;• ! ':i n,&#13;
Km; &gt;.\ •i 1^ j . , .&#13;
•i i ^&#13;
i v n •&gt; i • 11&#13;
.: - a: &lt;_*&#13;
M l ) iF.._p^r~t W M ; . -&#13;
. S n a n r ! W ; u n ' . ' - 1 : * .' : d l i O o l i n y&#13;
OULlSKriila. d k i a \ W o : ' * f'&lt;&gt;lj;:d t o&#13;
•'&lt;" ^ : a ' L v n a t f . ' . - ' i r: (J t •' i &gt; s o i i r i : .&#13;
M i s ( Yai :H\ 1 ti-1,-, .si. , ,*•»: f a . til&#13;
to 1 Jnt rem par: ina.&#13;
l i o r i r i P l r Winn- r(J ifi' on \\ r dt&#13;
M . ' . C K J ' I . ' ' t ' l H U V o . S . ) : . . - d r i \&#13;
MicJd Ayi»t*s (««r!':i«*\ of F(aa:-k&#13;
field spent rha p-tat week end with&#13;
h e r p a r e n t s M r a:a! Mr*. A J.&#13;
C l t t t f liHV&#13;
L b ! Srui'ti or' Arm Ar'jor and&#13;
Mis^s Fiorom-&gt;-« F a i r i e s - vibited&#13;
fiaend^ ( u th:s vicinity S u n d a y .&#13;
I Ftdi IFdi cf F . u c k a r ) ap^nt&#13;
~,,,Kl|SL.r)d-r. ai M n 1 , W.-ddb-aF*.&#13;
, I F \\ i v i l u . s i r irara-Hcted !ms-&#13;
L ! - : i l «&#13;
iiiodi in Howell Tu**.sda\.&#13;
. M:&gt; \V::;&#13;
^ V i (-u t o p - .'. '&#13;
! . ' &gt; : •• CM F !• &lt;\&#13;
! : A ' C&#13;
A 111 e : i -&#13;
A { 1 : - : ( , . 1 1 .&#13;
II -&gt;N , &lt;-&#13;
( i ;: y B i n ; i . s p &gt; - : . '&#13;
hio pareij:-). -1:&#13;
I V H I : &gt;_r I l J o v ' . .&#13;
I (J 1 ; ^ V I l l LP i -1 A&#13;
l i l t A Ct,- :. c ! I' i H ' It&#13;
] &gt; U | _ ' B e o&#13;
l i r u . f ^ i a i n ! fL.'j.; w ; ' r t-M :.rtctr :.. , j&#13;
0 (I r ! (1 f .-^6 • : i 1 i &gt; W i' ; i \ \ r&gt;i :!i e^' 1 H v&#13;
' 'i \ ri t* Ciai ,(i A -y ^;;:i)i &gt; ^ i a r d a v&#13;
in Fanb'h'j&#13;
N . Pact-v mi ! laoji v l'«)K a ' r i p&#13;
in t h e i r ii«w a u t o 'o Fow!«rvd!e&#13;
and Cofiway S a t u r d a y .&#13;
Aibt)it Wiiaun and wife of An&#13;
doraou visited -John &lt;'arr S u n d a y .&#13;
F a \ ern Deruere&amp;: an 1 familv (&gt;f&#13;
&lt;irt4 gory apenL S n u d a y at t Lie&#13;
b e n e of W. H Dock: 1^.&#13;
F l i u ^ r \ aul'^i ie:i s&#13;
day in Howidl.&#13;
ai^ri^^ii^awird^iM^itf&#13;
L e . ^ a i A d v t r t J j » l r i ^&#13;
Q j T A T K 0&gt;f M l C H h l A X . ! 0 ^ p r o ^ M a oour'- r-jt&#13;
. ^ . - . , .. - _ - » *««Hion of&#13;
• « i d uoarL h«l4«t tha p r a h a : e offtee in llM filing,-&#13;
of H o w e l l l'i »ti't iVnint/ on t'19 " • k il^i-af&#13;
A p r i l A . D *.Jli.&#13;
Pre«»eiu : H u n . r-k^.-ii J A . S [ , . * . .! 'i1&lt;- .:' P: i&gt;'&gt;»:«&#13;
u» tS&lt;» m a t t e r OI'VIIH i4»t&gt;- a:&#13;
Allerta's Brilliant&#13;
•nt a! - r&#13;
reason&#13;
Opening!&#13;
&lt; ) n r i.. r Cr a in P i i r . ( &lt; • , &lt; * i SatiM-dav nt' thi:&#13;
cvp&#13;
VVc will tc-utLin- C o n i i o . k W o r l d B e s t I r j Creaiii&#13;
in Wiriou.sjfla ,'or&gt;. Vcriior'.- Oin^c-r Alu, K c n U ' s F u F&#13;
;^me offSott I ) n n k &gt; a n d w;-: encU-a'.ur t o m&lt;:nt vouc&#13;
) : i i r o [ i a ' ' \ ' .&#13;
Seeding Time is Here&#13;
v lia.-3 A . Z 1 ) I » ' - A I : I ' \ i ^ : ' c i . l&#13;
f:: • •.' i (} 6 a i. G : ^ ( i r \ a P-w d a y J la-&#13;
• » . " - * «&#13;
I-) : - . &gt;.'(!r'i i»v '.'.&lt;- P*.'. (. '»*') w S i j u i c t / of&#13;
A u i e r i i H ;t:.:i '..'id' h P r—" &gt;''it'(! ' l u m b e r is&#13;
P ' P n ' l ' , , i I e * : , ' &lt; , u i , l . •: \\w .^ensi'i) of&#13;
l - i l - o A R L . T H ' i M i N i S : &gt; . - ^ J j l f ' : ' ; : " • . / &gt; : - . • . i r d t * i . : v :i : : n ; c - v a h I ' - a l .&#13;
G. W. T w p i , b ^ , , : u o 1 ^ ! i:. 3 S i d .-01.-. ui* ! " " '•:• ' ' " ' : v k , " f l : ' i ' ^ ' 1 ' ^ , ^ c u i t - n t a&#13;
;&gt;elltion p r a y - . u g t h i i t h e i die f .r L'jspr-'tiarra'wlon ] M ' : ^ - 1 : : ' r,t&gt; •'""p t i i : n . ' ' &gt;M0Uid ;tuv&#13;
i»r claioia a^jai'iat said twtati-bn L a u r e l ui'i t i n t a ; h.i ;,•,,.-:,. P v * : - ' - ' : - v - : " ) 2 ; &gt;•'' m i ' r r j b e -&#13;
iMliuBt all c l a i m s aiid d - : u « ; , . w : i - , ; - . . - -.v-1 i - ! " ' ' . ' ^ n ' ( ' " " K " '"' '• \ " ' f ' ' ^ d 1&#13;
t&#13;
UiJ&#13;
r«»*«d !)v « i d I.Hf,)re!»«i.l -oip't, : ^ • '•' -C^ ^ ' - ^ " . - • - :--•? : ;..- &gt; ! a r c : i . , : . .&#13;
It i« .&gt;:•]•• •;'! ThAt ! i . !• m o n " n rr^ni IHJ» Uic*&#13;
fw C l l o w - ' l f &gt;r .-|-&gt;4d:tr.rs • • •j.". ».-&gt;•' : C ' I : T . . ( I^J n !&#13;
s a i d tMiiAt-'&#13;
l i i s fi.r'.li.T -.-1-.',-fl 1 i.i • :-i.&gt; .U'i ' .-*/ o: l. .&#13;
A. n 19]K i t i«ti o'i'ini I; j (i&gt; &gt; T--»; :v :i it -a.-l&#13;
l&gt;rob»t« ffl'1*, ba fcfl-.i i» n-*«-^Nv t p ; v j i rj'^t : n r * u f&#13;
» x » m l n » t i o u x i d »dj'i.*i in»-»:* nf ai: : *: si« » r i e&#13;
i i i t t a ^ * a':n&lt;tt M i d l»«i^»»&lt;»fi&#13;
Ki'ia-INi ,\ S T " WI,&#13;
Jodfft of Probata&#13;
d e If&gt; &gt; ' . . : ( , vi ao:"Sf v. a n ;&gt;lt-:itv&#13;
B u r t N a s h "&#13;
People Yoil Know&#13;
Mr. and Mr?. A d r i a n HoiseJ Sr,&#13;
are visiti:i_j r e l a t i v e ::i H a m i l t o n ,&#13;
O n :&#13;
Mr*. A. H Fiin-of: aad Mi«s&#13;
-, ! A : I : M l'"r •i n : '.H , - p n : P ;a,^[_&#13;
Cncaiaber Pickle Contracts&#13;
C o n t r a c t u r'-" •_'"&gt;-•:•»: ^i,cn&#13;
LPI' p a ' k ; * for ' iu* reason id' 1!^F&#13;
may nuw '::-i LiH'i f: DP: .". •• • -r.: p&#13;
nHii'H': v-1 X, F M o: • - ; , , - , : it'&#13;
yrf*atiy "!•• M---i iir.c-e.-* \Vdi i:-t. ^ e i : : r s d - &lt; \ ,n H . . W - ! P&#13;
pa \'an J ? -• •' n -• -• :' v-ti"..' c e a - *o L i e .xF1&gt;8&lt;r-&gt; F.H:u:;f&gt; M - u p n f u i d&#13;
om- i.i, i" .:.:,; t ;, 111 pt-r ia,;-nel iNoia,&lt;t C d a ^ a ' AV.:&gt;- D e x &gt; r visifor&#13;
. - . P I , piraa--, 'cc.i."!;;u to ' o : s s a ' . ; i r F a i&#13;
r^i/^ a:id &gt; b i : t y - n w - n ^ fo. la-^e. \ [ r 8 , r ,j 'j - j ,.^ ;vaj a How«ii&#13;
= =* i ; iir one '.\RY ia.-" w^e.-.,&#13;
Pav vour suoscri.ition this month&#13;
THE ACHES OF HOUSE CLEANtN&#13;
The pain and aoreneas caused by&#13;
brulaea, oyer-exertion and etraining&#13;
during houae cleaning time are&#13;
soothed away by Sloan'a Liniment.&#13;
No need to euffer thU agony. Just&#13;
apply Sloan's Liniment to the sore&#13;
spots, rub only a little. In a short&#13;
time the pain leaves, you rest comfortably&#13;
and enjoy a refreshing sleep.&#13;
One grateful user writes: "Sloan's&#13;
Liniment LB worth its weight in gold.&#13;
Keep a bottle on hand, use it against&#13;
all Soreness, Neuralgia and&#13;
Bruises. Kills pain,&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
s&#13;
a u i.-&#13;
C U '&#13;
m a r e a n d we ha\&lt;j I). NF b V r n&#13;
a n d C o r n in hulk.&#13;
Scett-ad: &lt; a i ' » ; a ) \&#13;
Fruits in S t o c k c v e r j Day&#13;
Vegetables Saturday&#13;
Heinz \VCL*L, S O L I tlil; puki are m a k i n g&#13;
a hit. $ Addi.-on Cream Ch&lt;.-e-e bas tliat mikl tiavor&#13;
Ivc. at your&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Bsrt Ben bam of Awn A r b o r .&#13;
was M pmest of ins p a r e n t s ti.e&#13;
pant week.&#13;
Miss CIRIPI Carpten!-!', who waa&#13;
M iv" na Nip'.ii-i- /.--ra Howeii yis-jwit':. !n*r p a v - n t s y\r and M r s,&#13;
; i: s ri\ii-.-1 &lt;v C. IF C n r n t - n t e r a pa:a of ti.e&#13;
wt-ff. r t t u r m Ann At h e r&#13;
t h a t pleases.&#13;
If von&#13;
macka B r e a d&#13;
are not u^-n^' M r - . J o h r w a n ' - H o m e -&#13;
/o'a are mis&gt;m^ had" t h e i'.n- of life.&#13;
i&#13;
Hi&#13;
&amp;&#13;
3&#13;
Top Price for your Cream&#13;
Butter and Ei££s any day.&#13;
A Few of the Many&#13;
Tlw K uox-Hai H I ' a c i &lt; n.14 * ,J&#13;
Jaokflon, M :i&#13;
^aBssiaiaiaiaaaiasrara/?^^^ ; I&#13;
The first dance after Easter will be&#13;
given for the benefit of the H. S.&#13;
Base Ball Team, on&#13;
Friday Evening,&#13;
April 28th,&#13;
at the Pinckney Opera House&#13;
G O O D MUSIC&#13;
&gt;un&lt; my,&#13;
M rs M v» 0.. F. y 01 H0 w id i, | T&#13;
viei:eil lit: parents, &gt;Lp. and Mrs, ^&#13;
Wm, BeuLain the* p^st week.&#13;
Mrs. CUra Feidi^m of (uand&#13;
R.'ipitLs, is \-:si*i!;_r hei1 parent?.&#13;
Mr and Mi.- ' .,10, Swiuer, foi a&#13;
Mr?. M a t : - K.a .. .&lt;t CiiicaLrn,&#13;
j ss-ht&gt; iiati Foe 11 cftiiijjj' for her : '.uat.j|&#13;
Miss Fai'iei t\.r a tiiue. retn:aed ^&#13;
to her bomi' last Sat irday&#13;
Miss Ha/.el'Switzer was ia Ann&#13;
Aibor the pad* week helping uer&#13;
sister. Mrs. SchenkliD, care for&#13;
Mrs. Carrie Wliitlock wboisth.ere&#13;
sick.&#13;
Mr and Mrs. Da\id N'soHorn&#13;
enteitaioed the Lailiea Aid last&#13;
Iharaday. It wa« electiou of&#13;
offiaera. All the former officers&#13;
wer«* re-elected. It was a beautiful&#13;
day tud th« people responded&#13;
to the invitation to com*.&#13;
yca'J a t t a r n &gt;&#13;
- a " 'A' n ;n .-am jile&#13;
F(V)is' ari- Fein,;' -rial n u t&#13;
I 3&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
unday&#13;
If In Need&#13;
O f New Farm Tools&#13;
C a n and ,-av u-.&#13;
Superior d r a i n D r i l F , in all sizc&gt;. a\~c&gt; repair- tor&#13;
Oliver a n d G a l e Plow-, a n d Tillage Implement.-.&#13;
Single a n d T e a m H a r n e s s , and Hor.-o Collar-.&#13;
P r a t ' - B a b v C h i c Food and Poiittrv Food. F,u&#13;
i n c .&#13;
[(me (iortori visited &lt;&gt;\-rr T*\&#13;
with her &gt;i.«pT at Jack-on.&#13;
Arthur Mmiu'er anil family ot&#13;
Stock bridge *pvut Sundu; at }Y. T,&#13;
Barnum f.&#13;
Keniembi v tlia F'i.-tt 1 M)p[»er and&#13;
Apron Sale at the Ghnnt-i' hail Friday&#13;
nijrht.&#13;
Kev. P. J, Wright " t Str-f-kbrid^e&#13;
na&gt; a week end vi-itjr hen .&#13;
! Stenlien Hadl«'\ 1- lia\in^ the in-&#13;
I .&#13;
: tanor efdn,- homeexten?i\e » r(;pai!"td&#13;
I Mi^-Tanet W a t t - &lt;d'the F . &lt;&gt;t M.&#13;
I-pent last week at (iconje Marshall'-.&#13;
lk-y. Winn and family attended&#13;
the funeral at a naphc-u at l-dint last&#13;
week. j&#13;
I-&lt;&gt;nia Mar-hal i and -1(-.--11- Asei- |&#13;
tint .-[»ent Suncijjy af A . - F Holme' :&#13;
Otis Webb and u i f e u m ! Mr&gt;. ,J no. ]&#13;
Webb war. Stt»ekbrifl;_re yi-iter&gt; ;&#13;
T h u r - d a v . '&#13;
cacn week" an&#13;
t' - a d \ i&gt;e ( ai r&#13;
t( - coir.a m&#13;
; &lt; ,)--i!ka ;n&#13;
, a »• . a ., i a, .&#13;
1 &lt; 1 1 i c l l !1 L ; 1&#13;
t hev mi)&gt;t &lt;ia-&#13;
'.W WISH&#13;
a &gt; t ( (ltli'I's&#13;
- -( M ,n a&gt;&#13;
t d ' F a r t n&#13;
o a t t e r n&#13;
We.' i^-rx.'na'iiv g u a r -&#13;
antee a lit, .satisfaction&#13;
and a saving on anv garment&#13;
vou may cle:&#13;
made.&#13;
a&#13;
Yo&#13;
MONKS&#13;
Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
T h e Teer/.e H a r d w a r e Stor*- hereafter rviil sell&#13;
r/or&gt;ds lor ca&gt;h .&#13;
A Cash Discount of 10 per cent&#13;
will he d e d u c t e d from ai! troods except Gasoline and.&#13;
Oils of all kind,-., Coal, Salt. Calf Meal and S t o c k&#13;
F o o d .&#13;
W c e v p e c t every one tn &gt;ettic a c c o u n t s and&#13;
notc&gt; in t h e next 30 dav&gt;.&#13;
AN IDEAL SPRING LAXATIVE&#13;
A good and time tried remedy ia&#13;
Dr. KiOf'a N e v Life Pills. The first&#13;
dose will move the sluggigh bowlee,&#13;
•timulftte the liver and clear the&#13;
system of waste blood impurities&#13;
R e ? i , \ . vuur&gt; *&#13;
"4&#13;
t •-•&#13;
4?. .,&#13;
iJ .'.&#13;
t -K&#13;
*\;&#13;
1 •&#13;
•?&#13;
fi-&#13;
I n&#13;
cs&#13;
' •: fe&#13;
DlNK&amp;L&gt; &amp; DUNBAR » Yoa^6 {ttoy°*™**to ciear *•&#13;
L / I I I I \ L J U *&gt;J* i^r \ ^ » » * ^ / m • ^ ^ t r - U o i o f b o d y poisone, accumulated&#13;
)r dariDg the winter. Dr King's New&#13;
J L ' L l f e Pilte will do it 25c. at your&#13;
DragsUt. '*&gt;• X'-te&amp;'tto&amp;yj;. u^v;c-&gt;:--x.-&gt;"*&gt;v.r^v -y. -XW\\-&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
' - . ' ? • » . « " - ' •? «•&#13;
PJNCKNFY DISPATCH&#13;
PITT THE DIPLOMAT&#13;
R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S OF W A R R I N G&#13;
N A T I O N S H A R D E S T W O R K E D&#13;
M E N IN W A S H I N G T O N .&#13;
YOUNGER ONES IN ARMIES&#13;
Elderly Foreigners at Capital Arc&#13;
Forced to Toil Day and Night, for&#13;
Their Manifold Duticn Arc Burdensome&#13;
and Exacting.&#13;
By GEORGE C L I N T O N .&#13;
Washington.—Who are the hardest&#13;
working officials or government In&#13;
Washington today'.'&#13;
The quick answer might be the president&#13;
of the United States, the secre&#13;
tary of atate and the secretary of war.&#13;
In making this answer there would b*&#13;
an ignoring of the hard labor claims&#13;
of the ambassadors and the m e m b e r s&#13;
of their staffs who represent belligerent&#13;
countries today in the capital of&#13;
t h e United States.&#13;
The president, because of foreign,&#13;
Mexican and legislative troubles,&#13;
•works virtually all day and sometimes&#13;
p r e t t y well into the night. The secret&#13;
a r y of state, because of threatening?;&#13;
from across the water and from Mex&#13;
ico, is compelled perhaps more frequently&#13;
than t h e president to extend&#13;
his hours into the dark time. The&#13;
secretary of war is a new man in office&#13;
and his work is particularly trying&#13;
because he has a lot to learn and on&#13;
top of what might be called his school&#13;
ing has been imposed the necessity of&#13;
looking after the welfare of our army&#13;
in Mexico and along the border.&#13;
This work of the American officials&#13;
is hard and driving, but it is neither&#13;
harder nor more driving perhaps than&#13;
t h a t which daily must be undertake?)&#13;
by the a m b a s s a d o r s and other diplom&#13;
a t s in America representing the warring&#13;
powers abroad. Russians, Englishmen,&#13;
Frenchmen, Germans and the&#13;
rest over the water are serving their&#13;
governments in the trenches, but while&#13;
their work may be the more dangerous&#13;
it cannot be any more taxing than that&#13;
which falls to the daily lot of the diplom&#13;
a t i c r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s of these coun&#13;
t r i e s In this capita! of the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Hard Work for Elderly Men.&#13;
It has been said that the work of the&#13;
foreign soldiers abroad may be more&#13;
dangerous than that of their civilians&#13;
now in this country in official capacities,&#13;
but it may be that this s t a t e m e n t&#13;
in Itself is a trifle overdrawn. Some&#13;
of the a m b a s s a d o r s and their staff officers&#13;
are getting along in life and as&#13;
many of them work 16 hours a day the&#13;
heavy burden of the labor makes them&#13;
run the danger of actually being&#13;
worked to death.&#13;
When the war broke out nearly all&#13;
of the younger men attached to the&#13;
embassies in Washington immediately&#13;
started home to Join the colors, With&#13;
the exception of one or two foreign offices&#13;
in Washington the staffs are composed&#13;
of men who have been sent over&#13;
here because they had become lnca&#13;
pacitated for service in the trenches.&#13;
When one m e e t s a noticeably tired&#13;
looking man in Washington the natural&#13;
Inference is that he is a diplomat&#13;
r e p r e s e n t i n g one of the warring countries.&#13;
This recently has been written&#13;
concerning the work of the foreigners&#13;
in W a s h i n g t o n :&#13;
"In not one of the embassies of the&#13;
belligerents in this town is such an&#13;
order known as 'lights out'. From ambassador&#13;
to doorman the foreigners&#13;
toil away until exhaustion comes and&#13;
forces- them to bed. The belligerent&#13;
foreign g o v e r n m e n t s ought to send&#13;
Red Cross d e t a c h m e n t s to their emb&#13;
a s s i e s &lt;:. Washington."&#13;
Their Manifold Duties.&#13;
It might be thought that even in war&#13;
times the a m b a s s a d o r s of the powers&#13;
which are engaged in war would be occupied&#13;
only with duties connected with&#13;
the s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t of this governm&#13;
e n t Diplomacy, as it is generally&#13;
understood, forms only a small part of&#13;
the daily work of a Jusserand, a Von&#13;
Bernstorff. or a Spring-Rice. T h e s e&#13;
men are made the sympathetic recipient*&#13;
of every plea in behalf of their&#13;
countries. They are obliged to give ad-&#13;
Ylce and support to hundreds upon&#13;
hundreds of organizations all over the&#13;
United States which are engaged in&#13;
work In behalf of the destitute or the&#13;
wounded in the countries which the&#13;
ambassadors represent&#13;
Diplomatic correspondence ts but a&#13;
trifling matter of the day when com&#13;
pared to the scores upon scores of lett&#13;
e r s which must be answered from&#13;
Iters, there and everywhere concerning&#13;
w a y s and means of doing something to&#13;
aid t h e stricken in the countries at&#13;
war. The absence of the younger men&#13;
h a s increased the burden of the elder&#13;
m e n who today are dofrg the work&#13;
t h a t formerly was done by their assistants,&#13;
and who have their own work In&#13;
addition. To this must be added the&#13;
of various kinds of which the&#13;
days knew nothing.&#13;
•tree Interest Lawmakers.&#13;
Sarin*; makes the staid lawmakers&#13;
kin tart their fancies Uajhtly I&#13;
' to uther things ctian ieglsiaciuj.. The&#13;
btauLics ot nature, bird songs and other&#13;
pulsings or the spring season move&#13;
them out ot their Winter moodb.&#13;
For a week past the telephone ot a&#13;
newspaper correspondent in Washington&#13;
who has made an almost lifelong&#13;
study of birds has been ringing as a&#13;
summons to him to tell someone at&#13;
the other end of the line what the&#13;
wonderfully beautiful birds are that&#13;
have come to Washington tn such&#13;
great flocks this seauon. One of&#13;
these telephone messages was from&#13;
the office of the speaker of the house&#13;
of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . Champ Clark.&#13;
whose secretary wanted to know the&#13;
Identity of the visiting birds and to&#13;
give the information to many interest- j&#13;
ed ones In the capttol. !&#13;
Cedar Waxwing Visits Capital.&#13;
The speaker's secretary. Wallace&#13;
Bassford, is an observing man. He&#13;
had watched a Mock of visiting birds&#13;
for a long time Just outside the capltol,&#13;
and he brought back to his office&#13;
with him a perfect description of the&#13;
visitors. The birds are not at all rare,&#13;
but seemingly fairly r b u n d a n t as they&#13;
are, they a r e s t r a n g e r s to most people&#13;
in Washington. The visitor is the&#13;
cedar waxwing, frequently knowu in&#13;
the country districts as the cherry&#13;
bird. It is the Beau Brummel of its&#13;
type, dressed as it is with exquisite&#13;
neatness, with attractive yet not&#13;
gaudy coloring. On each wing is a little&#13;
flaming red deposit like wax, from&#13;
which the bird gets its more common&#13;
name of waxwing.&#13;
One day not long ago, a senator of&#13;
the T'nited States came into the capitol&#13;
in some excitement and told a half&#13;
a dozen of his colleagues that t h e r e&#13;
was a quail on t h e capitol lawn. He&#13;
said the quail had no business there,&#13;
that it ought to be out in the wilder&#13;
places, along the hedges or the borders&#13;
of the corn fields in Maryland or&#13;
Virginia.&#13;
One or two of the senators to whom&#13;
the information concerning the quail's&#13;
presence was imparted were skeptical&#13;
about the matter, and PO they asked&#13;
the superintendent of the senate press&#13;
gallery to a.sk the ornlthologically inclined&#13;
newspaper correspondent to investigate.&#13;
He did so, and found that&#13;
the quail which had aroused the inter&#13;
est of the senator was no quail at all.&#13;
but a flicker, or yellow-winged woodpecker,&#13;
or high-holder. This beautiful&#13;
and rommon woodpecker has about a&#13;
hundred and fifty names by which it&#13;
is known locally.&#13;
The flicker is one of the most abundant&#13;
of our woodpeckers, and yet a&#13;
country-bred senator of the United&#13;
States, standing within twenty feet of&#13;
the bird, thought it was a quail.&#13;
War Department Rushed.&#13;
Eiders among the correspondents in&#13;
Washington when they visit the war&#13;
d e p a r t m e n t are reminded sharply today&#13;
of the time of the Spanish war,&#13;
The Mexican trouble has started the&#13;
machinery into renewed and quickened&#13;
motion. The heads of d e p a r t m e n t s&#13;
and many of the employees are work- j&#13;
ing longer hours than the soldiers in&#13;
the Held.&#13;
Some time ago there was an a t t e m p t&#13;
made in congress to add an hour to &lt;&#13;
the working day of the employees of&#13;
the government. An a m e n d m e n t&#13;
which was proposed to a pending bill&#13;
was intended to increase the length of&#13;
the working day, but it was overwhelmingly&#13;
defeated. One of the&#13;
prime reasons for the defeat of the&#13;
m e a s u r e was the showing made by&#13;
the chiefs of the d e p a r t m e n t s that&#13;
when the pinch came all the government's&#13;
employees were willing to work&#13;
overtime and did so, although they&#13;
received no extra pay,&#13;
This Is one of the times in the war&#13;
d e p a r t m e n t when men who are compelled&#13;
by law to work seven hours a&#13;
day really a r e working many additional&#13;
hours and It is said that they&#13;
a r - doing It willingly. Perhaps the&#13;
most exacting duties of the war dep&#13;
a r t m e n t today are those of General&#13;
Crozier, chief of ordnance; General&#13;
Aleshire, chief of the q u a r t e r m a s t e r s '&#13;
corps, and his immediate Junior, Gen«&#13;
eral Sharp, who looks after commissary&#13;
m a t t e r s . Probably no outsider&#13;
has any conception of the beadquarter's&#13;
work t h a t is necessary when&#13;
even so small an army is in t h e held&#13;
as t h a t which Is now operating in&#13;
Mexico and along the border.&#13;
Food and Clothing Problems.&#13;
The soldier, as the old saying goes,&#13;
marches and fights on his belly. In&#13;
other words, the trooper has to be&#13;
well fed or he can neither fight nor&#13;
march as he ought to be able to do&#13;
If he is to "get there" and to win battles.&#13;
Not only must a soldier be well&#13;
fed, but be must be well clothed and&#13;
both food and clothing must be accommodated&#13;
to the climate tn which&#13;
the troops are operating.&#13;
Th«ire are all kinds of climate In&#13;
Mexico, the terrific heat of the lowlands,&#13;
the fairly temperate climate of&#13;
the midhighlands and the severe cold&#13;
of the upper mountain regions. All&#13;
these things had to be taken into consideration&#13;
in preparing Pershing's&#13;
punitive expedition for its incursion&#13;
Into the Mexican field.&#13;
A MOST PERILOUS&#13;
SITUATION NOW&#13;
C A R R A N Z A S E E M S TO D I C T A T E&#13;
T E R M S A N D W H A T M A Y T H E&#13;
H A R V E 8 T BE?&#13;
GERMANY CONFIDENT SHE&#13;
AN MEET U. S. DEMANDS&#13;
Will Consider All the Phases ot American&#13;
Evidence on Sicmmcr Sussex.&#13;
Berlin In spite of peaHimlatic reports&#13;
received here from EaglUh&#13;
BOurcea&gt; otficialp taspretjaed confidence&#13;
that t h e r e will be no breaking off of&#13;
diplomatic relation* between Germany&#13;
and the United State*. The foreign&#13;
WOLVERINE&#13;
News Brevities&#13;
WILL U. S. TROOPS REMAIN? ??J?h™a"iim »ht °T? ot **'ou' w freighters mentioned in President&#13;
Colonel Pershing's Expedition&#13;
Causing Anxiety Now That Mexican&#13;
Treachery Is Evident.&#13;
Is&#13;
Wilson's laat Inquiry closed by the&#13;
German reply that they were sunk&#13;
in accordance with the rules of cruiser&#13;
warfare. Germany, however, is willing&#13;
to meet the United States half&#13;
way and do everything in her power&#13;
to avoid a crisis, with respect to the&#13;
channel packet SuBsex.&#13;
The government's strong desire for&#13;
a continuance of friendly relations&#13;
with the United States is emphasized&#13;
by editorial utterances. Apparently&#13;
warned by the government, those&#13;
n e w s p a p e r s which in the past have&#13;
attacked the position&#13;
States with reference&#13;
NATIONAL GUARD MONEY&#13;
"SHAMEFULLY" UTiLlZED&#13;
Two Provisions Written in Army 81&#13;
Gives All National Guard Men&#13;
Above Captain $500 a Year.&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n - Secretary of W a r&#13;
Baker h a s issued a prepared state&#13;
nuent t h a t no change in the orders&#13;
to the American troops in Mexico&#13;
I has been made and none i-s contemplated.&#13;
The secreary's s t a t e m e n t&#13;
was interpreted as an official announcement&#13;
t h a t the troops will remain&#13;
in Mexico. It follows:&#13;
"The s t a t u s of the expedition into i ; . D o a t campaign, havt&#13;
Mexico is as it was in the beginning, m o r e conciliatory&#13;
in cordial co-operation with the de&#13;
facto government of Mexico. T h a t cooperation&#13;
continues. T h e r e has been&#13;
no change in the purpose; no change&#13;
has been made in the orders and none&#13;
is in contemplation."&#13;
Publication by the Mexican government&#13;
of the terms under which it&#13;
will permit American troops to continue&#13;
the punitive expedition forced&#13;
officials to the conclusion that a crisis&#13;
is close at hand.&#13;
As a means of opening up diplomatic&#13;
discussion of the question Secrotary&#13;
Lansing sent telegraphic instructions&#13;
to J a m e s L. Rodgers, the&#13;
s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t ' s r e p r e s e n t a t i v e at&#13;
Queretaro. to notify Carranza that&#13;
the United States "will t r e a t " with&#13;
him for withdrawal ot the troops.&#13;
State r.nd war d e p a r t m e n t officials&#13;
nrivately agree, however, that in the&#13;
light of Carranza'* demands an agreement&#13;
between the two governments&#13;
is out of the question.&#13;
President Wilson sent for Duval&#13;
West, of Texa.-. at one time his confident&#13;
ia! agent in Mexico. West recommended&#13;
after his return from&#13;
Mexico t h a t t h e government havt1&#13;
nothing to do with Carranza. The report&#13;
f-pread in connection with West's&#13;
vint that President Wilson is considering&#13;
n break with Carranza unless&#13;
the first chief acquiesces in the purposes&#13;
of the American expedition to&#13;
capture Villa.&#13;
There was added anxiety at the war&#13;
department over the perilous posi;ion&#13;
in which Gen. Pershing's expeditionary&#13;
forces are placed by Carranza's&#13;
threatened atttude.&#13;
of the United&#13;
to Germany's&#13;
been sih-nt, or&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n — T w o more provisions&#13;
designed to s t r e n g t h e n the federal&#13;
status of the national guard were&#13;
written into the senate army bill. In&#13;
the course of a debate enlivened by&#13;
charges t h a t federal funds provided&#13;
the national guard in past years had&#13;
been foolishly thrown away and in&#13;
some cases embezzled, the senate&#13;
adopted a m e n d m e n t s providing that&#13;
all officers of the guard above the&#13;
rank of captain be paid $5tni a y.&lt;ar&#13;
by the federal government and that&#13;
all g u a r d s m e n on enlistment he required&#13;
to take an oath to obey orders&#13;
from the president as well as the&#13;
governor of their respective state-.&#13;
The attack on guard officers for&#13;
their use of federal funds was made&#13;
by Senator Borah, in a speech opposing&#13;
the Reed amendment for federal&#13;
pay. The Idaho senator declared the.&#13;
18.000,000 available annually for use&#13;
of the guard under the Dick militia&#13;
law had been "shamefully" utilized&#13;
by officers to the exclusion of enlisted&#13;
men, and that some of it had been&#13;
"embezzled," Senators Reed, Pomerene&#13;
and others defended the guardsmen&#13;
and the federal pay amendment&#13;
was adopted 41 to 14.&#13;
MICHIGAN ENGINEERS NAMED AMERICAN NAVY'S WEAKNESS&#13;
The Survey of America's Producing&#13;
Resources for War Purposes.&#13;
Mr. Wood Says One Japanese Ship&#13;
Could Destroy the Pacilc Fleet.&#13;
New York—The names of 250 prominent&#13;
engineers who are to organize&#13;
state boards throughout the country&#13;
to make a complete survey of American&#13;
manufacturing and producing resources,&#13;
as a first step toward industrial&#13;
preparedness, were announc&#13;
ed by the committee on&#13;
Detroit—Henry A. Wise Wood,&#13;
former m e m b e r of the naval advisory&#13;
board, told his auditors at a twentysecond&#13;
annual banquet of the Detroit&#13;
Engineering society t h a t a standing&#13;
army of 500,000 would be sufficient&#13;
only to hold back for a time any army&#13;
industrial t l i a t m i £ k t invade the United States,&#13;
p r e p a r e d n e s s of the naval consulting M r - W o o d declared t h a t the United&#13;
board. T h e engineers have been ap&gt; S t a t e s a n d C b l n a w e r e n o w t h e o n l &gt;'&#13;
pointed s t a t e directors after being n a t l o n a «f t h e w o r l d without cornchosen&#13;
by fire engineering societies P u l s o r ^ universal military training.&#13;
"We who have pledged their total member- should have a navy on the Atship&#13;
of 30,000 to aid the movement.&#13;
The state directors, who will serve&#13;
without pay, also become associate&#13;
members of the naval consulting&#13;
board, of which Thomas A. Edison is&#13;
chairman. They are instructed to organize&#13;
as speedily as possible and begin,&#13;
with the assistance of field aides&#13;
lantic coast second only to one other&#13;
navy and a navy on the Pacific coast&#13;
second to none. One J a p a n e s e battleship&#13;
could destroy the entire United&#13;
States fleet now on the Pacific coast.&#13;
"Ever since history began, prophets I&#13;
and sages have attempted to discover&#13;
a formula for universal peace, but [&#13;
side of Nebraska and Detroit. Of&#13;
course, I respect Henry Ford as a&#13;
man."&#13;
chosen from the membership of t h e s e ' n . ° . w D ° ??e . knows the formula out;&#13;
societiee, an inventory of the manufacturing&#13;
and other industries that&#13;
could be utilized in case of war.&#13;
Following are the names of the directors&#13;
In Michigan: G, E. Williams,&#13;
Ann Arbor; M. M. Duncan, Ishperaing;&#13;
Alexander Dow, H. T. Graber,&#13;
Detroit; H. H. Crowell, Grand Rapids.&#13;
Hillsdale.—A woman tramp has&#13;
taken up her h e a d q u a r t e r s on railroad&#13;
property near the western city limits.&#13;
Manifltee.—After more than 45 years&#13;
in business in Manistee, J a m e s Henderson&#13;
has retired on account of ill&#13;
health.&#13;
Hillsdale.—The twenty-third annual&#13;
Grange fair for southern Michigan and&#13;
n o r t h e r n Ohio will be held at Camden.&#13;
September 19-22.&#13;
Portland.- Donald, five-year-old son&#13;
of Edward Salle, Orange township&#13;
farmer, is dead as the result of a tall&#13;
from a hay loft while gathering eggs.&#13;
H i s skull was fractured.&#13;
Hillsdale.—Only two townships of&#13;
HillsdalM county have failed to take&#13;
a d v a n t a g e of the new law providing&#13;
good roada. Theae are Wheatland&#13;
and Scipio.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—Twenty-one prominent&#13;
women of Dexter, near here, have succeeded&#13;
in getting the council to boost&#13;
the license fee to $1,000, thus shutting&#13;
oat the only two saloons In Dexter.&#13;
j South Haven.—Congressman Ed-&#13;
; ward NT. Hamilton has introduced a&#13;
bill in the house asking an appropriation&#13;
of $60,000 for a new post-office&#13;
' building at South Haven.&#13;
j Eaton Rapids.—Claude Chappall of&#13;
; Charlotte, former city manager of&#13;
| Jackson, has been engaged as city&#13;
j m a n a g e r by the commission here, to&#13;
J succeed I. R. Ellison, who went to&#13;
Grand Haven to beome city manager.&#13;
Vpsilanti.—The Detroit Symphony&#13;
orchestra will give a concert at the&#13;
; Pease auditorium of the Michigan&#13;
S t a t e Normal college here. This is the&#13;
sixth number of the concert course for&#13;
the year.&#13;
; Richmond.—The five-year-old daughter&#13;
of Anthony Zeimba, a farmer, lost&#13;
the thumb and forefinger of her right&#13;
hand when it was caught in a roll of&#13;
barbed wire that was being drawn&#13;
across the yard by a horse.&#13;
Lansing.—Acting upon the recommendation&#13;
of the state board of corrections&#13;
and charities. Governor Ferris&#13;
has appointed Hugh N. Nichols county&#13;
agent for Shiawassee and George N.&#13;
Deady as county agent for Huron.&#13;
Muskegon—Joseph R. Gossellno,&#13;
twenty-two, a deaf mute who worked&#13;
as a machinist in a local factory for&#13;
several years, son of Mrs. Philippine&#13;
Gosaeline, is missing. He disappeared&#13;
after withdrawing $200 In a local bank.&#13;
Ludington.—Fire destroyed a tene-&#13;
! ment house owned by Charles Skoog&#13;
Warned by Arvid Torberson, a neighbor,&#13;
Almond Leguire, one of the tenants,&#13;
saved his wife and three small&#13;
children when the roof and upper portions&#13;
of the building burned. Melissa&#13;
L. Badgely, a widow, another tenant,&#13;
escaped.&#13;
Battle Creek,—Irving L. Stone of&#13;
this city made it easier for the local&#13;
Young Women's Christian association&#13;
to erect its new building, for which&#13;
he had previously donated $50,000, by&#13;
offering to pay $5,000 additional for&#13;
the purchase of the Hickman property,&#13;
one of the three parcels composing&#13;
the site for the new structure.&#13;
Zeeland—John Beech, son of Albert&#13;
Besch, a Zutphen farmer, narrowly&#13;
escaped death when an interurban&#13;
car wrecked the wagon in which he&#13;
was driving across the tracks. Besch&#13;
jumped from the wagon and whipped&#13;
up the horse almost simultaneously.&#13;
One of the horses was slightly hurt,&#13;
but the driver escaped.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—The maple sugar&#13;
h a r v e s t in this section, which at the&#13;
opening of the season promised to be&#13;
one of the most profitable in a number&#13;
of years, is now pretty nearly closed.&#13;
It has proved to be far short of expectations.&#13;
The sugar and sirup product&#13;
is as good as that of previous&#13;
years, but the yield has been nearly&#13;
half of what it was last season.&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
Spain in 1915 mined 2,402,000 tons&#13;
of coal and imported 1,200,000 tons.&#13;
Tofcio—Japan's losses in mercantile&#13;
shipping during the present war&#13;
mount up to 13 steam vessels aggregating&#13;
79,450 tons. Those vessels&#13;
were newly built and it will take&#13;
some time to fill their places. Four&#13;
of them are stated to have been torpedoed.&#13;
CoL John S. Bersey of the state&#13;
military department, says If Carranza's&#13;
note means hostilities between&#13;
tbe United States and Mexico, the&#13;
Michigan national guard is ready and&#13;
can go into attion on a few hours' freference&#13;
notice.&#13;
Frosten Swanson, old resident of&#13;
Ramsay, was found dead by hanging&#13;
in a woodshed of his bachelor residence.&#13;
He left a note blaming local&#13;
politicians for preventing his nomination&#13;
for township treasurer, heooe ate&#13;
dlsjrjst with life.&#13;
| West Branch.—Mrs. William Meir REPRESENTATIVE PROTESTS ; aged ninety-four years, oldest resident&#13;
| of this county, died from injuries received&#13;
from falling down stairs. She&#13;
was born in Berlin, Germany, coming&#13;
to this country when forty-three years&#13;
of age. She lived in Ogemaw county&#13;
37 years. She leaves two sons and a&#13;
daughter, Conrad and Henry Meir and&#13;
Mrs. Stephen Weigers of this city.&#13;
Port Huron,—The suit of Clinton&#13;
Norris to set aside deeds and bills of&#13;
sale given by his father, the late William&#13;
Norris of the Central hotel, to&#13;
Mrs. William Norris and Earl Norris,&#13;
mother and brother of the complainant,&#13;
is on In the circuit court It is alleged&#13;
that several weeks before the&#13;
father died he deeded his property ti&gt;&#13;
members of his family and ignored his&#13;
son, Cttnton. The latter alleges that&#13;
undue Influence was exercised.&#13;
Lansing.—That in ten years Michigan&#13;
can be organized so effectively&#13;
that every section will be thoroughly&#13;
prepared to cope successfully with its&#13;
own tuberculosis problem was the&#13;
opinion expressed Monday by Dr. William&#13;
DeKleme In reviewing the work&#13;
done during the first s i i months of the&#13;
state-wide campaign. This half year's&#13;
period dosed the first week la AprtL&#13;
Criticises Signing to An Address Favoring&#13;
the Allies.&#13;
Washington—The great prestige of&#13;
the University of Michigan in Europe,&#13;
giving its name much more meaning&#13;
than that of individuals who might&#13;
attach their names to an unneutral&#13;
addrees to foreign peoples, is the&#13;
main reason Congressman Louis C.&#13;
Cramton protested against members&#13;
of the faculty attaching their official&#13;
titles in signing such a document, he&#13;
declares. "If these men will defy the&#13;
wise request of President Wilson for&#13;
neutral thought and action, let their&#13;
unneutral action be clearly their own,&#13;
and let them leave our greatest state&#13;
institution out of it. They should&#13;
withdraw from their signatures all&#13;
to the university, which&#13;
pays them to teach and not settle the&#13;
war in Europe."&#13;
8TATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
The Northwestern Michigan Apple&#13;
Growers' association will meet la&#13;
Cheboygan April M.&#13;
. v . ~ r ~ jj(m~--y*m: ;.^rrraCr-y^tfvr;::,", rra^^TOiaa&#13;
I M M M I M t M I I M M&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The Citu of&#13;
Numbered "i&#13;
Daus&#13;
Bu F R A N C I S LYNDE&#13;
Illustraliom by C. D. Rhode*&#13;
i t f t » f M M M • • • • » • • •&#13;
Copyright by CiiurLoo fcicribucr's Suua&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
— 10—&#13;
Brouillard, chief engineer of the Niquoia&#13;
Irrigation dam, nit-els J. Wesley Cortw&#13;
r i g h t and explains the reclamation work&#13;
to him. Cortwright organizes a company&#13;
a n d obtains government contracts to furnish&#13;
power and material. Steve MasalngaJe&#13;
threatens to start a gold rush If&#13;
Brouillard does not use his influence to&#13;
bring a railroad branch to the place, thus&#13;
opening an eaay m a r k e t for the "Little&#13;
S u s a n " mine ore. Brouillard tells Amy&#13;
Massingale of his need Tor money to pay&#13;
off his dead father's debts. She tells him&#13;
t o be tine to himself. He decides for the&#13;
extension, Mirnpolis, the city of numbered&#13;
days, booms. Cortwright persuades&#13;
Brouillard to become consulting engineer&#13;
of the power company In return for $100.-&#13;
&lt;J00 stock. Stoppage of work on the railroad&#13;
threatens a panic. Brouillard spreads&#13;
t h e Massingale story of placer gold in&#13;
t h » river bed and s t a r t s a gold rush,&#13;
which promises to stop the reclamation&#13;
project. Amy tells Brouillard that her&#13;
father la in Cortwright's financial&#13;
clutches. He tells her he has made $100.-&#13;
000 and declares his love. She loves him.&#13;
b u t shows him that he has become demoralised,&#13;
A real gold And is made. Brouillarfl&#13;
sella his stock but does not pay his&#13;
father' s debts. Cortwright's son shoots&#13;
D a v e MasslnjrMe. Brouillard threatens&#13;
Cortwright with exposure if he pushes&#13;
Massingale to the wall.&#13;
8 There comes a time In the life j?&#13;
of every young man who Is &amp;&#13;
smothering his soul to gratify 2&#13;
his senses and selling his char- 5&#13;
acter for money, when opportu- X&#13;
nity is given h i m to t u r n about 3-&#13;
face, to rediscover his Ideals 8&#13;
and get back to common hon- *}&#13;
esty. Has B r o u i l l a r d reached r&gt;&#13;
this point? S"&#13;
C H A P T E R — X V — C o n t i n u e d .&#13;
The promoter pulled himself erect&#13;
frith a grip on either arm of the chair.&#13;
"Brouillard, do you know what you&#13;
are talking about?" he demanded.&#13;
"No; it la only a guess. But as matters&#13;
stand—with your son indictable&#13;
for an attempted murder . . . it J&#13;
were you, Mr. Cortwright, 1 believe&#13;
I'd give David Massingale a chance to&#13;
pay those notes at the bank."&#13;
"And let him blackmail me? Not In&#13;
a month of Sundays, Brouillard! Let&#13;
him sell his ore and pay the notes If&#13;
he can. If he can't, I'll take the mine."&#13;
"All right," said the visitor placably.&#13;
"You asked, and I've answered. Now&#13;
let's come to something more vital to&#13;
both of us. There la a pretty persistent&#13;
rumor on the street that you and&#13;
your associates succeeded In getting a&#13;
resolution through both houses of congress&#13;
at the last session, appointing a&#13;
committee to investigate this Coronida&#13;
claim right here on the ground. Nobody&#13;
seems to have any definite details,&#13;
and it possibly hasn't occurred&#13;
to anyone that congress hasn't been In&#13;
session since Mirapolls was born. But&#13;
that doesn't malter. The committee&#13;
Is coming; youJKave engaged rooms&#13;
for it here 4flSHecgraa'. Vou are expecting&#13;
the prrvate-car special next&#13;
week."&#13;
"Well?" said the magnate. "You're&#13;
a pretty good kindergartner. But what&#13;
of it?"&#13;
"Oh, nothing. Only I think you&#13;
might have taken me in on the little&#13;
side play. What if 1 had gone about&#13;
town contradicting the rumor?"&#13;
"Why should you? it's true. The&#13;
congressional party will be here next&#13;
week, and nobody has made any secret&#13;
of i f •&#13;
"Still. 1 might have been taken in."&#13;
persisted Brouillard suavely. "You'll&#13;
surely want to give me my instruct&#13;
i n g Z l!tt!« beforehand, won't youT&#13;
Just think how easily *«*._ might get&#13;
tangled Suppose I should say to •Ones*&#13;
body—to ^Oarner, for example—that&#13;
the town &lt;ras hugely mistaken; that&#13;
no congressional committee had ever&#13;
been appointed; that these gentleman&#13;
who are about to visit us are mere&#13;
complaisant friends of yours, coming&#13;
as your guests, on a junketing trip at&#13;
your expense. Wouldn't that be rather&#13;
awkward ?"&#13;
The mayor of Mirapolls brought his&#13;
hands together, fist In palm, and for a&#13;
flitting Instant the young engineer saw&#13;
In the face of the father the same expression&#13;
that he had seen In the face&#13;
of the son when Van Brace Cortwright&#13;
was struggling for a second chance to&#13;
kill a man.&#13;
"Damn you!" said the magnate savagely;&#13;
"you always know too much I&#13;
Yon Ye bargaining with me!"&#13;
"Well, yon hare bargained with me,&#13;
first, last and all the time," waa the&#13;
cool retort "On each occasion I have&#13;
had my pries, and yon have paid It&#13;
N o v yo« are going to pa? It agate.&#13;
8**n 1 t o orsr to tDo gpotttgkt&#13;
1&#13;
b u t t o n e d h i s&#13;
link In y o u r&#13;
he Bald c v e n -&#13;
"You c a n ' t bluff m e t h a t way, Brouillard.&#13;
arid you o u ^ h t Lw s e n s e U by thin&#13;
t u n c I JO you tsupptme I d o n ' t k n o w&#13;
bow you a r e v wjl ? - - i h a i y o u ' v e got&#13;
j riioiiry - rjjoney t h a t you ubed w bay&#13;
| you owed bo me foody elbu— tied up in&#13;
[ Mirapolls in vestments ?"&#13;
liroiiillu! d iubu and&#13;
coat.&#13;
"There tti one weak&#13;
j chain. Mr. Curtwrlgbt,"&#13;
ly; "you don'i know men. Put on your&#13;
coai and come over to Harlan's office&#13;
with nae. It will take Just about two&#13;
ruinutea to satisfy you that I'm not&#13;
bluffing."&#13;
For a mo merit It appeared that the&#13;
offer waa to be accepted. But when&#13;
he had one arm In a coat sleeve,&#13;
Lirouillard's antagonist In the game of&#13;
hardihood changed his tactics.&#13;
"Forget It," he growled morosely.&#13;
"What do you want thin time'.'"'&#13;
"1 want you to send a wire to Red&#13;
Butte telling the smelter people that&#13;
you will be glad to have them handle&#13;
the 'Little Susan' ore."&#13;
-And If 1 do?"&#13;
"'If you do, two things otherwise due&#13;
to happen adversely will go over to&#13;
your side of the market. I'll agTee to&#13;
keep out of the way of the sham Washington&#13;
delegation, and I think I ean&#13;
promise that Harlan won't make a&#13;
scarehead of the facts concerning the&#13;
Coronida land titles."&#13;
Mr. Cortwright thrust the other arm&#13;
into the remaining coat Bleeve and&#13;
scowled. But the rebound to the norm&#13;
of brusque good nature came almost&#13;
Immediately.&#13;
"You are Improving wonderfully,&#13;
Brouillard, and that's no joke, I have&#13;
a large respect for a man who can outbid&#13;
me in my own corner. Vou ought&#13;
to be in business—and you will be,&#13;
some time. I'll send the wire, but 1&#13;
warn you in advance that I can't make&#13;
the smelter people take Massingale's&#13;
ore if they don't want to. All I can do&#13;
is to give the old man a free field."&#13;
"That Is all he will ask—all I'll ask,&#13;
except one small personal favor: Don't&#13;
rub your masquerading Washington&#13;
delegation into me too hard. A fine&#13;
quality of noninterference is about all&#13;
you are buying from me."&#13;
"Tell me one thing, Brouillard:&#13;
What'is your stake in the Massingale&#13;
game? Are you a silent partner in the&#13;
'Little Susan'?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Then why are you so anxious to&#13;
make old David a rich man at my expense?&#13;
Are you going to marry the&#13;
girl?"&#13;
The engineer did not resent the question&#13;
as he would have resented It a&#13;
few weeks earlier. Instead he smiled&#13;
and said: "A little while ago, Mr.&#13;
Cortwright, I told you that you didn't&#13;
know men; now I'll add that you don't&#13;
know women."&#13;
Public opinion, skillfully formed upon&#13;
models fashioned in Mayor Cortwright's&#13;
municipal laboratory, dealt&#13;
handsomely with the little group of&#13;
widely-heralded visitors—the "congressional&#13;
committee." When It was&#13;
whispered about, some days before the&#13;
auspicious arrival, that the visiting&#13;
lawmakers wished for no public demonstration&#13;
of welcome, it was resolved,&#13;
both in the city council and in the&#13;
Commercial club, that the wish should&#13;
be rigidly respected.&#13;
Hence, after the farewell banquet at&#13;
the Commercial club, at which even&#13;
the toasts had ignored the official mission&#13;
of Mayor Cortwright's guests, tingling&#13;
curiosity still restrained itself,&#13;
said nothing and did nothing until the&#13;
train had stormed out on the beginning&#13;
of its steep climb to War Arrow&#13;
pass. Then the barriers went down. In&#13;
less than half an hour after the departure&#13;
of the visitors, the Spotlight office&#13;
was besieged by eager tip hunters,&#13;
and the Metropole cafe and lobby were&#13;
thronged and buzzing like the compartments&#13;
of an anxious beehive.&#13;
Harlan stood the pressure at the&#13;
newspaper office as long as he could.&#13;
Then he slipped out the back way.&#13;
There was a light in Brouillard's office&#13;
on the sixth floor of the Niquoia building,&#13;
and thither he went, hoping&#13;
against hope, for latterly the chief of&#13;
the reclamation service had been more&#13;
than nsCSUT rsttesat&#13;
"What do yon know, Brouillard ?"&#13;
was the form his demand took,&#13;
"Go to Cortwrtght,* suggested the&#13;
engineer. "He's your man."&#13;
"JuBt come from him, and I couldn't&#13;
get a thing there except his admission&#13;
that he is buying instead of selling."&#13;
"Well, what more do you want?&#13;
Haven't you any imaginationV&#13;
"Plenty of it. and, by Gad, Pm going&#13;
to use It unless you put it to sleep!&#13;
Tell me a few correlative things,&#13;
Brouillard. and 111 make a noise like&#13;
going away. Is it true that you've bad&#13;
orders from Washington within the&#13;
past few days to cut your force on the&#13;
dam one-half?"&#13;
The engineer waa playing with the&#13;
paperknlfe, absently marking little circles&#13;
and ellipses on his desk blotter,&#13;
and the ash on his cigar grew a full&#13;
quarter of an Inch before he replied:&#13;
"Not for publication, Harlan, I'm&#13;
to say."&#13;
yes have the nristr&#13;
" Y e s . "&#13;
"Ciood. T h e n I'D a s k only o n e m o r e&#13;
q u e s t i o n , a n d if you a n s w e r \i ai aJJ I&#13;
k n o w you'll tell m e t h e t r u t h • A r e&#13;
i you, i n d i v i d u a l l y , b u y i n g or belling on&#13;
! t h e real e s t a t e e x c h a n g e ? "&#13;
B r o u i l l a r d did t a k e t i m e , p l e n t y of it&#13;
H a r l a n waa a s t u d e n t or men, but h i s&#13;
p r e s e n t e x c i t e m e n t w a s a g a i n s t h i m&#13;
O t h e r w i s e he would h a v e i n t e r p r e t e d&#13;
differently t h e s u d d e n h a r d e n i n g or t h e&#13;
Jaw m u s c l e s w h e n B r o u i l l a r d s p o k e .&#13;
"'I'm b u y i n g . H a r l a n ; w h e n 1 sell it&#13;
la o n l y to buy a g a i n . "&#13;
T h e n e w s p a p e r m a n r o s e a n d h e l d&#13;
o u t h i s h a n d .&#13;
" Y o u ' r e a m a n a n d a b r o t h e r , B r o u i l&#13;
lard, a n d I'm y o u r friend for life. I'm&#13;
g o i n g to s t a y u n t i l you g i v e m e t h e&#13;
h i g h sign to c r a w i o u t on the b a n k , is&#13;
t h a t a s k i n g too m u c h ? "&#13;
" N o . If t h e t i m e e v e r c o m e s w h e n I&#13;
h a v e a n y t h i n g to s a y . I'll say it to you.&#13;
B u t d o n ' t lose s i g h t of t h e "if,' a n d&#13;
d o n ' t l e a n too h a r d on me. I'm a&#13;
m i g h t y u n c e r t a i n q u a n t i t y t h e s e d a y s ,&#13;
H a r l a n , a n d t h a t ' s t h e t r u e s t t h i n g I've&#13;
t o l d you s i n c e y o u b u t t e d in. G o o d&#13;
n i g h t . "&#13;
M i r a p o l l s a w o k e to a full s e n s e of&#13;
Its o p p o r t u n i t i e s on t h e m o r n i n g foll&#13;
o w i n g t h e d e p a r t u r e of its d i s t i n -&#13;
g u i s h e d g u e s t s . By t e n o'clock It w a s&#13;
the talk of the lobbies, the club, and&#13;
the exchanges that the reclamation&#13;
service was already abandoning the&#13;
work on the great dam. One-half of&#13;
the workmen were to be discharged at&#13;
once, and doubtless the other half&#13;
would follow as soon as the orders&#13;
could come from Washington.&#13;
Appealed to by a mob of anxious inquirers,&#13;
Brouillard did not deny the&#13;
fact of the discharges, and thereupon&#13;
the city went mad in a furor of speculative&#13;
excitement in comparison with&#13;
which the orgy of the gold discoverers&#13;
paled into insignificance. "Curb"&#13;
exchanges sprang into being in the&#13;
Metropole lobby, in the court of the&#13;
Niquoia building, and at a dozen street&#13;
corners on the avenue. Word went to&#13;
the placers, and by noon the miners&#13;
had left their sluice-boxes and were&#13;
pouring into town to buy options at&#13;
prices that would have staggered the&#13;
wildest plunger otherwhere, or at any&#13;
other time.&#13;
Brouillard closed his desk at one&#13;
o'clock and went to fight his way&#13;
through the street pandemonium to&#13;
Bongras'. At a table in the rear room&#13;
he found David Massingale, his long,&#13;
white beard tucked into the closelybuttoned&#13;
miner's coat to be out of the&#13;
way of the flying knife and fork, while&#13;
he gave a lifelike imitation of a man&#13;
begrudging every second of time&#13;
wasted in stopping the hunger gap,&#13;
Brouillard took the opposite chair&#13;
and was grimly amused at the length&#13;
of time that elapsed before Massingale&#13;
realized his presence.&#13;
"Pity a man has to stop to eat on a&#13;
day like this, Isn't It, Mr, Massingale?"&#13;
he laughed; and then: "How is&#13;
Steve?"&#13;
Massingale nodded. "The boy's&#13;
comin' along all right now. They're&#13;
sayln' on the street that you're lettln'&#13;
out half o' your men—that so?"&#13;
Brouillard laughed again. "Yes, It's&#13;
true. Have you been doing something&#13;
In real estate this morning, Mr. Massingale?"&#13;
"All I could," mumbled the old man&#13;
between mouthfuls. "But I cayn't do&#13;
much. If it ain't one thing, it's another.&#13;
'Bout as soon as 1 got that&#13;
tangle with the Red Butte Bmelter&#13;
straightened out, the railroad hit me."&#13;
"How was that?" queried Brouillard,&#13;
with quickening interest coming alive&#13;
at a bound.&#13;
"Same old song, no cars; try and get&#13;
'em tomorruh, and tomorruh It'll be&#13;
next day, and next day it'll be the day&#13;
after. Looks like they don't want to&#13;
haul any freight out o' here."&#13;
"I see," said Brouillard, and truly&#13;
he saw much more than David Massingale&#13;
did. Then: "No shipments&#13;
means no money for you, and more delay;&#13;
and delay happens to be the one&#13;
thing you can't stand. When do those&#13;
notes of yours fall due?"&#13;
Massingale was troubled, and his&#13;
fine old face showed it plainly.&#13;
"I ain't much of a man to holler&#13;
when I've set the woods afire myself,"&#13;
he answered slowly. "But I don't kno"^&#13;
why I shouldn't yip a little to you if 1&#13;
feel like it. Today is the last day on&#13;
them notes. I been to see Hardwick&#13;
at the bank, and he gave me the ultimaytum&#13;
good and cold."&#13;
One of Bongras' rear-room luxuries&#13;
was a portable telephone for every&#13;
group of tables. Brouillard made a&#13;
sign to the waiter, and the desk set&#13;
waa brought to him. if David Massingale&#13;
recognized the number asked&#13;
for. he paid no attention; and, since s&#13;
man may spend his life digging boles&#13;
in the ground and still retain the in&#13;
stlncts of a gentleman—if be happen*&#13;
to have been born with them—he was&#13;
equally oblivions to the disjointed half&#13;
of the telephone conversation he might&#13;
have listened to.&#13;
"Hello! !• that Boyer—Niquoia National?&#13;
. . . This is Brouillard.&#13;
Can you give me my present figure?&#13;
. . . Not more than that? . .&#13;
Oh, yes; you say the Hillman check Is&#13;
in; I had overlooked -ft All right,&#13;
thank yon."&#13;
When the warier had removed the&#13;
desk set, the engineer leaned toward&#13;
his table companion:&#13;
-Mr. afsningiU. Vm going to as*&#13;
! you to tell m e frankly w h a t Kind or »&#13;
j deal it was you m a d e with Cort w n ^ b i&#13;
and Liie bank n e o u l e . "&#13;
"It w a s i h e biggest turn Tool razz If&#13;
t h a t a n y liviu' live man out or a lunatic&#13;
'syluui e v e r w e n t i n t o . " r u n f e s s e d&#13;
t h e p r i s o n e r of fate "1 was to stock&#13;
t h e ' S u s a n ' for half a million —oh, s h e ' s&#13;
w o r t h a . e v e r y d o l l a r of it; you might&#13;
say i h e o r e ' s in s i g h t lor it r i g h t n o w '&#13;
- t h i s In d e r e r e n c e to H r o u i l l a r d ' n&#13;
brow-lifting of s u r p r i s e . " T h e y waa to&#13;
put in a h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d c u s h . a n d i&#13;
w a s t o put in t h e m i n e a n d t h e o r e on&#13;
t h e d u m p , j u s t a s s h e s t o o d "&#13;
T h e e n g i n e e r n o d d e d a n d M a s s i n g a l e&#13;
w e n t o n .&#13;
"1 w a s to h a v e t w o t h i r d s at t h e&#13;
s t o c k a n d t h e y w a s to h a v e o n e - t h i r d .&#13;
T h e h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d for developm&#13;
e n t we'd g e t a t t h e b a n k , on my&#13;
n o t e s , b e c a u s e 1 w a s p r e s i d e n t a n d t h e&#13;
b i g g e s t s t o c k h o l d e r , with J o h n W e s ,&#13;
a s i n d o r s e r . T h e n , to p r o t e c t t h e bank&#13;
a e c o r d m ' to law, t h e y said, we'd put&#13;
t h e w h o l e b u n c h o' s t o c k — m i n e a n d&#13;
t h e l r ' n — i n t o . e s c r o w in t h e h a n d s of&#13;
J u d g e W i l l i a m s . W h e n t h e n o t e s w a s&#13;
paid, t h e j u d g e ' d h a n d t h e s t o c k back&#13;
to u s . "&#13;
"Just a m o m e n t , " i n t e r r u p t e d Brouill&#13;
a r d . "Did you s i g n t h o s e n o t e s pers&#13;
o n a l l y , or a s p r e s i d e n t of t h e n e w&#13;
c o m p a n y ? "&#13;
" T h a t ' s w h e r e t h e y laid t'or m e . "&#13;
s a i d t h e old m a n s h a m e f a c e d l y . " R i g h t&#13;
t h e r e is w h e r e J o h n W e s ' ten-dollar-ab&#13;
o t t l e s o d y - p o p stuff we w a s s o p p l n '&#13;
up must 'a' foolished me plumb silly."&#13;
"So it amounts to this: Vou have&#13;
given them a clean third of the 'Susan'&#13;
for the mere privilege of borrowing&#13;
one hundred thousand dollars on your&#13;
own paper. And if you don't pay, you&#13;
lose the remaining two-thirds as well."&#13;
"That's about the way it stacks up&#13;
to a sober man. Looks like I needed a&#13;
Janitor to look after my upper story,&#13;
don't It? And 1 reckon mebby I do."&#13;
"One thing more," pressed the relentless&#13;
querist. "Did you really handle&#13;
the hundred-thousand-dollar development&#13;
fund yourself, Mr. Massingale?"&#13;
"Well, no; not exactly. Ten thousand&#13;
dollars of what they called a&#13;
'contingent fund' was put in my name;&#13;
but the treasurer handled most of it—&#13;
nachurly, we bein1 a stock company."&#13;
Brouillard took out his pencil and&#13;
began to make figures on the back of&#13;
the menu card. He knew the equipment&#13;
of the "Little Susan," and his&#13;
Rpecialty was the making of estimates.&#13;
Hence he was able to say, after a minute&#13;
or two of figuring:&#13;
"It's a bad business any way you attack&#13;
it. What you have really got for&#13;
yourself out of the deal is the ten thousand-&#13;
dollar deposit to your personal account,&#13;
and nothing more; and they'll&#13;
probably try to make you a debtor for&#13;
that. Taking that amount and a fair&#13;
estimate of the company's expenditures&#13;
to date—say thirty-five thousand&#13;
in round numbers, which is fairly&#13;
chargeable to the company's assets as&#13;
a whole—they still owe you about fiftyfive&#13;
thousand of the original hundred&#13;
thousand they were to put In, If&#13;
there were time—but you say this is&#13;
the last day?"&#13;
"The last half o' the last day," Massingale&#13;
amended.&#13;
"That being the case, there is no&#13;
help for It; you'll have to take your&#13;
medicine and pay the notes. Do that,&#13;
take an iron-clad receipt from the bank&#13;
—I'll write It out for you—and get the&#13;
stock released. After that, we'll give&#13;
them a whirl for the thirty-three and&#13;
a third per cent they have practically&#13;
stolen from you."&#13;
The old man's face, remindful now&#13;
of his daughter's, was a picture of dismayed&#13;
incertitude.&#13;
"1 reckon you're forgettin' that 1&#13;
hain't got money enough to lift one&#13;
edge o' them notes," he said gently.&#13;
Brouillard had found a piece of blank&#13;
paper in his pocket and was rapidly&#13;
writing the "iron-clad" receipt&#13;
"No, I hadn't forgotten. I have something&#13;
over a hundred thousand dollars&#13;
lying idle in the bank. You'll take it&#13;
and pay the notes."&#13;
It was a bolt out of a clear sky for&#13;
the old man tottering on the brink of&#13;
his fourth pit of disaster, and be '&#13;
evinced his emotion—and the tense&#13;
strain of keyed-up nerves—by dropping&#13;
his lifted coffee cup with a crash&#13;
into his plate. The little accident was&#13;
helpful in its way—it made a diver- &gt;&#13;
sion—and by the time the wreck was I&#13;
repaired speech was possible&#13;
"Are you—are you plumb sure you ;&#13;
can spare it?" asked the debtor husk- j&#13;
ily. And then: "1 cayn't seem to sort i&#13;
o' surround it—all in a bunch, that !&#13;
way I knowed J. Wesley had me !&#13;
down; the 'Susan's* the only piece o' j&#13;
real money in this whole blamed free- i&#13;
for-alL and be knows it." |&#13;
After they had made their way&#13;
through the excited sidewalk exchanges&#13;
to the bank, and Brouillard&#13;
had written his check, the old man,&#13;
with the miracuiously-sent bit of rescue&#13;
paper in his hand, hesitated.&#13;
Temperance&#13;
(Cori'Jm-o •'. »&gt;v (!.•: Wuimi;-.! \\ -r .• j&#13;
(_':.r iiCla.11 Tvn:[.K I'a.'ici. 1 '-:... ,&#13;
E X P E R T T E S T I M O N Y .&#13;
Dr. John Dill Robertson, Chicago's&#13;
health commissioner, has this to oay&#13;
about alcohol:&#13;
"In the city of Chicago, where the&#13;
death rate ia approximately lOu a day,&#13;
it is safe to say that at least l\j pelcent&#13;
of these deaths are caused directly&#13;
or indirectly by alcohol.&#13;
"Sir William Osier, late of Johns&#13;
Hopkins, professor of medicine at Ux&#13;
ford. McGill and Pennsylvania universities&#13;
and one of the world's greatest&#13;
physicians, bays of alcohol that it&#13;
produces acute inflammation of the&#13;
stomach, hemorrhage of the pancreas,&#13;
heart disease, cancer of the stomach,&#13;
Bright's disease, fatty liyer, hardened,&#13;
liver, inflammation of the nerves, epilepsy,&#13;
hardening of the arteries and a&#13;
multitude of other afflictions of the&#13;
body.&#13;
"Those are known medical facts.&#13;
Alcohol is truly a poison. It is not&#13;
only the causative factor in the dls-&#13;
; eases and afflictions I have mentioned&#13;
; above, but it invades the mental man&#13;
\ and produces insanity.&#13;
"Alcoholic pneumonia is known to&#13;
r-ery practitioner. In the past twenty&#13;
years in Chicago the death rate&#13;
from pneumonia was just twice what&#13;
it was the preceding twenty years.&#13;
Alcohol is without doubt to blame for&#13;
a part of these deaths, for in alcoholic&#13;
1 pneumonia the death rate is tremendous.&#13;
"No one can estimate the large number&#13;
of people whose death certificates&#13;
t are marked by a diagnosis which&#13;
\ seems to have no connection with alcohol.&#13;
Still, If the truth were known&#13;
j it was the predisposing factor in the&#13;
death of them.&#13;
"When I say that 25 per cent of the&#13;
death rate is directly or indirectly due&#13;
to alcohol, I do not exaggerate. Twenty&#13;
per cent of the mortality among infants&#13;
is caused by the-ir having alcoholic&#13;
parents. Alcoholic poverty—and&#13;
I believe this phrase needs no explanation—&#13;
is one of the great indirect&#13;
causes."&#13;
friiro^Kr&amp;n^ftflpanftOQfrQHrfrftfrfta^&#13;
Will Old Dave Messlnoale go ;J&#13;
himself to Amy en£ te" her &lt;i&#13;
what Victor Kae done to pet the ;j&#13;
Maseinseie mine out of Cort* -i&#13;
wright's clutches? ; |&#13;
(TO BE C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
Japan has more telephones tts* aH&#13;
at&#13;
C I R C U S M A N ' S V I E W .&#13;
The plana for booking the bfg circuses&#13;
hereafter is to play only dry&#13;
towns, with the exception of the largo&#13;
cities. The manager of the Hagenbeck-&#13;
Wallace circus says, as reported&#13;
by William Allen White in the Emporia&#13;
(Kan,) Gazette: "We do a better&#13;
business in a dry town than in a wet&#13;
one. We noticed the difference in&#13;
Missouri; always the day's receipts&#13;
were better in a town that had gone&#13;
dry under local option than in a town&#13;
where saloons were open. And business&#13;
is better in Kansas than it was in&#13;
Missouri.&#13;
"I have seen this whole game up&#13;
and down and backward and across,&#13;
and I want to tell you that all this talk&#13;
about a town needing saloons or gambling&#13;
houses to stimulate business is&#13;
the purest bunk."&#13;
"Here is an amusement man's point&#13;
of view on booze," comments Mr.&#13;
White. "Once again the verdict is&#13;
thumbs down for John Barleycorn.&#13;
Poor old John! He can't mix with religion&#13;
or politics or business. If Ife&#13;
can't mix with the amusements where&#13;
does he get in? And the answer ia&#13;
that national prohibition is Just around&#13;
the corner."&#13;
S W E E P I N G V I C T O R I E S .&#13;
When in March the province of&#13;
Manitoba, Canada, voted dry (by a&#13;
majority of more than two to one),&#13;
it added 251,832 square miles to the&#13;
prohibition territory of North America.&#13;
The dominion of Canada is rapidly&#13;
going dry. Alberta, Prince Edward&#13;
Island, Newfoundland and Nova&#13;
Scotia (with the exception of Halifax)&#13;
have outlawed the liqnor traffic; Saskatchewan&#13;
has abolished all bar and&#13;
club licenses until after the war, the&#13;
residue of the traffic being under control&#13;
of the provincial government;&#13;
New Brunswick has prohibition tn&#13;
ten out of fifteen counties; about twothirds&#13;
of the territory of Quebec is&#13;
dry; in Ontario and In British Columbia&#13;
a plebiscite Wi- ^ ken this year.&#13;
B A R T E N D E R ' S F U T U R E .&#13;
"There are about 100,000 bartenders&#13;
In the United States. What will become&#13;
of them when the saloon is&#13;
abolished" What Is It that makes a&#13;
successful bartender? It is his ability&#13;
as a salesman, and a man who Is a&#13;
good bartender will make a good&#13;
clerk or salesman in practically any&#13;
other kind of business. Furthermore,&#13;
it requires many more people to sail&#13;
$200,000,000 worth of bread and clothing,&#13;
for example, than It doss to sell&#13;
liquor of the same value. And It 11&#13;
more than likely that at least as staay&#13;
salaried employees, toes, a s traveling&#13;
salesmen, bookkeepers sad&#13;
raphers, will bs&#13;
Kettle. i&#13;
i&#13;
in&#13;
f. &lt;..&#13;
IVY.&#13;
¥&#13;
i.&#13;
b fc&#13;
4&#13;
\&#13;
&gt; • •&#13;
r -^&#13;
5 «?v *.•'&#13;
V*K;&#13;
v.*'&#13;
.0 K ii**'.&#13;
&lt; / * » • 2.½¾^ X i .&#13;
asattsa BBBBSsassssaaii&#13;
v « . .-v., ',.&#13;
' ' IMP U'J'-UU1 IJWP1F"*W"»«I|PJPJWI»WBPJPJPJ—^&#13;
&gt; # ^&#13;
•rf--tfcfetr&#13;
# -&#13;
•'V,&#13;
ft&#13;
&amp; . ' ' •&#13;
^&#13;
'.?».&#13;
&amp; * • ' £&#13;
^&#13;
"Tf &lt;*- &gt; I &lt; I W ^ . U I »»&gt;»«!— T P I i m ^ m ^ m g i r i wi^n« IWWK , i » ' i n i ii i m i k w j j w i i*i i mMmm—mr»mt0f&#13;
•M*x*&lt; &gt;-'&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
•VW"&#13;
Of the Howell Consignment Sale Co.&#13;
A t Howell, Mich.&#13;
Livingston County&#13;
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 26 1916&#13;
100 Head of Registered Holstein Friesians&#13;
In Our New Sale Pavillian at&#13;
The Fair Grounds&#13;
The cattle represent the best, families of the breed, strongly bred in&#13;
the blood of King Segis, King Fayne Segis, Poniiac Korndyke, Hengerveld&#13;
DeKol, Rag Apple Korndyke 8th, King Se^is Champion Mobel,&#13;
Friend Hengerveld DeKol Butter Boy.&#13;
Here are a few of our Herd Sires and records of&#13;
their dams and grand dams&#13;
Mable Crest Hengerveld Korndyke, dam over 30 lbs.&#13;
King Hengerveld Palmyra Fayne, dam at 3 y n . 27.41; grand dam 35.55&#13;
Flint Hengerveld Pearl DeKol, dam at 3 yrs. 22.40; grand darn, 35.43&#13;
Sadie Vale Concordia's Paul DeKol 3rd dam 30,05; grand dam, 3 0 6 4&#13;
Fairview Colantha Rag Apple, d a m 30.8; grand dam 38.03&#13;
King Segis Pontiar Howell, dam at 3 yrs. 25.51. grand dam 3721&#13;
Kelley and Mack. Auctioneers&#13;
S. T. Wood. Pedigree Expert&#13;
Mark B. Curdy. Secretary&#13;
Our Ready-to-Wear&#13;
Department, both Ladies&#13;
and Men's are seeing the&#13;
Busiest Time in our History.&#13;
Men and Ladies:&#13;
It you haveni y e l bought&#13;
your Spring Suit or Coat you&#13;
-JiouUl coiiif up thie week.&#13;
One visit will&#13;
tell the »tory of&#13;
the i&gt;»r$e Stoek&#13;
we oarry, and the&#13;
difference between&#13;
our Prices&#13;
and the almost&#13;
prohibitive prices&#13;
of Cities*&#13;
We wrHe vou to come&#13;
ihis vvetk and ask us . t o&#13;
prove our statements.&#13;
Car Fare Paid on i£15 Purchases.&#13;
*&#13;
Terrible Croup Attack&#13;
, Quickly Repulsed&#13;
By Old Reliable Remedy&#13;
North Lake&#13;
W«B 1C»OWB Ceertia iter* k««»er b** ma*&#13;
t*r*4 ci«— and e«Ut for tua family af ten with&#13;
f•tay'a Hn«y aad Tar CampouncL&#13;
The minute that hoarse terrifying1&#13;
croupy cough is heard in the iiome of&#13;
T. J. Barber, of Jefferson, Ga,, out&#13;
comes Foley's Honey and T a r Compound—&#13;
there's always a botile ready.&#13;
Herd's w h a t he says: "Two of ray&#13;
children, one boy and a girl, aged&#13;
eight and six years respectively, had&#13;
terrible a t t a c k s of croup last winter&#13;
and I completely rured them with&#13;
Foley's Honey and T a r Compound. 1&#13;
have t e n in family and for years I've&#13;
PAMQAFoley's Honey and Tar Compound&#13;
a n d * i t never falls."&#13;
Banish worry and save doctor bills&#13;
—keep Foley's Honey and T a r Compound&#13;
always on hand, in your home.&#13;
C M bottle lasts a long time—it's reliable and&#13;
(safe-—and t h e last dose is a a good&#13;
as the first. Get t h e genuine.&#13;
*'Por Sale Everywhere'&#13;
Eczema Cured or Money Refunded.&#13;
T h k miarantee goes with *-very&#13;
box of Dr. Hobson'ft Kczema Ointm&#13;
e n t . Makes no difference whether&#13;
Us a baby, r.-hilri or aged. Xo i ^ a t t e r&#13;
i o w long standing rhe case the guara&#13;
n t e e holds good. Cut. o u t +hiH s-trip&#13;
g o t o TOUT druggist, get a boy of Dr.&#13;
Hobwm'g Eczema Ointment, u?-e it&#13;
a s d i r e c t e d ' a n d if you are'nor. filly&#13;
eetisfJed, t h e druggist o r m a k e r will&#13;
refund your money. Try it ja»t r.nc«&#13;
you will b « happily sAirprifved.&#13;
lleiirv K li-in-ohmidl -1 \ \ \ l M e r&#13;
visited h i c d a u g h t e r . Mr?. J o h n P r a t t&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
M..]jD.;i.k.-!orClK&#13;
(liiv a t i h i ' 1&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; CO. STOCKBRIDGE, MICH.&#13;
&gt; ,^&#13;
W i n . Mr&#13;
il;iy w n&#13;
Jo-'-fii I'&#13;
VMlr'l ll"! '&#13;
S u n d a y .&#13;
W i n . I L&#13;
itiir S i m d a ;&#13;
A r'.i'i'. r .&#13;
l l l l M&#13;
11 an&#13;
mil h&#13;
Jo)&#13;
l a 1&#13;
sea .-ften 1 Suif-&#13;
] Hini''hev a m i&#13;
M i l l - i&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
f | M . d o i e r o i . and family spent&#13;
Snndav r»t tjie Wafters B,-OK&#13;
•A 11 a l l -&#13;
M r - , M&#13;
k-•)-&lt;] w a - a P i n c k i&#13;
i x - n&#13;
Ml i l ' \' v\&#13;
(• .1&#13;
imi&#13;
Wilt"'&#13;
i \ •'11 l i l t '&#13;
' : 1' • m &lt;"•&#13;
I - ' M&#13;
a-&#13;
.f \l. - W&#13;
, Y - ! j " l i t&#13;
it't-i:' M a r i ' . ' i i&#13;
, ..t \ \ \ b - i r r &lt; -^ n e Mitt6»'b Lumboii.o filter-!&#13;
j tamed Mr. i3«K*-r\ Jester &lt; r«mer,&#13;
'and (-rlad\K Roberts T h ^ r s d a v ,&#13;
' eveniijt/.&#13;
I Mr. «nd Mr,- W. S, ('Rpkey :&#13;
I w e r e P i u c k . H r y c a l l e r s ^ V f l n e s ' I a y .&#13;
M r s . L 1 I^.'imboin r e ' a i r n e d •,&#13;
h o m e M o n d a y a f t ^ r e p e ' i d i n ^ !&#13;
feoiue * : m e 'Tith !^iB.T;ves ;D '&#13;
! P i n r k n e i v ,&#13;
AUCTION!&#13;
t i L&#13;
H a v i n g &lt;&lt;&gt;](] ir,\ f a r m , I&#13;
-luclion a t ' t h e H o n e v Cr.rciv S t o ^&#13;
&gt;V] j j&#13;
1 .&#13;
m v i)i'!'-5onai u r u&#13;
"arm, 1&#13;
p e r t y&#13;
2 miles w e s t&#13;
r d P i n ;KITr-v,&#13;
- i 1 •" r&#13;
• I I I Tuesday. April 2 5 ,&#13;
Ml ^j'.-jmninef ctt &lt; -ne U &lt;...!&lt; &gt;«. h &gt; in a r n&#13;
Itan ii ur.&lt;\&#13;
All I, uTVi-rtV :i-;vi ^e i- • -&#13;
A p r i l I-'' Und'-.r i.he provm&#13;
of th^ l'iw 1,0 i?f\v 1 '"-enses u il&#13;
i s m e d until th^ isiter I&gt;H-. of&#13;
Augo«4- P«T«oim htildirtr iic^iie***?&#13;
•Jthongh they lii^y no- etilt !&gt;-&gt; \n&#13;
foroe, may trnp musk rats ".mil&#13;
April 14, pron" JHI) a gun la wot&#13;
carried wheu t r a p p i n g — E x .&#13;
T b t h o d y o f DfivH Minn; i,M\&#13;
"wbo Was found un t h e ghore «if&#13;
k k # E r i e and v a t thought to bare&#13;
Wtb with foal play, was brought&#13;
faifft l u t Friday and t%keu to t h a&#13;
llOlM of b i s Mtiot, Mrn. Aboia&#13;
Boydan, frow wher* ( h e f.inernl&#13;
W d 8atr»rdfty ftffarnrKjn,&#13;
il € . H e {ormeriy lived in&#13;
**r tad was 33 yean old. The&#13;
t waa in Forest Lawn !&#13;
M i " M a r y W h a l i a n ^ l &gt; ' T ' a&#13;
- p t - n d in--11r-r v a c a t i o n &gt;\ : : 1 : 1'"''&gt;'&#13;
d I ' )!'•_;'' ' i l ' a l ; . 4 ! M a lit i '•&gt; ; t ' '&#13;
i • 11 * - -1' • r \ : - :t I'd a t dla' li1 MIV .il&#13;
Xijai. a a i ^ ;!•' S u n d a y .&#13;
A 11-x U:11KIM of I)'"'tr&lt;tit s}it-' i&#13;
U P U Y a'"!'! Siindn.v a t tlie iioiix&#13;
mother, Mr.-. M u r y (.iilbort&#13;
M'"-. Kivd S o l u i l t / rjD^i &lt;]a;&#13;
Dori- ji A n n A r b o r a n d \[v~.&#13;
Ma.r-&#13;
). V&#13;
- t i t e r .&#13;
J). J .&#13;
Amy Norma Elizabeth W :rter-s&#13;
was born in Ilnsnbnrg township.&#13;
Jan. ]r'Lh, ivr»2, and departed; this&#13;
life April iL^h. 1910. She ^pent&#13;
th- greater »,ar*". of h^r life ^n I^iv.&#13;
ingstnn Co. She was married to&#13;
Peter Van Keuren August 2S, l v -&#13;
^4. To this union w&amp;sborn seven&#13;
c h i l d r e c three dying in infancy.&#13;
She leaves ^o monrn h e r IOSP,&#13;
three daughters, Mr^. Max Cam-&#13;
L&#13;
OKJ&#13;
• grijy&#13;
I «00&#13;
^riaing, 5 \ r~. old&#13;
one vearlinc: ^olr.&#13;
3 Horses&#13;
wt . ; f &gt; L i 150. Bd i civ ma r t ' \ r&#13;
j ; b i r h .&#13;
;r)C'r.ih- o l d .&#13;
(&gt;Vv J&#13;
3 Head oi Guttle&#13;
11 r- old, d i e f o '"red:va.n s o o n , Dnrh.'.rn nil H)&#13;
l-^sii'mingr Tool«&#13;
. AU attrtdj, 4-!&gt;ot"tom Oliver Knginc &lt;7fing plow. John Deorc S u l -&#13;
ky plow new last year. T . M. Bisscl Walking plow, Superior (Jrain&#13;
eron of Unadilla, Mrs. Thurman t Drill II hoe, Osborne Spring-tooth Harrow nearly new, Gale l.cver&#13;
: ) e Tsbam and dauirhter of Chelsea -pent; ( | r 0 V e 8 of Webbeiwille, Mra. J . ( . i Drag nearly new, Walter A. Wood land roller, closed ends, adjustable&#13;
" e , pan ,if m&lt; w&lt;&gt;ek at tin- horii. .,1 ] \ g o w e n 0 f L«insing and one son ; boxes; Oliver Riding Cultivator new last year, American Riding Cul-&#13;
Xoidt HI»U "ii&lt;. j - ^ Q£ Q r e g O P y a n ( ^ e i g h t grand-I tivator. Gale Walking Lever Cultivator new. 2 Grasslioppe? Cultiva-&#13;
A. J Van Horn and wife of ('hel-! children also six brothers, Myron | tors, Deering Binder, McCormic mower, Side-delivery rake. Deering&#13;
&lt;ca -pen; Sunday with fuend* at; 0 f Jackaoo, Angnstas of Marion, i horse rake. Hay Leader, new Lanefng W a g o n and rack, 2 wide-tire&#13;
North Lake. William of PlainBeld, Chaucbey, j ^ r u c k wagons. 2-horse Platform Spring buggy, Single buggy, pa^r of&#13;
! Frank and Nathau of Ioaco and a [oscillating bobs nearly new, cutter, Jackson Touring Car, in hrst-class&#13;
boat of friendt. \ running order, 4-rolI McCormic Corn Huak&lt;:rt 8-horsc Fairbanks Sc&#13;
B*yond th« «J.Mihr« «nd hop« *vd fwr», | Morae gaaoline engine, i5-horse Fairbanks &amp; Morse gasolene engitte,&#13;
Beyond (b* r»r« *v.d JOT. ar.H t«ar«, ; gQQ.^, Buffalo Seal* and other articlas too numerous t o mention.&#13;
fi«yoiwl lb*» smiling anrl t)io r a p i n g ,&#13;
Bern ad the wafeiog and tb« •leepiq^,&#13;
• &gt;or Jov«^ op»» r(*t* in »lumfr&lt;w de«p,&#13;
In tilent end Knterotl »J^ep&#13;
W A T C H C H I L O ' 8 C O U G H&#13;
Coid», rannlns of noae. continued&#13;
irritation of the mucosa mamfciaaa&#13;
If aaflaeted may mean Catavrn lat-&#13;
«r Don't take the oh •urea An&#13;
•npmattlBi tor yoor child! CafMraa&#13;
wm not taka STMT madielaa, hat&#13;
UWT will take Dr. Ki»a&gt; Maw ttta-&#13;
COT«— aa4 witacat brftinc or taeniae.&#13;
He a nreet pleaaant Tarfiy—a&#13;
an4 10 cffectlTe. Joat laxatfre ana«gn&#13;
to eUm—ate the wmate polaona. Almoat&#13;
the flret doae helpe. Alwaya pre&#13;
pared, no m_mg or faaamg. Jnat&#13;
aak&#13;
New&#13;
your chtM agatnat aerloun ailmaota&#13;
resultfug from coldii.&#13;
All 8um« of $5.00 a n d under, cash. On all suini over that&#13;
p«»mitie». amount, a credU oi 6 months time will b e given o n good b a n k a b l e&#13;
Tb« &lt;.iiri-v.)«n never make ioe be- I notes a t 6 percent interest, a n d payable a t t h e Pinckney Exchange&#13;
Ueve t h a t op*is «np nnlneky. Why, I I p a n i -&#13;
*-fl«j wenrlusr tbem to.ijr. a n d I lxK?ame I&#13;
dnxfflat for Dr. King'a eogngeO to Heru-rt. Tbe Cat—Bnt&#13;
Diaeovery. I t will aafegnard ! W h a t av&gt;ont Herbert *l«ar? - rasning&#13;
fthow. 1 R. CLIIMTON.&#13;
\ ,&#13;
... A&#13;
*";.".'/&#13;
, *&#13;
• • • ,*&#13;
« « • .</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>P:nc n c v , L i v m ^ s l u n C o u n i v , M ' c h l Lr 'd n , T h LI r s d a v , ^ i . N . . 1&#13;
SPECIAL Pinckney School Improved ;TheButtleman Concert Co.&#13;
ELECTION&#13;
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tJnr b o u m m n&#13;
-&lt;-.i-ou. ..nd we&#13;
. C/U t O il'\\ (• Ll&lt;- &lt;i&#13;
i~ now open tor t h e&#13;
most cordially i n v i t e&#13;
trial.&#13;
vidod a i n e e t i o g will be h e l d on , p] a ^ e P ' o n * yv of nic^ l o o k i n g and&#13;
©igbth d a y of May, A. D., 1916 a t • W f c l . , , , . ^ . ^ , ^ ^ 0 ^ . , 1 seed t h i s&#13;
i h e r e s i d e n c e of J o h n D a n n e in i s fchowiu^ m i g h t y p o o r gerrniDfltbe&#13;
t o w n s h i p of P u t n a m , L i v i n g , tion u n d e r t h o r o u g h t e s t . L u c k&#13;
• t o n C o o n t y , M i c h i g a n , a t 10:00 in l n f l t h e v e a t h e r a r f e ^ o u ^ t 0 b e&#13;
t h e f o r e i o o n of ^atd d a y for t h e n v e , i 0 0 f c e . : t h i s seasou a* excuses&#13;
p o r p o a e o f h e a r i n g e v i d a i u * , b y ' f o r vhti p o o r - c r o p f a r m e r who&#13;
me, t h e said D r a m Commiaaioner, txfii.[tcttt t . b ^ o r T n a r y precauas&#13;
t o w h e t h e r o f n o t t h e c l e a n i n g r ; O D 6 j / x&#13;
o u t of said proposed drain i s n e e&#13;
which t h e tax h a s ' no*-,&#13;
dogs,&#13;
to be&#13;
a n d t a k e possesion of such&#13;
a n d kill o r cause i h e s a m e&#13;
e t i r | killed.&#13;
It will p r o b a b l y aavfj old F . l o&#13;
m n c h t r o n b i e and sorrow if y o n&#13;
h a r e y o u r dollar r e a d y when t h e&#13;
s u p e r v i s o r call*.--Ypeilanti R e c o r d&#13;
" T o P:o,ise y o u r P a l a t e , " is o y r Fovint&#13;
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fore.&#13;
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*be Df.-troii. C r e a m e n C o . , u n d e r the&#13;
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used. C u r flavors a f t h e T n i c F r u i t&#13;
Fln\ or- m a d e b y J. M u n g e r f o r d S m i t h ,&#13;
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eaaary s n d c o n d a c i v e t o t h e public ^ h e a r d in r e l a u o n t h e r e t o .&#13;
health, convetiiencrJ and welfare.' D ^ ^ ** F o w ^ r r i l ! ? . Mfchiiran,&#13;
A t said m e e t i n g a n y a o d a l l per- t l l i f i t w e n t v - f o c r t h d a y of A p r i l , ! C&gt;. P r e * , will be p r e s e n t a n d £ t v e&#13;
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p e r a n c e F n i o n will m ^ e t w i t h&#13;
M r s . H- F- S i l l e r n e x t T h n r s d s y&#13;
A p r i l 27 a&lt; 2 p , m. M r s . A r n o l d ,&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• * * &gt; WILSON SAYS GERMAN CRISIS IS NEAR&#13;
K&#13;
m&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
/ :&#13;
President Tells Congress He Has Notified Kaiser Break Must&#13;
;, Come Unless Methods of Submarine Warfare&#13;
Are Changed.&#13;
House of Representatives, the Capital,&#13;
Washington, April L'O.—Sharply&#13;
ting Germany fur its use of subnea&#13;
against merchant vessels,&#13;
ident Wilson yesterday, before a&#13;
Joint session of congress, issued public&#13;
notice to the world that unless that&#13;
government changes its methods the&#13;
United States will have no choice&#13;
but to sever diplomatic relations.&#13;
"The history in the making," was&#13;
witnessed by one ot the largest gatherings&#13;
that has ever been jammed into&#13;
the historic chamber of the house of&#13;
representatives. Every single inch&#13;
of available space was occupied, while&#13;
literally thousands were turned away.&#13;
There was no questioning the seriousness&#13;
of the president's position.&#13;
His voice, somewhat husky, penetrated&#13;
every corner of the room, and the&#13;
message was emphasized with an expression&#13;
that showed its author was&#13;
tearful of the outcome. That serious&#13;
neas was shared by the audience, the&#13;
usual applause given the president's&#13;
utterances being absent.&#13;
The message in every sense was an&#13;
Ultimatum. True, it contained no time&#13;
limit within which reply c;ust be made.&#13;
But it flatly Insisted that the German&#13;
submarine warfare has reached the&#13;
stage when this government will no&#13;
longer tolerate it.&#13;
The German explanations, previously&#13;
made, have been accepted in good&#13;
faith, the president said, in the hope&#13;
that that government would finally&#13;
be able to so order and control the acts&#13;
of its naval commanders as to square&#13;
Its policy with the position of humanity&#13;
as embodied in the "law of nations."&#13;
The United States has been willing&#13;
to wait, the president said, "until the&#13;
significance of the fact became absolutely&#13;
unmistakable and susceptible&#13;
of but one interpretation." That point,&#13;
he said, has "now unhappily been&#13;
reached."&#13;
Text of President's Address.&#13;
Following is the complete text of&#13;
the president's address:&#13;
"Gentlemen of the Congress: A situftttatB&#13;
has arisen in the foreign relations&#13;
Of the country of which It is my&#13;
• ptsfn duty to inform you very frankly.&#13;
* "It will be recalled that in February,&#13;
1915, the Imperial German government&#13;
announced its intention to treat&#13;
the waters surrounding Great Britain&#13;
and Ireland as embraced within the&#13;
seat of war and to deBtroy all merchant&#13;
ships owned by its enemies that&#13;
might be found within any part of&#13;
that portion of the high seas, and that&#13;
It warned all vessels, of neutral as&#13;
well &amp;s of belligerent ownership, to&#13;
keep out of the waters it had thus&#13;
prescribed, or else enter them at their&#13;
peril. The government of the United&#13;
States earnestly protested. It took&#13;
the position that such a policy could&#13;
not be pursued without the practical&#13;
certainty of gross and palpable violations&#13;
of the law of nations, particular&#13;
ly if submarine craft were to be employed&#13;
as its instruments, inasmuch as&#13;
the rules prescribed by that law. rules&#13;
founded upon principles of humanity&#13;
and established for the protection of&#13;
the lives of n on combatants at sea&#13;
could not in the nature of the case be&#13;
observed by such vessels. It based&#13;
Its protest on the ground that persons&#13;
of neutral nationality and vessels of&#13;
neutral ownership would be exposed&#13;
to extreme and intolerable risks, and&#13;
that no right to close any part of the&#13;
high seas against their use or to expose&#13;
them to such risks could lawfully&#13;
be asserted by any belligerent governm&#13;
e n t The law of nations in these&#13;
matters, upon which the government&#13;
of the United States based its protest&#13;
Is not of recent origin or founded upon&#13;
merely arbitrary principles set up by&#13;
convention. It Is based, on the contrary,&#13;
upon manifest and imperative&#13;
principles of humanity and has long&#13;
been established with the approval&#13;
and by the express assent of all civilised&#13;
nations.&#13;
[ Protest Was Disregarded.&#13;
•"Notwithstanding the earnest protest&#13;
of our government, the Imperial&#13;
German government at once proceeded&#13;
to carry out the policy it has announced.&#13;
It expressed the hope that&#13;
the dangers involved, at any rate the&#13;
dancers to neutral vessels, would be&#13;
reduced to a minimum by the Instructions&#13;
which it had issued to Its submarine&#13;
commanders, and assured the government&#13;
of the United States that it&#13;
would take every possible precaution,&#13;
both to respect the rights of neutrals&#13;
and to safeguard the lives of noncom&#13;
batants,&#13;
"What has actually happened in the&#13;
year which has since elapsed has&#13;
shown that those hopes were not Justl&#13;
Bed, those assurances insusceptible of&#13;
being fulfilled. In pursuance of the&#13;
policy of submarine warfare against&#13;
t b e commerce of its adversaries, thus&#13;
announced and entered upon by the&#13;
tsapertal German government in&#13;
despite of the solemn protest of this&#13;
government, the commanders of German&#13;
undersea vessels have attacked&#13;
merchant ships with greater and great&#13;
er activity, not only upon the high&#13;
Beas surrounding Grwat Britaiu and&#13;
Ireland, but wherever they encounter&#13;
them, in a way that has grown more&#13;
and more ruthless, more and more&#13;
indiscriminate as the months have&#13;
gone by, less and less observant ot restraints&#13;
of any kind; and have delivered&#13;
their attacks without compunction&#13;
against vessels of everj nationality&#13;
and bound upon every s*ort of errand.&#13;
Vessels of neutral ownership,&#13;
bound from neutral port to neutral&#13;
port, have been destroyed along with&#13;
vessels of belligerent ownership, in&#13;
constantly increasing numbers. Sometimes&#13;
the merchantman attacked has&#13;
been warned and summoned to surrender&#13;
before being tired on or torpedoed;&#13;
sometimes passengers or&#13;
crews have been vouchsafed the poor&#13;
security of being allowed to take to&#13;
the ship's boats before she was sent&#13;
to the bottom. But again and again&#13;
no warning has been given, no escape&#13;
even to the ship's boats allowed to&#13;
those on board. What this government&#13;
foresaw must happen has happened.&#13;
Tragedy has followed tragedy on the&#13;
seas in such fashion, with such -attendant&#13;
circumstances, as to make it&#13;
grossly evident that warfare of such a&#13;
sort, if warfare it be, cannot be carried&#13;
on without the most palpable&#13;
violation of the dictates alike of right&#13;
and of humanity. Whatever tbs disposition&#13;
and intention of the Imperial&#13;
German government, it has manifestly&#13;
proved Impossible for it to keep such&#13;
methods of attack upon the commerce&#13;
of Its enemies within bounds set by&#13;
either the reason or the heart of mankind.&#13;
As to Armed Merchantmen.&#13;
"In February of the present year the&#13;
imperial German government informed&#13;
this government and the other neutral&#13;
governments of the world that it had&#13;
reason to believe that the government&#13;
of Great Britain had armed all merchant&#13;
vessels of British ownership and&#13;
had given them secret orders to attack&#13;
any submarine of the enemy they&#13;
might encounter upon the seas, and&#13;
that the Imperial German government&#13;
felt Justified In the circumstances in&#13;
treating all armed merchantmen of&#13;
belligerent ownership as auxiliary vessels&#13;
of war, which it would have the&#13;
right to destroy without warning.&#13;
"The law of nations has long recognized&#13;
the right of merchantmen to&#13;
carry arms for protection and to use&#13;
them to repel attack, though to use&#13;
them, in such circumstances, at their&#13;
own risks; but the imperial German&#13;
government claimed the right to set&#13;
these understandings aside in circumstances&#13;
which it deemed extraordinary.&#13;
Even the terms in which it announced&#13;
its purpose thus still further&#13;
to relax the restraints it had previously&#13;
professed its willingness and&#13;
desire to put upon the operations of&#13;
Its submarines carried the plain Implication&#13;
that at least vessels which&#13;
were not armed would still be exempt&#13;
from destruction without warning and&#13;
that personal safety would be accorded&#13;
their passengers and crews; but&#13;
even that limitation, if It was ever&#13;
practicable to observe It. has In fact&#13;
constituted no check at all upon the&#13;
destruction of ships cf every sort.&#13;
"Again and again the imperial German&#13;
government has given this gov&#13;
eminent its solemn assurances that at&#13;
least passenger ships would not be&#13;
thus dealt with, and yet It has again&#13;
and again permitted its undersea commanders&#13;
to disregard these assurances&#13;
with entire impunity. Great&#13;
liners like the Lusitania and the Arabic&#13;
and mere ferry boats like the&#13;
Sussex have been attacked without&#13;
a moment's warning, sometimes before&#13;
they had eve-n become aware that&#13;
they were in the presence of an armed&#13;
vessel of the enemy, and the lives of&#13;
noncombatants, passengers and crew,&#13;
have been sacrificed wholesale, in a&#13;
manner which the government of the&#13;
United States cannot but regard as&#13;
wanton and without the slightest color&#13;
of Justification. No limit of any&#13;
kind has In fact been set to the indiscriminate&#13;
pursuit and destruction of&#13;
merchantmen of all kinds and nationalities&#13;
within the waters, constantly&#13;
extending in area, where these operations&#13;
have been carried on, and the&#13;
roll of Americans who have lost their&#13;
lives on ships thus attacked snd destroyed&#13;
has grown month by month&#13;
until the ominous toll has mounted into&#13;
the hundreds.&#13;
Sussex s Lste Example.&#13;
"One of the latest and most shocking&#13;
instances of this method of warfare&#13;
was that of the destruction ot&#13;
the French cross-channel steamer&#13;
Suasox. It must stand forth, as the&#13;
sink tag of the steamer Lusitanls did,&#13;
as so sinfularly tragical and unjustifiable&#13;
as to constitute a truly terrible&#13;
example of the inhumanity of aubma&#13;
rine warfare as the commanders of&#13;
German vessels have for the patsi&#13;
twelve months been conducting&#13;
it. If this instance stood alone. &amp;ome&#13;
explanation, some disavowal by the&#13;
German government, some evidence&#13;
of criminal mistake or wilful disobedience&#13;
oa the part of the commander&#13;
of the vessel that bred the torpedo&#13;
might be sought or entertained; but&#13;
unhappily it does not stand aioue.&#13;
Recent events make the conclusion&#13;
inevitable that it is only one instance,&#13;
even though it be one of the most extreme&#13;
and distressing instances, of&#13;
the spirit and method of warfare&#13;
which the imperial German government&#13;
has mistakenly adopted, and&#13;
which, from the first exposed that government&#13;
to tb£ reproach of thrusting&#13;
all neutral rights aside in pursuit cf&#13;
its immediate objects.&#13;
'The government of the United&#13;
States has been very patient. At every&#13;
siage or this distressing experience&#13;
of tragedy after tragedy in which&#13;
its own citizens were involved It had&#13;
sought to be restrained l'rom any extreme&#13;
course of action or of protest&#13;
by a thoughtful consideration of the&#13;
extraordinary circumstances of this&#13;
unprecedented war and actuated in&#13;
all it said or did by the sentiments of&#13;
genuine friendship which the people&#13;
of the United States have always entertained&#13;
and continue tc entertain toward&#13;
the German nation. It has, of&#13;
course, accepted the successive explanations&#13;
and assurances of the imperial&#13;
German government as given in&#13;
entire sincerity and good faith., and&#13;
has hoped, even against hope, that it&#13;
would prove to be possible for the&#13;
German government so to order and&#13;
control the acts of its naval commanders&#13;
as to square Its policy with-the&#13;
principles of humanity as embodied&#13;
in the law of nations. It has been&#13;
willing to wait until the significance&#13;
of the facts became absolutely unmistakable&#13;
and susceptible of but one interpretation.&#13;
"That point has now unhappily been&#13;
reached. The facts are susceptible&#13;
of but one interpretation. The imperial&#13;
German government has been unable&#13;
to put any limit or restraints&#13;
upon its warfare against either freight&#13;
or passenger ships It has therefore&#13;
become painfully evident that the position&#13;
which this government took at&#13;
the very outset is Inevitable, namely,&#13;
that the use of submarines for the destruction&#13;
of an enemy's commerce Is&#13;
of necessity, because of the very character&#13;
of the vessels employed and the&#13;
very methods of attack which their&#13;
employment of course involves, incompatible&#13;
with the principles of humanity,&#13;
the long-established and Incontrovertible&#13;
rights of neutrals, and the&#13;
saored immunities of non-combatants.&#13;
Virtual Ultimatum Sent.&#13;
"1 have deemed it my duty, therefore,&#13;
to say to the Imperial German&#13;
government that If it is still its purpose&#13;
to prosecute ruthless and Indiscriminate&#13;
warfare against vessels of&#13;
commerce by the use of submarines,&#13;
notwithstanding the now demonstrated&#13;
Impossibility of conducting&#13;
that warfare In accordance with what&#13;
the government of the United States&#13;
must consider the sacred and indisputable&#13;
rules of international law and&#13;
the universally recognized dictates of&#13;
humanity, the government of the&#13;
United States is at last forced to the&#13;
conclusion that there is but one&#13;
course it can pursue; and that unless&#13;
the imperial German government&#13;
should now Immediately declare and&#13;
effect an abandonment of its present&#13;
methods of warfare against passenger&#13;
and freight-carrying vessels this government&#13;
can have no choice but to&#13;
sever diplomatic relations with the&#13;
government of the German empire altogether.&#13;
"This decision I have arrived at&#13;
with the keenest regret; the possibility&#13;
of the action contemplated I am&#13;
sure all thoughtful Americans will&#13;
look forward to with unaffected reluctance&#13;
But we cannot forget that we&#13;
are in some sort and by the force of&#13;
circumstances the responsible spokesman&#13;
of the rights of humantty. and&#13;
that we cannot remain silent while&#13;
those rights seem In process of being&#13;
utterly swept away In the maelstrom&#13;
of this terrible war. We owe it to a&#13;
due regard for our own rights as a&#13;
nation, to our sense of duty as a representative&#13;
of the rights of neutrals&#13;
the world over, and to a Joint conception&#13;
of the rights of mankind to take&#13;
this stand now with the utmost solemnity&#13;
and firmness&#13;
Ml have taken It, and taken it in&#13;
the confidence that it will meet with&#13;
your approval and support. All Boherminded&#13;
men must unite In hoping&#13;
that the Imperial German government,&#13;
which has in other circumstances&#13;
stood as the ch cm pi on Df all&#13;
that we are now contending for in the&#13;
Interest of humanity, may recognize&#13;
the Justice of our demands and meet&#13;
them in the spirit in which they are&#13;
made."&#13;
Indirectly.&#13;
"What is an indirect lighting system?"&#13;
"It is where a fellow gets 'tit&#13;
up' when another fellow buys the&#13;
drinks."&#13;
STEPS IN THE DISPUTE&#13;
Chronological Record of Chief Developments&#13;
In Submarine Controversy.&#13;
Washington, D. C.—Following Is a&#13;
record of the- outstanding features of&#13;
the submarine controversy between&#13;
Germany and the United States in&#13;
chronological order:&#13;
1915.&#13;
Feb. 4—-Germany notifies United&#13;
States she will start submarine war in&#13;
waters adjacent to British isles on&#13;
Feb. 18.&#13;
Feb. 10—United States notifies Germany&#13;
it will hold her to "strict accountability'&#13;
for any loss or injury to&#13;
Americans as result of submarine war.&#13;
Feb. 20—United States suggests to&#13;
both Germany and Great Britain a ces&#13;
sation of their illegal activities.&#13;
March 28—British steamer Falaba&#13;
sunk; 160 lives lost, including one&#13;
American.&#13;
April 28—American steamer CuBhlng&#13;
attacked by German aeroplane.&#13;
May 1—American steamer Gulflight&#13;
attacked by German submarine; three&#13;
Americans lost.&#13;
May 7—Lusitania sunk; 114 Ameri-&#13;
: cans killed.&#13;
j May 13—President sends first Lusitania&#13;
note to Germany, saying United&#13;
States will omit "no word or act" to&#13;
preserve its rights.&#13;
May 28—Germany replies to United&#13;
States note, dodging issues raised by&#13;
Wilson.&#13;
June 1—Germany offers reparation&#13;
for Gulflight and Cushing attacks.&#13;
June 8—Secretary of State Bryan&#13;
resigns from cabinet&#13;
June 9—Second Lusitania note sent&#13;
to Germany by President Wilson.&#13;
July 9—Steamer "Orduna" attacked&#13;
without warning by German subma&#13;
rine.&#13;
July 21—Third American Lusitania&#13;
ncte sent to Berlin. Informing Germany&#13;
that further attacks would t e&#13;
regarded as "deliberately unfriendly."&#13;
July 25—American steamer Leelanaw&#13;
sunk.&#13;
Aug. 18—Count von Bernstorff assures&#13;
Secretary of State Lansing Germany&#13;
will end submarine warfare on&#13;
passenger ships.&#13;
Aug. 19—Liner Arabic sunk, two&#13;
Americans killed.&#13;
Aug. 27—Von Bernstorff promises&#13;
"complete satisfaction."&#13;
Sept. 1—Germany promises to sink&#13;
no more liners.&#13;
Sept. 4—Liner Hesperian Bunk mysteriously.&#13;
Sept. 7—German note on Arabic received&#13;
by United States,&#13;
Sept, 9—Germany explains attack&#13;
on Orduna.&#13;
Oct 5—Germany apologizes for attack&#13;
on Arabic, disavows act of submarine&#13;
commander, and offers Indemnity&#13;
to United States.&#13;
Nov, 7—Italian liner Ancona sunk,&#13;
with loss of American lives.&#13;
Dec. 6—United States calls Austria&#13;
to account for sinking Ancona.&#13;
Dec. 15—Austria replies and attempts&#13;
to start argument on fact.&#13;
Dec. 19—United States sends rejoinder&#13;
to Austrian reply, demanding complete&#13;
backdown.&#13;
Dec. 22—Japanese steamer Yanaka&#13;
Maru sunk in Mediterranean&#13;
Dec. 29—Austria backs down and&#13;
apologizes.&#13;
Dec. 30 — Steamer Persia sunk In&#13;
Mediterranean. United States Consul&#13;
McNeely killed.&#13;
1916.&#13;
Jan. 5 — United States senate debates&#13;
advisability of warning Americans&#13;
off helligerent liners.&#13;
Jan. 7—Von Bernstorff gives United&#13;
States new assurances on German submarine&#13;
policy, insisting safety of non&#13;
combatants will be considered.&#13;
Jan. 18—Secretary Lansing sends&#13;
note to allied powers suggesting they&#13;
disarm merchantmen or United States&#13;
will regard them as auxiliary cruisers&#13;
Feb. 10—Germany informs United&#13;
States after March 1 It will attack all&#13;
armed liners without warning.&#13;
Feb 21—Senator Stone, chairman of&#13;
senate foreign relations committee.&#13;
Chairman Flood of house foreign affairs&#13;
committee, and Senator Kern of&#13;
Indiana call on Wilson at White&#13;
House and tell him congress wants&#13;
Americans warned TM armed ships.&#13;
Feb 24—Wilson makes public letter&#13;
to Stone declining to warn Americans.&#13;
Feb. 27—Germany informs United&#13;
States its order will go into effect&#13;
Feb. 29—Wilson demands that congress&#13;
defeat resMutlons warning Americans&#13;
off armed ships.&#13;
March 3—Resolution of warning Introduced&#13;
by Gore tabled by senate&#13;
with provision in it that sinking of&#13;
armed ships, resulting in death of&#13;
Americans, would be cause for war.&#13;
March 7—House tables McLemore&#13;
resolution of warning.&#13;
March 24—English steamer Sussex&#13;
attacked by submarine—several Americans&#13;
seriously injured.&#13;
March 25—British steamers Manchester&#13;
Engineer, Eagle Point and Berwyndvale&#13;
attacked.&#13;
April 18—Wilson decides to lay entire&#13;
case before congress after cabinet&#13;
approves note to Germany inform*&#13;
lng her United States will not argue&#13;
submarine matters any longer.&#13;
HUSBAND OBJECTS&#13;
TO OPERATION&#13;
Wife Cured by Lydia Ei&#13;
Pukham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa.—" Four years ago&#13;
[ was very sick and my life was nearly&#13;
spent. The doctors&#13;
•tated t h a t I would&#13;
never get well witho&#13;
u t a n operation&#13;
and that without i t&#13;
I would not live one&#13;
year. My husband&#13;
o b j e c t e d to any&#13;
operation and got&#13;
me some of Lydia E.&#13;
PJnkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. I took&#13;
it and commenced&#13;
to get better and am now well, am&#13;
stout and able to do my own housework.&#13;
I can recommend the Vegetable Com-&#13;
-pound to any woman who is sick and&#13;
run down as a wonderful strength and&#13;
health restorer. My husband says I&#13;
would have been in my grave ere this&#13;
If it had not been for your Vegetable&#13;
Compound. "—Mrs. BLANCHE J E F F E R -&#13;
SON, 703 Lyon S t , Des Moines, Iowa.&#13;
Before submitting to a surgical operation&#13;
it is wise to try to build up the&#13;
female system and cure its derangements&#13;
with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound; it has saved many&#13;
women from surgical operations.&#13;
W r i t e t o t h e L y d i a E . P i n k h a m&#13;
M e d i c i n e C o . , L y n n * M a s s . , f o r&#13;
a d v i c e — i t w i l l b e c o n f i d e n t i a l&#13;
RHEUMATISM Snffemra&#13;
l e t m e&#13;
-h etp?r oQ. 1W . wAi. llO AdioiP HitN TrlrfoiJ«l., U BHeonwd arnda mbte. Nanedw arakd,d trLe aaL.&#13;
"Is It Fatal, Doctor?"&#13;
Evan B. Stotsenburg, attorney general,&#13;
once was trying a lawsuit in New&#13;
Albany. A colored physician was&#13;
called as a witness for the other side&#13;
to establish certain medical evidence.&#13;
This colored man had come to New&#13;
Albany with a diploma written in some&#13;
foreign language, and no one ever bad&#13;
taken the trouble to determine whether&#13;
it was genuine, Stotsenburg said in&#13;
telling the story. Mr. Stotsenburg&#13;
cross-examined the witness thus:&#13;
"You say you are a physician—a&#13;
medicine physician?"&#13;
"Yea, sir," replied the colored man.&#13;
"You know all about diseases—all&#13;
kinds?"&#13;
"Yes, sir, yes. sir. I knows that disease,&#13;
sir,"&#13;
"Well, then, Just explain to this Jury&#13;
what that disease it," Stotsenburg ordered.&#13;
"It's a disease of the kidneys, suh, a&#13;
disease of the kidneys," the physician&#13;
told the Jury.—Indianapolis News.&#13;
Not to Be Thought of.&#13;
"I see that popular actresses are being&#13;
protographed with their pet&#13;
monkeys."&#13;
"I wonder what they'll be doing&#13;
next?"&#13;
"That's hard to say, but I'm certain&#13;
of one thing."&#13;
"And what is that?"&#13;
"It will be a long time before you&#13;
see one of them photographed with&#13;
her husband."&#13;
\&#13;
Well Built&#13;
Is Built To Winbut&#13;
in building brain&#13;
and body, often the daily&#13;
diet lacks certain essential&#13;
mineral elements.&#13;
These necessary factors&#13;
are abundantly supplied&#13;
by the field grains,&#13;
but are lacking in many&#13;
foods—especially white&#13;
flour, from which the^&#13;
are thrown out in the&#13;
milHng process to make&#13;
the flour white.&#13;
Grape-Nuts&#13;
made of whole wheat and&#13;
malted barley, supplies&#13;
all the rich nutriment of&#13;
the grains, including their&#13;
VI tal mineral salts, those&#13;
all-necessary builders of&#13;
active brains and vigorous&#13;
bodies.&#13;
To build right, eat&#13;
Grape-Nuts.&#13;
"There's a Reason19&#13;
f - I * , t r XK&#13;
. • * - ' •;.&gt;J f: Sj. ~ 'J-r -, Strife itt-i&#13;
' .. J ?-';&amp;&lt;• :'£*a!&#13;
VSKs* «3&amp;»J*•**• ; ' i '•xa&#13;
«:&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ASK FOR A N D OCT SKINNER'S T H t HIGHEST QUAUTY SPAGHETTI&#13;
Save the trademark signature ot Paul P.&#13;
• flrinncT from all paduges and escfaaiue free&#13;
for Oneida Community SilverwareTvCriie&#13;
today for free 36 page recipe book aod full&#13;
iafbrmaaon.&#13;
S K I N N E R MFCS. CO., OMAHA, U.&#13;
L A M E S T MACARONI FACTORY IN A M t f t l C A&#13;
Abaent-Minded.&#13;
"You say that the cook that Subbuba&#13;
married has left him?"&#13;
"Yea. Force of habit, yon know.&#13;
Forgot she was married to him."&#13;
HOW TO REMOVE DANDRUFF&#13;
Itching and Irritation of the Scalp&#13;
With Cuticura. Trial Free.&#13;
On retiring lightly touch spots of dandruff.&#13;
itching and burning with Cuticura&#13;
Ointment. Next morning" shampoo&#13;
thoroughly with Cuticura Soap and hot&#13;
water. These super-creamy emollients&#13;
do much to keep the scalp clean and&#13;
healthy and to promote hair growth.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
The cheeky individual may get&#13;
there, but generally at the expense of&#13;
someone's good opinion.&#13;
Important 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;
B e a n the v-**- s/trj» . *&#13;
Signature of C&amp;tfyyfT&amp;fc&amp;U&#13;
In U s e for Over 30 Years,&#13;
C h i l d r e n Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s Castoria&#13;
You can soon fill your purse by adding&#13;
a little more than you take out.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the&#13;
original little liver pills put up 40 year*&#13;
ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.&#13;
The English language has 82 sounds.&#13;
» » » » «&#13;
M&#13;
in One&#13;
Minute with1&#13;
Cold Water-&#13;
Reacjy to Appjv&#13;
Immediate^&#13;
Alabastine is the most&#13;
effective, economical and&#13;
simple wall decoration on the&#13;
market. It has demonstrated&#13;
its superiority in thirty-five&#13;
years use.&#13;
Think of it! No boiling water, no&#13;
glue added. It's one of the easiest&#13;
jobs in the world to prepare and&#13;
apply Alabastine, and the resulting&#13;
surface, if ordinary care is taken, is&#13;
solid, streakless and mat-like.&#13;
7%« Moat BmootiM Watt Tmt&#13;
And when you consider that you&#13;
obtain the most beautiful, mellow,&#13;
nature colors, viz., soft buffs, delicate&#13;
greens and exquisife blues, or am&#13;
thadi you wish by combining shades&#13;
of Alabastine, then you'll know why&#13;
Alabastine is one of the most popular&#13;
wall decorations with millions of&#13;
Painters and Householders, Decorators&#13;
and Womenfolk, who take a pride&#13;
in their homes the wide world over.&#13;
T h e Alabastine Co.&#13;
3 8 2 Graa&amp;WflleRd,&#13;
Be tare the it4 tiBM and drrfc are o a cat* l a c t a t e of&#13;
Alabastine fon boy Alabastine i» sold by moat aroRiets.&#13;
hardwire deafen and paint stores enery where. If r o a n&#13;
» 1 sasaMe AJabasttse, take 0 0 n b e t f c m .&#13;
HOTHEI S U r S SWEET&#13;
Relieve Fcveriahneta, Constipation,&#13;
Coldi mad correct disorder* of&#13;
lb* stomach and boerala, Vmd h&#13;
Btttkmfrr #&lt;**••*-». AUDnuiiata&#13;
^ ^ 1 ^ / 2 ¾ art&#13;
"JkASW ••••aWSJa^SW ^•••jef/ W * B ) W V I V I I •*&gt;• PATENTS&#13;
KEEP 6§EN BUS!&#13;
Small Plot Will Produce Enough&#13;
Vegetables for Family.&#13;
^f Land Was Not Plowed Last Fail It&#13;
8houid Be Broken in Spring aa&#13;
Soon at Froet la Out—Manure&#13;
1« Best Fertilizer.&#13;
( F r o m tho United S t a t e s D e p a r t m e n t of&#13;
Agriculture.)&#13;
Even the smallest back yard may&#13;
be mad« to yield a supply of fresh&#13;
vegetables for the family table at but&#13;
slight expense if two or three crops&#13;
are successively grown to keep the&#13;
area occupied all the time, according&#13;
to the garden specialists of the department.&#13;
People who would discharge&#13;
a clerk If he did not work the year&#13;
round will often cultivate a garden at&#13;
no little trouble and expense and then&#13;
allow the soil to lie idle from the time&#13;
the first crop matures until the end of&#13;
the season. Where a two or three&#13;
crop system Is used in connection&#13;
with vegetables adapted to small&#13;
areas, a space no larger than 25 by 70&#13;
feet will produce enough fresh vegetables&#13;
for a small family. Corn, mel-&#13;
HocAser&#13;
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&amp;C0LAHtA77O*J {&#13;
Plan for 8mall Garden.&#13;
one, cucumbera, and potatoes and other&#13;
crops which require a large area&#13;
should not be grown in a garden of&#13;
this size. Half an acre properly cultivated&#13;
with a careful crop rotation&#13;
may easily produce 1100 worth of various&#13;
garden crops In a year.&#13;
When to Work Soil.&#13;
If the garden was not broken In the&#13;
fall. It should be plowed in the spring&#13;
as soon as the frost is out of the&#13;
ground. Small areas may be worked&#13;
with a spade, pushing the blade in to&#13;
its full depth and turning the soil to&#13;
break up the clods. Heavy soils should&#13;
never be worked when wet. Overzealous&#13;
gardeners, ready to seize the first&#13;
warm spell as a favorable opportunity&#13;
to go out and work the heavy clay&#13;
soil before it Is dry, are not only wasting&#13;
their energy but are doing a dam-&#13;
PREPARE SEEDBED FOR OATS&#13;
Not Generally Necessary to Plow&#13;
Land Before 8owlng—Disk Harrow&#13;
Is Recommended.&#13;
Oats usually follow a cultivated&#13;
crop such as com or potatoes; hence&#13;
It is not generally necessary to pldw&#13;
the land before sowing. Oats do well&#13;
on fall-plowed land, but if the land&#13;
baa not been plowed in the fall better&#13;
yields are usually produced from&#13;
sowing In a seedbed made by diski&#13;
n s and harrowing than in one mads&#13;
by spring plowing. Early seeding for&#13;
oats la very desirable. As a gfeod seedbed&#13;
can be made much more quickly&#13;
with the disk harrow than with the&#13;
plow on land that was In a cultivated&#13;
crop last year, the saving In time is&#13;
an advantage. Two disking* and one&#13;
harrowing with the spike-toothed harrow&#13;
will put clean land In good shape&#13;
for sowing with the drill.&#13;
Oats grow best In s seedbed that&#13;
has 2 or 3 Inches of loose surface soil.&#13;
but which Is firm below that depth.&#13;
This Is another reason why disking is&#13;
• 9 b t pi«fsffr«4 to spring plowing, tor&#13;
age to the soil troin wtiich 11 will utke&#13;
yearb for ii 10 recover To deierrniue&#13;
when heavy soils are ready for plowing,&#13;
a handful of earth should be collected&#13;
from the surface and the fingers&#13;
tightly clobed ou it. If the ball&#13;
of compacted earth la dry enough for&#13;
cultivation li will fall apart when the&#13;
hand Is opened.&#13;
A garden apot near the houte la often&#13;
more desirable Lhan a plot which&#13;
is In better tilth but located at an Inconvenient&#13;
distance. A garden which is&#13;
near the house will receive many a&#13;
spare hour of care from adults and&#13;
children which would otherwise be&#13;
wasted. Where there is ample room&#13;
for the selection of a garden site, the&#13;
alope of the land should be carefully&#13;
considered. A gentle tslope toward the&#13;
South is most desirable for growing&#13;
early crops, while it Is a decided advantage&#13;
to have the plot protected on&#13;
the north and northwest by either a&#13;
hill, a group of buildings, or a board&#13;
fence.&#13;
Drainage of the garden is of great&#13;
Importance. The land should have&#13;
sufficient fall to drain off aurplus wa&#13;
ter during heavy raina and yet not be&#13;
so steep that the soil will be washed&#13;
or gullied. The surface should be&#13;
nearly level so the water will not stand&#13;
In hollows. Where the natural slope&#13;
of the land does not provide sufficient&#13;
natural drainage, ditches may&#13;
be dug or a tile drain put in. Thia&#13;
will prevent waste water from the adjoining&#13;
land from washing over it.&#13;
How to Fertilize.&#13;
The soil in the average back yard ia&#13;
not only lacking in plant food but also&#13;
has been packed until It is bard and&#13;
unyielding. To loosen up such soil&#13;
and make it suitable for garden produce&#13;
requires that careful attention be&#13;
given to its preparation. After spading&#13;
the inclosure thoroughly, the upper&#13;
three inches should be made fine&#13;
with the use of hoe and rake Stones&#13;
and rubbish should be removed and&#13;
clods of dirt broken. The surface&#13;
should be made even and as level as&#13;
possible, it may then be marked off&#13;
for planting in conformity with the&#13;
general plan of the garden.&#13;
Barnyard or stable manure is the&#13;
best fertilizer because it furnishes both&#13;
plant food and humus. An application&#13;
at the rate of from 20 to 30 tons to&#13;
the acre of well-rotted manure is very&#13;
satisfactory. This should be applied&#13;
after plowing or working with a spade,&#13;
and distributed evenly over the surface&#13;
and later worked in with a hoe&#13;
and rake. On many soils it is advisable&#13;
to apply commercial fertilizer,&#13;
especially phosphate, in addition to&#13;
the manure. An application of 300&#13;
to 600 pounds of acid phosphate to the&#13;
acre is usually sufficient If additional&#13;
potash is needed, which is often&#13;
the case with sandy soils, thia may be&#13;
economically supplied in the form of&#13;
wood ashes If the wood ashes are&#13;
unleached they should be distributed&#13;
over the garden, using 1,000 pounds to&#13;
the acre. If they have been wet, or&#13;
leached, 2,000 pounds should be used.&#13;
An application of 100 pounds to the&#13;
acre of nitrate of soda may be used in&#13;
the spring to start the plants before&#13;
the nitrogen in the manure has become&#13;
available.&#13;
Small Garden Plan.&#13;
In the plan illustrated all the vegetables&#13;
named are planted In rows&#13;
across from the inside lateral rows&#13;
of strawberries. As rapidly as each&#13;
kind of peas matures and the crop ia&#13;
over, kale is planted in its pface. The&#13;
ground to be used for tomatoes is first&#13;
planted with onion sets, and these&#13;
onions are used as rapidly aa needed.&#13;
When the time comes to set out the&#13;
tomatoes, some of the onions are dug&#13;
to make space for the tomato plants.&#13;
When the tomato crop Is over, the&#13;
ground is occupied by spinach aa the&#13;
third crop. Spinach Is also planted as&#13;
soon as the bulb onions from the side&#13;
are gathered. The beans, carrots, and&#13;
peas are succeeded by late cabbage,&#13;
and between the rows of late cabbage&#13;
"potato-onion" sets are planted. Late&#13;
beans are planted between the rows&#13;
of parsnips after the radishes and lettuce&#13;
have been gathered.&#13;
there Is not time for plowed land to&#13;
settle before the seed Is sown. 8till&#13;
another reason why the disk is better&#13;
is that a field can be plowed, and the&#13;
cheaper way of doing a Job should&#13;
always be chosen If it gives just as&#13;
good results as the more expensive&#13;
way.&#13;
DAIRYING ON A LARGE SCALE&#13;
Number of Unpleasant Surprises Are&#13;
In Store at Start—Start With&#13;
Few Cow* and Grow Up.&#13;
The man who starts dairying on a&#13;
large scale by buying the whole dairy&#13;
herd is in for a number of unpleasant&#13;
surprises. The best way to get into&#13;
the dairy business is to grow into it,&#13;
starting with a few cows and selecting&#13;
and culling as experience dictates. It&#13;
is a slow way to be sure, but It is a&#13;
safe one. Only those who have been&#13;
through the mill know how hard It is&#13;
to set out and buy good milch cows.&#13;
The endeavor of every dairyman is to&#13;
sell off his poorest animals and keep&#13;
tbe best.&#13;
A N o w R e m e d y f o r&#13;
1 K i d n e y , B l a d d e r a n d&#13;
a l l U r i c A c i d T r o u b l e s&#13;
Dear Readers:&#13;
I appeal to those of yoa who are&#13;
bothered wiih kidney and bladder&#13;
trouble, that you give up the uae of&#13;
harsh salts or alcoholic medicines and&#13;
in their place take a short treatment&#13;
of "Anurlc." I have taken many of&#13;
Dr. Plerce'a medicines for the past&#13;
twenty-five years with good results. 1&#13;
suffered with kidney trouble for some&#13;
years. I recently heard of the newest&#13;
discovery of Dr. Fierce, namely, his&#13;
'"Anuric" Tablets. After using same&#13;
I am completely cured of my kidney&#13;
trouble. A doctor pronounced me a&#13;
well preserved woman for my age, all&#13;
due, 1 believe, to Dr. Pierce's aid.&#13;
MRS. MEL1NDA E. MILLER.&#13;
If you- suffer from backache, lumbago,&#13;
rheumalibm, get "Anuric" now.&#13;
After Grip-&#13;
Winter Colds—&#13;
Bad Blood&#13;
You are pale, thin, weak—with little&#13;
vitality. Your Liver is sluggish and&#13;
the bad blood causes your stomach,&#13;
muscles to lose their elasticity and b o&#13;
come flabby—then indigestion.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,&#13;
purely vegetable and tree from&#13;
alcohol or narcotics, is the great and&#13;
powerful blood purifier of today. Extracted&#13;
from American forest herbs&#13;
and roots. Contains no alcohol. Ingredients&#13;
printed on wrapper.&#13;
Taken as directed It will search&#13;
out impure and poisonous matter&#13;
throughout the system and eliminate&#13;
it.—Adv.&#13;
INFLUENZA Catarrhal Fever,&#13;
Pink t y o , Shipping&#13;
Fever, Epizootic&#13;
And al! d i s e a s e s of the h o r s e affecting- his t h r o a t s p e e d i l y&#13;
c u r e d ; c o l t s a n d h o r s e s In s a m e s t a b l e k e p t f r o m havmar&#13;
t h e m by u a i n g S»iK&gt;hB'« D i s t e m p e r C o m p o u n d , 3 to 6 d u s t a&#13;
o f t e n c u r e ; o n e b o t t l e g u a r a n t e e d to c u r e o n e c a s e . S a f «&#13;
for b r o o d m a r e s , b a b y c o l t s , s t a l l i o n s , all a g e s a n d c o n -&#13;
d i t i o n s . M o s t s k i l l f u l s c i e n t i f i c c o m p o u n d . 50c a n d l \&#13;
per b o t t l e ; $5 a n d $10 a doai-n. A n y d r u K ^ i s t or d e l i v -&#13;
ereilby numuf»ctur«rs. SPOH.N M E D I C A L CO., G o a h e n , I n d ,&#13;
All W o m e n N e e d&#13;
a corrective, occasionally, to right a disordered stomach,&#13;
which is the cause ot so much sick headache, nervousness&#13;
and sleepless nights. Quick relief from stomach&#13;
troubles is assured by promptly taking a dose or two of Beecham's Pills They act gently on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, assisting&#13;
and regulating these organs, and keeping them in a healthy condition.&#13;
These famous pills are vegetable in composition—therefore; harmless,&#13;
leave no disagreeable after-effects and are not habit-forming.&#13;
A box of Beecham's Pills in the house is a protection against the&#13;
many annoying troubles caused by stomach ills, and lays the foundation For Better Health Direction* of Special Value to Women are with Every B o&#13;
Sold by D n w i a t a Tkrooghoot the WorU. la bosea, tOe*&#13;
Bos.&#13;
28c&#13;
The Gay Life.&#13;
"Made his money in petroleum, you&#13;
say?"&#13;
"Yes. And his son is spending large&#13;
sums on a by-product."&#13;
"What?"&#13;
"Gasoline."&#13;
(f You Need a Medicine&#13;
You Should Have the Best&#13;
Although there are hundreds of preparations&#13;
advertised, there 1B only one that&#13;
really stands out pre-eminent ae a remedy&#13;
for diseases of the kidneys, liver and&#13;
bladder.&#13;
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not recommended&#13;
for everything.&#13;
A sworn certificate of purity is with every&#13;
bottle. You may receive a sample&#13;
size bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcel&#13;
Post. Address Dr. Kilmer &amp; Co . Blnghamton,&#13;
N. T., and enclose ten cents.&#13;
For gals at all drug stores in bottles of&#13;
two sizes—60c and $1.00. also mention this&#13;
paper—Adv.&#13;
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE&#13;
T h e Antiseptic P o w d e r to&#13;
Shake Into Your S h o e s&#13;
and use ia the Foot-Batta. Gives Instant&#13;
relief to tired, achinur, swollen, perspinntr,&#13;
smarting, nervous feet, stops the sting o/&#13;
corns and buuions.&#13;
Read si few extra*te from&#13;
original testimonials on file ui&#13;
our office :&#13;
"Allen's Foot—Ease works&#13;
like mairic. Have placed tumie&#13;
in tight shoe* and feet feel fresh&#13;
and comfortable."&#13;
"It is cue of the grandest&#13;
remedies ever made."&#13;
"Allen's Foot—KAA« has Just prevented&#13;
me Irom throwing away&#13;
a new pair of 15.00 shoes. It is&#13;
grrat.&#13;
Nothing BO thoroughly rests&#13;
"Ota t Waal *'i e 'c e t &lt; I I t a l t C 8 t l i e friction&#13;
g j ^ " d 'rr&gt;aa the »hoe and makes walk&#13;
Comfort" ing a deliglit. We have 30 i.«ou&#13;
testimonials.&#13;
Over 100 &lt;v&gt;o packages are being used by&#13;
Allied and lierman troops at the front. SolJ&#13;
everywhere, ?3c. Don't accept any snbstlraie.&#13;
F p e C TRIAL PACKAGE&#13;
« 1 6 6 •nntbymall. AcJrtreM,&#13;
tl.LEM W. o r . M N T K I I . I . e K o y . N. V.&#13;
Early Words.&#13;
Mrs. Styles—My children began&#13;
studying French very younR.&#13;
Mrs. Mylea—Is that so? Let me see.&#13;
what is "goo-goo" in French?&#13;
F R E C K L E S&#13;
Now Is the T i m e to G e t Rid of T h e s e&#13;
L'giy Spots.&#13;
There's no longer the allghtrst neM 01&#13;
reeling ashamed of your frecklca. aa the&#13;
prescription othlne—douhlr&gt; strength— is&#13;
guaran'eed to remove these homely spots&#13;
Simply get an ounce of othlne—double&#13;
strength—from your druggist, and apply a&#13;
little of It night and morning and you&#13;
should soon see that even the worst freckles&#13;
have begun to disappear, while the lighter&#13;
ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom&#13;
that morp than one ounce Is needed to completely&#13;
clear the skin and gain a beautiful&#13;
clear complexion.&#13;
Be sure to ask for the double strength&#13;
othlne, as this Is sold under guarantee of&#13;
money back If It falls to remove freckles.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
It's easy for the average woman to&#13;
keep a secret—poing.&#13;
RorF&gt;llogUtcAb^ir»PormaldiBalm.&#13;
Satltfactioa Qaaraateeeer M©«y Refunded,&#13;
Par sate by «11 Drarjista, or seat apoa re*&#13;
cefot of 25c postpaid. Send far free sample,&#13;
HOME REMEDY CO. Soot* Hires, Mich.&#13;
W. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 18-1916. Wanted 50,000&#13;
Farm Hands&#13;
. of ixpsriMci al ORCI on the fan* af&#13;
Western Canada&#13;
and Ontario&#13;
To replace the young farmers who&#13;
have enlisted for the war. Good wages&#13;
and full season's work assured&#13;
There is no danger or&#13;
possibility of Conscription&#13;
In Canada.&#13;
no PAftiPorrt AMI NiouoMiy TO nrrtft&#13;
r«»-w&gt; u. Piockney Dispatch&#13;
Pinckney [)i^patch&#13;
Entered at the Poatoifice at Pinekney,&#13;
Mich., a* Second Class Matter&#13;
J. SIBLET, EOiTOfi AND PUBLISHER&#13;
r . i o K I I ' U1J&#13;
"1&#13;
;«'i".&#13;
N&#13;
v.&#13;
.A U ' e r t o : r i&#13;
C a r d s o i T n a u k - , dftv . - i *.&#13;
Krsolutit.uH of C -ado.f-n' - „:ie • J •. i i a r.&#13;
L o c a l N U I M e s , iU L"&lt; i. .v.'^mii- u v c&#13;
Jtrai p e r l i n e j&gt;er e a c h ( i i ^ . ' i u a .&#13;
A i l malitrr i tit e n d e d ic :K:K- it m o [&gt;ej--&#13;
ooiuii o r busiuebs i u t e r e ^ i ••' niiy . individu&#13;
a l will be [)1.,1)1 isiied a: ' t - j , ' ^ i: *&lt;J ve: :i&gt;ei&#13;
Qg r a l e a .&#13;
AuQouuct-'uieut j . ' f u l e r i a . tiiu "niz e t c . ,&#13;
m u s t b e p a i d &gt;f-u ::: re^L'Uf i . •.«.: su N .&gt;lice&#13;
ratet&gt;.&#13;
O b i t u a r y a n d n i s r : i^^e H'.nc--&gt; s ."-• puLi&#13;
a h e d t r e e of c h a r g e .&#13;
P o e t r y mu-ii b e p a . d * /.-• i i u , c r a l e of&#13;
6ve c e n i a p e r l i n e .&#13;
f o r Pawfess Deniistry, Se&#13;
Dr. W. 1. Wright&#13;
In Th* Do/an Bhck&#13;
PINCKHEr - kICHiGAN i J a c k s o n&#13;
_ _ _ ; Vou'li&#13;
Boys 2 pant tmita 34 to ^ H*&#13;
Dancer's.&#13;
F. G. JdckttOL spent Thursday&#13;
iD Detroit.&#13;
Harold Swarthoui is clerking&#13;
at Mouka Brae&#13;
Lela Monks of Lanbing »j&gt;ent&#13;
Subscript iuu, $1. IVr Year iti A'Jtauoe Satu'^ay here&#13;
C 1.. Mel n tyre has moved his&#13;
family to Detroit.&#13;
Mist* Roth Frost a pent laat Saturday&#13;
in Gregory.&#13;
Percy Swarruout waa a Howell&#13;
visitor Wednesday.&#13;
\'ictor Johnson spent the first&#13;
of the we*k in Detroit.&#13;
Miaa Letha McMullei. spent&#13;
Wednesday in Howell.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler waa a Lnnsing&#13;
caller the first of the week.&#13;
Kd. Fair:ana and wife spent the&#13;
first of the week in Detroit-&#13;
Will Kead of Mauton is visiting&#13;
his brother Thomas Read.&#13;
A few of the school children&#13;
are confined at home with the&#13;
mease la.&#13;
Allison Brady of Detroit spent&#13;
the past week with hia aunt Mrs.&#13;
S. Blunt.&#13;
Gladys Poole of Gregory is&#13;
visiting her sister Mr a. A. H.&#13;
Gilchrist.&#13;
T " " * ^ 1 1 * " " * •"»»—•»•———"•&#13;
Dance, Friday night&#13;
Wm. Jeffreys spent Saturday in&#13;
9*v* on men's suits at&#13;
I Dancer's&#13;
Claude Kenned&gt; spent Tuesday | Mr. and Mrs. S. H, Carr spent&#13;
; in Detroit. i the week end with rehitivea in&#13;
j Dr. Will Monk, of Howell spent j Redferd.&#13;
! Sunday here. Lyie Heudee, Walter Cook am]&#13;
j S. £ . Swarthoi.it was. ia Howell Roy Hicks spent Saturday at&#13;
last Wednesdav South Lyons.&#13;
i - i *&#13;
I W. E. Murph&gt; spent the first of! The Misses Laura Bnrgeas and&#13;
| the week in Detroit. Pauline Swarthout were in Hanij&#13;
Norbart Lavev IS visiting his' b u r ^ ' Monday evening.&#13;
Miss Maude Wyman of Romeo&#13;
spent a few days the past week, at&#13;
parents here this v,h-&#13;
Mrs. Kit Phcewav was a Howell&#13;
caller Wednesday&#13;
Claude Moni.s of Detroit sp^nt&#13;
Sunday with relatives here&#13;
Thomas Morau of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunda&gt; with his parents here.&#13;
You aught to atop and see the&#13;
new porch at the U-Auto-Stop-&#13;
Inn.&#13;
Mr and Mrs. Thomas &gt;h-jhau&#13;
the home of J. P Doyle.&#13;
Mrs*. Lujeue Diukel of near&#13;
Howeii apent Thursday with her&#13;
parents, Mi\ and Mrs. D. D. Smith.&#13;
W. W. Barnard expects to make&#13;
his future home at Grand Rapids,&#13;
and will move there iu about two&#13;
weeks,&#13;
Mrs. It Merrills and daughter&#13;
M A K AN -V J ' " ' * ' U&#13;
Daisie B.&#13;
S t o c k b r i d y ^ ,&#13;
Chapell&#13;
spent Sunday *tthe home of Wm.°'o f Hamburg spent the Mrst of the&#13;
Sheh'in. we«*iv with he', mother, Mrs Nettie&#13;
Mrs. .John Docking &gt;r. i» visit- V a u ^ i , l K&#13;
ing at tue ho:-it- of her 3oi;. vViu. Hans JacksoL-. Ho;:is and&#13;
Dockin_r. Donald Sig;-i' epeu* l.ie latter&#13;
Mr. aiv: M?&gt; N'eher of Katun I*rt of last wee1; with R-x ReaBOii&#13;
e of&#13;
oote.&#13;
iiapnls ;.-. v;s:' ;u2 at&#13;
M i c h i g a n L Q p&#13;
Grand i runk t ime Table&#13;
For '. v , • - ' '•• - " : i •,&#13;
Trains £,i&gt;f&#13;
Ko. 4S— i:41 P&#13;
•v * t !&#13;
Miss Fanuir* Swaitijont R:H\&#13;
Miss Turner .*f Flint -:&gt;^-r&gt;r the&#13;
week e:,d ne: -&#13;
Mrs. Mai;. Abbott ; - r for Detroit&#13;
Friday ^-her" she wi:l make&#13;
uer future iifirue.&#13;
L. K. Mansfield of Niagara&#13;
home of&#13;
of Detroi'&#13;
A proclamation LH=? 'open issued&#13;
by Goverco'' Ferris, deaignailug&#13;
Friday M;iy oth.. as Arbor ^ud&#13;
bird da\&#13;
Alice LI!»_:ei of Webste: is visitar&#13;
the home &gt;n her grandparents&#13;
dobn Fohey and wif^ of North&#13;
i \ i t u a i i ) .&#13;
H . F O I O i f B -r&#13;
Reservt'd seats for the Ijuttlem&#13;
C'oucrrt will be on sale at&#13;
Meyer's drug store on and after j&#13;
Falls is vi-dting at tti&#13;
Wm Kennedy S r .&#13;
Veronica Fohe\ of YpsHanti . ^ f-j 2«)tu&#13;
spent Sunday with her parents, i * ^ ,,, - . , - .. , „ ,&#13;
^ , l o u 11 eiijo\ the prices that \ \ .&#13;
J. Dancer A: Co have on their&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Fohev.&#13;
Drs. Sigler 4 Slgier&#13;
i * i i&#13;
Ail o i l , -&#13;
PINCKNKV&#13;
Ine H. S. ball game at South ; ladies and misses coats and suits.&#13;
Lyons last Saturday T ^ called&#13;
off on account of rain.&#13;
»si V&#13;
V.N X ' grandmother Mrs. Peter Harris&#13;
i2n-d.3 O f&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
&gt; ^. ^.&#13;
£k*p back *f Orug &gt; •&#13;
\'ast assortments.&#13;
C. G. Meyer has taken in somek'nite&#13;
a miraber from :;ere will wher.^ in the neighborhood of&#13;
take the teacher's examination at :&amp; ton of mail order catalogues&#13;
Howell tomorrow a u d F r i d a y . :tbis week as result of his special&#13;
set vice o-rTer last week.&#13;
T h e Fir&gt;t Dance af'er Laster&#13;
will be held P'riday evening, April&#13;
2"\ for the benefit of the base bail ]&#13;
A very fine musical pro-ram u . R m Boos' 4 piece Orchestra has&#13;
WHS rendered to a crowded house , l , e t ; i secured for that night.&#13;
at tlu- Cont'd, church Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Ambrose, Lorenzo anti Florence&#13;
Murphy spent Sunday with their&#13;
V\ in... M n r p h v has rented the&#13;
Lonis Monks iionse. Mr. Monks&#13;
We are informed that eight • w\\] : n o v e to Howell the last of&#13;
ladies registered last Saturday for this month where be will lak- up&#13;
the s p e c i f election to be held on \^{B w o r k 0ri the rural delivery.&#13;
M a v 6 t h . i i * i 14\. t • i r&#13;
About a dozen of tria friends r»t&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Alleyn and daiigh- Robt. Gnrhiiegave him a farewell&#13;
tei Unth, spent the past week with surprise last Tneaday evening at&#13;
her parents Mr. and Mrs H. the hom«- of Miss Mad-line Bow-&#13;
\N illist»n. nisi' Games were played u&amp;til a&#13;
Miss Agnes McCluskey of Y p g i - j ^ ^ ^0 l i r - w^«*!l refreshments were&#13;
w t - t i t » e a d to do , 8 u t i a » d Gregory MeClnskey o f : 8 e n e ^ A ver&gt; pleasant evening&#13;
li«ftrsh-cla»« o e d t r ' Detroit spent Sunday at the home! *** repoited by all present. Robt.&#13;
of tbeii parents Mr. aad Mrs Ed. *«P«»fts to ieavo for his home at&#13;
y -CLEANING&#13;
PRESSING&#13;
&amp;r 9to*i*60ra»u*&amp;* t h e equip-&#13;
Klamt tmr ttir Dry.Cleaning&#13;
•'•*'. m&gt;&amp; ©ARROW .McClnskov. Shelby the last of this week.&#13;
I&#13;
Q LASGOW&#13;
Noted For SelliDf M&#13;
ROS.&#13;
Goods Cheap&#13;
J A C K S O N , MICHIGAN&#13;
Ever day brings in new models in footwear,&#13;
such a s - -&#13;
Women "&gt; h:gb&#13;
'.vith u bito etK'.mc&#13;
W o m j n '&#13;
a n d witiiMi&#13;
'A hitt- can ', as iaco Shoe&gt;&#13;
hee!&gt;.&#13;
C its tile it P u ;n :•- 'A'.tn&#13;
I C O&#13;
If _ I I'&#13;
w e Ua\ j ;t&#13;
t h e Dotigo&#13;
Metal ^air"&#13;
A a;:&#13;
j , -&#13;
v\ ; t!&#13;
u y c c&#13;
&gt;iK'o. ma.&lt;ing ^ar'u.".i,&#13;
;a.-tii(MK'd pebMo - o a t ,&#13;
iiea v A &gt;ole:s. tile Ciiin&#13;
IV'' from f2.(H'i t "&#13;
You cati&#13;
Bov'&gt; Sh.oc&#13;
sbric&#13;
a&#13;
Hoc-. \\&#13;
hat u&#13;
Hiacl; S r&#13;
Child V.&#13;
*\'!ll t l i j t&#13;
., Ke--; "&#13;
al I . O L i i&#13;
T : : i&#13;
{ &gt; • • -&#13;
( b \ - : . . - . - i - i -&#13;
and r\)uw.&#13;
loot Satv.la'&#13;
• n&#13;
'•: H &gt; ' a \ i_&gt; cl&#13;
9&#13;
\&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
I s&#13;
SALE ON&#13;
BREADFor&#13;
the rest of this week-&#13;
5c Bread 4c&#13;
10c Bread 9c&#13;
Special Prices. Wednesday.&#13;
May 3rd. on&#13;
Boots and S h o e s&#13;
C E- BOOTH.ES2&amp;&#13;
y ^w-&#13;
..-^-v,&#13;
,&gt;'o^-.&#13;
~.-r*. As 'ii* rffrrnfrlWfV.&#13;
t.&gt;'.&#13;
fc.f&lt;v.&#13;
•*• •?*&amp;?•'&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
this oftiwr.&#13;
Y;&lt;j!iu. luqujrt* ai&#13;
4 9 l a u ^ t , rt.'C'kitjy en&#13;
W f c e . i C h a i r , JJ -o&lt;i&#13;
• L I U&#13;
•' L - i l ' l t u . O&#13;
M c l i n vrt- Li^cuc.&#13;
WANT*; J'&#13;
jfVKSAJ.i-:&#13;
Ueau-d : -&#13;
A t uriLL, O " il &lt; ,'rt '&lt;0 rj t-&#13;
- c. ! K i&#13;
i' a i: i&#13;
iOft hAf.i&#13;
l ' O K S A L K&#13;
s &gt; , ,! I , • :&#13;
». &lt;ita |', I .i&#13;
W TVri,&#13;
::k&lt;?;&#13;
H(.&gt;r*v&#13;
i.ick &gt;a&#13;
Pi. I:H&#13;
IU a r L*&#13;
lL'.&#13;
l o w i J e u ! .&#13;
^ f t - d ( w&#13;
I f A V I N &lt; » - wi \ U }-;i&#13;
M ' v e r . i ; .'»&gt;'.•! i - '" i.' u&lt;.&#13;
U 19 UHV l ' ' i r&#13;
ir ( a j , V e l&#13;
I ' I uv. K ai'V&#13;
e f'w - : . l e&#13;
. 1&#13;
-*.in&#13;
conilitiuu . }••'&lt;.i&gt;e.&#13;
17 itoed.&#13;
Ncu'satui- H I U'ood&#13;
Mrv (ieo. Uead.&#13;
L»cAa! A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
STATIC OK M I C H I G A N , t b * p r e d a t e c o « i t for&#13;
ttie c o y n t y of LIv: u ^ s t o i A I a »e*«ion of&#13;
•Aid c o u r t h^Uuf t h e p r o b a i c office :u t h « vill&#13;
of H o w e l l l a . m d t ' o u n t v on t'i»15Ui rtsy cf&#13;
A p r i l A , L&gt; ll'Vi.&#13;
in t h e m a t t e r of t h e s t a t e o t A l U 0 1 1 1 0 1 » l e L O . a t d d . C ' k &gt; O H&#13;
Gregory&#13;
xVu interesting' VV. C T . U.&#13;
m e e t i n g was held at the home of&#13;
M r s S. Chttrlott.- Hiio.li'U. last&#13;
T h u r s d a y .&#13;
S e \ e r a ! t'l-din nej-e utten.ded th*&gt;&#13;
ReiniblirunV \&gt;u\-t'liiioij at lluw&#13;
ell hist week.&#13;
.VIM i e Whitaicer a mi several&#13;
r»tri«'!'^ are reported to be Mint in&#13;
U I t l l Un'cLftit'.-i t h i s W e e k&#13;
Mrs. Demeres* \ivt«-&lt;i H&lt;.e\t-ll&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
! Born, to Mr. and Mr-- Lyl&lt;-&#13;
iOorton, April iMst, a-son&#13;
Win, Buhl and family .'iiotured&#13;
to Howell last Fi'iday.&#13;
('. N. Bulils i v in nulte feeble&#13;
• health&#13;
Me^daia---- Marsh and litirden&#13;
s p e n ' njM- elav (MM week in .hi'lc&#13;
son.&#13;
Tin'iv ,\ j &gt;, a iurgv a t t e n d a n c e&#13;
at the Bap! IMIIU! v i v i r c - S u n d a v&#13;
evening, w h e a six youi**/ ladies&#13;
aiid seven yium.ir men, united&#13;
with t h e G r e g o r y Baptist Church&#13;
and w e r e baptised by R e v . J . J.&#13;
S c h u l e r .&#13;
J o h n Wiliard wa&gt; home over&#13;
S u n d a y , Hv» i&gt;employed in the&#13;
blue print room of t h e Briscoe&#13;
R O M Head, Jame* Harris and&#13;
Dr. H. F , Sigler w#rt» ia Detroit&#13;
VVodrteidaj.&#13;
Chubb's Corners&#13;
mi Mrs. Albert Ihukbi vialJ!&#13;
ir nan. relttt J ^-H ISU O-&#13;
\ ^ K a ' w i a u - c i j a r d a&#13;
v r n r of a c b o o , ;:id! F n -&#13;
H u j s e l wert)&#13;
Wr-t-r, bv [ l i b&#13;
ite.! Wr.5&#13;
dav.&#13;
&gt;!•=. K&#13;
dav.&#13;
M r Had Mr*. Ed&#13;
Chi.vJ To C'ttuada nta&#13;
n:.'it?ad of feintivea.&#13;
Albert Frost had rented :-:e i-i.&#13;
K. Froat farm for the couiiuy year.&#13;
J o h n W &gt;'lie anrl fnmih «pent&#13;
Sunday at the home of doha Kvera&#13;
Ly:e Heudee ^pent Satr.rda\' at&#13;
Sunrb I A O D S .&#13;
Mr and .Mrs. David Ben net:&#13;
and d a u g h t e r H a / e h ^r.ent Sunda'-&#13;
H4 Maik Allison ^.&#13;
North Lake&#13;
E I X J A H L . T I i O M P K ' N . Ll oi.vawJ&#13;
G. W. T e ^ p i e b a ^ i n ^ tiled in ^aid co..rt hi&gt; , . . . T J - I I&#13;
[jet.tJ.m iJfA&gt; : j f . " i a t the t me /'or t h e p r e s e n t a t i o n J a &gt; &gt; l S t l l i y M l ' - . H i d W l M i&#13;
of clsun(# a^'aiiis.! naid e s t a t e be ilmii ed a u d t ' l i t a&#13;
time a n d pl&lt;K*&lt;' I"" ,1 ppoint-.-u to r&gt;.- v i . . \ e x a m i n e ,&#13;
n d ' d r t all clii.ru9 a a d tl&gt;'iun'.idd H^al:.-'. *.til'\ &lt;ieceased&#13;
by a n t &gt; f ;-p 9K;: 1 . : o ; . e ,&#13;
It e orir&gt; &gt;•'. T;v.it f" ;r i.ionth? i rum this •iatf ! . E&#13;
t)0 nllowed 1..- - r ^ d l : o r i m --.&gt;.-., i: t cininv- a » a : : i M ] ( l a V e V t - ' l l i n &lt; f . B e i l l a l l B a t e :&#13;
said &lt;»*tat*. , ' . '' ,&#13;
It i s f u r t i i - : .&gt;,,iered.Tii.vt :!it»i&amp;th J a y of A ' . ^ ! t a k e M i x , C a . i i e ' s p i a - c e M&#13;
A 1&gt; 1'JJo a' If:i fiVlock la ' h o f o r e n x n , at -ai&gt;J \T-,\ .-,. : i&#13;
]&gt;rob*fe ftice, ')*.• ' n d i» herpi&gt;&gt; appoint-'d t o r tb*- . ^ ' U i c i u l l l \ .&#13;
e x a n d i i a t i o n a n d ikdjnstnieut nf all i !.ii m * i:, I r4*- •&#13;
u m n d s a a i u - " J » i d deceased.&#13;
F-Vil-KM A. feT \ v i :&#13;
Miss Zada. Cane, w h o ha^ been&#13;
her&#13;
louse work, the pa&gt;t f^w weeivs.&#13;
1 r e t u r n e d in Stocdcl)rid,Lre S a t u r -&#13;
wtll&#13;
the&#13;
Jadse of Proteta.&#13;
Mis&gt; Ph'ina P y p e r of J a c k s o n&#13;
called on friend- here S a t u r d a y&#13;
and spent F&gt;a-&gt;t'ir with n^r partanto&#13;
Pickle Contracts "nts ar r n a d i i l a .&#13;
(.'ontractti ftu uro&gt;viiig cucmii&#13;
l;er pickle h/r t i e seBson c f ]^I'&gt;&#13;
may now b&lt;* ..ad1 i:: ui our represeutatiw*&#13;
N. I' Morte.ju-on at&#13;
greatly increased prices SVe are&#13;
payin.u' from 96\euty-h\-e cejits to&#13;
one dollar nud a half ptv bushel i a t { l l ° limine of Mr&#13;
for small pickles according l o ! t a ^ l u ' ' A i^^'ieu or&#13;
size aud thirty-five cents for large.&#13;
The Knc-x-Harria Packing Co&#13;
Jackson. Mich&#13;
Help for Bronchial&#13;
Trouble and Cough&#13;
"ToUyVi Honty »nd Tar Compound&#13;
aeti mora like a food tban a m«Ucla«."&#13;
Mr, Will O. Richmond, In&amp;lewood,&#13;
Calif, say^e—"I wish to recommend&#13;
Tolcy's Honey and Tar Compound as it&#13;
ha-s greatly benefitted me for bronchial&#13;
trouble and cou^h. It acts so well in&#13;
harmony with nature that it is mere&#13;
l'A&lt;.c a food than a medicine."&#13;
Foley's Honey and Tor Compound ha^&#13;
a wonderfully q-.nck w-iy of aooclung&#13;
and healia/j tho r a v tirkling- surface of&#13;
the throat tul bronchial tubes. It&#13;
cases the o^-ii.nes.s over the ch^.-t,&#13;
rnises ttie \&gt;'-- ;—. easily, and helps the&#13;
"stroboni ' .^ cough that is so cxhat3tinjp&#13;
aiu. v eakenuig.&#13;
It is the T&gt;e^&gt;t medicine you can buv,&#13;
' and better than anything you can roakV.&#13;
for coughs, colds, spasmodic croup,&#13;
whooping cough, la grippe and bronchial&#13;
coughs. hoarseness, tickling&#13;
throat and stuffy wheezy breathing.&#13;
&lt;It contains no opiates.'and i? acceptable&#13;
to tiie most sensitive stomach.&#13;
• • • arery nm*r la • friend.&#13;
"FOP S a l e E v e y w h c r e *&#13;
O l a Ciadup wil! work for Wi&#13;
me?' ( VoNsnian rhi- »unnner.&#13;
T h e W o m a n S h * f r ; r ' \ ' aiui&#13;
(d\'ic ( d u b , winch ha-&gt; i^'Cfntly&#13;
be«-n organized, held it'&gt; rirst&#13;
r e g u l a r niet'tinir h\ iday afternoon&#13;
Elhi Mon-&#13;
Ad\'entiii'es&#13;
in C o n t e n t m e n t " bv David Irrayson&#13;
wa&gt; iriven by M r s . Minnie&#13;
W o o d w o r m . An interesting and&#13;
(helpful di-sriL&gt;&gt;ion foilftwed, JJus&#13;
1 ic aud readings add"d to thep&#13;
l e a s u r e of the afterno,)ii. T h e&#13;
l|e\l 111^^:,1,^ W]ll be held at ihe&#13;
honi" '&gt;*' Mr- C"&lt; trude Cro&gt;&gt;nian&#13;
on May 11m&#13;
d i e ' eitizehs .ii i i !'i &gt;ei HT art.'&#13;
r e - p e e 1 f e d l y re&lt; j a e . s t e d ! o &lt; d;)-&gt;tT\a •&#13;
Monday. May ]&gt;:. a&gt; " C i o t n u p&#13;
D a v , " Le; u- join in an effort to&#13;
- make (-ivgiirv a " T o w n Beauti-&#13;
: ful." ( dean street-, ;md&#13;
I are t h e best beirinnine;.&#13;
alleys&#13;
* . e r .&#13;
i "d ' - " ' a - : . .-»:-&#13;
1 . - &gt;' h •: - ; . ' . ' • _&#13;
I l.'.V&#13;
; n j i ' i \&#13;
M r . I '].*t O i i - i i&#13;
tiJtMi, l i e ;,(,(] -&#13;
rlt'ar"?— V.):J'verj Sen?-nun&#13;
Henry Gilbert li»s purchased a&#13;
F o r d touruiag car.&#13;
M i n Mildred DaLiels of Albion&#13;
. ip«ut Saoday at the home of her&#13;
pfirsuta of this place.&#13;
Miss Mary WIndium rt-tumed to&#13;
Dalroit Sunday to resume, h e r&#13;
school work after a ten days&#13;
vacation.&#13;
Mr\ and Mrs. Dennis Wa.lK.er&#13;
and family of Chelsea spent Sunday&#13;
with Wm. Baird and wife.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Thomas were&#13;
Jackson visitors one day last week.&#13;
Mrs. A r t h u r Allyn and daughter&#13;
are visiting at the home of&#13;
her parents in P i u c k o e y&#13;
Mrs das. Hankerd and family&#13;
were ia P i a c k n e y Tuesday and attended&#13;
tiie auction of !e-r brother&#13;
R C b a t o n .&#13;
J o h n Hinchey has had a telephone&#13;
placed in his resideuoe.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. CowelU of Detroit&#13;
have moved iheir household goods&#13;
to Gieun Brook Stock farm where&#13;
they expect to n. LA:- their home.&#13;
Edward Daniels left Friday for&#13;
St. Joseph, II! to attend Uii- funer\-&#13;
of his uncle.&#13;
M:ss Ruth Pierce of Detroit&#13;
who has been the gueet of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Whaliiu the past *Qn days,&#13;
returned home Sunday ,&#13;
To-day and&#13;
Thursday and&#13;
will make a special price&#13;
on&#13;
tomorrow,&#13;
Friday, w e&#13;
Gold Medal Flour&#13;
to be delivered about May&#13;
15th.&#13;
A s conditions all point&#13;
to higher priced flour this&#13;
may be an opportunity fop&#13;
i you to save some money.&#13;
Top P r i c e for your C r e a m&#13;
Butter and Eig£s any day.&#13;
fa&#13;
£T&#13;
our»ei&#13;
M O N K S BROS.&#13;
Siar^gfeggQjBflBj'BaHf^&#13;
-•*•* -4-^-+^ • : * J O # * V&#13;
^ !:&lt;•&lt;;&gt;' ;TI tin.' w orld. (&#13;
t oo e t h e r s you u s e&#13;
garafaeagaagEgggigfagig^^&#13;
The first dance after Easter will be&#13;
given for the benefit of the H. S.&#13;
Base Ball Team, on&#13;
AVOID SPRING COLDS&#13;
sudden changes, high winds, .shifting&#13;
seasons cause colds and grippe.&#13;
and htese spring colds are annoying&#13;
and dangerous, and likely to turn&#13;
into a chronic summer cough In&#13;
such cases take a treatment ot Dr&#13;
King's N'ew Discovery, a pleasant&#13;
laxative tar syrup. It soothes the&#13;
cough, checks the cold and help.s&#13;
break up an attack of grippe. Its already&#13;
prepared, no mixing or fussing.&#13;
Just ask your druggist for a bottle of&#13;
Dr King's New Discovery. Tested&#13;
and tried for over 40 years&#13;
^•H^-H-I-l-r-M-W^^-t-KS-i-I-I-K'-KF&#13;
L A T T E R Y .&#13;
Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
The x-p'.c Ilardw d'.'j Sl« ".v!:.&#13;
'I M I t Is I :&lt;sn&#13;
A Cash Drscount of 10 percent&#13;
B e w a r e of him who f l « t t « r i&#13;
you to your face or to one h«&#13;
think-, w i l l tell you of it. Most&#13;
probably h* has either deceived&#13;
you or means to do so. R e -&#13;
m e m b e r the fable of the fox&#13;
c o m m e n d i n g the singing of the&#13;
crow, who had something in&#13;
"ISP m o u t h w h i c h the fox w a n t -&#13;
ed.—Sir M a t t h e w H a l e .&#13;
*&#13;
-:«^-i«&#13;
\y. ; ii b e (' e j d 'JV l e (&#13;
( bi&gt; of : h ' h ; n .1-&#13;
l"»V)(l.&#13;
\V^.:^v&#13;
r&gt;c^^&gt; in :he rj:\&#13;
'M::I ai: ^'&#13;
L&#13;
;v&lt; da\&gt; .&#13;
' U S e \ ^' e *, * ' j a v ' i&#13;
. Caif Mcai an&#13;
M ' L l J U l&#13;
a ;i c*.&#13;
.« &gt;i i \&#13;
ana&#13;
R c.^ J V o u r&#13;
TeepleJHardware Company&#13;
Friday Evening,&#13;
April 28th,&#13;
at the Pinckney Opera House&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
$&#13;
A Few More Days&#13;
to dispose of what (urniturc I&#13;
want to. As I will move in about&#13;
two weeks, it must he sold and be&#13;
?'~»M cheap for cash.&#13;
Qn&lt;r Oak Side Board, Walnut&#13;
Book Case, Bed and Commode to&#13;
match. Ash. W a l n u t Trimmed,&#13;
Oak Dresser with long mirror, Oak&#13;
Rocker with leather &gt;cat, Oak&#13;
Rocker with Cobbler Seat. Wardrot&gt;&#13;
e. Setee and chair to match,&#13;
Silk covered; Eight Dav Clock,&#13;
Plate Rack and other thing? too&#13;
numerous to mention.&#13;
W. W. Barnard.&#13;
If In Need&#13;
O f N e w F a r m Tools&#13;
Call and ^ev- u&gt;.&#13;
Superior Grain Drills, in all sizes, also rer&gt;airs for same.&#13;
Oliver and Gale Plows and Tillage Implements.&#13;
Single and T e a m Harness, and Horse Collars.&#13;
P r a t ' s Babv Chic Food and Poultrv Food. E t c .&#13;
D I N K &amp; L , St D U N B A R&#13;
BXSBSSfcJ: ' • . .&#13;
HK^;''''.''&#13;
p^^-' !&#13;
•if*&#13;
J*&gt; :*»&#13;
3^&#13;
I:&#13;
K&#13;
£&#13;
li'^'L-&#13;
» :.f f»&#13;
• . &lt; * • •&#13;
^ • • . *&#13;
PINCJCNEY DISPATCH&#13;
WARNS FARMERS&#13;
WHO RAISE CORN&#13;
T H E M. A. C. T E S T S S H O W SERIOUS&#13;
C O N D I T I O N A N D H O W TO&#13;
P R E V E N T G R E A T LOSS.&#13;
ONE OF GERMANY'S&#13;
STRATEGISTS DIES&#13;
DANGER IN SELECTING SEED&#13;
How to Secure Good Seed and Why&#13;
That Alone Will Save Lo**c«&#13;
of Many Thounanda of&#13;
Dollars.&#13;
Eaut Lansing—With the planting&#13;
beason but a few weeks away, Michigan&#13;
farmers are confronted by one of&#13;
the mobt aerioua corn-Beed shortages&#13;
ever felt in this state. The situation&#13;
ii^ such, according to farm crop&#13;
authorities of the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
college, that looses which may&#13;
run into hundreds of thousands of dollars&#13;
are seen if extraordinary precautions&#13;
are not exercised by farmers&#13;
in the selection of seed for the coming&#13;
season"« crop, in view of conditions&#13;
aa they have been found to prevail&#13;
throughout the state, the college&#13;
is issuing a "first aid" bulletin to&#13;
advise agriculturists as to measures&#13;
most likely to be of value in minimizing&#13;
the seed corn danger.&#13;
The bulletin, which has ben given&#13;
out is based on information gathered&#13;
during the course of a state-wide survey&#13;
of the seed corn situation.&#13;
"On account of the continued cold&#13;
BARON VON DER GOLTZ.&#13;
Athens, via Rome—It is reported&#13;
here that the death of Field Marshal&#13;
von der Goltz was atended by most&#13;
mysterious circumstances and was&#13;
not due to natural causes. It is learned&#13;
that von der Goltz arrived in Constantinople&#13;
a week ago and at that&#13;
time was in excellent health.- He&#13;
and wet weather during the aum-mer expected to go to Berlin to confer&#13;
of 1915, the corn crop made a much&#13;
slower growth than usual, and with&#13;
few exceptions, failed to mature.&#13;
"In order to determine the seriousness&#13;
of the seed-corn situation, the&#13;
with the kaiser. He died on April&#13;
18. The news was withheld until announced&#13;
officially in Berlin last Friday.&#13;
The announcement of Field Mar-&#13;
Men Arretted in Baltimore Have&#13;
Stolen Securities.&#13;
department of farm crops made a s h a l v o n d e r Qoltz's death from Ber.&#13;
seed corn survey in representative l l n l a 8 t F r i d a y 8 a i d hi» death was&#13;
sections in ten counties in southern d u e t 0 B p o t t e d f e V er.&#13;
Michigan. Inquiries were made aa&#13;
to the amount of seed corn available, " "&#13;
and samples were secured for germ S T O L E N M A I L P O U C H E S F O U N D&#13;
ination tewts.&#13;
i&#13;
"While results varied somewhat in&#13;
different sections, the conditions&#13;
were found to be very unsatisfactory&#13;
in all of the ten counties. It was&#13;
found that only 50 per cent of the Baltimore—A man, giving the name&#13;
farmers had saved sed corn. Many 0f Edward J. Quigley, having in his&#13;
of these had not saved enough for | poesesion all the securities stolen off a&#13;
their own use, and much of that ferry boat at New York, February 26,&#13;
which had been saved was not fit for I w a a arrested here. The arrest was a&#13;
planting. The average per cent of piece of good luck by the postal augermination,&#13;
including the weak tborities. Quigley was seized on suasprouts,&#13;
was only 63.4 per cent. picion of being wanted in St. Louis&#13;
"It is readily seen from these fig. j for raising money orders. An alleged&#13;
uree that the seed corn situation in confederate named George F. Windall&#13;
Michigan is very serious. It i8 a was arrested with him but is held on&#13;
situation that will result in thousands, a technical charge.&#13;
if not millions, of dollars loss to When told to open his grip Quig-&#13;
Michigan farmers the coming seasons ley proteeted and said he could not&#13;
unless an unusual effort is made by &lt; be made to give it up. It contained&#13;
all com growers to procure the best ; a large bundle with old newspapers&#13;
possible seed corn. If a satisfactory for a wrapping. Inside were found&#13;
supply cannot be located, application certificates of stock of the Baltimore&#13;
may be made to the Michigan Agri- &amp; Ohio railroad, the Chicago, Burltngcultunal&#13;
college, or to county agents, ton &amp; Quincy railroad, New York City&#13;
"The seriousness of the seed corn stock and other securities of aggresituation&#13;
is not generally appreciated gate face value of $400,000.&#13;
and it is feared that many farmers A sight drift for $38,000, drawn on&#13;
will have very thin stands which will S. B. Chapin &amp; Co., of New York, by&#13;
produce only a small percentage of Smith, Lockhart &amp; Co., of Baltimore,&#13;
the usual crop. It is important that was also found in the satchel attachevery&#13;
corn grower who has not al- ed to certificates for 100 shares of&#13;
ready done so. should test his seed Union Pacific and 100 shares of&#13;
corn at once."&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
Northern Pacific stock.&#13;
Chief Postoffice Inspector J. C.&#13;
Koons said he believed that the satchel&#13;
contained all the securities valued&#13;
at $200,000, which had been sent from&#13;
A Muskegon youth reported to the Baltimore in the registered mail&#13;
police that he had been "swindled" pouches stolen on the New York ferry&#13;
into paying 75 cents for a "genuine boat. Some of the securities found in&#13;
Klmberley diamond of five carats," t n ^ satchel were mailed from Washwhich&#13;
wasn't a "regular rock." Ington. One of the stolen pouches&#13;
was from Baltimore and three were&#13;
from Washington.&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
The state capital finally has a fire&#13;
©scape—that is, they call it that. It&#13;
consists of four steps which reach&#13;
to the roof from the window of the&#13;
fire marshal's office, fn case of fire&#13;
t i e officers and employes wait on the ;&#13;
roof for some one to save them. j The state convention of the Knights&#13;
The body of an unidentified Italian i of Columbus will be In Petoskey June&#13;
is in the Wayne county morgue, the 6th.&#13;
victim of one of the most peculiar [ Washington—War department reaccidenta&#13;
in Detroit's history. He ( porta indicate that attendance at the&#13;
was asphyxiated in the open air. The army Instruction camps for civilians&#13;
body waa found on a carload of ashes this summer will approximate 28,500.&#13;
in the Grand Trunk yars. The man | Secretary Baker reporting to conhad&#13;
climbed into the car to sleep, gross on the department's plans for&#13;
while the ashes were warm. The the camps, asked for an approprirain&#13;
seeped throgh the top crust and ation of $464,085 for their expenses,&#13;
fortned a poisonous gas which caused y G W York—The total number of&#13;
the man's death. g t r e € t a c c e n t s in New York City&#13;
Some Michigan counties have more ! during 1915 according to Police Comdog&#13;
wardens than dogs, as the re- misaioner Woods, was 22,540. In&#13;
suit of the new state law which makes j accidents the number of individuals&#13;
it the duty of the supervisors to per- j injured or killed was 23,980. One&#13;
tonally attend to the collection of person was killed every 13¼ hours,&#13;
the dog taxes. The tax is $1 per | and a person Injured every 22 mindog,&#13;
of which the supervisors get a ' utes.&#13;
ten-cent fee for collecting. The Bucharest—Since the concentrat-&#13;
BVperrleort must keep a list of the j i o n o f l a r g e bodies of RussUn troops&#13;
of tfceir respective districts and a i o n | the Rumanian frontier began&#13;
some time ago hundred! of soldiers&#13;
of the csar have deserted and crossed&#13;
the border. The number of deserters&#13;
lately has increased to an&#13;
alarming extent and is causing the&#13;
Rumanian authorities considerable&#13;
i worry.&#13;
snast furnish a list of all dogs on&#13;
which taxes are not paid. The sheriff&#13;
shoot all dogs so listed, for&#13;
which be gets a fee of $1. It is fig.&#13;
that this Plan will cost tn&#13;
shoot 50 cents a head tor&#13;
oss fmtij ng&amp;ntem.&#13;
U. S. AWAITS&#13;
U-BOAT ANSWER&#13;
G E R M A N Y W A N T S N O B R E A K&#13;
W I T H A M E R I C A O V E R SUBM&#13;
A R I N E I S S U E .&#13;
PREVENT BREAK AT ANY COST&#13;
Lull Already Noted in U-Boat Activltica&#13;
Since Wilson'* Ultimatum&#13;
to Germany.&#13;
Berlin, via Copenhagen to London—&#13;
The imperial chancellor, Dr. von&#13;
Bethman-Hollweg, returned to Berlin&#13;
which would seem to justify the aasumption&#13;
that the empire's responsible&#13;
leaders at Great Headquarters&#13;
have finished -consideration of the&#13;
American note and reached a decision&#13;
concerning Germany's reply. The&#13;
chancellor's return, it is understood,&#13;
waa not expected until Tuesday;&#13;
hence a general decision appears to&#13;
have been reached earlier than looked&#13;
for.&#13;
Berlin, via Amsterdam—Germany's&#13;
ans-wer to President Wilson's virtual&#13;
ultimatum will be dispatched to Wash,&#13;
ington, at the earliest in the middle,&#13;
possibly not before the end of the&#13;
ensuing week. Of all the signs and&#13;
hints and omens with regard to the&#13;
outcome of the crisis between the&#13;
two countries, this very delay of Germany's&#13;
answer is most significant. It&#13;
points clearly to a back-down on the&#13;
part of the German government, a&#13;
dignified and gradual but none the&#13;
less complete, accession to America's&#13;
demand that the lives of American&#13;
citizens must be safeguarded.&#13;
Were Germany courting a break&#13;
with the United States; were she convinced&#13;
that there is "not once scintilla&#13;
of justification for the American&#13;
demands"—as some individual, hotheaded&#13;
editors have been asserting—&#13;
then there would have been flashed&#13;
across the cable inside of 24 hours&#13;
after the presentation to the foreign&#13;
office of the American note a brief,&#13;
courteous reply telling the American&#13;
government in yo many words, that&#13;
what it asks is impossible to grant&#13;
and that this is Germany's last word&#13;
and closes the incident.&#13;
Even the kaiser's absence from&#13;
Berlin would not have prevented&#13;
that. The laat paragraph of President&#13;
Wilson's note is clear enough&#13;
to be put into one or two code words&#13;
and convey it through the special&#13;
wire running from the foreign office&#13;
to the kaiser's desk at general headq-&#13;
uarters,&#13;
What is really coming to pass in&#13;
Germany at this moment Is a feverish&#13;
preparation for a submission to&#13;
American demands—not, to be sure,&#13;
for a complete abandonment of the&#13;
submarine warfare, but of that which&#13;
is asked in Mr. Wilson's closing paragraph,&#13;
"a declaration and a putting&#13;
into effect of an abandonment of its&#13;
present methods of submarine war.&#13;
fare against passenger and freightcarrying&#13;
vessels."&#13;
TR00PST0 REMAIN IN MEXICO&#13;
General Scott to Remain On Border&#13;
With Funston.&#13;
Washington—For the present, at&#13;
least, the American forces are to remain&#13;
In Mexico. Announcement to&#13;
this effect was made by Secretary of&#13;
War Baker following a conference&#13;
with President Wilson. The president&#13;
approved a recommendation&#13;
from Major General Funston, indorsed&#13;
by Major General Scott, chief of&#13;
staff that there should be a redisposltion&#13;
of the forces of General Pershing&#13;
pending diplomatic negotiations&#13;
now in progress between the state department&#13;
and the de facto government&#13;
of Mexico.&#13;
The secretary said:&#13;
"General Funston recommends a&#13;
redisposition of the forces in Mexico&#13;
for the purpose of recuperation and&#13;
pending opportunity for further cooperation&#13;
with the force of the de&#13;
facto government of Mexico. His recommendation&#13;
has been approved and&#13;
Its execution left to his discretion."&#13;
The conterence between the president&#13;
and Secretary Baker followed&#13;
a long vigil kept at the war department&#13;
by the latter, pending the receipt&#13;
and deciphering of a lengthy&#13;
code dispatch from General Scott,&#13;
who went to San Antonio to confer&#13;
with General Funston,&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Lyons, Franca — The Russian&#13;
troops which arrived at Marseilles&#13;
for service with the French on the&#13;
western front, passed through here&#13;
on their way northward. They were&#13;
given an enthusiastic welcome al)&#13;
along their route.&#13;
MARKET&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—CaiUe: Receipt* 2,137.&#13;
Beet heavy steers, 18.50®9; beat handy&#13;
weight butcher stem, $7.5U&lt;&amp;&gt;!&gt;.25;&#13;
mixed steers and heifers, $7.25 fc&gt;8;&#13;
handy light buLchera, $7.25©»8; light&#13;
butchers, |6®725; best cows, $6®7;&#13;
butcher cows, $6® 6; common cows,&#13;
|4.&amp;0©5; canners, $3.50©4.25; beat&#13;
heavy bulla, $7; bologna bulla, $6®&#13;
6.&amp;0; stock bulla, $5.50©6; feeders,&#13;
$7.&amp;0®8, stockers, $6.60®7.50; milkere&#13;
and springers, $40¢80.&#13;
CaJ res—Receipts, 1,697. Best&#13;
gradee went at $9.75®10, and common&#13;
and heavy grades $6®9,&#13;
Sheep and Lamb—Receipts, 2,735.&#13;
Best lambs, $9.26®9.&amp;0; fair lambs,&#13;
$70)7.50; light to common lambs, $7&#13;
@7.50; yearlings, $8®&gt;8.50; fair to&#13;
good sheep, $6.i&gt;0@7; culls and common,&#13;
$4.50@5.&#13;
Hogs — Receipts, 18,238. Yorkers&#13;
and mixed selling at $9.30®9.55, with&#13;
bulk of sales for the good ones at&#13;
$9.50; pigs brought $8.50^)8.90.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO-Recelpts of cattle,&#13;
150 cars; market 15@25c lower;&#13;
fair to prime native steers, $9.25 @ 10;&#13;
fair to good, $8.75 ®9; plain and&#13;
coarse, $8.25@8.50; Canadian steers,&#13;
1,350 to 1,450 lbs., $8.75@9.25; do&#13;
1,250 to 1,300 lbs., $8.50@8.75; light&#13;
butcher steers and heifers, $8@8.50;&#13;
yearlings, dry-fed, $9@9.50; best&#13;
handy steers, $8.50 @8.75; good butchers'&#13;
steers and heifers, mixed, $8®&#13;
8.25; steers and heifers, fair to good,&#13;
$7.25®7.50; prime fat heifers, $8.25®&#13;
8.50; best heavy fat cowa, $7®7.50;&#13;
butcher cows( $6.25@8.75; cutters,&#13;
$4.6Q©5; canners, $3.50@4; fancy&#13;
bulls, $7@7.50; butchering bulls, $6.50&#13;
@7; Bausage bulls, $6.26@6.50; light&#13;
bulls, $5.50©6; stockers, good, $7®&#13;
7.60; light common Btockers, $6@&#13;
6.50; feeders, $7.25@7.50; milkers and&#13;
springers, $65@90.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 80 cars; market&#13;
10c lower; heavy, $10.30&lt;g&gt;10.40; yorkers,&#13;
$10.25&lt;g)10.35; pigs, $9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 50 cars;&#13;
market steady; top wool lambs, $12;&#13;
clipped, H0.25.@10.50; yearlings, $8.50&#13;
&lt;8&gt;9; wethers, $8@8.50; ewes, $7@7.50.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 1,800; market&#13;
steady; top, $11.25; fair to good, $9.50&#13;
@10.50; fed calves, $5@6.&#13;
And No Wonder-Renting Hfe&#13;
Land He Made $8.50 I f&#13;
Per Acre. n&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat: Cash No 2 red,&#13;
$1.19; May opened without change at&#13;
$1.18 1-2 and advanced to $1.19 1-2;&#13;
July opened at $1.18 1-2 and advanced&#13;
to $1.19 1-2; No 1 white, $1.14.&#13;
Corn—Cash No 3, 75 l-2c; No 3&#13;
yellow, 78c; No 4 yellow, 75 l-2@77c.&#13;
Oata—Standard, 47 3-4c; No 3 white&#13;
46 3-4c; No 4 white, 44 l-2@45 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No 2 94 l-2c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and&#13;
April shipment, $3.65; May, $3.70.&#13;
Seeds—Prime red clover, $9.75;&#13;
prime alsike, $9.35; prime timothy,&#13;
$3.60.&#13;
Hay—No 1 timothy, $19.50@20;&#13;
standard timothy, $18.50@19; light&#13;
mixed, $18.50@19; No 2 timothy, $16&#13;
@17; No 1 mixed, $15@15.50; No 2&#13;
mixed, $11@13; No 1 clover, $12® 13;&#13;
rye straw, $7.50@8; wheat and oat&#13;
straw, $6.50® 7 per ton in carlots, Detroit&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 lbs, jobmg lots: First patent,&#13;
$6.50; second patent, $6.20; straight,&#13;
$5.90; spring patent, $6.80; rye flour,&#13;
$6 per bbl.&#13;
Fed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran $24; standard middlings, $25;&#13;
fine middlings $30; coarse cornmeal&#13;
$30; cracked corn $31.50; corn and&#13;
oat chop, $28 per ton.&#13;
So many Americans now have per*&#13;
eonal knowledge of Canada that false -&#13;
reports concerning this country are&#13;
being continually corrected by Amsfw "&#13;
leans themselves who know the factH&#13;
and who are too fair-minded to let #&gt;*&#13;
false statement go unchallenged,&#13;
case in point arises out of a statem&#13;
supposed to be made by a resident j £ *&#13;
Alberta, and published recently in flbs&gt;^&#13;
Spokesman-Review, of Spokane, Ij^&#13;
which the condition of settlers in th|s&gt;&#13;
country was painted in a very bad&#13;
way indeed. The writer of t h i r attack&#13;
on Canada refused to let his&#13;
name be known, so it can be taken&#13;
for what it is worth, but Mr. S. L.&#13;
Wallace, of N 4723 Crestline, Spokane,&#13;
who lived for some years in Western&#13;
Canada, came to the defense of the&#13;
country in the following letter which&#13;
was published in the Spokesman-Review&#13;
of February 11, 1916: —&#13;
"To the Editor of the Spokesman-Review:&#13;
"In Sunday's Spokesman-Review was&#13;
a letter from a man in Alberta to the&#13;
chamber of commerce, asking that&#13;
something be done to keep Americans&#13;
from going to Canada, and saying that&#13;
that government was run by the railroads,&#13;
banks and manufacturers; t h a t&#13;
once a man got there he never could&#13;
get away. Had this man published&#13;
that letter over his own signature&#13;
there is no doubt but he could get out&#13;
of Canada.&#13;
No country will do as much to help&#13;
a man to get on his feet, if he tries to&#13;
help himself, as Canada. I know of&#13;
the government helping people to provisions,&#13;
feed, seed grain and fuel, and&#13;
charging only cost of delivery to t h e&#13;
nearest town and 6 per cent. What&#13;
more could a man ask?&#13;
I lived five years in Southern Saskatchewan&#13;
and earned a patent to 320&#13;
acres of as good land as I ever saw.&#13;
I have raised over 80 bushels of oats&#13;
on sod, 40 bushels of wheat, and 20&#13;
of flax to the acre. Until I lost my&#13;
health I never was better satisfied anywhere.&#13;
I had my land rented this last&#13;
year for one-third. It brought me almost&#13;
$8.50 per acre, or $1,143.91 for&#13;
135 acres.&#13;
This man says he loves the land his&#13;
fathers died for. So do I, and I love&#13;
the land that gave me my home.&#13;
"S. L. WALLACE."&#13;
N4723 Crestline, Spokane.—Advertisement.&#13;
*y'*.'it*&#13;
\&#13;
BOMBED BY THEIR OWN GUNS&#13;
Anti-Aircraft Shrapnel Falls in the&#13;
Streets of London, and Causes&#13;
Casualties.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Grape Fruit—$2.75@3.50 per case.&#13;
Pineapples—Florida, $6.50® 7 per&#13;
case.&#13;
Cocoanut8—$7.50 per sack and 90c&#13;
®$1 per doz.&#13;
Strawberries — Louisiana, $3@3.25&#13;
per 14-pt case; Florida, 28®30c per&#13;
Qt&#13;
Apples—Greenings, $3®3.75; Spy,&#13;
$3.50®4; Baldwins, $3@3.50; Steele&#13;
Reds, $4®4.50 per bbl; western, $1.75&#13;
®2 per box-&#13;
Mushrooms—40@4&amp;c per lb.&#13;
Cabbage—$1.75@2 per bbl; new,&#13;
$2.75@3 per cwt.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey, kiln-dried,&#13;
$1.20®1.35 per crate.&#13;
Celery—Florida, $2.50® 2.75 per&#13;
crate and 75c @$1 per dot.&#13;
Maple Sugar—New, 15® 16c per lb;&#13;
syrup, $1@1.10 per g a l&#13;
Tomatoes—Hothouse, 25® 28c per&#13;
lb; Florida, $2.75®3 per crate.&#13;
Lettuce—Hothouse, 13® 14c per lb;&#13;
head lettuce, IS®3.25 per hamper.&#13;
Potatoes—Carlots on track, 95c® $1&#13;
for white and 90© 95c for red per bn.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Best, 14 ©14 1 2c;&#13;
cholee, 13® 13 l-2c; ordinary, 11® 12c&#13;
per lb.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, 16®17e; amber, 10®llc; extracted,&#13;
9® 10c per lb.&#13;
Tmilow—No 1, Sc; No 2, 7c per Ik.&#13;
During the air raid, everything from&#13;
machine guns to three and four-inchers—&#13;
not one in the lot built for antiaircraft&#13;
work—belched forth the best&#13;
it had. Up went the bullets and shrapnel,&#13;
and down they came again, down&#13;
on the roofs and streetB of London.&#13;
Far, far below the contemptuous airships,&#13;
the little stars of bursting shrapnel&#13;
spat forth their steel bullets in&#13;
spiteful Impotence, and back they&#13;
rained on the tiles and cobbles. . . .&#13;
As we stepped from the curb somethink&#13;
tinkled against my foot. Picking&#13;
it up, it turned out to be a still&#13;
warm piece of steel which J&#13;
identified at once as a fragment of the&#13;
casing of an incendiary bomb. It was&#13;
not more than an eighth of an inch&#13;
thick but of such superlative quality&#13;
that it rang like a silver bell even to&#13;
the tap of a finger nail.&#13;
A far more murderous fragment of&#13;
shivered metal, which J kicked&#13;
into a few minutes later, was a piece&#13;
of shrapnel casing, and there is no&#13;
doubt that the casualties from antiaircraft&#13;
gun projectiles are very considerable:—&#13;
Lewis R, Freeman, in Atlantic&#13;
Monthly.&#13;
But Satan Helps.&#13;
Johnnie was entertaining a It&#13;
friend one afternoon when a h&#13;
thunder shower came up and&#13;
were obliged to play in the house.&#13;
After awhile the lightning began playing&#13;
with the telephone wires and&#13;
there were sharp reports and sparks&#13;
from the telephone. The little friend&#13;
inquired, "What is that?" Johnnie's&#13;
mother told him it was the lightning&#13;
on the telephone wires,&#13;
"But what makes it?" he persisted.&#13;
Then Johnnie said, "Well, God makes&#13;
the lightning but I believe Satan's got&#13;
something to do with it, all r i g h t "&#13;
*£;m&#13;
mi&#13;
Encouraging Sign.&#13;
1 met Dubwaite yesterday and he&#13;
told me his mind was occupied."&#13;
"I'm not surprised."&#13;
-No?"&#13;
T h e real estate men tell me a&#13;
great many vacant places tn the city&#13;
are filling up."&#13;
If you want to be sure of aa audience&#13;
with a woman, either flatter her&#13;
Of abuse hsi&#13;
*, K&#13;
•ssBSassissiiiSttsBBaasl&#13;
^'iiWCMti-'u * m u - ll i t$ W ^ i I I ^ I I ^ M I I ^ . \amm ^ * &lt; — y&#13;
PINOCNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The Qtyof Numbered Days&#13;
By Francis Lynde&#13;
Cspfisjat by&#13;
-Or&#13;
S Y N O P 8 I 8 .&#13;
—11—&#13;
". Stoulllard, chief engineer of the Nlquola&#13;
SSflffaUon dam, meet a J. Wesley Cort-&#13;
-SSJtsht and explain* the reclamation work&#13;
*t him. Cortwrisht organizes a company&#13;
4Ad obtains government contractu to furnish&#13;
power and material Steve Maasln-&#13;
«ale threatens to start a gold ruah if&#13;
irouillard does not use his influence to&#13;
brio* a railroad branch to the place, thus&#13;
opening an easy market for the "Little&#13;
Susan" mine ore. BroulUard tells Amy&#13;
Uassingale of his need for money to pay&#13;
off his dead father's debts. She tells him&#13;
to be true to himself. He decides for the&#13;
extension. Mlrapolis, the city of numbered&#13;
days, booms. Cortwright persuades&#13;
Brouillard to become consulting engineer&#13;
of the power company In return for $100.-&#13;
000 stock- Stoppag&amp; of work on the railroad&#13;
threatens a panic. Brouillard spreads&#13;
the Masaingale story of placer gold In&#13;
the river bed and starts a gold rush,&#13;
which promises to stop the reclamation&#13;
project Amy tells Brouillard that her&#13;
father Is in Cortwrigbt's financial&#13;
clutches. He tells her he has made »00,-&#13;
000 and declares his love. She loves him.&#13;
but Bhows him that he has become demoralized.&#13;
A real gold find la made. Brouillard&#13;
sells his stock but does not pay his&#13;
father's debts. Cortwright's son shoots&#13;
Dave Massingale. Brouillard threatens&#13;
Cortwright with exposure if he pushes&#13;
Massingale to the wall. The magnate&#13;
promises to give the old man a free field.&#13;
Stories of the dam's abandonment revive.&#13;
Foreclosure on the "Little Susan" la Impending&#13;
and Brouillard loans Dave Massingale&#13;
his tlOO.OOO to clear him.&#13;
J»Wb^VWVb*sVW*s^WVsVWWW&#13;
Old Man Massingale Is loath&#13;
to put himself under financial&#13;
obligations that will Involve&#13;
Amy's marriage. Do you think&#13;
that Brouillard will trick the father&#13;
and salve his conscience&#13;
with the saying, "All's fair in&#13;
love and war?"&#13;
££•&#13;
&amp;.&lt;&#13;
'&amp;&amp;&#13;
CHAPTER XVI—Continued.&#13;
"There's one thing—and I've got to&#13;
spit It out before it's everlastingly too&#13;
late. See here, Victor Br'uillard—Amy&#13;
likes you—thinks a heap of you; a&#13;
plumb blind man could see that. But&#13;
say, that little girl o' mine has just&#13;
natchurly got to have a free hand when&#13;
It comes to pairln' up, and she wont&#13;
never have If she finds out about this.&#13;
You ain't allowin' to use It on her,&#13;
Victor?"&#13;
Brouillard laughed.&#13;
"I'll make a hedging bet and break&#13;
even with you, Mr. Massingale," he&#13;
aaid. "That check is drawn to my order,&#13;
and I have Indorsed It Let me&#13;
bave it again and I'll get the cash for&#13;
you. In that way only the two of us&#13;
need know anything about the transaction;&#13;
and if I promise to keep the&#13;
secret from Miss Amy, you must promise&#13;
to keep it from Mr. J. Wesley Cortwright&#13;
Will you saw It off with me&#13;
that way?—until you've made the turn&#13;
on the ore sales?"&#13;
David Massingale shook hands on it&#13;
with more gratitude, colored this time&#13;
with a hearty imprecation. "Dad burn&#13;
you, Victor Br'uillard, you're a man—&#13;
ever' single mill-run of you!" he burst&#13;
o u t But Brouillard shook his head&#13;
grarely.&#13;
"No, Mr. Massingale, I'm the little&#13;
yellow dog you mentioned a while&#13;
back," he asserted, and then he went&#13;
to get the money.&#13;
Left alone In the small retiring room&#13;
of the bank where the business had&#13;
been transacted, David Massingale&#13;
look the sheaf of bank notes from his&#13;
pocket with trembling hands, fondling&#13;
it as a mlBer might Twice the old&#13;
roan made as If he would turn toward&#13;
the door of egress, and the light in his&#13;
array-blue eyes was the rekindling&#13;
flame of a passion long denied. But&#13;
In the end he thrust the tempting&#13;
sheaf back into the inner pocket and&#13;
went resolutely to the cashier's count&#13;
e r window, finding Schennerhorn, the&#13;
Ident sitting at the cashier's desk.&#13;
%.&amp;'xe come to take up them notes o'&#13;
e with John Wes,' name on 'em,"&#13;
slngale began, pulling out the thick&#13;
sheaf of redemption money.&#13;
"ITm. yea, here they are. Brought&#13;
the cash, did yon? The "Little Susan'&#13;
to pan out, has it? I didn't&#13;
yon had commenced shipping ore&#13;
$ - ^ -&#13;
„•»»'"• •» ••&#13;
? • • * - •&#13;
- * • »&#13;
e haven't" David Masslngals&#13;
made the admission and regretted it tn&#13;
one and the same breath.&#13;
"You've borrowed to meet these&#13;
notes?" queried the president look*&#13;
lag op quickly. "That wont do, Mr.&#13;
Massingale; that wont do at alL We&#13;
« a n t afford to lose an old customer&#13;
that way. What's the matter with our&#13;
money? Doesnt U look good to you&#13;
any more?"&#13;
Massingale stammered out something&#13;
about Cashier Hardwick's peremptory&#13;
demand of a few hours earlier,&#13;
bet be was not permitted to-falsa.&#13;
"Of course, that is an right from&#13;
Hardwick's point of view. He was&#13;
merely looking out for the matnriag&#13;
How moob more time will yon&#13;
to eaabse yom t# got&#13;
your shipments? Sixty 'days? Ail&#13;
right, you needn't make out new notes;&#13;
I'll indorse the extension on the back&#13;
of these, and I'll undertake to get&#13;
Cortwright's approval myBelf. No; not&#13;
a word, Mr. Massingale. As long as&#13;
you're borrowing, you must be loyal&#13;
and borrow of us. Good afternoon.&#13;
Come again when we can help you&#13;
out."&#13;
David Massingale turned away,&#13;
dazed and confused beyond the power&#13;
of speech. When the mists of astoundment&#13;
cleared he found himself in the&#13;
street with the thick wad of bank&#13;
notes atlll in his pocket Suddenly,&#13;
out of the Umbo into which two years&#13;
of laborious discipline and self-denial&#13;
had pushed it stalked the demon of&#13;
the ruling passion, mighty, overpowering,&#13;
unconquerable. The familiar&#13;
street sights danced before Masslngale's&#13;
eyes, and there was a drumming&#13;
in his ears like the fall of many&#13;
waters. But above the clamor rose&#13;
the Insistent voice of the tempter, and&#13;
the voice was at once a command and&#13;
an entreaty, a gnawing hunger and a&#13;
parching thirst&#13;
"By gash! I'd like to try that old&#13;
system o' mine jest one more time!"&#13;
he muttered. "All it takes is money&#13;
enough to foller it up and stay. And&#13;
I've got the money. Besides, didn't&#13;
Br'uillard say I was to get an extension&#13;
If I could?"&#13;
He grabbed at his coat to be Bure&#13;
that the packet was still there, took&#13;
two steps toward the bank, stopped,&#13;
turned as if In the grasp of an invisible&#13;
but Irresistible captor, and moved&#13;
away, like a man walking in his sleep,&#13;
toward the lower avenue.&#13;
It was the doorway of Haley's place,&#13;
the Monte Carlo of the Nlquola, that&#13;
finally halted him. Here the struggle&#13;
was so fierce that the bartender, who&#13;
knew him, named It sickness and led&#13;
the stricken one to a card table in the&#13;
public bar-room and fetched him a&#13;
drink. A single swallow of whisky&#13;
turned the scale. Massingale rose,&#13;
tossed a coin to the bar, and passed&#13;
quickly to the rear, where a pair of&#13;
balse doors opened silently and engulfed&#13;
him.&#13;
CHAPTER XVII&#13;
The Abyss&#13;
It was at early candle-lighting in&#13;
the evening of the day of renewed and&#13;
unbridled speculation in Mlrapolis&#13;
"front feet" that Brouillard, riding the&#13;
piebald range pony on which he had&#13;
been making an Inspection round of&#13;
the nearer Buckskin ditchers' camps,&#13;
topped the hill in the new, high-pitched&#13;
road over the Chlgrlngo shoulder and&#13;
looked down upon the valley electrics.&#13;
Brouillard let the pony set Its own&#13;
pace on the down-hill lap to the finish,&#13;
freshened himself at his rooms In the&#13;
Nlquola building, and went to the&#13;
Metropole to eat his dinner with Marray&#13;
Grislow as his vis-a-vis. The busting&#13;
throngs in the Metropole cafe and&#13;
lobby annoyed him, and even Onslow's&#13;
quiet sarcasm as applied to the day's&#13;
bubble-blowing failed to clear the air.&#13;
At the club there was the same atmosphere&#13;
of unrest; an exacerbating overcharge&#13;
of the suppressed activities Impatiently&#13;
waiting for another day of&#13;
excitement and opportunity. Corner&#13;
lots and the astounding prices they&#13;
had commanded filled the air In the&#13;
lounge, the billiard room and the buffet,&#13;
and after a few minutes Brouillard&#13;
turned his back on the hubbub and&#13;
sought the quiet of the darkened building&#13;
on the opposite side of the street&#13;
He was alone in his office on the&#13;
sixth floor and was trying, half absently,&#13;
to submerge himself in a sea of&#13;
desk work when as distinctly as if she&#13;
were present and at his elbow, he&#13;
heard, or seemed to hear, Amy Massingale&#13;
say: "Victor, yon said you&#13;
would come if I needed you. I need&#13;
yon now." Without a moment's hesitation&#13;
he got up and made ready to go&#13;
out.&#13;
The Massingale town house was one&#13;
of a row of stuccoed villas fronting on&#13;
the main residence street, which beyond&#13;
the city limits became the highroad&#13;
to the Quadjenai bend and the&#13;
upper valley. Brouillard took a cab at&#13;
the Metropole, dismissed It at the Tills&#13;
gate, and walked briskly up the path&#13;
to the bouse, which was dark save for&#13;
one lighted room on the second floor—&#13;
the room tn which Stephen Massingale&#13;
was recovering from the effects of Van&#13;
Brace Cortwrigbt's pistol shot&#13;
Amy Massingale was on the porch&#13;
—waiting for him; as be fully believed&#13;
ttatil bar greeting snmdently proved&#13;
bar surprise at seeing baa,&#13;
"You. Victor?" she said, coming&#13;
quickly to meet him. "Murray Grislow&#13;
said you had gone down to the&#13;
Buckskin camps and wouldn't be back&#13;
for two or three days!"&#13;
"1 changed my mind and came back&#13;
How is Steve this evening?"&#13;
"He is quite comfortable, more comfortable&#13;
than he has been at all since&#13;
the wound began to heal I have been&#13;
reading him to sleep, and when the&#13;
night nurse came I ran down to get a&#13;
breath of fresh air in the open."&#13;
"No, you dldnt'come down for ;hai&#13;
reason," Brouillard amended gravely.&#13;
"You came to meet me."&#13;
"Did I?" she asked. "What makes&#13;
you think that?"&#13;
"I know what happened," said Brouillard,&#13;
speaking as soberly as if he&#13;
were stating a mathematical certainty.&#13;
"You left that room upstairs and came&#13;
to me. I didn't see you, but 1 heard&#13;
you as plainly as I can hear you now.&#13;
You spoke to me and called mo by&#13;
name."&#13;
She shook her head, laughing lightly.&#13;
"You have been overwrought about&#13;
something, or maybe you are Just plain&#13;
tired."&#13;
"You are standing me off," he declared.&#13;
"You are in trouble of some&#13;
sort, and you are trying to hide it from&#13;
me."&#13;
"No, not exactly trouble; only a little&#13;
worry."&#13;
"All right call It worry If you like&#13;
and share it with,me. What is it?'&#13;
"I think you know without being&#13;
told. I am afraid we have finally lost&#13;
the Tdttle Susan.' That is one of the&#13;
worries and the other I've been trying&#13;
to call silly. I don't know what has&#13;
become of father—as if he weren't old&#13;
enough to go and come without telling&#13;
me every move he makes!"&#13;
"Your father isn't at home ?" gasped&#13;
Brouillard.&#13;
"No; he hasn't been here since nine&#13;
o'clock this morning. Murray Grislow&#13;
saw him going into the Metropole&#13;
about one o'clock, but nobody that I&#13;
have been able to reach by phone&#13;
seems to have seen him after that"&#13;
"I can bring the record down to two&#13;
o'clock," was the quick reply. "He ate&#13;
with me at Bongras', and afterward I&#13;
walked with him as far as the bank.&#13;
And I can cure part of the first worry&#13;
—all of It, in fact; he had the money&#13;
to take up the Cortwright notes, and&#13;
when I left him he was on his way to&#13;
Hardwick's window to do it."&#13;
"He had the money? Where did he&#13;
get it?"&#13;
Brouillard put his back against a&#13;
porch post, a change of position which&#13;
kept the light of the street electric&#13;
from Bhining squarely upon his face.&#13;
"It has been another of the get-richquick&#13;
days in Mlrapolis," he said&#13;
evasively. "Somebody told me that the&#13;
corner opposite Poodles' was bought&#13;
and sold three times within a single&#13;
hour and that each time the price was&#13;
doubled."&#13;
"And you are trying to tell me that&#13;
father made a hundred thousand dollars&#13;
just in those few hours by buying&#13;
and selling Mlrapolis lots? You don't&#13;
know him, Victor. He is totally lacking&#13;
the trading gift He has often said&#13;
that he couldn't stand on a street corner&#13;
and sell twenty-dollar gold pieces&#13;
at nineteen dollars apiece—nobody&#13;
would buy of him."&#13;
"Nevertheless, I am telling you that&#13;
he had the money to take up those&#13;
notes," Brouillard insisted. "I saw it&#13;
in his hands."&#13;
She stood fairly in the beam of the&#13;
street light The violet eyes were&#13;
misty, and in the low voice there was&#13;
a note of deeper trouble.&#13;
"You say you saw the money In father's&#13;
hands; tell me, Victor, did you&#13;
see him pay it Into the bank?"&#13;
"Why, no; not the final detail. But&#13;
as I say, when I left him he was on his&#13;
way to Hardwick's window."&#13;
Again she turned away, but this time&#13;
it was to dart into the house. A minute&#13;
later she had rejoined him, and the&#13;
minute had sufficed for the donning of&#13;
a coat and the pinning on of the quaint&#13;
cowboy riding hat&#13;
"I must go and find him," she said&#13;
with quiet resolution. "Will you go&#13;
with me, Victor? Perhaps that 1B why&#13;
I—the subconscious I—called you a little&#13;
while ago. Let's not wait for the&#13;
Quadjenai car. I'd rather walk, and&#13;
we'll save time."&#13;
From the moment of outsetting the&#13;
young woman's purpose seemed clearly&#13;
defined. By the shortest way she&#13;
indicated the course to the avenue,&#13;
and at the Metropole comer she turned&#13;
unhesitatingly to the northward—toward&#13;
the region of degradation.&#13;
As wss to be expected after the day&#13;
of frantic speculation and quick money&#13;
changing, the lower avenue was abtaxe&#13;
with light the sidewalks were passes&#13;
of peril, and the saloons and dives&#13;
were reaping a rich harvest Luckily.&#13;
Brouillard was well known, and bis&#13;
position as chief of the great army of&#13;
government workmen purchased something&#13;
like Immunity for himself and&#13;
bis companion. But more than ones he&#13;
was on the point of begging the young&#13;
woman to turn back for her own sake.&#13;
The quest ended unerringly at the&#13;
door of Haley's place, and when David&#13;
Massingale's daughter mads a s if she&#13;
would go in. Brouillard protested&#13;
qolckly.&#13;
"No. Amy." be said firmly. "Yon&#13;
mustn't go la there, Lot me tabs yo«&#13;
around to the Metropole. and Chen III&#13;
come back alone."&#13;
"I have been in worse places." she&#13;
returned In low tones. And then, with&#13;
her voice breaking tremulously: "Be&#13;
my good friend Just a Utile longer, Victor!"&#13;
He took her arm and walked her&#13;
into the garishly-lighted liar-room,&#13;
bracing himself milltantly lor what&#13;
might happen. But nothing happened.&#13;
Dlaalpatlon of the western variety seldom&#13;
sinks below the level of a certain&#13;
rude gallantry, quick to recognize the&#13;
good and pure in womankind. Instantly&#13;
a hush fell upon the place. The&#13;
quartets at the card tables held their&#13;
hands, and a group of men drinking at&#13;
the bar put down their glasses. One, a&#13;
Tri-Circ* cowboy with his back turned,&#13;
let slip an oath, and in a single swift&#13;
motion his nearest comrade garroted&#13;
him with a hairy arm, strangling him&#13;
to silence.&#13;
As If guided by the same unerring&#13;
instinct which had made her choose&#13;
Haley's out of the dozen similar hells.&#13;
Amy Massingale led Brouillard swiftly&#13;
to the green baize doors at the rear&#13;
of the bar-room. At her touch the&#13;
swinging doors gave inward, and her&#13;
goal was reached.&#13;
Three faro games, each with its inlaid&#13;
table, Its Impassive dealer, its&#13;
armed "lookout," and its ring of silent&#13;
players, lay beyond the baize doors. At&#13;
the nearest of the tables there was a&#13;
stir, and the dealer stopped running&#13;
the cards. Somebody said. "Let him&#13;
get out," and then an old man, bearded,&#13;
white-haired, wild-eyed, and haggard&#13;
almost beyond recognition,&#13;
pushed his chair away from the table&#13;
and stumbled to his feet, his hands&#13;
clutching the air like those of a swimmer&#13;
sinking for the last time.&#13;
With a low cry the girl darted across&#13;
the intervening space to clasp the staggering&#13;
old man in her armB and draw&#13;
him away. Brouillard stood aside as&#13;
they came slowly toward the doors&#13;
which he was holding open for them.&#13;
He saw the distorted face-mask of a&#13;
soul in torment and heard the mumbling&#13;
repetition of the despairing&#13;
words, "It's all gone, little girl; it's all&#13;
gone!" and then he removed himself&#13;
quickly beyond the range of the staring,&#13;
unseeing eyes.&#13;
For in the lightning flash of revealment&#13;
he realized that once again the&#13;
good he would have done had turned&#13;
to hideous evil in the doing, and that&#13;
this time the sword thrust of the blind&#13;
passion impulse had gone straight to&#13;
the heart of love itself.&#13;
CHAPTER XV11I&#13;
The Setting of the Ebb&#13;
Look and Feel&#13;
Clean, Sweet and&#13;
Fresh Every Day&#13;
Drink a glass of real hot water&#13;
before breakfast to wash&#13;
out poisons.&#13;
Contrary to the most sanguine expectations&#13;
of the speculators—contrary,&#13;
perhaps, even to thOBe of Mr. J&#13;
Wesley Cortwright—the upward Burge&#13;
in Mlrapolis values, following the visit&#13;
of the "distinguished citizens," proved&#13;
to be more than a tidal wave; it was&#13;
a series of them. Day after day the&#13;
"curb" markets were reopened, with&#13;
prices mounting skyward; and when&#13;
the news of how fortunes could be&#13;
made in a day in the Miracle city of&#13;
the Nlquola got abroad In the press dispatches&#13;
there was a fresh influx of mad&#13;
money hunters from the Bast.&#13;
Now, if never before, the croaker&#13;
was wrathfuliy shouted down and silenced.&#13;
No one admitted, or seemed to&#13;
admit, the possible impennanence of&#13;
the city.&#13;
To the observer, anxious or casual,&#13;
there appeared to be reasonable&#13;
grounds for the optimistic assertion. It&#13;
was an Indubitable fact that Brouillard's&#13;
force had been cnt down, first to&#13;
one-half, and later to barely enough&#13;
men to keep the crushers and mixers&#13;
moving and to add fresh layers of concrete&#13;
to the huge wall of sufficient&#13;
quantities to prevent the material—In&#13;
technical phrase—from "dying." The&#13;
Navajos had been sent home to their&#13;
reservation, the tepees were gone, and&#13;
two-thirds of the camp shacks were&#13;
empty.&#13;
Past these material facta it was&#13;
known to everybody in the frenzied&#13;
market place that Brouillard himself&#13;
was, according to his means, one of&#13;
the most reckless of the plungers, buying,&#13;
borrowing, and buying again as if&#13;
the future held no threat of a possible&#13;
debacle. It was an object lesson for&#13;
the timid. Those who did not themselves&#13;
know certainly argued that&#13;
there must be a few who did know,&#13;
and among these few the chief of the&#13;
reclamation service must be In the&#13;
•ery foremost rank.'&#13;
r V W W&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Beware of Temptation to Trim.&#13;
Many shrubs fail to bloom because&#13;
they are trimmed now, when every&#13;
amateur g e u out his saw. Only the&#13;
fall flowering shrubs should be pruned&#13;
tn March or the bods, which ware&#13;
made last year, will be cut oft. This&#13;
includes lilacs, forsythia. snowhaO.&#13;
Japanese quince, mock orange sad&#13;
bridal wreatt&#13;
Life is not merely to live, but to&#13;
live well, eat well, digest well, work&#13;
well, sleep well, look well. What a&#13;
glorious condition to attain, and yet&#13;
how very easy it is If one will only&#13;
adopt the morning inside bath.&#13;
Folks who are accustomed to feel&#13;
dull and heavy when they arise, splitting&#13;
headache, stuffy from a cold, foul&#13;
tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach,&#13;
can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy&#13;
by opening the sluices of the system&#13;
each morning and flushing out the&#13;
whole of the internal poisonous stagnant&#13;
matter.&#13;
Everyone, whether ailing, sick or&#13;
well, should, each morning, before&#13;
breakfast, drink a glass of real hot&#13;
water with a teaspoonful of limestone&#13;
phosphate in It to wash from the&#13;
stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels th»&#13;
previous day's indigestible waste, sour&#13;
bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing,&#13;
sweetening and purifying the entire&#13;
alimentary tract before putting&#13;
more food into the stomach. The action&#13;
of hot water and limestone phosphate&#13;
on an empty stomach is wonderfully&#13;
Invigorating. It cleans out all the&#13;
sour fermentations, gases, waste and&#13;
acidity and gives one a splendid appetite&#13;
for breakfast. While you are&#13;
enjoying your breakfast the water and&#13;
phosphate is quietly extracting a large&#13;
volume of water from the blood and&#13;
getting ready for a thorough flushing&#13;
of all the inside organs.&#13;
The millions of people who are bothered&#13;
with constipation, bilious spells,&#13;
stomach trouble, rheumatism; others&#13;
who have sallow skins, blood disorders&#13;
and sickly complexions are urged&#13;
to get a quarter pound of limestone&#13;
phosphate from any store that handles&#13;
drugs which will cost very little, but&#13;
is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced&#13;
crank on the subject of internal&#13;
sanitation.—Adv.&#13;
Her Way.&#13;
"How did your wife ever get the&#13;
carpet man to come on time?&#13;
"She simply floored him with her&#13;
talk and nailed him down to a date.''&#13;
Marriage isn't necesasrily a failure.&#13;
Thousands Tell It&#13;
Why dally along with backache and&#13;
kidney or bladder trouble*? Thousands&#13;
tell you how to find relief. Here's a&#13;
case to guide you. And it's only one&#13;
of thousands. Forty thousand American&#13;
people are publicly praising Doan'i&#13;
Kidney Pills. Surely it is worth the&#13;
while of any one who has a bad back,&#13;
who feels tired, nervous and run-down,&#13;
who endures distressing urinary disorders,&#13;
to give Doan'a Kidney Pills a trial.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
Mrs. Alice Barnum, „. .. _M W, Caroline St., Fen-.5^'**J*amor&#13;
ton, Mich., s a y s :&#13;
"Kidney t r o u b l e&#13;
came on me gradually&#13;
with pains In nay&#13;
back and hips. I got&#13;
d i i s y ana nervous&#13;
and nights was restless.&#13;
Mornings. I was&#13;
hardly able to do ray&#13;
work. When I saw&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills&#13;
advertised, I got a&#13;
supply and they soon&#13;
gave me relief. That&#13;
happened s e v e r a l&#13;
years ag*o and I have&#13;
had little kidney trouble since."&#13;
Qe«Dd%aUa&gt;Asy3»aft,sOesB&lt;ai DOAN'S TO1V&#13;
POSTBUslLBUKN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Is Growing Smaller Every &amp;*?•&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible— they&#13;
not only grve relief&#13;
—•* they permanently&#13;
cure C«&#13;
stipstisa, Milt&#13;
lions u s e&#13;
them for&#13;
QlAIAIUUSItAIXlXM&amp;SMAUl^CL&#13;
Signature&#13;
YOU CAJTT CUT OCT A&#13;
Boi Spavin or Thoroogttph&#13;
but TOO can clean them off prrmptl? with&#13;
ABSORBINE&#13;
and you work the hone&#13;
Does not blatter or&#13;
hair. 12.00 per bottle,&#13;
Will tell TOO snore if&#13;
Book 4 M free.&#13;
the antiseptic lisuasem Isr&#13;
reduces Varicose VesM,&#13;
i M I K H t ^ C&#13;
' k v X PINOCNEY DISPATCH&#13;
: ^&#13;
W&#13;
fe&amp;L&#13;
'X.&#13;
m&#13;
&lt; - &gt; • «&#13;
if&#13;
r,&lt;f-&#13;
HSU*&#13;
• . * * * » . * ? .&#13;
ft A:&#13;
' t&#13;
1&#13;
y?-jr--&#13;
Floor Coverings&#13;
Carpets, Ru^s, Linoleums,&#13;
Etc.&#13;
Expi&#13;
Liquor Money Is S o u t h M a r i o n&#13;
N P-tcey d.'L'i fa-uiiy visited i«»i _;• -&#13;
8 H S I V 6 o l U l t ' Htivea :r] d'ick.son S a m U y . - - ^ 1&#13;
W t e n cob', of lives a n d p r o p e r !NJ ra. L'da. .Miiier of H o W t l J ^ ,.'&#13;
i • * ''"C»J&#13;
iy sacrificed ih thkkju into t ^ c ' t u n t wpent t h e pa.BC w^ek with n c r p a l - ';-*:^&#13;
Hat w«- vvert- lo irdk h'lou'. ( ')'*: 'o • ente, M .-. &lt;v ' ."'!r^. K'":i-r Vert&#13;
v. her^ T ! . e \ unvt fo:"y-rhv. d&gt;y i ' ^ u r e n .&#13;
counties, ;anl for: y . u i r e t W H i-cc i; (':iiib UCDCU . hud l a u . . . y t p e n t&#13;
r;ed. L K JH for .--1 iic»m;.c o u - Kapler hi t h e home ui' B e r n a r d&#13;
aider tht&gt; actual r e e i c ^ .n :«.MH6 ' M c C l u b i e y oi N . H a m b u r g . - ^ 3 ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
• .SIJBU: -v coui&#13;
r\ : ie»'a r«t- wu&gt;,&lt; »•:«, peop.e- of [ oi dave last week with Mr aj&#13;
i J o n d p a v liit.- prc^eni hicj)., niciiKct prices I-JT dour ^ J \ U I ; I ^ when \&lt;ni c a n&#13;
,;ti : h c m &lt;a nearly t h e old prices. We ordered our -nrin^, stock, last i:dl, when pi ices&#13;
were a .^reai deal less. diaii present mar^c-i price-, ilu-rc-lore cuii m a k e y o u u great s a \ ' -&#13;
l u u . W e h a v e d i e l a r -(..--1 u r n ! b — t d r c _ w&lt;&#13;
Uie wti ooui.ticrb U;K\ f : e r&#13;
' cense m o n e y .&#13;
i&#13;
• T h e 4 . j d r y c o u n t i e s beut&#13;
1 Boyt&gt;' l u d u t t t r i a i b&#13;
. year 7b.&#13;
' The 4d w e : •oautiee, e n t i t l e d&#13;
1! Will Hiair of I &gt;s .TW&#13;
a i t e r (Jxover a n d wife of Koffl*--^?..&#13;
oo! d u r i n g&#13;
i : u e&#13;
he&#13;
erviile bpent S u n d a y u : the h o m e&#13;
oi N . Pjicey.&#13;
oy&#13;
d«.\&gt;.&#13;
inc. e r \ c out ic-\ a r c uoirr. -1 U i e - e&#13;
//? Rugs We Carry the following Sizes:&#13;
ife-inchx36-inch, 2 7dnch\5_jjnch, j ; d : i c h . \ 6 o inch, ^ o n n c h x 6 3 - i n c h . ; 5 6 - i n c h \ 7 2 -&#13;
"nch, 54-inchx90-Inch. 6-foots9-loot, 7-iooi 0 inrhesxy-ioot, y-liooiAO-foot, S it 3 in \ 10&#13;
it 6 i n . 9 ft x 10 ft 6 in. 9 it x 12 it, 0 id \ 13 ft 6 in, i n tr 0 in x 12 ft. 10 tt 0 i n x i 3 it&#13;
0 in, I I \\ 3 in x )2 ft. 11 ft 3 in x 13 id ^ i n . 1 1 ft } in x 15 fr. 12 ft x 13 ft 6 in a n d&#13;
\1 i t x 15 it.&#13;
Prices Ran$e from 50c to J&amp;43. Wool &amp; Fibres,&#13;
Brussels, Velvets, Axmirristers, and Wiltons.&#13;
In Carpets we have Granites, Mattings,&#13;
U u c r ' e r , Half a n d All Wool, two-ply Ingrain-. :'rc:n 2$&gt;: LO 7(jc p-.-r \-,:id.&#13;
U i l d o t h s , P r i m e d a n d Inlaif! I d ' O / l e c n ^ , we rarr;.- in ! ; : , 2 . 2 : . , 3 ..n&lt;\ 4 &gt; ar&lt;!&#13;
wi'dths. at prices from ; o c t o ^1.00 ijcr -^• ' , d .&#13;
We a r e also h e a d q u a r t e r - for wo^d a n d ;-ra— r. •:•&gt;•. \\imJ&lt;;w - h a d e - ,::1(1 a i r t a n ^ .&#13;
rn'rher m a t t i n g a n d wc-od \'eneeriiiL.&#13;
W e wotild b e t i e d t o h a v e v i / i c c r \ - : ' d 'sir price- widi air, vu'.i i . i n n n c . eitlier&#13;
c( ••ther niercli:mi- ia" c a t a l o g u e - . Jownd - e n d &lt;ova&gt;' w'v./fi ^. MI i\m inry ..- c h e a p it IK ;&#13;
' '-leaner a t h n m o , n n d besides sex- w h a t VO.J a r c ^itin:^..&#13;
j p o p u l a t i o n aj -cial -Jd^, a i ' u a d y&#13;
j s e n t 2^0.&#13;
] Thd 15 d r y e o u u t i e e t e c t to t h e&#13;
• G i r l s I n d u s t r i a l h o m e h i Deie-&#13;
' ware 'SJ .&#13;
i T h e lo" w e : c o a n t i e s , &gt;\J.&#13;
, T h e io d r y c o u n t i e s beet to the"&#13;
; O h i o p e n m t e u i a r y l(Hj.&#13;
' T h e 4d wet c&gt;ci:jf&#13;
iet.) e n t i t l e 1 oy&#13;
; PopuJnrion to ser;&lt;l Hl^, a e n o d i y i p a s t weeK IU Jneksjon.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
M r . oaker of D e t r o i t s p e n t S u n -&#13;
day a t tiic Lome oi L . LamOorJi&#13;
-Mr. a n d oiifc. jJdv;o S m i t h -at&#13;
O c a o i l O o . i C ' . . a i Ltic - u l U c O i&#13;
t - T e o i ^ t . 11 a . L o c o - i l e . « : . o i t i l e&#13;
\V c c k .&#13;
M l n . T . W a . n ^ C i l U . b ' j c i i L t i l t o&#13;
: 6U9.&#13;
i H i e 4o r i r v ^,: lie ties s t u ^ T c e i t o&#13;
i work h o u s e s 1 IS.&#13;
j i b e 41:&gt; w e t c o u n t i e s , e n t i t l e d by&#13;
' p o p u l a t i o n t o send d o i , a c t u a l l y&#13;
|sent9*J7. O u i ' e a p r i c e to pfty for&#13;
•the license m o n e y , especial! w h e n&#13;
t!ie ieu-ai t e n d e r is b o \ s a n d ^:rip,&#13;
men Hi]:} w o m e n . W.cat ' l o YOU&#13;
oirfc. L . T . L u n i b o r n a m i M r s .&#13;
\\ , ;y Caskey called on Mr*, JS.&#13;
W a t t e r s I ' L a r s d a y .&#13;
M •. ^ : 1 M ' ^ '^r h- - i' Mdner&#13;
called on Bert I; doei'f- S t t n d a y .&#13;
' thi• • k a b o u t&#13;
Rabeials' Almanac.&#13;
TLe e;i!'ii&lt;.&gt;t knewoi iilrranuic devoted&#13;
expressly to tlie \&lt;'ni- ef Issue was&#13;
pnbli-l'ed by 30ilxIaN ia 1 .".'33.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
jfdaster wtis ihf f errefl lov t o -&#13;
Saturday Special: ; o d n c h \o;-.un;'i A x n u n H u r \i&#13;
W J DANCER M O&#13;
'lav sen00&#13;
'•'.. 11; a n L J •&#13;
M i s . W i d H&#13;
ai lace.&#13;
'••1 11. i s&#13;
L b - 1 . . j j "&#13;
0&#13;
• i&#13;
. a - ' &gt; A J ?&#13;
pi'o^rain,&#13;
a. '.vnoi&#13;
p - n b ;&#13;
'i JJ _',&#13;
- o r -&#13;
un-&#13;
U b ) I \f&#13;
i i . U&#13;
w p e .•,&#13;
- t . M -&#13;
For Tired Women&#13;
With Aching Heads&#13;
" T h f y ' . ' I p jr&gt;' s o ::c..C'"rt , ^ : ^ I fln&lt;l&#13;
r r M ^ f a s fioon n ^ I b e r m t&lt;0.iriK y o u r&#13;
?:VUr.y K i d n e y P i l l s . " M r s . F r a n k 1'.&#13;
^ ' o o d , M o r r i l l , J l a i n c , T.. F . D . No. 2.&#13;
S o m e t i m e s i t s r - o m s ; , s if y o u c a n ' t&#13;
t t a n d t h e p a i n a c r o s s y o u r ba&lt;.k. I t&#13;
is ju.st m a k i n g 1 y o u r l i f e mi-sta-able&#13;
a n d r o b b i n g y o u e l l e n e r g y a n J&#13;
i l a ' \&#13;
L'l&#13;
: ^&#13;
T c O :&#13;
S t o e k h r i d g e . &gt;Ii-*li- V\ , s e c m,&#13;
T e a v h t - r - Wi.i, t JV w 1^1,.1^-,-&#13;
W r i I i f - - \ V i « * ] o r ! ^ v ) , n ( o t h e r iKMiple&#13;
n a n ' t k n o w . - rh!):i.]«-,yhj!\ HfH'ord.&#13;
R t r e n g t l i . "When y o u a r e c o n s - i a n t i y&#13;
t i r e d , h e a d a h v u y s a c ' c i n ? , n c r \ ' c s " o n&#13;
e d g e , " k i d n e y a c t i o n p . . i n f u l a n d burn--&#13;
i n p , t h e n i s tbfc l : m ^ u&gt; s t a r t i n a t&#13;
o n e © o n F o l e y K i d n e y P i l l s .&#13;
T h e y M r e n g t ! n _ n t h e V'i'ai;, a i l i n g&#13;
k i d r a y f ; , i m p r o v e t h e i r ncO&lt;-n, e n a b l e&#13;
il:f-m t o t h r o w off t h e p o i s o n s t h a t&#13;
c a u s e y o u r t r o u b l e . Y o u r n e r v e s fjrow&#13;
p e a c e f u l , s l e e p b e o o m e s . s o u n d e r , n e r v -&#13;
0119 h e a d a c h e s d i s a p p e a r . ,\.s M r s .&#13;
"Wood s a y s : " I find r e l i e f a s s o o n a s I&#13;
b e g i n tr&gt; t a k e y o u r F o l e y K i d n e y&#13;
P i l l s . " B e s u r e y o u g e t t h e g - e n u l n o&#13;
Yo).--\* K i d n e y P i l l s , f o r t h e y a r e&#13;
p u r e l y m e d i c i n a l . a n d - c o n t a i a n o&#13;
h a r m f u l d r u g s .&#13;
"FOP Sale Everywhere'&#13;
Time to Clean Up (1&#13;
bet Us WintheSpotless&#13;
Town Title For&#13;
Ourselves.&#13;
' J\\ 1 t o w :, &lt;••. j ., • ' : , f t v - \ - • -&#13;
ii.g fcncli \b Wis :.'"-&gt;r he--n rC ,^ A D .'&#13;
h e r e before. T h e allev.a, t h e int.*1&#13;
1&#13;
t h e b u i l d i i i ^ s , t h e h o m e s , in fact, j&#13;
all p a n s of t h e place s h o u l d tin- i&#13;
d e r g o g e n e r a l renovation. "Wneu!&#13;
it is all o v e r we !?t]oulrl be able t.o'&#13;
^ove it t n e title of " S p o t l e s s&#13;
T o w n . " L e t n s ^ e r t o g e t h e r and i&#13;
tlRrt BOinethiug. |&#13;
T h e boaeewbfe s n o n i d ^ e t '.&lt;&gt; n e r j&#13;
fcrpiou;; boas© c i e a n i u ^ . M r . H u b - j&#13;
by e h o o l d b© b e h t i n g t h e c a r p e t s , j&#13;
I t ' s t h e t:m«* TO Clean u p m?b t o l&#13;
Paint up. {&#13;
In other communities North;&#13;
Hoatb, Ka*t, and We*^, the Clean i&#13;
Xjp and Paint Cp period h&amp;e al-'&#13;
ways bf»en a big feoccea^ For&#13;
that reason under the pree^Lt RCiirity&#13;
and growth, onr town goonld&#13;
be able to show an interest in the&#13;
rt«nlt« that will compare favorably&#13;
with o*.her ''ommvi Duties'.&#13;
rhe baaiuea« men will ebow au&#13;
int«r«0t iu the movement, and will&#13;
laud rapport in any way pettibl?}&#13;
to aid in the cleaning up. 7bey&#13;
tkiak tb# Clean Up and Paint Up&#13;
aoTlBint is a snight j ^001 one,&#13;
n#t only to advertise, but to make&#13;
%h#town Attractive for the visitor.&#13;
A woman in Bay City, Mich.&#13;
whwrwtbe Clean Up and Paint&#13;
Up campaign was a big event last&#13;
yet, baeama diajrrontled baeaoaa&#13;
gfca nad worked4il»Bantl&gt; aii we#k&#13;
c . t - f l l l ' . M L '&#13;
h y f L e X ' d&#13;
touch t c - i&#13;
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- I 1 to keep t h e bowels active and regyla&#13;
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move the bowels gently, stimulate&#13;
the liver, cleans t h e system and puri'&#13;
fy the hlood. A splendid s-pring medicine.&#13;
2-V, at your druggist.&#13;
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a n d j/iadiy.&#13;
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weekly «na^k&gt;::ne* and ?ome of t h e&#13;
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North Hamburg&#13;
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mi^h'- cave :;eeti l^^rn^d in 2f)&#13;
year».&#13;
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of W o m e n fc C l a b a , t h e Soy Seoul,&#13;
t h e b*&gt;ard &lt;&gt;f h e a l t h , t h e city c o u n -&#13;
cil a n d m a n y o t h p r civir a n d&#13;
official eitgi.u«/atioLB island l&gt;ehind&#13;
t h e u3o?e;hrnt in practically e^very&#13;
city a n d v»wn i n t h e lTnttP&lt;i&#13;
Stsre**-.&#13;
have r e t u r n e ' I to C a m p T r a v . p . for W Mrs. VVUJ. Beuhan; s«r.t f. b o u - 1&#13;
q u e t of bfcntiful c a r r ^ t i o c s t o l M c C o r m i c g r a i n b i n d e r , M c C o r m i s : m o w e r , S u i k y plow, Oliverr}?&#13;
t h e ( d m r c b , E a a t * r S n n d a v . T h e y ! o s r i I a t i n S r u ^ i v a t o r . G r a i n drill, Milford c u l t i v a t o r , 6 0 t o o t h s p i k e f&#13;
w e r e a p p r e c i a t e d by a!'. j d r a g , S o u t h B e n d w a l k i n g plow. B e a n poller. H o r ^ e r a k e . c ^ r t , Ajax&#13;
j c u l t i v a t o r . S u r r e y , C a r n a g e r u n n e r s . W a g o n a n d S r o c k r a c k . 8 0 0 lb^&#13;
RHEUMATIC PAIN STOPPED j B a r n scales, d o u b l e t e a m h a r n e s s , 1-2 d o u b l e h a r n e s s , light d r i v i n g&#13;
•&gt;rt&#13;
PILLS BEAT FOR LIVER&#13;
Becaaae tfcay contain the beat&#13;
liver medici&amp;M, n o mattar how bitter&#13;
or aaaaealiatg for t h a awaet cofax&#13;
ooatioc bidaa t h e taate. Dr. King'*&#13;
New Life PiU* contain iagrediafita&#13;
that pat t h e liver workiac, m o r e the&#13;
boweli freely. No a*ipe, no naneea,&#13;
aid disaitfaa. Jmat t r y a bottle of&#13;
Or. Klas'a New U f e PiUa and notice&#13;
how much better you fe*&gt;J 2r,e. a t&#13;
r o a r DragHat.&#13;
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rtSk^^niX^d'to mZ£ s l e i « h s - B a r r e l c h u r n - 3 m i l k c a n s - f a r k s - sl'«A-H«. a b o u t 2 5 0 b u c o m&#13;
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t o - m e n t i o n .&#13;
Liniment. It stimulate* circulatkm&#13;
to t h e painful part. Jnar apply a s&#13;
directed t o t h e sore spots. In a&#13;
abort time t h e pain elves way to a&#13;
tingling sensation of comfort and&#13;
warmth. Here's proof—"I have had&#13;
wonderful relief since I used your Hn&#13;
iment on my knee. T o think, one&#13;
application g a r e me relief. Sorry I&#13;
havn't space t o tell yon t h e history.&#13;
Than king yon for what your remedy&#13;
has done for me. "—Jame« 6. Fergn&#13;
so, Philada, P a . Sloan's Liniment&#13;
kills pain. 25c, a t druggist*&#13;
* * a&#13;
eaj joni Avaasnptiiia taw l a&#13;
All sums of $5.00 and under, cash. On all sum* over that&#13;
amount, a credit of 7 months time will iw £»ven on good bankable&#13;
notes at 6 percent interest.&#13;
&amp;. E. F R O S T fr,i&#13;
7--&#13;
K*^. -&#13;
^. *&gt;•*». * • * * * &amp;</text>
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                <text>April 27, 1916 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>Pmcknev, Livingston County, Madn^an, Thursday, Ma ] ( ) ] i No. i&#13;
. - V&#13;
•5&#13;
The Ann Arbor On Bonding&#13;
M P . . | Our attention has been called to an&#13;
R y r e S u V a l article written by Mr. Jewell, relative4&#13;
to the good roada question and the polargumenta(&#13;
7). As we understand it&#13;
one believes it possible to make all&#13;
state roads, but all can be graveled and&#13;
made good so that everyone can easily&#13;
get out by a short drive,&#13;
i road.&#13;
I These bonds can be floated at 4 per&#13;
cent and issued from time to time as re-&#13;
Tbe Ann Arbor May Festival, to be&#13;
held May 17th, Lath, l'Jlh and 20th haa&#13;
abtsumed unusual proportions. A cast&#13;
of soloists such as never before haa been&#13;
aaaembled in Michigan or in this section&#13;
j&gt;f the country haa been engaged to&#13;
take part in the annual classic.&#13;
Aa usual it will consist of four evening&#13;
concerts and two matinees, with&#13;
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under&#13;
Frederick Stock, Conductor, The University&#13;
Choral Union, and a Special&#13;
Children's Chorus has of several hund- j&#13;
red voices under Director Stanley, furnishing&#13;
the musical background.&#13;
Frieda Hempel, the distinguished i&#13;
coloratura soprano of the Metropolitan i&#13;
Opera Co., whose success has been j&#13;
sensational, will be heard in a miscellaneous&#13;
program at the Wednesday '•&#13;
evening concert.&#13;
Thursday evening the Choral Union |&#13;
will present a new choral work "Paradise&#13;
Lost," by Bossil. Florence Hinkle,&#13;
America's favorite soprano; Sophie j&#13;
Braslau, Contralto of the Metropolitan!&#13;
Opera Co., Reinald Werrenrath, whose;&#13;
tour with Geraldine Farrar has attracted&#13;
so much attention; and Gustaf Holmijuist,&#13;
a bass of wide recognition, will '&#13;
take the solo parts. ;&#13;
At the Friday afternoon concert the&#13;
Children's Chorus will in appear in a&#13;
sparkling work by Pierne "The Chil-;&#13;
dren at Bethlehem". Florence Hinkle i&#13;
Will also appear as soprano soloist. The j The B .Snarp Club held its April me»-t&#13;
Children's Chorous has become a prom-1 ing on the 27th, at the home of Mrs. F&#13;
Lent feature and their contributions j Swarthout.&#13;
this year are of an unusaually import- ' the roll va&#13;
icy of bonding, therefore we have not&#13;
time nor inclination to answer all his Dexter in a slugging match, by a score&#13;
Pinckney H. S. Wins&#13;
First Game Saturday&#13;
The Pinckney High School Ball Team&#13;
won their first game this year, with&#13;
of ,lH to 28. As this is the first game&#13;
the object of bonding is to builJ the the most of the boys were ever in, their&#13;
roads as soon as possible so that All may courage has risen considerable as the&#13;
enjoy what they are paying for. No | outcome of this game. The next game&#13;
will be played on the home grounds,&#13;
next Saturday with South Lyons, the&#13;
field where the race track used to be,&#13;
to a state ' having been secured to play on. W x t&#13;
Tuesday Howell will play here and&#13;
May 17th, Dexter will return the game&#13;
here. The line-up last Saturday was&#13;
quired. Their payment merit can extend ' a s follows, Lester Swarthout, p; Koche&#13;
over a period of time so that our high- Shehan, c; Raymond Harris, Latb; Harway&#13;
tax yearly will only be j or i what i low Shehan, 2nd b; L^wis Harris, s s;&#13;
Percy Mowers, 3rd b; Verne Kenedy, r&#13;
f; Hernian Vedder, r f ; Will Clark 1 f;&#13;
and Ly'ie Hendee, c f.&#13;
The Brighton H. S. team came over&#13;
Wednesday afternoon and were beaten&#13;
22 to 2. Hendee pitched for the local&#13;
is now. instead of a few paying this&#13;
sum it will be paid in part by tne younger&#13;
generation and people who move in&#13;
iatter. It will increase property values&#13;
more than any other improvement. The&#13;
interest on what we now pay will be&#13;
worth and will cost just as much as it | team, holding the Brighton boys down!&#13;
will when the bonds are finally paid.&#13;
Money is worth its value, whether in&#13;
our pocket, our bank, or invested in&#13;
roads. Conservative Hamburg investigated&#13;
the question carefully and carried&#13;
:± to i. The sum asked is not&#13;
large for the township considering the&#13;
benefit to be derived. Dr. H. F. Sigler.&#13;
in fine shape. He also made the only&#13;
home run during the game.&#13;
The B Sharp Club&#13;
o"t nature.&#13;
Friday evening will bring to Ann Ar-&#13;
1. -&gt;r for the first time that eminent Irish&#13;
tenor, John McCormac, who will appear&#13;
in a program of miscellaneous numbers, ' ing&#13;
especially chosen for the occasion. To&#13;
All members responded to&#13;
and the minutes of the&#13;
Mai'ch meeting were read, after which&#13;
the programme was given with Miss&#13;
Florence Kice as leader. Schuman was&#13;
the composer chosen for the Aprii meet-&#13;
~e;ections from his composition?&#13;
were given by Miss Kice, Mrs. Swartbear&#13;
so eminent an artist under so fav-! hout, Miss Harris, Miss Martin, Mrs&#13;
memor-&#13;
Pay As You Go j&#13;
The following article is taken from&#13;
the Prairie Farmer, and printed by&#13;
request.&#13;
A civil engineer who specializes in !&#13;
road building can prove that by [paying i&#13;
cash you can get 2£ times as much good&#13;
highway for your money AH when you '&#13;
put out a bond issue on which interest;&#13;
is paid and a sinking fund provided.&#13;
Usually highway bonds bear interest at '&#13;
the rate of !iv,e per cent. The corpora- |&#13;
tioii, town, city, county or state, that '&#13;
puts them out, agrees to set aside a&#13;
certain sum every year to insure itsj&#13;
payment when due. They run from 1&#13;
2D to 25 years. About the time the j&#13;
bond issue becomes due and the total of j&#13;
Pearson and Miss Gardner. Mrs. Dun money paid out has equaled 2h times&#13;
ning. Mrs. Pearson, Mrs. Swarthout j the cost of the improvement, the work&#13;
and Miss Curlett gave readings from j must be done over again.&#13;
his life. Miss Joseph^e Harris in a | Another bond issue is sold and the&#13;
orable conditions will mark a&#13;
able occasion.&#13;
The fifth concert Saturday afternoon&#13;
will bring to Ann Arbor Ralph Kinder,&#13;
well known concert organist and com- j very pleasing manner gTFve a humorous I community undertakes to pay 2½ times&#13;
me&#13;
poser. Kvery organist, of note is fa- reading on music. A dainty luncheon ] the cost of doing the work over. Why&#13;
milliar with his work in both fields, j was served after which a social hour j not pay as the work is done.' The reawhilfc&#13;
those interested in this partic- was indulged in. Miss Harris will be&#13;
ular instrument are especially happy a t j leader for the May meeting, and Miss&#13;
his selection. j Martin will act as hostess.&#13;
The climax of the festival will be ! *&#13;
reached, however in the last concert&#13;
Saturday evening, when Saint-Saens'&#13;
"Samson and Delilah", one of the&#13;
ciost famaliar and melodiouB operas&#13;
adaptable to the concert stage, will be&#13;
given bv an all-star cast composed of&#13;
Kasquale Amato, Baritone, who will&#13;
^ake the part of the High Priest; Morgan&#13;
Kingston, Tenor of the Century&#13;
Opera Co., will appear in the roll of&#13;
"Sarnson"; and Margarete Matzenauer,&#13;
whose "Delilah" at at the Metropolitan&#13;
Opera Co., has been sensational;&#13;
and Reinald Werrenrath, who will appear&#13;
in the role of "Abimilech" and&#13;
the "Old Hebrew".&#13;
- With so select a sanes of offerings&#13;
unusual interest has been awakened&#13;
throughout the state and country and&#13;
musicians and music lovers from all&#13;
What is Said About&#13;
Prohibition Cities I&#13;
Mayor Gill of Seatle says, "I tell&#13;
these people just what I can see with&#13;
my own eyes that prohibition hag been&#13;
a wonderful thing for Seattle. 1 know&#13;
men who keep their families clothed&#13;
and their grocery hills paid who, in the&#13;
days of the saloon never had a nickle&#13;
men whom I've seen almost every day&#13;
for years, i know that times are better.&#13;
Mayor Fawcett of Lacoma says, 'Shoe&#13;
Dealers fray there rs now an unpreee&#13;
dented sale of childrens shoes. Merchants&#13;
generally report increasing trade&#13;
especially in women's and children's&#13;
wares. Grocers all report growing&#13;
business and much better collections.&#13;
son is that a community is persuaded&#13;
that a highway improvement can be&#13;
made permanent so permanent that&#13;
not only this generation, but future will&#13;
reap the benelit, but you can see the&#13;
fallacy of that reasoning.&#13;
A. P. Brady, La Salle Co., 111.&#13;
New Officers&#13;
Saturday night the 0. E. S. Chapter&#13;
installed the following officers for the&#13;
ensuing year,&#13;
quarters will appear in large numbers • p r o h , b i t ] o n has not hurt business at all;&#13;
for the occasion. 1 -t 1S better t h a n for s o n o e v e a r 8 a n r l is&#13;
The sale of tickets has been excep- | i m p r o v i n K a l l t h e t i r n e .&#13;
•icnally heavy, but there is still a lim- I ^ % . 0 „ . u ^ f . x p r e ^ thu ^ f f ^ r e n -&#13;
•;t«d number available which will be d i a - j t h e r p i s i n t h e c i t y n f D e n v c r u n d e r&#13;
posed of on a series basis up to May 6,&#13;
ifter which time such tickets as have&#13;
not been sold for the course, will be&#13;
offered for the individual concert.&#13;
Persons desiring further information&#13;
W. M.&#13;
W. P.&#13;
A, M.&#13;
Sec'y.&#13;
Treas.&#13;
Cond.&#13;
A. Com&#13;
Adah -&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Esther-&#13;
Martha&#13;
Electa&#13;
Georgia Van Winkle&#13;
Carey Van Winkle&#13;
-Marion Pearson&#13;
Lila Swarthout&#13;
Edith Can-&#13;
Florence Kice&#13;
1 Sadie Read&#13;
Mattie Allison&#13;
Lucy Reason&#13;
Louise Wilcox&#13;
- Carmen Leland&#13;
Aria Gardner&#13;
Warder- Mary Swarthout&#13;
Chaplain Addie Potterton&#13;
Marshal Margaret Flintoft&#13;
Organist Blanche Martin&#13;
Sentin*- John Martin&#13;
or a&#13;
rhc':l&#13;
r-opy of the Illustrated Booklet,&#13;
d address the Secretary.&#13;
prohibition. Some of the most disreputable&#13;
old places have been rehabilitated&#13;
and fairly shine with cleanliness and&#13;
displays of various kinds. It is remarkable&#13;
and illuminating aUo, to see how&#13;
many of them are selling food. O&#13;
may opened a candy store near t h e . The annual meeting of the Michigan j&#13;
high school. He says cutting off the j G u o d Ko a c jg Association at Battle.Creek '&#13;
expense for license, the long hours, , M a y y^ ! : t n &gt; w j j | be a good school for |&#13;
electric fijrn, etc., that he is making ! r o f l H builder?. The law allows per diem&#13;
Meeting of Goon Roads Asso- !*&#13;
^ciation At Bam? Creek May 10&#13;
more money selling candy than he ever&#13;
did selling booze.&#13;
Uss Hook aid Line Hereafter&#13;
In Tatiu "Rroik" Fish&#13;
Spearing sucker*, mullet, red-sides&#13;
and grats pike is a kind of sport which&#13;
is very much enjoyed by soma resident&#13;
every spring. It is no longer lawful to&#13;
use a jack in spearing, and this will reduce&#13;
the number of fiah taken each season.&#13;
Using a dip net haa been a favorite&#13;
method in taking these kinds of&#13;
"rough fish" though it is a slower and&#13;
lees active method than using a sbear.&#13;
Since last Sunday it is unlawful to use&#13;
a p e a r o r n e t until next seaaon. Hook', t b e i r i1?™- Here were pw?hente&lt;l to| nourJslfc* food, lots of out door ex-&#13;
Earliest Theater.&#13;
What Mas probably one of (lie earliest&#13;
theaters built was the theater of&#13;
Diouy*iup. which was l*egun five centuries&#13;
l*efore Christ. The mating capacity&#13;
of thin remarkable building IK said&#13;
to have been ,T0.&lt;*X&gt;, nearly four times&#13;
that nf our largest amusement palace.&#13;
road builders.&#13;
wages and actual expenses to be paid&#13;
t:&gt; township highway commissioners&#13;
who attend and the highway commissioner&#13;
who is in earnest on the road&#13;
question can render his township value&#13;
received by taking in this convention.&#13;
South Lyon Herald.&#13;
TO RID CHILD OF WORMS&#13;
Don't, scold the nervous, fretful&#13;
child. Often its due to worms. Get&#13;
The flicau-r 1 / 0 1 0 1 ^ 0 « was" orcJi«l f « ot t h £ f t&#13;
b y ^ ^ S L ^ S H f 1 1 t 0 I i T&#13;
. , , ^ , ' , lOsjaoge Klckapoo Worm Killer, a lax&#13;
when Greek a r t ami literature were ln| a - ^ ^ O P m candy. Give only plain,&#13;
a n i l i n e only are th^ r r ^ t h ^ by which I ^ ^ ^ 2 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ n¾o u r l¾s t t ^°; f1o od,* °l o*ts *o f^ ou^ t do*or* e"x*- f*i_s.h may b. e *c apt.u red. aAftIeTr AAZp-rIiTl M30Mth. works of Aeac1iylii&lt; Sophocles audi stools And c&lt;&#13;
Hastings Banner Earipkte*.&#13;
_ continue giving Kickajwo&#13;
Wovm&amp;bEonges, they will positively f?&#13;
remote the vflnua. 26c. at druggist*. -&#13;
•Ti&#13;
TRADE AT&#13;
For Cash&#13;
Anil Save Money&#13;
£» ax $es\ S\oc\u £&gt;o\» es\."Pr'vcfcs&#13;
Our Saturday Grocery&#13;
Specials Will Surprise You&#13;
Do not fail to get&#13;
Our L o w Price&#13;
on Flour, Saturday,&#13;
M a y 6th&#13;
»&#13;
Ten Different Brands to&#13;
Select From.&#13;
»iv*^*&gt;+H^+.f*&gt;4 *•••*»•»•*»*»+•-&#13;
PENING! ' * •&#13;
1&#13;
Our F';un:ain &gt; iiuvv upt-n lor the&#13;
-fd-on, ami \vc* mo^t ojrdiMly inviie&#13;
\ ou t o '^i\'fj u*- .L trial.&#13;
" T o PlfM^.1 your I'.ilaH1, ' i ^ o u r Kuiin-&#13;
\.',n m o ' i o , a n d w 1 oelievc &lt;tiir -^Tvirti:-&#13;
-jii-t ,1 l i ' i l r OH b e t t e r t h a n c \ e r \&gt;rl&#13;
' I P ' .&#13;
\ c l v i ; Hrand h v ( n a m n n r l e bv&#13;
•he I )^1 roil C r e a m e r v ( J I . , u n d e r the'&#13;
mo?! sanitar\" condit!o!i-&gt; k n o w n will b e&#13;
used. O u r flavors are t h e T r u e F r u i t&#13;
Kla\ ors m a d e by J . H u n ^ e r l o r d S m i t h .&#13;
Lastly ever d r i n k wil! lie &lt;ev\ ed in s a n -&#13;
iiarv p a p e r dishc**-&#13;
We serve ( h o c o l a t r a n d X'anilbt vTeam&#13;
We. also r a k e o r d e r s for !)ri&lt;^k &lt; r e a m&#13;
kmd faney m o l d s , such a s flowers. 1 « * ! ^&#13;
enililcms. a n i m a l s , in fart a n y thin*;- that,&#13;
von w a n t in ira e r e n m .&#13;
m*m&#13;
1&#13;
.¾¾&#13;
Pinckney* Mich. •Mi&#13;
. • ' • • « ' • . .&#13;
•vy. * L •!*••S M m*&#13;
* rviN&#13;
&amp;*z&#13;
iu«s?&amp;iriMK&#13;
J*:&#13;
• ^ • w a s t t o ^ V ^ a i • • , 1 ( ^ ^ . , . - . - • - . — « « » . . . ^ . - f - , - . , » v »•)&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ffe*&#13;
&amp;£&#13;
T&#13;
S#? - h5*- *&#13;
bo-&#13;
ONE BEA&#13;
Tkei&#13;
r5 aivd 5hmb&#13;
rTare and Cviltivatiorv.&#13;
KEEPING A GOOD STAND OF RED CLOVER Everywhere!&#13;
You Go&#13;
Everywhere&#13;
They Know : i . - £ . T _ .&#13;
- 3 C T&#13;
Alabastine&#13;
Heavy Second Crop of Clover.&#13;
The Neatest Yard Hat a Smooth Lawn.&#13;
THE FRONT YARD&#13;
By E. VAN BENTHUYSEN.&#13;
The neatest yard now has a smooth&#13;
lawn gTass sod kept closely mown,&#13;
while ^the flowers and shrubbery are&#13;
restricted to the sides and rear. This&#13;
n o t only renders the lawn more easily&#13;
k e p t than where there are flower&#13;
toeda to mow around and trim, or trees&#13;
o r shrubs to dodge, but it is really&#13;
more restful in app3&amp;rance.&#13;
If there is room for only one shrub,&#13;
l e t it be Hydrangea paniculata, the&#13;
magnificent tresses of bloom lasting&#13;
for weeks.&#13;
It should be cut back every spring&#13;
fully half of the previous year's&#13;
growth. While this may go against&#13;
t h e will it insures larger blossoms and&#13;
more of them.&#13;
A liberal mulching with stable&#13;
manure Is also in order. Roots may&#13;
be transplanted in either spring or&#13;
fall.&#13;
The Deutzias have extreme haralness,&#13;
neat form, profusion of bloom&#13;
and early blossoms to commend them,&#13;
a n d are worthy of a place in riny collection&#13;
Several of the Spireas are beautiful&#13;
with graceful rose colored or white&#13;
blossoms. While not all of these&#13;
withstand the late frosts which come&#13;
In May, just when they are ready to&#13;
p u t forth their feathery bloom, the&#13;
beauty of the blossoms when they are&#13;
perfect atones for an occasional miss.&#13;
Among June blossoms none are&#13;
greater favorites than the syringa or&#13;
mock orange, the flowers being as&#13;
fragrant as beautiful. While the&#13;
shrub itself is perfectly hardy, late&#13;
frosts sometimes kill the buds; and&#13;
an observing grower gives the rule&#13;
that there will be orange blossoms&#13;
v h e n there will be peaches.&#13;
Calycanthus is a curious shrub,&#13;
the brownish blossom being odorous&#13;
of strawberries, yet with so many&#13;
beautlfu as well as fragrant bloseoms&#13;
It could scarcely head the list.&#13;
Purple fringe is an odd plant, the&#13;
name smoke tree perhaps more accurately&#13;
describing the appearance afte&#13;
r midsummer, when the pedicels&#13;
lengthen, brfc^c/a and bear long plumy&#13;
hairs, either greenish or tinged with&#13;
red.&#13;
The Spigelia is handsome when In&#13;
bloom,'the tubular blossoms of white,&#13;
rose or purple being produced in pro&#13;
fusion. A variety with leaves variegated&#13;
with gold is especially pleasing.&#13;
Instead of planting in rows the&#13;
fancy is now to group the shrubs and&#13;
the flowers for cutting. Place the&#13;
taller ones in the rear with the shorter&#13;
ones in front&#13;
Arrange that the blooming season&#13;
shall be prolonged throughout the&#13;
summer and see that no two specimens&#13;
with blossoms which do not har&#13;
monize in color shall be in bloom&#13;
side by side at the same time.&#13;
PLANTS FOR NORTH WINDOWS&#13;
By BETTY PAKE.&#13;
To make boxes in windows with a&#13;
northern exposure attractive and&#13;
cheerful fill them with the following&#13;
plants:&#13;
For vines, plant either variegated&#13;
vlncas or English ivy, or both intermingled.&#13;
Vincas are very bright, but&#13;
they will not survive exposure to&#13;
freezing temperature, while English&#13;
Ivy will stand unhurt all through the&#13;
winter. Either of these vines should&#13;
be planted about one foot apart. The&#13;
main part of the boxes can be planted&#13;
with begonias, which can be procured&#13;
from any florist In various colors,&#13;
white, pink, red. The boxes, if planted&#13;
wholly with material of a uniform&#13;
height, are apt to have an artificial&#13;
appearance, to prevent which, plants&#13;
that grow taller and having a more&#13;
graceful habit should be placed, say,&#13;
one to every half dozen of the others,&#13;
and for this purpose few plants equal&#13;
dracaena terminals.&#13;
Pansies do fairly well in the shade,&#13;
and so does Balvia or scarlet sage. If&#13;
English lvey is used for a vine, it will be&#13;
found to be of advantage in that when&#13;
the other plants In the boxes are&#13;
killed by frost the ivy remains and can&#13;
be left all winter, with the space taken&#13;
up by the other plants filled witr&#13;
small evergreens.&#13;
i • — y r&#13;
7i;\-?f.. •&#13;
i*'*ft&#13;
(Prepared by the United States Department&#13;
of AKrteuhure.)&#13;
Red clover is commonly seeded with&#13;
small grain which is called the nurse&#13;
crop. This nurse crop serves two&#13;
functions, it keeps the weeds down and&#13;
it produces a money crop while the&#13;
clover la making its first year's&#13;
growth. Whether it is wise to use a&#13;
nurse crop depends on so many things&#13;
that it cannot be discussed within the&#13;
limits of a brief article; it has been&#13;
abundantly shown, however, that If&#13;
weeds are kept down by clipping, the&#13;
clover will make a better growth when&#13;
sown alone than when with a nurse&#13;
crop. In dry seasons the nurse crop&#13;
is pretty certain to cause the death&#13;
of the clover by taking all the moisture&#13;
and then leaving the young plants&#13;
exposed to the heat of a July or August&#13;
sun when In a weakened condition&#13;
by reason of the lack of moisture.&#13;
If a nurse crop is used care&#13;
should be taken not to seed It too&#13;
thkkly, since the thicker the grain&#13;
crop the more certain it is to smother&#13;
the clover or to take all the moisture&#13;
and leave the soil dry at harvest time.&#13;
Of the BmalL grains rye shades the&#13;
ground the least and oats the most&#13;
and these crops represent both extremes&#13;
of desirableness so far as red&#13;
clover is concerned. The most frequent&#13;
causes of the death of young&#13;
clover are the drought and heat to&#13;
which the plants are subjected upon&#13;
the removal of the grain crop. The&#13;
amount of injury caused will, of&#13;
course, depend on the season.&#13;
Injury will also be worse on soils&#13;
deficient in humus since these run together&#13;
and dry out more than soils&#13;
having plenty of organic matter. Top&#13;
dressing the fields with manure during&#13;
late winter is as good a preventive of&#13;
this danger as can be suggested. The&#13;
manure will not only prevent loss of&#13;
moisture but will furnish plant food&#13;
for the young clover, making stronger&#13;
plants, better able to withstand&#13;
drought. It is also advisable to leave&#13;
thb grain stubble as long as possible&#13;
so as to afford shelter to the young&#13;
plants.&#13;
If there is a good stand of clover on&#13;
a field in September and October&#13;
thore is every reason to expect a good&#13;
stand in spring, barring, of course,&#13;
most unusual weather conditions. If,&#13;
however, the soil Is deficient in lime&#13;
the plant, though appearing fair in&#13;
the fall, may lack the vigor to go&#13;
through even a reasonably mild winter.&#13;
Two mistakes are often made,&#13;
and these should be guarded against&#13;
The young clover should not be pastured&#13;
closely in the fall, nor should it&#13;
be allowed to Beed. Last fall, owing&#13;
to the favorable summer young clover&#13;
was found blossoming and seeding in&#13;
many fields. This is bad because it&#13;
weakens the plants and increases the&#13;
number of clover-seed insects, the late&#13;
broods finding these flower heads a&#13;
fine place in which to lay eggs which&#13;
hatch into larvae, many of which may&#13;
live over the next winter.&#13;
Provided there is lime and phosphorus&#13;
enough in the land, secondyear&#13;
clover should give little trouble&#13;
unless attacked by root borers or oth-&#13;
VALUABLE FEED FOR SWINE&#13;
Pigs Receiving Rape Pasture In Addition&#13;
to Corn Make Big Daily&#13;
Average Gains,&#13;
er insects. There are leaf-eating Insects&#13;
that do damage locally and some&#13;
fungi have been known to kill whole&#13;
fields or to reduce yields, but the insects&#13;
working on the roots probably&#13;
give more trouble than other insects&#13;
or than diseases. When a field becomes&#13;
infested with root-eating Insects&#13;
there is nothing to do but plow&#13;
it up. The fact that insects and diseases&#13;
of all kinds increase in clover&#13;
fields is one of the best reasons why&#13;
such a field should not be kept longer&#13;
than two years.&#13;
The principles of successful clover&#13;
growing may be summarized as follows:&#13;
Give the clover a chance to make a&#13;
healthy plant by adding lime, phosphorus&#13;
and potash to soils that need&#13;
them. In some way add vegetable&#13;
matter to the soil and keep up the&#13;
supply by turning under clover often&#13;
enough.&#13;
Give the seed a fair chance by placing&#13;
it in mellow soil and covering it&#13;
from one-half to one inch deep.&#13;
If sown with a nurse crop, give the&#13;
young plants a chance by not seeding&#13;
the grain crop too thickly, by top&#13;
dressing with manure if practicable,&#13;
and by cutting the stubble as high as&#13;
possible.&#13;
For further information the reader&#13;
Is referred to Farmers' Bulletin No. [&#13;
455 of the United States department&#13;
of agriculture. i&#13;
FOR 35 years Alabastine has&#13;
been the choice of housewives&#13;
who take particular&#13;
pride in the decoration of&#13;
their homes.&#13;
For 35 years Alabastine has&#13;
been sold everywhere by paint,&#13;
hardware, drug, and general&#13;
stores. It is known by dealers&#13;
and users alike as the "tint beautiful"&#13;
for walls and ceilings.&#13;
Alabastine is adr" powder that&#13;
mixes perfectly in cokl water! You&#13;
can apply it yourself or your local&#13;
painter will do the work reasonably.&#13;
Be sure that you set Alabastine&#13;
brought on the job in properly&#13;
labeled packages.&#13;
Free Color Plans&#13;
The best decorators advise the use&#13;
of stencils to produce contrasting&#13;
wall and ceiling borders. Ordinarily,&#13;
stencils cost from SO cents to&#13;
13.00 each: but if you will write for&#13;
the free "Alabastine Packet," containing&#13;
hand colored proofs of 12 of&#13;
the very latest stencil effects, we&#13;
wul tell you how you can have&#13;
your choice of these and 500&#13;
others at practically no expense.&#13;
Write today for this absoiuUiy&#13;
frm decorating nrvic*.&#13;
Alabastine Co.&#13;
3MGnavO»U GrassRases*, Mick.&#13;
BUILDING A POULTRY HOUSE&#13;
Extreme Open-Front Structure Fur&#13;
nishes Ideal Conditions—Roosting&#13;
Closet Desirable.&#13;
Ominous.&#13;
The veteran hobo was initiating a&#13;
new recruit into the mysteries of&#13;
panhandling.&#13;
"It's like die. Buddy," be explained.&#13;
"When one of us 'bos visits a house&#13;
we puts a mark on de gatepost ter&#13;
show wot kind of a reception we gits.&#13;
Den de next guy wot cornea along&#13;
looks at de mark an' acka accordin'."&#13;
"What do you do when you don't&#13;
find no mark on de gate," asked the&#13;
novice.&#13;
"In dat case we Aggers dat de last&#13;
guv wot was dere came out so fast he&#13;
didn't have time to leave no mark, so&#13;
we passes de place up."&#13;
A house with a large area of glass&#13;
and no muslin has a high moisture&#13;
content and low temperature, accompanied&#13;
with 0apid changes. An extreme&#13;
open-front house furnishes ideal&#13;
conditions, providing the birds are protected&#13;
from rain, BDOW and drafts.&#13;
A house, the front of which contains&#13;
gome muslin and glass is a very efficient&#13;
type. Hollow tile construction&#13;
makes a very desirable house, but it is&#13;
doubtful whether at the present prices&#13;
of tile and mason labor the resulting&#13;
increased cost warrants its use. A&#13;
roosting closet with double walls is&#13;
desirable in shed-roof laying houses.&#13;
The providing of ample means of&#13;
properly ventilating shed-roof, paper&#13;
covered houses adds greatly in reducing&#13;
temperature during spring and&#13;
summer. Tongued and grooved boards&#13;
for the outside wall when covered&#13;
with a layer of building paper are&#13;
reasonable in cost and supply in a&#13;
great measure the nonradiating qualities&#13;
of a double wall.&#13;
Not at All Belligerent.&#13;
"So you are the editor cf a western&#13;
newspaper?"&#13;
"Yes," replied the unobtrusive looking&#13;
man.&#13;
"I suppose you have your private&#13;
cemetery filled with persons who have&#13;
differed with you in the past?"&#13;
"Oh, no. American humorists have&#13;
given you the wrong impression of&#13;
journalism in the West. While I keep&#13;
a six-shooter on my desk, I merely use&#13;
it as a paperweight."&#13;
• m&#13;
The animal husbandry department&#13;
of South Dakota Agricultural college&#13;
conducted an Interesting experiment&#13;
to determine the comparative ralne of&#13;
hogging off corn with and without&#13;
rape.* It was learned that the ptgs receiYing&#13;
rape pasture in addition to&#13;
corn made a daily average gain of 1.28&#13;
pounds, while those receiving corn&#13;
only, gained but 1.06 pounds.&#13;
SILO SAVES MUCH FEED COST&#13;
In Soft River Valley in Arizona, «Howtn§&#13;
T f w t v •&#13;
Begin Planning for Place to Store&#13;
Green Fodder Necessary for Cattle&#13;
During Winter.&#13;
It's none too soon to begin to plan&#13;
on that silo for next fail. If yon&#13;
hare not a silo now yon should be&#13;
frifr..&lt;ng to see if yon couldn't maJce&#13;
food o n of one this year.&#13;
A cOo or two oa every t a r a last&#13;
year would hswo saeant the sartaf of&#13;
Blood In Milk.&#13;
Blood in milk is caused by ruptures&#13;
of the small blood vessels in the udder,&#13;
allowing blood to flow into the milk&#13;
ducts. Nothing can be done to prevent&#13;
ft Its appearance is not a sign of disease.&#13;
Frequently the ruptures are&#13;
caused by the cow striking her udder&#13;
against something.&#13;
a lot of feed that was more or less of&#13;
a loss without the silo.&#13;
DEFINITION OF PERFECT SOIL&#13;
Sand, Clay. Lime and Organic Matter&#13;
Are Named as Necessary Ingredients&#13;
by Ohio Expert.&#13;
Prof. Alfred Vivian, head of the department&#13;
of agricultural chemistry of&#13;
Ohio State university, defines a perfect&#13;
soil as "one which contains the&#13;
ingredients in perfect proportions;&#13;
sand, to enable it to absorb sir and&#13;
moisture in proper amounts and to&#13;
render it warm and friable; clay, to&#13;
keep it cool, and prevent a too rapid&#13;
leaching or evaporation of water;&#13;
lime, to assist in the decay of vegetable&#13;
matter, and organic matter to&#13;
retain the best amount of moisture&#13;
and to furnish material for the various&#13;
chemteal processes continually&#13;
going on in good soils."&#13;
summet.ume Excataons&#13;
Always In&#13;
More sheep should be raised The&#13;
for laaab and motto* fts s i&#13;
See Cali/WBits&#13;
' - fatos 8 orchards&#13;
_ pasifapYosorife Very-lew fates&#13;
3TK* totOXSt-flttjet&#13;
economy wtt h&#13;
personal escort.&#13;
T O C a l i f o r n i a only $ 7 3 3 0 r o o d trio&#13;
from Caeeago, $ 7 0 from St. Look and&#13;
( 6 0 f r o * PBasoori River. On sale May 1&#13;
to Sept. 3 0 : fes) W L Oct. 3 1 . StiB&#13;
lower fsres June 9 to 16 sad Jnry 33 to&#13;
3 0 ; fed await, two&#13;
CaJMcrm^hasadeBgatralsmnnwrflinsI* won! by&#13;
*he sea sad in mountains—right time to sse crowing&#13;
crops. In vineyards sad orchards ons finds delirioui&#13;
grap«a. apricots, peaches, figs and Valencia&#13;
oranges. Berries and melons etna* early; almonds&#13;
sad pears etnas later. Har testing wheat sad rotting&#13;
green fields of alfalfa are other June-July sctrrkias.&#13;
PersooaBy-eaadiicted patties in tourist sleepers&#13;
enable you to make to* journey in eomfart and&#13;
with &lt;&#13;
FMd Harvey metis and&#13;
BOSS. Write me for full detaikef land&#13;
and especiafly ask lor thai "&#13;
^ K *&#13;
" • « &gt; *&#13;
. ' ' * • :&#13;
\X • &gt; &gt; » • * # • »&#13;
s?'&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
: zmzr&#13;
&lt; • • - • . •&#13;
BEGIM HOT WATER&#13;
BOKTIFEEL MGIT&#13;
nays glaM of hot water with&#13;
phosphate before breakfast&#13;
washes out poisons*&#13;
If you wake up with a bad taste, bad&#13;
breath and tongue is coated; II your&#13;
head is dull or aching; II what you eat&#13;
sours and forms gas and acid In stomach,&#13;
or you are bilious, constipated,&#13;
nervous, sallow and can't get feeling&#13;
just right, begin drinking phosphated&#13;
hot water. Drink before breakfast, a&#13;
glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful&#13;
of limestone phosphate in i t&#13;
This will flush the poisons and toxins&#13;
from stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels&#13;
and cleanse, sweeten and purify&#13;
the entire alimentary tract Do your&#13;
inside bathing immediately upon arising&#13;
in the morning to wash out of the&#13;
system all the previous day's polBonous&#13;
waste, gases and sour bile before&#13;
putting more food into the stomach.&#13;
To feel like young folks feel; like&#13;
you felt before your blood, nerves and&#13;
muscles became loaded with body Impurities,&#13;
get from your druggist or&#13;
storekeeper a.quarter pound of limestone&#13;
phosphate which is inexpensive&#13;
and almost tasteless, except for a&#13;
sourish tinge which is not unpleasant&#13;
Just as soap and hot water act on&#13;
the skin, cleansing, sweetening and&#13;
freshening, so hot water and limestone&#13;
phosphate act on the stomach,&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and&#13;
women who are usually constipated,&#13;
bilious, headachy or have any stomach&#13;
disorder should begin this inside bathing&#13;
before breakfast. They are assured&#13;
they will become real cranks on&#13;
the subject shortly.—Adv.&#13;
Samson was the first actor to bring&#13;
down a house—and he was killed in&#13;
the fall.&#13;
AFTER SIX YEARS&#13;
OF SUFFERING&#13;
Woman Made Well by Lydia&#13;
EL Pinkham'a Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Columbus, Ohio.—"I had almost given&#13;
tap. I had been sick for six years with&#13;
female troubles and&#13;
nervousness. I had&#13;
a pain in my right&#13;
side and could not&#13;
eat anything without&#13;
h u r t i n g m y&#13;
stomach. I could&#13;
not drink cold water&#13;
at all nor eat any&#13;
kind of raw fruit,&#13;
nor fresh meat nor&#13;
chicken. From 178&#13;
pounds I went to&#13;
118 and would get so weak at times that&#13;
I fell over. I began to take Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and&#13;
ten days later I could eat and it did not&#13;
hurt my stomach. I have taken the&#13;
medicine ever since and I feel like a&#13;
new woman. I now weigh 127 pounds&#13;
so you can see what it has done for me&#13;
already. My husband says he knows&#13;
your medicine has saved my life."—&#13;
Mrs. J. S. BARLOW, 1624 South 4th S t ,&#13;
Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
contains just the virtues of roots&#13;
and herbs needed to restore health and&#13;
strength to the weakened organs of the&#13;
body. That is why Mrs. Barlow, a&#13;
chronic invalid, recovered so completely.&#13;
It pays for women suffering from any&#13;
female ailments to insist upon having&#13;
Lydia £ . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
Skin Muddy?&#13;
Dull eyes, blotches and other aids&#13;
M»«ifah»« result from a disordered dk&#13;
geatkn. Purify the blood, tone the&#13;
stomach, gently stimulate the liver and&#13;
regulate the bowels and bile with BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS SeWefAs* laes*&#13;
Me*]&#13;
F o r F H l M Use AseirsPersaysafialBL&#13;
Far sate fey a l Dranteta, sr ssst ansa re.&#13;
adststncpsrtssM&#13;
BOMS UMEDTCa&#13;
GALLSTONES&#13;
$823^55 i££r25*y FREE&#13;
W. N. U„ DCTROIT, MO. 1ft-1t1ft.&#13;
LATEST CORSET COVER&#13;
&amp;&#13;
NEW LINES MADE NECESSARY BY&#13;
THE WIDE SKIRTS.&#13;
Design for Combination Garment That&#13;
W i l l Be Found to Meet all Requirements&#13;
of Fashion — Suggestions&#13;
for Trimming.&#13;
With the incoming of wide skirts&#13;
and new bodice lines comes a necebsity&#13;
for new lines In underskirt and&#13;
corset cover, and this design furnishes&#13;
the sort of combination garment that&#13;
Combination Petticoat for New Gowns.&#13;
meets the requirements of both. The&#13;
broad band that does not come up to&#13;
the arms, which furnishes all the bodice&#13;
of many evening frocks, and with&#13;
a strap across the shoulder to hold It&#13;
In place, can be worn over this type&#13;
of corset cover, where the jeweled or&#13;
ribbon or shirred shoulder strap may&#13;
be fastened over ihe strap beneath It,&#13;
and so not allow any hint of underwear.&#13;
There Is a tight against thia&#13;
type of overbodice, but while it reigns&#13;
this type of corset cover is a necessity,&#13;
and may be worn with any other&#13;
sort of dress waist.&#13;
For nearly all styles of figures a&#13;
yard and a half will prove ample when&#13;
purchasing the flouncing for the corset&#13;
cover, and some figures require&#13;
less. It is a pretty fancy, that is very&#13;
common, to make the corset cover of&#13;
some sort of cross-barred or figured&#13;
lawn or batiste. This is much cheaper&#13;
than flouncing of the better class, and&#13;
can be finished at the top with a narrow&#13;
beading and edge of embroidery&#13;
or lace. The top should always have&#13;
a narrow edge, becaube it would otherwise&#13;
spoil the flat appearance of&#13;
the waist worn over It.&#13;
This new wide skirt is adorned with&#13;
an embroidered flouncing and a bead&#13;
ing to match the beading that con&#13;
nects corset cover and skirt. The&#13;
same design Is good for the Dolly&#13;
Varden sateen and silk underskirts&#13;
that are now In vogue, and these&#13;
skirts are finished with flounces of&#13;
material that often contrasts in color&#13;
and figure, and all are edged with&#13;
ruching, little ruffles or cordlngs. It&#13;
is a fancy to make petticoats of this&#13;
character with plain tops and flowered&#13;
flounces, but, however they may&#13;
be constructed, it is the fashion of the&#13;
season to have very elaborate petticoats,&#13;
often of Batin with veilings of&#13;
chiffon and ever so many furbelows&#13;
and ribbons.&#13;
FASHION HINTS&#13;
There is nothing prettier or more&#13;
comfortable for the little girl's chemisette&#13;
than white crepe de chine.&#13;
CheckM taffeta makes a pretty&#13;
trimming for a dress of plain color.&#13;
Button trimming is in evidence on&#13;
suits and frocks.&#13;
Most utility coats are. long enough&#13;
to almost cover the dress.&#13;
Entire dresses are made of silk Jersey&#13;
for outing wear.&#13;
Many of the new silk suits have&#13;
carefully fitted backs.&#13;
Mouse color is a soft and becoming&#13;
shade.&#13;
New silks are in large and striking&#13;
checks and daring stripes.&#13;
Flannel blazer jackets are coming&#13;
into use for street wear with serge&#13;
skirts.&#13;
Many new evening dresses have&#13;
short puff sleeves.&#13;
NEATNESS EASY TO ATTAIN&#13;
8mart Dressing Not as Difficult as It&#13;
Wat Only a Few Short Years&#13;
Ago.&#13;
There was a time when it was far&#13;
more difficult to look smartly dressed&#13;
than it is today. That was the time&#13;
when we wore separate belts, when&#13;
there was dress braid on our skirts,&#13;
when we wore separate neckwear. We&#13;
had to be careful that the braid on our&#13;
skirts didn't become ripped, to hang&#13;
in loops of untidiness. We had to see&#13;
to it that the belt of our skirt didn't&#13;
sag. We had to see to it that the&#13;
leather belt we wore exactly coincided&#13;
with the skirt belt. We had to see to&#13;
It that the ribbon or muslin collar we&#13;
wore exactly made connections with&#13;
the blouse beneath it. Yes, those were,&#13;
indeed, difficult days.&#13;
Today neatness counts as much as&#13;
ever, but there are not so many pitfalls&#13;
for the woman who would be&#13;
neat.&#13;
Neatness of footgear counts more&#13;
than ever before. The shoes must be&#13;
spotless, well polished and in good re-&#13;
T&gt;air. Heels that slant are an outrage&#13;
on good dressing; moreover, they are&#13;
decidedly unhealthful.&#13;
It goes without saying that the hair&#13;
must be neat. A hair net sometimes&#13;
produces a stiff effect, hut that is better&#13;
than a sloppy one. So choose the&#13;
hair net In winfiy weather, and learn&#13;
to adjust it becomingly. This year,&#13;
when our milliners tell us to wear our&#13;
hats straight on the head, neither&#13;
tipped to left or right neat hair is&#13;
more than ever essential.&#13;
Immaculate gloves count for much&#13;
In producing a smart appearance.&#13;
Soiled glove*, ripped gloves or worn&#13;
gloves are a disgrace. Nowadays, when&#13;
washable gloves can be bought at almost&#13;
any pries, it is possible for everybody&#13;
to have clean glove*. The cotton&#13;
ones, if clean, always look well—infinitely&#13;
better than soiled kid ones.&#13;
And a stitch now and then will keep&#13;
gloves always well mended.&#13;
Then there is the handbag. In this&#13;
case, the more you pay, the better, for&#13;
an expensive handbag outwears two&#13;
cheaper ones, and looks better the last&#13;
day it is carried than the cheap one&#13;
does after the first few weeks.&#13;
There are Utile details, like the&#13;
handkerchief, which ssoukl always be&#13;
white, that&#13;
quite as much as some of the bigger&#13;
things in giving the impression of&#13;
smartness which the modern woman&#13;
aims to attain.&#13;
DRESSY SUIT OF SILK&#13;
The coat of this suit has a full flare&#13;
back and sides. Embroidered&#13;
pockets are Introduced on coat.&#13;
There *n full flaring cuffs and embroidered&#13;
lingerie collar.&#13;
Washing Spats.&#13;
White spats are only permissible as&#13;
long as they are really white. To&#13;
have them look like new again when&#13;
they have become soiled, tbe broadcloth&#13;
variety can be washed. Use&#13;
warm water and good white soap.&#13;
Wash well, rinse, and don't wring out.&#13;
Let them hang perfectly wet. and after&#13;
a few hours they will be dry,&#13;
smooth, and randy to&#13;
W e d d e d t o t h e G a m e .&#13;
Preston was the bt-ene, and the&#13;
evunt in i-irogretsa was a wedding '1 he&#13;
"'speaking parta" in the ceremony had&#13;
all been played, and now bride and&#13;
bridegroom and their friends were in&#13;
the veutry putting the mailer into&#13;
writing. But the clergyman waa not&#13;
youthful, nor waa he swift. Time&#13;
passed, and the bridegroom became&#13;
more and more fidgety.&#13;
""You atmm In a great hurry," remarked&#13;
the officiating cleric, at laxst&#13;
"Have you a train to catch?"&#13;
The happy man stood btcck still,&#13;
and scratched hia head in perplexity.&#13;
"Well, air," he replied, good-naturedly,&#13;
"it ain't a train, air, but 1 don't&#13;
want to be late for t' football match."&#13;
BAD COMPLEXION MADE GOOD&#13;
When All Else Falls, by Cuticura Soap&#13;
and Ointment. Trial Free.&#13;
If you are troubled with pimples,&#13;
blackheads, redness, roughness, itching&#13;
and burning, which disfigure your complexion&#13;
and skin, Cuticura Soap and&#13;
Ointment will do much to help you.&#13;
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the&#13;
Ointment to Boothe and heal.&#13;
Free sample each by mail with Book-&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
Answer the Alarm!&#13;
A bii'l 1XKJ&gt;. iiuik'-- i: day's WUTK twice&#13;
its littjd. 1 iuckd.cfJc utuu.-v conic:: rro'n&#13;
w r a k kidncv », an.l n hcadacrice, a:/./:&#13;
lies» or u r i n a r y diaoi'dcrw mx tiO&gt;le&lt;i,&#13;
don't wait—get help b t t o r e drupay,&#13;
gravel o r Brigbt'b djoeaae act m. DoariS&#13;
Kidney Pills have brought new lite and&#13;
new s t r e n g t h t o thoubau&lt;i» ot wording&#13;
men a n d w o m e n . Used a n d r e c o m m e n d -&#13;
ed ;he world over.&#13;
A M i c h i g a n C a s e&#13;
" • w r y P*etwn&#13;
ZWte u Story "&#13;
A m b r o M Hatfield.&#13;
Brook 8 T . , fcla-ton&#13;
R a p i d s , Mich., a u y s&#13;
"I h u d rheuma.!!'.-&#13;
yal/ia thai &amp;vi wuia&lt;-&#13;
as I g r e w older I&#13;
b e c a m e w e a k , nt-rvoua&#13;
and dl&amp;cuurugeJ&#13;
a n d the p a i n s w:r&lt;-&#13;
awful. F o r one y e a r&#13;
I h a d to be asBihie&lt;.i&#13;
from t h e c h a i r to the&#13;
bed. D o a n ' s K i d n e y&#13;
P i l l s r e s t o r e d rnc to&#13;
g o o d h e a l t h . I c a n ' t&#13;
be too g r a t e f u l . "&#13;
Gat D o a a ' * at Aaty Star*. 60c • B « D O A N ' S V.^IV&#13;
pOSTER^OLaUKN CO., BUFFALO. N. T.&#13;
Community Spirit.&#13;
"Do the citizens of this town show a&#13;
disposition to pull together?" asked&#13;
the new arrival.&#13;
"I should say so!" answered the old&#13;
resident with conviction. "Only last&#13;
week we lynched a horse thief, an'&#13;
I'm blessed if every man in town except&#13;
the thief himself didn't want to&#13;
catch hold of th' rope!"&#13;
The Retreat.&#13;
"Any news from the front9" asked&#13;
the war correspondent.&#13;
"None whatever," said the general&#13;
as he hurried by, "except that the&#13;
front is now in the rear."&#13;
Make the Liver&#13;
Do its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten when the liver la&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
gently but firmly com;&#13;
pel a lazy liver to^&#13;
do its duty.&#13;
Cures Constipation,&#13;
Indigestion,&#13;
Sick&#13;
Headache,'&#13;
and Distress After Eating,&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Kill the Files Now and Prevent&#13;
disease. A DAI8Y FLY KILLER will do it.&#13;
Kills thousands Lasts all season. AH dealers&#13;
or six sent express paid for $1; H. 80MER8,&#13;
150 DeKalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Adv.&#13;
Political Wisdom.&#13;
"The people have a long memory."&#13;
"Then take care how you tax it."—&#13;
Exchange.&#13;
E v e r y W o m a n Wants&#13;
F I T S , K P I L B T S T . F A L L I N G STCKNKH8&#13;
Stopped QttlcklT. Fifty r«ars of nnlaierruptod&#13;
•ucoeta of l)r. Klin«'i MpUepar M«liclne Insures&#13;
UMlns rwnlta. L A R G S T R I A L BOTTLB * R I B . DK.&#13;
K L I N E C O M P A N Y , Rad B a n k , *f. J . - A 4 T&#13;
Ambition is the thing that boosts a&#13;
man up the ladder.&#13;
ANTISEPTIC POWDER&#13;
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE&#13;
erred la water for donchos step*&#13;
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and taflam*&#13;
inanon. Recommended by Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham Med. Co. for ten yean.&#13;
A heeling wonder lor nasal catarrh,&#13;
•ore throat and tore eye*. Economical.&#13;
Hat aftandsMfy eWosJM sad f'"*'* ^** puwtif.&#13;
0*e&#13;
l&#13;
promotes DigestionCheerfulness&#13;
and Rest.Contains neither&#13;
OpuimrMofphinc nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
*M+t*Qldl&gt;r.$JWEL PfTCHUt&#13;
Pumpli* S**d-&#13;
Atx $juvt* '&#13;
5 W »&#13;
ClmHASSm§or&#13;
WuUtrmrmtm rim&#13;
A perfect Remedy for CuattR^&#13;
tkwi. Sour Stomach.Dutn-hoca,&#13;
Worms. Feverishnesa aad&#13;
L o s s OF SLEEP,&#13;
fac-Simil* Slflnnlunrof&#13;
THE CEJTOUJR COMPMJTY;&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
CASTORIA For Infants and Children,&#13;
Mothers Know That&#13;
Genuine Castoria&#13;
Always&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA&#13;
WE PAY CASH FOR&#13;
MEDICINAL ROOTS, HERBS, LEAVES, BARKS, ETC&#13;
We tray over rwo hundred different kinds of Medicinal Roots, Herbl.&#13;
Barks, Seeds, Flowers. Etc. for which we pay net cash on arrival&#13;
We make a specialty ei Gsseeaf, Galea* SssJ Beet, SnmVs Sasnt l a s t |sn? l e s t&#13;
Stsr GsUSS sUat, sWswsx, Etc. V a f«y «»• e»m sriesa.&#13;
If yon want to line ep with a prnsjreaiiee. growtag, honest, up-to-date concern&#13;
who will handle yonr goods right, who will keep yon well posted en market&#13;
conditions, write as for oar price list, shipping tags, and fall inievmatson.&#13;
H. R. LATHROP St C O , Inc.&#13;
lia.t1S414.lM New Yeffc Ory, f t Y.&#13;
lMWaea ItIO&#13;
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t i^fs,&#13;
i** v^-*'- tf-* 3£ mrfi 1*LJL g^ V J I L ' ^ . u 1 1 ' '•••&#13;
- j * . - • . ^ • . - v - ' ^ ; - . * « ^ * / ^&#13;
-+rh&#13;
^ \:&#13;
.V&lt;&amp;*.&#13;
«'•«&#13;
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ums*.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
5] V&#13;
r*^&#13;
BL'v-&#13;
*&gt;-.&#13;
S-r» •&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
p i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h&#13;
E n t e r e d a l t h e Postomct&gt; a t P i u c k -&#13;
aey, Mich., aa S e c o n d Class M a t t e r&#13;
C J. SI3LET, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
&gt;ub&gt;cri|iiiori, $ 1 . Per Ytar m A J a u c&#13;
Piockae^' Dispatch&#13;
U'j w :j 0 &lt; ,&#13;
D o e s a C • &gt;ir-H«r--.--i• kv Banki&#13;
n g i&gt; Li c*i n&#13;
•J p c . r c e . f i t&#13;
paid CMI A\1 Tirue Deposit*&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W T f c b f L L&#13;
M i c h&#13;
f r o p&#13;
For Painless Dentistry, See —&#13;
Dr. M&gt;. 1. Wright&#13;
In The Oolan Block&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN&#13;
A 11 ,- e r 111111.' iM L en :.. :i •J •.-&#13;
i{'yl;C8li"U.&#13;
C a r d s ul Tna.uk*, hr'iy ••-rj.-.&#13;
KebOluUNiis o i C'jQdOjrTu:*' vtitr dui.Mr.&#13;
Looal N o L i « 8 , i a i r x a i O j l u m r o tivt&#13;
. c a t p e r Hue [&gt;er r a c h m i f i d o n .&#13;
All m a i a - r iiUendet! e . : ^ , &lt; - D : eW- p e r -&#13;
bOna.i or busiue&amp;i iiitert-b .&gt;- a n y i n d i v i d -&#13;
ual will b e [J- bli-ilicd a'- " - - &gt; '&gt;; a d v i ' p i s e -&#13;
ing r a l e s .&#13;
A U U J U u c e t u e a l oi eiUcria J nmtrnta, e t c . ,&#13;
mu&amp;t b e p a i d fur a: f f ^ u l a r L&lt;»ca. N o t i c e&#13;
O b l n i a r y a n d m a r r i n g e notice-, «:e p::Llidhed&#13;
t r e e of c h a r g e .&#13;
P o e t r y must b e [&gt;aid (:»: at Uic r a i e of&#13;
five c e n t s p e r l i n e .&#13;
&lt;f7*i #&#13;
\\ fc VV \ )&#13;
( c v ! I I) LI V&#13;
g i \ e&#13;
;di&lt;»-&#13;
V \&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d &lt; j e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
F u r t l r - ( r*'\y : e &gt; •&#13;
I. J . K e n n e d y s p e n t S u n d a y in&#13;
A n a A r b o r ,&#13;
M i l ! id:ady of H o well va&gt; :n&#13;
town M o n d a y .&#13;
A. W. \'incf« s p e n t last W e d n e t -&#13;
day in Leslie.&#13;
F ( i . J a c k s o n a n d W. C. Milk-r&#13;
weiv *u H o w e l l F r i d a \ .&#13;
Fr. Covie was in B a t t l e ('reek&#13;
the ri rbl of t h e week.&#13;
A b o u t 4") Humbert* were o n t ht&#13;
I he dance labt F r i d a y n i g h t .&#13;
Mre. S a r a h B u r c h i e l ia v i a i t i u g&#13;
relatives at Walitftrville, O a t .&#13;
F. X / e i i j e r of T o l e d o has&#13;
b o u g h t t h e hotel at L a k e l a n d .&#13;
K i c h a # ] G r e i n e r of B i g R a p i d s&#13;
visited hib p a r e n t s h e r e last week.&#13;
Win. S t e p t o e of D e x t e r s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y at t h e h o m e o f T. Shehan&#13;
Dun G o o d n o w a n d wife of H o -&#13;
well were P i n c k n e v visitors T u e s -&#13;
day.&#13;
Miss P a u l i n e S w a r t h o u t s p e n t&#13;
a couple d a y s t h e first of tiie week&#13;
in H o w e l l .&#13;
J . T . C h a m b e r s h a s sold o n e of&#13;
his B l a c k t e a m s to O r . L o n g n o e k e r&#13;
of H a m b u r g .&#13;
F r e d G r i e v e s a n d family of&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e visited P i n c k n e y rel-&#13;
! atives S u n d a y .&#13;
Miss H e l e n S e l l m a n of A n n&#13;
A r b o r visited at t h e home of J . C.&#13;
D u a i i t h i past week.&#13;
M r a n d M r s . F r e d S w a r t h o u t&#13;
s p e n t t h e week e n d at t h e h o m e&#13;
of W. G. C h u b b of H o w e l l .&#13;
D r . H . F . S i g l e r was in T o l e d o&#13;
T u e s d a y a n d r e t u r n e d with a n e w&#13;
Willys K n i g h t t o u r i n g c a r .&#13;
K. G. C a r p e n t e r of f M t \ s v i l ) e&#13;
Is very low at trw hone-' of d a u g h -&#13;
ter, M r s . Lose of A n n A i b o r .&#13;
Miiss M a r y B r o ^ a u aiid friend&#13;
Miss Beck of t h e Hovv.dl sanitoruiii&#13;
w.-ited friends here S u n d a y .&#13;
Mr, a n d M r s . F m m e t t B e r r y&#13;
and son ot S t o c k b r i d g e visited&#13;
relati\ es h e r e t h e h r a t of t h e week.&#13;
A forma! CHII h a s been issued&#13;
for a d e m o c r a t i c county c o n v e n t -&#13;
M r s . I d a W h e t s e l is in L a n s i n g j ion at A n n A r b o r F i i d a v , M a y 12.&#13;
t a k i n g t r e a t m e n t s for s t o m a c h ; H . A. A&gt;e: s and wifr of D e t r o i t&#13;
t r o u l ; ' i e ' ' s p e n t S a t u r d a y a n d Sm,,o&lt;&#13;
,^•1 rimes H r u m y of J a c k s o n s p e n t [ h o n e ' of M i - S a r a h Nih:!,&#13;
the weeu e n d n\ tlie home (&gt;i Joljn r: \\ \ i , ,••;,, .,,-,,' (&#13;
M j n i v ,&#13;
Nellie G a r d n e r s p e n t M o n d a y&#13;
in J a c k s o n ,&#13;
Dr. H, F . S i l l e r was in A n n&#13;
r A r b o r F r i d a y .&#13;
Mrs. H. A . Fick is visiting relatives&#13;
in D e t r o i t .&#13;
G. A. S i g l e r t r a n s a c t e d b u s i n e s s&#13;
in D e t r o i t M o n d a y .&#13;
Miss Aria G a r . l n e r s p e n t Satu&#13;
r d a y at S t o c k b r i d g e .&#13;
G. G. H o y t s p e n t t h e week e n d&#13;
with r e l a t i v e s a t R e m u s .&#13;
F r a n k B o w e r s of D e t r o i t s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y with h i s p a r e n t s h e r e .&#13;
J£rs. W, H. Crofoot w a s a&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e v i s i t o r S a t u r d a y .&#13;
Mrs. C l a r a L , D u n n e left Satu&#13;
r d a y for h e r h o m e in C h i c a g o .&#13;
Beatrice H i n c k l e y of H a m b u r g&#13;
s p e n t S a t u r d a y with C o r d e l i a&#13;
D i n k e l .&#13;
Will Blades J r . of A n n A r b o r&#13;
s p e n t S u n d a y with h i s p a r e n t s&#13;
here.&#13;
. i t t l 4 e&#13;
•iini.y ot&#13;
with, his&#13;
tin .&#13;
i•;r r » *&#13;
Trains East&#13;
No. 4G—* :3 4 1&#13;
No. 48—1:44 i. r&#13;
W'Mt&#13;
'! i . ro,&#13;
7 . m.&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sigler ;j&#13;
t *J4 V - • f ! &lt; -,S T l&#13;
A l l ( 'i t • • , " i - f i i ;&#13;
M&#13;
PIXCKMIY \ i l ' . ( ; G . \ \&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
22 3B3ici^3ird.s&#13;
Sb#p back «*f Dru- St »,&#13;
Q LASGOW n R O S .&#13;
Noted Far SelliDi Good 1 3 Goods Cheap i f Ladies S u i t s and Coat&#13;
J A C K S O N , MJjCHlGAN&#13;
News for Pinckney Women&#13;
Mr. A. S. Cla^co&#13;
York, where he h a s&#13;
the citv of Jacks jrt&#13;
He boujrht t h e on tire stoc&#13;
a manufaac t iiro r i&#13;
We hesitated&#13;
a son&#13;
jj G a r m e n t s i 4 sturh a g r a n d o p p r . r t u n&#13;
I we h a d their welfare at&#13;
0&#13;
a entire line. i -&#13;
Xe&#13;
- o i i i e t i n i&#13;
necessary to make t h e&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
\ of «Jacob S a m u e l " f&#13;
York of Ladies Fine 8&#13;
owitig- t n t h e a m o u n t 2&#13;
but we deemed it j&#13;
p a t r o n s t h a t 4&#13;
\&#13;
has j u s t retuj'rie&lt;l from Xew&#13;
made t h e largest purchase of&#13;
e1.er made }&gt;\- any store in&#13;
vurcnase,&#13;
.ty to &gt;h(iw (»n&#13;
heart t h a t •ve !*o usfht t h e&#13;
^It's the Opportun-J&#13;
ity of a Lifetime&#13;
DRY-Cb&amp;ANING&#13;
AND PRESSING&#13;
H a v i n g procured the. equip-&#13;
• a n t for the. 0&gt;v-C&lt;e*ninA&#13;
^ r i Q t t t i w e a r e ready to do&#13;
w o r k In first'diass order&#13;
(i, M M a r t i n and&#13;
H o W e d S p r . i t S l l l i ife.&#13;
i Kiia liiaci-; spent a few dnys th e i mot her. M r s . F . N\'. Ma&#13;
oast weeA with h e : sister in i ,,.. &gt; / ,&#13;
' j I '.it- oastor s e;ass oi tti*-j Oonu :.&#13;
d a c k s o o , 1 . , , , ,. ,, , ,&#13;
i S u n d a y school well soil bake&#13;
d a m e s I i p l » d y of D e t r o i t is | y o o t i a ]d l i f ) n t h 'f l s l o r P i s , ; i t u r , l M y&#13;
visiting ins p a r e n t s . Mr. a n d M r s . : ' ^ j a v f;&#13;
J- l i p l a d v . v TJ « u n&#13;
1 ' \ e r o n i c a c r o i r a n or r l o w e l l&#13;
• M r . B e i l a n y of dont-aviile s p e n t s p e n t S a t u r d a y and S n n d a y with&#13;
the nrst of t h e week with M r . a n d b e r p a r e n t s . M r . an-: M i s . C u r i e ,&#13;
Mrs. C. G. M e y e r . j ljr 0 l rR ! 1 .&#13;
Mr. a n d *Mrs. Will Dock i n - ; H a n y a n d G e o L e a v e y w h o&#13;
were callers at t h e home of P . ' S p e n t t h e w i n t e r in S t . P e t e r s -&#13;
L e a v e y S u n d a y . I b u r p , Fla., r e t u r n e d to t h e i r h o m e&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s . }{. H . T e e p l e of T h u r s d a y .&#13;
M a n i s t i q u e s p e n t t h e p a s ' w e e k J Will C n r l n t t h a s p u r c h a s e d t h e ;&#13;
5i with relatives h e r e . I hon.-e and lot b e l o n g i n g to Willi&#13;
L u c i l l e M c Q u i l l a n of Chilson j D n n n i n g a n d is m o v i n g i n t o t h « |&#13;
s p e n t t h e week e n d with her sister 1 s a m e t h i s week. j&#13;
. ' 1&#13;
Mrs. L, G. D e v e r e a u s . I H a r r y C a s e a n d family of H a r - j&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s . G l e n n R i c h a r d s ! h o r S p r i n g s a r e v i s i t i n g at, t h e !&#13;
of G r a n d R a p i d s a r e visiting at j h o m e of t h e Lewis Bros, noil -T. •&#13;
the h o m e of L . L . R i c h a r d s . j T. C h a m b e r s ,&#13;
W i n , l i p l a d v a n d family of T h f M i t e societ v of t h e N o r t h ;&#13;
D e x t e r spent S u n d a x with his j H a m b u r g c h u r c h will r m e e t w i t h ;&#13;
p a r e n t s . Mr a n d M r s . J . T i p l a d y . i Mr. a n d M r s C l a r e n c e C a r p e n t e r&#13;
Mrs. S t e l l a G r a h a m a n d M r e . \ f o r «»PP^r - T h n r s d s y . May 11. ;&#13;
H a r r y P a l m e r a n d son of J a c k s o n | Mrs. N e t t i e V a u g h n . M r . anrl&#13;
are g u e s t s of Miss J e s s i e G r e e n . j M r s . W. C l a r k a n d D r . H . F .&#13;
Mrs. Ix&gt;nis Roue he and c h i l d r e n S i g l e r a t t e n d e d t h e O d d F e l l o w ' s&#13;
of G r a s s [pie were g u e s t s of b e r \ memoriMl s e r v i c e s at H a m b u r g&#13;
m o t h e r , A n n B r a d y a couple of S u n d a y ^ j&#13;
days last week. Wr*. A n n B r a d y r e t u r n e d to&#13;
S. E . S w a r t h o u t a n d wife a n d , lier h o m e last W e d n e s d a y after&#13;
H. H . S w a r t h o u t , wife a n d d a i t g h - ' S p e n d i n g t h e w i n t e r with h e r g *&#13;
ter Bessie s p e n t S u a d a y afternoon . d a u g h t e r . M r s . F . J . Hoisel o f . f e&#13;
in B r i g h t o n . ! H o w e l l .&#13;
A r r a n g e m e n t a r e !&gt;eing m a d e T h e D e t r o i t C r e a m e r v C o . will&#13;
for a F i s h e r ' s P a r t y at t h e O p e i a e r e c t a t e m p o r a l y C r e a m s t a t i - n&#13;
H o u a e . F r i d a y e v e n i n g May 12 I t b a c k of M u r p h y A d a r k s o r / s s t o r e&#13;
is n o t k n o w n for c e r t a i n w h e t h e r t h i s week. T h e y expev* to b u i l d&#13;
t h e O r c h e s t r a can be s e c u r e d for »n ; 1 P t o ( ^a t f ' c e m e n f s t a t i o n n e a r&#13;
!&#13;
^ 'Fh.nk o&#13;
I at]d C j a t s . wortli&#13;
^ Call at &lt;&gt;nce&#13;
jj Bargains.&#13;
1 1 1 I"( L J t)&#13;
"(nn 4 ^ t 5 ^ .&#13;
:e--mmu te&#13;
a L or' ~o-&#13;
S u i t s&#13;
which t&#13;
SI2.50 to S20&#13;
C i I , ( t ) ) . Lt * I' 'La-&#13;
L J I o&gt;&#13;
S e a t h e s e Wonderful&#13;
i&#13;
Special for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Ladies', Gent's and Children's Shoes&#13;
8 pkgs. Corn Flakes 50c, i for 25c&#13;
Come in and took over our new line&#13;
of Summer Waist Good;?. We also&#13;
have a new shipment of light Underwear&#13;
for Summer at very reasonable&#13;
prices. Latest thing in Gents Neckwear.&#13;
Come in and See.&#13;
MO* \vaw Seed Yolaloes.&#13;
-S^seV'&#13;
W&gt;'&lt;- .''&#13;
•i!\ 7A. i •&#13;
Mt R E I A R R n W ' t b f l t l l f t t e H 9 }'tU f l 1 r t - i e r i u f o r - the depot soon. C E BOOT H, £E°S..&#13;
Pay your tnaacn^tioo thia aioath&#13;
... • +t'~*-&#13;
L — ~&#13;
P1NCKNEV DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising South Iosco&#13;
FOR SALK &lt;;&lt;od&#13;
tins oiticf.&#13;
Vi i I J - I U &lt;•«• a :&#13;
F O R N A I . K W t i e i ! ( l u . r , -, ,,,,&#13;
' ^ « u r a a ^ e , r c c k i r j ^ u u . r i o n&#13;
©I h e r h o u s e h o l d j ; ' " " i v J11 • i •&#13;
M c l n i v r e h o m e .&#13;
ft . ' ( . ' / I&#13;
m&#13;
i o :.rt a Lid&#13;
c ,,. [Jn-&#13;
FOK :-A I.K CHr-'A P li5Uj !eet of white&#13;
oak Lnmber. Haroui Swarthoui.&#13;
81&#13;
•!»,}• iip litia 'J»«'. uie ("or iue presenuutJD U O U b e W O r k a t p r e s e n t ,&#13;
ciuutti Bald obiaiu uo iitmreii aud iu»i a&#13;
Uce be Mpuonji^d to r^-,-iu-. examine, E d e e n L u l l , J e s s i e B e s i c o a m&#13;
L e £ a l A d v t r t i s i n ^&#13;
I T 1 T K O K MICHIGAN. o,&gt;- ,, ,;,t,- 0 &gt; : r l f&lt;„&#13;
t h e c o u D t v o t L l v t u g w d x i A i .1 s e s s i o n i»t&#13;
, M M c o u r t h e l ' l H ' Che • &gt; n j l m u ' o t i , n : .1 t h * o i l s ' ; •&#13;
&lt; • ' • ! H o w » l l i " ts*ii' 1 &lt; &lt; J Q : J ' ' 0-1 : v ; , t ' i l a y o !&#13;
&gt; ^ i f i * i A . i) i'.*irt.&#13;
f t j U I I I H I l O L . K d ^ f f l . ; A . :•*'•'•.'•.• .: i-. r - i j l . j ; , :&#13;
l l t i l t m a l l e i o f The n l a n - o !&#13;
&lt;». '.V. T * J « | &gt; 1 B t i i n . n - : n't*.! in .itud ,-ourl. !iia&#13;
p t t i i i o u p r u ,&#13;
o f c l a i m s a&#13;
i l i o e a u d p&#13;
n d u i a t a l l c l a i m s a n d d c i i m i i d a a . - u i u r : i n . d d e&#13;
i;ea*t*i b y a m i t ' e f o r o mud c o u r t ,&#13;
I t »r* o r 1 t v c « l T l i ( U f " ! i r niontli-* ' 1 ,&gt;m I In? d a t e&#13;
tHJ it I l o w e d fn|- Ci't*dl! i&gt;i'd i' ;j : &lt;j-&gt;t.-ii l O.i. IIL- .,.;.,: list&#13;
o m d estttiL-.&#13;
It its t i . r t l i i ' r o r d t r r i - d . !':,.,: ' l i e U i 1 u i ; . of A u ^&#13;
A J J* IWlfj at O'N 1.1 e l d ' a: ) u th&gt;.* I ' l r r H jc-u, a *&gt;ai,J&#13;
probate ftico, bt) and is hert_-p. a/.;*.., rjt• • ci fur i t e&#13;
«"»»jiUuali(&gt;u a u d j i d i t i s l llj,*iil « J t ml , .'.11:11- a: id ' c&#13;
mind*) against staid ilL-ceased.&#13;
1-. 1 &lt; U : M . A -vi w '.&#13;
Judjpa of P r o t e t e .&#13;
^ T A T K U K M i l l l l &lt; j . \ \ t : - - i ' m r ^ i . C ^ . j - i „ t&#13;
O t b t j c o u n t y 11! l.M : n^**;,)!) i . - t a t r ot&#13;
£,-,(. ate of JOH.s MOOKi-., L^cuavd.&#13;
The nndt-rsii'ued !iaviDt' TH'CII appoint ad, bjr&#13;
Judge of Probate ot said county, cuiuniiaBlonerB 00&#13;
claim* in the m s t t r r «,r -.nid oatate. andfo;ir month•&#13;
from tha 'J4 O u t l a y of April, A. U. 1910.&#13;
been allowed b\ said Judge of ProLmte to all person*&#13;
holding clivlais nnuiutt ••aid estate in which to&#13;
present their claim** to :.-* for examination and&#13;
adjustment.&#13;
Mi-, a n d M r a . H o m e r W aaaou&#13;
s p o n t S u n d a y ar tin- horrid of B e r t&#13;
K o b e r t a .&#13;
FIo_\d L o v e a n d wife of M a r i o u&#13;
v id l i e d a l l b - Lome* of F r e d ! ( n ff&#13;
S u n d a y .&#13;
J o r fto'i^rrd a u d '^vif^ aiifi C'm.**-&#13;
i^akt*r dp&lt;-rjt &gt; I H I I 1 ; I V w i t h r&gt;Iai 1 vi-.-»&#13;
i-i W i l , l a i u a t o a an.1. Wc-noervill* .&#13;
i ' T i i 10 Mi', a m i M !'B, M a i l m&#13;
Au'ii-i'(,uu ina! '.I' ii u r d d a \ a JO l&lt;»&#13;
i^iri.&#13;
M a b d l Ca&gt;&gt;k.t*n of P i a i j i f i e l u i-i&#13;
a a w i a t i a g M r n , A u t l e r a o n w i t h h e r&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
-Mra, D o v e r t j u t e r t a i r i o t t Lei obU&#13;
f ' o a i i i o ^ c i l S u n d a y&#13;
•M.'e&gt;. I'OJ'o aipj o c u of 'fVoUiiiurc-&#13;
L a k e , w o r e S u n d a y ^ t \ - ^ 3 of -M:b.&#13;
- l o a e p u &gt; : a ' j k a o i c .&#13;
C i y d o a;:.i H a / d U - U I J O L I , &gt;'.\,jt-&#13;
S . i : ; d a y _;J,-OLO ot _M r, an : -M : 3 . K&#13;
J &gt; c n:. r ('.&#13;
A.'id :.: K i L: C- U i u W e h ,&#13;
1 1 1 ' 1 O (, ' IX&#13;
-J. 1^ R o b e r t a a r e d l o w l y r e c o v e r&#13;
inLf fi'ofJi 'die Qjeadleti.&#13;
lit. a trie*-&#13;
2 1 l i o w e J !&#13;
L a i n h o r n s p e n t F ' r i d a y&#13;
Chubb's Corners&#13;
-M:. a n d M r s . L h t i o F i e u c u of&#13;
L a r o h a J l v i i l e s p e n t t h e first of last&#13;
w e e k at d. W . S b a r p ' a .&#13;
M r s . B e n M o n t a g u e is o n lb©&#13;
s i c k list.&#13;
, , Kd. P a u l o w i s h of C l e v e l a n d is&#13;
Notic**.' is herein ^rivcn t:im wo w.li uicot on the |&#13;
L'4th day ot.lutic, A. \&gt;. lwitj, and on Die -.'4ili jjinlc j UL;• a t l e x t e n d e d v i s i t W i t h&#13;
day of Aur. A. i'. 1010, at t-.*n o'clock p . m . of cadi \ _ l&#13;
uay at the Banii in th,; \ii:u&lt;'e 0! Oreirors- in -a!d i f i l b l l d s 1 LI t h i s VIC 1 Q it \'.&#13;
conntv to receive and examine ati(-:i clam: •. ! • -r*&#13;
C l y d e B e n n e t t h a s h i r e d o u t t o&#13;
F . W . A l l i s o n for t h e c o m i n g&#13;
. ^ 1 ( . :&#13;
n e r e&#13;
fcDated: Hw\vr&#13;
M . ]•:. K-.ifin&#13;
A- .' l&gt;:eurli*y&#13;
Mi' M a y i-&gt;f&#13;
1&#13;
i l O i i T .&#13;
v e a r&#13;
CQCQfflber Pickle Contracts W o r k h a * b e g u n o n t h e n e w&#13;
s t a t e r o a d s o u t b of t h e C o r n e r s .&#13;
C o n t r a c t s for u r o w i n g c u c i i i n Mi*a L u c y C o o k of P i a o k n e y&#13;
b e r p i c k l e for t h e s e a s o n of \f&gt;V) s p e n t t h e week e n d w i t h h e r s i s t e r&#13;
m a y n o w b a h a d f r o m o u r r e p r e - M M . K. W , K n t w i a l e .&#13;
s e n t a t i v e N . P . M o r t e n s o n a&#13;
g r e a t l y i n c r e a s e d p r i c e s . W e a r e&#13;
p a y i n g f r o m s e v e n t y - f i v e c e n u \o&#13;
o n e d o l l a r a n d a h a l f p e r b u s h e l&#13;
f o r ninall p i c k l e s a c c o r d i n g to&#13;
s i / e a n d t 1J ii t.y-five cents? for l a r g e&#13;
T i n - K u c x - h : t ; ids P a c k i n g C J&#13;
J a c k s o n . M i c h&#13;
People Toil Know&#13;
M i s s L a u r a B u r g e s s a n d P a u l -&#13;
i n e S w a r t h o i i t s p e n t last W e d n e s -&#13;
d a y in H t j w e i l .&#13;
M r s . AI. J . Lea-son .-pent pa i t&#13;
of t u e {• ast w e e k witli r e l a t n ' e s ; ;t&#13;
D e t r o i t .&#13;
M . s U . J ' ; i l ; n - » ; H i l l n o l i n f&#13;
• J a c k s o n s p t t . l t h e *fvt\ eri'i w i t h&#13;
relal iv,*.s h e r e&#13;
M r. MOO M r s . A .1 l-'or.i -. of&#13;
Jat;kf&gt;oi! s p ^ u t I ' V . C A V HI ::i * iiiiuie&#13;
of L U I)--\•**: r a n x .&#13;
M r s I ' e a t i c t l y of l l H i o o u i g&#13;
s p e n t I h u r s i l a y w i r h h e r i l a i s g i i t e r&#13;
M r s . C. A . B e n n e t t .&#13;
W i l l i a i u C t i a i k e r of M a s o n&#13;
Di n s o l a n d&#13;
\ ' . G . D i n ^ e&#13;
thr* i u m i " of A ' . o i r 1&#13;
w i f e&#13;
W a l t e r K ^ a s o u nf W e s t P u t n a m&#13;
s o o n : S n u i i a y w i t h M. A l i i s o i ;&#13;
M r . c.id M r s . R i ' h i t w i s i e s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y in P i n c k u e y .&#13;
( " r i i H ^ u r v s ( ) i u . S a n l a y a t&#13;
L . F r o s t ' s&#13;
A b o u t ~)0 fri'^ntU an i r e l a t i v e s&#13;
of K. F r o s : a n d f a o i i i y s u r p r i s e d&#13;
t u e m irist W e d n e s d a y e v e n i n g '&#13;
L y n n H e u d e e in o r h a d of tlie&#13;
coin p r c v \ , p i - r s e n t e d M i . ;:Li»1 M r s .&#13;
^ is a g u e a i ot M r s . K. ' II&#13;
tl . C 1 iXb I (. f l b " W c C rv&#13;
'I he f u o o i a i of M r s . I h.as.&#13;
a n , who«»&lt;: hoi.y w a s oiuii^.'i&#13;
for burittJ, was h e l d at t h e N o r t h&#13;
i i a m b u r g e h u r c n l a s t S a t u r d a y ,&#13;
1'iib old L i e u da a n d n a i g h b o r a&#13;
t t i r t i o d o u i tu p a y int.-if i^oL i e -&#13;
B|jecla lo a d e a r l n « i n ; A f t e r iLtj]&#13;
d e a t b of h e r s o n B e r t , Alio w a s '&#13;
d r o w n e d .u B i s h o p L i k e a h o o C&#13;
11 &gt; e a r s a g o , ^ t r s . ^ t u a r : w e n t t o&#13;
^ . \ . S t a t e to r e s i d e vvito h e r&#13;
s i s t e r , w h e r e s h e r e u i a i r i - d o u r : I&#13;
t h e t i m e of L a : d e a t h .&#13;
L a s t o i a u C a r p e n t e r of Pettys-&gt;j&#13;
viiie, is v e r y :ow at th-&gt; h o m e of I&#13;
h i s d a u g h t t - r in A n n 4 - i b o r .&#13;
i&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . C a r p e n t e r w e n t ,&#13;
t o v i s i t t n e i r d a u g h t e r a u d h e w a b ;&#13;
t a k e n w i t h p a r a l y s i s w h i l e t h e r e . !&#13;
Full Line of Potted Plants&#13;
Cabbage and Tomato S e t s&#13;
You W i l l Have&#13;
to hurryasthis&#13;
shipment will&#13;
not last long.&#13;
We will nil any Special&#13;
Orders.&#13;
COLDS QUICKLY RELIEVED&#13;
Many people cough and cough—&#13;
from the b e g i n n i n g of fall r i g h t&#13;
through to spring. O t h e r s get cold&#13;
after cold. T a k e Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery and you will get almost&#13;
immediate relief. It c h e c k s your&#13;
cold, stops t h e r a c k i n g , r a s p i n g , tissue-&#13;
tearing cough, h e a l s the inflamm&#13;
a t i o n , soothes t h e r a w tubes. E a s y&#13;
to t a k e , A n t i s e p t i c and Healing Get&#13;
a 50c bottle of Dr. K i n g ' s N e w Discovery&#13;
to-day. "It is certainly a&#13;
s p e n t S u n d a y at I good medicine and I keep a bottle&#13;
of it continually on h a n d " w r i t e s W.&#13;
C. J e s s e m a n , F r a n c o n i a , X. H, Money&#13;
back if not satisfied.&#13;
r- i s ,&#13;
a on&#13;
C i :&#13;
i 11.,'&#13;
w a s&#13;
Wi l l a . i&#13;
r'l ud n; u&#13;
• " o 3 i i . i i : . a :&#13;
i ;• &gt;\ •• *1 : &lt;\ a :,&#13;
^-lA p • lerda. an.:&#13;
1, • . M i s s l i u i h&#13;
: w is p.-'} " i rlur&#13;
t l l o ' ; m e&#13;
Italy's N a m ; Is Oldest.&#13;
So I' ir ;i - ;.('•• !..i a.*.* i- c ,!,Mf*riii' !&#13;
I t a ! . . i1^ l'-v - i T i - ' : ' ; t n i ' ) ! : _ t ; n &gt; i i , i ; i ' H i - «&#13;
(if l ! l o \^ • •:! ' T l l r 111 IllO " 1 t l l l i . l " llrl -&#13;
I H ' O I I ; i p [ ; l i C ' ' l t - , r ! i o I t ; i l i ; i ; i n e n i l i - . u ] . i&#13;
111 o:., ,-i.» l.tr M.n |v .1^ li-Ofiidary rv&lt;'-&#13;
oo.l&gt; oxtt'ii'!. TIA- "Itrtlia" i&gt;ro[&gt;er ar»«&#13;
South Marion&#13;
M r s . D o c k i n g of P i n c a i e y is&#13;
s p e n d i n g s o m e t i m e a t t h e h o m e&#13;
of W i l l D o c k i n g .&#13;
M e t G a l l u p anil f a m i l y e n t e r -&#13;
t a i n e d f r i e n d s f r o m (*&gt;*egoiy S u n -&#13;
d b v&#13;
&lt;iuy lJjlair a n d wife s p e n t &gt; u n -&#13;
Wi 11. ,i i-*. [;ar-j!j: s of l o s e - '&#13;
M r . a n d M t s . L'ii; m IL-rigaii • . -&#13;
'&gt;j t a i n e d en u p a n y fr'or: B i i g l d " 1 : !&#13;
-aid H o web S u n d a y .&#13;
M r . a n d M r s , W i i . S . . e u a u ? p " i i :&#13;
Siin;.!-^ At t he non.-- of h d L-rje&#13;
D : - m e r e s t of G r e g o r y&#13;
11. M i l l e r Hi^.i c l i o d i e n of l u v ' O&#13;
t&#13;
t sv&#13;
t&#13;
t t&#13;
SL ^ n t ."MI a d a y at tu no: Ki&#13;
m e i \ an B e n : an&#13;
G e o . L r a u e of A n d e r s o n s p e n t&#13;
S u u d a &gt; vsiih A l b e i t&#13;
f a m i l y .&#13;
A l b e i t F r o s t aiw: fatniiv&#13;
F r o s t a u d&#13;
S ; d d t o hrivi^ h o c i 11&gt; li;11 lit ;l f i t s o f t i l e&#13;
soul iiera si'i'lon of llie c,iuiitr&gt;, The&#13;
nnine is su;'i&lt;osod \&gt;.&lt; ;»•• &lt;leri\rd from&#13;
v i s i t e d h i s b r o t h e r J o h n t h e p a s t that of Klim Italu-. thou-li pn.t&gt;ably ! m o v i n g t o t-ie F r o s t f a r m&#13;
orlpin.illy luoii-.ioiAeil \':ralu&gt; or ^ ' i - j P u t n a u i&#13;
_• tulus. meanhiu- ., !.&gt;ul! milf. Some see&#13;
s o n of in the name M rcOfori'-e to Italy as the&#13;
land of cittlo. —rathtlinlr-v.&#13;
week.&#13;
F r a n k L l l s w o r t h a m&#13;
S o c k b r i d g e a u d M r . a n d M r s . H .&#13;
R e e v e s v i s i t e d at t u * h o r n " of&#13;
P a t r i c k L e a v e y S u n d a y .&#13;
L ' s t - r D o kin •; of l ) . t : o&#13;
h i s iieeit &gt;ick a t h U u o u i " 1c&#13;
t u r n e d t o h i s w o r k M o n d a y ,&#13;
a re&#13;
Last&#13;
w h o&#13;
i&gt; r e -&#13;
A r t h u r A i l e v i i of G r e g o ry &gt; p e n t&#13;
L i t t l e A l i c e F n g e l of W e t &gt; s t e r S u n d a y at t h e h o m e of H . W .&#13;
i s s p e n d i n g a few d a y s w i t h h e r W d l i a t o n&#13;
g r a n d p a r e n t s , J o h n F o h e y a n d J o h n C h a l k e r a n d s o n M e r r i t&#13;
wife .&#13;
WATCH CHILD FOR WORMS&#13;
W o r m s sap child's s t r e n g t h , rob&#13;
child of food and m a k e child fretful&#13;
irritated, n e r v o u s . W a t c h stool and&#13;
a t first sign or suspicion of w o r m s&#13;
give one-half to o n e lozenge Kickav&#13;
i s i t e d J a m e s B u s h n e a r C h e l s e a ; poo W o r m Killer, a c a n d y worm r e -&#13;
, c i , v • » -I mover. Gives i m m e d i a t e r e s u l t s , is&#13;
\ e r o m c a * o h e y ot 1 p s n a u t i . r e c e n t l y . ' l a x a t i v e . P a r a l y z e s and r e m o v e s t h e&#13;
a n d f n e n d , Mi&amp;s K a v s p e n t t h e H a r r v « u d ( i e n L e a v e v w e r e ' w o r m s , i m p r o v e s digestion and gener-&#13;
, . , I- o t « L „ 1,^..,^ ne i'^, n . . . p n t a 4 f V t i . • i t • , 4 I al health of child. Continue giving&#13;
* f r f c a t . h e h o m e ot b e i p a i e n t s , K 1 1 M t s of S t o c k n n d g e f r i e n d s t h» , K i c k a p o o W o r m Killer until all s i g n s&#13;
;Mf, a n d M i s . ff(ihn F o h e y of N . first of t h e wf»p»k. ' o f w o r m s a r e gone. 25c. at your&#13;
' * * » * m - M r , a n d M r s . B a s i l W h i t e a o f D 0 ™ * * *&#13;
M i s s Ktfie K e a s o n of G r e g o r y s o n , ant} M r s . J . W n i t ^ a n d F r a n k&#13;
s p e D t t h e first of t h e w e e k at t h e W h i t e of H o w e l l v i s i t e d nt t l i e&#13;
h o m e of G . W . R e a s o n . h o r a n of P . L - a v e v S n n d a v .&#13;
1&#13;
Poultry and &amp;ggs Wanted&#13;
• Paying Cash for Poultry and Eggs&#13;
delivered at my poultry house six&#13;
days of the week and wiH pay ali&#13;
the market affords at all times.&#13;
. &amp;. F A R N U M&#13;
A Few More Days&#13;
t o d i s p o s e of w h a t f u r n i t u r e I&#13;
w a n t t o . A s i will m o v e in a b o u t&#13;
t w o w e e k s , it m u s t b e s o l d &lt;uv\ !x*&#13;
! ^old c h e a p for c a s h .&#13;
O n e O a k S i d e B o a r d , W a l n u t&#13;
! B o o k C a s e . B e d a n d C o m m o r l c t o&#13;
j m a t c h . A s h . W a l n u t T r i m m e d ,&#13;
I O a k Dr* s s c r w i t h l o n g m i r r o r . O a k&#13;
i R o c k e r w i t h l e a t h e r s e a t , O a k&#13;
! R o c k e r w i t h C o b b l e r S c a t , VVard-&#13;
! r o b e . S e t e e a n d c h a i r t o m a t c h .&#13;
S i l k c o v e r e d ; E i g h t D a y ( d o c k .&#13;
P l a t e R a c k a n d o t h e r t h i n g s t o o&#13;
n u m e r o u s l o m e n t i o n .&#13;
t W. W. Barnard.&#13;
Top Price for your Cream&#13;
Butter and Eig£s any day.&#13;
O M I ' t t&#13;
MONKS BROS&#13;
a 1&#13;
a&#13;
* » * » * » r t - 4 * &lt; ^ » f • * • * • * • •••'•.r&#13;
Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
T l i e T c e u ' o H a r d v. ;•:••.; S"&#13;
i&#13;
&lt; ' •' 'i.: *- 11 »r c a s ' i .&#13;
c . 1 i .. o . , ' , , ! ! s o i l •*&#13;
t&#13;
1* A Cash Drscount of 10 percent&#13;
Wd.i l-'.j (icfiuctcd from ali grood- except (ja^niiiu: an&lt;d&#13;
Oil- &lt;d all kind.-, Coal, Salt. Calf Mcai and S t o c k&#13;
F o i ' i d ,&#13;
W c e x p e c t every one to settle accounts and *&#13;
notes in t h e next .-0 daw-,&#13;
Re:sj&gt;y. your:&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
If In Need&#13;
Of Mew Parm Tools&#13;
Call and see us,&#13;
Superior Grain Drills, in all sizes, also repairs tor same.&#13;
Oliver and Gale Plows and Tillage Implements.&#13;
Single and Team Harness, and Horse Collars.&#13;
Prat's Babv Ckic Food and Poultry Food, Etc.&#13;
* DINKEL &amp; DUNBAR&#13;
j&#13;
^ ^ * S M f a&#13;
.4*.*»Vi4JJ4«k^&#13;
•/&#13;
• ^ • • ^ ^ w^rttrrrrrsn&#13;
'•*&#13;
I&#13;
&lt;• &gt;.•&#13;
"SS'&#13;
::'-&lt;'&#13;
•' &lt; . " " '&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
T "&#13;
CONTROLLING THE&#13;
IRISH UPRISING&#13;
T H E SCENES IN DUBLIN MADE&#13;
SPECTACULAR BY FIRES AND&#13;
ARTTLLERY.&#13;
STREET FIGHTING CONTINUES&#13;
Only Merger Details of the Situation&#13;
Known in London as Communication&#13;
is Hampered.&#13;
CARRANZAS MEXICAN&#13;
MINISTER OF WAR&#13;
GENERAL OBREGON&#13;
General Obregon Insists That&#13;
Recall Troops.&#13;
U. 8.&#13;
London The situation in Dublin on&#13;
Saturday was the inoat critical since&#13;
the outbreak of the Irish rebellion.&#13;
Parts of the city were awept by tire&#13;
and street fighting continued. There&#13;
ww much looting, it is said, but the&#13;
reinforced inilitajy was making steady&#13;
progress. Most of the shops were&#13;
closed and passenger communication&#13;
cut off.&#13;
One dispatch received from Ireland&#13;
hays that SackviUe and Grafton&#13;
streets in Dublin are in flames and&#13;
that artillery is being used on the&#13;
houses( the inhabitants having been j&#13;
removed.&#13;
Although the story of the early&#13;
hours of the Dublin uprising has now The Mexican minister of war held&#13;
been disclosed in considerable detail, several conferences with the military&#13;
England is still without authentic in-j and civil authorities of the de facto&#13;
formation as to the progress of later government of Chihuahua in which evevents.&#13;
Normal telegraph, telephone ery phase of the situation was discussa&#13;
n t mail services with Ireland have ed so that the presentation of the&#13;
not been restored and the existing Mexican proposals could be made to&#13;
means of communication are subject Generals Scott and Funston.&#13;
to such strict censorship that it is possible&#13;
to obtain only fragmentary in- "&#13;
formation Such news dispatches as T H E M E X I C A N S I T U A T I O N&#13;
came through added little to the information&#13;
contained in Friday night's "&#13;
official advices and stories of eyewitnesses.&#13;
So far as official reports show, the&#13;
situation in Dublin is gradually being&#13;
brought under control. The most El Paso, Texas—The military peace&#13;
Important recent news that the rebels commissioners of the United States&#13;
have been driven out of St. Stephen's and Mexico did not meet on Sunday,&#13;
green with- bombs, sustaining heavy General Hugh L. Scott's report on&#13;
losses in killed, wounded and prison- what took place at the conference in&#13;
ersi has not been confirmed officially. Juarez was not delivered to the pres-&#13;
There seems to be no doubt, however, tdent until noon Sunday, he was adthat&#13;
the rebels still control various vised by the war department, and ha&#13;
parts of Dublin, and that street fight- stated that he did not expect further&#13;
lng continues with a lengthening list Instructions until he had word from&#13;
of casualties, It is reported the casual- Washington,&#13;
ty list already exceeds 100. The insistence of General Alvaro&#13;
Obregon, Mexican minister of war,&#13;
London—That the British troops In that the American troops be wlth-&#13;
Dublin and other disaffected counties drawn at once was the barrier upon&#13;
la Ireland are gradually gaining con- which the conference split. General&#13;
t:-ol of the situation brought by the Obregon insisted that the American&#13;
Sinn Fein revolutionary outbreak Is troops must leave Mexico, not merely&#13;
indicated in the government's official because the Carranza government so&#13;
statement wishes, but because, he said, the Car-&#13;
"The general officer commanding in ranza government is in actual danger&#13;
chief the Irish command has reported of being overthrown, or at least of&#13;
the situation In Dublin much more facing a formidable revolution it thia&#13;
satisfactory. Througout the country does not take place,&#13;
there was still much more to be done, General Obregon cited a recent afwhich&#13;
would take time, but he hoped fair in Chihuahua City in which ha&#13;
that the back of the rebellion had said over 200 men were arrested in a&#13;
been broken. hall where they were plotting the&#13;
"Messengers were sent out from the death of Governor Gutierrez and all&#13;
rebel leaders in Dublin to the rebel Carranza officers in the state because&#13;
leaders in Dublin to the rebel bodies the Carranza government had permit-&#13;
In Galway, Clare, Wexford, Louth and ted the American troops in Mexico.&#13;
Dublin counties ordering them to sur- General Scott told General Obregon&#13;
render and priests and the royal Irish that the American people are in such&#13;
constabulary arc doing their utmost a frame of mind that if the troops&#13;
FRENCH REPULSE&#13;
GERMAN ATTACK&#13;
A L 8 0 TAKES TRENCH NORTH OF&#13;
DEAD MAN H I L L AND FIFTYTHREE&#13;
PRISONERS.&#13;
GERMANS BRING DOWN PLANE&#13;
Paris and Berlin Re porta Differ and&#13;
Some Very Tenacious Figthlng&#13;
Goes On.&#13;
London- The French have taken&#13;
the offensive on both slde&gt;s of the&#13;
Meuse, in the region generally north&#13;
of Verdun, and a.re driving the Germans&#13;
from some of their recently captured&#13;
trenches, according to advices&#13;
from Paris. Even the Berlin war pfhce&#13;
statement admits the force of the&#13;
Krench offensive in saying that&#13;
"strong enemy forces attacked tho&#13;
German positions on Dead Man hill&#13;
and adjoining lines as far as the&#13;
northern part of Cauretes wood," and&#13;
were repulsed only "after tenacious&#13;
fighting.''&#13;
The Paris war office statement contradicts&#13;
the Berlin report of a "repulse"&#13;
by saying the French captured&#13;
a trench north of Dead Man hill, taking&#13;
53 prisoners, and ejected the Germans&#13;
from a trench south of Lassigny.&#13;
Paris adds that the French repulsed&#13;
a serious German attack in the Vosges&#13;
Mountain region.&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT-Cattle: Receipts, 2,46».&#13;
BCML handy altera, $8.75^5.80; beat&#13;
handy weight butcher *ieers, $8®&#13;
8.50; mixed steers and heifers, $7.76¾)&#13;
».2*; handy ligh/ buichera, $7.25®&#13;
7.76; light butchers, $6.75®7.25; best&#13;
cows, $6.50®67o; butcher cows, $5.60&#13;
®C25; common cows, $4.50®5.25,&#13;
caaners, $3®425; beBt heavy bulla,&#13;
$6.60® 7; bologna bulls, $6® 6.25;&#13;
stock bulls, $5®5.50; feeders, $7.25©&#13;
7.75; stockers, $6®7.50; milkera and&#13;
springers, $40®75.&#13;
Calve*—Receipts, 1,542. Best, $9.50&#13;
®9.75, with an occasional extra fancy&#13;
one at $10; common and heavy $6&#13;
Sheep and Lamb—Receipts, 2,34:..&#13;
Best lambs, $9®9.25; fair lambs, $7&#13;
®8; light to common lambs, $6.76®&#13;
7; yearlings, $8® 8.25; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $6.50(2,7; culls and common.&#13;
$4.2505.&#13;
Hogs -Receipts, 12,0*18. Extra heavy&#13;
grades $^.70, but bulk of sales was&#13;
at $9.60 for good, aad mixed lights&#13;
at $9.60; pigs brought $8.75.&#13;
Berlin( by wireless to Sayville, N. Y.&#13;
—French attacks on the German positions&#13;
on the eastern slope of Dead&#13;
Man hill and adjoining lines In the region&#13;
of Verdun, were repulsed after&#13;
tenacious fighting says the official&#13;
statement issued at the German army&#13;
headquarters. The text of the statement&#13;
follows:&#13;
"Western theater: The English&#13;
made several successive attacks&#13;
against Givenchy-en-Cohelle without&#13;
success.&#13;
"North of the Somme and northwest&#13;
of the Oise, patrol engagements&#13;
were successful for the Germans.&#13;
"To the left of the Meuse (northwest&#13;
of Verdun) strong French forces&#13;
attacked German positions on Dead&#13;
Man hill and adjoining lines as far as&#13;
the northern part of Caurettes wood.&#13;
After tenacious fighting on the east&#13;
slope of the height, the attack was&#13;
repulsed.&#13;
"On the right bank of the river an&#13;
attempt made by the enemy to advance&#13;
northwest of the farm of Thiaumont&#13;
failed.&#13;
"A German aviator flying over Ver&#13;
dun engaged three adversaries and&#13;
shot down one of them.&#13;
"Eastern theater: South of Narocz&#13;
lake four more Russian cannon and&#13;
one machine gun were captured and&#13;
83 prisoners taken."&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Receipts o' n*, ?&gt;&#13;
130 cars; heavy grades 15c lower;&#13;
butchers' stock, choice to prime native&#13;
steers, $9.60® 9.75; good to choice&#13;
$9©9.25; fair to good, $8.75® 9; Ca&#13;
nadian steers, 1,300 to 1,400 lbs., $8.52 and the constant pressure of popula-&#13;
A LAND PROBLEM AHEAD&#13;
(FROM T H E PEORIA J O U R N A L ^&#13;
The Nebraska State Journal call! atVtention&#13;
to the face that Uncle SanV*&#13;
opening of a 4,000-acre tract In the&#13;
North Platte irrigation district for settlement&#13;
practically winds up the "free.&#13;
land distribution ' of the nation. It&#13;
adds:&#13;
• "Free or cheap land has been&#13;
the American safety valve. A&#13;
population straining for aelf-bet- .&#13;
terment has had its own remedy—&#13;
to go west and grow up with the&#13;
country. With the government&#13;
reduced to advertising an opening&#13;
of forty three farms, the safety&#13;
valve may be considered forever&#13;
closed. The expansive energy formerly&#13;
exerted outward, must hereafter&#13;
work itself out intensively.&#13;
Increasing land speculation, with&#13;
rapidly rising prices of land and&#13;
proportionately increasing dissatisfaction&#13;
among the landless would&#13;
seem inevitable. The tone of our&#13;
politics and the intensity of our&#13;
social problems cannot but be vitally&#13;
changed under the strain of&#13;
dealing internally with a social&#13;
pressure which hitherto has had&#13;
the wilderness to vent itself upon.&#13;
" 'Land hunger' will soon become a&#13;
reality In this rapidly growing country&#13;
@8.75; do 1,250 to 1,350 lbs.,&#13;
$8.50® 8.75; yearlings, dry-fed, $9(¾1&#13;
9.50; best handy steers, $8.50@8.75;&#13;
light butcher steers, $8® 8.25; good&#13;
butcher steers and heifers, $8® 8.25;&#13;
steers and heifers, fair to good, $7.25&#13;
©7.75; prime fat heifers, $8.25@8.50;&#13;
western light common heifers, $6.50®&#13;
7; best fat cows, $7@7.50; butcher&#13;
eows, $6.25®6.75; cutters, $4.50® 5;&#13;
canners, $3.50@4; fancy bulls. 7.25®&#13;
7.75; butchers' bulls, $6.75® 7.25; light&#13;
bulls, $5.50®6; good stockers, $7®&#13;
7.50; light common stockers, $6®6.50;&#13;
feeders, best, $7.50®7.75; milkers and&#13;
springers, $65@90.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 90 cars; market&#13;
6®10c higher; heavy, $10.15® 10.25;&#13;
yorkers, $10®10.50; pigs, $9®9.25;&#13;
roughs, |9.10@9.25.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 65 cars;&#13;
market 15@25c lower; top lambs,&#13;
$10.15®10.25; yearlings. $8.25@8.50;&#13;
wethers, $7.75®8; ewes, $7®7.50.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 1,500 head; market&#13;
slow; tops, $10; fair to good,&#13;
$8.50®9.50; fed carves, $4.50®5.&#13;
HARD BLOW IN T U R K E Y&#13;
Surrender of British Force at Kut-et-&#13;
Amara Announced.&#13;
to disseminate this information.&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
were withdrawn and another raid&#13;
should take place, similar to the affair&#13;
at Columbus, it would bo impossible&#13;
to tern the demand for an im«&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
The strike of weavers of the Clinton m e d i a t e invasion o f w a r o n M c x l c o '&#13;
Woolen Manufacturing Co. has been&#13;
settled by an advance in wages. The&#13;
company is working on an order for&#13;
the federal government&#13;
The open season for trout begins&#13;
Sunday night at one minute past midln&#13;
with a whipping of streams wThicb&#13;
may break records.&#13;
Pittsburgh—Advertisements in the*&#13;
newspapers, announcing that the&#13;
Cadillac is to have a new Methodist&#13;
church which will seat 2,000 per*&#13;
night, and from indications at Lansing sons and will cost about -50,000.&#13;
the season this year is to be ushered ,. . T , ,&#13;
New lork—In a signed statement,&#13;
former President Theodore Rooseveit&#13;
has declared that the question of en-&#13;
George and Franklin Recder. of f r a n c h i R i n g W Omen has become na-&#13;
Portland. 80 and 75 years old. respect- t i o n a l a n d pledged his support of the&#13;
ively, were burled side by side in p r o p p e d suffrage amendment to the&#13;
Danby township cemetery. their f e d e r a l c o n 8 t i t l l t i o n .&#13;
deaths having been the result of a&#13;
recent runaway accident.&#13;
Wm. Kilts a former Jackson con- s t r i k } n g employes of the Wesinghouse&#13;
vict has admitted the police say, that c o m p M l i e B . j ^ y had lost $650,000&#13;
he set fire to the home of h.s brother- l n g i n ^ e f f o r t t o e n f c r c e&#13;
ta-law, John Bernhardt, for revenge. ^ e i K h t . h o u r day made up the most&#13;
He has been bound over to the circuit l m p o r U n t development of the most&#13;
court on an arson charge. | OTeventful d a y s i n c e iJk% g t r i k e TO&#13;
The body of William B. Stiles, 67, declared a week a*o.&#13;
G / ^ i J ^ S ! d 8 l u m b f ™ &amp; n ' w*&gt; f * ' New Y o r k - W a r risk insurance both SLiSTL ™T? J comln* lL? »« ** clt* "d ^ ^ 0 ° *"*«"»&#13;
Detroit on an Intemrban car from ML „ t h e T m l t o f a report | n flnanclal&#13;
on his way home will be c i r c l e g t h a t a n o t h e r ¢ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
to Grand Rapids for burial. m e T M nideT n a d - i p p e d t h r o n g h t h e&#13;
Ira township board has grant British patrol. The raider was re-&#13;
«d a H*«or license to Charles A- Mel- ported to have escaped during the re-&#13;
4TUWL, partially breaking three-corn- cent bombardment of British east&#13;
ered deadlock that has existed for: c o » s t towns by a German battle crntwo&#13;
weeks. One more license is to i»er squadron&#13;
S L S ^ T 1 , ' " L S i * * t h e r e ^ t W faottoas contending ° ^ l*^*™^ *«r&gt; Pa—Tobacco shippers g e c t i o n h a v # ^ ^ ^ t h e l n .&#13;
stock took a boost at the ternal revenue authorities to examine&#13;
^ i n Holland when U ( ] certify the shipment of tobacco&#13;
Brooks. 55 years old, fpot t here to Scandinavian ports Tho&#13;
lilies to register with nhlppers complain that shipments for&#13;
clerk and them walked those ports have been opened by&#13;
election day to vote for British authorities, with the result&#13;
tor that tobacco arrival at its deatnatsM&#13;
.«a kad cooditJoa.&#13;
London—A Constantinople dispatch&#13;
received by way of Berlin says that&#13;
the vice-chief commander of the Turkish&#13;
army announces that the British&#13;
garrison at Kut-el-Amara under General&#13;
Townshend, which surrendered&#13;
unconditionally, numbered 13.300 men.&#13;
Major General Charles Townshend,&#13;
commander of the British forces besieged&#13;
at Kut-el-Amara, Mesopotamia,&#13;
by Turkish forces since last December,&#13;
has surrendered. This information&#13;
was contained In a British official&#13;
statement.&#13;
The following official anouncement&#13;
was made: "After a resistance protracted&#13;
for 143 days and conducted&#13;
with a gallantry and fortitude that&#13;
will be forever memorable, General&#13;
Townshend has been compelled by the&#13;
final exhaustion of his supplies to surrender.&#13;
"Before doing so, he destroyed his&#13;
guns and munitions. The force under&#13;
him consists of 2,1*70 British troops of&#13;
all ranks and services, and some €,000&#13;
Indian troops and their followers."&#13;
The eventual surrender of General&#13;
Townshend had been expected since&#13;
the failure of the forces under&#13;
LaeuL Gen. Gorringo and Gen. Keary&#13;
to break through the Turkish position&#13;
at Sannayyat, just below Kut-el-Amara&#13;
on the Tigris river and the unsuccessful&#13;
attempt to send the blockaded army&#13;
provisions by steamers. It bad&#13;
been touch and go with the small&#13;
British force for many days.&#13;
The position of Kut-el-Amara, which&#13;
is on a peninsula extending into the&#13;
Tigris river, made it impossible to&#13;
send supplies by air, as there was&#13;
Ao landing place for aeroplanes.&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat: Cash No 2 red,&#13;
J1.21; May opened without change at&#13;
$1.20, lost l-2c, advanced to $1.20 1-2&#13;
and declined to $1.20; July opened at&#13;
$1.20 1.2, declined to $1.20, advanced&#13;
to $1.21 and declined to $1.20 1-2;&#13;
No 1 white, $1.16; No 4 red, $1.14.&#13;
Corn—Cash No 3, 76 l-2c; No 3 yel.&#13;
low, 79c; No 4 yellow, 76 l-2c@78c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 46 12c; No 3&#13;
white, 45 l-4c; No 4 white, 43®44c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No 2, 95c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$3.70; May, $3.75.&#13;
Seeds—Prime red clover and alsike,&#13;
$9; prime timothy, $3.25.&#13;
Hay—No 1 timothy. $20.50® 21;&#13;
standard timothy, $19.50®20; light&#13;
mixed, $19.50®20; No 2 timothy, $17&#13;
®18; No 1 mixed, $15.50® 16.50; No&#13;
2 mixed, $11® 13; No 1 clover, $12®&#13;
13; rye straw, $7.50®8; wheat and&#13;
oat straw, $6.50® 7 per ton in car.&#13;
lots, Detroit.&#13;
Flour*—In one-eightb paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 lbs jobbing lots: First patent,&#13;
$6.50; second patent, $6.20; straight,&#13;
$5.90; spring patent, $6.80; rye flour,&#13;
$6 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $24; standard middlings, $22;&#13;
fine middlings, $30; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$30; cracked corn, $31.50; corn and&#13;
oat chop $28 per ton.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Vir*t supposed to be of incendiary&#13;
origin, caused f2&amp;.000 damage to the&#13;
Imparlal Furniture Co., at Grand Sapids.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Grapefruit—$2.75®3.50 per case.&#13;
Lemons—California, $3.75® 4.25 per&#13;
box.&#13;
Cocoanuts—$7.50 per sack and 90c&#13;
®$1 per doss.&#13;
Nuts—Spanish chestnuts, 10c per&#13;
lb; shellbark hickory, $1.50; large&#13;
hickory, $1.25 per bu; walnuts, $1.25&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Oranges — California navels, $3®&#13;
?.75; Florida, I3.50@3.75 per box.&#13;
Strawberries — Louisiana, $2.50®&#13;
2.75 per 24-pt case, $5J0®5.75 per&#13;
24-qt case.&#13;
Apples—Greenings, $3®3.75; Spy,&#13;
$3.50®4; Baldwins, $3®3.50; Steele&#13;
Reds, $4®4.60 per bbl; western, $1.75&#13;
®2 per box.&#13;
Mushrooms^—40945c per lb.&#13;
Cabbage—$2®2.25 per bbl; new, $3&#13;
per crate.&#13;
New Potatoes—Bermuda, $9.50 per&#13;
bbl. $3.25 per bu.&#13;
Celery—Florida. $2®2.50 per crate&#13;
and 76c0&gt;$l per dot.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey, kiln-drie&lt;L&#13;
$1.30®1.35 per crate.&#13;
Asparagus—$4.25 per case; Illinois&#13;
section. $3®1.25 per box.&#13;
Maple Sugar—New, 15®16c per lb;&#13;
•Trap, $101-10 Ptr gal.&#13;
Lettuos—Hothouse, L2fJlXc par lb;&#13;
head lettooe. $4,769* per&#13;
tion, increasingly higher than^he ratio&#13;
of production, is bound to bring us&#13;
face to face with economic problems&#13;
that we have heretofore considered remote.&#13;
The far-sighted statesman and&#13;
publicist must devote his thought&#13;
earnestly to the consideration of these&#13;
questions if we are to escape the extremes&#13;
which curse the older nations&#13;
of the world."&#13;
In the above will be found one of&#13;
the reasons that the Canadian Government&#13;
is offering 160 acres of Land free&#13;
to the actual settler. There is no&#13;
dearth of homesteads of this size, and&#13;
the land is of the highest quality, being&#13;
such as produces yields of from 30&#13;
to 60 bushels of wheat per acre, while&#13;
oats run from fifty to over hundred&#13;
bushels per acre. It is not only a matter&#13;
of free grants, but in Western Canada&#13;
are also to be had other lands at&#13;
prices ranging from $12 to $30 per&#13;
acre, the difference in price being&#13;
largely a matter of location and distance&#13;
from railway. If one takes Into&#13;
consideration the scarcity of free&#13;
grant lands in the United States it Is&#13;
not difficult to understand why there&#13;
has been most material advances in&#13;
the price of farm lands.&#13;
A few years ago, land that now sells&#13;
for two hundred dollars an acre in&#13;
Iowa, could have been bought for seventy-&#13;
five dollars an acre or less. The&#13;
Increased price is warranted by the&#13;
increased value of the product raised&#13;
on these farms. The lands that today&#13;
can be had in Western Canada at the&#13;
low prices quoted will in a less time&#13;
than that taken for the Iowa lands to&#13;
increase, have a proportionate increase.&#13;
In Nebraska the lands that&#13;
sold for sixteen to twenty dollars per&#13;
acre seven years ago, find a market at&#13;
one hundred and seventy-five dollars&#13;
an acre, for the same reason given for&#13;
the increase in Iowa lands. Values&#13;
in these two States, as well as in others&#13;
that might be mentioned, show&#13;
that Western Canada lands are going&#13;
at a song at their present prices. In&#13;
many cases in Western Canada today,&#13;
there are American settlers, who realise&#13;
this, and are placing a value of&#13;
sixty and seventy dollars an acre on&#13;
their improved farms, but would sell&#13;
only because they can purchase unimproved&#13;
land at sech a low price that&#13;
ln another few years taey would have&#13;
equally as sjooi fcnas as taey left or&#13;
such as their friends have ia 4hs United&#13;
States.&#13;
The worth of the crops grown - nl&#13;
Western Canada is of higher valve&#13;
than those of the States named, so why&#13;
should the land not be worth fully as&#13;
much. Any Canadian Government&#13;
Agent will be glad to give you ingSF*&#13;
mation as to homestead lands or w)&#13;
you can buy.—Advertisement&#13;
Hint for Nurse,&#13;
Mrs. Simpson had taken her little&#13;
daughter out to tea at a friend's&#13;
house, and all went well till the close&#13;
of the meal.&#13;
Then she was horrified to see little&#13;
Elsie tying to smuggle a slice of thin&#13;
bread and butter into her pocket&#13;
"Oh, Elsie, what are you doing 7" she&#13;
asked in sad surprise.&#13;
"That's all r i g h t mother." her small&#13;
daughter reassured her. "I just&#13;
thought I'd take a piece back to nurse&#13;
as a pattern!"&#13;
Correct.&#13;
'Can anyone give an example of an&#13;
Imaginary quality?" asked the professor&#13;
of mathematics.&#13;
' T h e United States merchant marine,"&#13;
promptly responded the brightest&#13;
student in the class.&#13;
Some people&#13;
ing out wnich side of their&#13;
tattered until taey drop It&#13;
In&#13;
# - :&#13;
:-j&#13;
T f - ¼ . ^ V&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The City of Numbered Days&#13;
By Francis Lynde&#13;
crrrtftt »,&#13;
Ckinai Soissert leas&#13;
; SYNOPSIS.&#13;
— 12—&#13;
Broulllard, chief engineer of the Nlquoia&#13;
fcfteation darn, meets J Wesley O r t -&#13;
•%rl«ht and explains (he reclamation work&#13;
t o him. Cortwright organizes a company&#13;
&amp;Jld obtains government contracts to furnish&#13;
power and material. Steve Massm-&#13;
«ale threatens to s t a r t a gold rush if&#13;
Brouillard does not use his influence to&#13;
bring a. railroad branch to the place, thus&#13;
opening an easy m a r k e t for the "Little&#13;
S u s a n " mine ore. Broulllard tella Amy&#13;
Maaslngale of his need for money to pay&#13;
o S his dead father's debts. She tells him&#13;
to be true to himself. H e decides for the&#13;
extension. Mirapolis, the city of numbered&#13;
days, booms. Cortwright persuades&#13;
Broulllard to become consulting engineer&#13;
of the power company In return for $100,-&#13;
000 stock. Stoppage of work on the reJlrop.&#13;
d t h r e a t e n s a panic. Broulllaxd spreads&#13;
t h e Masslngale story of placer gold In&#13;
t h e river bed and s t a r t s a gold rush,&#13;
which promises to stop the reclamation&#13;
project. Amy tells Brwulllard t h a t her&#13;
f a t h e r Is In C o r t w r l g h t s financial&#13;
d u t c h e s . He tells her he has made $100,-&#13;
000 and declares his love. She loves htm,&#13;
b u t shows him t h a t he has become demoralised&#13;
A real gold find Is made. Broulllard&#13;
sells his stock but does not pay his&#13;
f a t h e r s debts. Cortwright's son shoots&#13;
Steve Maaslngale. Broulllard threatens&#13;
Cortwright with exposure If he pushes&#13;
Maaslngale to the wall. The m a g n a t e&#13;
promises to give the old m a n a free flel*.&#13;
Stories of the dam's abandonment revive&#13;
.Foreclosure on the "Little S u s a n " is Impending&#13;
and Broulllard loans Dave Masslngale&#13;
his HOO.OOO to clear him. Masslngale&#13;
gambles a w a y the entire amount.&#13;
• • ! # '&#13;
Once more Broulllard is&#13;
tempted by Cortwright If he&#13;
accepts CortwrJght'a offer he&#13;
can make money and stand a&#13;
chance of defeating the crooked&#13;
capitalist's purposes In the long&#13;
run. If he refuses, he loses not&#13;
only his job but his savings.&#13;
What would you do—considering&#13;
that acceptance is wrong?&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII—Continued.&#13;
For the better part of a fortnight the&#13;
tidal waves of prosperity, as evinced&#13;
by increasing speculative values, kept&#13;
on rolling In, each one apparently a little&#13;
higher than its immediate predecessor.&#13;
Then the flood began to subside,&#13;
though so slowly that at first it&#13;
was only by a careful comparison of&#13;
the dally transfers that the recession&#13;
could be measured.&#13;
Causes and consequences extraneous&#13;
to the city itself contributed to the almost&#13;
imperceptible reactionary tendency.&#13;
For one, the Buckskin Mining&#13;
and Milling company reluctantly abandoned&#13;
its pastime of plowing barren&#13;
furrows on Jack's mountain, and a little&#13;
later went into liquidation, as the&#13;
phrase ran, though the eastern bondholders&#13;
probably called it bankruptcy.&#13;
About the same time the great cement&#13;
plant deprived of the government&#13;
market by the slackening of the work&#13;
on the dam, reduced its output to leas&#13;
than one-fourth of its full capacity.&#13;
Most portentous of all, perhaps, was&#13;
the rumor that the placers at Quad&#13;
Jenai were beginning to ehow signs of&#13;
exhaustion. It was even whispered&#13;
about that the two huge gold dredges&#13;
recently installed were not paying the&#13;
expenses of operating them.&#13;
Quite naturally, the pulBe of the&#13;
Wonder city beat sensitive to all these&#13;
depressive rumors and incidents, responding&#13;
slowly at first but a little&#13;
later in accelerated throbbings which&#13;
could no longer be ignored by the most&#13;
optimistic bidder at the "curb" exiseaernr&#13;
sstlU there was no panic. As the actttittes&#13;
in local sales fell off and the&#13;
Jpjsjfjpoiitans themselves were no long-&#13;
- er crowding the curbs or standing in&#13;
line at the real estate offices for their&#13;
turn at the listings, the prudent ones,&#13;
v^wlth Mr. Cortwright and his chosen&#13;
tea far in advance of the field,&#13;
•*"*-ere placing Mlrapolls holdings tempton&#13;
view in distant markets; placing&#13;
them and selling them with&#13;
hUsonry of advertising worthy of the&#13;
en*y of those who have called themselves&#13;
the suburb builders of Greater&#13;
-JNew York.&#13;
It was after this Invasion of the dis-&#13;
-Aant market was fully in train that&#13;
-^Cortwright once more sent for Brouil-&#13;
"Wd, receiving the engineer this time&#13;
Is the newest offices of the power company,&#13;
on the many-times-bought-andtold&#13;
corner opposite Bongras'.&#13;
"Hello, Broulllard!" said the magnate&#13;
Jocosely, indicating a chair and&#13;
the nerer-abeent open box of cigars in&#13;
the same gesture. "You're getting to&#13;
be as much of a stranger as a man&#13;
fw*g*»t wish his worst enemy to be."&#13;
T o n seat for me?" Broulllard broke&#13;
to tersely. More and more he&#13;
funding to acknowledge a dull&#13;
he heard fh#. call of bis master.&#13;
T e e . What about the dam? Is your&#13;
going to start up again? Or is it&#13;
&lt;ttforsjoocr&#13;
set his tip to keep&#13;
the Dlunt Inquiry threatened to evoke.&#13;
To assume that Mr. Cortwright did not&#13;
know all there was to be known was&#13;
to credit the incredible.&#13;
"1 told you a good while ago that i&#13;
was only the government's hired man,'&#13;
he replied. "You doubtless have much&#13;
better information than any 1 can give&#13;
you."&#13;
"You can tell me what your orders&#13;
are—that's what 1 want to know."&#13;
The young chief of construction&#13;
frowned first, then he laughed.&#13;
"What has given you the impression&#13;
that you own me, Mr. Cortwright? I&#13;
have often wondered."&#13;
"Well. 1 might say that 1 have made&#13;
you what you are, and—"&#13;
"That's true; the truest thing you&#13;
ever said," snapped Broulllard.&#13;
"And, I was going to add, 1 can unmake&#13;
you Just as easily. But I don't&#13;
want to be savage with you. Ail I'm&#13;
asking is a little information first, and&#13;
a little Judicious help afterward. What&#13;
are your orders from the department?"&#13;
Broulllard got up and stood over the&#13;
Btocky man in the office chair, with the&#13;
black eyes blazing.&#13;
"Mr. Cortwright, I said a moment ago&#13;
that you have made me what I am,&#13;
and you have. 1 am infinitely a worse&#13;
man than you are, because I know better&#13;
and you don't It is no excuse for&#13;
me that I have had a Motive which I&#13;
haven't explained to you. because, as I&#13;
once told you, you couldn't understand&#13;
it in a thousand years. The evil has&#13;
been done and the consequences, to&#13;
you, to me, and to everyone in this&#13;
cursed valley are certain. Facing them&#13;
as 1 am obliged to face them, 1 am telling&#13;
you—but what's the use? You&#13;
can't make a tool of me any longer—&#13;
that's all. You must cook your meat&#13;
over your own fire. I'm out of it"&#13;
"I can smash you," said the man In&#13;
the chair, quite without heat.&#13;
"No, you can't even do that," was&#13;
the equally coel retort. "No man's&#13;
fate is in another man's handB."&#13;
He was moving toward the door, but&#13;
Cortwright stopped him.&#13;
"One more word before you go,&#13;
Broulllard. It is to be war between us&#13;
from this on?"&#13;
"I don't say that. It would be awkward&#13;
for us both now. Let is be&#13;
armed neutrality if you like. Don't interfere&#13;
with me and I won't Interfere&#13;
with you."&#13;
"Ah!" said the millionaire. "Now&#13;
you have brought it around to the&#13;
point I was trying to reach. You don't&#13;
want to have anything more to do&#13;
with me, but you are not quite ready&#13;
to cash in and pull out of the game.&#13;
How much money have you got?"&#13;
The cool impudence of the question&#13;
brought a dull flush to the young man's&#13;
face, but he would give the enemy no&#13;
advantage in the matter of superior&#13;
self-control.&#13;
"That 1B scarcely a fair question—&#13;
even between armed neutrals." he objected.&#13;
"Why do you want to know?"&#13;
"I'm asking because you have Just&#13;
proposed the noninterference policy,&#13;
and I'd like to know how fairly you&#13;
mean to live up to it A little while&#13;
back you interfered in a small business&#13;
matter of mine very pointedly.&#13;
What became of the one hundred thousand&#13;
dollars you gave old David Masslngale?"&#13;
"How do you know I gave him a&#13;
hundred thousand dollars?"&#13;
"That's dead easy," laughed the man&#13;
in the pivot chair, once more the genial&#13;
buccaneer. "You drew a check for that&#13;
amount and cashed It, and a few minutes&#13;
later Maaslngale, whose account&#13;
had been drawn down to nothing, bobs&#13;
up at Schermerhorn's window with exactly&#13;
the same amount In loose cash.&#13;
What did be do with It—gamble i t r&#13;
-That is his own affair," Broulllard&#13;
countered briefly.&#13;
"Welt the future—next month's future—&#13;
is my affair. If you've got money&#13;
enough to Interfere again—dont&#13;
You'll lose i t the same as you did before.&#13;
And perhaps 1 sha*nt take the&#13;
second interference as good-naturedly&#13;
as I did the first"&#13;
"Is that all you have to say?" Branfllsrd&#13;
asked impatiently.&#13;
"Not quite. I don't believe yon were&#13;
altogether in earnest a minute ago&#13;
when you expressed your desire to call&#13;
it all off. You dont want the Mtrapolis&#13;
well to go dry right now. not one bit&#13;
more than I do."&#13;
"I have been trying pretty hard to&#13;
make you understand that it is a matter&#13;
of utter indifference to me."&#13;
"But you havent succeeded very&#13;
well; it isnt at all a matter of indifference&#13;
to you," the magnate instated persuasively.&#13;
MAs things are shaping&#13;
themselves up at the preaeat speaking,&#13;
you stead to lose, not eely the hundred&#13;
thousand you aqaaadsred en osi&#13;
David, bat all you've saaie tulasa, I&#13;
keep in touch—it's my business to&#13;
keep In touch You've been buying&#13;
bargains and you are holding thwn —&#13;
for the simple reason that with the&#13;
present slowing-dowu tendency tn the&#13;
saddle you can't bell uud uiaku any&#13;
money."&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"I've got a proposition to make, that&#13;
ought to look good to you. What we&#13;
need Just now in this town Is a little&#13;
more activity—something doing. IOU&#13;
can relieve the situation if you feel&#13;
like it."&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"If I tell you, you mustn't go and use&#13;
It against me. That would be a lowdown&#13;
welcher's trick. Bui you wou't.&#13;
See here, your bureau at Washington&#13;
is pretty well scared up over the pros&#13;
pect here. It is known In the capital&#13;
that when congress convener there is&#13;
going to be a dead-open-and-shut tight&#13;
to kill this Buckskin reclamation project&#13;
Very well; the way for you Tallows&#13;
to win out is to hurry—finish&#13;
your dam and finish it quick, before&#13;
congress or anybody else can get action."&#13;
For a single Instant Brouillard was&#13;
puzzled. Then he began to understand.&#13;
"Go on," he said&#13;
"What 1 was going to suggest la&#13;
this: You prod your people at Washington&#13;
with a hot wire; tell 'em now'a&#13;
the time to strike and strike hard.&#13;
They'll see the point and if you ask&#13;
for an increase of a thousand men&#13;
youll get it Make it two thousand,&#13;
just for the dramatic effect We'll&#13;
work right along with you and make&#13;
things hum again. We'll start up the&#13;
cement plant and I don't know but&#13;
what we might give the Buckskin M.. &amp;&#13;
M. folks a small hypodermic that would&#13;
keep 'em alive while we are taking a&#13;
few snap-shot pictures of Mirapolis&#13;
on the Jump again."&#13;
"Let me get it straight" said Broulllard,&#13;
putting his back against the door.&#13;
"You fully believe you've got us down;&#13;
that eventually, and before the water&#13;
is turned on, congress will pass a bill&#13;
"There Is No 8uch Thing as Good&#13;
News in This God-Forsaken Valley,&#13;
Castner."&#13;
killing the Niquola project But in the&#13;
meantime, to make things lively, you'd&#13;
like to have the reclamation service go&#13;
ahead and spend another million or so&#13;
in wages that can be turned loose in&#13;
Mirapolis. Is that it?"&#13;
"You've surrounded it very neatly,"&#13;
laughed the promoter. "Once, some&#13;
little time ago, I might have felt the&#13;
necessity of convincing your scruples,&#13;
but you've cut away all that foolishness.&#13;
It's a little tough on our good&#13;
old Uncle SamueL 111 admit but it'll&#13;
be only a pin-prick or BO in comparison&#13;
to the money that is thrown away&#13;
every time congress passes an appropriation&#13;
bill. And, putting it upon the&#13;
dead practical basis, Broulllard, it's&#13;
your own and only salvation—personally,&#13;
I mean. You've got to unload or&#13;
go broke, and you can't unload on a&#13;
falling market You think about it and&#13;
then get quick action with the wire.&#13;
There is no time to lose."&#13;
Brouillard was looking past Cortwright&#13;
and out through the plate glass&#13;
window which commanded a view of&#13;
the great dam and its network of forms&#13;
and stagings.&#13;
"It is a gambler's bet and a rather&#13;
desperate one." be said slowly. "You&#13;
stand to win all or to lose all in making&#13;
i t Mr. Cortwright The town is&#13;
balancing on the knife-edge of a panic&#13;
at this moment Would it go up. or&#13;
down, with a sudden resumption of&#13;
work on the dsm?"&#13;
T h e careless thinker would say&#13;
that H would yell Tire!' and go up into&#13;
the air so far that ft could never&#13;
climb down," was the prompt reply&#13;
"But well have the medicine dropper&#13;
handy, in the first place, everybody&#13;
can afford to stay and boost while&#13;
Uncle Sam is spending his million or&#13;
so right here in the middle of things.&#13;
Nobody will want to pun out and leave&#13;
that cow nnmilked. In the second&#13;
place, we've s o t a mighty good antidote&#13;
to use in any sure enough case&#13;
of tardropbobJa your cjqftsk dea* DUOSV&#13;
The Man on the Bank&#13;
Brouillard. walking out of Mr. Cortwrigbt's&#13;
new offices with his thoughts&#13;
afar, wondered if It were by pure coincidence&#13;
that he found Castner apparently&#13;
waiting for him on the sidewalk.&#13;
"Once more you are Just the man L&#13;
have been wanting to see." the young&#13;
missionary began, promptly making&#13;
use of the chance meeting "May i&#13;
break in with a bit of bad news?'&#13;
"There Is no such thing as good&#13;
news in this God-forsaken valley. Castner.&#13;
What's your grief?"&#13;
"There Is trouble threatening tor&#13;
the Cortwrlghts. Stephen Masslngale&#13;
is out and about again, and I was told&#13;
this morning that he was filling himself&#13;
up with bad whisky and looking&#13;
for the man who shot him."&#13;
Brouillard nodded unsympathetloally.&#13;
"You will find that there is always&#13;
likely to be a second chapter in a book&#13;
of that sort—if the first one isn't con&#13;
elusive."&#13;
"But there mustn't be this time."&#13;
Castner insisted warmly. "We must&#13;
stop It; it is our business to stop it"&#13;
"Your business, maybe; It falls right&#13;
In your line, doeBn't it?"&#13;
"No more in mine than In vours,"&#13;
was the quick retort.&#13;
"Am I my brother's keeper?" said&#13;
the engineer pointedly, catching step&#13;
with the long-legged stride of the athletic&#13;
young shepherd of souls&#13;
"Not if you claim kinship with Cain,&#13;
who was the originator of that very&#13;
badly outworn query," came the answer&#13;
shotlike. Then: "What has come&#13;
over you lately, Brouillard? You are a&#13;
friend of the Massingales; I've had&#13;
good proof of that Why don't you&#13;
care?"&#13;
"Great heavens, Castner, 1 do carel&#13;
But if you had a cut finger you&#13;
wouldn't go to a man in hell to get It&#13;
tied up, would you?"&#13;
"You mean that I have brought my&#13;
cut finger to you?"&#13;
"Yes. 1 meant that, and the rest of&#13;
it. too I'm no fit company for a decent&#13;
man today, Castner. You'd better&#13;
edge off and leave me alone."&#13;
Castner did not take the blunt intimation.&#13;
For the little distance intervening&#13;
between the power company's&#13;
new offices and the Nlquoia building&#13;
he tramped beside the young engineer&#13;
in silence. But at the entrance to the&#13;
Nlquoia he would have gone his way if&#13;
Brouillard bad not said abruptly:&#13;
"1 gave you fair warning; I'm not&#13;
looking for a chance to play the Good&#13;
Samaritan to anybody—not even to&#13;
Stephen Masslngale. much less Van&#13;
Bruce Cortwright. The reason is because&#13;
1 have a pretty decent backload&#13;
of my own to carry. Come up to my&#13;
rooms If you can spare a few minutes.&#13;
1 want to talk to a man who hasn't&#13;
parted with his soul for a money&#13;
equivalent—if there is such a man left&#13;
in this bottomless pit of a town."&#13;
Castner accepted the implied challenge&#13;
soberly, and together they ascended&#13;
to Brouillard's offices. Once behind&#13;
the closed door, Brouillard struck&#13;
out viciously.&#13;
"You fellows claim to hold the keys&#13;
to the conscience shop; suppose you&#13;
open up and dole out a little of the&#13;
precious commodity to me, Castner. Is&#13;
it ever Justifiable to do evil that good&#13;
may come?"&#13;
"No." There was no hesitation in&#13;
the denial.&#13;
Brouillard's laugh was harshly derisive.&#13;
"1 thought you'd say that No qualifications&#13;
asked for, no judicial weighing&#13;
of the pros and rons—the evil of the&#13;
evil, or the goodness of the good—&#13;
just a plain, bigoted *No.'"&#13;
The young missionary left his chair&#13;
and began to walk back and forth on&#13;
bis side of the office desk.&#13;
•o&lt;«s»#&#13;
" Y o u could let tt leak out t h a t , ta&#13;
s p i t e of ali t h e b u r r a l i anu ruen cm&#13;
t h e d a m , c o u g r e s s is really going to int&#13;
e r f e r e before we a r e r e a d y 10 t u r n&#13;
t h e w a t e r ua," tsaid Brouiuaru. m u s i n g -&#13;
ly a n d a s if it w e r e only nla t h o u g h t&#13;
s l i p p i n g into u n c o n s c i o u s s p e e c h&#13;
"•precisely. We c o u l a tnaiie lhat p r o p !&#13;
hold It you w e r e a c t u a l l y p u t t i n g t h e&#13;
top c o u r s e on y o u r wall a n d m a k i n g i&#13;
p r e p a r a t i o n s to d r o p t h e s t o p g a t e in&#13;
y o u r s p i l l w a y . "&#13;
"1 see.' v. a s t h e r e j o i n d e r , tmd U&#13;
w a s cuude in t h e sauje h a l f - a b s e n t&#13;
m o n o t o n e . ""Rut while we a r e still on&#13;
j t h e knife-blade edjee a m u e&#13;
p u s h Mr. C o r t w r i g h t . if t h e r e&#13;
J w e r e o n e s o l i t a r y r i g h t e o u s m a n left&#13;
In M i r a p o l i s — "&#13;
" T h e r e i s n ' t . " c h u c k l e d t h e p r o m o t e r ,&#13;
t u r n i n g back to his d e s k while t h e eng&#13;
i n e e r was g r o p i n g tor the door KIIUO&#13;
— " a t least, n o b o d y with lhat particular&#13;
b r a n d of r i g h t e o u s n e s s o a c k e d by&#13;
t h e needful i n s i d e i n f o r m a t i o n . You&#13;
go a h e a d a n d do y o u r p a r t a n d we'll ;&#13;
do t h e r e s t . "&#13;
JEW CHAPTER XIX gg&#13;
The Yellow Kind.&#13;
M a u d - 1 do a d m i r e a m a n of m e n ! * .&#13;
M a r i e -So du 1. T h e m o r e gold ho&#13;
h a s t h e b e l t e r • Uosioi: K v e n i n v. Trail&#13;
s c r i p t .&#13;
M a n y S c h o o l C h l l d r e i i A r e i M c l t l y&#13;
C h i l d r e n w h o nc- d t r l l c a i f , f e v e r i s h aii'l cros.-)&#13;
will Ktrl liumcdlHitr relief from M u i h t - r Gru.v'.i&#13;
B w e e l P o * d c r s for Cb l l d r r ii Tfir ;• r i e a i i o r ttir&#13;
B t o o i a c h , a d o u I he 11 v e r , &lt;vud Are r-51-0111 r u e n d e d&#13;
for c o m pluliii ritf eh 1 :d't-rj. A p; ea,»*wit r e m e d y&#13;
for w o r m H. I'ned t&gt;; uii&gt;t t i e r s tor W s c a r s .-i 1&#13;
DnitfKlaln, 25c. S a m p l e b'KJCK. A u d r e y , M u l l i c r&#13;
Grujf Co., L c Hoy, S. V.&#13;
A b o u t T i m e .&#13;
"Ik) yuu r e m e m b e r '.hat s t o r y &lt;r&#13;
m i n e 111 last m o n t h ' s S c r i b b l e r ' s ' . ' "&#13;
a s k e d t h e a u t h o r .&#13;
" T h e um- 1 :11 u.-irated '." i n q u i r e d t h e&#13;
a r t i s t .&#13;
"Yea. It h a s m a d e s u c h a hit t h a t&#13;
T a b a s c o h a s -irteied lu d r a m a t i z e it&#13;
for m e . "&#13;
"You d o n ' t say .so. I g u e s s I'll h a v e&#13;
to r e a d it."&#13;
DO YOU NEED A KIDNEY&#13;
REMEDY? Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root ta not recommended&#13;
for everything;, but if you have&#13;
kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it m a y&#13;
be found just the remedy you need.&#13;
flwamp-Root m a k e s friends quickly because&#13;
its mild and immediate effect la&#13;
noon realized in most cases. It la a f e n tie&#13;
healing' herbal compound—a physician's&#13;
prescription which has proved Its g r e a t&#13;
curative value in thousands of the most&#13;
distressing' cases according to reliable&#13;
testimony*.&#13;
All druggists in 60c and 11.00 sixes.&#13;
You may have a sample slse bottle of&#13;
this a l w a y s reliable preparation by P a r -&#13;
cel Post, also p a m p h l e t telling a b o u t it.&#13;
Address Dr. Kilmer &amp; Co.. B l n g h a m t o n .&#13;
N. Y., and enclose ten cents, also mention&#13;
this paper.—Adv.&#13;
Showing Her Spirit-&#13;
James J. Hill, the railroad king.&#13;
whom King Albert has asked to reorganize&#13;
Belgium, said in a Y. M. C.&#13;
A. address in Chicago:&#13;
"Success is a matter of spirit, the&#13;
right spirit. If we have the right&#13;
spirit, we can't help showing It, and if&#13;
we have the wrong spirit, we can't&#13;
help showing it, either—like the maid,&#13;
you know.&#13;
"A lady engaged a maid. This lady&#13;
had a few current scandals in the family,&#13;
and she wanted their kept dark.&#13;
So, examining the maid, she said:&#13;
" 'And, of course, 1 can expect you&#13;
to be reticent?"&#13;
" 'Oh, yes, ma'am," Baid the maid.&#13;
'Yes, Indeed, ma'am,' and she added&#13;
eagerly, 'What is there to be reticent&#13;
about0'"&#13;
Monotonous Introduction.&#13;
There is a remarkable monotony&#13;
about the openings of speeches in&#13;
the house of commons. On Wednesday&#13;
43 speeches i not counting brief&#13;
efforts In the way of interjections)&#13;
were delivered, and In ^0 cases the&#13;
speeches began with the first person&#13;
singular, Only 15 members could think&#13;
of anything more original. One was&#13;
Mr. Warwick Brookes, but even his&#13;
maiden speech began: "In rising to&#13;
say a few words, I should like," etc.&#13;
An analysis shows that "I beg" was&#13;
used four times. So was "I should&#13;
like." "I am sure" and "I wish" were&#13;
each the opening of three members.&#13;
"I would like," "I think" and "I desire"&#13;
had two each. "I hope." "I do&#13;
not rise," "I should not," "I want to&#13;
ask," "I was hoping," "I dc Dot wish,"&#13;
"I have not," "I associate myself." "I&#13;
agree," "I am quite sure," and "I acknowledge"&#13;
were each used once.—&#13;
Manchester Guardian.&#13;
EXPERIMENTS&#13;
Teach Things of Value.&#13;
!&#13;
WIN the clea&gt;-minded young &lt;•&#13;
missionary persuade the engl* ))&#13;
neer to refuse Cortwright'* of- &lt; *&#13;
for, or will he see the ultimate ] \&#13;
possibility of BrouHlsrtTs win- &lt; J&#13;
ntnf and counsel him to aooeptr ] *&#13;
(TO BK OONTlMUsUU&#13;
Where one has never made the experiment&#13;
of leaving off coffee and&#13;
drinking Postum, it is still easy to&#13;
learn something about it by reading&#13;
the experiences of others.&#13;
Drinking Postum is a pleasant way&#13;
out of coffee troubles. A Penn. man&#13;
says:&#13;
"My wife was a victim of nervouscess,&#13;
weak stomach and loss of appetite&#13;
for years; and although we resorted&#13;
to numerous methods for relief,&#13;
one of which was a change from&#13;
coffee to tea, it was all to no purpose.&#13;
'"We knew coffee was causing the&#13;
trouble but could not find anything to&#13;
take its place until we tried Postum.&#13;
Within two weeks after she quit coffee&#13;
and began using Postum almost all of&#13;
her troubles had disappeared as if by&#13;
magic. It was truly wonderful. Her&#13;
nervousness was gone, stomach trouble&#13;
relieved, appetite Improved and.&#13;
above all, a night's rest was complete&#13;
and refreshing.&#13;
"This sounds like an exaggeration.&#13;
as it all happened so quickly. Each&#13;
day there* was improvement, for the&#13;
Postum was undoubtedly strengthening&#13;
her. Every particle of this good&#13;
work is due to drinking Postum in&#13;
place of coffee." Name given by Postum&#13;
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
Postum comes In two forms:&#13;
Postum Cereal—the original f o r m -&#13;
must be well boiled. ISc and 25c pkgs.&#13;
Instant Postum—a soluble powder—&#13;
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water,&#13;
and, with cream and sugar, makes&#13;
a delicious beverage instantly. 30c&#13;
and 60c tin*.&#13;
Both forma are equally deUdoas&#13;
and coat aboe* tfce same per cap.&#13;
• a, a t a m * * for&#13;
• 7&#13;
•*uotf£s*«4K.'- •jsesssssi&#13;
ii »if|j ,\m&#13;
**,&#13;
1**;&#13;
" * &gt; . -&#13;
£?:':•,*'&#13;
.1&#13;
r \ - -v&#13;
I: cyv.&#13;
tf&#13;
t*v,&#13;
Kf»" I&#13;
[?'&#13;
&amp; • •&#13;
&amp;*£.&#13;
'&lt;W;'&#13;
t&#13;
, I l&gt;&#13;
U I'-&#13;
l l&#13;
i&#13;
,lVi,&#13;
? . ' • ' -&#13;
• s * \ ; -&#13;
'*?s&#13;
( • - * • » -&#13;
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PHMCKNEY D I S P A T C H&#13;
North Lake SPECIAL&#13;
ELECTION&#13;
S h a l l W e . B o n d P u t n a m T o w n *&#13;
» h i p f o r t h e . S u m o f $ 2 0 , O O I &gt;&#13;
f o r S t a t e . R e w a r d R o a d s ' ?&#13;
M r . a/. .! M r s . H o t ! T n o m &amp; 8 we-iv&#13;
W ' b l j n t r v J l c N'ioi1.'Jfo M u r n l a y .&#13;
M r UT:ii M r b . P . N o a h h p e n t&#13;
S a u d o y tit t h e h o m e of T h e o d o r e&#13;
W o o d m i d w i f e of C h e l s e a .&#13;
K o y C ; i n r o u of P i O r k n e y bpeiit.&#13;
S u u d a y w i t h Mm -Jab. H a n k e n ! . , . , , , - , , 7&#13;
-7 I D e m a n d h a v i n g b e e n a u l y m a d e&#13;
_M r a n d M r s . F . 4 A G l e n n of ' u p o n t h e T o w n s h i p B o a r d o f i\.&#13;
H i g h l a n d P a r k b p e n t S a u d a v t \ \ T o w n s h i p o f P u t n a m , C o u n t y&#13;
t h e h o m e of E. ( \ G l e n n ' L i v i r i o n S t a t e o f M i c h i g a u g&#13;
w r i t t e n a p p l i c a t i o n s i g n e d b y t o * )&#13;
M r . a n d M t s . J o h n H m c h t y | r e q u i r e d n u m b e r o f f r e e h o l d e r s&#13;
a n d d a u g h t e r M a r y v i b i t e d S a t u r- s a i d T o w n s h i p of P u t n a m and&#13;
d a y a t t h e h o m e of .M . D i n k e l a n d &lt; l a t t * \ M a r c h 2 5 t h , P J I O , s a i d w r i t -&#13;
w i f e o f C h e l s e a .&#13;
.¾&#13;
'3&#13;
Second Annua/ Sale&#13;
100 Head of Registered Holsteins at the&#13;
Sale Pavilion on the Fair Grounds&#13;
at Howell. Mich.&#13;
Wednesday, May 17, '16&#13;
At 10:30 o'clock ft. m.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. 0 . B u r k h a r t of&#13;
Chelsea and Mrs. Arnold of Detroit&#13;
were Sunday visitors at the&#13;
home of K. Danielle.&#13;
Vera Ishaoi of Chelsea is spending&#13;
this we^k with her graudparents&#13;
Mr and Mrs. H. lacam,&#13;
Several ladies from this vicinity&#13;
attended the shower given in honor&#13;
of Miss Pearl Mohrlo^k at the&#13;
heme of Ed. Finnell Saturday.&#13;
VVm. Hankerd waB in Ann Arbor&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
our otierin^s are under&#13;
OI Oil am ha Johanna&#13;
This is not a lot of cull stuff. Seventy-five per rent of&#13;
4 years old and include 5 grandaughters of the $50,000 bull,&#13;
had and 2 of Ponllac Korndyke, 4 daughters of King of the Hengervelds. a full&#13;
to Pledge Pietze DeKol, who has just m a d e a record of 397-5 lbs. of milk and&#13;
lbs. butter in 7 days at 2 years and 4 months old, and &lt;) other daughters of the&#13;
sire who is a 31 lb. bull, and 1^1 daughters of a grandson of Pomiac Korndyke, a!&#13;
R 0 . cows and daughters of A. R. 0 . cows&#13;
CUPBOARD&#13;
sister&#13;
2 0 . 4 0&#13;
same&#13;
&lt;o A.&#13;
P&#13;
Our reference sires are a superior lot&#13;
40.32 lbs. at 4 years old ' W o r l d - Record; ;&#13;
30 lbs from well known&#13;
:nd include .&lt; son o! Malxd Segis Korndgke&#13;
id H;ns of cows with records trom 20, 10&#13;
J rc-&#13;
A fine chance to&#13;
catalogues address&#13;
et i^ood, young Jound.it ion -i&lt;/&lt;'k. Remember cor&#13;
F. J. F1SHBSCK, S e c .&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
F E R R Y and MACK. Auctioneers.&#13;
HOT BREADS.&#13;
A H K E H H O U S E £ O R X C A K E . —&#13;
Mix o n e cupful of Hour, o n e c u p -&#13;
ful of Ind'inn n^enl, o n e aUG onehalf&#13;
t e a s p o o n f u I s of &lt; r e a m of t n r t a r ,&#13;
o n e t - a s p u o n f n l &lt;ii s a l o r a t u s a n d a&#13;
iiitie s a l t topL'tiier, t h r u mix one egg,&#13;
&lt;»r,c"hnif cupful su.^j'.r. piece of P u t t e r&#13;
sii-e of un e u ^ cu&lt;\ &lt;&gt;):&lt;j c u p f u l of w a r m&#13;
):/i]k to£.'etber. Vow: t h i s i n t o t h e d r y&#13;
m i x t u r e , bent well uu;l \yt\ko.&#13;
S'uu' Mill: (iritMa cakes,—Mix one&#13;
fs-L', ^ e l l b e a t e n . &gt;\itp o n e ^-i:pl'vil s c u !&#13;
njiik. hiilf ;i tc:i&lt;ii'•'Oiit'nl ^"Pa. rjunrter&#13;
i»-;,&lt;pnoi]ful suit .'Hid ••tipt'ul iiicl j i ' i u a r -&#13;
',ci* nf flunr. I ) r c p siKVdif'iI hy spoonful&#13;
oji h o t /I'iuihc. / P o \ \ ;i \\ ci! ••!) oft*&#13;
vide. Wln-n piit'fi.'d J:;ii nf PIPJIPC.S JIU'I&#13;
l ' o i n t o Pun •i.iii'S. — 'J'aj.f.' 1 i^la I'AVizv&#13;
poiaiocf&gt;, ;,. ]•(,; ..-.a -^:11 (• 1 lJriiin uff&#13;
the \viitcf iiml jidd ui.c cip't'ul of s w ( e i&#13;
milk, om.-l;:i!f N'iis[)(Miiful linUm.ir po^--&#13;
(\vi\ oiie lea spec til::: s;:!t, four ^'fll&#13;
l i c a i r n t^rv.s. our &lt; n| ful pour. R-tUe on j&#13;
hot g r i d d l e . Serve w i t h a m p l e sirt.p J&#13;
]?rovrn Ure.'nl.-dnoitk s t a l e h r e a d |&#13;
ten deaiand requiring the tthid&#13;
Township Board to submit to the&#13;
qualified electors of eaid Township&#13;
the question of bonding said&#13;
TovrnBbip for the sum of Twenty&#13;
Thousand ($20,000.00) Dollars for&#13;
the purpose of building State reward&#13;
highways; Therefore, notice&#13;
is hereby tfiven, that a special&#13;
Township Meeting will be held&#13;
on Saturday, the Oth. day of May,&#13;
at the Town Hall in the village of&#13;
Piockney within said T o w n s h i p -&#13;
that beiDg the usual voting place&#13;
of said Township of P u t n a m , and&#13;
at the aforesaid time and place&#13;
1 there will be submitted to t he&#13;
t qualified Electors of said Townj&#13;
ahipof P u t n a m , to be determined&#13;
! by them, tiie question whether&#13;
the township of P u t n a m shall be&#13;
bonded for said amount and pur-&#13;
Jpose, or whether it shall not. be&#13;
bonded. The said voting shall he&#13;
by ballott, and such ballott HURII&#13;
contain the following:&#13;
Shall the Township be bonded&#13;
for #20,000.00 V \Yes)&#13;
Shall the Township be bonded&#13;
for $20,000.00? ( N o )&#13;
Dated at. Putnam l o w n s h i p thi^&#13;
11th day of April A. D. PU'd&#13;
VVM J. D l ' N B A H ,&#13;
Township Clerk,&#13;
P u t m i m T O V T U S I J if)&#13;
J. J. Church&#13;
Will&#13;
F rainy&#13;
and t)ti&#13;
Prices&#13;
t i o n ft^H&#13;
tm- lP-;' ir: • ' k n e y Ho t . e&#13;
S •. 1 • n r d n \ , &gt; bi y 0 1 !&#13;
. A i l 1- v i-h .• . r t ' o r t ' v fitted&#13;
r e a . S ' n ; n l . ) e nr } e x a m i n a&#13;
.1. cnnicif.&#13;
We Still Have Hopes&#13;
F«r N«ur*I(l*. • • t h i n g U&#13;
Wtf«r t h a n&#13;
Dr. M i l e s '&#13;
A a t i - P a i n P i l l s&#13;
for a { • • • r a t i o n&#13;
T h o s e w h o h a v e suffered f r o m&#13;
n e u r a l g i c pair.s nee&lt;i n e t be t o ' d&#13;
h o w n e c e s s a r y it is to s e c u r e re*&#13;
Haf. T h e r o s i e s t w a y o u t of&#13;
n e u r a l g i a is t o U T l3r. M i l e s '&#13;
A n t i - P a i n Pi',1-. T h e y h a v e relieved&#13;
sufferers for so m a n y&#13;
y e a r s t h a t t h e y have b e c o m e a&#13;
h o u a e h o l d n r c r s s o t y .&#13;
"I have t*k*n Dr. Miles' Antl-Paia&#13;
Flll« for five vn.is *ud thf-y a r a the&#13;
only, t h l n f t dat tio^p me »ny ffoo4.&#13;
They h a \ e vfl»•'^•^'d n«i:r«ilfta. In my&#13;
haatf Jn fifi^fii m.m;tf-s. ; l,av« also&#13;
takan tb«m U-r rhfiitimti™, headacb&#13;
«, painF li-. :i.f&gt; br^mat. toothache,&#13;
«»rach« snU ].;&lt;.(.s ii. Mi* towels and&#13;
ltmbB. I )... t- '.. .. .1 lmiliinj to&#13;
*&lt;juai them . :ri ; iy A:« M.1 t h a t ii&#13;
cl*im«d for (""!:-.&#13;
J. W. .SICl'uK J-.: .c Spi-lr.c». Mo.&#13;
A t aH aruggists—JO coses 2% cants.&#13;
Never volt! in bulk, 1&#13;
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, In*.&#13;
A S c r e e n Coop.&#13;
'["ln's i]r:&lt;\vii.Lr -!in\\&gt;- (ne [iJ.'iu of&#13;
'•liick'fMl &lt;-&lt;u,\i w v i)r-&gt;i^i,t,l ;,ii&lt;! I.tivo&#13;
boon USIIIL' I he l.i-t feu yc;\v&lt;. 'i'he&#13;
(-•oops nvc !li:i&lt;1i' ill ' h e "v i l i l f i 1 t i l l l «&#13;
w h e n tho Hit a uff' not liii'-y &gt;&gt;'itli tiilivr&#13;
work. TlH'v ;.!'(' m a ' l r n! twc'.xc aittl&#13;
ei.v iixU soft pine ]KI;Irds, 'J'hoy arc&#13;
t w e n t y t h r e e i n c h e s ion;:, e i g h t e e n Inclic&#13;
s \\\i]f. o i ii;r litet'ii iiii-!i"s tiiL'Ii in front&#13;
and a f"&lt;&gt;t Mu'li ;U ilic lm&#13;
e x t e n d s . l(\ &lt;T {\\i&gt; side veil&#13;
ll'l'diOS , . ] | ;|&#13;
h i l l i - ' e d o i l . ; v&#13;
pattitc«l Insjd&#13;
T i l e fitfif&#13;
l&lt; a Not it ttiree&#13;
sides. 'Die tlrx'C's jire&#13;
IMHVU. and t h e coops « r e&#13;
a n d out. W i r e screen \H&#13;
DANGERS OF DRAFT&#13;
D r a f t s feel b e s t w h e n "toe a r e h o t&#13;
aiul p e r s p i r i n g , j u s t w h e n t h e y a r e&#13;
m o s t d a n g e r o u s a n d t h e r e s u l t i s&#13;
N e u r a l g i a , Stiff N e c k . S o r e M u s c l e s&#13;
o r s o m e t i m e s a n a t t a c k of r h e u m a -&#13;
t i s m . I n s u c h c a s e s a p p l y S p a n ' s&#13;
L i n i m e n t . It s t i m u l a t e s c i r c u l a t i o n&#13;
to t h e s o r e a n d painfu) p a r t . T h e&#13;
blood f l o w s f r e e l y a n d in a s h o r t&#13;
t i m e t h e s t i f f n e s s a n d p a i n l e a v e s , i&#13;
T h o s e s u f f e r i n g f r o m X e u r a l g i a o r '&#13;
N e u r a l g i c H e a d a c h e will find o n e o r j&#13;
t w o a p p l i c a t i o n s of S l o a n ' s L i n i - i&#13;
raent will g i v e g r a t e f u l relief. T h e '&#13;
a g o n i z i n g p a i n g i v e s w a y to a t i n g -&#13;
l i n g s e n s a t i o n of c o m f o r t a n d w a r m t h&#13;
a n d q u i e t r e s t a n d s l e e p i s p o s s i b l e . !&#13;
Good f o r N e u r i t i s too. P r i c e 2 5 c ,&#13;
a t y o u r D r u g g i s t .&#13;
into s m a l l pie'TS. T h e r e s h o u l d ho o n e j T h e p a p e 1 ' n:fl f k e f &gt;• MI H am'1&#13;
a n d one-lmJf &lt;-.)|.M!ls. A d d i u o , npfuJs C O [ u ] ; | J o n . P r h r c B a r e a &lt; v f u l . I n&#13;
cold Mater, covei' a n d it t s t a n d over . • * , „ . • i • ,&#13;
nicLt. In t h e m n n n i , . ' m l , tin-ou-h a fiP&gt;^ o i t [ ^ f h e t w e m i e e r f u . l d i o t n&#13;
c o i a n d f i ' a m i a d d t h r e e - q u a r t e r s cupful w h o p u b l i s h c o u n t r y w e e k l i e s m e&#13;
m o l a s s e s nnd one a n d o n e - h a l f onr-fiils | ^ p n , f l i n , r h\Qn&lt;, t o ' l r , 8 L l e&#13;
e a c h ryu im al, g r a n u l a t e d corn meal | n - v . ..&#13;
a n d g r a h a m flour, m i x e d a n d sifted | ** t ! i f i 8 f i r a f i o l ] ( ] o j U r&#13;
W i t i i tWO IO&lt;&lt;S|KK;IW'U!&gt;5 o f SV^l a n d Ullt'&#13;
«nU one-lialf tea.spounfu;s .salt; t h e n&#13;
a d d o n e a n d one-half cupi'uls cold wa-&#13;
+ + + + 4. + + + + + + 4. + + + + + +&#13;
H a P r a f a r r v d Ona Girl.&#13;
W b e u J . M. H«rrie. t h e a u t h o r of&#13;
* ' P c t « r P a n , " »»ddre*,seti an a t i d i e n c e of&#13;
* tfeousaud girls &gt;it Smith college duri&#13;
a c JUg A m * i lean vi«it s o m e y e a r n Ago.&#13;
• fctofid a s k x l bjm b o w h e b a d found&#13;
t b € e x p e r i e n o *&#13;
" W e l l , " j e l l e d Mr. B a r r t e . " t o teJl&#13;
y o u t b e U^itb, I d a u u b r a t b e r t a l k a&#13;
I b o t M a n d time* t o o n e f i t l t h a n to tnlk&#13;
« M U a t e t o a tbonfutnd glrla."&#13;
1 p u t In t h e e n d s , as ^ h o w n . to p r o v i d e&#13;
; ventilalioij. T h e Utile slide d o o r per-&#13;
, m i t s '-hicks to com*1 a n d ^ro. T h e ma-&#13;
| terlal in e a c h coop costs al-out £1. We&#13;
j u s e the coops from y e a r to y e a r , n*&#13;
t h e y a r e d e n n e d out. e v e r y fall a n d&#13;
; put a w a y in a d r y place d u r i n p t h e&#13;
w i n t e r . I have, n e v e r yet l o s t a chicke&#13;
n in t h e s e coops, e i t h e r b y d r e n m i n g ,&#13;
s m o t h e r i n g or t h r o u g h b a v i n s s o m e&#13;
a n i m a l g e t i n . — M r s . S. M. G * p h a r t In&#13;
F a n n e r ' s Mail a n d B r e e z e .&#13;
R u b b i n g Out a T u r n e r .&#13;
(&gt;n \ o \ lUnil --trvf''., in L o n d o n . '&#13;
s o m e ycHrs ;\^n n T u r n e r w o r t h $nn.•&#13;
ttfJO w a s d e s t r o y e d by n c h a r w o m a n .&#13;
T h e T u r n e r " i t s a \uitt*r cuhir d n i w -&#13;
inR, s n d a ]»jiintiuc in oil* buiiu beside 1&#13;
it- T h e o w n e r f l u t e d 1o t h e p a i n t i n g '&#13;
a u d s a i d :&#13;
" T h a t j&gt;leture is d u s t y . Huh n d a m p j&#13;
cloth o v e r it." ;&#13;
B u t t b e c h a r w c i a f l u by m i s t a k e rub- ;&#13;
bed Iier d a m p c l o t h o v e r t h e I r a t c r col- j&#13;
or, t u r n i n g i t i n t o a blot, a nmudtfe,&#13;
and thua one of tW floe* T n m m dH»-&#13;
appMrNl from the wori«L&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
4&#13;
MULCHING.&#13;
N i t r a t e nf sodn c a n lie u s e d&#13;
with benefit on all crops. I t&#13;
is i m m e d i a t e l y a v a i l a b l e a n d&#13;
s h o u l d t h e r e f o r e be only e m p l o y -&#13;
ed in c o n n e c t i o n w i t h p l a n t s in&#13;
a n a c t i v e s t a g e of g r o w t h .&#13;
T h e r e is f a r too little m u l c h -&#13;
ing d o n e . S m a l l fruit, t r e e s a n d&#13;
g a r d e n c r o p s a r e j.riven a m o s t&#13;
f a v o r a b l e o p p o r t u n i t y for a t t a i n -&#13;
ing t b e h i g h e s t {&gt;erfectlon a n d&#13;
d e v e l o p m e n t w h e n t h e i r roofs&#13;
a r e T v e r p d with a t h i c k m a t -of&#13;
leaves, h a y »»r o t h e r s u i t a b l e m a -&#13;
terial.&#13;
A t'oed mulch k e e p s d o w n&#13;
w e e d s a n d r e n d e r s t h e soil Inoco,&#13;
nm1st ami p o r o u s a t all t i m e s ,&#13;
a n d t h a t . too. with little l a b o r&#13;
of c u l t i v a t i o n .&#13;
+&#13;
4»&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
+&#13;
4»&#13;
4&gt;&#13;
•&#13;
4»&#13;
*&#13;
4»&#13;
4'&#13;
4»&#13;
+&#13;
4-&#13;
4»&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
t c r . S t i r u n t i l well m i x e d a n d till on»&#13;
p o u n d b a k i i i p p o w d e r tins, t w o - t h i r d *&#13;
full of t h e m i x t u r e . S t e a m t w o h o u r s .&#13;
C r e a m of T a r t a r B i s c u i t s . — O n e q u a r t&#13;
of flour, t w o toa.spocnfuls c r e a m of&#13;
t a r t a r , o n e tea*poonful of b a k i n g soda,&#13;
o n e t e a s p o o n f u l of salt. Sift all tog&#13;
e t h e r four times, Uub in w i t h y o u r&#13;
h a n d o n e tablespoon ful of l a r d or butter.&#13;
U s e milk a n d w a t e r (little over&#13;
half milkl e n o u g h to m a k e it a s soft a s&#13;
you c a n k n e a d a n d roll a b o u t t h r e e -&#13;
q u a r t e r s of an inch t h i c k a n d b a k e in&#13;
hot. o v e n fifteen or t w e n t y m i n u t e s .&#13;
A ^ p l e Murlins.—One c u p f u l of milk,&#13;
t w o a n d one-half eupfuis. of flour (or&#13;
lessv p e r h a p s t w o cupfuli&gt;-i. one lablespoo;.&#13;
fnl of sti^-ar. a p i n c h of salt, o n e&#13;
t* pnpe:&#13;
a year&#13;
pnee. This, in iu»elf, woubl be excusable,&#13;
if eubscriijeerR would&#13;
promptly pay t i n i r sul)Hcr'p'ion&#13;
IfeBuiu^ a ptiper now cofct.s&#13;
than it has before in y u n s&#13;
of which lea&lt;]s tij&gt; to (on*- thiu^&#13;
we need the tno«ey.--Oxford Le«&#13;
tier.&#13;
more&#13;
All&#13;
i t a b l e s p o o n ful or m e l t e d b u t l e r a n d&#13;
Taking powt&#13;
a r v e :inp!e.&#13;
t tsemr»&#13;
i&#13;
iard, t w o t e a s n o o n f u l s of&#13;
&lt;ler in t he Hone Add o n e&#13;
sliced tlon 'T chopped. 1&#13;
pa lis. It lr.ay be ase^l a s a d e s s e r t&#13;
wif b r.ny nice so ul&#13;
a k e in ^eut&#13;
Old Folks Saved&#13;
i rrom SttfihBfing&#13;
+ + + + .V • + + + + + + + + * + +&gt;4»&#13;
C l t i . n i L e a t h e r .&#13;
A r e a d e r &lt;\ ' lie ''lo'i*n.,tl S. ^ n -f&#13;
! \ f t H l i t ' t r W I M f v " i .ii.'., U ; \ ii.l ijtll i;.«'&#13;
\&lt;&gt; a l o t o f I*-:. 1 l.i j- &lt; t o I + " v it l i t ' V t h e v&#13;
^1) told mo it • Mi-Id i?«»t he elejined. hu;&#13;
f 'e-iflied f e r n a fi-ie.nd t h a t a t u b e&#13;
*jHMiriful ef (iX'.'ille uc»d dtvvdlve'd \), a&#13;
qtnirt &lt;tf e. .Id v\ater r lea us »-ow!i d&gt;\&#13;
{•iif^kln n n d *uU* leal her w r y ^ativf;, .&#13;
toril v.-&#13;
Mrs. M a r y A. D e a n , T a u n t o n , Masa^&#13;
in h e r S7th year, s a y s : "I t h o u g h t I&#13;
wa-s beyond t h e reach* of m e d i c i n e , b u t&#13;
F o l e y K i d n e y P i n s h a v e p r o v e n m o s t&#13;
beneficial in m y caaa."&#13;
Mr. 8 a m A. H o o v e r , Higrh P o i n t ,&#13;
N. C , w r i t e s : "My k i d n e y t r o u b l e w a s&#13;
w o r s e a t n i g h t a n d I h a d t o g e t u p&#13;
f r o m five to a e v e a t i m e s . N o w I do&#13;
T.ot h a v e t o get u p a t ulg-ht, a n d c o n -&#13;
s i d e r myself in a t r u l y n o r m a l condition,&#13;
w h i c h I a t t r i b u t e t o F o l e y K i d -&#13;
ney Pi lis, a s I h a v e t a k e n n o t h i n g&#13;
else."&#13;
Mrs. M". A. Bridffea, R o b i n s o n . M a s * .&#13;
p a y s : "I suffered f r o m k i d n e y a i l -&#13;
rocr.ts fnr t w o y e a r s . I comznenead&#13;
takfnK F o l e v K i d n e y P i l l s t e n m o n t h s&#13;
cjro. a n d t h o u g h I a m «1 y e a r s of a g e ,&#13;
1 f«wl like a l e - y a a r - o l d glrV*&#13;
F o l e y K i d n e y Pllla a r e ttmie.&#13;
rtren^rthetiins; a n d u p - b u i l d i n g , a n d&#13;
r e s t o r e n o r m a l a c t i o n to t h e k i d n e y s&#13;
a n d t o a d i s o r d e r e d a n d p a i n f u l b l a d -&#13;
d e r . " T h « y s e t q u i c k l y a n d c o n t a i n&#13;
DO d a n g e r o u s or k a r r n x u l d r u g s ,&#13;
•*Por Sale Everywhere'&#13;
T h e C r o w n of E n g l a n d .&#13;
F r o m t h e financial sta»»dp«dnt t h *&#13;
c r o w n of B n g l s n d \» w«»rth a b o u t half&#13;
a Million d o l l a r s .&#13;
OUR&#13;
s COLUMNS&#13;
arc read by the people&#13;
bcc«ju.\e it gives them&#13;
news of absorbing interest.&#13;
People no longer&#13;
po looking about for&#13;
things they want—they&#13;
Co to their newspaper&#13;
for information as to&#13;
where such thine..&gt; may&#13;
be found". This method&#13;
saves time and trouble.&#13;
Tf yon want to bring&#13;
your wares to the attention&#13;
of this community,&#13;
our advertising columns&#13;
Should&#13;
Contain Your&#13;
Ad&#13;
DDDDDDD&#13;
Q&#13;
1&#13;
D&#13;
^ 1&#13;
v&#13;
O +. -&#13;
N * i * ^&#13;
:k*":^M. ;*c</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 04, 1916</text>
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                <text>May 04, 1916 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, May 11th 3916 No. 17&#13;
Pinckney H. S. Playing&#13;
Great Ball&#13;
The High School base ball team ia&#13;
putting up a great article of ball this&#13;
epilog, having lost but one in four&#13;
starts, for a percentage of 750. Dexter,&#13;
Brighton and South Lyons have each&#13;
been beaten one game while Howell&#13;
managed to slip over a victory on the&#13;
home boy a.&#13;
Last Saturday South Lyons waa on&#13;
deck, leaving town with the short end&#13;
of a 4-2 score. The game waa a pretty&#13;
contest throughout, South Lyons hold-1&#13;
ing the home team scoreless for five j&#13;
innings. In the sixth by means of greatj&#13;
etick work the boys shoved across three }&#13;
scores, enough to win as the visiting&#13;
team never threatened after the first&#13;
when they scored two runs on wild&#13;
throws. However Shehan came back&#13;
in the sixth with a homer and made&#13;
things secure. Battery, Hendee and j&#13;
Shehan. j&#13;
Tuesday afternoon&#13;
into town with their&#13;
managed to take one&#13;
team by the narrow&#13;
score. The game waa hotly contested&#13;
throughout, in fact it was no one's&#13;
game until the last out. Pinckney had&#13;
two on in this inning when a long fly&#13;
was sent to center field ending the&#13;
game. Battery, Hendee, Swarthout&#13;
and Shehan.&#13;
The boys are to be congratulated on&#13;
their fine showing in holding a team&#13;
like Howell. Many of Howell's players&#13;
have been in the game for four or five&#13;
years, while most of the Pinckney boy?&#13;
are seeing their first season of high&#13;
school base bail. The feature of all&#13;
the games so far is the great stick&#13;
work of the team, neithar left hand or&#13;
right hand pitching seems to bother&#13;
the boys. First base, which has been&#13;
a weak spot for years is now securely&#13;
plugged by R. Harris.&#13;
Dexter comes to Pinckney next&#13;
Wednesday for the final home game.&#13;
The boys need ^noral support, turn out&#13;
and see the last game and help the j&#13;
home team.&#13;
Program of Buttleman Elias Root&#13;
Paw des Cymbals&#13;
PIANO DUO&#13;
(a) A Little Pink Hose&#13;
(b) Yesterday and Today&#13;
SOPRANO&#13;
SprosH&#13;
Concert, May 17th , , ^ ^ w a s b o r n i t h t vill^e uf&#13;
» » : Hamburg, Livingston Co., April 2^,1&#13;
Chammade ; 1854 and died May 0, 191€, age 02 years&#13;
, 10 days. His entire life was spent in&#13;
Bond Livingston County.&#13;
Jan. 1, 1890 he was united in marriage&#13;
to Addie Leverett. To this union&#13;
waa born two sons, CharleH and George&#13;
both at home. There is also left to&#13;
mourn their loss, four brothers and a&#13;
sister, George and William of Pinckney,&#13;
Charles of Hamburg, and James and&#13;
Mary of Ann Arbor.&#13;
The funeral w*» held at hits late&#13;
idence Monday afternoon, liev. T.&#13;
Jones officiating.&#13;
"A precious one from us is gone,&#13;
A voice we loved is still,&#13;
A place is vacant in our home,&#13;
Which never can be filled."&#13;
res-&#13;
H.&#13;
Exchange Clippings&#13;
Howell dropped&#13;
crack team and&#13;
from the home&#13;
margin of one&#13;
HANNAH COCHRANE, soprano j T h e Michigan Central section men&#13;
(a) Serenata Alexander j w e n t b a c l c t o w o r k t h i s morning, after&#13;
(b) Capriccio Spagnuolo&#13;
MANDOLIN&#13;
WM. PLACE Jit., Mandol&#13;
Lullaby . .&#13;
HARP&#13;
(a) The Little Damozel&#13;
(b) At Parting&#13;
SOPRANO&#13;
Adoration&#13;
VIOLIN&#13;
inist&#13;
Rogers&#13;
NoveHo&#13;
. Rogers&#13;
Borowiski&#13;
M. A. C. Market&#13;
News Letter&#13;
East Lansing, Mich., May 3rd—The&#13;
question is—Shall Michigan dairymen&#13;
produce milk at leae than actual cost?&#13;
It is a live issue, inasmuch as some of&#13;
the dairymen show a disposition to argue&#13;
the proposition. The Livingston&#13;
County Milk Producers' Association has&#13;
issued the call for a state meeting a t&#13;
the Agricultural College for May 23 for&#13;
the purpose of organizing a state association&#13;
and for the further purpose of&#13;
starting a campaign to accomplish four&#13;
things, viz., 1, An advance price schedule&#13;
from buyers for such/ JW|*ri as will&#13;
Btabilize the milk i*0tatilf||». 2, Advance&#13;
a m o v — a n t t© Jf***&amp;\the int&#13;
a g x i t j * f tfa* batter ft* stopfer d. 3,&#13;
Seem«« incntai prie* for milk in&#13;
,§Ca^1|rltfciW*lmnrease cost of proj&gt;&#13;
0tloi, 4, Promote the interests of&#13;
&amp;&amp; milk producers of the state.&#13;
State Director of Markets, James N.&#13;
McBride, has been called upon for information&#13;
regarding the milk marketing&#13;
methods prevailing in other states,&#13;
and the Dairy Department of the College&#13;
is being asked for facta and figures&#13;
regarding the cost of production, and if&#13;
it were not that the dairy industry&#13;
helps to maintain the fertility of the&#13;
*:oi), they '.voul'i be on the road to ruin.&#13;
The iniiK producers ar^-ue that this 13&#13;
the tir:"!p to consider their problems.&#13;
They point to the recent success of \hv&#13;
dairyrnon furnishing Chicago with milk&#13;
in the matter o; getting an average&#13;
summer price of Si. ."&gt; a hundred pounds.&#13;
The Michigan dairymen want to know&#13;
where they are at, and want to know&#13;
a t once. They propose to make a fight&#13;
if necessary for a price that is fair.&#13;
Munier j being on* duty for four days on a&#13;
" s t r i k e " for increased wages, without&#13;
j having gained their point.-Chelsea&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
j At a meeting of the town board of&#13;
i Stockbridge Saturday, they voted to&#13;
build two milea of state reward roads&#13;
I this summer, one mile from the north-&#13;
; east corner of the village limits, north,&#13;
and one mile from Guy Ramsdell's corn&#13;
e r s south and west.— Brief-Sun.&#13;
j The annual reunion of the Thirtyfirst&#13;
Michigan Volunteer regiment of&#13;
• Spanish-American war veterans will be&#13;
'• held at Ypsilanli May 17th. The veterans&#13;
of that city are making extensive&#13;
preparations, A banquet is planned.&#13;
Chelsea Standard.&#13;
We understand that a petition is being&#13;
circulated to bond the township of&#13;
, Brighton for the sum of $2:.,001 for the&#13;
purpose of building good roads. The&#13;
bonding proposition is about the only&#13;
way we will get a complete system of&#13;
good roads in this generation, and is being&#13;
UBed to advantage all over the United&#13;
States. Brighton Argus.&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
J take this method of expressing my&#13;
! thanks to my many friends who so&#13;
• kindly assisted me in winning the Graph-&#13;
, anola in the recent contest at Meyer's&#13;
drugstore. Letha McMullen.&#13;
Captain Hobson on&#13;
War and Drink&#13;
EULOI.IA SNYDER violinist&#13;
Captain Hobson knows war. He hap&#13;
been in it. He is the same Hobson who&#13;
ran an old cellier, manned with volun-&#13;
Impromptu - . A b t ' t e € r s ' u n d e r t n € £ u n 8 a t Santiago, and&#13;
UNACCOMPANIED MANDOLIN j s a n k h « r t o *&gt;«»« U P t h e Spanish fleet.&#13;
OSoloMio . . . . dia Capuai Hobson had seen how men act under&#13;
Voice Mandolin Rnd Harp I nre- -sober men and men who drink. He&#13;
j ^ a g c a ] a j knows the relation between drink and&#13;
Wieniawski&#13;
(a) A Minor Concerto&#13;
(b) Souvenir di Posen&#13;
MANDOLIN&#13;
' Love's Like a Star Odell&#13;
Voice, Violin, Mandocello, Harp&#13;
Secure your reserved seats for the&#13;
1 Buttleman Concert now.&#13;
• Meyer's L--jp Store.&#13;
On saie at&#13;
Bonding Proposition&#13;
Turned Down&#13;
The b'.n .!&#13;
•"GO 1 P ':•'"' p :&#13;
Special FJ*?&lt;&#13;
pose of dc-;&#13;
of Putr. !i\i -&#13;
for t !-.&lt;.• :.&gt;o,&#13;
or not. ' J"&#13;
votes w £.•.-*•&#13;
thirty-n in*.&#13;
bonding.&#13;
war from personal observation, So convinced&#13;
is he that this nation has approached&#13;
a crisis in the drink question ,&#13;
that he is giving his time to lay the&#13;
facts before our people. Earnestly he&#13;
went on to sav:&#13;
Our country can never be properiju&#13;
prepared until all the saloons are closed.&#13;
Drinking in an army and navy makes&#13;
inefficicieficy. The day come when only&#13;
the efficient nations will survive. One&#13;
of the great powers in tbi.s L'ir-'potn&#13;
'.var jan blame hei present un-atiiiacicry&#13;
position upon irink ana dri.'jK alor^.&#13;
"In the last fifty y e a a s th ~: rrrfi':.\&#13;
-•r p-'';;;er;..n!i v/as cpven a&#13;
v »a.-t .'•';iturday at the&#13;
trT1 .'.elJ h;;rc- for the pur- of this«co',3;::ry h** bef.-n u;i'iormi:-.e I b .-&#13;
M-'£ whether th" town ;hin j uriiiK. V/e are hf/S^ed th-; ;-ame v,-.jy.&#13;
hoil'i b : ;:•'&gt;.•; . :d f^r &gt;2'.i,"•;:';' We .-hall rot in?i,je so ;&lt;/::£ an \r.&lt;i ?«t-&#13;
&lt;"&gt;-&gt;'.' 1...' ; u b ;r,friroo'l roa'.'H, i-;ons conti/iUi-" their trfjfTic. V.';? .-biab&#13;
-. h infiri-?d and ninety-rive not b.? any more nl iu defend o^rself&#13;
•jfcSt. One hundred and J than was Rome.&#13;
.-.j'ii-l .:•.'.. h.'d I'ifty-Pix tor] "A crisis has come in tb^ wjrld'.&gt;&#13;
j history. We are the ocly great nation&#13;
. not yet immersed in war. Some day&#13;
+&#13;
-r&#13;
r&#13;
4&#13;
County Eighth Grade&#13;
Examinations&#13;
The County Eighth Grade Examinations&#13;
will be held this week May 11th&#13;
and 12th, at Howell, Pinckney, Brighton,&#13;
Hartland, Fowlerville, Oak Grove&#13;
and Gregory. Work will begin at £:30&#13;
«tand«rd time. Btoe or pick booka will 1&#13;
^ t wed. Hugh G. Aldricb, Com.!&#13;
Howell Stock&#13;
Raiser Is Dead&#13;
we are going to have war. We are not&#13;
going to make it; it is going to be forced&#13;
\ upon vn. And we mart be ready to&#13;
j meet it. We must be ready with aome-&#13;
Howell, Mich., May 7 . - P r a n k R.Uhing else b#|ides ships, aoldiers, guns.&#13;
Oranriall, weil Known Howell stock •We must be «|adv with the right kind&#13;
raiser and a director of the Livingston ' of men. We are not going to have those&#13;
Coanty Agricultural society is. dead. . m '*n ' U w « a s a nation continue our&#13;
He recently .returned from Minneapolif, drinking. There ia ne half-way about,&#13;
where he vi*jted the Mayo Bros'. ho«- i t I t it abstinence or drink. When&#13;
pita). Mr. Cra»4»H is aurvived by bis you contktor efficiency, there is no aqch&#13;
widow, foflr SOR« and on* daughter. ' tiling aa tempermte drinking.&#13;
i&#13;
• . , / . :&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
Bargain List&#13;
25 doz. Ladies' Fa^t Black Hose - -&#13;
For Saturday Only, 2 pair for 15c&#13;
1000 yards Brown Sheeting, cheap at&#13;
9c, Saturday price - 7J^c yd.&#13;
All Odds and Ends in our Shoe&#13;
Stock go Saturday regardless of cost.&#13;
Srocet^ 5\V^TS&#13;
Lenox Soap, 9 bars for 25c&#13;
Best Raisins, 10c pkg.&#13;
Empire 30c Coffee, 27c&#13;
Table Talk Coffee, 22c&#13;
Gold Medal and Henkel's Flour 89c&#13;
Good Bread and Rosebud Flour 85c&#13;
Watch out for our Special&#13;
Announcement&#13;
Coming Soon&#13;
44 CAROLA * *&#13;
T h e Nightingale of&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Will U- on chsplay in our wt/^t: window in «t&#13;
Uwv (]ays. W a t r h for :t and wlion vow see it, ask&#13;
tf» b^ar it. lh»-n &lt;\&lt;\&lt; ihr. nrir^,&#13;
Von ran n-w brr.v an ':'i&gt;' rnn&lt;ir of t h e WMTM&#13;
-r&lt; yr»;:r hnm- at t; y;,-.- {}-:[*L \ -'n^at'onally low.&#13;
i. v s ' eant'Jui "lew ;):~IO'T.^T;LI)!~I i,n^&lt;-- nerferL renro-&#13;
•••vti-&gt;r; '•;" a'; C&gt;-\i •:,•)''&gt;'•?,. • nd, \"^:\.^ r -ao'-ds, ;mcl at&#13;
V ( "&gt;'•' '-. '. ''* . oL" ,, ', . i - 1 1 ' : ''•"! • - " i t * ,i *:;,rn''.•»•' -&#13;
\a'v. •'•ft.y^i : a ; . '&#13;
-•:'-ad \&gt;: awv-c^i •.(.'. y&#13;
*''."i [ - )r&gt; :"•','• '..:" • ! o l ' ' " : ' : ' a '&#13;
" *• *.(-'• a '• n&gt; ;" o ' ; , a ,^-a n&#13;
inri'U^ii .ueVai.&#13;
Can '»-..* &gt; a i m e d&#13;
Ailu* -etan^- a:nl i'aar(n^a yon will want one.&#13;
Ordt'T-. will Lr ti'kcn a.are of a* fast as possible, Hut&#13;
we rannot'guarantee duaiver • under 10 days, for&#13;
the machine ha? made such a sensational hit t h a t&#13;
the factory is war Ix-hind on orders&#13;
Pinckney, Mich*&#13;
I&#13;
1 £&#13;
a ^ .&gt;.&#13;
' *&#13;
^^r s&#13;
^^^^^Ibf' ' am y-'^t'S&amp;i «'4S&#13;
• • , ' • • * • ;&#13;
.•»-v'&#13;
y-;*&amp;&#13;
•,' :¾¾¾ '•' 4^:-jM&#13;
• ",vW&gt;&gt;al - * • . T A S I&#13;
"'^'^ll&#13;
•••'"'^SH **"' &gt; : T ? T M B&#13;
*.2*^*£Jm^^M&#13;
~»»&gt; -***Mi&#13;
"JD-.Ti.; ^s&amp;: --a.*:; ' • I t H l&#13;
.."*" . * J K : ^ .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
&amp;&#13;
GIVES VEttS ON&#13;
GERMAN CHARGES&#13;
LORD ROBERT CECIL TELLS&#13;
ABOUT GERMANY'S FALSE ACCUSATION3&#13;
ON SEA WARFARE.&#13;
MOTHERS DAY. MAY 14th&#13;
NOTE FULL MISSTATEMENTS&#13;
.Measures Taken by Great Britain&#13;
Against German Trade Have Coat&#13;
No Neutral Life, It la&#13;
Claimed.&#13;
The Guveruor'b Mother's Day proclamation&#13;
says in part:&#13;
The mothers of every country&#13;
are more important than armies&#13;
and munitiouii of war. The mothers&#13;
are the source of civilisation.&#13;
To oar mothers we owe our patriotism&#13;
our religion, our holiest aspirations.&#13;
It is especially fitting in&#13;
the year nineteen sixteen that we&#13;
pay tribute to the Mothers of America.&#13;
Let the boys and. girls and the&#13;
grown-ups, who are away from&#13;
home on Mothers' Day, write a&#13;
letter of gratitude to Mother. Let&#13;
those who are home meet Mother&#13;
with a smile, a kiss and a handful&#13;
of flowers. Recite to her the prayer&#13;
she taught you at the bedside.&#13;
Therefore, I, Woodbridge N. Ferris,&#13;
ask that the people of Michigan&#13;
set apart the second Sunday&#13;
in May (the 14th) as Mothers' Day.&#13;
In obedience to a Resolution by&#13;
the United States Congress, I ask&#13;
the people of Michigan to display&#13;
on this day the United States flag&#13;
on all government and public buildings,&#13;
at their homes or other suitable&#13;
places, "as a public expression&#13;
of their love and reverence&#13;
for the Mothers of our country."&#13;
As far as possible let parents In&#13;
their homes and both young and&#13;
old in public meetings discuss the&#13;
theme of Mother with that enthusiasm&#13;
and sincerity which charac&#13;
BAND OF VILLISTAS&#13;
Kills Porty-Two and Wounding&#13;
Many Other —No American&#13;
Casualties Reported&#13;
London—Declining to comment on&#13;
the purely American German questions&#13;
involved in the German reply&#13;
to the American note on submarine&#13;
warfare, Lord Robert Cecil, minister&#13;
of war trade and parliamentary undersecretary&#13;
for foreign affairs, in behalf&#13;
of the foreign office gave the Associated&#13;
Press a statement dealing with&#13;
the charges against Great Britain and&#13;
Germany's avowed desire for peace..&#13;
The reply of the German government&#13;
to the American note of April 20 respecting&#13;
submarine warfare is not a&#13;
communc&amp;Uon upon which any general&#13;
comment can properly be made&#13;
in this country, as the questons at is-&#13;
•ue concern the United States and i&#13;
Germany, and any interference by a 11 t e r i z e a a11 l o v a l Americans."&#13;
third party would be presumptous. i * — — — — — — — — — — —&#13;
Since however the German note con-1 ~~&#13;
tains certain misstatements of facts MAJOR HOWZE ROUTES&#13;
respecting the actions of Great Britain&#13;
the following observations may not&#13;
he thought out of place. The German&#13;
government states that it has, so far&#13;
ss is possible, instituted a far-reaching&#13;
restraint upon the use of the submarine&#13;
weapon solely in consideration&#13;
of neutral interests and in spite of the&#13;
fact that these restrictions were nee- General Pershing's Headquarters&#13;
essarily of advantage to Germany's,n e a r Namiquipa, Mex., via wireless&#13;
enemies. t 0 Columbus, N. M.—Half clad, afoot,&#13;
It is alleged that no such consider- wi*h only » few revolvers left them&#13;
ation ever has been shown to neutrals &gt;an(* w l t n n ° rood, the demoralized&#13;
by Great Britain and her allies. ' remnants of what was the largest band&#13;
Do the facta bear out these asser-!of Villaistas remaining, are seeking&#13;
tlons? So far as is known the mea-s- j sanctuary in the mountains south of&#13;
ures taken by Great Britain against j Cusihuriachic.&#13;
German trade have cost no I At their backs are six troops of the&#13;
neutral life. Great Britain maintains' Eleventh cavalry, which, under Major&#13;
that they are in accord wth the prin- Howie, at Ojo Azules, swept over&#13;
clplee of international law and is pre- them, killing 42, wounding many more,&#13;
pared to make good that claim. They; taking prisoners and horses, all withoan&#13;
surely compare favorably, BO far out the loss of a single American&#13;
as consideration to neutrals is con-! trooper. They are giving the Villacerned,&#13;
with a policy whose fruits are l8t*fl no rest, although the cavalryseen&#13;
in the tragedies of the Lusitania,, m * n h*ve been at it continuously for&#13;
the Arabic and the Sussex. nearly two days. They can find no&#13;
The Germans maintain that It was safety in the aroyas or canyons, in&#13;
owing to the illegal oonduct of the the thick undergrowth of the moun-&#13;
British warfare that Germany was tains or the mesquite of the plains.&#13;
forced to resort to her submarine war- Where the most desperate are making&#13;
fare on the ground that it is a meas- a show of resistance there is short&#13;
ure of reprisal against the action shrift and where surrender comes&#13;
of the British government in cutting there are speedy trips to the main&#13;
off supplies from Germany. column.&#13;
EIGHT SINN FEIN REBELS&#13;
ARE SHOT TO DEATH&#13;
FAIL TO CHECK THE FRENCH&#13;
Twe Others Were Given Life Imprisonment&#13;
by Court&#13;
Martial&#13;
They Are in a Fair Way Now to&#13;
Drive Invadera From Their&#13;
Strongest Position!.&#13;
Dublin—It was officially announced&#13;
that John McBride was shot. He was&#13;
the eighth leader of the Sinn Fein&#13;
rebellion to suffer death by sentence&#13;
of court martial.&#13;
The sentences of Thomas Hunter&#13;
and William Cosgrave, who were sentenced&#13;
to death with Major McBride,&#13;
were commuted to life imprisonment.&#13;
Joseph Plunkett one of the leaders&#13;
in the rebellion, was married an&#13;
hour before he was put to death to&#13;
Miss Giffard, sister of Mrs. Thomas&#13;
- MacDonagh&lt; widow of one of the first&#13;
rebels who' was put to death after&#13;
court-martial.&#13;
James M. Sullivan, former American&#13;
minister to the Dominican republic,&#13;
who has been imprisoned In Dublin&#13;
castle for several days on the charge&#13;
of having been implicated in the Irish&#13;
rebellion, probably will be released&#13;
It is said by officials.&#13;
Edward L. Adams, American consul&#13;
in Dublin, has been active in behalf&#13;
of Sullivan. He has made several&#13;
trips to the castle and held a number&#13;
of conferences with high officials.&#13;
The present favorable attitude of&#13;
these officials apparently is due to&#13;
the efforts of Mr. Adams.&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
The electrification of the Muskegon&#13;
branch of the Grand Rapids A&#13;
Indiana railroad company is amid to&#13;
be a possibility.&#13;
Niagara Tails, Ont—A Canadian&#13;
machine gun has been placed near&#13;
# the approach to the lower steel arch&#13;
bridge by a squad under command of&#13;
Major Vanderslys, of the Ninetyeighth&#13;
battalion. The gun is well&#13;
hidden behind a barricade of sand,&#13;
bags. The military authorities refuse&#13;
to discuss the reason for placing the&#13;
«am st the bridge.&#13;
I London—Desperate efforts by the&#13;
Germans to check th* French counter&#13;
offensive at Verdun h&amp;xe failed, according&#13;
to military experts here and&#13;
in Paris, who declare the defenders&#13;
are now in a fair way for driving the&#13;
: invaders from their strongest positions&#13;
to the north and northwest of&#13;
the fortress. Official reports from&#13;
j Berlin and Paris tell of small gains&#13;
I by both sides in the region of Dead&#13;
! Man hill, they are interpreted as show-&#13;
| ing a situation decidedly in favor of&#13;
i the French. Berlin's admission of a&#13;
i continuance or strong French attacks&#13;
is in Itself regarded as an acknowledgment&#13;
of gradual weakening on the&#13;
, part of the Germans.&#13;
; The Paris statement says the Germans&#13;
strongly attacked the French&#13;
J positions north of Hill 304, but were&#13;
j repulsed along the whole front, sxjoept&#13;
at one or two points in the ad-&#13;
! vanced trenches.&#13;
| Berlin's statement tells of the capjture&#13;
of "several French trenches&#13;
[southeast of Haucourt," evidently the&#13;
same trenches that are mentioned in&#13;
| the Paris statement.&#13;
j Berlin also says that reported attacks&#13;
against the German position&#13;
west of Dead Man hill broke down.&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
New York-^fhe Protestant Episcopal&#13;
church of America has, in two&#13;
months, given $2,000,000 towards the&#13;
$5,000,000 it requires to institute a&#13;
sound and comprehensive pension&#13;
fond for all of its clergy.&#13;
Penaacola, Fla.—Wireless communication&#13;
with an aeroplane was put to&#13;
a successful test at the naval aeronautical&#13;
station here tor the first&#13;
time. A Cnrtiss machine was sent&#13;
up with ah operator and a small wireless&#13;
plant The wireless station si&#13;
the navy yard kept, in almost constant&#13;
communication with the machine in&#13;
the air.&#13;
VILLISTAS RAID&#13;
TWO TEXAS TOWNS&#13;
KILLING FOUR AMERICAN SOLDIERS&#13;
AND WOUNDING AND&#13;
CAPTURING OTHERS.&#13;
U. S. MEN IN FIERCE BATTLE&#13;
A Body of Seventy Mounted Mexican&#13;
Bandits Forded the Rio Grande&#13;
and Raided Glenn Springs.&#13;
Alpine, Tex— Villa bandits, some&#13;
70 in number, forded the Rio Grande&#13;
and sweeping 15 mile* inland, on&#13;
American soil, raided the little settlement&#13;
of Glenn Springs and attacked&#13;
a detachment of American cavalry,&#13;
consisting of nine men of troop&#13;
A, the Fourteenth cavalry. Three&#13;
troopers and a little 10-year-old boy&#13;
were killed, two cavalrymen were&#13;
wounded and another is missing. He&#13;
is believed to be a prisoner of the&#13;
bandits who are now fleeing southward&#13;
into Coahuila, Mexico. Two&#13;
American citizens, J. Deemer, and a&#13;
man named Compton, according to&#13;
reports received here, were carried&#13;
across the Rio Grande and reports&#13;
have it that their throats were cut.&#13;
A posse of 50 citizens of Marrathon&#13;
are in pursuit of the Villistas.&#13;
The missing trooper is Private&#13;
Roscoe Tyree. The little boy is the&#13;
son of Compton. He was deaf and&#13;
dumb and bandits are thought to have&#13;
killed him because he could not answer&#13;
their questions.&#13;
The two wounded troopers, Privates&#13;
J. Birck and Frank Defree, were&#13;
brought here badly wounded. Birch's&#13;
body was filled with small brass&#13;
pieces of tacks fired from a shotgun.&#13;
Defree was burned about head and&#13;
shoulders. In a little adobe house,&#13;
nine cavalry men made their flight&#13;
for life against the 70 or more Vlllista&#13;
bandits at Glenn Springs. A&#13;
hail of shot poured for more than&#13;
two hours into the single window of&#13;
the adobe house, but the cavalry men&#13;
kept up a steady rate fire in defiant&#13;
answer. Then the Mexicans' leader&#13;
ordered fireballs to be thrown on the&#13;
roof, thickly thatched with candaL&#13;
abra.&#13;
The blazing weed tortured the&#13;
soldiers below and burnt their heads&#13;
and bodies. Smashing the door, the&#13;
troopers broke for the open, firing as&#13;
they ran. Two were shot and killed&#13;
as they fled. One is missing and it&#13;
is believed he is dead. Another was&#13;
killed as he tried to climb through a&#13;
window.&#13;
According to the story brought&#13;
here the Mexican bandits first attacked&#13;
a store and one or two houses&#13;
in Boquillas, where they made&#13;
Deemer and Compton prisoners and&#13;
then sped 15 miles northward to&#13;
make their attack on Glenn Springs,&#13;
which is fringed by rugged hills. At&#13;
Glenn Springs they wrecked a wax&#13;
factory belonging to William Ellis,&#13;
his store and residence, besides one&#13;
or two other small buildings.&#13;
SAYS ENGLAND KNEW&#13;
SECRETS OF GERMAN NOTE&#13;
An Eminent German Accutes England&#13;
of Stealing Dlplomatio&#13;
Code Secrets.&#13;
New York—"The British government&#13;
knew the contents of Germany's&#13;
reply to the United States at least&#13;
12 hours before the American state&#13;
department did.'1&#13;
The charge was made here by an&#13;
eminent German who is close to the&#13;
German embassy. He went even&#13;
further, saying:&#13;
"For many months Downing street,&#13;
which 1B in possession of the American&#13;
secret diplomatic code, has had&#13;
advance information as to the co^&#13;
tents of every official and private&#13;
message exchanged between Berlin&#13;
and Washington.&#13;
"Ambassador Gerard in Berlin&#13;
knows this. Every attache at the&#13;
American embassy knows it, and the&#13;
German government knows it. Moreover,&#13;
it is moderately certain that the&#13;
American state department knows it,&#13;
for It has received—not once, but&#13;
repeatedly — communications frnm&#13;
Ambassador Gerard urgently requesting&#13;
the adoption of a new code."&#13;
As an illustration of how well posted&#13;
the British government was ox&#13;
the contents of the German reply to&#13;
President Wilson's ultimatum on tub.&#13;
marine warfare, my informant point&#13;
ed out that slmultsneonsly with the&#13;
publication in the morning papers Jn&#13;
this country* there was also published&#13;
a London dispatch announcing the&#13;
decision of the British government&#13;
to make four Important concessions&#13;
relaxing to a great extent the blockade&#13;
which plays such a vital part in&#13;
the German reply.&#13;
TEACHERS' SUMMER&#13;
COURSE AT M. A. C.&#13;
RURAL SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS&#13;
TO BECOME A GREAT FACTOR&#13;
IN AGRICULTURAL STUDY.&#13;
MUST HAVE RIGHT VIEWPOINT&#13;
What Is to be Done for Teachers at&#13;
the College by the Faculty During&#13;
June and July.&#13;
East Lansing—That there Is a&#13;
strong movement on foot for a redirection&#13;
of country life can hardly&#13;
be gainsaid at this time when farm&#13;
bureaus, co-operative buying and&#13;
selling organizations, rural credit societies,&#13;
and many other similar associations&#13;
are being fostered to bring&#13;
more full to the farmer and fanner's&#13;
wife the just returns of honest toil.&#13;
It is likewise true that rapid development&#13;
in this direction can hardly be&#13;
expected, for an appreciation of the&#13;
problems and a betterment of conditions&#13;
will only come as result of a&#13;
comparatively slow process of education.&#13;
Of all the agencies that make for&#13;
education along this line, especially&#13;
with the farmers of the future, the&#13;
teachers in the country schools of&#13;
Michigan stand out as most prominent.&#13;
The requirement of a recent&#13;
act of the legislature that agriculture&#13;
be taught in rural schools brought&#13;
great consternation to a certain class&#13;
of rural teachers. Many of these&#13;
were not country bred and few of&#13;
them had any sympathies with farm&#13;
people, let alone any knowledge of&#13;
their problems. None of the teach,&#13;
ers felt that they had time for an&#13;
added subject.&#13;
But gradually the light has been&#13;
creeping in on this new problem of&#13;
education. Teachers who are prepared&#13;
are finding that the supposed&#13;
burden is really a lift, that it vital,&#13;
izes the interest of the students in&#13;
all other subjects. And it is generally&#13;
believed that the rural school&#13;
teaching of the future will turn about&#13;
agriculture as a center. How natural&#13;
a development this is for education&#13;
in a region primarily agricultural!'&#13;
The wonder is that the vision has&#13;
been so tardy in coming.&#13;
The teaching of agriculture has&#13;
been carried on in rural schools for&#13;
two or three years now, and yet none&#13;
of the teachers feel over-confldent of&#13;
their ability. In fact it is the teachers&#13;
who have been on the job who&#13;
best realize their deficiencies. It is&#13;
freely predicted that during the coming&#13;
summer several hundred rural&#13;
teachers—or would-be rural teachers&#13;
—will avail themselves of the oppor.&#13;
tunity which the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
College offers of taking work in&#13;
the summer session, June 19th to&#13;
July 28th, designed particularly for&#13;
their needs.&#13;
The Agricultural College at Lansipg&#13;
is admirably fitted to give this instruction&#13;
with its corps of trained specialists&#13;
along every line as well as college&#13;
farms, orchards, forest nurseries,&#13;
dairy herds, experimental plots, and&#13;
other necessary demonstration features.&#13;
The very atmosphere of the&#13;
state college has an invigorating rural&#13;
tone. There will be other features&#13;
in addition to the subject matter presented&#13;
which will give added value&#13;
to the summer session. Among these&#13;
are lectures dealing with phases of&#13;
rural life, conferences of rural leaders&#13;
in boys' and girls' club work,&#13;
courses in rural play, rural organization,&#13;
and many others. In fact the&#13;
value of this summer work at M. A.&#13;
C. is so generally understood that the&#13;
State Board of Education has author,&#13;
ized the state normals to give credit&#13;
for work done at the M. A. C summer&#13;
BChool in agricultural and other&#13;
subjects.&#13;
Not only will the college offer a&#13;
special course for rural teachers this&#13;
coming summer, but one will also be&#13;
given for teachers of agriculture in&#13;
county normals. This course will be&#13;
distinctly of college grade and will&#13;
consider experiments, apparatus, and&#13;
home project work, and other vital&#13;
problems to the end that these teachers&#13;
may better instruct others who&#13;
are planning to teach in rural schools.&#13;
The whole aim of both of these courses&#13;
is to place at the disposal of&#13;
those who feel the need, the splendid&#13;
equipment which the state has provided&#13;
for agricultural education- The&#13;
Agricultural college has special interest&#13;
in the affairs of rural communities&#13;
d is in a position to render valuable&#13;
assistance in the education of&#13;
the hoys and girls of the country.&#13;
^ - • ' • - • '&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
The Pere Marquette depot at Alto,&#13;
valued at $2,000. was totally destroyed&#13;
by fire. A bucket brigade saved near*&#13;
by buildings.&#13;
Michigan&#13;
Happenings&#13;
Ionia.—Ionia's second annual dollar&#13;
day was pronounced a greater success&#13;
than the one a year ago.&#13;
Benton Harbor.--Steps leading to&#13;
the construction of a tuberculosis sanitarium&#13;
for Berrien county will be&#13;
taken as a result of the tree test exhibit&#13;
held here last week.&#13;
Richmond,—Dr. E. R. Breitenbecher&#13;
has been called to Detroit by the news&#13;
of injuries Buffered by his father, Robert&#13;
Breitenbecher, in a tall from a&#13;
street car in that city.&#13;
Charlevoix.—The body of Billy, sixyear-&#13;
old son of Milo Miller of this city,&#13;
was found in ten feet of water near&#13;
Wilbur's dock. The little fellow had&#13;
been missing all day.&#13;
Ionia.—Sheriff Lowrie had to attach&#13;
Aeronaut Phelps' balloon here&#13;
before Phelps would pay Fred Miller&#13;
five dollars agreed upon for making&#13;
the "dollar-day" ascension.&#13;
Belding.—Bids on the «25,000 bond&#13;
issue for paving North and South&#13;
Bridge street will be opened May 5.&#13;
Abutting property owners will pay 50&#13;
per cent of the cost&#13;
Lansing,—William Stett of Bay City,&#13;
a braksman on the Michigan Central,&#13;
operating on a freight line between&#13;
Jackson and this city, was ground to&#13;
pieces under his own train at Holt&#13;
Corunna.—George Serr, former supervisor&#13;
and prominent farmer, and&#13;
Joe Starks, wealthy stock buyer, pleaded&#13;
guilty to charges of selling diseased&#13;
meat. They will be sentenced&#13;
later. *&#13;
West Branch.—Mrs. Sophia Crawford,&#13;
seventy-six, a resident of Ogemaw&#13;
county the past twelve years, is&#13;
dead of heart disease. She moved&#13;
here from Ohio and leaves two sons in&#13;
this county.&#13;
Pontiac—Mrs. Henrietta Voorhels&#13;
is dead at the home of her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. K. P. Rockwell of this city. Mrs.&#13;
Voorhels was a lifelong resident of&#13;
Oakland county, having been born in&#13;
Springfield in 1843.&#13;
Albion.—W. J. McKone, Albion's superintendent&#13;
of schools, has been notified&#13;
of his appointment as one of&#13;
the assistant sergeants-at-arms at the&#13;
national Republican convention in Chicago,&#13;
in June.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—The Technical association&#13;
of the pulp and paper industry&#13;
has been invited to join the Taylor&#13;
society in a conference on scientific&#13;
management which is to be held at&#13;
the university, Ann Arbor. May 11-13.&#13;
Owos8o. — While Piatt Wilcox,&#13;
wealthy Perry township farmer slept,&#13;
a thief entered his home and stole&#13;
S52 and other valuables. The prowler&#13;
overlooked some valuable jewelry&#13;
lying on the dresser.&#13;
Holland.—The home of Gerrit J.&#13;
Diekema, Republican candidate for&#13;
governor, was the scene of a gay party&#13;
when he turned it over to his servants,&#13;
who invited their friends for an&#13;
evening.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—The dozen or more&#13;
farm tractors at work in this section&#13;
are doing successful jobs of plowing&#13;
for the spring crops. Most of the farmers&#13;
are considerably behind with their&#13;
work because of so much bad weather.&#13;
Muskegon.—Milo Furman, Twin&#13;
Lake boy, who admitted having stolen&#13;
a $12 pay check from his employer,&#13;
William Buck, and then forged an indorsement,&#13;
was sentenced to serve six&#13;
months at Ionia prison by Circuit&#13;
Judge Sullivan.&#13;
Cheboygan.—A halt in the building&#13;
operations of the new resort church&#13;
at Topinabee has occurred, because&#13;
of the discovery of a deeded right of&#13;
way through the grounds for a road.&#13;
This not only jfUs the shape of the&#13;
lot but Jeeves iMlflkUat Sfnos tet&#13;
the church buililag. "&#13;
Port Huron.—Mt WAS filed tat tfct)&#13;
circuit court by Charles R. Jarftp&#13;
against S t Clair county for $100,000&#13;
damages. Jarvis alleges that while&#13;
driving a motor truck in St. Clair township,&#13;
the machine went over an embankment&#13;
because of the bad roads.&#13;
Jarvis holds that the county road commissioners&#13;
were at fault for not having&#13;
the highway in condition.&#13;
Flint.—John H. Farley has been appointed&#13;
by the common council as&#13;
city attorney, to succeed Homer J.&#13;
McBride, who had held the office eight&#13;
years. Mayor Johnson appointed&#13;
Frank R. Streat to the police commission&#13;
to succeed C. H. Bonbright, whoso&#13;
term expired. The salary of City En-&#13;
Gtneer Shoecraft was advanced to $4,-&#13;
800. Other city officers were also&#13;
given increases in pay.&#13;
Flint—Twenty-three men were arraigned&#13;
in police court here on charges&#13;
of intoxication. Fifteen of them escaped&#13;
with suspended sentences. Genesee&#13;
is dry. It cost Ben Brough $100&#13;
to sell a pint bottle of beer at a "social&#13;
party," April 17. He pleaded guilty&#13;
Monday.- Four small children who appeared&#13;
In court with their mother, lira.&#13;
Fannie Berkowitch, when she was arraigned&#13;
for violating the local option&#13;
law, saved her from a heavy sentence.&#13;
She was let off with a warning.&#13;
i *&#13;
•V--'*&#13;
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IS."*' il. ' •"/ • "'••*• u •**• ''t.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
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m&amp; m-• &gt; &gt; . . . . *&#13;
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THE CITY OF *&#13;
NUMBERED DAYS&#13;
4 / FRANCIS LYNDE - • •&#13;
ILLUSTRATIONS bvCD.RHDDES • • •&#13;
COPYRIGHT BY CMAPLCS SLRIBrtfR',5 5DNS&#13;
gm:^&gt;asffig&gt;ffiff^*]f)q^^&#13;
The power of a good woman&#13;
over the man who lovea her—&#13;
w h a t a great force it is! Brouillard,&#13;
head over heels in dishonest&#13;
speculation, wants to go&#13;
to Amy and tell her e v e r y t h i n g .&#13;
Ho needs her sorely, but h i&#13;
fears she w i l l t h r o w him o vee.lt&#13;
she learns w h a t he has been doing&#13;
and how deeply he is in&#13;
volved.&#13;
I&#13;
C H A P T E R X I X — C o n t i n u e d .&#13;
—13—&#13;
"You want counsel and you are not&#13;
willing to buy it with the coin of confidence,"&#13;
he said at length, adding:&#13;
"It is just as well, perhaps. I doubt&#13;
very much if 1 am the person to give&#13;
it to you."&#13;
"Why do you doubt it? Isn't it a&#13;
part of your job?"&#13;
"Not always. I am not your conscience&#13;
keeper, Brouillard. Don't misunderstand&#13;
me. I may have lived a&#13;
year longer than you have, but you&#13;
nave lived more—a great deal more.&#13;
That fact might be set aside, but there&#13;
Is another: In the life of every man&#13;
there is some one person who knows,&#13;
who understands, whose word for that&#13;
man is the one only fitting word of inspiration.&#13;
That is what I mean when I&#13;
say that I am not your conscience&#13;
keeper. Do I make it clear?"&#13;
"Granting your premises—yea. Go&#13;
on."&#13;
"I will. We'll paste that leaf down&#13;
and turn another. Though I can't&#13;
counsel you, I can still be your faithful^, friend in the East.&#13;
accuser. You have committed a great&#13;
«ln, Brouillard, and you are still committing&#13;
it. If you haven't been the&#13;
1 leader In the mad scramble for riches&#13;
here In this abandoned city, you have&#13;
been only a step behind the leaders.&#13;
And you were the one man who should&#13;
have been like CaeBar's wife, the one&#13;
whose example counted for most."&#13;
Brouillard got up and thrust out his&#13;
band across the desk.&#13;
"You are a man, Castner—and that&#13;
is better than being a priest," he asserted&#13;
soberly. "I'll take back all the&#13;
spiteful things I've been saying. I'm&#13;
down under the hoofs of the horses,&#13;
and it's only human nature to want to&#13;
pull somebody else down. You are one&#13;
of the few men In Mirapolis whose&#13;
presence has been a blessing Instead&#13;
of a curse—who hasn't had a purely&#13;
selfish greed to satisfy."&#13;
Again Castner shook his head.&#13;
"There hasn't been much that I could&#13;
do. Brouillard, It Is simply dreadful—&#13;
the hard, reckless, half-demoniac spirit&#13;
of this placet There is nothing to appeal&#13;
to; there Is no room or time for&#13;
anything but the mad money chase or&#13;
the still madder dissipation In which&#13;
t h e poor wretches seek to forget I&#13;
can only try here and there to drag&#13;
some poor soul out of the fire at the&#13;
last moment, and It makes me s i c k -&#13;
sick a t heart!"&#13;
"You musn't look at it that way,"&#13;
said Brouillard, suddenly turning comforter.&#13;
"You have bjfltt % i n g good&#13;
work and a lot of ft-«MM9&gt; tban any&#13;
three ordinary m a otvAMMftt up under.&#13;
I hatrmt « * WpoftH »seing and&#13;
truly I have&#13;
And-ril My this: "If I had only&#13;
yoor courage . . . but it's no&#13;
I'm in too deep. I can't see any&#13;
'farther ahead than a man born blind.&#13;
There is one end for which I have been&#13;
striving from the very first, and it is&#13;
still unattained. I'm past help now. I&#13;
have reached a point at which I'd pull&#13;
the whole world down in ruins to see&#13;
t h a t end accomplished."&#13;
The young missionary took another&#13;
turn up and down the room and then&#13;
came back to the desk for his h a t At&#13;
t h e leave-taking he said the only helpful&#13;
word he could think of.&#13;
"Go to your confessor, Brouillard—&#13;
your real confessor—and go all the&#13;
more readily if that one happens to be&#13;
a good woman^—whom you love and&#13;
t r u s t They often see more dearly&#13;
than we do—the good women. Try it;&#13;
and let me help where a man can&#13;
help."&#13;
For a long hour after Castner went&#13;
away Brouillard sat at his desk, flghtfng&#13;
as those fight who see the cause&#13;
l o s t and who know they only make&#13;
the ruin more complete by struggling&#13;
on.&#13;
Cortwright'i guess had found its&#13;
mark. He was loaded to break with&#13;
"front feet" and options and "corners;*'&#13;
In the least speculative period he had&#13;
bought and mortgaged and bought&#13;
again, plunging recklessly with the&#13;
sole object of wringing another han-&#13;
4red thooaand out of drying&#13;
a g a t e * the tlssa whan BtvJd&#13;
/&#13;
gale should need It. At first the undertaking&#13;
Beemed easily possible. But&#13;
with the drying of the speculative&#13;
sponge it became Increasingly difficult.&#13;
More and more he had been compelled&#13;
to buy and hold until now the&#13;
bare attempt to unlex 1 woul i have&#13;
started the panic which was only waiting&#13;
for some hedging seller to fcre the&#13;
train.&#13;
The sweat stood out&#13;
on his forehead when&#13;
a pad of telegraph bl;&#13;
hand and began to WJ&#13;
Painstakingly he composed&#13;
ring often to the nott-s in&#13;
In gr at drops&#13;
&lt;:*&lt;•. flni. n y drew&#13;
uiis u; ler his&#13;
:to a ni ;asage.&#13;
it referhis&#13;
fieldwords&#13;
neatly&#13;
defined handbook,&#13;
and printing th&#13;
in his accurate, clear.&#13;
writing.&#13;
When it was finished 'm translated it&#13;
laboriously into the dt :&gt;artiD nt code.&#13;
But after the copy was made and&#13;
signed he did not ring at once for a&#13;
messenger. Instead, he put the two,&#13;
the original and the cipher, under a&#13;
pape'r weight and sat glooming at them&#13;
searching blindly for some alternative&#13;
to the final act of treachery which&#13;
would be consummated in the sending&#13;
of the wire.&#13;
Since, by reason of Cortwright's tarnperlngs&#13;
with the smelter people and&#13;
the railroad, the "Little Susan" had become&#13;
a locked treasure vault, the engineer,&#13;
acting upon his own initiative,&#13;
had tried the law. As soon as he had&#13;
ascertained that David Massingale had&#13;
been given sixty days longer to live,&#13;
solely because the buccaneers chose&#13;
to take his mine rather than hia&#13;
money, Brouillard had submitted the&#13;
facts In the case to a trusted lawyer&#13;
officer In the field, he had restated the&#13;
facts—farts doubtless well known in&#13;
the department—the probability that&#13;
congress would Intervene and the hold&#13;
the opposition was gaining by the bus&#13;
pension ot the work on the dam. IT&#13;
the work could be pushed energetically&#13;
and at once, there was a possibility&#13;
that the opposition would become dls&#13;
couraged and voluntarily withdraw.&#13;
Would the department place the men&#13;
and the means instantly at hia disposal&#13;
?&#13;
"If I were the honest man J am&#13;
supposed to be, that is precisely the&#13;
message I ought to send," he mused&#13;
reflectively. "It is only as the crooked&#13;
devil in possession of me will drive me&#13;
to nullify the effort and make It of no&#13;
effect that it becomes a crime; that&#13;
and the fact that I can never be sure&#13;
that the Cortwright gang hasn't the&#13;
inside track and will not win out In&#13;
spite of all efforts. That Is the touchstone&#13;
of the whole degrading business.&#13;
I am afraid Cortwright has the&#13;
inside track. If I could only get a little&#13;
clear-eighted daylight on the damn&#13;
able tangle!"&#13;
H P CHAPTER XX C H&#13;
Love's Crucible&#13;
This hope had pulled In two like a&#13;
frayed cord. Massingale must pay the&#13;
bank or lose all. Until he had obtained&#13;
possession of the promissory&#13;
notes there would be no crevice in&#13;
which to drive any legal wedge. And&#13;
even then, unless some pressure could&#13;
be brought to bear upon the grafters&#13;
to make them disgorge, there was no&#13;
chance of Masslngale's recovering&#13;
more than his allotted two-thirds of&#13;
the stock; in other words, he would&#13;
still stand committed to the agreement&#13;
by which he had bound4*hlmself to&#13;
make the grafters a present, in fee&#13;
simple, of one-third of his mine.&#13;
Brouillard had written one more letter&#13;
to the lawyer. In It he had asked&#13;
how David Massingale could be unassailably&#13;
reinstated in his rights as the&#13;
eole owner of the "Little Susan." The&#13;
answer had come promptly and it was&#13;
explicit "Only by the repayment of&#13;
such sums as had been actually expended&#13;
in the reorganization and on&#13;
the betterments—for the modernizing&#13;
machinery and improvements—and the&#13;
voluntary surrender, by the other parties&#13;
to the agreement of the stock in&#13;
dispute," the lawyer had written; and&#13;
Brouillard had Bmiled at the thought&#13;
of Cortwright voluntarily surrendering&#13;
anything which was once well within&#13;
the grasp of his pudgy hands.&#13;
Falling to start the legal wedge,&#13;
Brouillard had dipped—also without&#13;
consulting Massingale—into the mat*&#13;
ter of land titles. The fLittle 8usan"&#13;
was legally patented under the land&#13;
laws, and Masslngale's title, if the&#13;
mine were located upon government&#13;
land, was without a flaw. But on a&#13;
former reclamation project Brouillard&#13;
had been brought in contact with some&#13;
of the curious title litigation growing&#13;
out of the old Spanish grants; and In&#13;
at least one instance he had seen a&#13;
government patent Invalidated thereby.&#13;
As a man in reasonably close touch&#13;
with his superiors in Washington, the&#13;
chief of construction knew that there&#13;
was a Spanish grant involvement&#13;
which had at one time threatened to&#13;
at least delay the Niquoia project. How&#13;
it had been settled finally he did not&#13;
know; but after the legal failure he&#13;
had written to a man—a college classmate&#13;
of his own—in the bureau of land&#13;
statistics, asking for data which would&#13;
enable him to locate exactly the Niquola-&#13;
touching boundaries of the great&#13;
Coronida g r a n t To this letter no reply&#13;
had as yet been received. Brouillard&#13;
had cause to know with what&#13;
slowness a simple matter of information&#13;
can oose out of a department bureau.&#13;
The letter—which, after all,&#13;
might contain nothing helpful—lingered&#13;
on the way, and the crisis, the&#13;
turning point beyond which there&#13;
could be no redemption rn a revival of&#13;
the speculative erase, had arrfred,&#13;
Brouillard took up the draft of the&#13;
Washington telegram and read It over.&#13;
He was cooler now, and he saw that tt&#13;
was only aa tt came from the hand of&#13;
a traitor, who could and would deliberately&#13;
wrack the train of erenta tt&#13;
Might aat hi motion, that H beoasaa a&#13;
WMttag at th* omMiiitiM i&#13;
Obeying a sudden impulse, Brouillard&#13;
thrust the two copies of the telegram&#13;
under the paper-weight again,&#13;
sprang up, put on his hat, and left the&#13;
building. A few minutes later he was&#13;
on the porch of the stuccoed villa in&#13;
the Quadjenai road and was saying&#13;
gravely to the young woman who had&#13;
been reading In the hammock: "You&#13;
are staying too closely at home. Get&#13;
your coat and hat and walk with me&#13;
up to the 'Little Susan.' It will do you&#13;
good."&#13;
The afternoon was waning and the&#13;
sun, dipping to the horizon, hung like a&#13;
huge golden ball over the yellow immensities&#13;
of the distant Buckskin as&#13;
they topped the final ascent in the&#13;
steep trail and went to sit on the steps&#13;
of the deserted home cabin at the&#13;
mine.&#13;
For a time neither spoke, and the&#13;
stillness of the air contributed something&#13;
to the high-mountain silence,&#13;
which was almost oppressive. Work&#13;
had been stopped In the mine at the&#13;
end of the previous week, Massingale&#13;
declaring, morosely, that until he knew&#13;
whose ore he was digging he would dig&#13;
no more. Presumably there was a&#13;
watchman, but if so he was invisible&#13;
to the two on the cabin step, and the&#13;
high viewpoint was theirs alone.&#13;
"How did you know that I have been&#13;
wanting to come up here once more before&#13;
everything is changed?" said the&#13;
girl at length, patting the roughly-hewn&#13;
log step as If it were a sentient thing&#13;
to feel the caress.&#13;
"I didn't know it," Brouillard denied.&#13;
"I only knew that I wanted to get out&#13;
of Gomorrah for a little while, to come&#13;
up here with you and get the reek of&#13;
the pit out of my nostrils."&#13;
"I know," she rejoined, with the&#13;
quick comprehension which never&#13;
failed him. "It is good to be out of it.&#13;
to be up here where we can look down&#13;
upon it and see it in its true perspective—&#13;
as a mere little impertinent blot&#13;
on the landscape. It's only t h a t after&#13;
all, Victor. See how the great dam—&#13;
your work—overshadows it."&#13;
"That is one of the things I hoped I&#13;
might be able to see if I came here&#13;
with you," he returned slowly. "But&#13;
I can't get your point of view, Amy. I&#13;
shall never be able to get it again."&#13;
"You did have it once," she asserted.&#13;
"Or rather, you had a better one of&#13;
your own. Has Gomorrah changed it?"&#13;
"No, not Gomorrah. I could shut the&#13;
waste-gates and drown the place tomorrow&#13;
for all that Mirapolis, or anything&#13;
in it, means to me. But something&#13;
has changed the point of view&#13;
for me past mending, since that first&#13;
day when we sat here together and&#13;
looked down upon the beginning of the&#13;
reclamation construction camp—before&#13;
Gomorrah was ever thought of."&#13;
"I know," she said again. "But&#13;
that dreadful city is responsible. It has&#13;
robbed us all, Victor; but you more&#13;
than any, I'm afraid."&#13;
"No," he objected. "Mirapolis has&#13;
been only a means to an end. The&#13;
thing that has changed my point of&#13;
view—my entire life—is love, as I have&#13;
told you once before."&#13;
"Oh, no," she protested gently, rising&#13;
to take her old place, with her&#13;
back to the porch post and her hands&#13;
behind her. And then, still more&#13;
gently: "That is almost like sacrilege.&#13;
Victor, for love is sacred."&#13;
"I can't help i t Love baa made a&#13;
great scoundrel of me. Amy; a criminal,&#13;
if man's laws were aa closely&#13;
meshed aa God's."&#13;
"I can't believe that," ahe dissented&#13;
loyally.&#13;
"It is true. I have betrayed my&#13;
t r u s t Cortwright will make good is&#13;
all of his despicable schemes Congress&#13;
will intervene and the Niquoia project&#13;
will be abandoned."&#13;
"Tell me," she begged briefly; and.&#13;
since he waa staring fixedly at the&#13;
scored slopes of Jack's mountain, ha&#13;
did not aee that ahe caught her Up&#13;
between her teeth to atop fta trenv&#13;
bling.&#13;
"Aa you know, I had a debt to pay&#13;
before I could any: 'COBB* ttttlo girt&#13;
let* go and got married.' 8o 1 baoaaae&#13;
* atonkartday m Cortvrigfct't power&#13;
company, knowing perfectly well when&#13;
L consented that the hundred thousand&#13;
dollars' wor'h ot stock he gave me waa&#13;
a bribe—the price of my alienee and&#13;
noninterference- with hia gTe-edy&#13;
schemes."&#13;
"But you didn't mean to keep it;&#13;
you know you couldn't keep It!" she&#13;
broke in; and now he did not need to&#13;
look to know that her \ii&gt;a were trembling&#13;
piteously.&#13;
"1 did keep it."&#13;
She dropped quickly on the utep beside&#13;
him and a sympathetic hand crept&#13;
into his.&#13;
"You kept it until the unhappy day&#13;
when you gave it to ray father, and he&#13;
—and he threw it away." She was&#13;
crying softly, but hia attempt to comfort&#13;
her waa almost mechanical.&#13;
"Don't cry about the money. It had&#13;
the devil's thumb-prints on it, and he&#13;
merely claimed his own and got it."&#13;
Then he went on as one determined to&#13;
leave nothing untold. "Cortwright had&#13;
bought me, and I served him as only a&#13;
man in my position could serve him. 1&#13;
became a promoter, a 'booster.' with&#13;
the others. There have been times&#13;
when a word from me would havo&#13;
pricked the bubble. I haven't said the&#13;
word; I am not saying it now. If J&#13;
Bhould say it I'd lose at a single&#13;
stroke all that I have been fighting for.&#13;
And I am not a good loser, Amy."&#13;
For once the keen, apprehending per&#13;
ception failed.&#13;
"I don't understand," she said, speaking&#13;
as if she were groping in thick&#13;
darkness. "I mean I don't understand&#13;
the motive that could—"&#13;
He turned to her in dumb astonishment.&#13;
"I thought I had been making it&#13;
plain as I went along. You wanted&#13;
something—you needed it—therefore&#13;
it must be purchased for you. And&#13;
the curious part of the beaetment is&#13;
that I have known all along that I waa&#13;
killing your love for me. If it wasn't&#13;
quite dead before, it will die now—now&#13;
that I have told you how I am flinging&#13;
the last vestiges of uprightness and&#13;
honor to the winds."&#13;
"But how?" she queried. "You&#13;
haven't told me."&#13;
"With the dam completed before congress&#13;
could intervene, Mirapolis would,&#13;
of course, be quite dead and ready for&#13;
its funeral, But if the Cortwright people&#13;
industriously insist that the spending&#13;
of another million or two of government&#13;
money is only another plum&#13;
for the city and its merchants and industries,&#13;
that, notwithstanding the renewed&#13;
activities, the work will still&#13;
stop short of completion and the city&#13;
will be saved by legislative enactment.&#13;
the innocent sheep may be made to&#13;
bleed again and the wolves will escape."&#13;
She shuddered and drew, a little&#13;
apart from him on the log Btep.&#13;
"But your part in this horrible plot&#13;
Victor?" she asked.&#13;
"It is as simple as it Is despicable.&#13;
In the first place, I am to set the situation&#13;
before the department in such a&#13;
light as to make it clearly a matter of&#13;
public policy to take advantage of the&#13;
present Mirapolitan crisis by pushing&#13;
the work vigorously to a conclusion.&#13;
After thus turning on the Bpigot of&#13;
plenty, I am expected to crowd the&#13;
pay rolls and at the same time to hold&#13;
back on the actual progress of the&#13;
work. That is all—except that I am to&#13;
keep my mouth shut."&#13;
"But you can't, you can't!" she cried.&#13;
Then, in a passionate outburst: "If&#13;
you should do such a thing as that, it&#13;
wouldn't kill my love—I can't say that&#13;
any more; but it would kill me—I&#13;
shouldn't want to live!"&#13;
He looked around at her curiously,&#13;
as if he were holding her at arm's&#13;
length.&#13;
"Shall I do what you would have me&#13;
do, Amy? Or shall I do what Is best&#13;
for you?" The opposing queries were&#13;
as impersonal as the arm's-length gate.&#13;
The tears had burned out of the&#13;
steadfast eyes which were resting,&#13;
with the shining soul looking out&#13;
through them, upon the crimsoning&#13;
snow peaks of the distant TImanyonla.&#13;
"How little you know the real love!"&#13;
she said Blowly.&#13;
He got up stiffly and helped her to&#13;
her feet and together they stood looki&#13;
n g down upon the city of the plain,&#13;
lying now under the curved, sunset&#13;
shadow cast by the mighty, inbending&#13;
sweep of the great dam.&#13;
• • • • • • •&#13;
Monsieur Poudrecaulx Bongraa, rotund,&#13;
smiling and reached and waxed&#13;
to a broad burlesque of second-empire&#13;
fierceness, looked in vain among hia&#13;
dinner guests that evening for the&#13;
chief of the reclamation service, and&#13;
Brouillard's absence held a small disappointment&#13;
for the Frenchman. Rumor,&#13;
the rumor which waa never quiet&#13;
and which could never be traced conclusively&#13;
to its source, was again busy&#13;
with exciting hints of a new era of&#13;
prosperity about to dawn, and Bongraa&#13;
had hoped to drop his own little plummet&#13;
of inquiry into the reclamation&#13;
service chief.&#13;
O O BalOOMTIWUBIM&#13;
s&#13;
" I DON'T SUFFER&#13;
ANY MORE"&#13;
"Feel Like a N e w Person,n&#13;
It gays Mrs. Hamilton. ^&#13;
New Castle, lad,— " F r o m the time&#13;
I waa eleven years old until I was seventeen&#13;
I suffered each&#13;
month so I had to be&#13;
in bed. I had headache,&#13;
backache : i d&#13;
such pains I would&#13;
cramp double every&#13;
month. I did not&#13;
know what it was&#13;
to be easy a minute.&#13;
My health waa all&#13;
run down and the&#13;
doctors did not do&#13;
me any good. A&#13;
neighbor told my mother about Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and&#13;
I took it, and now I feel like a new&#13;
person. I don't suffer any more and I&#13;
am regular every month. " — Mrs. HAZEL&#13;
HAMILTON, 822 South 15th S t&#13;
When a remedy has lived for forty&#13;
years, steadily growing in popularity&#13;
and influence, and thousands upon&#13;
thousands of women declare they owe&#13;
their health to it, is it not reasonable&#13;
to believe that it is an article of&#13;
great merit?&#13;
If y o u w a n t s p e c i a l a d v i c e w r i t e&#13;
t o L y d i a E . P i n k h a m M e d i c i n e&#13;
Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass.&#13;
Your letter will be opened, read&#13;
and answered by a woman and&#13;
held in strict confidence.&#13;
V i c t o r y .&#13;
"How happy the bride looks!"&#13;
"She has a right to loo* happy. Her&#13;
friends have been laying odds of two&#13;
to one that she wouldn't land him."&#13;
The average man knows how to do&#13;
another man's work better than he&#13;
knows how to do his own.&#13;
W H O IS&#13;
B L A M E&#13;
Women a* well as&#13;
men are made miser-&#13;
T &gt; A able by kidney and&#13;
* *•* bladder trouble. Thousands&#13;
recommend Dr.&#13;
K i l m e r ' s Swamp-&#13;
Root the great kldrrey remedy. At druggists&#13;
in flfty-cent and dollar sixes. You&#13;
may receive a sample size bottle by Parcel&#13;
Post, also pamphlet telling- about It.&#13;
Address Dr. Kilmer &amp; Co., Blnghamton,&#13;
K Y., and enclose ten cents, also mention&#13;
this paper.&#13;
For&#13;
Emergencies&#13;
When you have a bilious attack,&#13;
or when you feel illness&#13;
coming on—promptly move the&#13;
bowels, start the liver v/orking&#13;
and put your entire digestive&#13;
system in good shape with a&#13;
dose or two of the time-tested&#13;
You will welcome the quick&#13;
relief and often ward off a&#13;
severe illness. Beecham's Pills&#13;
are carefully compounded from&#13;
vegetable products —mild,&#13;
harmless, and not habit-forming.&#13;
Buy a box now. You&#13;
don't know when you may need&#13;
Beecham's Pills. A reliable&#13;
family remedy that always .•&#13;
Should Be&#13;
at Hand&#13;
Largo* SaU o* Any M M U C I M ia tko W o v U .&#13;
Sold ovorTvaoro. Ia boxes. 10c, 2 8 c&#13;
ASTHMA&#13;
. KELLOWS ASTKMARMEDY&#13;
prompt • f Asthma&#13;
• A M f &gt; L C&#13;
^•^M^ M M ^nv ^BV s s I M N M '•^^MM^MMPM^PPTBO^^PM^* '&#13;
Dr. J . D, *&lt;•» f * T C&#13;
R E M E D Y&#13;
A B S O R B I N E&#13;
KCaOCM S U O B B I ,&#13;
mad lOayt pin. HtlkSMfl.4&#13;
grahm iMt C M * ft % *&#13;
SAFE MTIttTm tM&#13;
DOM SOt MMttf 0f&#13;
*XMabott*,4tiif«ftd.&#13;
for&#13;
* &gt; * ' • ..**-&#13;
"*£:; &gt;» 5 .&#13;
»&#13;
; • ' * * • .&#13;
?••&#13;
P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h 1&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
pinckney Qippatch I Dr c L- &amp;&amp;** ha* * uew Kord&#13;
* * runabout&#13;
Entered at the Postofiice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Secoud Class Matter&#13;
NY. K. Murphy spanl Monday&#13;
u HoweJl.&#13;
Miss Nellie Gardner&#13;
Does a Con&#13;
irig B u s i u * ^&#13;
'»* '• V rt i v ^ &gt; Bank-&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on nil Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TttrLb&#13;
Mich,&#13;
f ° &gt; o p&#13;
C. J. SIBLEY, EDITOR &gt;flD PUiUSHEB | Monday in J a c k ™ .&#13;
Boys ti pant suita $'&lt;)•&gt;&#13;
VY. A. Dancer &amp;. Co.&#13;
Ladieb Coats and Suite&#13;
Subscriptiou, $1. Per Year IH Advance&#13;
a pe n t&#13;
a n d u p.&#13;
A'iverUsuiy ru:c-a in.'t. l i U ' J W U on&#13;
f o r Painless Denttstry, See —&#13;
Z?A ». ?. Wright&#13;
In The Do/an Block&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
* fKJhcatio/).&#13;
Curds of Thank.,-, fciflv :t-a;v&#13;
Keaolulinns uf Coudoleuce, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notiiea, in Local columns five&#13;
Jen I per line [&gt;er each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to beuetit the personal&#13;
or business interest oi a n / iudividaal&#13;
will be published at i-egular a d v e r m e -&#13;
ing rules'.&#13;
Announcement of e m c r U i o i u e u i s , e t c . ,&#13;
must be paid for at regular L&lt;&gt;ca! Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage a Hice^ are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rale of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Vigil ed&#13;
Sundav&#13;
was&#13;
for&#13;
&gt;^Sj \&#13;
Dance to-night.&#13;
Roy Caverly of Howel&#13;
MICHIGAN]**1**1* h e r 0 SllQ(lav-&#13;
J as. Docking was a&#13;
truest of Will Docking.&#13;
M. Martin of Howe!! visited&#13;
relatives here Sunday.&#13;
Or. W i l l Monks of Howell&#13;
a S u n d a y visitor here.&#13;
Claude Danfortn will work&#13;
Fred Teeple this summer.&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler and C. (4.&#13;
Meyer were in Howell Monday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L y n n Hendee&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Mrs, Parker spent several d a y s&#13;
last week at the hcum? of A. H.&#13;
isham.&#13;
Alger and Dell Hall Lave purchased&#13;
the car belonging to C, V.&#13;
Winked&#13;
O U R l'Yion&lt;l&gt;&#13;
a m I h in L:' \( i;&#13;
t h e m •—L'\».t';d&#13;
t o ^ r a p h .&#13;
MAKI-l AN A l V u i . \ i Mi.&#13;
C. 1.1&#13;
Cii-A&#13;
\ ('&#13;
HIV&#13;
: i \ c&#13;
at very&#13;
attractive prices at Dancer's.&#13;
\Y. F. Murphy and son Ambrose&#13;
spent S a t u r d a y in Jackson.&#13;
Geo. Deviue and family of Dexter&#13;
visited relatives here Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. M. E . Darrow of&#13;
Flint visited his p a r e n t s here over&#13;
Sunday&#13;
VY. VV. Barnard expects to move&#13;
to G r a n d Kapius the la&gt;t of this&#13;
week.&#13;
W. W. Barnard spent a few&#13;
days the past woek in G rand&#13;
Rapids&#13;
Mrs. Fred Teepie and M r s .&#13;
Claude Danforth spent S u u d a y in&#13;
Flint.&#13;
R o g e r C a n , wife and mother&#13;
gpent a few days t h e past week in&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Mrs, L. G. Devereaux and son&#13;
spent Sunday with her parents at&#13;
Chilson.&#13;
Frankie Ashley of Detroit is&#13;
visiting .at the home of his grandfather&#13;
M. Dojan.&#13;
Will Tiplady and family of near&#13;
Webester were S u n d a y visitors at&#13;
the home of J a s . Tiplady.&#13;
Mrs. C. G. Teeple, M r . a n d M i i .&#13;
R. H . Teepie and J . J . Teeple&#13;
mortored to Detroit Tuesday.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank&#13;
Battle of Chelsea, May v, a 10!,&#13;
U&gt;. son, Mrs. Battle WAS formerly&#13;
Kate Connors.&#13;
Mrp. Villa Richards u n d e r w e n t |&#13;
an operation at the Sanitarium !&#13;
last Saturday aud af thi.s wri.t i.n g jl&#13;
is doing nicely. [&#13;
-T. E, Comiskey and wife of i&#13;
Detroit and Francis Comiskey I&#13;
I Q LASGOW p R O S .&#13;
Noted For Selling Good J t 5 Goods Cheap&#13;
JACKSON, MICHIGAN I jJust Mow Most |&#13;
jlvlcn 'Are. Giving \&#13;
Serious Thought \&#13;
\&#13;
To Summer Cloth- \&#13;
jing Needs |&#13;
i&#13;
!&#13;
•ic'n v/lio w a n t tc p a v&#13;
for a S u i t , a r e c h o o s i n g f&#13;
s t y l e s a t t h e p o p u l a r prio«.&#13;
I'M m t \ v e n t v - - l i v e jroocl. s m a r t&#13;
p h f &gt;•&#13;
C A. Bennett has traded his&#13;
old machine in for a new Ford j and wife of Detroit spent Sunday&#13;
Touring car. j at t h e home of J o h n Comiskey.&#13;
Tne Life of Cnrist will be given j y[ ])0 1H I 1 am"j daughter Helen&#13;
returned home Saturday after&#13;
u&gt; winter with relatives&#13;
M. L, Church next&#13;
( t! ontiac Knd De-&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
StoclcbridSe, Michigan&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Tabid&#13;
For l\v conven MM •• ., &lt; ir r^td,-:;&#13;
Trains Easr&#13;
No, 46—N :3 i ,i. m.&#13;
No. 48—4:44 p. n..&#13;
N .. !&#13;
No.&#13;
in song at t&#13;
Sunday at 7 p, m. .'spending&#13;
h o \ M(i:;tii of Ann Arbor Hpeut 'at Akron. Ohio, !'&#13;
Suuda\ with hi.s paientr,. Mr. and ' t.roit. '&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Moran, [ ( ) : ] a c c o u n i 0f the increase in&#13;
Mr. a:,l Mi.-,. Eugene Dink'd | the amount of cream we will buy&#13;
of near Howcii spent Suuda&gt; at J craam either Tuesday or Friday&#13;
[ as the customer may prefer.&#13;
H W H W W W » » ^ &lt; » H H » U » » » H M&#13;
H . F . HIO J,KM, M. U. C. I . s M r . E R, M.Ji.&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sigler&#13;
Ph^sjcifl'is i n&lt;\ S'j r ^ w i J&#13;
All cajis |ir&gt;&gt;uj;&lt;!p&#13;
day or uijr|,t. (»f^r,.&#13;
» ( ! c i i r l e u In&#13;
it M a i n N .&#13;
PINCKNKV ... MKHIGAX&#13;
the home of David Smith,&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. J . Appleton of&#13;
C'iiiison visited at t h e home of&#13;
Alden ('arp&lt;jnter Sunday.&#13;
Fred (T reives and family of&#13;
Stockbridge visited at t h e home&#13;
of W. H. Crofoot S u n d a y .&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Wm. Buhl and&#13;
Monks Bros. j&#13;
We understand that the musical j&#13;
program to be given at th* M. E , j&#13;
church next S u n d a y evening, is&#13;
by t h e singiug class taught by&#13;
Rev. Camburn&#13;
Misses V era and Ireue Uham&#13;
I i VJfe have them in Blacks, \&#13;
I Blues and Pancy Mixtures i&#13;
i ranging in prices from 310 \&#13;
J to 3 2 5 . j&#13;
i Strong Line of Blue Serges \&#13;
J at 315 I&#13;
I&#13;
O u r Par G r e a t e r |&#13;
Value-Giving \&#13;
Appeals To All \&#13;
M e n |&#13;
xmm.mmsmgm&amp;&#13;
at the home of Fred&#13;
daughter Lillian of Gregory spent] and Messrs Albert Horton and&#13;
Clayton Heselschiverdt of Chelsea&#13;
spent Sunday at t h e home of A.&#13;
H. I s h a m .&#13;
S u n d a y&#13;
Burgess.&#13;
Ginseng and Golden Seal ship&#13;
pers wilt learn something to their j T h e Ladies of the Cong'l church&#13;
advantage by addressing Lock box ] will serve their regular supper at&#13;
No. 532 Chicago. adv. I their hall. Wednesday, May IT,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. F . W r i g h t and&#13;
family. Mrs. M. C. Wilson and&#13;
Earl T u p p e r of Flint spent S u n .&#13;
S u p p e r from •*&gt; until all are served.&#13;
Everyone welco ne.&#13;
There will be a Mav P a r t y a t&#13;
day a t the home of Willis Tupper. j t b e C ) p e r a H o n s e , T h u r s d a y Eve.,&#13;
T h e Epworth League of the M . j May 11, (to-night.) Finzel'a Orch-&#13;
E. church will hold an Orietital estra from Detroit will fnnish t h e&#13;
social iu the Opera House Friday | music. Musical Concert at 8:30.&#13;
evening, May 26. Come aud en-&#13;
Special for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
3 pkgs. Growler Tobacco&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
S h o p back &lt;*f Drup S t o re&#13;
D R Y - C L E A N I N G&#13;
joy a good time.&#13;
T h e Ladies of the M. E . chnrch&#13;
will hold a baked goods sale at&#13;
their rooms next Saturday May 14.&#13;
Everybody requested to bo present&#13;
iu the p. m. as there is business&#13;
of importance.&#13;
A pel it ion is beini: circulated&#13;
j for the nomination of W. C.&#13;
i Miller, Supervisor of Putnam&#13;
If yon are looking for bargains&#13;
be sure and read all t h e ads- every&#13;
week, Bargains a r e offered for&#13;
certains days iu t h e week by&#13;
nearly all the stores, and it will&#13;
be W( rth m c i u v to yon to keep&#13;
next.&#13;
T h e Grafonola Contest at&#13;
Meyer's drug store WM? e»r1f»d last&#13;
Wednesday 11i_;ht at ten o'clock.&#13;
Ladies Shoes, 3 2 and 3 3&#13;
values, sizes 2 to 3 1-2&#13;
r&#13;
| the Grafonola troing to Miss Let ha j fc»&#13;
A N D P R E S S I N G i township, for Sheriff of L i v i n g s McMulien, who b r o u g h t :.i \\w&#13;
Mna.v.f,f!t„f*t np»r,wo c&gt;u*r,,e.Hd ^t?r^e ~e nq u i-p^* i} t«fim , c o^o.n.-t -..v ' t o h e&lt; iv •o t f ? d " P ° n «ft4t ! li argest number nf trade cupons&#13;
m u i t f * t h e D i y - C / e a n . - n * ' P"in(.r:es this s p n o j j . Mr. dnririK tl1 P c o n t « t . Miss Cirdelia&#13;
r r o c e » « . w e . a r e r e a d y t o d o l M , l , e r l l 8 8 »hf&gt;wi&gt; l.iinsplf to lis a Dinke) hrougl.l iu t h e secom!&#13;
a u c h w o p k t n . f l r a t - c l a s s o r d e r ! v e r &gt; ' cnpnl)lc had trnstwortby j largest nnmlwr, Mifw Laura Bur-&#13;
W R l » A R R n w ! M " " m , w i " " " ( l o u , , , , m v e , b e gee* third, «nc! Miss Rntli Frost&#13;
" * . . " V i T * * " " " " ' s u p p o r t o t tbe Entire commuuilv&#13;
Fettijohns Breakfast&#13;
Food, 10c pkg.&#13;
Tlline and Armor's Washing&#13;
Fowder, 2 pkgs. 5 c&#13;
S a l e on Corsets&#13;
C E-BOOTH,PS2?-&#13;
* *&#13;
* - * • • &gt;&#13;
f oo rth&#13;
*79*'&#13;
Af"'&#13;
&gt; « •&#13;
,&lt;:'v#&#13;
• v . - **•••&#13;
"n; • A &amp; ' - .&#13;
PtNCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising South Marion&#13;
t'Oix SALE -Guoct Viuiiu.&#13;
Lhu» ofticr.&#13;
;D l | U ; r ,. a l , M r a . S e c o r e v i s i t e d M r u . H . G&#13;
G a n e s a t e w d a v d laat wet-i^&#13;
H e n r y H u d s o n a p e n t a c o u p l e&#13;
of di^rt j*m w e e k HI tijo h o m f of&#13;
uihe; JiOL^eiio^l „•'" -.:¾. iu .j/c .,: :.&lt;,t ( 1 {til I iey B i a u d of H a i t i a u d&#13;
&gt;K I in vre liouje.&#13;
North Lake&#13;
Pred Hunson of Ghehwa, aptjnt&#13;
Sunday a: the homo of Daaiei&#13;
l i e i i l y a n d wife.&#13;
M r . a n d M i d F l o y d B o y tie of&#13;
A n d e r s o n a p c m S u n d a y a - t h e&#13;
h o m e of h e r p a r e n t a P . K N o a h&#13;
a n d wife.&#13;
Mr Hud M r y . K o v G d h u y h a o j&#13;
K J U S ^ L K C H K A P tiGOO r eet of white ' of Ft. Wayri«, l a d . , a r e v i s i t i n g af&#13;
oak Lumber. Haxoid Swarthout. j t h e Lc,;u» of I. -J A o b o ' l .&#13;
LOST 4 small key* o&lt;, u ring. Finder! W a i i - r * . : &gt; ^ r ao 1 wifo of . . i k ttud M r b ' F - A ° l e D i l o f&#13;
pleace leave with C. G. Meyer j F o w h-i w l i ? e p H t J t S a t u r d a y a n d&#13;
S u n d a y WAU S. P a c y a n d f a m i l y .&#13;
G a r i d B r o ^ a n a n d f a m i l y w e r e&#13;
guet&gt;[a of d ^ h n L e d w t d ^ e a n&#13;
f a m i l y of D e x t e r S u n d a v .&#13;
J T A T K O C M I C ! ! " , \ N Mie ^ n . ' - a l e t o u i t f o r i&#13;
TO L E I ' Brar: ground or the Dunald&#13;
son farm. m n&#13;
L e A a l A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
Q T A J K O K MIC&#13;
O i h e c o u n t y of l.iv:nj.3 r,vj At a BL'SBMD of&#13;
eatd c o u r t tiekmt ihe o r o b a ' J o&amp;cw in the v i l l a s&#13;
»»f Howell io ajid i j u L i , on tiii 5:h day of&#13;
M»v A . D. 191»».&#13;
P i e s m i t : H o n . Ku.'cnu A. &gt; c*» v* e, lu&lt;U&#13;
ifi tliv in^tt,.'!' of the fctatd o!&#13;
1J b a (&#13;
A L E X AN 1 'L' K Mel .\ T v tv r.' ;/Ho-;i^d&#13;
G. W. Te«;&gt;it» b a v i u x i) *-ii HI , j i d o&gt; .r: ins&#13;
O!'«J,-H-! eataii' in i1 -r^.iia :&gt;-., e-Lrtl,- ' :,-:--111 d,-&gt;.&#13;
I T I i ' - i ) , m j n , . . I . j a ' i&#13;
I L J» i- K'J-^H, 1 ii.ii ii,o „i,d att&gt; • ; J'.; 'ie A. iJ. v.iia&#13;
A^ lo u ,i,„ 1, , , .u&lt;.- !()!--.-4oou .it T«id j robaU; . • •. 1 k , 1 i r \ t «1&#13;
office, be a J:I: , s ne/&lt;*;.y . , ^ , - : 1 1 - fu;- n e a r i n g j V i b l tCO. a t ' . t i e h o m e u t ALTS- A l i C e&#13;
i?*id u c l u i u.t.i-i rliit a:: i-ursuu;, a ni fleet ad lu 1 1 1 , v f ; • 1 1 • 1&#13;
Mud e s l d i e .i,],i- rti L»tf, .- i L'.-ar: at auul tiu.ts : t l O ' t O i L u i i t l l j i a ^ U H C l a X ' .&#13;
Hud place, ;o al.ov, ea'i-je -*u'-' a J,.~i'ii- e to s«il the&#13;
inert,-,; &lt;,l &gt;n&gt;&lt;\ ,--i -t., :, , I real •.•:'. ;tle rthoiili&#13;
.10c ue •'r.irrrtfi.&#13;
W i l l B u h l a n d f a m i l y of G r e g -&#13;
o r y ripent S u n d a y a t t h e h o m e of&#13;
F. X . Bar_;ea*.&#13;
.Mr nu&lt;{ Mm K M. *§leuo w t i o&#13;
s p e n t I be w i n t e r in H o w e l l , m o v e d&#13;
t 1 thi-ir fir in h e r e L-trit woek.&#13;
G. F ( i ^ l G v v a \ a n d f a m i l y&#13;
it i s h.rtliOT -,r-lert'&lt;l T i n t '.h&gt;&gt; }'JIU day ot Aug&#13;
A. I) 191(&gt; «1 ten o'e!o&lt;:k 1:1 t!ji? foret-oon' ill x*i&amp;&#13;
{•rubate fticc, be a u d i* iitieb- a p p o i n t e d for the&#13;
a x a u t i n a t i o n ;md ad.iuai nu-ui- of all c l a i m s a:.d nn&#13;
mtads a^giast said deceated.&#13;
EUOENE A ST- wi:&#13;
'•/•-' ^udff &lt;H PrQtat*-&#13;
I , J . A b o o t a n d wife a n d K o v&#13;
D i l l i u g h a m a o d wife s p e n t t h e&#13;
first of t h e w e e i in F o w i e r v i l l ?.&#13;
M r s . i l . G a l l u p a t t e n d e d t h e&#13;
L a d i e s A i d a t t h e h o m e of H a r r y&#13;
. M a y c o c k W e d n e s d a y&#13;
M i s s G ^ r m a i n e L e d w i d g e of&#13;
A n d e r s o n v i b i t e d M a r g a r e t B r o -&#13;
g u e W e d n e s d a y n i g h t&#13;
H a r r y S a d c i i e ^ o n is d o i n g s o m e&#13;
p a i n t i n g f o r L y n a G a r r i n e r of&#13;
I o s c o .&#13;
Chubb's Corners&#13;
M r . a u d M r a , O t t o P o o l of E a s t&#13;
H o w e l l a p e n t S u n d a y a t t h e h o m e&#13;
of T o m R i c d r a r d s o n .&#13;
J u d g e A. M o n t a g u e a n d w i f e ,&#13;
L . H. M a n n i n g a n d f a m i l y of L a n -&#13;
a i i u a n d Mir* H . E r w i u a n d&#13;
c h d d i ^ n of H 0 w t d 1 ? p e n ' S u n d a y&#13;
iiP»y MOW iv) lia-i rs.-iu o u r ^ ^ r e . ; a t M o " t r t y l l t ? '«"1 ' ^ - i ' O F e F a -&#13;
HriOHiiv^ N . V, M o r t e i i i o n a t ! M r s . W m - M e r c e r a u d W a i t e r&#13;
gn-'aNv nici'M^O'! p r i c e s . W e a r e&#13;
p H \ i n ^ from seN'^u^ v'-fiv''-1 CPnts t o&#13;
n i A i ' i . U ' r M l i ' l i l U A . V , !f - i'rofjjfe Cwnj: »f&#13;
i o t h e eouDty O' I-iving^tun I^Lste •«'&#13;
iC-u;i'* .•{ .HMI&gt;I MO'.)R[:, Decett.^ed.&#13;
Tit'.' um.:Lrt*i.-ii,M ISSVILJ: a ^ t i iii-p'i.nteu, by&#13;
J a J ^ ' e ot P r o b a t e ot .*airl fir.iuiy. L^amiLadloaers on&#13;
c U n u s iti tl)^ tiiMtri-df -5ctUlert'.aii*.andt'iv'.r m o n l b a&#13;
troiu Old r i i ('.JY ot .'.pri,', A. i). l'MO.&#13;
itcv'A allo&lt;v.'.i ;:y said ,,:^1^0011^-.^1:0 t-- ;il. por-&#13;
BOII^ bc-Uiiri'.' chiii^h a^nip.-*t »aid»?s&gt;i;itc in svlr.cbto&#13;
p r e s e n t lLiej•• 1 I c n - t :n t;s l&lt;&gt;*- ^x-mtitialuin a n J&#13;
sdjast m e n : .&#13;
Notiei1 Is l.i.-1--• ,, ^-,v.':i :[;:-.: « c ^ i ! l tiir'i''! oii t h e&#13;
MUi day ot.Km"', A. u . luib, and on ibe ^4tb&#13;
i!«v (d An.', A. 1». 1016, at t e a o'clock ]&gt;. in oi' each&#13;
oay at t h e Bunk in the &gt; ilJarQ oi G r e g o r y ju said&#13;
coiiiitr to recoivtj ant) e x a m i n e auch claim-?.&#13;
• L&gt;Aied: HmviM. Mich., M*y K. .». u. 1'JM&#13;
&gt;«. 1: K'ti-n \ I&#13;
• -. oiii::: i+sioncr. oaCliiiiUH&#13;
A. .1. DrParlrn-&#13;
P I L L S BEST FOR LIVER&#13;
Because they contain t h e best&#13;
liver m e d i c i n e s , no m a t t e r h o w bitt&#13;
e r or n a u s e a t i n g for t h e s w e e t s u g a r&#13;
coating hides t h e t a s t e . Dr. K i n g ' s&#13;
New Life PillB c o n t a i n i n g r e d i e n t s&#13;
t h a t p a t t h e liver w o r k i n g , m o v e t h e&#13;
bowels freely. No gripe, no n a u s e a ,&#13;
aid diff««tlo«. J o s t t r y a bottle of&#13;
Dr. K i n d ' s jf#w Life P i l l s a n * notice&#13;
k o w m u c h b e t t e r you feel 25c. a t&#13;
y o u r Druggist.&#13;
Caconiiur Pickle Cooiracts&#13;
G o n h ; . r ! r t f i r L ' o « n i g c u c u m&#13;
htj r oickitj u^r t h e S»-BPOM of 1^B&gt;&#13;
; R e a s o n a p e n t S u n d a y w d h A l b e r t&#13;
' Diukeb&#13;
utih o ^ d a r find a h a l t p e r b u s h e l ' -b'rt*cl B e n e d i c t s p e n t Kie first of&#13;
for Hindi p i c k l e s A c c o r c d u g t o Mist w e e k wit'i h is s i s t e r . M i l F .&#13;
si/.&lt;-&gt; a m i t liii t v -ri ve c e n t s for l a r g e . , ^ . A i i i s o n&#13;
Th&lt;- K m x - t i a r r i s P a c k i n g Co ; B o r n to x \ [ : . HI, \ ; d : s &gt; . F&#13;
J a c k s o n . Af.cii , G u r i m i t a h;-tij\' 'on;&#13;
^_~_m_ I -M" a n d M M i G o M o n t a g u e&#13;
v i 3 i ; ^ ! i \ \ ' F d . ' m t m r e l a t i v e - last&#13;
He Uses the Safe and&#13;
Sure Thing at Home&#13;
Suntb-. v&#13;
H i g h l a n d P a r k s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h&#13;
r e l a t i v e s at t h i s p l a c e .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Lh mk.U of&#13;
C h e l s e a w e r e c a l l e r a at tliL- horn 3&#13;
of d o h u H i u c n e y a n d wife.&#13;
H. V. W aits and Geo. Doodv&#13;
h a v e e a c h p u r c h a s e d F o r d c a n .&#13;
Mr*. A . V a n H o r n r e t u r n e d t o&#13;
b e r h o m e in C h e l s e a S u n d a y a l t e r&#13;
s p e n d i n g p a r t of laai w e e k w i t h&#13;
M r s , M a r y G i l b e r t .&#13;
M r . a u d M r s . S . A, S c h u l t z a n d&#13;
d a u g h t e r of A n n A r L n r M r . ant)&#13;
M r d . A l b e r t { v e m n a u t a n d d a u g h -&#13;
t e r of G h e i s e a w e r e S u n , v i a i t o r e&#13;
at t h e b o r n e of M r s . Ally a of t h i s&#13;
pi ice.&#13;
M r s E \V. D a n i e l s a n d a o n&#13;
W a r r e n m o t o r e d t o F e r r y S a t u r -&#13;
d a y to v i s i t h e r b r o t h e r , G e o r g e&#13;
B u r k h a r t wiio is i d .&#13;
FRESH&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
Gent's Furnishings&#13;
A Complete L»ine i X&#13;
m&#13;
— 1&#13;
^ ,&#13;
W&#13;
m&#13;
0&#13;
a&#13;
D A N G E R S OF D R A F T&#13;
P. A. Efird, Conejo, Calir., writes as Urafts feel best when we a r c hoi&#13;
followa:—"I have vsold Foley's Honey and perspiring, just when they are&#13;
and Tar Compound and also other lire.-; m f t . , rfan?prnn&lt;s aru) thr&gt; r^snlr is&#13;
of cough medicines for a number of ^ o s t , a a n g " ° . ^ b&#13;
x ^ n a , u ^,c r c * , ,&#13;
years, but never use anything but Neuralgia, Stiff rseck, Sore M u s c l e s , j } { , | , l l P u "&#13;
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for or sometimes an a t t a c k of rheuma- '&#13;
my family or myself, as I find it pro- He,™ ir, ^,-,^-^ ^QPQ O „„„,,. 5 , A ! l n &gt; 0&#13;
duces the best results, always cures t l s m ' I r i s u c h c a s e s a P P ^ S l o a n s&#13;
severe colds and sore chest and do«s Liniment. It s t i m u l a t e s circulation&#13;
not contain opiates or other harmful to t h e sore and painful part. T h e r Unthinkin£ and careless people neg- b l o o d flows freely a n d in a short&#13;
lect their coughs and colds, not realiz- , time t h e stiffness a n d pain leaves.&#13;
i £ £ . r ° t i T . % M £ ? 0 i ^ T h ° s e suffering from Neuralgia or&#13;
lower tne vital resistance to such grave VT .. . . -_ , , . , , * , - ,&#13;
- Neuralgic H e a d a c h e will find one or&#13;
two applications of Sloan's Linim&#13;
e n t will give grateful relief. T h e&#13;
agonizing pain gives way to a tingling&#13;
sensation of comfort a n d w a r m t h&#13;
and quiet r e s t a n d sleep is possible.&#13;
Good for N e u r i t i s too. P r i c e 2 5 c ,&#13;
a t your Druggist.&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
M r - , d u o . W e b b a p e n t l a s t w e e k&#13;
witii h e r s i r t e r at S t o c k b r i d g e .&#13;
L. C h a m b e r l a i n a n d w i f e of&#13;
W e b s t e r v i s i t e d t h e W e b b f a m i -&#13;
l i e s h e r e o v e r S u n d a y&#13;
F r a n k M a y a u d f a m i l y of . l a c k -&#13;
s o n v i s i t e d b i s p a r e n t s h e r e o v e r&#13;
S u u d a &gt; .&#13;
R e i i i e m b e . ; ' t o e Y o u n g P e o p l e ' s&#13;
S o f i a . af t h e base:ii^r.t F r i d a y&#13;
e ve:irr_'.&#13;
Ld { r a n u a -,,1 i f a . n b y s p e n t&#13;
S u n d a y at W ; b M a r s k b ''••).&#13;
Wdi. S t e v e u s o i i s j ; - i d S u a d a ' ,&#13;
a t d a n e t Wc.\ 11 &gt;'N.&#13;
A, L. \N a^soi. wni hoti-.' o v e r&#13;
S i u i ' i a y .&#13;
K a r l ' 1 r\l'.\0 .-'-"in S u n d a y fit A&#13;
9!&#13;
*&#13;
Connor's Ice Cream&#13;
World's Best&#13;
Fruits and Vegetables&#13;
S a t u r d a y w&#13;
Top Prices on Butter&#13;
and Eiggs every Day&#13;
Best P r i c e and a fair&#13;
t e s t on c r e a m T u e s -&#13;
days and Fridays.&#13;
Yours&#13;
0&#13;
CD&#13;
I&#13;
=&#13;
0 I&#13;
ft&#13;
f t&#13;
ft 0&#13;
1&#13;
ft&#13;
MONKS BROS.&#13;
ia/sajaeMa/afajsjsja/s^^&#13;
Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
diseases as bronchitis, pleurisy and&#13;
even pneumonia.&#13;
POT promptly averting serious results&#13;
from a cold, use Foley's Honey&#13;
and Tar Compound. It spreads a heal*&#13;
ing soothing influence over raw Inflamed&#13;
surfaces, eases tightness and&#13;
soreness of chest, helps croup, whooping;&#13;
cough, stuffy whatap breathing,&#13;
bronchial and la trim* Oftghs.&#13;
' P O P S a l e Bvaywvliar^'&#13;
GOODNESS.&#13;
It is not always eaty to be&#13;
good- If it were, goodness&#13;
would be worth vary tittle. It&#13;
wauid not mean struggle, pery&#13;
6 stcnr.s, asr--ir?.tion, develop-&#13;
J. vtloLviert, cbi.-acta", as it does&#13;
J row. Reat fjo'dr.ess is valuj&#13;
* ab'e because of what it costs&#13;
•&gt; day oy d a / , and it never comes&#13;
X a-, a barqain.&#13;
&gt; . . * . ' , ^ » • « ' * - * ' * . . . . . * -t t . . . i . - . .&#13;
T h e Youngest Juliet.&#13;
Thyllis Neilson-Terry was eighteen&#13;
when she first played Juliet a t the New&#13;
theater, in London, in September, 1911.&#13;
Adelaide Noilson AV*S in her twentieth&#13;
year at least when she first played&#13;
Juliet in April, 1SGT», n t Mrs. T h o m e ' s&#13;
theater, Margate. But. the record as&#13;
"the youngest J u l i e t " m u s t be given up&#13;
by both of them in favor of M.'iry Anderson,&#13;
v.hc^c first appearance 011 the&#13;
stajje via.&lt; made as Juliet w h r n she&#13;
was sixteen. T h a t was Nov. 2.1. 187."»,&#13;
a t Barney Ma^auley's theater, in Lonis&#13;
rille.—New York Times.&#13;
A child tajc^s Dr M i i e s ' ; « , i . «&gt; "; a b -&#13;
le** withnui thtnWInrf ,\f •'ni»«riir'in« "&#13;
• 5 » "&#13;
S, K. Nelson and family of&#13;
Jackson are occupy lug their cottage&#13;
at Bruin Lake.&#13;
Geo. Mutter and family of&#13;
Howell spent Sunday with her&#13;
mother here.&#13;
The Missionary Society of the&#13;
Presbyterian church will meet&#13;
in their rooms Wedueaday p. in.&#13;
Supper will be aerved at 0o'clock.&#13;
Henry Gilbert aud biide are&#13;
spending a few days in Detroit.&#13;
The Tv.vjdo Hardware St&#13;
Lri«' K!&gt; lor ca^h .&#13;
A Cash Discount of 10 per cent&#13;
(-r- hrrcalU-r w'i.. &gt;idl *&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
Poultry and &amp;^^s Wanted&#13;
Paying Cash for Poultry and Eggs&#13;
delivered at my poultry house six&#13;
days of the week and will pay all&#13;
the market affords at all times.&#13;
E. FARNUM&#13;
jS I a s\&gt;fi\KIT rvi-d). .1 ;T lioMt' JOHI dun !• (•.&gt;;;•&#13;
T W E L V E C O U N T R I E S NOW AT&#13;
WAR.&#13;
W i t h t h e Ft'ia'+tan n a v a l a f t ^ c k&#13;
;jpon t h # R u l i r ^ n a n Blac-k »«a port.&#13;
of X'.irna t ; ^ c o u n t r i e s n o w u t w a r&#13;
w!th i r p l r dat*Mi of r l o c l a r a t l o n s or&#13;
a t t a c k * a r e :&#13;
J u l y :S. 1914. A u s t r i a a g a i n s t ft*rvi^.&#13;
Aiie. 1. \9U. G r c r m a n y «jfaln«t R T I S -&#13;
»1 -•&#13;
Aujf 2, 1014. Ofrffiany a t w u r w i '&#13;
H*»lciun-:&#13;
Ausc. .^, 3 PI 4, G ^ r t n m v awainiit&#13;
K r a n r e .&#13;
A u « . J. 1*»14, Cirewt B r t t a i n a s a i n f i t&#13;
C«»rrn.»iiy.&#13;
A'jtf. 1*&gt;, 11*1*, F r a n c e ayalnftt Aimt&#13;
r i a .&#13;
Ail*. 12. 1914. r r r " a t Hrifain a * a ! n » t&#13;
A u ^ ' r t a .&#13;
A U K . 2?.. 1il4. J a p a n a * * i n * t G^rir.&#13;
n n y.&#13;
N'ov S. 1914, ' J r ^ a t Pr:'tx&lt;n a g a i n s t&#13;
M a r --'• Iftla. I t a l y a**!n«t A u » ; r ! a .&#13;
Auy. 3 . IMS, I ml:, a c . d n s t Turk**:-.-&#13;
&lt;"»&lt;?t. 7. 1S1K, R u s s i a a t w . i r wit!.&#13;
liu'm.irl*.&#13;
Mor,trn^»«ro h i s Vircr. :-. a s t a ' e&#13;
r,f ^ ' « r v:ifh An«rr:-| sinrv, ,I'i3;&lt;- 2''.&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
&amp;tt&amp;:&amp;&amp;^^^^^^&#13;
SPECIAL PRICES&#13;
FOR NEXT TEN DAYS&#13;
We have on hand&#13;
%&#13;
a- *&#13;
will be deducted from ail ^foods except (ia-solme and. r&#13;
(Jils of all kind&gt;, Coal, Salt. Calf Meal and Stock&#13;
Food.&#13;
Weocxpect every one to settle accounts and&#13;
notes in the next 30 day&gt;.&#13;
Reapy. yours&#13;
j h a o p y T ^ a n t .&#13;
J Thf h.r'!»!.-"-r ! I'i'lii luasT v.in v.Ii 'i&#13;
One Hoosier Corn Planter, one Gale Foot-Lift;&#13;
Sulky plow, carried over from last year- will make|&#13;
very low price on them for cash.&#13;
^ ^ Screen Doors, Window Screens, also genuine Gilbert &amp;&#13;
Bennett Pearl Wire Screen— as near Rust-proof as metal can&#13;
be^made. Chick Feed. Scratch Feed, Baby Chick Food andg?&#13;
Calf Meal.&#13;
-v.- DINK&amp;L, St DUNBAR&#13;
\&gt;,d',\';-'.v.^&gt;,;,v-.' -.';&#13;
'n- ,+: -Ok^^ r i y . i * r ^ *&amp;*?&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
H&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
i\&#13;
i ;&#13;
* ,&#13;
OME BEA&#13;
r s aivd (Shrub ^&#13;
TKcir Care ai\cl Cvdtivatioiv V*&#13;
CEWGG LOSS&#13;
Pack in Spring so as to Prevent&#13;
Ail Shell Damage.&#13;
Special lets of United States Department&#13;
of Agriculture Recommend&#13;
Use of New Standard Cases&#13;
With Strong Filler*.&#13;
( F r o m t h e I ' n l i e d S t a t e s D e p a r t m e n t of&#13;
Ajjjriculi urv )&#13;
About 50 per ceut of the egg crop of&#13;
the whole year is produced during the&#13;
montus of March, April, May and June.&#13;
It Is during March, April and May a!ao&#13;
that the eggs are or thu beat quality&#13;
and most, desirable for cold storage.&#13;
Nearly SG per cent of ail the eggs BO&#13;
stored go into storage during March,&#13;
April and May.&#13;
It ia especially necessary, therefore,&#13;
the department a egg-handling special-&#13;
Effective Planting&#13;
HOME GROUNDS BEAUTIFUL&#13;
By B E T T Y P A K E .&#13;
Look out for dahlias, gladiolus and&#13;
other rank-growing plants that are&#13;
likely to be blown down by the wind&#13;
and stake them.&#13;
Pick the pansiea and nasturtiums&#13;
every day if you want to have plenty&#13;
of bloom.&#13;
When the lilacs have finished blooming&#13;
all the seed clusters should be&#13;
cut away.&#13;
It is fatal to some plants to fertilize&#13;
them with rich manures when the&#13;
ground is very dry.&#13;
Never allow roses to remain on the&#13;
bush until the petals fall.&#13;
If the seed Is allowed to develop on&#13;
the lilac It generally has few flowers&#13;
except every other year.&#13;
The best way to kill weeds is to&#13;
pull them up by hand. Do not allow&#13;
them to get ahead of you.&#13;
Look out for the red bug and other&#13;
enemies of the rose.&#13;
An excellent spray for the rose&#13;
bushes is made of one-half pound of&#13;
laundry soap melted in hot water to&#13;
which is added one cupful of kerosene.&#13;
When thts comes to a boil, use&#13;
about one part to fifteen parts of water.&#13;
Lawn clippings make an excellent&#13;
mulch for bushes, shrubs and large&#13;
plants.&#13;
Tea roses like to have the soil about&#13;
their roots cool and moist. Grass&#13;
clippings are good for that purpose.&#13;
Spread the grass over the bed to a&#13;
depth of two or three inches. As soon&#13;
as it withers work it into the soil&#13;
when as it decays it will act as a I&#13;
fertilizer. Apply fresh clippings '&#13;
Makes for Beauty.&#13;
after the soil is stirred, and let the&#13;
rain drive it to the roots.&#13;
Dig a strip 15 or 18 inches wide&#13;
across the bed or border and then&#13;
rake it, beginning at the bottom of the&#13;
trench and fining the soil from t h e&#13;
subsoil to the top. Continue this&#13;
throughout the length of the bed, and&#13;
then you will have worked the soil&#13;
perfectly.&#13;
To insure a succession of blooming&#13;
periods, do not sow all your annuals&#13;
at the same time, nor your blooming&#13;
bulbs. Wait two or three weeks.&#13;
Start cosmos as early as possible,&#13;
and at the end of April plant in the&#13;
open two to four feet apart, for they&#13;
need plenty of room. They want&#13;
light, rich soil, and can stand a great&#13;
deal of pinching back to keep them&#13;
stocky.&#13;
It is said that the quickest growing&#13;
hardy vine is t h e Kudzu vine—pueraria&#13;
Thunbergiana—which often&#13;
grows 40 feet in a season. It needs&#13;
winter protection as it sometimes winterkills.&#13;
Just as soon as the frost is gone,&#13;
plant the Madeira vine, it is propagated&#13;
by tubers. It grows rapidly, has&#13;
thick, waxy leaves, and its flowers—&#13;
drifts of creamy snow—cover the&#13;
plant when in bloom, The finest example&#13;
of what this plant can do was&#13;
seen on a second-story porch, turning&#13;
a prosaic second-story fiat porch into&#13;
a Juliet bowpr of beauty.&#13;
Give the wild grape a place about&#13;
the home. It is so hardy and its flowers&#13;
so sweet.&#13;
If you have a dry, bare spot that&#13;
gets sun all day, seed it to portulaccaa.&#13;
They will beat weed seeds growing&#13;
Excelsior Buffing, Properly Used,&#13;
the Case Makes an Even, Soft Cushion&#13;
Which Prevents Eggs From&#13;
Shifting.&#13;
ists say, to see that the early spring&#13;
pack is well put up in new standard&#13;
cases with new strong fillers and flats&#13;
and that cracked eggs, even the very&#13;
"lightest checks," be rigidly excluded.&#13;
Cracked eggs, the practical studies&#13;
of these investigators have established,&#13;
are the cause of great trouble&#13;
and loss to the egg industry from producer&#13;
to consumer. Every time an&#13;
egg is handled on the farm or elsewhere&#13;
It is likely to get shell damage.&#13;
Occasionally the hen cracks an&#13;
egg, but that is seldom. The farmer&#13;
cracks some on the farm, and by the&#13;
time he has hauled them to the country&#13;
store or to the shipper investigators&#13;
find that approximately 4 per&#13;
cent are cracked and one-tenth of one&#13;
per cent mashed or leaking.&#13;
If the country storekeeper rehandles&#13;
the eggs and hauls them to the egg&#13;
TRANSPLANTING SEEDLINGS&#13;
HELPS IN FLOWER GROWING&#13;
Don't drain the soil before the&#13;
moisture of winter and spring has&#13;
drained from ft, so that it will pulverise&#13;
perfectly. If the soil drops from&#13;
the spade in moist, soggy lumps, be&#13;
sure it is not ready to work.&#13;
As the frost leaves the soil dig in&#13;
the manure-mulch placed last fall&#13;
about the shrubs, roses and hardy perennials.&#13;
If there be no winter mulch&#13;
about such plants, be sure to apply&#13;
some kinr1 I fertilizer to them.&#13;
A good coat of bone meal in the absence&#13;
of well-rotted manure will serve.&#13;
Scatter it about the base of the plants&#13;
As soon as seedlings can be conveniently&#13;
handled, transplant in pots or&#13;
boxes; give them plenty of room on all&#13;
sides.&#13;
Transplanting carefully by hand is&#13;
the way professional gardeners do&#13;
their transplanting, but a forked ftick&#13;
can be used if carefully handled&#13;
Shade from the bright sun for a few&#13;
days -and water carefully. If the&#13;
weather is advanced, give the newly&#13;
transplanted plants plenty of air. In&#13;
this way they are hardened off until&#13;
they will be able to stand full exposure&#13;
in the open ground. Care must be exercised&#13;
with all plants removed fiom&#13;
conservatories, hotbeds or from plants&#13;
raised in boxes or pots in the house&#13;
&lt;z ;•?&#13;
Excelsior Buffing, Improperly Used,&#13;
Increases Rather Than Prevents&#13;
Egg Breakage in the Case and Distributes&#13;
Pressure Unevenly on the&#13;
Top Layer.&#13;
shipper, the number of cracked eggs&#13;
is Increased to about 6 per cent In&#13;
addition, three-tenths of 1 per cent are&#13;
mashed eggs or leakers that must be&#13;
thrown out. If, however, the country&#13;
storekeeper sends the cases of eggs to&#13;
a nearby shipper by local freight, the&#13;
total of cracked eggs has risen at the&#13;
end of the journey to approximately 7&#13;
per cent, and 1 per cent more are&#13;
mashed or leaking. The damage when&#13;
eggs reach the big cities after a haul&#13;
of 1,000 miles or more will depend&#13;
upon the quality of the egg packing&#13;
the way the lot is placed in the car.&#13;
G00O POULTRY LICE POWDER&#13;
and the way the railroad hauls the&#13;
car, especially when switching. When&#13;
the eggs are shipped in car lots and&#13;
both shippers and carriers do their&#13;
work well, transit damage Is kept&#13;
down to as little as 1 per cent, Including&#13;
cracked, mashed, and leaking&#13;
eggs.&#13;
Approximately one egg in two cases&#13;
gets maahed or becomes a leaker on&#13;
the railroad trip. But when eggs are&#13;
shipped in less than car lota, the transit&#13;
damage m generally multiplied&#13;
many times.&#13;
Cracked Eggs Lower Prices.&#13;
Because there are so many lightly&#13;
cracked eggs and because they will&#13;
bring a lower price if put In cases by&#13;
themselves, moat shippers have got&#13;
into the habit of including about 5&#13;
per cent of cracked eggs in the casea&#13;
of supposedly sound eggs.&#13;
Very often the receiver blames the&#13;
railroad for all the light as well as the&#13;
heavy damage in the case; a r ^ since&#13;
the inclusion of the 5 p^r cent of lightly&#13;
damaged ege? 1-as L^corne generally&#13;
known, i+ cr^^uanly is supposed that&#13;
it i^ Uieae eggs which, being weak,&#13;
are further damaged in transit. The&#13;
investigators of the department, however,&#13;
find that these light cracks, or&#13;
even dents, if well packed, loaded,&#13;
and transported, are only one-third&#13;
more liable to damage than are the&#13;
sound eggs similarly handled. If the&#13;
cases are well packed and shipped In&#13;
well-loaded car lots, the additional&#13;
liability to damage is only about onefifth&#13;
of an egg per case. From the&#13;
viewpoint of transportation alone the&#13;
5 per cent of lightly cracked eggs&#13;
appears to be comparatively unimportant.&#13;
Cracked Eggs Cause Serious Loss tf&#13;
Stored.&#13;
From the viewpoint of cold storage,&#13;
however, even lightly cracked eggs&#13;
are of great importance. The Investigators&#13;
find that about 50 per cent of&#13;
the err eked eggs are rotten by November,&#13;
generally because of a growth of&#13;
mold. Sometimes the moldy crack&#13;
resting against the filler infects it&#13;
and the egg in the next cell becomes&#13;
moldy. Each leaking egg causes about&#13;
two eggs besides itself to rot. On the&#13;
other hand, good early spring eggs&#13;
with sound, clean shells show less&#13;
than 1 per cent loss from decay by&#13;
November. In other words, six eggs&#13;
in every dozen cracked eggs will rot,&#13;
while only one sound egg in 12 dozen&#13;
will rot, all other conditions being&#13;
equal. The cracked egg^are a heavy&#13;
economic loss.&#13;
Loss $94 Per Carload.&#13;
Eggs at the eastern seaboard during&#13;
the early spring are commonly&#13;
worth about 20 cents a dozen. Carrying&#13;
charges, Including insurance,&#13;
are usually about 2 cents a dozen.&#13;
Therefore, the nine cracked eggs&#13;
which are spoiled by November show&#13;
a total loss, not only of their value&#13;
when they were stored, which was&#13;
about 15 cents, but also the carrying&#13;
charges, or a total of 16½ cents.&#13;
About ten cracked eggs out of the&#13;
19, on the average, will not spoil, but&#13;
are much lower in grade when coming&#13;
out of storage than the sound eggs.&#13;
They will be sold for about 33 per cent&#13;
less than the sound, good eggs, making,&#13;
on a 25-cent basis, another loss&#13;
of 7 cents, or a total loss due to&#13;
cracked eggs alone of 23¼ cents a&#13;
case, or about $94 on a carload of 400&#13;
cases.&#13;
This loss of 23½ cents a case, which&#13;
is believed to be a conservative estimate,&#13;
quickly mounts up to imposing&#13;
figures when the vast number of cases&#13;
of eggs that are stored is taken into&#13;
consideration. In 45 cold-storage&#13;
houses alone, according to the report&#13;
of the American Warehousemen's association,&#13;
about 3,750,000 cases of eggs&#13;
were in storage on July 1, 1915. If&#13;
these cases suffered the average damage,&#13;
in these warehouses alone there&#13;
would be a loss t6 t h e country of&#13;
When Housework Drags&#13;
Keeping house Is hard enough&#13;
when welL The woman who h a s&#13;
a bad hack, blue, nervous spells,&#13;
and dizzy headaches, has a hard&#13;
lot, for the family tasks never let&#13;
up. Probably it a the result of kidney&#13;
trouble and not the much-feared&#13;
"woman's weakness." Strengthen&#13;
the kidneys with Dean's Kidney&#13;
Pills. They a r e a s harmless a s&#13;
they are effective and may he used&#13;
for children with weak kidneys, too.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
"Every&#13;
Jtcturt&#13;
TeiU a&#13;
Story*&#13;
Mrs. Anna. Wright.&#13;
412 Vermont Ave., Detroit.&#13;
Mich., says: "I&#13;
had Intense pains in&#13;
my back and kidneys&#13;
and the kidney secretions&#13;
were full of £ 'liment.&#13;
I tlrad euaiiy,&#13;
lacked energy and had&#13;
trouble in breathing'.&#13;
V.': en I read about&#13;
ixmn's Kidney Pills&#13;
1 tried them and four&#13;
or Ave boxes cured&#13;
me. I am glad to say that the troubles&#13;
have never returned."&#13;
Gat Doan's at Amy Stan. 60c a Baa D O A N ' S Vz°AY&#13;
FOSTBUMILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.&#13;
F o r P l l e a Uw Abe IPs FormakU Balm.&#13;
Satisfaction Qoaranteedor Moaey Refunded,&#13;
For sate by all Drurrists, or sent upon receipt&#13;
of 25c postpaid. Send for free sample.&#13;
HOME REMEDY CO. Sooth Haven. Mich.&#13;
Some Success.&#13;
"How a r e you getting on in your&#13;
pursuit of that bandit?"&#13;
"Very well," replied t h e Mexican&#13;
general. "By skillful strategy we&#13;
have prevented him from capturing&#13;
any of us."&#13;
This WU1 Interest Mothers.&#13;
Mother Gray'a Sweet Powders for Children&#13;
for Fererlshness, Headache, Bad Stomach,&#13;
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the&#13;
bowel* and destroy worms. They break up&#13;
Colds In 24 hours. They are BO pleasant to take&#13;
children like them. Used by Mothers for 28&#13;
fears. All Druggists, 25c. Sample FBEE. Address,&#13;
Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
If They Told the Truth.&#13;
"Mr. Chairman, I'm glad to say that&#13;
I can't make an interesting speech, but&#13;
even if I could I wouldn't waste it on&#13;
so little Intelligence as I see before&#13;
me this evening—sitting, as you are,&#13;
half dazed with food, alcohol and tobacco."&#13;
"Well, good-by, Mrs. Diamondback.&#13;
I've had a dull week-end. But I expected&#13;
it, anyway. One of the things&#13;
we have to endure, isn't it? Hope&#13;
you'll get a better cook the next time&#13;
I come."&#13;
"You'd never know this was a secondhand&#13;
car, would you? The engine&#13;
hasn't been touched for five years, but&#13;
a new coat of paint has given it a fine&#13;
appearance, hasn't it? Worth $75. Sell&#13;
it to you for $500."—Life.&#13;
New Fish Story.&#13;
Mrs. X hsd forgotten to give her&#13;
meat order in time for the first delivery.&#13;
So she searched her memory&#13;
for a meat that would cook quickly&#13;
and had Just gone to the phone to&#13;
order it when her husband entered&#13;
the room, saying:&#13;
"The meatman brought our fish a&#13;
moment ago, I paid him."&#13;
"But, John, I didn't order any fish."&#13;
She took down the receiver and got&#13;
the meat market on the line.&#13;
"This is Mra. X talking. Your man&#13;
left a fish here which I did not order.&#13;
Please send for it. Have you any&#13;
brains?"&#13;
fever, and when convalescing?&#13;
$881,000" that "migbrhave been "saved I m i t t e d to ^ W^111* ***&#13;
£•*&gt; *%»&#13;
^^¾^^^^¾^^^¾&#13;
Dried Tobacco Stems, Powdered&#13;
Mixed With Slacked Lime, Is&#13;
Excellent Mixture.&#13;
ind&#13;
^ ¾ ^&#13;
A CJianniitg OirTs Ptnytssism&#13;
Tobacco stems, dried, powdered and&#13;
mixed with slacked lime or used alone,&#13;
make an excellent lice powder. The)&#13;
stems can be boiled, when the Juice&#13;
forms a good spraying liquid for killing&#13;
the mites on the roost.&#13;
For head lice on chicks apply t h e&#13;
jnice to the head with a small camel's-&#13;
hair brush.&#13;
Tincture of larkspur makes short&#13;
work of the large head lice, but must&#13;
be used carefully and in small quantities.&#13;
to the egg industry from producer to&#13;
:he consumer tf shippers had been&#13;
nore careful in packing their early&#13;
spring eggs.&#13;
PROPER HOUSING FOR TOOLS&#13;
Incubator Suggestions,&#13;
It is Important that the machine is&#13;
level and every part perfectly adjusted.&#13;
None but the best oil obtainable&#13;
should be used. Ren the machine with&#13;
out eggs antil you understand its&#13;
workings and can regulate it perfectly&#13;
AH egg* shcnJd be as nearly fresh M&#13;
AM Implements Should Be Protected&#13;
From Weather When Not in Use&#13;
to Save Depreciation.&#13;
The only way to overcome depredation&#13;
is to provide proper housing for&#13;
mil tools and Implements. This win&#13;
protect them from the weather when&#13;
they are not in use. While the Question&#13;
of bousing is important, it is&#13;
equally important that the defective&#13;
and broken parts be repaired.&#13;
A workshop is required to make&#13;
these repairs. It seed not be large,&#13;
but sufficiently roomy to allow for a&#13;
work bench, a stove, and a certain&#13;
amount of floor space where the machinery&#13;
o r tools may be repaired.'or&#13;
taken apart and reassembled.&#13;
GLASS OF WATER&#13;
Upset Her.&#13;
People who don't know about food&#13;
should never be allowed to feed persons&#13;
with weak stomachs.&#13;
Sometime ago a young woman who&#13;
lives in Me. had an attack Of Sf—lit&#13;
Powder the Chicks.&#13;
Powder the chicks occasionally d o r&#13;
tug the first eight weeks.&#13;
Need Free Hasps,&#13;
Geese do not thrive&#13;
Indiscriminate feeding sc&#13;
back in bed with severe Btomach and&#13;
kidney trouble.&#13;
"There I stayed," she says, "three&#13;
months, with my stomach in such condition&#13;
that I could take only a few teaspoonfuls&#13;
of milk or beef juice a t a&#13;
time. Finally Grape-Nuts was brought&#13;
to my attention and I asked my doctor&#13;
if I might eat it. He said, yes,'&#13;
and I commenced at once.&#13;
T h e food did me good from the&#13;
start and I was soon out of bed and recovered&#13;
from the stomach trouble. I&#13;
have gained ten pounds and am able&#13;
to do all household duties, some days&#13;
sitting down only long enough to eat&#13;
my meals. I can eat anything that&#13;
one ought t o e a t but I still continue&#13;
to e a t Grape-Nuts a t breakfast and&#13;
supper and like it better every day.&#13;
"Considering that I could stand only&#13;
a short time, and that a glass of water&#13;
seemed *so heavy,' I am fully satisfied&#13;
that Grape-Nuts has been everything&#13;
t o m e and that my return t o health&#13;
Is due to it.&#13;
1 h a r e told several friends having&#13;
nervous o r stomach trouble what&#13;
Grape-Nuts did for me and i n every&#13;
ease they speak highly of the food."&#13;
a Reason.** Name grrsm&#13;
by Postum Co. BatUe&lt;&gt;eek, sOon.&#13;
-¾¾&#13;
' '16 w&#13;
\+--&lt;%$.&#13;
"a*^&#13;
i*'i*t&#13;
i,&#13;
v.&#13;
" • * &amp;&#13;
*&#13;
•*«*•«&lt;&gt;.¥»• V 'ifiaJ *T- Btta^SM •faki M ••• ^ " .&#13;
•j#3te&#13;
•rtr*^&#13;
•r&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*&#13;
»KFr&#13;
•»*:&#13;
\&#13;
'DRESSY' PARIS MODEL&#13;
ilSCOMPREHENSIVE&#13;
SKETCH OF A&#13;
POPULAR DESIGN.&#13;
Fashion's Demand for Full Skirta Satisfied,&#13;
With Arrangement That&#13;
Is Highly Artistic—In Shaped&#13;
and Plaited Basques.&#13;
The sketch shows a Beer model&#13;
which comes under the heading&#13;
"dressy." This is a very new and&#13;
original design and here you see the&#13;
slightly raised waist line.&#13;
Nearly all the Beer models of this&#13;
season are immensely wide at the hem&#13;
of the skirt, and tbe dress I have&#13;
fuJ tolds and did nut look unduly&#13;
"bunchy."&#13;
The coatee which accompanied this&#13;
costume had one of the new, very full,&#13;
basques, and this basque was attached&#13;
to the upper portion of the coat under&#13;
a band of lovely oxidized steel embroidery.&#13;
The same embroidery&#13;
formed a high collar which framed the&#13;
face and neck and there were hands&#13;
on the side pockets which appeared&#13;
on the full skirt.&#13;
The buttons on the coat were balls&#13;
of cut steel and the lining was a&#13;
handsome brocaded satin whirh&#13;
showed bright orange designs on a&#13;
dull blue ground.&#13;
Shaped and plaited basques axe making&#13;
their appearance on very many of&#13;
the new tailored coats. In some cases&#13;
two basques are introduced, one slightly&#13;
Bhorter than the other, and these&#13;
are effective on tall figures.&#13;
Of course a basque coat does not&#13;
give the long, graceful curve which&#13;
was a marked feature of last season's&#13;
models. We mise the princess outline;&#13;
indeed we miss it so much that&#13;
some of our leading dressmakers&#13;
seem inclined to return to it for favorite&#13;
clients.&#13;
It is all very well to follow the fashions&#13;
to a reasonable extent, but when&#13;
It comes to accepting an outline which&#13;
takes away from the grace of the figure&#13;
it is time to call "halt."&#13;
It really is true that the more exclusive&#13;
Parisiennes never accept a&#13;
style which is not becoming to them&#13;
Individually. They demand, and obtain,&#13;
modifications which will make&#13;
the coat or dress thoroughly comfortable&#13;
and becoming. It is only the&#13;
weak ones of the earth who allow&#13;
themselves to be driven this way and&#13;
that by sensational dressmakers whc&#13;
care little about beauty but who are&#13;
always seeking to advertise themselves.&#13;
The Latest Costume Tailleur In Navy&#13;
Blue Serge With Embroidery In Oxidized&#13;
Steel Thread.&#13;
sketched was no exception to this rule,&#13;
writes Idalia de VillierB, Paris correspondent&#13;
of the Boston Globe.&#13;
At the extreme hem the serge skirt&#13;
measured from seven to eight yards,&#13;
but the material was so beautifully&#13;
soft and supple that it fell in grace-&#13;
Taupe-Colored Hats.&#13;
Taupe-colored straw turbans are&#13;
cropping out in multitudes, these days.&#13;
The special providence that watches&#13;
over headgear has evidently decided&#13;
that taupe hats shall be "the thing"&#13;
this spring. The hats are in turban&#13;
or small sailor shapes, excessively&#13;
chic in line and poise, and there is&#13;
only a hint of trimming—a smart&#13;
quill, a plaited ribbon cocade or a&#13;
bead or leaf ornament. Millinery ribbons&#13;
are being doubled over strips of&#13;
a resilient stiffening material, noncrushable&#13;
and not affected by the&#13;
dampness, and the new hat bows and&#13;
cocades are especially crisp and correct&#13;
thereby.&#13;
NEW FASHIONS IN LIGHTS&#13;
#~&#13;
: &gt; : •&#13;
•a.-:&#13;
mj&#13;
l.ii&#13;
r-&#13;
Homemaker Has Practically Innumerable&#13;
Ideas From Which to Make&#13;
Most Appropriate Illumination,&#13;
Almost every woman of every clime&#13;
has decided notions about the value&#13;
of color and light in her home, for&#13;
these things have decorative value&#13;
that gives distinction.&#13;
The improvements in lighting since&#13;
the days of candles have been so many&#13;
that no person remembers them all.&#13;
Now we have indirect lighting, shaded&#13;
lights and lights aB soft as candles.&#13;
Anti-glare societies are as common&#13;
as anti-noise ones and uncomfortable&#13;
lights are out of fashion, but lamps&#13;
are still in demand and are made with&#13;
shaded tops that either cast or relieve&#13;
shadows. But they no longer have&#13;
chimneys, so they are fitted wNh what&#13;
are called mushroom ffcofcti. Through&#13;
these the elect!** lfgstt fit*** softly&#13;
and give* a enCe****** •£ wWlneas&#13;
thai briiliea* Ufkt teste,&#13;
K 7 0 V eosne te art equipped with&#13;
we recommend that you&#13;
of the new shades and&#13;
mew ways of placing lamps and lights&#13;
and imitate them as well as you can&#13;
with the means you have.&#13;
Novelty Is not the chief thing aimed&#13;
Wt in the colored shades; eye-comfort&#13;
f*' Iff,far more important. If you ate&#13;
S-t ajaking or buying a lampshade have It&#13;
suit the room in which it will be used.&#13;
Linings of silk shades may be made&#13;
of various tints and textures so that&#13;
the light may be subdued on certain&#13;
occasions.&#13;
.' Split bamboo, willow rattan and&#13;
wooden shades are suitable for the&#13;
jjflen and the library, and these are&#13;
V iined with silk or with rice paper, and&#13;
of course linings may be changed&#13;
often.&#13;
. Glass will always be the favorite&#13;
material for shades, and its fragile&#13;
tenderness only makes them more&#13;
prised. The Japanese, however, believe&#13;
In prolonging beauty, s o that we&#13;
have marveloualy lovely shades of&#13;
glass and metal called "cloisonne."&#13;
Another fancy In shades of beauty are&#13;
the silver and glass filigree hoods for&#13;
ball lanterns.&#13;
If yon have not used your best&#13;
endeavor to have your b o n e well&#13;
lighted, torn your attention to tbe matter&#13;
now and make yourself and family&#13;
a gift of well-placed, prettily shaded&#13;
lamps and lights. Nothing else cao&#13;
give you more comfort.&#13;
ATTRACTIVE FUR CAPE&#13;
Fashion again rules thai furs shall&#13;
predominate as one of the extraordinary&#13;
features of spring and summer&#13;
wear. This fascinating little&#13;
cape with its fur tie and balls Is&#13;
mi"« of the softest mole skin lined&#13;
wftti rose and gray-striped silk.&#13;
Msny unusual styles in furs have&#13;
been seen, but the most novel thing&#13;
of all is that almost every garment&#13;
has fur attachments of some kind.&#13;
The cape shown in the photo makes&#13;
an unusual striking neckpiece.&#13;
Pad for Gland Kid.&#13;
There is a fad for glased trimmings&#13;
this spring, sad some of the most exclusive&#13;
motor coats show facings,&#13;
strappings aad other details of kid In&#13;
soft, rich color that harmonize with&#13;
tbe coat material. Occasionally on a&#13;
motor coat for a very young woman&#13;
one comes aeross glased kid trimming&#13;
in bright colors, like scarlet, royal blue&#13;
or even emerald green, but the average&#13;
choice is gray, mouse, tan or&#13;
brown glased kid; and white Is need&#13;
with much dalnttaees of effect also.&#13;
If you Suffer from Backache, Lumbago,&#13;
Kidneys or Rheumatism,&#13;
Take Hot Water and "ANURIC"&#13;
(Coziduciot by the NciUuriitl W o m a n ' s&#13;
Chnsiio.il TempL-rancc Union.)&#13;
CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITION.&#13;
( A n n a A. Gordon, President N a t i o n a l&#13;
W. C. T. U. and One of the National&#13;
Prohibition A m e n d m e n t Commission.)&#13;
In order to win national constitutional&#13;
prohibition two-thirda of the&#13;
members of the United States senate&#13;
and house of representatives must&#13;
vote In favor of a bill referring the&#13;
question to the various states for ratification&#13;
through their legislatures'&#13;
When 36 of our 48 etates through a&#13;
majority vote of their legislatures ratify&#13;
the measure thus referred it is&#13;
adopted and becomes a part of the&#13;
United States Constitution. Such a&#13;
prohibitory amendment is surely in&#13;
harmony with the spirit of the Constitution&#13;
of the United States, which, as&#13;
its preamble declares, was established&#13;
"to promote the general welfare and&#13;
secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves&#13;
and our posterity.&#13;
Nineteen commonwealths have already&#13;
gained the high, dry ground of&#13;
statewide prohibition. Six states—&#13;
Nebraska, South Dakota, Montana,&#13;
California, Idaho and Michigan—vote&#13;
on the question on November 7. Idaho&#13;
in the endeavor to change its statutory&#13;
prohibitory law to constitutional&#13;
prohibition. The territory of Alaska&#13;
also closes a prohibition campaign on&#13;
November 7. If we can win this additional&#13;
prohibition territory and call&#13;
a roll of 26 prohibition states we&#13;
shall be within ten Btates of our national&#13;
goal. The fact that more than&#13;
half the people and more than threequarters&#13;
of the area of this country&#13;
are under prohibitory laws Is assurance&#13;
that we are fast nearlng national&#13;
constitutional prohibition.&#13;
All states will benefit by the amendment.&#13;
All will still have power to go&#13;
Just as far as they desire in prohibiting&#13;
any phase of the liquor traffic and&#13;
will have the aid which comes from&#13;
a national policy. Our greatest difficulty&#13;
today is the difference in policy&#13;
between the nation's government and&#13;
the prohibition states. With a similar&#13;
prohibition standard In the nation&#13;
and the states federal and state&#13;
officers would furnish "a frank and&#13;
candid co-operation for the general&#13;
good."&#13;
American men and women must gu^rd&#13;
constantly against kidney trouble, because&#13;
we eat too much and all our fojd&#13;
is rich. Our blood ia tilled with uric&#13;
acid which the kidneye strive to hlter&#13;
out, they weaken trum overwork, become&#13;
tluggitth; the ehrninatjve tissues&#13;
clog and the rebult is kidney trouble,&#13;
bladder weakness and a general decline&#13;
in health.&#13;
W h e n your kidneys feel like lumps of&#13;
lead, when your back hurts or the urine&#13;
IB cloudy, full of sediment, or you are&#13;
obliged to beek relief two or three timee&#13;
during the night, when you buffer with&#13;
eick headache or dizzy, nervoub spells,&#13;
acid stomach, or you have rheumatism&#13;
when t h e weather is bad, get from your&#13;
druggist—" A N U R I C " Because uf uricacid&#13;
i n # overabundance in the KVHtem,&#13;
backache, pama here and there, rheuoian&#13;
a m , gout, gravel, neuralgia and hcutica&#13;
result. It was Dr. Pierce who discovered&#13;
a new agent, called " A n u r i c , " wh.ch will&#13;
throw out and eradicate this uric acid&#13;
from the bybtern. D r . Pierce believes&#13;
"AnuiSc" to be 37 t i m e s more potent&#13;
than Ut/tia, and consequently you need no&#13;
longer tear muscular or articular rheumatism&#13;
or gout, or many other diseubea which&#13;
are dependent on an accumulation of uno&#13;
acid w i t h i n the body. Send Dr. Pierce,&#13;
Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N . Y . , 10c for&#13;
trial package or $1.00 for full treatment&#13;
" A n u r i c . "&#13;
Dr. Pierce's reputation is back of thai&#13;
medicine and you k n o w t h a t his "Pleasant&#13;
P e l l e t s " for the liver and his "Favorite&#13;
Prescription," for the ills of women&#13;
have had a splendid reputation :or t h e&#13;
past 50 years. Adv.&#13;
••Wormy," t h a t ' s w h a t ' s t h e m a t t e r of 'em. S t o m a c h&#13;
a n d i n t e s t i n a l w o r m s . N e a r l y a s bad aa d i s t e m p e r . C o s t&#13;
y o u t o o m u c h to f e e d 'em. L o o k b a d — a r e bad. D o n ' t&#13;
p h y s i c 'em t o d e a t h . S p o h n ' s C o m p o u n d w i l l r e m o v e t h e&#13;
w o r m s , i m p r o v e t h e a p p e t i t e , a n d t o n e 'em u p all r o u n d&#13;
a n d don't "physic.""' A c t s on g l a n d s a n d blood. F u l l&#13;
d i r e c t i o n s w i t h e a c h b o t t l e , a n d s o l d b y a l l drugsrlsta.&#13;
S P O H N MEDICAL. CO., C h e m i s t s , G o a h c a , I n d . , U. S. A .&#13;
Shameless.&#13;
"That soprano in the choir is a bold,&#13;
brazen thing."&#13;
*'Why, 1 thought she appeared to be&#13;
particularly modest and refined."&#13;
"Oh, you men! You never notice&#13;
anything! Didn't you see that she&#13;
was wearing her last year's hat Just to&#13;
attract attention?"&#13;
T h e y ' r e E v e n .&#13;
"See here, Mr. Jones," said his physician,&#13;
"it is taking you an awful long&#13;
time to pay that bill of mine."&#13;
"I know it, Doc," answered Jones,&#13;
"but you ought to remember that you&#13;
were an awful long time curing me."&#13;
F I T S , E P I L F P 8 T , F A L L I N G 8TCKKE88&#13;
S t o p p e d Oaicklv, Titty years of nnlnterrnpted FRECKLES&#13;
N o w I s t h a T i m e t o G e t B i d at T h e * *&#13;
Ugij S p c U .&#13;
There's no longer the slightest n»*d of&#13;
feeling* ashamed of your freckles, as the&#13;
prescription othlne—double strength—is&#13;
guaranteed to remove these homely spots.&#13;
Simply get an ounce of othlne—double&#13;
strength—from your druggist, and apply a&#13;
little of it night and morning and you&#13;
should soon see that even the worst freckles&#13;
have begun to disappear, while the lighter&#13;
ones have vanished entirely, It is seldom&#13;
that more than one ounce is needed to completely&#13;
clear the skin an4 gain a beautiful&#13;
clear complexion.&#13;
Be sure to aak for the double strength&#13;
othlne, aa this Is sold under guarantee of&#13;
money back if it falls ts remove freckles.—&#13;
Adv.&#13;
BDocean of IT. Kline's Kplleps/ Medicine ins&#13;
lasting l-esnlw. L A B » I T R I A L BOTTLB F&amp;JEX. ]&#13;
K L I N E C o i I F A &gt; i , l i * d B a c k , N . J . - I d T •BE&#13;
The less one thinks the more one&#13;
speaks.&#13;
Signs.&#13;
Hokus—So you believe in signs,&#13;
eh? Well, when a man is always&#13;
making new friends what is that a&#13;
sign of?&#13;
Pokus—It's likely to be a sign that&#13;
his old friends have found him out.—&#13;
Life.&#13;
FOR T H E SAKE OF BOYS,&#13;
Rev. John Empringham, an Episcopal&#13;
clergyman of New York, became,&#13;
as he expressed It in an interdenominational&#13;
meeting of 500 ministers,&#13;
filled with the thought of "how&#13;
much power might be added to the antiliquor&#13;
forces if the Episcopal church&#13;
would lend some of ita strength," and,&#13;
realizing that "none of the present&#13;
aniiealoon speakers have the entree&#13;
to its pulpits," volunteered for the&#13;
work. He said to his wife: "For&#13;
the sake of our five boys, I am going&#13;
to wage war against the liquor business."&#13;
She replied: "My sister in&#13;
€anada has sacrificed her two boys in&#13;
the trenches for England. The foe&#13;
destroying this country is more dangerous.&#13;
I am willing to make any sacrifice."&#13;
"Three of those five boys,"&#13;
said Mr. Empringham, "are preparing&#13;
for West Point, and if the need ever&#13;
came, I would be willing to see them&#13;
give up their lives In defense of this&#13;
country, but I am not willing to see&#13;
them go down to the gutter, victims of&#13;
the saloon."&#13;
How about your boys?&#13;
CUTICURA COMFORTS BABY&#13;
Suffering From Itching, Burning&#13;
Rashes, Eczema, etc. Trial Free.&#13;
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE&#13;
T h e Antiseptic Powder to&#13;
Shake Into Your Shoes&#13;
and use in the Foot-Bath. Gives instant&#13;
relief to tired, aching, swollen, perspiring,&#13;
smarting, nervous feet, stops the sting of&#13;
corns and bunions, t&#13;
R e a d a f e w e x t r a c t s from {&#13;
original testimonials on file in&#13;
our office :&#13;
"Allen's Foot—Ease works&#13;
like magic Have placed some&#13;
in tight shoes and feet feel fresh&#13;
and comfortable."&#13;
"It is one of the grandest&#13;
remedies ever made."&#13;
"Allen's F o o t - E a s e bas Just prevented&#13;
me from throwing away&#13;
a new pair of )5.00 shoes. It ii&#13;
great.&#13;
Nothing so thoroughly rest*&#13;
**©»» W k s t t b e iccu I I **•*• t h * friction&#13;
»•*• anlfrom t h e 8 h o &lt; a a d makes walkr&#13;
« n f 2 S - i n « « delight. Wc have 30,000 t ^ m , " n testimonials.&#13;
Over 100.000 packages are being used by&#13;
Allied and Crerman troops at the front. Sold&#13;
everywhere, 25c. Den't accept say •afcftttaie.&#13;
F D C B TRIAL PACKAGE&#13;
• % B s i Mntbrmall. Address,,&#13;
A L L E N W. OL.MHTEI). L e I t o y . N. Y.&#13;
RUSSIA'S FOUNDATION.&#13;
Pierre L. Bark, Russian minister&#13;
of finance recently declared that Russia's&#13;
prosperity is rapidly on the in*&#13;
crease.&#13;
"Russia's finances rest upon the&#13;
most solid foundation In the world,"&#13;
said Mr. Bark. "The economic prosperity&#13;
of the Russian people is now&#13;
greater than was ever conceived possible&#13;
before the beginning of the war.&#13;
There is nothing illusory or specious&#13;
about Russia's prosperity. It rests&#13;
upon the Incontrovertible fact of the&#13;
Russian people's increased earnings&#13;
and savings. When a year ago the&#13;
savings banks showed a monthly increase&#13;
In deposits of 50,000,000 rubles,&#13;
it was regarded as phenomenal. But&#13;
that was only the beginning." Savings&#13;
deposits have increased over&#13;
1,000 per cent under prohibition. This&#13;
greatly changed condition of Russian&#13;
finances. Minister Bark explains, "It&#13;
accounted for principally by the crowing&#13;
thrift and economy of the peasants&#13;
since the enforcement of prohibition^&#13;
Give baby a bath with hot water and&#13;
Cutlcura Soap, using plenty of Soap.&#13;
Dry lightly and apply Cuticura Ointment&#13;
gently to all affected parts, Instant&#13;
relief follows and baby falls into&#13;
a refreshing sleep, the first perhaps&#13;
in weeks. Nothing more effective.&#13;
Tree sample each by mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv,&#13;
The Fact.&#13;
"Is there anything really in your&#13;
love for this young heiress?"&#13;
"Certainly; there're millions In it."&#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 30 'Years.&#13;
Children Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s Caatoria&#13;
Nine cubic inches of water frozen&#13;
will measure ten cubic Inches.&#13;
CURSE O F M I S S I O N *&#13;
In China the government Is careful&#13;
to label all poisons and It la stated&#13;
that the liquor shipped from this country&#13;
ta labeled 'The Jesus Poison."&#13;
In Japan drunkenness waa practically&#13;
unknown until after tbe revolution of&#13;
186«, and now when a drunken n a n&#13;
la seen en tbe street the natives say,&#13;
"Hare cornea a Christian.'*&#13;
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.&#13;
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regulate&#13;
liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.&#13;
What this world needs is fewer&#13;
creeds and more real charity.&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They art&#13;
brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Trj&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
Purely vegetable. Act&#13;
gently on the liver,&#13;
eliminate bile, and&#13;
soothe the delicate^&#13;
membrane of the^i&#13;
bowel. C a n&#13;
Caattipstioa,&#13;
BUisosaeas,&#13;
Sick Hes*&#13;
sea* sos' lngigtstioe., • • ailHsftf kasw.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER £ ~ f &amp;*&amp; £&#13;
Siss. Hmt. eissa, etv&#13;
•asscBtsi, oonvtttlsat •etessavtpe- n*L eas tied sa «i4l&#13;
s»««ftL flsatspMler « •&#13;
©*•*; «tS sot sail Off&#13;
I s l s r s aajrtslBC,&#13;
eaaiMtssa sftsettv* AJItfaalaraorissai&#13;
aaaeiA soiaas. IM B« B*X» *««.. amUra, *• T,&#13;
PATENTS g^i^i^&amp;tts&#13;
Bates reasonable. TTIghsst lafswaces, Bsateemeea.&#13;
W s t i o a M. C p l s i&#13;
•- Lawyer, Wsi&#13;
W. N. U H DETROIT, NO. 20-1916. Bumper Grain Crops&#13;
0J///X/£3f 6 o o d Markets-High Prices&#13;
^mMX^JBSL W**t*m*a*t*, OAmwmf** B*Bmdr iteoy ,W A*iftmmlrfmmO m*m4m fo*&#13;
The winnings of Western Canada at the Sell&#13;
Exposition at Denver were easily made, The&#13;
comprised Wheat, Oats, Barky and Grasses&#13;
important being the prises for Wheat and Oata&#13;
sweep stake on Alfalfa.&#13;
NoleMimpcsnantthanthtiolendMcuaiicj&#13;
Canada's wheat and other frame, ia the «mWHrt*&#13;
the cattle fed and fattened on the graasea of&#13;
A recent shipment of cattle to CUcago&#13;
the market in that city far quality and price,&#13;
hat&#13;
of&#13;
that&#13;
s e a l ef tie Osftas&#13;
to proputk*&#13;
exportable surplus of&#13;
n theworidV&#13;
year than any&#13;
prices you&#13;
lor the pro*&#13;
will find&#13;
ILV.MeKIMMiS,f78&#13;
£ *&#13;
• } * • • . - • •&#13;
' V .&#13;
v &gt; * "WJ-'rZ . r v ^ ^&#13;
*«-;&#13;
"•«„&#13;
«tv&#13;
:x' «&lt;£.•&#13;
•u&#13;
'A3&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The Dancer's&#13;
Store For Men&#13;
weffEN ssnsai&#13;
CUPBOARD Vi • I i « | - i s&#13;
m&#13;
Exclusive Features of Dancer's Mens Spring&#13;
Apparel Stand Out Like Mountain Peaks on&#13;
the Clothing Horizon.&#13;
Dancer's Clothes Service covers the field&#13;
'completely. Several houses including&#13;
Michael Sterns&#13;
-ee to it that not a detail has been overlooked.&#13;
Clothes for &gt;oung men. Clothes tor conservative&#13;
men, for fat men, slim men—some tailoring&#13;
establishment has taken especial care of each&#13;
of them.&#13;
The fabric are the best woolens tested thoroughly&#13;
by the tailors before being put into garments-&#13;
The patterns are the latest and most desirable&#13;
we can obtain. The tailoring has all that&#13;
attention given to detail that the most particular&#13;
man appreciates.&#13;
We call your attention to the advantage of&#13;
being able to slip into several models of Spring&#13;
Suits in a great many patterns, and seeing your&#13;
new suit on you before you buv.&#13;
The Dancer's service tnat follows your suit&#13;
even after you have started to wear it and insist&#13;
that it be perfectly satisfactory before you finally&#13;
accept it. is also worthy of your attention.&#13;
Blue Serges, blue unfinished worsteds, homespuns,&#13;
tweeds and gray mixtures. The new Saxonys,&#13;
flannel, clear-cut and demi-finished worsteds&#13;
Spring and Summer Suits $ 1 0 t o $ 2 5&#13;
Call and look them over. Car fare paid on $15&#13;
purchases&#13;
SOME RELISHES.&#13;
W E E T G U E U K . I N S . - - F i l l u t u b&#13;
w i t h s u i t M a i e r at-rou^ e n o u g h icb&#13;
e a r U[&gt; u i i e g g . 1'ut g h e r k i n ^&#13;
n o t o v e r a linger l u u ^ i n tills a n d lot&#13;
t h e m s t a n d n i n e d a y * . T a k e t h e m o a t&#13;
and. h a r d e u tliem by J e t t i n g t h e m s t a n d&#13;
in f r e s h cold w a t e r f u r s e v e r a l h o u r s ,&#13;
[ h e n s p r e a d t h e m o u t o n a folded tu&#13;
blecloth t o t r e e i h e i u of m o i s t u r e .&#13;
I ' a e k t h e m i n g l a s s q u a r t jurw, till&#13;
w i t h cold v i n e g a r a n d s e t t h e m a s i d e&#13;
for t h r e e w e e k s In a c o o ! p l a c e ; t h e n&#13;
o p e n t h e j a r s , d r a i n off t h e v i n e g a r&#13;
a n d t o t h a t of e a c h j a r a d d o n e cupful&#13;
K&gt;1 a u g u r , o n e - h a l f t e a s p o o n ? u l o f ext&#13;
r a c t of m a c e a n d t h e s a m e of e x t r a c t&#13;
of c l o v e s a n d c i n n a m o n a n d c a y e n n e&#13;
p e p p e r t o t a s t e -Stir u n t i l t h e s u g a r is i&#13;
d i s s o l v e d , p o u r t h e liquid o v e r t h e |&#13;
p i c k l e s , close t h e j a r s a n d s e t i n a coo! \&#13;
p l a c e . 1&#13;
P i c k l e d B e e t s - T h a t Will K e e p . - S i x !&#13;
b e e t s , t w o o u n c e s of w h o l e p e p p e r s , j&#13;
t w o p i n t s of v i n e g a r , ' o n e b l a d e of I&#13;
uaa'-e, one-half o u n c e of w h o l e g i n g e r !&#13;
a n d t w e l v e c l o r e ^ . W a s h b e e t s care-)&#13;
fully, t a k i n g r a r e n o t t o b r e a k t h e fiber;&#13;
or t h e y will bleed a n d lose t h e i r color.]&#13;
Boil t h e m in p l e n t y o f boiling s a l t e d j&#13;
w a t e r f o r o n e h o u r a n d a half. T a k e&#13;
t h e m u p , peel a n d c u t t h e m i n slices- j&#13;
an e i g h t h of a n inch t h i c k a n d p u t ;&#13;
t h e m i n a Jar. Ball o n e p i n t of t h e&#13;
v i n e g a r w i t h t h e w h o l e p e p p e r s , m a c e ,&#13;
c l o v e s a n d g i n g e r a n d w h e n boiled for&#13;
five m i n u t e s a d d t o i t t h e o t h e r p i n t 01&#13;
cohl v i n e g a r .&#13;
M a n g o P e p p e r K e l i s b . — S e v e n l a r g e&#13;
m a n g o p e p p e r s (five g r e e n , t w o red),&#13;
one tine g r a i n e d (liyge) c a b b a g e , onet&#13;
h i r d cupful of gait, o n e c u p f u l of sugar,&#13;
t w o h e a p i n g t a b l e s p o o n f u l s w h o l e&#13;
w h i t e m u s t a r d seed, v i n e g a r e n o u g h&#13;
to ftgver. U u n p e p p e r s t h r o u g h m e a t&#13;
g r i n d e r , u s i n g finest g a u g e . Squeeze&#13;
«11 t h e J u i c e f r o m t h e c h o p p e d p e p p e r s&#13;
a n d p u t t h e m i n t o a p o r c e l a i n o r g r a n&#13;
ite inn). Crinrt c a b b a g e , m i x all t o&#13;
g e t h e r t h o r o u g h l y . B a r e l y c o v e r w i t h&#13;
v i n e g a r .&#13;
A p p l e Pickle.—Gut fiweet a p p l e s , after&#13;
p a r i n g , into pieces; t h e r i g h t size to&#13;
go i n t o cant*. Gool&lt; in w a t e r until lewd&#13;
e r , t h e n p u t i n t o c a n s a n d k e e p w a r m&#13;
w h i l e t h e pickle h&gt; h e a t i n g . Boil tog&#13;
e t h e r t w o p o u n d s of isugar, o n e pint&#13;
of v i n e g a r , one-half o u n c e e a c h of cinn&#13;
a m o n b « r k a n d cloves. P u t t h e spice&#13;
in a b a g . T u r n e v e r t h e cooked a p -&#13;
ples In t h e c a n s w h i l e h o t a n d seal.&#13;
t*se m o r e s u g a r if a p p l e s a r e sour a n d&#13;
be c a r e f u l not to c&gt;ok too long.&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
S&#13;
COLUMNS 0&#13;
D&#13;
a r c r e a d by t h e p e o p l e&#13;
b e c a u s e it uivesi t h e m&#13;
n-iws of a b s o r b i n g i n -&#13;
t e r e s t . P e o p l e n o l o n g e r&#13;
g o l o o k i n g a b o u t f o r&#13;
t h i n g s t h e y w a n t — t h e y&#13;
g o t o t h e i r n e w s p a p e r&#13;
f o r i n f o r m a t i o n a s t o&#13;
w h e r e s u c h t h i n g s m a y&#13;
be f o u n d . T h i s m e t h o d&#13;
s a v e s t i m e a n d t r o u b l e .&#13;
If y o u w a n t t o b r i n g&#13;
y o u r w a r e s t o t h e a t t e n -&#13;
t i o n of this c o m m u n i t y ,&#13;
o u r a d v e r t i s i n g c o l u m n *&#13;
Should&#13;
Contain Your&#13;
Ad&#13;
nnnnnnn&#13;
r ' ;&#13;
AN IDEAL SPRING L A X A T I V E&#13;
A g o o d a n d t i m e t r i e d r e m e d y i *&#13;
D r . K i o g ' a N e w L i f e P i l l s . T h e flm&#13;
d o s e w i l l m o v e t h e s l u g g i s h b o w l e s ,&#13;
s t i m u l a t e t h e l i v e r a n d c l e a r t h e&#13;
s y s t e m of w a s t e b l o o d i m p u r i t i e s .&#13;
Y o u o w e i t t o y o u r s e l f t o c l e a r t h e&#13;
s y s t e m of b o d y p o i s o n s , a c c u m u l a t e d&#13;
d u r i n g t h e w i n t e r . D r . K i n g ' s N e w&#13;
L i f e P i l l s will d o i t . 25c. a t y o u r&#13;
D r u g g i s t .&#13;
From Weak and Lame&#13;
To Well and Strong&#13;
W. J. DANCER i ^-^-/-/&#13;
4t ookbridge, I\£ieli. A Definition.&#13;
H o h e r t - ~ P o p , &gt;vh:U Is r.n&#13;
c o n t e s t ? F f i t b e r - T b f&#13;
n i e i i t . .IlHliJC.&#13;
e n d u r a n c e&#13;
nver.'ige rirgu-&#13;
*«&gt;tt«i&gt; than&#13;
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston C o u n t y , Michigan, T h u r s d a v, Mav ISth ](i]f No. I S i&#13;
School Notes&#13;
r&#13;
f* H. S c h o o l S e n i o r s M a k e&#13;
G o o d R e c o r d&#13;
Nine from the Senior Class of Pinckney&#13;
took t h e County T e a c h e r ' s Examination&#13;
last month. Supt. Doyle has&#13;
been notified this week that all of the&#13;
nine applicants were successful in passing.&#13;
This is an exceptionally good r e -&#13;
cord and the school may b^ proud of its&#13;
g r a d u a t i n g class this year. This is t h e&#13;
only high school in the county to m a k e&#13;
this rceord, of passing every student j&#13;
taking the examination. The following&#13;
are the names of t h e successful applicants&#13;
from this school; Leora McCluskey,&#13;
Florence Byer, Raymond H a r r i s , Percy&#13;
Mowers, Tiorence Tupper, Lucille Brogan,&#13;
William Clark, Claudia Hinchey i&#13;
ur.d Lester Swarthout.&#13;
The H. S. baseball t e a m defeated the&#13;
D e x t e r H. S. team here yesterday afternoon,&#13;
7 to 2 in a seven inning game,&#13;
the Dexter team g e t t i n g here so iate&#13;
t h a t it was impossible t o play nine innings&#13;
before dark. S w a r t h o u t and Sheban&#13;
were the battery for Pinckney and&#13;
Richman and McGinnis for Dexter.&#13;
Pinckney will go to South Lyons Saturd&#13;
a y for a return g i m e , and Wednesday&#13;
t h e 24th will return t h e g a m e with&#13;
Howell. Decoration D a y t h e Alumni&#13;
H. S. team will play t h e boys here.&#13;
Storm Does Considerable&#13;
Damage Here&#13;
The storm Sunday evening did considerable&#13;
damage in this vicinity. Besides&#13;
washing out t h e roads in various&#13;
places, t h e east wall of the school building&#13;
here was weakened so that t h e&#13;
same started to bulge In a dangerous&#13;
manner, so that no school w a s held a t&#13;
all Monday. The wall was proped up&#13;
and after a meeting of t h e school board&#13;
it was decided to continue school in t h e&#13;
other p a r t of the building for the rest&#13;
of the week, t h e high room moving t o&#13;
the g r a m m a r room, no school being held&#13;
in t h e lower grades this week. Work&#13;
will be started an once t o repair t h e&#13;
wall.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
House and Barn and t w o Lots,&#13;
S t e a m heat, and electric lights.&#13;
Every thing in first class condition,&#13;
good garden, and well w a t e r Terms&#13;
suitable to purchaser. Price, assessed&#13;
valuation. J . C. Dunn.&#13;
Pinckney Chatauqua&#13;
July 31 Aug. 1-2&#13;
The Pinckney Bay View Reading club&#13;
assisted by the professional and business&#13;
people of Pinckney, will present a&#13;
Chatauqua program this "coming s u m&#13;
mer, t h e dateB being July 111, Aug. l-'Z.&#13;
The t a l e n t secured will equal, if not&#13;
excel, t h a t of last year, and that is&#13;
giving it t h e highest praise. Please&#13;
k e e p t h e dates in mind and a r r a n g e&#13;
your plans so that you will not miss a&#13;
g r e a t e n t e r t a i n m e n t .&#13;
•£&#13;
Tigers at Detroit&#13;
Following a r e t h e dates for the&#13;
1 iger ball games in Detroit:&#13;
May 27, 28, 29 with St. Louis. i&#13;
June i, with Chicago.&#13;
J u n e :-1, ;, .", with Washington.&#13;
June 0", ", x, a, with Boston.&#13;
June 10, 11. 12, 1::. with New York.&#13;
J u n e 15, 16, 17, 1*. with Philadelphia.&#13;
J a n e 20, 21, 22, 2-4, with Cleveland, i&#13;
July 24, with Chicago.&#13;
July 2.",, 2o\ 27, 28, with Washington,&#13;
July 29, 30, ;;l, with Boston. !&#13;
August I, with Boston !&#13;
AugU3t \1, t. ' , G, with New York. i&#13;
August 7, fe, {&lt;, ]•), with Ppiladelphia. 1&#13;
Sept. 2, with Chicago. j&#13;
Sept. 3, 4* with Cleveland. |&#13;
Sept. 7, *•, i\ with St. Louis. |&#13;
Sept. \H, 14, 15, with N e w York. !&#13;
Sept. 16, 17, 18, with Philadelphia. !&#13;
Sept. lf&lt;, 2'1, 21, with Boston.&#13;
Sept. 22, 23, 2-i, j'», with Washington&#13;
Last game in Detroit, Sept. 2.".&#13;
Last game played Oct. I, at St, Louis i&#13;
* 2 games&#13;
Everything Coming Right&#13;
In South Dakota saloons have been&#13;
recently voted out of fourteen cities or&#13;
towns formerly w e t , and eighteen of&#13;
the larger towns voted to remain dry.&#13;
None of t h e towns voted t o return t o&#13;
license.&#13;
Since prohibition w e n t into effect in&#13;
Oregon there h a s not been an arrest&#13;
for selling liquor to an Indian, introducing&#13;
liquor on an Indian reservation or&#13;
for murder or assult by an Indian in&#13;
t h e state of Oregon. United S t a t e s&#13;
District Attorney Reamee gives t h e&#13;
credit to the prohibition law, and says&#13;
t h a t a t the present rate the government&#13;
will be saved l l O ' a »'.»0 per year in&#13;
prosecuting Indian cases in Oregon.&#13;
The Coors brewery plant, a t Denve&#13;
was not destroyed when prohibition&#13;
was adopted. The old owners have i t .&#13;
The plant is not idle. I t in now a malted&#13;
milk factory and is doing a big business,&#13;
thank you.&#13;
Georgia's new prohibition law, designed&#13;
to drive breweries, locker clubs&#13;
and " n e a r b e e r " saloons from the state&#13;
became effective at midnight April 30.&#13;
j6UPB0ARD!&#13;
i l i i M M || 1 M B — ^ - — P&#13;
Exchange Clippings&#13;
Dr. R. B. Honey, who recently sold&#13;
his drug store here, has deceided t o&#13;
locate in Ann Arbor, and in company&#13;
with H e r m a n Mayer, has purchased t h e&#13;
Drug Store of J. J . Goodyear of t h a t&#13;
c i t y . - D e x t e r Leader.&#13;
W. A. V a n W e g e n and J . W. Scattergood,&#13;
of Dowagiac News, have entered&#13;
into partnership for the purchased of&#13;
t h e Ypsilanti Record, owned by Jessie&#13;
K. Coats and Ford Hicks. T h e deal&#13;
was closed last Friday. Mr. VanWegen&#13;
has for 10 y e a r s been p a r t owner and&#13;
m a n a g e r , and Mr. Scatterfoop h a s&#13;
been editor of the Daily N e w s . In t h e&#13;
cenduct of t h e Ypsilanti paper, Mr.&#13;
V a n W e g e n will b e business m a n a g e r&#13;
and Mr. Scattergood will be editor.-&#13;
Chelsea Standard.&#13;
The Howell Sales Pavilion Company&#13;
held i t s annual meeting a t t h e fair&#13;
grounds last week and elected t h e following&#13;
directors: Frank Crandall, Mark&#13;
B. Curdy, Seth Rubert, R. C. Reed and&#13;
D. H. IToover.&#13;
The association voted to buy t e n&#13;
shares of Livingston County Fair stock&#13;
also bought a gasoline engine for pumping&#13;
w a t e r for the sales company and for&#13;
the sales company and for use a t t h e&#13;
fairs. That is certainly a good example&#13;
for others to follow. -Republican.&#13;
Dr. J . D. Singer h a s sold his practice&#13;
in Brighton to Dr. L. E. Westcott of&#13;
the western part of the s t a t e and will&#13;
leave about the first of J u n e , going to&#13;
Boston where he will enter H a r v a r d&#13;
Graduate School of Medicine. He will&#13;
devote two months study to a special&#13;
line of work; after which he will open&#13;
offices in Detroit. D r . Singer will, r e -&#13;
main here until his successor will be&#13;
able to move here. His many friends&#13;
here join in wishing him success in his&#13;
new field Brighton Argus.&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We desire to e:: press our sincere&#13;
' h a n k s to our many friends and neighbor?,&#13;
who so kindly assisted us in t h e&#13;
house of sorrow and death of our husband&#13;
and father; t h e singers for the&#13;
beautiful s o n g s end for the floral&#13;
offering's.&#13;
Mrs. Eiias Root.&#13;
Charles Root&#13;
George Root&#13;
M&#13;
West Michigan Plans for&#13;
Greater Fair&#13;
• I - , . ; . P.apids. Aorii ; a With practi-&#13;
.'-iiy a-e-ha!: of aha entire available&#13;
C P I . V r, th'1 Li :&lt;. Sf ofk, Agricultural&#13;
aad Horticultural D e p a r t m e n t s a r r a n g -&#13;
f i or r.t this r-xr]y 'Lite. West Michigam&#13;
" A T Ofri-'iaic 2IV C'-v-.fr-rr.plating extensive&#13;
in";prove-Tier;is *n \_%Vn rare of exaiaitnr*&#13;
t.hi= fall.&#13;
W'-aa- many of i.b-- Iqr^er farmers,&#13;
breeder-- arai '.r jani7.?tior.-s in t h e S t a t e&#13;
will mak''- rx*a-«ivf- exhibits, individual&#13;
showing by farmers will be a featj.-&#13;
r- of t h " fair which will bp held Sept.&#13;
"i &gt; fh -- 22nd.&#13;
County co.hihits. Boys' and Girls'&#13;
Clubs, O a n e r s and F a r m e r s ' Clubs&#13;
from nil ovr&gt;- Michigan will be in evirirnrr,&#13;
the result of thf unusual large&#13;
and attractive premium list. Special&#13;
classes for 3ma!l exhibitor? a r e helping&#13;
to rreat*' wide spread interest a m o n g&#13;
individual g r n w r r ? and breeders.&#13;
S'-'Tetary Lyman A. Lilly announces&#13;
that t h e liberal poiic.v of t h e Fair Mana&#13;
g e m e n t is a t t r a c t i n g exhibitors from&#13;
all p a r t s of the S t a t e . A post card will&#13;
brinj? the new 200 page premium book&#13;
t o t h o s - interested.&#13;
~ J :, CAY O E 8 8 E R T * . , , H i&#13;
a. i a.i; &gt; tCSSK. i'ut in &amp;s*uc*-&#13;
P I &gt; :* VeLH»?'«MV ••UpfVlJ Of&#13;
a;..p , ~a ap. - - .:" 1: if.» it 1 i:e&#13;
!&gt;*-a:c!] oiih-i a •.,(;;• ( ' v o . p!a- v. &lt;i\aa&#13;
t h e liiv hh.J Mir until Tin- m i x t u r e !.«••&#13;
:-&lt;'ll;f"N ))'•;. 'i'Le ••„£&gt; 'Ail! luiakrai ;i,e&#13;
tdnip. Tiii c i';-Kii MM- lire a t ma-e a n d&#13;
s t a n d in a p a n &lt;&gt;f i&lt;-»- w a t e r . Heat warh&#13;
a n vu.A l";r.t-i a a l u ajzl.l a n d &lt;-oii.l; then&#13;
pci.tiy !'"••; ii, .•!,&lt;• pint &lt;&gt;t' -Train wbi-a;&#13;
Las 1 -&lt;''•!: M i \ : w M p p r d . 1 '-n;f in •:&#13;
mold, ;;•'•*•: a. 1 f .J ii. 1 -•a!:, a M a a n.&lt;...&#13;
sail t!.. a '' •. . •• - iva in. a m i dn :,-•[&#13;
a n ' !.&lt; • .: • ,.:;,• I 1'i.iir hi 'Mas.&#13;
&lt;..'(&gt;fi'v&lt;' ' 1- r.v^( t (;,,. , ;;;,| i;1 . ,f , -_-., ,-&#13;
1 W l l .. ; ' • ! !, .(' r i - . r ; i i V u C ' - . 1--.,(- '""a] ' l Y ' .&#13;
;&lt;f vl, \; l ,. :k. . i - ;,,:,r "'.' ].•-;: \ &gt;- •;•(-:,,.&#13;
iinc ;&lt;-.,-';"-•'; : : '•• a : a 1:: a;,tl i n«- t.&#13;
' - i t - ^ p - &gt; - : a ; : \ L : . - : . a ! , i ; &lt;••"! _ i 1 , . 1 ' , , . .&#13;
I • i s -.'•. ', - . ; . ' • - : . _ ; ; . • i . t I K . - - o jf: &gt;•(' • ., • !&#13;
y:Ll t1'* ^-:.-0 .... -.. :.:--h lias ;,(-•••:, ^.'..:.&#13;
c-il in a 1.; ' &lt;' . . • . • , : . ; • . Sof a ' l i i - ;&#13;
Tuberculous Cows give&#13;
Many the White Plague.&#13;
Lansing, Mich., M a y 0 . - - A t Jeaat 20&#13;
. per cent of tuberculosis in human&#13;
! beings comes from milk from tuberlous&#13;
1 cows, according to a s t a t e m e n t made by&#13;
1 D r . George W. Dunphey, s t a t e veterin-&#13;
• arin. While thia is only an estimate&#13;
t h a t cannot be postively verified, t h e&#13;
" H e a l t h F i r s t " p a r t y of t h e s t a t e&#13;
hoard of health is paying a pood deal oi&#13;
attention 10 the ^fate-wide anti-*uheraulosis&#13;
camijagin to advisinfr cities t o&#13;
appoint officials veterinarians 7;ho --ar,&#13;
safeguard the mill: supply. The sta*e&#13;
board of health hones ia this way t o&#13;
prevent tuberculosis fra-a at ''f-^0' •/,-•&#13;
proiifi** soai-ce of i - f e c t r ' ^ .&#13;
it ( M(-S ,-a '! I -••'. a:- 'o l :•:i-1-.f•;i -!ia!a .;&#13;
f i l i a l a O . l ' ' . e i , , ; .; ;. ] , , ! , r ' e ; ! ! , ; , U ]. : . ; • •&#13;
&lt;:,ff. T.- 'I-- : a i - -"••• e- -! :r. y l.e-it : .,&#13;
i r e a m ' ]'.' ',' - •' -a a. eip-e^ a ~&lt; \ T i.:* -&#13;
a n d a d d t :.&gt;•• f.',",. •. i!: ' V a ? a : iiae a "&#13;
all is in. ','••.• ii •:.-• : &gt;et '•'• eell :;ddil i.»i •&#13;
! '-i"i'' a.i'i a in-- 1. ,-at par:d!:n p::pt-,&#13;
nvcr *'. * *.,'. .;.'.] -~c\ or. ! id. vrldr&#13;
s l i ' l l l i - l ' 1 , ,. ' ' ' • ' . ' i - k l a , • ' ;| ; . | v ' -&#13;
a ltd ]. ; a ^,:..&#13;
i'iiM-.'ai| i, i&#13;
S ] i ' i - - i d ' a i : .: •• •&#13;
H -ai (,f n, , i!' - .,..;&#13;
i»f In-1, pine,'&#13;
Tills ,-'• I,-| ..; - :&#13;
-iiL'ar. St'-, in a&#13;
H- i:-iv a&lt; a a .&#13;
.-M- S.-:iV: .-.;.(• a ' ,-&#13;
a •',]M• i aatiaer&#13;
• ''-:'. a' h. i - • a e &lt; i, p f. a&#13;
• ; - a i i. i M i i T:i l i ' e - p o . , ; .&#13;
:• e .'• iid nil,' eupfn)&#13;
,1 V -• 1 a e i •&#13;
' tin- t!iiek«-a,- l--.d in ;Uc .". !np fioia - i ••&#13;
nnart. of t k a , - renin. I'a-'k in v d t a i i&#13;
h'-e four boa:"-.&#13;
Method in His Madness&#13;
A t •: mo'-T^a "•- j:"-"t^r'T anis f~ "'.;•-:-&#13;
a.-Ti"a!:y a-aa".;a "ia^ the a -^ &lt;,i &gt;. . \&#13;
to:..i:-ants.&#13;
" i ^v;?a ai! tn»- i.-t-r. aa tar -xr.w.&#13;
ad the vrhi^key a: fh- 'Vir^',, va^ s* t h -&#13;
l- dtorr. rd :'&gt;• n - ^ . : , , ' ' a-: -aah&#13;
Iia^ti.'y P i t arasc.- t- hi"- -•"•*.&#13;
''Sure, sriiHii'i)') J, ~-&gt;r." ha- --^-.:1.&#13;
"1 '.vish tv-'-ry rtit oi :" w i s ".• ':&gt;• h'atora&#13;
'••( trif sea.&#13;
A:- th'-;." we re ;••••; vinp the .-. .-i jj --,,-.&#13;
i^'-turer rn^our tor*- i P a t .&#13;
• 1 KTI certainly r&gt;rood of y a p " ho&#13;
f^oid. " I t ;va" « brave thin*.* for you to&#13;
ris.e anri say what ve»u did. Arc you *»&#13;
tePtotaler'.' "&#13;
' ' \ ' T inda.'le. «,or. " answered Pa*. " 1&#13;
Hti a di'.'f-r.:" Kwrir and Horae.&#13;
Old laaiy tin nh,to «dir.p', Have nn;&#13;
felt Hllp]*-r»V Hoy AKnlstaj.it &lt;H«IUMIIL1.VI&#13;
— V*^. uia'uni; mnuy » time.&#13;
Opening Up Drain Outlets.&#13;
A few h o u r s spent now to i e e t h a t&#13;
all t n e drain outlet* a r e well opened&#13;
irmy acve considerable delay o n ao-&#13;
4K»Bt of *ki fields i s t h e sprteg.&#13;
Trade At&#13;
For Cash anil Save Money&#13;
Saturday, &gt;fav 2tOtli.&#13;
Ladic's Fast Black Hose&#13;
2 pairs for !5c.&#13;
IOOO yds Brown Sheeting&#13;
cheap at 9c. Sat. 7 l-2c&#13;
SV\oes&#13;
We are showing the largest line&#13;
of Men's Work Shoes ever shown in&#13;
Pinckney. Prices ranging from $2.0()&#13;
to $3.50. All Odds and Ends go regardless&#13;
of Cost.&#13;
Table Talk Coffee. 22c. Best Tea 4oc&#13;
Berdaa's Empire Coffee 27c&#13;
Berdan's Blue Label 32c&#13;
Tea Dust, 15c. WhiteHouee Coffee 32e&#13;
Gold Modal Flour 8(Jc&#13;
Good Bread Flour 85c&#13;
Get our prices on Flour and Sugar.&#13;
Highest Price For Cream Wednesdays&#13;
46 CAROLA"&#13;
T h e Nightingale of&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
' V Dr ;&#13;
v » . :&#13;
i I&#13;
* n&#13;
!.n&#13;
. ; r ; ; -«- ; i n d ;a a : j&#13;
&gt; - M ] I J , 1 W , - .&#13;
'v -'.y .-lea'1, r" n'-&#13;
' ' r&lt;' a i ]•&lt; .i • a •&#13;
^ ' -' -\ m ;te.v m a&#13;
' . . . ' . &lt; "• • r , u&#13;
-'' - -,. !. ' a ,;, i, . , aa .&#13;
L; :' ' - IK ' " ' T t r r j j p - , -&#13;
' "'* '&lt; a.i-i!v. ; , n d pit&#13;
, 1 i! ^ ^ i l r',:•;; *-••&#13;
• V;t n ' i i i r i ; ;&#13;
::&gt;- Vhrouiarh -nvt.^].&#13;
Hc&lt;] \~ '&gt;•• V'i\(l'tt'&#13;
. i . i ' . j r n t ( } "&#13;
'^ *&#13;
' In;.a&#13;
' i ' , ' "^ T 1 '&#13;
' , 4 t a r . , - , , ; a ^ ; . : v '&#13;
! b « ' T :-:-:(-^ a ; . ;&#13;
« • • ' • w .&#13;
4 - 1, &gt;t as p« '^s;i&gt;lf. h u t&#13;
4-.ii -.&lt; &gt;t Lfnara:" •'.".-• ' •: • :"• :':ivita- 10 davs. for&#13;
tht* jTi:.i-hint; h.'i-s ridaa -'-a.h ;,. -t:;i&lt;ati&lt;&gt;n;i! hit t h n t&#13;
tnt'tti.dt^ry-¾ wav S.'h.iid on orrkrr&gt;&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
'4&#13;
.1&#13;
^ i&#13;
--¾^&#13;
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! • ' ! &lt; ' '&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
mi MA rs aivd 5hrub&#13;
TKdrTare aivd Culfivaiioiv&#13;
MONEY IN W00DL0T&#13;
Farmer Should Look for Regular&#13;
Cash Return.&#13;
Purely a Matter of Business, Which&#13;
Every Farmer Should Recognl&#13;
Well to Remember to Use&#13;
the Ax With Care,&#13;
iPreftircd by the LTrUted Stales DvpajrtznciiX&#13;
of Agriculture.)&#13;
A cash return for the wood grown&#13;
on the farm woodlot is Just as possible&#13;
aa a profit on other farm cropa.&#13;
Farmers often lose sight of this fact.&#13;
mainly because timber requires only a&#13;
•small amount of labor but a long&#13;
period of years to bring it to a marketable&#13;
condition. Often, therefore,&#13;
the owner is satisfied with an annual&#13;
supply of dead firewood, and the woodlot&#13;
becomes a harboring place for insect&#13;
pests and a meager pasturage for&#13;
roaming live stock. Yet improvement&#13;
of the woodlot depends upon just a&#13;
few simple principles which any farmer&#13;
may learn aud practice. These are&#13;
contained in a new farmers' bulletin,&#13;
No. 711. published by the United&#13;
States department of agriculture.&#13;
Improvement of the woodlot begins&#13;
with the cutting out of all dead and&#13;
diseased timber. Then the mature&#13;
merchantable trees should be removed,&#13;
like any other farm crop, when&#13;
conditions favor a sale. New trees&#13;
Carnations and Cld-Fashioned Pinks Are Fine for the Hardy Garden.&#13;
PLANT YOUR HARDY GARDEN&#13;
NOW&#13;
By E. VAN B E N T H U Y S E N .&#13;
A h a r d ; garden is the garden for&#13;
the busy woman. It will last for years&#13;
and be a delight to her and to her&#13;
neighbors with a very little care.&#13;
Take a careful survey of your re-&#13;
Sources and make a study of your own&#13;
Individual problem. "Book taught"&#13;
gardeners may be all right up to a&#13;
certain limit, but one season's experiment&#13;
along your own lines will give&#13;
you an Insight Into plant life that,&#13;
aside from being a most fascinating&#13;
Study, will teach you more than&#13;
years of reading.&#13;
Those who wish to plant roses and&#13;
Hot bother with them more than to&#13;
prune and fertilize annually and keep&#13;
the ground mellow about the plants&#13;
Should plant hybrid perpetual roses.&#13;
The hybrid perpetuals are the hardiest&#13;
of roses and will stand more cold&#13;
Weather than any other species.&#13;
The following are desirable specimens:&#13;
Anne de Diesbach, bright carmine;&#13;
Baroness Rothschild, an exqulBlte&#13;
pink; La France, blooms all&#13;
Summer; Frau Karl Druschkl, snow&#13;
White, has splendid buds and immense&#13;
flowers, four to Sve inches across, and&#13;
Is delightfully fragrant; General Jacqueminot,&#13;
a popular rose of brilliant&#13;
red; Paul Neyron, lovely dark pink;&#13;
Grass an Teplitz, a strong, vigorous&#13;
grower, of richest crimson; Killarney,&#13;
both pink and white, are hardy, and&#13;
Mrs. John Laing, a rose of delicious&#13;
fragrance an J of a rich satiny pink&#13;
color.&#13;
A hardy border that is a triumph of&#13;
beauty and has been enjoyed for&#13;
years contains hollrhocks, phlox, larkspur,&#13;
foxglove, Iris, eohunbfsas, pinks,&#13;
and sunflowers. It tt not so expensive,&#13;
Hgwes up about six cents per square&#13;
loot, fcBJt arranged according to size&#13;
i p i color makes a wonderful show-&#13;
Hardy roses require ordinarily good&#13;
garden soil, well enriched with wellrotted&#13;
manure. Thev must have an&#13;
open, sunny position clear of the roots&#13;
of all trees and shrubs. It is well to&#13;
prepare the bed a few days before&#13;
planting to allow for settling. Everblooming&#13;
roses should be planted 18&#13;
inches apart and the hybrid perpetuals&#13;
two feet apart. Roses should be&#13;
planted with the roots diverging and&#13;
at, least nine inches below the surface&#13;
of the ground, the soil made firm about&#13;
them and then should be liberally watered.&#13;
Hollyhocks succeed best In rich,&#13;
well-drained soil, and should be lightly&#13;
protected during the winter months&#13;
with coarse straw or spruce boughs.&#13;
Larkspur seed sown in the open&#13;
ground early will produce flowering&#13;
plants by the beginning of July, and&#13;
will give a continuous succession ~f&#13;
bloom from then until frost. It is excellent&#13;
for cutting and very ornamental.&#13;
It produces in a great variety&#13;
of forms aud colors some of the&#13;
most beautiful flowers in cultivation.&#13;
AM varieties are easily cultivated and&#13;
adaptable to most conditions, but in&#13;
a soil deeply dug and well enriched&#13;
with fine old manure, their blooms are&#13;
the finest. Set from one and one half&#13;
to two feet each way.&#13;
Old-fashioned clove pink, and its&#13;
more elegant relation, the carnation,&#13;
flower so easily as an annual that it&#13;
has attained a most popular position&#13;
among garden plants. The beautiful&#13;
flowers make an attractive display&#13;
with their world of color, and are&#13;
greatly to be desired as a table decoration&#13;
and also as a border plant.&#13;
Pinks grow easily from seed and&#13;
come true to color. Sow out of doors&#13;
when danger from frost is over. If&#13;
the seed is sown early enough the&#13;
perennials will bloom the first year.&#13;
There are a great many other plants&#13;
that are hardy and desirable, this is&#13;
but a mere beginning. Choose the&#13;
flowers you are fond of and the work&#13;
will be more successful and more&#13;
pleasant. But have a garden now, no&#13;
matter how small.&#13;
Doubts White KU'^rnay. Hardy and Exquisite.&#13;
Second Growth White Oaks—Woodlot&#13;
In Good Condition.&#13;
should be planted !n the open spaces&#13;
to grow up and fill In the forest canopy&#13;
and encourage the growth of tall,&#13;
3traight timber.&#13;
YVoodlots may be divided into two&#13;
classes, each determined by the character&#13;
of the stand. On one type, the&#13;
trees are a second growth of approximately&#13;
the same age and it Is found&#13;
that undesirable species are crowding&#13;
out valuable trees, the former&#13;
should be cut to allow the unhampered&#13;
5rowth of the better quality timber.&#13;
While timber taken out In this&#13;
cutting will rarely pay directly for&#13;
Us removal, the resulting enhancement&#13;
In value of the remaining stand&#13;
makes the work a jood Investment&#13;
The presence of dead or dying tress&#13;
in the stand, a very dense interlocked&#13;
crown Cover, stems very slender In&#13;
proportion to their height, or apparent&#13;
stagnation in the height growth,&#13;
all indicate that a thinning is needed.&#13;
This usually is done when the stand&#13;
is from 15 to 20 years old. The operation&#13;
Is similar in principal to thinning&#13;
any other farm crop where It is&#13;
desired to obtain a few good plants&#13;
rather than many of poor quality. The&#13;
owner should use the ax with care,&#13;
removing only trees which crowd others&#13;
and cause too great competition&#13;
for sunlight. Material removed in a&#13;
thinning is valuable for fence po9ts&#13;
and pole3 and should pay for the operation.&#13;
As a rule, not more than one-&#13;
RIGHT CONDITION FOR SOWS&#13;
Search for Superior Sire.&#13;
Cntil we get perfect animals we&#13;
should search for a sire that In some&#13;
particulars is superior to the cows in&#13;
our herds.&#13;
Three Rations Suggested by Nebraska&#13;
Experiment Station—Have Alfalfa&#13;
Hay Accessible.&#13;
Brood sows should be taken away&#13;
from the rest of the hogs and be fed&#13;
a different ration. Three rations suggested&#13;
by the Nebraska experiment&#13;
station are:&#13;
(1) One part high-grade tankage. 12&#13;
parts corn.&#13;
(2) Skim milk or buttermilk and&#13;
corn, using three parts of the milk&#13;
to one part of corn.&#13;
(3) Wheat and shorts.&#13;
Whichever ration is used, a rack&#13;
containing alfalfa should be so placed&#13;
that the hogs have free access to the&#13;
hay at all times, in addition the sows&#13;
should be supplied with minerals. It&#13;
is a good plan to dump the wood and&#13;
coal ashes in the lot where the sows&#13;
run. A mixture composed of a basket&#13;
of charcoal or fine coal, five pounds&#13;
nl salt, five pounds of air-slaked lime,&#13;
and twe pounds of sulphur will five&#13;
good rstnres if kept snail? available.&#13;
Dry Yards for Sheep.&#13;
A well drained dry yard and stable&#13;
floor are worth more to the sheep&#13;
keeper than a $10,000 sheep barn.&#13;
EXCELLENT MASH FOR FOWLS&#13;
Mixture of Wheat Bran, Middlings,&#13;
Ccrnmeal. Oats and Beef Scraps&#13;
Is Recommended.&#13;
A recommended dry mash Is mads&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Wheat bran, two parts.&#13;
Wheat middlings, one p a r t&#13;
Cornmeal. one part.&#13;
Ground oats, one p a r t&#13;
Beef scraps, one p a r t&#13;
To this can be added In bulr, cut&#13;
clover hay according to the way thefowls&#13;
eat i t The parts of the rest ot&#13;
the formula Is by weight&#13;
Decreased Milk Yield.&#13;
It has been proven by experiments&#13;
that it takes about one-third more feed&#13;
to produce a given amount of milk&#13;
when the cow is exposed to sorere&#13;
weather and not bedded than when&#13;
she is properly shedded and provided&#13;
with bedding.&#13;
Point In Feeding Calves.&#13;
One of the greatest points in feeding&#13;
calves is not to overfeed,&#13;
firth to one-fourth of the treea uhould&#13;
be removed at ^ne tlmo. Grapevine,&#13;
ivy and woodbine, and similar climbem&#13;
which have grown into the treea&#13;
should be cut out by severing their&#13;
main at ems near the ground.&#13;
In the second type of woodlot the&#13;
treea vary greatly in age and height&#13;
a n ! the stand la largely dominated&#13;
by old trees, whose tops *&lt;hut off the&#13;
sunlight and retard the growth of the&#13;
younger trees bene-vth. Such a tract&#13;
should flrst be cleared of dead and&#13;
diseased timber. Next, the mature&#13;
living trees should be removed. Thia&#13;
should be delayed, however, until sufficient&#13;
reproduction is started in the&#13;
openings made in the first operation,&#13;
and marketing conditions permit a&#13;
satisfactory sale. Heavy stands composed&#13;
almost wholly of mature trees&#13;
should not be removed all at once unless&#13;
the owner expects to provide for&#13;
the new crop by planting. The old&#13;
treea should be taken off in two or&#13;
three successive cuttings at intervals&#13;
of several years, each cutting taking&#13;
from one-third to one-half the trees.&#13;
These cuttings allow the remaining&#13;
trees to receive more sunlight and&#13;
thus encourage them to produce more&#13;
seed. Neither of the first two cuttings&#13;
should be so heavy as to encrurage&#13;
the growth of weeds or grass on the&#13;
forest floor. The third cutting should&#13;
be made after the seedlings are established&#13;
and there is no further need \&#13;
for protection of the old trees.&#13;
Scattered old trees, suppressing valuable&#13;
young growth, often will be&#13;
found in woodlots. Such trees will&#13;
never be of much value for lumber&#13;
and their wldespreading habit often&#13;
results in the suppression or killing&#13;
of the young and better-formed seedlings,&#13;
which frequently may be of&#13;
considerable value, it is best in such&#13;
cr.ses to remove the old trees at&#13;
once.&#13;
Pasture and timber production cannot&#13;
be practiced on the same area,&#13;
except to the disadvantage of each,&#13;
and the combination will not be as&#13;
remunerative to the owner as the practice&#13;
of either one separately. Cattle,&#13;
horses, sheep or goats eat young seedlings,&#13;
trample them out, or brush&#13;
against them and break them off.&#13;
Hogs eat the seed and thus prevent&#13;
reproduction from starting, or root&#13;
young seedlings out of the ground.&#13;
The existing growth is damaged&#13;
through the trampling or wounding of&#13;
the roots and the compacting of the&#13;
soil so that it is impervious to water.&#13;
Horses should be kept out of the&#13;
woodlot entirely because they often&#13;
peel the bark from trees and eat the&#13;
young shoots. When young growth&#13;
is not desired, a f°w head of cattle&#13;
are permissible, provided, however,&#13;
that the ground is not soft when they&#13;
are turned in. Hogs may be used to&#13;
aid reproduction before the time for&#13;
the seed to fall. They will root up&#13;
the ground and thus put it In good&#13;
condition for receiving the seed.&#13;
Goats and sheep should be allowed in&#13;
the woodlot only when it Is necessary&#13;
to clear up brush of undesirable&#13;
species.&#13;
Care should be taken to keep fire&#13;
from getting into the woodlot. This&#13;
destroys the fallen leaves and accumulated&#13;
litter of several years, thus doing&#13;
away with the very material with&#13;
which the trees enrich their own soil.&#13;
Burned-over ground becomes exposed,&#13;
evaporation is greater, and more of&#13;
the rain and malted snow mna. off the&#13;
sur*\ce. T^eaf or grass fires usually&#13;
destroy the young seedlings up to one&#13;
inch In diameter and also do great&#13;
damage to other trees in the stand,&#13;
especially by making conditions favorable&#13;
for the entrance of rot-producing&#13;
fungi.&#13;
Why That Lame Back ?&#13;
Morning lameness, sharp twinges&#13;
when .bending, or an all-day backache;&#13;
each Is cause enough to suspect&#13;
kidney trouble. Get after the&#13;
cause. Help the kidneys: We&#13;
Americans go it too hard. We&#13;
overdo, overeat and neglect our&#13;
sleep and exercise and, so we are&#13;
fast becoming a nation of kidney&#13;
sufferers. 72% more deaths than&#13;
In 1890 Is the 1910 census story.&#13;
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, Thousands&#13;
recommend them.&#13;
A Michigan Cat*&#13;
William Hough. 816&#13;
Alderman St.. BeLdlna\&#13;
Mich.. says: "I had&#13;
kidney trouble after I&#13;
left the army and I&#13;
k e p t getting worse.&#13;
The kidney saecretlons&#13;
were painful und too&#13;
frequent in passage&#13;
and I had lumbago&#13;
and rheumatic pains.&#13;
My limbs w e r e so&#13;
stiff, I had to ba&#13;
helped around. Medicine&#13;
failed and I had&#13;
almost given up hope when I heard of&#13;
Doun's Kidney Pills. They cured me."&#13;
C*t Doan's at Aajr Store, 50c a Box D O A N ' S "/s&#13;
BJiV&#13;
FOSTEIUMILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.&#13;
Modern Sign.&#13;
"Where's that hotel that used to advertise,&#13;
'All the Comforts of Home for&#13;
$1?' "&#13;
"Busted up. The hotel opposite put&#13;
up a sign, 'None of the Discomforts of&#13;
Home for $2.' "&#13;
Many Children arc Sickly.&#13;
Mother Oray'a Sweet Powders for Children&#13;
Break up Colds In 24 hours, relieve Feveriahneas,&#13;
Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething&#13;
Disorders, more aud regulate the bowels, and&#13;
Destroy Worms. They are so pleasant to take&#13;
children like them. Used by mothers for28years.&#13;
All druRjflsts, 25c. Sample FREE. Address,&#13;
Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
Anyway, one-half the world suspects&#13;
how you live.&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS never&#13;
faiL Purely vegeta*&#13;
ble — act surely&#13;
but gently on&#13;
the liver.&#13;
Stop after&#13;
dinner distress—&#13;
cure&#13;
indigestion,'&#13;
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL D4&gt;SE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Every Woman Want*&#13;
ANTISEPTIC POWDER&#13;
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE&#13;
Dissolved In water for douche* stops&#13;
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and Inflammation.&#13;
Recommended by Lydia E.&#13;
Pfnkham Med. Co, for ten years.&#13;
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,&#13;
•ore throat and tore eyes. Economical.&#13;
Hat sjUiosfisiiy^jlainsw^ and fanakidal power.&#13;
Kill A l l F l i e s ! Th5r.S.D«" fetiasaas, dM soeTatW, ebl«ers«a.,0 «o#rrara aMwyD tKali,l teearu aTttarsakcatst, asaaddk flteafl&#13;
?Uawatta»aiHri em t •pUJ «&#13;
Daisy Fly Killer&#13;
by sijunni prntttd, fl.Ma&#13;
HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DeKslo Ave., Brooklyn, N. y. W A N T E D&#13;
A representative in each county to represent&#13;
us selling our U P - T O - T H E - M I N U T E&#13;
Specialties. Exclusive territory. Must&#13;
furnish references. We want producers only.&#13;
W . A C. S A L E S C O M P A N Y&#13;
«2-613 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE DETROIT&#13;
F o r P l l e a Use Abeir. PermaWaBalm.&#13;
Satisfaction (hursnteedsr Mosey Refunded,&#13;
Far sale by all Dratglsts, or seat opon receipt&#13;
ef 25c postpaid. Seed for tree sample.&#13;
BOMB REMEDY CO. Snath Hsveo. Mich.&#13;
Help Digestion&#13;
To keep your digestive&#13;
organs in good working'or*&#13;
der—tostimulate your liver,&#13;
tone your stomach and&#13;
regulate your bowels, take—&#13;
G A L L S T O N E S&#13;
* * » FREE&#13;
rimm^mm^^mmfmmfmmmmwmmwW9mp&#13;
m nmmmmmmwmtm RTSRSSESTS: • * \me*t «9 •!••« * ' * • P W ^ " . , « r ; ~ T ;&#13;
'SSSSSfSSHK wllHH •I'/IWtH'*'&#13;
•'!.' Ii!MJPI&#13;
1 * * » * - . . —&#13;
»«.«*»,,•&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
V »&#13;
&amp;Uk XOcmen&#13;
For Forty Years Lydia EL Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound Has Been&#13;
Woman's Most Reliable Medicine&#13;
—Here is More Proof.&#13;
To women who are suffering from some form of&#13;
woman's special ills, and have a constant fear of breaking&#13;
down, the three following letters ought to bring hope: —&#13;
North Crandon, Wis.—"When I -was 16 years&#13;
old I got married and at 18 years I gave birth to&#13;
twins and it left me with very rx&gt;or health. I could&#13;
not walk across the floor without having to sit&#13;
down to rest and it was hard for me to keep about&#13;
and do my work. I went to a doctor and ne told&#13;
me I haa a displacement and rlcers, and would&#13;
have to have an operation. This frightened me so&#13;
much that I did not know what to do. Having&#13;
heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
I thought I would give it a trial and it made me as&#13;
well as ever. I cannot sav enough in favor of the&#13;
Pmkham remedies."—Mrs. MATH* ASBACB, rforth Crandon, Wis.&#13;
from Oklahoma.&#13;
iAwton, Okla,—"When I began to take lydia BL PftKham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound I seemed to be good for nothing. I tired easily&#13;
and had headaches much of the time and was irregular. I took it again&#13;
before my little child was born and it did me a wonderful amount of&#13;
good at that time. I never fail to recommend Lvdia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound to ailing womenbeoause it has done so much&#13;
for me."—Mrs. A. I* MOCASLANX\ 609 Have St, lawton, Okla.&#13;
From a Grateful Massachusetts Woman*&#13;
Roxbury, Mass.—a I was suffering: from inflammation&#13;
and was examined by a physician who found&#13;
that my trouble was caused oy a displacement&#13;
My symptoms were bearing down pains, backache,&#13;
and sluggish liver. I tried several kinds of medicine&#13;
; then I was asked to try Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound. It has cured me and I am&#13;
pleased to be in my usual good health by using it&#13;
and highly recommend it. — Mrs. B. M. OSGOOD,&#13;
1 Haynes Park, Roxbury, Mass.&#13;
• If yon want special advice write to Lydia&#13;
K. Pinkbam Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. «Tonr&#13;
letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held&#13;
in strict confidence&#13;
What Puzzled Her.&#13;
A little girl, aged three, had been&#13;
breathlessly watching the terrible villain&#13;
at the movies. When he reached&#13;
a railroad bridge she turned to her&#13;
mother and asked:&#13;
"Oh, muvver, what's he going to do&#13;
now?"&#13;
"He's going to blow up that&#13;
bridge." *&#13;
"But, muvver," came back the small&#13;
inquiring voice, "how can he get&#13;
enough bref?"&#13;
Stopped QnicklT. Tlfty rears of uninterrupted'&#13;
inooeoft •nooeai of pr. gnne'a BplIeWJ Mortldne lucres rest) it*.&#13;
E CO]&#13;
&gt;SY. FALLING 8TCKXE8g&#13;
tieVs Bpl , ^&#13;
When a woman tries to describe a&#13;
lecture it sounds as If Bhe had been&#13;
consulting her dressmaker.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver,&#13;
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for&#13;
a laxative—three for a cathartic.—Adv.&#13;
The wise man lets the other fellow&#13;
do most of the talking.&#13;
Got Just What He Wanted.&#13;
"Will you let me off this afternoon,&#13;
sir?" asked the clerk in a dry goods&#13;
store, "my wife wants me to beat some&#13;
carpets."&#13;
"Couldn't possibly do it," said the&#13;
boss.&#13;
The clerk turned joyfully to his&#13;
work, saying: "Thank you, sir.&#13;
Thank you a thousand times."&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sore remedy for&#13;
Infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of _^&#13;
In Use for Over 30*Year».&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
The difference between a compliment&#13;
and flattery depends on whether&#13;
It Is handed to you or some other&#13;
person.&#13;
Being a widow seems to be a habit&#13;
with some females.&#13;
A Famous Physician's&#13;
Wonderful Discovery&#13;
After a series of careful experiments&#13;
and testa at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical&#13;
Institute, Buffalo, N. Y^ covering&#13;
many years—Dr. Pierce, the medical director&#13;
of that hospital, made announcement&#13;
that he could prove that a medicine which&#13;
be called "ANURIC" was the best uric&#13;
acid solvent now to be had. As a remedy&#13;
for those easily recognized symptoms&#13;
of inflammation—as scalding urine, backache&#13;
and frequent urination, as well as&#13;
sediment in the urine, or if uric acid in&#13;
the blood has caused rheumatism, lumbago,&#13;
sciatica, gout, it is simply wonderful&#13;
bow quickly "Anuric" acts; causing&#13;
the pains and stiffness rapidly to disappear.&#13;
Swollen hands, ankles, feet are due to&#13;
a dropsical condition, often caused by&#13;
disordered kidneys. Naturally when the'&#13;
kidneys are deranged the blood is filled&#13;
with poisonous waste matter, which settles&#13;
in the feet, ankles and wrists; or&#13;
under the eyes in bag-like formations.&#13;
It is just as necessary to keep the kidneys&#13;
acting properly as to keep the bowels&#13;
active.&#13;
The very best possible way to take care&#13;
of yourself is to take a glass of hot^water&#13;
before meals and an "Anuric" tablet. In&#13;
this way it is readily dissolved with the&#13;
food, picked up by the blood and finally&#13;
reaches the kidneys, where it has a tonio&#13;
effect in rebuilding those organs.&#13;
Step into the drug store and ask for s&#13;
50-eent package of ^Anuric," or send Dr.&#13;
Pierce lOe for trial pekg. "Anuric"—many&#13;
times more potent than lithia, eliminates&#13;
uric acid as hot water melts sugar. A abort&#13;
trial will convince j*u— Adv.&#13;
ONE HUNDRED&#13;
LEAVE THE FARM&#13;
O P P O R T U N I T Y FOR T H E B O Y *&#13;
W H O L I V E ON F A R M S O P E N S&#13;
ITS A R M S T O T H E M&#13;
BEGINNING GREAT WORK NOW&#13;
The M i c h i g a n A g r i c u l t u r a l College&#13;
B r o a d e n * Ita Field of W o r k to&#13;
Reach t h e Greatest N u m b e r .&#13;
K&amp;st JLaxslng- One hundred far in&#13;
Doya of Michigan will leave their&#13;
lamia In July. The above fact does&#13;
not alarm the "Stay-ou-the-Farm" ad&#13;
voeatea, however, be&lt;;auae the hundred&#13;
boyjs are going lo the second&#13;
annual Farm Boys Camp ai the Michigan&#13;
Agricultural College. While city&#13;
boys are pitching their tents In the&#13;
country, these lads will pitch their&#13;
tents on the campus of Michigan'**&#13;
greatest center of agricultural education&#13;
at East Lansing.&#13;
The experiment was first made last&#13;
summer when 39 boys from 23 comities&#13;
came for the first Farm Boys*'&#13;
Camp. The Camp was so successful,&#13;
that provision will be made to accozu*.&#13;
modate one hundred boys this year.&#13;
The Farm Boys' Camp is mar*&#13;
than a mere camp; it is a combination&#13;
of School and Camp. It is a&#13;
movement to give farm boys a t&amp;ate&#13;
of agricultural while they are still in&#13;
their teene—at the age when t h e /&#13;
usually have strong tendencies to&#13;
make their vocational choices. Bach&#13;
morning is spent at real hard study&#13;
of farm problems. No boofc» ax*&#13;
us€d; the College farm and the&#13;
College livestock constitute the laboratory&#13;
where these boys will do their&#13;
studying.&#13;
The afternoon is devoted to game*,&#13;
lessons in swimming and varioua&#13;
other recreational activities. In th«&#13;
evening the boys gather around tha&#13;
campflre to listen to the leader's&#13;
talks, tell stories and sing songs.&#13;
There will be a leader for each group&#13;
of ten boys. These leaders are teach,&#13;
ers of agriculture in the High Schools&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
This ia but another of the many innovations&#13;
to be included In M. A. C.'a&#13;
growing summer school which is&#13;
under the supervision of Dean E. H.&#13;
Ryder,&#13;
The Camp begins on July 10th and&#13;
lasts ten days. Boys who are members&#13;
of the Agricultural Clubs, superintended&#13;
by the College are elegible&#13;
and the age limits are from 12 to 16&#13;
years.&#13;
Creating a New Profession.&#13;
The new movement in rural life Is&#13;
creating a new profession, or, perhaps&#13;
it Bhould be said that it is regenerating&#13;
en old profession, for since the&#13;
beginning of the Boys' and Girls' Club&#13;
movement, rural teachers and other&#13;
rural leaders have been compelled to&#13;
acquire a new training. They can no&#13;
longer continue to merely "Keei&#13;
School"; their communities are demanding&#13;
some practical results in tht&#13;
nature of home projects connected&#13;
with school work.&#13;
Last year there were 5000 boys and&#13;
girls in Michigan organized into&#13;
various kinds of clubs for the purpose&#13;
of carrying on home project work.&#13;
The number is increasing at a rapid&#13;
rate. The demand right now is for&#13;
teachers and other leaders who are&#13;
equipped to direct these clubs.&#13;
The summer sessions at the Michigan&#13;
Agricultural College will attempt&#13;
to meet these demands for new training.&#13;
A special school of instruction&#13;
for club leaders will be conducted at&#13;
East Lansing from July 17th to July&#13;
22nd. Those who attend this special&#13;
school will be taught how to demon,&#13;
ttrate the new cold-pack method of&#13;
canning. Instruction will be given in&#13;
the methods of conducting corn clubs,&#13;
potato clubs, bean clubs, gardening&#13;
clubs, poultry duba, garment-making&#13;
clubs, etc. The demonstrations and&#13;
classes will be under the supervision&#13;
of those who have charge of the clufc&#13;
work in Michigan, assisted by soxm*&#13;
•ne from the department at Wasb&#13;
tegton.&#13;
Dean E. H. Ryder of the Summer&#13;
Ichooi announces that this special&#13;
achool of instruction for club leader*&#13;
to to be conducted without cost t#&#13;
'hose who attend. Tbe only expeng/&#13;
«rill be for board. Ten dollars wl/J&#13;
be sufficient to permit anyone to tafte&#13;
advantage of this special school for&#13;
community builders.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS ITEMS&#13;
William Hammond, a fanner living&#13;
Juat tooth of here, thinks that be may&#13;
have found a gold mine « B hit farm.&#13;
Twice recently his cream •epan.tor&#13;
kaa blown op, and be ia beginnlai&#13;
to belieTO that one of hi* cowg la&#13;
gMBg caaoHne InataaJ of milk, la&#13;
wbicfa OJHtt be llgnrea be will&#13;
bt rich.&#13;
Buy materials that la*t Certain-teed Fully guaranteed&#13;
— be»t&#13;
responsibility Roofing For sale by dealer*&#13;
everywhere&#13;
at reasonable price*&#13;
General Roofing Manufacturing Company&#13;
Wurtd'a largoA nuinufacturtn of Hoofing and Bu&amp;dtng Paper*&#13;
* • * Tart Ctt/ CkJuc* rfclUdeii*l» St. Uata rtUafcarfk Itatnri* &amp;u h m l M Clnctasatl&#13;
b j l l M J&#13;
Wc arc Certain-teed distributors* write us &amp; for information.&#13;
BEECH ER, PECK &amp; LEWIS, DETROIT&#13;
The E n d of t h e T r a m .&#13;
Mra. Norah Mulvaney one day met&#13;
her friend Mra. Bridget Carr, who had&#13;
in her arms her twelfth child.&#13;
"Arrah now, Bridget,'' bald Norah,&#13;
"an' there ye are wicl another little&#13;
Carr in yer arma."&#13;
"Another it ia, Mrs. Mulvaney," replied&#13;
ber friend, "ar. it's me that's&#13;
hopin' 'tis the caboose."---American&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
HEAL SKIN TROUBLES&#13;
T h a t I t c h , B u r n and Disfigure by&#13;
Using C u t i c u r a . T r i a l Free.&#13;
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the&#13;
Ointment to soothe and heal. Rashes,&#13;
eczemas, pimples, dandruff and sore&#13;
hands yield to treatment with Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment. Relief is immediate&#13;
and healment, in most cases, complete,&#13;
speedy and permanent.&#13;
Free sample each hy mail with Book.&#13;
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,&#13;
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.&#13;
M. D. Meant Movin' Day.&#13;
Two young negroes were on a Central&#13;
avenue car. They talked of the&#13;
work they had doue that day. One&#13;
said that he had been helping a woman&#13;
move, adding that his companion&#13;
had helped ber move several times.&#13;
"Who is Bhe?" questioned the second&#13;
negro.&#13;
"Go on and guess."&#13;
"I can't guess. What's her initials?"&#13;
"M. D."&#13;
Silence followed while the possible&#13;
meaning of the initials were pondered.&#13;
Then a laugh.&#13;
"Ah, hah, I know who you mean&#13;
now M. D. Movin' day."&#13;
Then both remembered that months&#13;
before they had nicknamed a move&#13;
once-a-month whose initials are M. D.&#13;
as Movin' Day,—Indianapolis News.&#13;
MEAL-TIME CONSCIENCE.&#13;
What Do the Children Drink?&#13;
There are times when mother or&#13;
father feeds the youngsters something&#13;
that they know children should not&#13;
have. Perhaps it is some rich dessert&#13;
but more often It is tea or coffee.&#13;
It is better to have some delicious,&#13;
hot food-drink that you can take yourself&#13;
and feed to your children, conscious&#13;
that it will help and strengthen,&#13;
but never hurt them.&#13;
A Yorkstate lady says: "I used&#13;
coffee many years in spite of the conviction&#13;
that it injured my nervous system&#13;
and produced my nervous head*&#13;
aches. While visiting a friend I -was&#13;
served with Postum and I determined&#13;
to get a package and try it myself.&#13;
The result was all that could be desired—&#13;
a delicious, finely flavored, richly&#13;
colored beverage. Since I quit coffee,&#13;
Postum has worked wonders for&#13;
me.&#13;
"My husband, who had suffered from&#13;
kidney trouble when drinking coffee,&#13;
quit the coffee and took up Postnm&#13;
with me and since drinking Postum he&#13;
has felt stronger and better, with no&#13;
Indication of kidney trouble.&#13;
T o n may be sure 1 find ft a great&#13;
comfort to have a warm drink at&#13;
meals that I can give my children,&#13;
with a dear conscience that it will&#13;
help and not hart them as coffee or&#13;
tea would."&#13;
Name g*re8 by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
Postum comes in two forms:&#13;
Postum Cereal—the original form—-&#13;
must be well boiled. lSc and 15c pkgs.&#13;
rnetaM Poatum—a soluble powder—&#13;
dissolves qnickly in a cup of hot water,&#13;
and, with cream and sugar, make*&#13;
a delldoos beverage Instantly. 80c&#13;
and 66c tins.&#13;
Both f a m e are equally deUdoms&#13;
tad cost about the same par cup.&#13;
-There's a Reason" for&#13;
Girl Paul Reveres for Zeps.&#13;
Girl Paul Reveres now give warning&#13;
of the approach cf Zeppelins over&#13;
London. They are telephone operators&#13;
attached to the telephenn and who&#13;
have volunteered to ride a bicycle&#13;
around to rouso their colleagues. All&#13;
go to the exchanges where there is a&#13;
rush of business every time there is an&#13;
impending raid,&#13;
There are now 4 20 women on night&#13;
duty at the London telephone exchanges,&#13;
and when there is a threatened&#13;
raid hundreds more can be called&#13;
out. Between 80 and 90 per cent of&#13;
the girls are on duty within half an&#13;
hour of the call being sent out.&#13;
innocent. 4&#13;
"Why, Mr. Frontpew," exclaimed&#13;
hia pastor reprovingly, "I am aur*&#13;
prised and grieved to bee you coming&#13;
out of a common liquor saloon." :&#13;
"Well—er—you see," stammered Mr.&#13;
Proritpew. "I—er--just stepped in&#13;
there to look at the mirror to aee if&#13;
I had a smudge on my nose."&#13;
KIDNEY MEDICINE DISSOLVES&#13;
GRAVEL STONES Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root sella well&#13;
with us because it invariably produces tood results in Kidney, Liver and Bl*d&lt;&#13;
er troubles. We sola a dollar bottle to&#13;
I one of the inmates of our Soldiers' Horn*&#13;
: near here, and after using it he brought&#13;
j in about one dozen gravel stones, tcr^e 14&#13;
: large as a pea, which be had passed. H«&#13;
j states that he obtained wonderfu] relief&#13;
from the use of Swamp-Root.&#13;
ERNEST A. BROWN,&#13;
I Lafayette, Ind.&#13;
j Personally appeared before me this 1 28th of July, 1909, Ernest A. Brown o&lt;&#13;
I the Brown Drug Co., who subscribed th«&#13;
above statement and made oath that tht&#13;
same is true in substance and in fact.&#13;
DAVID BRYAN, Notary Public.&#13;
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yot&#13;
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer &amp; Co.,&#13;
Binghamton. N. Y., (or a sample site hot*&#13;
tie. It will convince anyone. You will&#13;
alto receive a booklet of valuable infor*&#13;
mation^telling about the kidneys and blad*&#13;
der. When writing, be sure and mention&#13;
this paper. Regular fifty-cent and on*&#13;
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug&#13;
store*.—Adv.&#13;
Why is watered silk classified ai&#13;
dry gooda?&#13;
26cAitdren were poisoned last year in only II slain&#13;
Fly Poison Kills More Children&#13;
Than All Other Poisons Combined&#13;
For Safety's Sake, Use&#13;
Is there in your home, anywhere&#13;
within baby's reach, a saucer of&#13;
arsenic poisoned paper floating in&#13;
water, or a can with A sweetened&#13;
poisoned wick?&#13;
Dorisg 1913, 26 case* of fly poisoning&#13;
were reported from U states; in 1814, 4f&#13;
cases from 14 state*. Fly Poison ktlU won&#13;
children than alt other Poisons camhisud.&#13;
Yet fly poison stQ Is left tmgnarded&#13;
except la the homes where mothers have&#13;
learned that the safe, sure, mom poitonotu.&#13;
efficient fly catcher and destroyer Is j£&#13;
TANGLEFOOT&#13;
The Journal of the Michigan 8tate lladJoal&#13;
Society comments tint* m a recent lasass&#13;
si-mSyilmarp ttoom ths oosfe a rosfe ncihcoalleproai somnftaaa*r aamre:^ neat»r dUonnrbatmed wlye rae nrueamllbye cra osfe sr oafs aasr soefn icchaol lpeorias omn** cmhro.l etmrat dinefaatnht,u tmfo.o omriag, was attributed to&#13;
•W1e arreep deaant,g earnoeuasf acnadl sfhlyo udleds tbrao ya blaoyli sdhae&gt;d .&#13;
Bealtn officials sbonld become aroused to&#13;
peetent farther loss of Ufa from their source,&#13;
Our Michlsran Lefistature, thJa last session,&#13;
passed a law refniattesT tbeeaie of poisoooo*&#13;
f^papara,"&#13;
Tito O. &amp; W. Tirana Co,&#13;
Wolverine Chemical Closets&#13;
J*&#13;
m&#13;
w&#13;
* - • &lt;rA&#13;
v, .&#13;
w.icu, DsTTtiorr,*a tt-tm.&#13;
V. V ' . &gt; . * • 'f " *«* '&#13;
?AZtX*&#13;
• &lt; - C : &gt; : *&#13;
' • * * • • • ; • :&#13;
•i&#13;
''.*&#13;
5s&#13;
L ^&#13;
fc!&#13;
I \&#13;
c-H.&#13;
if&#13;
ut-&#13;
1&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a, C&lt;&gt;i&gt;-f&#13;
ing BuHint-&#13;
,'H : »'e Bank-&#13;
3 pi".r c e n t&#13;
paid on til! l i m e Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W . T f c h f L t&#13;
Mich.&#13;
f r o p&#13;
Pinckney Qippatch&#13;
Entered at the Poetoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich,, &amp;a Second C I u » Matter&#13;
C. J. SIBLEY, EDITOR ARO PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year in AdrnDce&#13;
A'i vcrliiiirip' rales m.t&lt;l.: ^O&lt;JW:I on&#13;
i ;r.jlicati&lt;&gt;ii.&#13;
C a r d s ot Tnankt*, lifiy :-i'uiv&#13;
Keaolummis uf C o u d o l c u c c , &lt;jne duii.tr.&#13;
L o c a l XoUi ea, in L o c a l c o l u m n a , tive&#13;
: e u : p e r Jiue per each iuM-rUon.&#13;
All m a i l e r i u l e a d e d lo oeiu-tit The pers&#13;
o n a l or buoja«M i o t e r e s t ot any i n i i v i d -&#13;
u»i witi b e p u b l i s h e d at i ^ i . b i a d v e u i s e -&#13;
iog ruieis.&#13;
A u u j u u c e r n e n t ot e n l e r u i i i i u e i i L u , e t c . ,&#13;
mu«! be p a i d for al r e g u l a r i-ocni N o t i c e&#13;
r a t e s .&#13;
O b i t u a r y a n d m a r r i a g e uoii.ee* HVC p u l -&#13;
l i i h e d t r e e of c h a r g e .&#13;
P o e t r y muat be p a i d for al the r a l e ot&#13;
tive iTulK p e r l i n e .&#13;
For Paw/ess Dentistry, See -&#13;
Dr. *. h Wright&#13;
In The Dotan Block&#13;
PINCKNEY - MICHIGAN&#13;
past&#13;
,S- &gt;j&#13;
Mr*. W o , Bullis spent Saturday&#13;
iu Howell.&#13;
Grace Campbell spent lust week&#13;
iu Ann Aroor.&#13;
Mrs. C, L. Sigler was a Lansing&#13;
visitor S a t u r d a y .&#13;
Mrs. A. T. C a m b u m was in Detroir&#13;
th« first of the week.&#13;
M r. ant i Mrs. W. B. Darrow&#13;
O U R l'Yien&lt;l&gt;&#13;
a n v t h i n ^ v "&#13;
t h e m - e \ ^ i ' i '&#13;
t O &lt; i ' ! " i [ d i .&#13;
MAK1-; AN AIM'O.N I Mi&#13;
L t l I&#13;
1 \ '&#13;
( i ! ' V \&#13;
Daisie B.&#13;
StockbridAe,&#13;
Grand Trunk&#13;
F o r tttP t:i)iue:i.."i&#13;
Chapell&#13;
W i c h i £ a n&#13;
me Tab\t&#13;
•'1' i&#13;
Trains East&#13;
Xo. 46—H :31 ,i. ni&#13;
No. 48—L44 p. trt&#13;
(i. W. Teeple spent the&#13;
week in Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
Dr. (V L. Sigler was in Ann&#13;
Arbor Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Dora Davis spent the first&#13;
of the week in Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Ea^ran is visiting&#13;
relatives at Jackson.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Roche spent&#13;
the week end in Fowlerville.&#13;
J o h n Tiplady of Chilson spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. vSarah Burchiel visited&#13;
friends in Walkerville last week,&#13;
The Misses Alice and Madeline&#13;
Roche spent the week end in&#13;
Fowlerville.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. Fred of Detroit&#13;
spent the week end at the home&#13;
of Thomas Read.&#13;
Miss Veronica Fohey of Ypsi&#13;
lauti spent tne week end with her&#13;
parents here. ""&#13;
Postoffice Inspector, Iv (J.&#13;
Mackey of Lansing visited Pinckney&#13;
last week,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. \Y. IV. Jiarnard&#13;
left for tneir lioni- at Oraud&#13;
Iiapidsi Saturday,&#13;
Mr, s u d M r s . Ciitt3. VanKuren&#13;
of Detroit spent the week end at&#13;
tne hom ' of O, W. Teepk\&#13;
M:ss K-uLeriii* Driver attended&#13;
the funeral of S\\bt&gt; Kate&#13;
r o l i U t o ; i ,-jf i l " v v c l l l a s t W &gt; e k .&#13;
Mios Lucille McQuillan of Ho-1 dent of Mr. Crofoot next YVedueewell&#13;
spent the week end with her j day.&#13;
sister Mrs, L. G. Devereaux, A very mc^ time in reported by&#13;
spent last Thursday in Jackson.&#13;
Regular meeting of the O. K S.&#13;
Chapter tins week Friday May FJ.&#13;
Father J . V. Ooyle waa in Ann&#13;
Arbor a couple of days this week.&#13;
Irviu Ottrnpbell and family&#13;
moved to Ann Arbor last week.&#13;
Will Dunbar and family visited&#13;
Detroit relatives S u n day and&#13;
Monday.&#13;
T h o s . Ooyle of Ann Arbor spt-nt&#13;
the week end at the home of Father&#13;
Ooyle-&#13;
E. Ohipman of Piainfield has&#13;
returned to the Sauitarium for&#13;
treatment.&#13;
Remember the Epworth League&#13;
social yt the opera house Friday&#13;
evening, May 26th.&#13;
Mrs. Allan Blake of Eloise spent&#13;
several days last week af the home&#13;
of Ed Breningstall.&#13;
Miss Mary Mclntee of Ann Arbor&#13;
visited at F a t h e r Crude's the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . M. Hudson spent the&#13;
past week with friends and relatives&#13;
at Paulding, Ohio.&#13;
Chas. Htannard and family of&#13;
Lansing were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of Dr. H. F, Siller.&#13;
Mrs. F. G. Jackson i-i visiting&#13;
relatives in Detroit, and attennini:&#13;
a meeting of the Wtiyiin ( '.) association&#13;
of Eastern Star*&#13;
Mr. -wid Mrs. R, F. \Vi i^lit an'l&#13;
famil\ aod Mr. and Mrs. Glenn&#13;
Tuppfir and son a pen* Sunday at&#13;
the home of W'illia Tn ppcr,&#13;
Siva. M. 0, Wilson and Mrs. J.&#13;
S. Jenkins of Flint spent a few&#13;
days the past we^k with their&#13;
sister Mrs W. E, Tuppji- ,&#13;
in view of tin* hi_jh c.ifit of&#13;
gasoline, the following sent out&#13;
'uy the United Sist&lt;:s pn 1 die healt ii&#13;
sersdet-' i- ^^(--1 m w s ; " D &gt; vtm&#13;
know that walkp,^ is ti;" be.-,! exerriM-&#13;
and t lie c iitMpHS! '.'"-- Ex ,&#13;
I esjM'cially solicit t h^ difficult&#13;
can s wjj^re ot h&lt;- i opticians havtlaih"!&#13;
And Ljnarantee success in&#13;
• J V M \ CH8H. L. fj'Wi&gt; exj)crt Ann&#13;
Ariu.'r optical sppciH 1 i.-1" st resi-&#13;
!&#13;
bASGOW n R O S .&#13;
Noted For SelliBi Good D Goofls Cheap&#13;
JACKSON, MICHIGAN f&#13;
We are well prepared to show you Lhai odd pieoo of lur- fa&#13;
which your housecleaning liai&gt; bhown rhe need oi. A&#13;
All kindb of moderate priced furniLure aL the righi price I&#13;
Cotton Felt M a t t r e s s e s %&#13;
with roll edge, weight 45 p o u n d s and with bJuc or yellow J l&#13;
striped ticking- Regular value is $10.00. SAJJ-! P R I O E . $ 7 . 5 o p&#13;
\ Iron Beds&#13;
We have a large assortment of Iron Beds in all styles and 5&#13;
prices from $2.50 to ¢15.00 m&#13;
Brass Beds from $[5.00 to $30.00.&#13;
Iron Bed Springs I j A spring with heavy sides and is well supported and will 2&#13;
^ not sag. Regular price is ?6.oo. SALE P R I O R $5.40 g l Odd D r e s s e r s&#13;
in q u a r t e r e d oak. Prices ranging from $12.00 to $33.00. | j&#13;
A L A R G E A S S O R T M E N T OF i&#13;
Dintn£ Room Tables&#13;
.00.&#13;
in quartered oak or fumed oak, round top or bquare top. 6 feet S&#13;
long and S feet long, 45-inch top or 48-inch lop. All styles o! P I&#13;
Collapsible Go-Carts i&#13;
Wc will nlace on 3:ile our entire -took lor O n e - Q u a r t e r •&#13;
O f f t h e R e g u l a r P r i c e . \&#13;
j pedestals. Prices from $12.00 to &gt;Vv&#13;
1&#13;
We have an cxiri l.ir^c as-ortnient in all &gt;t\ and prices 4&#13;
W e J i e ,1 on -. ,; (&gt;: la r g g i n ; &gt;. •&#13;
D n r i&#13;
^•1 --.'•/./c.(&gt;•&gt; ;mann d J&#13;
W ( 1 ] a \ v "' re^-Li vo &gt; one o: \.\i- iar^c&gt;i -,iip;;;on: &gt; 01 tour&#13;
yard wide Linoleum.^ in the be&gt;l I), quality and a rim: lot of&#13;
pattern:-. Price per yard. 76c A S O O A R E Y A R D . \&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ - a a . W m •&#13;
I&#13;
N . . . 4:&#13;
V\ i r i i c e i n s i n &gt; 1 I . J -&#13;
All C»l«&gt;. [•&lt; ifn.i'&#13;
d»y or ni^ie,. (&gt;rh \&#13;
PINOKSEY&#13;
m&#13;
MI' TUG AN&#13;
H. F . Siff.I.t:K. U. f«. e, i , \h*\ at, v a.&#13;
Drs. Sigier &amp; Sigler&#13;
Furniture Repairing&#13;
»k«p back of Drug Store&#13;
of Mrs. Sarah Brown last week.&#13;
Miss Geraidine Fitzsimmons of&#13;
flackson is visiting at the home of&#13;
her grandmother, Mrs. M. Black.&#13;
J a m e s Tiplady of Detroit and&#13;
Miss Naunary of Ann Arbor spent&#13;
the week end at the home of J a s&#13;
Tiplady.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H e n r y Johnson&#13;
returned horns Friday after spending&#13;
the winter with their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Ida Flint of Stanl ev&#13;
N\ Y&#13;
f&gt;RY-CL,&amp;ANING&#13;
*&amp; AND PRESSING]&#13;
HttvlnA P r o c u r e d f h « e q u l p -&#13;
:fm t h e D r y . C l e a n i n g&#13;
i v e * r e n a d y t o dm&#13;
1 W. B BARROW&#13;
Louis W e u r t h of Munith is the all who attended the May Party&#13;
uew Section boas on the railroad | ftt r u e ° P e r a «onse last Thursday | $&#13;
during the illness oc Mr. Lyuch. j^veuin^- The music furnished by j |&#13;
Mr*, and M r s . D M. Hodgeman j F , n z e l * « r c b 8 f i t r a o f &amp;*™t ^ ^ 8&#13;
of Oak frrove, visited at the home v e r &gt;' « » » ^ t o r y . Another party&#13;
is contemplated for Thursday&#13;
evening, May 26th.&#13;
Ohria Brogan has sold his place&#13;
3 mile&amp; north and o' miles west of&#13;
Pinckney and will move to Ohilsou&#13;
soon. He will sell his personal&#13;
property at auction Tuesday,&#13;
May 2^1, beginning at 12 o'clock.&#13;
The Adv. of the same will be 1^&#13;
found on the back page of t h e j ^&#13;
Dispatch. J ~&#13;
T h e following pastors of t h ^ i J&#13;
first District of the M e t h o d i s t , v&#13;
(Uinrch are called together to con- £&#13;
0. M. Hudson has sold th« flour , suit with the District Superinteu- f&#13;
mil! here to H a r r y Lee of Jackson deut. Rev. V. W. Baldwin, Mon- *&#13;
who will take immediate possess- ( day, May 22nd, morning and after- j *&#13;
ion. Mr. Hudson is undecided as noon at the pHrsonage here. Those '&#13;
to where he will go, but expect to caded are W, G. Stephens, R. E.&#13;
leave town about tlie first of J u n e . Winn, 0 . F. Hst.ha.way, Geo. Hill,&#13;
Mrs. Ehaa Root will sell her; »T. A. Rowe, L o m e Carter, G. A&#13;
personal property at auction, F r i - G a r m * n , 0 M. Woodriiansee, and&#13;
day i l a y 19, begiLning at 12:^). A. T. Cam burn.&#13;
Th«y expect to nio^e to Ann LeRoy Lem in, expert Ann Arbor&#13;
Arbor toon. 'optician will ajjain retnrn next&#13;
Mrs. Grace Wallacn and daugh- Wedneaday, office at resident of&#13;
t*r Dorothy * r « «pendirg some-{Mr Crofot)t He 1« a gaadnaU of&#13;
time in A B U Arbor, Mrs. Wallace Detroit, Chicago and New York&#13;
Itaa a clerkship and Miss Wallace optical schools and has had 30&#13;
has ttnpUiyment ia a telephone years constant experience in this&#13;
office. one specialty. a d r .&#13;
Why We Merit&#13;
Your Clothes&#13;
Order&#13;
V\ r study your appearance ard&#13;
personality wc take into account&#13;
your h£e and occupation we suggest&#13;
fashiona ar.d fabrics in keep.&#13;
irg: with your individuality.&#13;
Th? rlo+hf3 are -Juarif exnreaBly&#13;
for YOU and YOf. h)r,ne. We&#13;
jfuarar.tef: coat fror.ta and lining&#13;
for onp yeir or replace without&#13;
charge.&#13;
Ci The&#13;
Coronado,,&#13;
V O U young men who x want freedom of body&#13;
movement, together with cooling&#13;
c o m f o r t , d u r i n g t h e w a r m&#13;
weather, should wear clothes that&#13;
are tailored to meet your personal&#13;
characteristics.&#13;
That means have&#13;
Ed. V. Price &amp; Co.&#13;
make your clothes to order.&#13;
Have us take your measure—&#13;
right now!&#13;
C EBOOTH.PROS&#13;
0 *&#13;
ftv&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Classified Advertising )C*pC TUC CIpTQI&#13;
OK Gcud V , o u , | n i KOK 8ALK (.loud Violin. , u l I , . J ^ ^ ' " N l O I 0 .&#13;
t i n s o t f i c .&#13;
Koii SAL P ; Whh e* - ( tun i , 0" o&lt; i «. • i n&#13;
eu r a n ^ e , r o c k i n g ch;ui r m t r m - t a u J&#13;
olfter in.i.^i'Ui 'I ii ;"'&gt;rU. ! [)• &gt; i:i- i:,&lt;-&#13;
j i c l nl v if h m u f .&#13;
South iosoo&#13;
Mr. a n d M r a . B e r t R o b e r t&#13;
- _ — J j a n b i D ^ rf-dierd !mst wi ek&#13;
.J Weeks Talks About Our Nav&gt; Walter M U W&#13;
and National Defense. opem Friday HI J&#13;
.. -Mrn. S t H i t ChipriM.'i a-u&#13;
M r ! FRESH&#13;
, insists on Military, Commercial, Fin- F l u a D o u o h u e of P ; * ; - f i - l ' 1 e;;u It&#13;
K O K f c A J . h C H F A F i^.O icet uf w h i t e ; ancial a n d Industrial P r c p s r o d n c s s OU M r ^ . VI K r 11 ri A ie it-r&gt;.i m F n d *&#13;
oak Lnuib^r. Harui'i S w i t h o u t . —L ct Us Be Rojdy for Peace a s u ft-,.„,.,„,,&#13;
LOST 4 small keys u:&#13;
pleace leave With&#13;
;'-;.',. Finder&#13;
V. (,. Meyer&#13;
Well A* W a r .&#13;
By J A M E S B. M O R R O W ,&#13;
In the Phi IudcJphia Record.&#13;
ONE of t h e Weeksea, tsuve J o h n&#13;
M r . H I I I .Mt'ri. d )!MI K )b»-i ^&#13;
CH1 Ur f'-^ S i i ii ;•' I ,-i v&#13;
'l'O L E T Bean ground or ihe Duhairi- '&#13;
son farm. m 11 ! fWT u-&#13;
I 1 ^ l i t i g a t e , tiie senator a n d t h »&#13;
W A N T E D A girl ...r woman lo work ' .Uasaachusetu candidate for&#13;
. ,, , , ,,,. ., . i president—toiling as they all did&#13;
by tfie day or week. Mrs. I h " ^ liead ! am,,,,, ,^,, „..., , »• ...&#13;
l i l t - ' _M :&gt;-, -.-:o L i iU I Hi! II .-! C i l l r C&#13;
o'i M i s . Jo:;p, KuM.rutin T i i&#13;
Mi'rf. T r u r n i u i&#13;
!l!t 1 ' S O M '&#13;
w a i m L_rh t re&#13;
Le.,4al A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
Q ' l ' A ' l ' L ( i f ' - M M . ' I I I O A . ^ . l b ^ I&gt;IA li*:.' ,.(..,1 ; ! c r&#13;
O Hit'ct&gt;uiH r .if !,j n u ^ - u j u A I A tw»ai&lt;»n o r&#13;
• alii f o u r ! ii"ii:af 5 'v ;&gt; m i n i ! c .win •• •. n t h" s i i l ' n&#13;
o f H I &gt; » H II i n ri 11,1 ( '.)(] ;i i. , a s . 'iiamong&#13;
t h e granite h u m p s of New t ' l r u e d b o w * l a s t wot-k a f t e r e n r&#13;
itr_' for Mrri. Mi!l-M for HHUI • duHj&#13;
Mai&#13;
I f «-»er ' . 11&#13;
h . l . i i&#13;
» , . .&#13;
j Hampshire w a s (jyer noted £or his ac&#13;
cumulation of cash or property.&#13;
They were farmers mostly, beginning&#13;
with J^onar-J Weeks, who, emigrating&#13;
from England in 1656, became&#13;
the head and sonrce of t h e family.&#13;
j Agriculture sternly practiced among&#13;
i the embedd«ii roeko&#13;
I North Lake&#13;
Mieb M : ! i r e d D a n i e l * nf Albi- u&#13;
VV 1 I I I&#13;
1LK.X' \ \ \ l . i il&#13;
and irremovable&#13;
bowldei'ij tau^ln t'n-m to be ruaource- : s p e n t &gt;h t ;&lt; r hty a id . S u n d a y&#13;
ml and to Ue.-p at luast one eye open j u , r . , . u e l i . a aj_ o t j j s r/nct-&#13;
C •'•. T ••;..• '. . ,'••. ;i •••! . M..( .-JM-- i.i&gt; J to opportunity i - - - - i •• -&#13;
i*i-i'" ;•&gt; i' • • • •.-: '•'' -; • •-&lt; " ••:. o.u .i,nrlSL j So Will iii ru ]"&gt;. th^ father of t h e sen- j Muss Blfintdie M dh-r of Ci&#13;
'"'•"'• •"~:;"' ":i " '"i:i "' ' "' ' : : ' ' " - ' d ' s " ator, wan a probutn judge, and once t , P i x •.,&#13;
' T U ' ' d - a I ' '• ' : " H ' ' , ^ . . , , . , ^ t ; p • „ Witv, i f i U e i l l 1 I H \ - ! U V e V H U l l l ' ' W i l l i&#13;
, , , , , , , • . , * ; essayed to w. a manufacturer. With t i - ^&#13;
It is • rJcri"ii . i .it l i i,i .' i .4 a a.v - •: I .aio A \J. i .'16&#13;
al | 0 u&lt;. I'K'k .ii Ii..- l . i i ' i i o n u , .it l a i d j . i ' n h a t c «ui | . tui nui.d tbjt s , KL,on, ,utei-e,ted la , £ a c t o r y a t Laneastcr for m a k i n r starch ' Alr-x ( m b e r L m i d f a u i d y ofc U e »aui e."*i(ite «[&gt;(&gt;• »r iietori' n " l i ' ' a r : at uuul tittle J 1 f" " —&#13;
»ud plact', iu shun catiae » h / a lisunco to seii ibt i f o W p 6 t a t o e 3 .&#13;
mior^t ui e^i-t .-tarH m ..ii .-,•«! ,-t,i&gt; .^louid ; ' i W M n t t V e r forget t h e look on my I&#13;
•'"! &gt;t( ,jrH" "''• j father's face." Captain Weeks told me,&#13;
I. i.- . ..1.. V.^i ..i..i[iii' iDJr» day of \. ig "when, on a Sunday morning, Just a l&#13;
A. DitJieat.."! . . : . . . , ; , ; u.» for«r ocn o-t; «id : leaving church, we saw m e n&#13;
l&gt;robale fflcc, 1*) a n d in lier^liv a p ^ u j o t i ' d t o r tru- _ . " '&#13;
... . , the cooperation of neighbors, likewise j Jas. Haakerd and family&#13;
,:o ;;• . a i u far hearing j alert aad advenfuroua, he s t a r t e d a j&#13;
o , : , 1 : ^ {^fZ£ j £ ? l ? T ^ L ^ - a H t c r for making starch ;&#13;
j t r o i t s p e n * t h e w e e k e n d at t h e&#13;
h o m o of h i - n r . d h e : , M r s . M a r y&#13;
G i l b e r t .&#13;
L n c d l l e a-.id (.Veil B r o w n w e r e&#13;
S a t u r d a y a n d S m h n v v i s i t o r s a t&#13;
t h e hoar.- of P h i l ^juith find wife&#13;
c&#13;
HTaminatioti and adjuai muit ut a: i chv.n* »ui it, : and boys r u n n i n g down t h e s t r e e t a n d&#13;
lands against aaid dvce^tscd.&#13;
KI. ' T ! ' ; M ; A, S I ' ; A \ ::&#13;
Jadj?e of Probata&#13;
heard them eryine:&#13;
tory is burning.'&#13;
T h e starch facu&#13;
t&#13;
I'l A i ' L O K \ l l i ' ! l I'.f A S ,&#13;
K&gt;ta'.&lt; f . :w: i . \ &gt; oOI i i . , [) ; - &lt; I .&#13;
'l')\? uini.T'-ii'n»U ' u ' . :a.p '&gt;».'ii ii).,"-: i t - n . -&gt;.•&#13;
J j d g e ol' I'rnija"^ a t staid " i i , u t , . &lt;j&gt; .Mini isR;&gt;*'a'!'s nn&#13;
ciairun in tli*' tnj,t!ITII ' -*:ii.I -1-; J ' . • . « i r t : &lt; 11 m-.nti\ =&#13;
l i o i n i h u .:iHi C.u\ &lt;&gt;t Apr 1, \. 1&gt; V-MH.&#13;
iKX^n nllovved ').&gt; s a i l ,..: li;- : i ' n . " i t r :•• nil | i t ! -&#13;
»ooK h o l d i n g .:).1 i!L.i a^.iin-c -iti.i -^1:11^ :&lt;\ • :i:i•!• lo&#13;
protHflt t h t i ; ' - iHiiiu .!. i •• ...i- c x A'.:, n:ii:, -n iin.1&#13;
R'ljiibUnem .&#13;
NutiCC i s liri I'IIV ^\ ••• -\ ii : ;I.I ' •/.^ '\ . m - v l n,1 : ! , i&#13;
','ltli any •&gt;! .i i MI-, A I. i'd.'i. .uid . r i t i n ' '.Mtli&#13;
.'nn' of V ii -, A : !'.Mi&gt;. :tt t..-Q O'I.-IIW I; j) m 0' fi'.i ti&#13;
...iy .'.I ; l i f li.iii't. HI 'Ii,- i ! : u ' - ' l ' i r f ^ i r : - i.'i - i i&#13;
c o u n t y t o d'ceiV". ;i')H f t » n . , u s i&lt; n r\:r. u -&#13;
«Bl&gt;Mci, H-.'-i&#13;
V . i- . K n l ,&#13;
\i:,-!i , \ ! iv&#13;
A . l: • v&#13;
Cacnuilier Pickle Coni&#13;
•A' I ' i&#13;
V&#13;
( ' )i i ' ! ; t c&#13;
hi r pick I&#13;
t l l M V H "&#13;
H r : i ( : t ' 1'&#13;
t; i v ' i i 1V&#13;
p)fl VI 11 u&#13;
D i l l ' . l u l l 1 ' •'. I': ' ;i&#13;
f o r . - l i e n . [i ,&gt; • iv !-&#13;
s i •/.&gt;' ' i i " ; ' • i . t &gt;' - ii v&#13;
r r ' ' i i&#13;
I 11 • • i \ ; -, - i ! •&#13;
c n&#13;
'i i n&#13;
MM&#13;
, " . I ' l i s e '&#13;
-,1111 H - ' v&#13;
. l i ' r V :&#13;
: v - t i t&#13;
• I I ( ' &lt; w&#13;
J -"K,&#13;
r» 1»"&gt;&#13;
Kt&#13;
a r e&#13;
n ' , I . )&#13;
h ; i - A&#13;
1 -' —,&#13;
• i ; , 'i i&#13;
Oil i&#13;
i&#13;
o f M a r i o r -&#13;
P a r ! : r s t o:u D'-&gt;: t-r a re&#13;
iiayr ;. c o : :11-/1.- ;t! N.A: ::, J / i&#13;
r&gt; ^s&#13;
plan'* h f e Miad'' f.»! -e , 1*' H&#13;
C )'t"i^f.s t o l)e t-11 A : r_-' •" 1 t i d " , - j i i ' i ;&#13;
M r . find M r s . W i n , K ' ^ e t / n e i s T&#13;
wen* in D e t r o i t F r i Uy t o vi-it t h "&#13;
Latter'^ untit, w h o is . - c r i o u s i v ill.&#13;
M : . a n d Mrs. 1 \ K. No»ili ^ n t e r -&#13;
Mrs. W a l z | E&#13;
O r a ^ e of i ral&#13;
Cbelsf.'M. &gt;&gt;ui,dHV&#13;
Tii A ] { e f d w 1 ll u'i '&gt;' ' t ;.H 15' 'iffl a&#13;
b ^ t i q u e t V iiia \' t'V.'i! in./, M n v l'.y • S'RSJS&#13;
i c e crearii a n d c a k e .-'-r\'ed.&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
Gents Furnishings&#13;
A Complete L»ine&#13;
Connors Ice Cream&#13;
World's Best&#13;
Fruits and Vegetables&#13;
S a t u r d a y&#13;
Top Prices on Butter&#13;
and Ei££s e v e r y D a y&#13;
Best P r i c e and a Fair&#13;
t e s t on c r e a m T u e s -&#13;
days and Fridays.&#13;
i&#13;
r&#13;
• :&#13;
0 0 s&#13;
«&#13;
0&#13;
«&#13;
^1 I t a i u e d t h e l a t e r ' s a u n t&#13;
! j a u d (Iftii udi tot -v 1( u ' .1 a : 11&#13;
1 MONKS BROS. I&#13;
M&#13;
Captain John Wingate Weeks.&#13;
KC-:,J "r&#13;
T I A T P&#13;
cloar, h&#13;
to K^t'P ' ii&#13;
5 k m Ciea- a:'a h c ^ t h / .&#13;
on ly or," way to ha\ f a,&#13;
: -,• c o : v . T \ ^ X K ' V ;-.iiri T h A' I S&#13;
bowr-lb n f i v r ,T :vl r- guUi&#13;
l)r.'"KinK'ri Now Li:&gt; Pi'.iS \\\\\ ir.ake&#13;
your coTiiplexjor healthy atri clear,&#13;
inove the 1)0 w^ls gently, .^tiiViulate&#13;
t h e ii' i;r, cU-^liri tho i;yftU'M ftlirl purify&#13;
i h r 1&gt;AK)(', . A splendifl spring modicUie.&#13;
2;'r. at your druggist.&#13;
P n v V'")!]r f t i 0 8 ' , r i ":nrj * u 5 tjiorrh&#13;
R H E U M A T I C P A I N S T O P P E D&#13;
T h e d r a w i n g of muscleB, t h e soreness,&#13;
stiffness and agonizing pain of&#13;
r h e u m a t i s m quickly yield t o S l o a n ' s&#13;
Liniment. It stimulates circulation&#13;
to t h e painful part. J u s t apply as&#13;
directed to t h e sore spots. In a&#13;
short time the pain gis'es way 10 a&#13;
tingling sensation of comfort and&#13;
warm.li. H e r e ' s proof—"I have had&#13;
wonderful relief since I used your liii&#13;
iment on my knee. To think, or/1&#13;
"There was no insurance—the pol- ; application gave me relief. Sorry I&#13;
i'"v had lapsed—and t h e fire swept havn't space to tell you t h e history.&#13;
av.-oy all of my father's means and p u t : T h a n k i n g you for what your remedy&#13;
a burdensome m o r t g a g e on his farm, h a s done for me, " — J a m e s S. Fergu&#13;
two and a half miles In the country." i SK&gt;. Philada, P a , Sloan's Liniment&#13;
If there had been a navy of a re- , kills p a i s . 25c, at druggists,&#13;
spectacle size In 1881 J o h n - W i n g a t e j 0 .1 l f l _ ' _&#13;
w e e k s would n o w b e a captain in- O O U I D i V l a T 1 0 f t&#13;
stead of § senator Nor would h e ;&#13;
ever h i r e b e M t t i I banker and thua : M ; « . C . \ a n h t i r e i i o t ( j r e ^ j o i y&#13;
have set at n a u g h t all t h e traditions of j V 1 M ^ . , | ftr *'.1e ii^ui-. nf K&#13;
the Weeki fam^y t o r self-respecting, , , /&#13;
capable a n d Vhol$f6n$e *p6terty, J b u r t i j feULiday.&#13;
And yet a psychological analysis of '&#13;
inherited t r a i t s m i g h t show t h a t t h e&#13;
t&#13;
•H +&gt;:*;f * * ^ ^ » ^ ^ ^ ^ * * ^ ^ ^ - ^ » 4 T + * » - i&#13;
TIT i Another Good Cash Store Here&#13;
1&#13;
i&#13;
t t&#13;
!&#13;
4.&#13;
1 i c I I I I 'A ; i l \ ; S L 1 1 I'K'i'Oai Lei' Wl&#13;
&lt;r t &gt; i 11 i -, ! -:i&#13;
\ ;i 11&#13;
They Let Him&#13;
Sleep Soundly&#13;
- "Since taking: Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
I believe I a m e n t i r e l y cured a n d I&#13;
sleep soundly m a l l night." H. T.&#13;
S t r a y n s e ,&#13;
T a k e two "of" Foley Kjdney Pills&#13;
with a crl&amp;Bg of p u r e w a t e r after each&#13;
meal &amp;nd a t bedtime. A quick a n d&#13;
easy w a y t o p u t a stop t o your g e t -&#13;
t i n g u p time after t i m e during t h e&#13;
night.&#13;
Foley Kidney Pills also stop pain&#13;
In back a n d sides, headaches, stomach&#13;
troubles, disturbed heart action,&#13;
•tiff and aching1 joints, a n d rheumatic&#13;
pains due t o kidney a n d bladder ailments.&#13;
Gainesville, Ga.. Ti. R. No. 3. Mr.&#13;
TT. T. Strayngre says: " F o r ten years&#13;
I've been unable to sleep all n i g h t&#13;
without fretting up. Sometimes only &amp;&#13;
few minutes after firolnff to bed I'd&#13;
have to get up, a n d I tried everything&#13;
T heard of for t h e trouble. Last year&#13;
I tried Foley Kidney Pills and after&#13;
i .-iking' one bottle I believe I am entirely&#13;
cured and I sleep soundly a l l&#13;
r.lglu."&#13;
"For Sale Ev^ywherc&#13;
senator comes n a t u r a l l y by his t a l e n t s&#13;
for public affairs and finance. Any&#13;
inquiry into his personality m u s t include&#13;
the Wlngatt*. t h e chief of whom.&#13;
John, an Englishman, emigrated t o&#13;
New Hampshire la 1669.&#13;
The Weeksas and t h e Wingates intermarried&#13;
daring t h e second American&#13;
generation—the We^kses to continue&#13;
as farmers, with an excursion&#13;
into potato starqh, a s has been recorded,&#13;
but t h e Wingates t o become&#13;
soldiers, preachers and s t a t e s m e n .&#13;
Paine Wingate, for example, the greatgrandson&#13;
of John, w a s a m e m b e r of&#13;
the Continental congress and l a t e r a&#13;
senator from N e w Hampshire.&#13;
A Big Man Physically.&#13;
John W i n g a t e Weeks of Massachusetts,&#13;
in h i s name, therefore, goe* back&#13;
to t h e middle of t h e seventeenth century.&#13;
Perhaps h i s gifts a r e equally a s&#13;
ancient. W h e r e v e r they originated,&#13;
h« has m a d e good u s e of them. H e is&#13;
\crll-to-do—but h a s less money, perhaps,&#13;
than is often represented—and&#13;
Republicans in Massachusetts h a v e notified&#13;
the country that h e is their candidate&#13;
for rre^rt&lt;--/.. If h e is nomi-&#13;
Mih-s LIva D o c k i n g of Y p s d a n t i&#13;
8 p - n t t h e w.-eiv e n d w i t h h e r p a r -&#13;
e n t s h e r e .&#13;
Mi;** k&lt; A b b o t t of L a m i n g&#13;
s p e n t t h e pa;&gt;t w e e k w i t h C. K .&#13;
G a l l o w a y a n d f a m i l y .&#13;
M r ^ . 1. d. A'nboit s p e n t t h e last.&#13;
of Isst. w e e k in H u n t i n g t o n , I n d .&#13;
M r s . ] W n i r d M c ( \ r . * k " y of N .&#13;
H a m b u r g s p e n t Inst w e e k w i t h&#13;
r e l a t i v e s h e r e .&#13;
L u c i l l e D e m e r e s t of G r e g o r y&#13;
s p e n t t h e fiis»l of tile w e e k h e r n .&#13;
A Cash Discount of 10 percen&#13;
will I).j (ledueted frn^i ali .yoods except. Gasoline anc!&#13;
Oil- of all Uiti(l&gt;, Cnah Salt. Calf Meal and Stock&#13;
Food.&#13;
\Ye"e\'fnx:t e\ cry one to -settle accounts and&#13;
noU-s in the next 30 dav&lt;.&#13;
-v&#13;
*&#13;
•t-&#13;
:'r&#13;
t&#13;
R .espy, yours&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
V.&#13;
Poultry and &amp;$$s Wanted&#13;
Paying Cash for Poultry and Eggs&#13;
delivered at my poultry house six&#13;
days of the week and will JKIV «11&#13;
the market affords at all times.&#13;
&amp;. FARNUM&#13;
AVOID SPRING COLDS&#13;
Sudden c h a n g e s , high w i n d s , shifting&#13;
s e a s o n s cause colds and grippe,&#13;
and h t e s e spring coVds a r e a n n o y i n g&#13;
and d a n g e r o u s , a n d likely to turn&#13;
Into a chronic s u m m e r cough. In&#13;
auch cases t a k e a t r e a t m e n t of Dr.&#13;
K i n g s N e w Discovery, a p l e a s a n t&#13;
laxative tar syrup. It s o o t h e s t h e&#13;
cough, c h e c k s t h e cold a n d h e l p s&#13;
break u p a n a t t a c k of grippe. I t s already&#13;
p r e p a r e d , n o mixing o r fussing.&#13;
J u s t a s k your druggist for a bottle of&#13;
Dr. K i n g ' s N e w Discovery. T e s t e d&#13;
and tried for over 40 y e a r s .&#13;
naled at Chicago In J u n e , t h e main&#13;
reason will have been t h a t he is a&#13;
business man. H i s candidacy, then,&#13;
will h e something entirely n e w tn national&#13;
potttlca.&#13;
In his measurements, Captain Weeks&#13;
is a large man. • reasonable rasa*&#13;
at his weight would be 250 pounds.&#13;
His stature, perhaps, is Are feet and&#13;
eleven inches. His eyes are gray and&#13;
his meaner is frank and hearty. While&#13;
at the naval academy he could slowfy&#13;
raise a 112-pound dvmbbell a e o v t his&#13;
heed with hts right hand Then, kneeling&#13;
with one. leg. he could slowly raise&#13;
(Continued on Last Pasre)&#13;
SPECIAL PRICES&#13;
FOR NEXT TEN DAYS&#13;
We have on hand&#13;
One Hoosier Corn Planter, one Gale Foot-Lift.&#13;
Sulky plow, carried over from last year- will make!&#13;
verv low price on them for cash.&#13;
Screen Doors. Windom- Screen*, also feauuit Gilbert ftl&#13;
Bennett Pearl Wire Screen—at near Rust-proof as m«tal caa;&#13;
be made. Chick Feed. Scratch Feed, Baby Chick Food and&#13;
^C.alf Meal.&#13;
DINKQL £» DUNBAR&#13;
r&#13;
i •••&#13;
»&#13;
&gt;?&#13;
r:&#13;
I*.&#13;
I&#13;
- )&#13;
i'.&#13;
/&#13;
-T^'&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
THE INCREASE IN&#13;
OUR REGULAR ARMY&#13;
MARCH FOMWAREONEIS&#13;
Wen and Women of Gotham Turn&#13;
Out for the Greatest Parade&#13;
in History of U. 8- A.&#13;
T H E B I L L PROVIDES FOR&#13;
ARMY OF 206,000 MEN IN&#13;
PEACE T I M E .&#13;
AN&#13;
CAN NEVER GO BELOW 160,000&#13;
A r m y Would Consist of 65 Regiment*&#13;
of Infantry, 25 of Cavalry, 21 of Field&#13;
Artillery and Other I recreates.&#13;
New York—The old American apirit&#13;
flared up in this easygoing comfort-&#13;
loving New York and inspired the&#13;
grettieat demonstration for patriotism&#13;
. our country has ever known. It fired&#13;
the eyes and straightened the uhouli&#13;
dere of 145,000 earnest men and women&#13;
who marched up Broadway and&#13;
Fifth avenue from early in the morning&#13;
until late at night.&#13;
It made more than 1,000,000 spectators&#13;
banked at the edges of this&#13;
human torrent do soraethlng more&#13;
than cheer or beat their hands to-&#13;
Washington—A regular army of&lt;gether. It made them think—made&#13;
206,000 men at peace strength, cap- them understand how determinedly&#13;
able of expansion to 254,000 men in ^ d positively the solid citizenship&#13;
time of war, was agreed upon by w a f i expressing JtBelf in the demand&#13;
house and senate confere*a on the for complete defenses on land and&#13;
army reorganization bill, first of the 8 e a&#13;
big national defense measure. The; They were marclng In a great&#13;
report will be submitted to both bran-j cause. They had surge** spontaneches&#13;
of congress for ratification. ously from every activity of the&#13;
In the agreement on the regular, city's life, each man, each woman&#13;
army, Che senate bill system of or-' enthusiastically contributing a part&#13;
ganizatlon was retained as a sub- -0f t n e expense of the demonstrastltute&#13;
for the house #ystem, which tj0 n—g0 m e | j f s o m 6 jio, some $100,&#13;
would have recruited a maximum each from his means.&#13;
army of 140,000 men. I n w a a absolutely non-partisan.&#13;
The regular line of the army, the x n e aerried files of men that came&#13;
bill now provides, can never go swinging up the sun-bathed avenue&#13;
below 160,000, and its maximum for e i g n t hours, from 10:30 a. m.&#13;
strength in times of peace would be j un&gt;tn 7 p&lt; m . —the 115,000 men of&#13;
175,000 officers and men. In this c a l - ' ^ trade* and the professions that&#13;
culation, however, there are excluded marched In the 63 divisions of the&#13;
5,273 Philippine scout*, 6,499 In the^v^u^Q parade—did not give a moqunrtermaster'a&#13;
corps, 7,290 In t h e i m e n t ' g thought to party politics.&#13;
NEITHER SIDE&#13;
GAIN GROUND&#13;
VIOLENT FIGHTING ON BOTH&#13;
SIDES OF T H E MEUSE IN T H E&#13;
VERDUN REGION.&#13;
BRITISH MINES ARE BLOWN UP&#13;
German Reconnoltering Party Pen.&#13;
ctratcd the British Line North&#13;
of Armentlerea and Takp&#13;
10 Prisoners.&#13;
medical department, 3, 887 In the signal&#13;
corpB, 8,750 nnaasigned recraiU,&#13;
They did not care a rap who was&#13;
Republican, Democrat or Bull Moose.&#13;
* total of 31,650. These added to the Bt2( ^ y k n e w tj,ey themselves were&#13;
regular lien of 175,000 men give a to-1 tewI1 to ^ h E n J p a n ot flawless Amtal&#13;
regular army peace strength ot\taicaiiiBm w r t hout any alloy of hy-&#13;
206,669. The president Is authorized j ph«nisms. And that had its effect on&#13;
to Increase the regular army divisions !&#13;
tDj8 spectators.&#13;
to maximum strength without con-j g i n c e the first parade was given&#13;
gresslonal action. | i n N e w York, after the stars and&#13;
Under the conference agreement,; stripes became the symbol of patthe&#13;
regular army would consist of triotism, never was so much honor&#13;
65 regiments of infantry , 25 regi- spontaneously given to the national&#13;
menu of cavalry, 21 regiments of colors. There were, of coarse, the&#13;
field artillery, a coast artillery corps formal salutes, the salutes given&#13;
of 30,009 officers and men, a signal b y t n e mayor ^ n iB Btaff in Madicorps&#13;
of 3,387 men, including the s o n s q u a r e , by General Wood and&#13;
aviation section, and seven regiments Admiral Usher and their staffs of&#13;
of engineers. In the aviation section t h e ^ ^ a n d ^ n a v V ( Dy Goverthe&#13;
number of officers is Increased n o r c h a r i e 8 S. Whitman, independfrom&#13;
a total of 60 to 148, including e n t l y reviewing the column from&#13;
one colonel, one lieutenant-colonel, t h e union League club's stand at&#13;
London—Although the artillery&#13;
activity around Verdun ia being kept&#13;
up, the Germans are gradually widening&#13;
the scope of their attacks, according&#13;
to reports. The Paris war&#13;
office says the Germans made a&#13;
thrust south of Roye but were repulsed.&#13;
In the Argonne the French&#13;
were successful in a mine explosion&#13;
at LaFllle Morte, a German trench,&#13;
according to Paris. Both Paris and&#13;
Berlin tell of a continued and violent&#13;
bombardment on both aides of the&#13;
Meuse in the Verdun region. Dead&#13;
Man hill and Hill 304 are again the&#13;
centers of attack, but neither side&#13;
reports any gain of ground. There&#13;
has been no infantry action around&#13;
Verdun. A German reconnoltering&#13;
detachment penetrated the British&#13;
eecond line north of Annentleres,&#13;
blew up a sap and returned with 10&#13;
prisoners. Mines were also exploded&#13;
at other points on the British front&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 2,540.&#13;
Beat heavy steers, $8,75 &lt;&amp; 9; best handy-&#13;
weight butcher steers, $8.5008.75;&#13;
mixed steer* and heifers, »7.75®8.50;&#13;
handy light butchers, $7©8; light butchers,&#13;
16.50®7.50; best cows, 16.75(¾)&#13;
7; butcher cows, $5.75(g)6.50; common&#13;
cows, $4.5005.25; cannens, $3.50(g)&#13;
4.26; best heavy bulls, $6.75(07.25;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6.2506.75; stock&#13;
bulls, $505.50; feeders, $7.50 @8;&#13;
stackers, $6.5007.50; milkers and&#13;
springers, »40#75.&#13;
Calves—Receipts, 1,378. The be3t&#13;
selling at 110.250 10.50, with a few&#13;
very choice bunches as high as 110.75.&#13;
Culls, $809.50.&#13;
Sheep and Lamb—Receipts, 2,274.&#13;
Best lambs, $9.5009.75; fair lambs,&#13;
$7.6O08.gO; light to common lambs,&#13;
$707.2«; fair to good sheep, $707.25;&#13;
culls and common, $4.6005.50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 12,878. Good ones&#13;
bringing $9.70, mixed grades 19.50(g)&#13;
9.65; pigs, $8.5008.85.&#13;
WOLVERINE&#13;
News Brevities&#13;
eight majors, 24 captains and 144&#13;
first lieutenants.&#13;
The organization plan contem-&#13;
Fifth avenue and Thirty-ninth street.&#13;
by the police and by officials whose&#13;
service or training Impelled them to&#13;
plates attaining the full peace strength r a l s e g]oved h a n &lt; f t 0 c a p v j s 0 r B u t&#13;
within five years as proposed in the l h e m o 8 t l m pr e S 8 lve tributes to the&#13;
original preparedness plans. c o l o r a w e r e t h o g e t h a t c a m 6 D a 8 h r u H y&#13;
General officers of the line would , f r o m t h e c l o 8 e p a c k e d m u l t i t u d e u p 0 n&#13;
be increased by four major-generals t h e f l v e m i l e s of B i d e w a l k s .&#13;
and 19 brigadier-generals. The general&#13;
Btaff of the army would be increased&#13;
from 34 officers to 52. The POLICEMAN SHOT TO DEATH&#13;
provision of the senate bill which&#13;
would have placed five officers of tbo&#13;
National Guard In the general staff,&#13;
was stricken out, but provision waa&#13;
made for officers of the National&#13;
Guard to be assigned to volunteer&#13;
citizens camps at government ex-&#13;
Went to Disperse a Gang of Rowdies&#13;
and In Pursuit of Them Was Shot.&#13;
Berlin, by wireless to Sayville, N.&#13;
T.—The repulse of a French attack&#13;
with hand grenades on German positions&#13;
in the vicinity of Hill 304, on&#13;
the Verdun front, is announced In the&#13;
statement from general headquarters.&#13;
The announcement follows:&#13;
"Weetern front: A reconnoltering&#13;
detachment penetrated the enemy's&#13;
second line near Ploegsteert wood,&#13;
north of Armentlerea, blew up a sap&#13;
and returned with 10 captured British&#13;
soldiers. In the district of Givenchyen-&#13;
Gohelle mines were exploded in&#13;
positions of the British, Fighting&#13;
about the craters and in trenches&#13;
waB successful for us.&#13;
"West of the Meuse (Verdun&#13;
front) a French hand grenade attack&#13;
on Hill 304 was repulsed. The artillery&#13;
was very active on both sides&#13;
of the river.&#13;
"Eastern front: There were no&#13;
events of particular importance,&#13;
"Balkan front: Hostile aviators&#13;
who dropped bombs on Mirovitza and&#13;
Doiran wore driven away by the fire&#13;
of our anti-aircraft gnna."&#13;
Detroit—Lei and Alexander, a patrolman&#13;
attached to the Hunt&#13;
pense. An effort to give volunteer street police station, of ^Detroit,&#13;
citizens In camp pay of enlisted men was shot and almost Instantly&#13;
while in training camps failed. killed in an alley between&#13;
A provision for vocational training Illinois and Leland streets, each of&#13;
for men in the regular army regulat- St. Aubin avenue, Friday night Alexed&#13;
by the secretary of war, was left ander died In an ambulance while bein&#13;
the bill and the house proposal for ing removed to the Receiving hospital,&#13;
government operation of nitrate Within ten minutes of the shooting a&#13;
manufacturing plants to cost not dragnet of police, gathered from the&#13;
more than $20,000,000 also was ac- reserves of all nearby stations and&#13;
cepted. Selection of sites Is left to police headquarters, was thrown&#13;
the president. The product of the around the scene of the murder, but&#13;
plants, when not needed in war time, at an early hour this morning no arxnay&#13;
be sold for fertilizer under exec- rests had been made.&#13;
utive regulations. i At about 11:25 Friday night John&#13;
Pershon, a saloonkeeper, 721 St. AufiCRIIAMY'Q&#13;
I HQQPQ ^ i n a v e n u e * telephoned to the Hunt&#13;
U C n m A n i O LUdOCO street station that a half dozen young&#13;
PLACED AT 2 4 0 , 0 0 0 m e n were on the corner near his sa-&#13;
. j loon and that one of them was flourishing&#13;
a revolver.&#13;
ARMY IN MEXICO ABLE&#13;
TO MEET ANY ATTACK&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Receipts of cattle&#13;
160 cars; market 15c lower: choice&#13;
to prime native steers, $9.2509.60;&#13;
fair to good, $8.75#9.15; plain, $8.25&#13;
08.50; very coarse and common,&#13;
$7.75&lt;#8; best Canadian steers, $8.50&#13;
09.15; fair to good, $8.2508.50; common&#13;
and plain, $7.7508; choice heavy&#13;
butcher steers, $8.7609; fair to good,&#13;
|8©8.50; best handy steers, $8.75®9;&#13;
common to good 78 08.50; light, thin,&#13;
$7.5007.75; yearlings, prime, $8.750&#13;
9.35; prime fat heifers, $7.75®8.50;&#13;
best handy butcher heifers, $7,750&#13;
8.25; common to good, $6.5007.50;&#13;
best fat cows, H.6007.75; good butch,&#13;
erlng cows, $6®«.50; medium to fair,&#13;
$505.76; cutters, $4.2504.75; . good&#13;
butchering bulls, $6.5006.75; sausage&#13;
bulls, $606.25; light bulls, *505.60;&#13;
good yearlings, $6.2606.76; common,&#13;
$404.75; best feeders, $7.2507.60;&#13;
common to good, $6.5006.75; best&#13;
stockers, $6.5006.75; common to good,&#13;
$5.7606.25; milkers and springers,&#13;
$65095.&#13;
Hogs: Reoelpts 9 cars; market 10&#13;
016c lower; heavy, $10.20010.25;&#13;
yorkers $10.10@10.20; pigs, $9(g)9.25.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 75 cars;&#13;
market steady; top lambs, $10@10.25;&#13;
yearlings, $8.25@8.75; wethers, $8®&#13;
8.25; ewes, $707.50.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 2,000;&#13;
steady; tops, $10.25010.50;&#13;
good, $9 09.60; fed calves,&#13;
6.25.&#13;
market&#13;
fair to&#13;
$4.50®&#13;
The Lines of Communication Are&#13;
Weil Guarded Says Pershing,&#13;
After Eighty Days of Fierce Fighting&#13;
at Fort Vsrdun, Paris&#13;
Reports&#13;
Paris—German losses In eighty days&#13;
of battling at Verdun now reach a total&#13;
of 40,000, according to estimates&#13;
made here, a high percentage of this&#13;
nnmber representing German dead.&#13;
Since the attack on the fortress was&#13;
resumed ten days ago with thrusts&#13;
at the French lines on both sides of&#13;
Ike Meuse, the Germans have lost,&#13;
nearly 20,000 men. In positions re-1&#13;
Patrolman Alexander and a brother&#13;
officer, Louis Hacker, the two minutemen&#13;
at the Hunt street station, were&#13;
sent to the saloon and on the corner&#13;
of St. Aubln avenue and Illinois street&#13;
found a gang of seven of eight young&#13;
men.&#13;
. As the policemen dashed Into sight&#13;
on motorcycles, the gang separated,&#13;
about half of them going east over&#13;
Illinois street, while the others went&#13;
west on the same street.&#13;
Hacker chased the men who went&#13;
west, while Alexander went after the&#13;
ones who had gone east When Hack*&#13;
Advance Base, Punitive Expedition,&#13;
United States Army, Via Radio to Columbus,&#13;
N. M.—General Pershing, who&#13;
visited the camp on a tour of inspection,&#13;
emphatically denied the alarmist&#13;
rumors published by many American&#13;
newspapers to the effect that the&#13;
army now in Mexico is menaced on&#13;
every hand.&#13;
"You may say," he said, "that our&#13;
army now In Mexico is fully able to&#13;
cope with any situation which may&#13;
arise, and you may add also that there&#13;
is no danger of an attack by any&#13;
source or direction.&#13;
"The result of the battle at Ojos&#13;
Azules a few days ago put such fear&#13;
in the heads of the bandits that it&#13;
will be a long time before they invite&#13;
another such beating as was then&#13;
given them."&#13;
General Pershing denied categorically&#13;
that there has been any movements&#13;
of the army towards the border or&#13;
that any such movement is intended&#13;
in the near future. The lines of communication&#13;
are well guarded and&#13;
forced and forces so well disposed&#13;
as to be in no danger of being attacked,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
$1.22 3-4; July opened with a drop of&#13;
l-2c at $1.23 1-2; September opened&#13;
at $1.23 1-4; declined to $1.22 1-4 and&#13;
advanced to $1.23 1-4; No. 1 white,&#13;
$1.17 3-4c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 75c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
77 l-2c; No. 4 yellow, 75 076c,&#13;
Oats—Standard, 48 1-c; No. 3 white,&#13;
47 l-2c; No. 4 white, 45 1-2046 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 95c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and May&#13;
shipment, $3.90; June, $3.95.&#13;
Seeds—Prime red clover and prime&#13;
alsike, $8.85; prime timothy, $3.50,&#13;
Hay—No. 1 timothy, $21.50021;&#13;
No. 2 timothy, $18019; No. 1 mixed,&#13;
$15.50016; No. 2 mixed, $11.13; No. 1&#13;
clover, $13014; rye straw, $7.5008;&#13;
wheat and oat straw, $7.50^8; wheat&#13;
and oat straw, $8.5007 per ton In car«&#13;
lots, Detroit.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 lb8., jobbing lots; First pafc&#13;
ent, $6.50; second patent, $6.20;&#13;
straight, $5.90; spring patent, $6.80;&#13;
rye, $6 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-tb .sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran $24; standard middlings, $22;&#13;
fine middlings $31.60 corn and&#13;
crop, $28 per ton ;&#13;
Genera!&#13;
captured by the French in a success- ( ^ : ^ ™ ^ 7 ^ ^ hZZ&#13;
« o « i n t e T ^ t t a c k east of Dead Mans w hM* *™* htaJ * b J f k h e n ^&#13;
t m T w W^JMO. «# „*.-.w 1 Ann rw-^.r,- several shots and turned to run back&#13;
^ J ^ f i S Germans t o ^ ^ , ^ ^ o f Mmad„, I n * ,&#13;
Al ^ K T ™ * fc.nv rsf •&gt;•• xr«n«* »»«5^«-^ just off Illinois street he al-&#13;
21 ^Z 7 1 J northwest of Verd?u n, t••h•e LopJpIoSsiSngj 'w * * "»H 0*«" Alexander^ bodyJ ,&#13;
armies apparently are in another&#13;
deadlock. The French improved their&#13;
4efenslTe positions by an advance in&#13;
the direction of Hill 287, the war offtee&#13;
ouMttnoed, the Germans making&#13;
n* Infantry attack.&#13;
On the east bank of the Meuse,&#13;
—ratal heavy German attacks on the&#13;
&lt;Manmontrrort Donaumont line were&#13;
tyisoond annual cotnmo,&#13;
at the grand lodge, F. A A.&#13;
held in Battle&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST&#13;
Markets,&#13;
navels,&#13;
$4 04.50 per&#13;
90c&#13;
per&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Pekin—The government has declared&#13;
a partial moratorium. Gov*&#13;
eminent banks will not pay out da*&#13;
posits and will not redeem paper money&#13;
with gold or silver.&#13;
New Hartford, Oonn.—Clara Louise&#13;
KaOosjff Strakosch, formerly a nunooa&#13;
prima donna, died following a year's&#13;
with eancesv She waa&#13;
in tompterviUe, B. C. Jar/ U, IMS.&#13;
Deadwood, 8. D.—Four to six Inches&#13;
of snow has fallen over the Black&#13;
Hills region.&#13;
London—The British steamer Eretrla&#13;
of 3,464 tons gross, has been&#13;
sunk, Lloyd's shipping agency has&#13;
announced.&#13;
Toledo, Ohio—George EL Lorenx,&#13;
postmaster of Toledo from 1836 to&#13;
ISM, died at his residence, after an&#13;
illness of two months.&#13;
Washlnfton—The conference report&#13;
on the annual p—tofflcs appropriation&#13;
bin. containing a provialon&#13;
raising the maartmnm of individual&#13;
postal savings accounts to $1,000, and&#13;
with the section for more pay to mailearrytng&#13;
railroads, nan haan agreed&#13;
to by the&#13;
Oranges—California&#13;
3.76 per box.&#13;
Lemons—California,&#13;
box.&#13;
Cocoanuts—$7.50 per sack and&#13;
0 $ 1 per doz.&#13;
Pineapples—Florida, $2.7503&#13;
case and $202.25 per doz.&#13;
Strawberries—Louisiana, $1.75&#13;
24-pint case, $3.2503.50 per 24 quart&#13;
case.&#13;
Nuts—Spanish chestnuts, 10c per&#13;
lb; shellbark hickory, $1.50; large&#13;
hickory, $1.25 per bu.; walnuts, $1.25&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Apples—Qreenings, $303.75; Spy,&#13;
$3.5004; Baldwins, $303.50; Steele&#13;
Reds, $404.50 per bbl; western, $1-75&#13;
0 2 per box&#13;
Mushrooms—30035c per lb.&#13;
Asparagus—Illinois section, $ 1 0&#13;
L25 per box&#13;
Cabbage—$202.25 per bbl; new,&#13;
$3J 78.60 per crate.&#13;
Celery—Florida, $2,7603 per crate&#13;
and SOc0$l per do*&#13;
Maple Sugar—New, 15016c per lb;&#13;
syrup, fU«01.8O per gal&#13;
Tomatoes--Hothouae, 18020c per&#13;
lb; Flarlda, SS0S.S8 par orate.&#13;
Potato— Cariots on track, McO&#13;
$1 for white and » 0 0 Wc tor red par&#13;
Lettace Pothouse, 1601?« par lb;&#13;
Jackson.—Patrick Swift waa sentenced&#13;
to Ionia reformatory for from&#13;
uix months to two years.&#13;
Saginaw.—MrB. George B. Beyerlein,&#13;
a resident of Frankenmuth for 53.&#13;
years, died of apoplexy.&#13;
Marshall.—Judge North Monday sentenced&#13;
Arthur Cud worth to 20 dayB in&#13;
Jail and $75 fine and coats for violating&#13;
the local option law.&#13;
Hillsdale.—Mrs. Harriet Edwards,&#13;
well-known resident of this city, died,&#13;
aged sixty-nine years, at her home&#13;
here.&#13;
West Branch.—Miss Bertha Hagedorn,&#13;
seventeen years old, a high&#13;
school girl of this city, is dead of heart&#13;
disease.&#13;
Lansing.—Upon the recommendation&#13;
of the state board of corrections and&#13;
charities, Governor Ferris has appointed&#13;
M. R. Salter as agent for Gratiot&#13;
county.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—Mrs. Charlotte Bennett,&#13;
Eaton township's oldest pioneer&#13;
resident, aged eighty-nine years, waa&#13;
seriously Injured by a fall at her home,&#13;
west of this city. She will recover.&#13;
Ann Arboi'—Joseph B. Martin, a&#13;
resident of this c&gt;ty for 30 years, died&#13;
at his home after an illness of several&#13;
months. He was prominent In&#13;
Masonic circles.&#13;
West Branch.—The farm residence&#13;
of James Anderson of Edwards township&#13;
was burned to the ground with&#13;
all its contents during a terrific wind&#13;
storm.&#13;
Hillsdale.—Mr. and Mrs. Albert W.&#13;
Venees of Hillsdale street celebrated&#13;
their flfty-ecventh wedding anniversary.&#13;
They were married in Fulton&#13;
county, Ohio, May 10, 1859.&#13;
Muskegon.—Ross W. Judson, vicepresident&#13;
of the Continental Motor&#13;
company of Detroit and Muskegon, has&#13;
purchased a hydroaeroplane and will&#13;
fly to his office from his summer home&#13;
at Lake Harbor.&#13;
Adrian,—The arrest of Joseph Mattausch,&#13;
twenty years old, is believed to&#13;
have cleared many burglaries which&#13;
have terrorized Adrian citizens. He&#13;
is alleged to have confessed to flve&#13;
robberies.&#13;
Hillsdale.—At a chapel service conducted&#13;
by Prof. Bertram Barber, Governor&#13;
Ferris' arbor day proclamation&#13;
was read, after which all marched ^y&#13;
classes to the campus, where class&#13;
trees were planted.&#13;
Marshall.—Roy Allen and George&#13;
Chapin, two Jackson boys, who stole&#13;
an automobllo in Battle Creek, were&#13;
released on probation by Judge North&#13;
upon payment of $125 to cover costs&#13;
and damage to the automobile.&#13;
Standish.—The large farmhouse on&#13;
the N. B. Bradley farm, six miles&#13;
south of this city, was struck by lightning&#13;
during a thunderstorm, and&#13;
burned to the ground. The loss will&#13;
reach about ;S,000.&#13;
Grand Rapids.—G. D. Curtis, who began&#13;
as an express messenger on the&#13;
G. R. &amp; I. out of Grand Rapids several&#13;
years ago, has Just been elected vicepresident&#13;
of the Adams Express company&#13;
with headquarters In Chicago, he&#13;
announced to his friends here.&#13;
Hillsdale.—Covered stock pens at&#13;
shipping points and alleged discrimination&#13;
in railroad rates were the principal&#13;
matters discussed at the annual&#13;
meeting of the Tri-Stato Michigan,&#13;
Ohio and Indiana Live Stock Dealers*&#13;
association here.&#13;
Hastings.—Deputy Game Wardens&#13;
Mlllenbacher and Huber arrested H. J.&#13;
Wilks and Frank Falvey of Kalamazoo,&#13;
who were caught with a set line in&#13;
Crooked lake, and Wallace Campbell of&#13;
Cedar Creek, who was discovered wading&#13;
up a stream at midnight and catching&#13;
black bass with his hands. All&#13;
were heavily fined in Delton.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—For the eleventh&#13;
consecutive year the Ladies* History&#13;
club of this city has voted to provide&#13;
funds for the care of the park at the&#13;
Michigan Central depot here, which&#13;
through the efforts of the club has&#13;
per j been converted into one of the beauty&#13;
spots of Eaton Rapids. The Michigan&#13;
Central Railroad company provides the&#13;
plants and shrubbery and the club for&#13;
care and upkeep.&#13;
Manistee.—Flattering recognition of&#13;
the splendid work of Deputy Sheriff&#13;
John Bujka in capturing a murderer&#13;
and two accomplices in a Denton&#13;
(Mont) brawl, is expressed in an issue&#13;
of a paper of that city received&#13;
here. Bujka is a Manistee youth who&#13;
attracted considerable attention as a&#13;
baseball player during the Michigan&#13;
state league days. He left Manistee&#13;
two ye*rs ago.&#13;
Jackson.—In order to accommodate&#13;
persons who hare made application&#13;
for automobile licenses but have not&#13;
yet received them, the city manager&#13;
has issued temporary licenses which&#13;
can be used within the city. Bach applicant&#13;
rrust pay 60 cents for the license&#13;
and make affidavit that application&#13;
for a state Heense has been inade.&#13;
When the regular license nan been ra»&#13;
a rafted of Sf cents wffl an&#13;
oat&#13;
$30&#13;
made by the city.&#13;
.*'&#13;
v £&#13;
A*&#13;
.-:&amp;&#13;
»»*»^PJP vf+ESSVOBESSE 11 j » i « i ) « r &gt; » &gt; n u n i wi.1! i i,i IHI......I •! . , , , , ^ , . , u i i n . i n i i f i n . &gt; 9 &lt;^V'!"mt,i"^M, ;,' l*j W.M3&#13;
*mmfr£."*«:±.., f&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • M M I M I M&#13;
' * * - !&#13;
I&#13;
T!&#13;
The Cita of&#13;
Numbered&#13;
Daus&#13;
sanaai&#13;
BB F R A N C I S LYNDE \&#13;
IUiatralhna by C. D. Rhode*&#13;
M O M t M M M M M M M t &lt;&#13;
Copyright by Charlns Scuhaer'* Sag*&#13;
CHAPTER XX—Continued.&#13;
—14—&#13;
The chance did not materialize. The&#13;
tight* In a certain upper office In the&#13;
Nlquoia building were still turned on&#13;
long after M. Poudrecaulx had given&#13;
up the hope of the deep-sea Bounding&#13;
for that night. Some time after the&#13;
lobby crowd had melted, and before&#13;
the lower avenue had begun to order&#13;
email-hour suppers of Bongraa, the two&#13;
high windows in the Nlquoia building&#13;
went dark and a few minutes later the&#13;
man who had spent half the night&#13;
tramping the floor or sitting with his&#13;
bead In his hands at the desk in the&#13;
upper room came out of the street&#13;
archway and walked briskly to the&#13;
telegraph office across the plaza.&#13;
"How Is the line tonight Sanford—&#13;
pretty clear?" he asked of the night&#13;
manager, killing time while the sleepy&#13;
sight receiving clerk was making his&#13;
third attempt to count the words in&#13;
the closely-written, two-page government&#13;
cipher.&#13;
"Nothing doing; "a little A. P. stuff&#13;
drizzling In now and then," said the&#13;
manager; adding: "But that's like the&#13;
poor—always with us."&#13;
"All right; there is no particular&#13;
rush about this matter of mine, Just&#13;
ao It la sure to be in the secretary's&#13;
bands at the opening of business In&#13;
the morning. But be careful that it&#13;
goes straight—you'd better have It&#13;
checked back before It is put on the&#13;
through wire from Denver."&#13;
"Sure, Mr. Broulllard. What you say&#13;
in this tittle old shack goes as It lays.&#13;
"Well look out and not bull your message.&#13;
Good night."&#13;
CHAPTER XXI&#13;
An Evening Call&#13;
Notwithstanding the preliminary rumors&#13;
which Bongras and many others&#13;
had sought so anxiously to verify, the&#13;
Mlrapolltan awakening to a realization&#13;
that once more the tide had turned to&#13;
bring new billows of prosperity tumbling&#13;
into the valley of the Nlquoia&#13;
came with a sudden and triumphant&#13;
shock.&#13;
The first of the quickening waves&#13;
fell upon the government reservation.&#13;
Between sunrise and nightfall, on a&#13;
day when the cloud of depression had&#13;
crown black with panic threatenings,&#13;
the apathy which had lately character&#13;
laed the work on the great dam disappeared&#13;
as If by magic. The city found&#13;
Stg billboards posted with loud calls&#13;
for labor; the Idle mixers were put in&#13;
commission; the quarries and crushers&#13;
began to thunder again; and the&#13;
stagings once more shook and trembled&#13;
under the feet of a busy army of pud*&#13;
dlers,&#13;
While the revival was as yet only Is&#13;
the embryonic period, fresh labor began&#13;
to come In gangs and in carloads&#13;
and presently by special trains. Swarming&#13;
colonies of Greeks, Italians and&#13;
Bulgarians were dumped upon the city&#13;
through the gate of the railroad station,&#13;
and once more Cbigrlngo avenue&#13;
at night became a cheerful midway&#13;
answering to the speech of all nations.&#13;
Change, rerrvlflcation, reanlmation&#13;
instantly became the new order of&#13;
the day; and again Mlrapolls flung itself&#13;
Joyously into the fray, reaping&#13;
where it bad not sown and sowing&#13;
only where the quickest crop could ba&#13;
gathered. For now the dullest of the&#13;
reapers saw that the government work&#13;
was really the Mlrapolltan breath of&#13;
Ufa.&#13;
&lt; This new and never-mentioned con&#13;
victlon wrought an eager change in&#13;
men and in methods. Credit vanished&#13;
and spot cash waa tacitly acknowledged&#13;
to be the only way to do business&#13;
in a live community. Fortunes&#13;
oji««tj»rt bauds swiftly, as before, but&#13;
sow there was little bargaining and.&#13;
with hot haste for the foreword, little&#13;
time for ft. To the western motto of&#13;
-Oo to It and gat the money* waa&#13;
added: "And dont coma back without&#13;
it" It was said with a laugh, but&#13;
behind the laugh there was a menace.&#13;
Among the Individual transformations&#13;
wrought by the new condition*,&#13;
the young chief of the reclamation&#13;
aervlos afforded the moat striking example.&#13;
Prom the morning when he bad&#13;
summarily canceled the lease for the&#13;
offices la the Nlquoia building and bad&#13;
returned bis headquarters to the old&#13;
log frnfl4*rg« on the gorerument reear-&#13;
•attoa aad thence had Issued bis first&#13;
of orders tor the reanmpttoa of&#13;
worhoB the&#13;
those who had not known him best discovered&#13;
that they had not known him&#13;
at all Even to Grtslow and the man&#13;
of his staff he was curt, crisply r^nlstory,&#13;
almost brutal For one and ail&#13;
there was rarely anything beyond the&#13;
shotlike sentence: "Drive It, man;&#13;
drive it; that's what you're hare t o r -&#13;
drive it!"&#13;
The time ho took to eat his hurried&#13;
meals at Bongras' could be measured&#13;
in minutes, and what hours he gate&#13;
to sleep no man knew, since be was&#13;
the last to leave the headquarters at&#13;
night and the first oa the work in the&#13;
morning. Twice, after the renewed&#13;
activities on the great wall had become&#13;
a well-ordered race against time,&#13;
and the concrete waa pouring into the&#13;
high forms in steady streams from the&#13;
ranlced batteries of mixers, Mr. Coitr&#13;
wright had sent for Broulllard. and on&#13;
each occasion the messenger had gone&#13;
back with the brief word. "Too busy&#13;
during working hours." And when a&#13;
third messenger came to Inquire what&#13;
Mr. Brouillard's working hours were,&#13;
the equally blunt answer returned waa:&#13;
"All the time."&#13;
In the face of such discouragements&#13;
Mr. Cortwright was constrained to&#13;
pocket his dignity as mayor, as the&#13;
potentate of the exchanges, and as&#13;
the unquestionable master of the surly&#13;
young industry captain who refused&#13;
to come when he was called, and to go&#13;
in person. Choosing the evening hour&#13;
when he had been assured that he was&#13;
likely to find Broulllard alone and at&#13;
work, he crossed the boundaries of the&#13;
sacred reservation and made his way&#13;
to the door of the log-built mapping&#13;
room.&#13;
"I came around to see what Is eating&#13;
you these days," was the pudgy&#13;
tyrant's greeting for the young man&#13;
flitting under the shaded desk lamp.&#13;
"Why don't you drop In once ln^a&#13;
while and give me the run of thingsr*&#13;
"I gave your clerk the reason," said&#13;
Broulllard laconically. "I'm too busy.'1'&#13;
"The devil you are!" snapped the&#13;
great man, finding the only armchair&#13;
In the room and dropping heavily Into&#13;
it "Since when?"&#13;
"Since the first time you sent for&#13;
me—and before."&#13;
Mr. Cortwright recovered his working&#13;
geniality only with a palpable effort&#13;
"See here, Broulllard, you know you&#13;
never make any money by being short&#13;
with me. Let's drop It and get down&#13;
to business. What I wanted to say Is&#13;
that you are overdoing it; you are put'&#13;
ting on too much steam. You've&#13;
brought the boom, all right, but at&#13;
the pace you're Betting It wont last&#13;
long enough. Are you catching onr"&#13;
"I'm listening," was the noncommittal&#13;
reply.&#13;
"Well, enough's enough, and too&#13;
much of a good thing scalds the hog&#13;
before you're ready to dress It and cut&#13;
It up. It's all right for you to run men&#13;
In here by the train load and scatter&#13;
'em out over your scaffolding—the&#13;
more the merrier, and It's good for the&#13;
town—but you needn't sweat the last&#13;
shovelful of hurry out of them the way&#13;
you're doing. It won't do to get your&#13;
Job finished too soon."&#13;
"Before congress convenes, you&#13;
mean?" suggested Broulllard.&#13;
"That's just what I mean. 8txing It&#13;
out Make It last"&#13;
Broulllard sat back In his pivot chair&#13;
and began to play with the paperknife.&#13;
"And if I don't choose to 'string it&#13;
out'—If I even confess that I am straining&#13;
every nerve to do this thing that&#13;
you don't want me to do—what than.&#13;
Mr. Cortwright?"&#13;
The quiet retort Jolted the stocky&#13;
man In the armchair as if it had been&#13;
a blow. But he recovered quickly.&#13;
"I've been looking for that," be said&#13;
with a nervous twinkling of the little&#13;
gray eyes. "You've no business being&#13;
out of business, Broulllard. If you'd&#13;
quit paddling sand and cement and little&#13;
rocks together and strike your gait&#13;
right in ten years you'd be the richest&#13;
man this side of the mountain a 111&#13;
be open-banded with you: This time&#13;
you've got us where we cant wiggle.&#13;
We've got to have mora time. How&#13;
much is it going to cost us?"&#13;
Broulllard shook his head slowly.&#13;
"Odd as It may seem to you, rm oot&#13;
of your market this time, Mr. Cortwright—&#13;
quite out of it**&#13;
"Oh. no, you're not You're got&#13;
property to sell—a good bit of i t Wecan&#13;
turn it for you at a figure that&#13;
wUl—*&#13;
"No; you are mistaken," waa the&#13;
quick reply. 1 have no property in&#13;
Mlrapolls. I am merely a squatter oa&#13;
government land, like everyone else&#13;
In the Nlquoia valley."&#13;
Tor heaven's sake!" the promoter&#13;
burst out "What's got Into you?&#13;
Don't you go around trying to stand&#13;
that corpse on its feet; it's a damd one,&#13;
I tell yon! The Coronlda titles are all&#13;
right!"&#13;
There are BO Coronlda titles. You&#13;
have known tt all along, aad I know tt&#13;
—now. I have tt straight from the bureau&#13;
of land statistics, in a letter from&#13;
a man who knows. The nearest&#13;
boundary of the old Spsxish grant is&#13;
Latlgo peak, ten miles south of Cht&gt;&#13;
gringo. The department knows this&#13;
and to prepared to prove ft Aad m&#13;
the vary beginning you and your associates&#13;
wars warned that you coeJd aat&#13;
acquire homestead or other rights hi&#13;
the Nlquoia.-&#13;
ft go!" snapped the&#13;
king of the pack. "We've got to get&#13;
out alive and we're going to get out&#13;
alive. What's your price?"&#13;
"1 have answered that question once,&#13;
hut 111 make It a little plainer if you&#13;
wish. It Is beyond your reach; If you&#13;
should turn your money-coining soul&#13;
into cash you couldnt pay It this time&#13;
Mr. Cortwright"&#13;
"That's guff—boy-talk—play-ranfclng!&#13;
You want something—is it that&#13;
damned Maasingale business again? I&#13;
dont own the railroad, but If you think&#13;
I do. 111 sign anything you want to&#13;
write to the traffic people. Let Maastngsie&#13;
sell his ore and get the money&#13;
for It Hell go gamble it as he did&#13;
yours."&#13;
Broulllard looked up under the&#13;
shaded electric globe and bis handsome&#13;
face wrinkled in a sour smile.&#13;
"You are ready to let go. are you?"&#13;
he said. "You are too late. Mr. Ford&#13;
returned from Europe a week ago, and&#13;
I have a wire saying that tonight's&#13;
"How U the Line Tonight, Pretty&#13;
Clear?"&#13;
through freight from Brewster is chiefly&#13;
made up of empty ore cars for the&#13;
'Little Susan.' "&#13;
The sandy-gray eyes blinked at this,&#13;
but Mr. Cortwright was of those who&#13;
die hard.&#13;
"What I said still holds good. Mas&#13;
singale or his son, or both of them,&#13;
will gamble the money. And If they&#13;
don't, we've got 'em tied up In a hard&#13;
knot on the stock proposition."&#13;
"I was coming to that" said Broulllard&#13;
quietly. "For a long time you&#13;
have been telling me what I should do&#13;
and I have done It Now I'll take my&#13;
turn. You must notify your associates&#13;
that the 'Little Susan' deal is off.&#13;
There will be a called meeting of the&#13;
directors here In this room tomorrow&#13;
evening at eight o'clock, and—"&#13;
"Who calls It?" Interrupted the&#13;
tyrant&#13;
"The president."&#13;
"President nothing!" was the snort*&#13;
ed comment "An old, drunken gambler&#13;
who hasn't got sense enough to&#13;
go in when it rains! Say, Broulllard,&#13;
111 cut that pie so there'll be enough&#13;
to go around the table. Just leave&#13;
Maasingale out of it and make up&#13;
your mind that you're going to sit In&#13;
with us. We've bought the mine and&#13;
paid for it I've got the stock put&#13;
away where it's safe. Maasingale&#13;
cant touch a share of it or vote It&#13;
either."&#13;
Broulllard shook his bead.&#13;
"You are stubbornly hard to convince,&#13;
Mr, Cortwright but 111 try one&#13;
more time. You will come bare tomorrow&#13;
evening, with your confederates&#13;
in the deal prepared to take the&#13;
money you have actually spent in bettorments&#13;
and prepared to release the&#13;
stock. If you fan to do so you will&#13;
get nothing. Is that explicit enough?*&#13;
"You're craxy!" shouted the promoter.&#13;
"You talk as if there wasn't any&#13;
law In this countryl"&#13;
There isnt—for such men as yon;&#13;
you and your kind put jum serves&#13;
above the law. But that Is neither&#13;
here nor there. You dont want to go&#13;
into court with this conspiracy which&#13;
you have cooked up to beat David Masv&#13;
stngale out of his property. It's the&#13;
butt thing on earth you want to do.&#13;
So you'd better do the other thing—&#13;
while yon can."&#13;
fl^ CHAPTER XXII £ g&#13;
The Sunset Gun&#13;
Mr. Cortwright sat back in his chair,&#13;
and ones mora Brouniaxd saw hi the&#13;
sandy-gray eyes the look which had&#13;
bean in the SOB'S ayes when the derelict&#13;
fought for freedom to flnlah tiffing&#13;
Stephen Mssstngala&#13;
"It's a pretty dangerous thing to tr?&#13;
to bold a man up unless youVe got the&#13;
drop oa him, Broulllard," ha said significantly.&#13;
T v e got yon covered from&#13;
my pocket; rve had you covered that&#13;
way ever since you begaa to book and&#13;
roar on me a couple of months ago.&#13;
One little wire word to Waaaiagtoa&#13;
fixes you for good aad an. If I say the&#13;
word, you'll stay on your Job Just as&#13;
long tut it will take another man u&gt; get&#13;
here to supersede you."&#13;
Broulllard Laughed.&#13;
"The pocket drop Is never very safe,&#13;
Mr. Cortwright You are likely to lose&#13;
too much time feeling for the proper&#13;
range. Then, too, you can never be&#13;
sure that you won't miss. Also, your&#13;
assumption that I'm taking an unarmed&#13;
man's chance is wrong. I can&#13;
kill you before you can pull the trigger&#13;
of the pocket gun you speak of—&#13;
kill you so dead that you won't need&#13;
anything but a coroner's Jury and a&#13;
coffin. How long would it take you to&#13;
get action in the Washington matter.&#13;
do you think?"&#13;
"I've told you; you have Just about&#13;
a week longer to live, at the farthest"&#13;
"I can better that," waa the cool&#13;
reply. "I have asked you to do a certain&#13;
thing tomorrow night. If you don't&#13;
do It, the Spotlight will print, on the&#13;
following morning, that letter 1 spoke&#13;
of—the letter from my friend In the&#13;
bureau of land statistics. When that&#13;
letter is printed everybody in Mlrapolis&#13;
will know that you and your accom&#13;
plicea are plain swindlers, amenable to&#13;
the criminal law, and from that moment&#13;
there will never be another real&#13;
estate transfer in the Niquola valley."&#13;
The promoter rose slowly out of his&#13;
chair and stood leaning heavily with&#13;
his fat hands, palms downward, on the&#13;
fiat-topped desk. His cheeks were&#13;
puffed out and the bitten mustaches&#13;
bristled like the whiskers of a gray old&#13;
leader of the timber wolves.&#13;
"Broulllard." he grated huskily,&#13;
"does this mean that you're breaking&#13;
with us, once for all?"&#13;
"It means more than that; it means&#13;
that I have reached a point at which I&#13;
am ashamed to admit that there was&#13;
ever anything to break."&#13;
"Then listen: You've helped this&#13;
thing along as much as, or more than,&#13;
anybody else in this town; and there&#13;
are men right here In Mlrapolls—&#13;
plenty of 'em—who will kill you like a&#13;
rat in a hole if you go back on them&#13;
as you are threatening to. Don't you&#13;
know that?"&#13;
The younger man was balancing *he&#13;
paper cutter across his finger.&#13;
"That Is the least of my worries,"&#13;
he answered, speaking slowly. "I am&#13;
all sorts of a moral coward, I suppose;&#13;
l'V9 proved that often enough In the&#13;
past few months, God knows. But I'm&#13;
not the other kind, Mr. Cortwright"&#13;
"Then I'll take a hand!" snarled the&#13;
tyrant at bay. "I'll spend a million dollars,&#13;
if I have to, blacklisting you from&#13;
one end of this country to the other!&#13;
I'll fix it so you'll never build anything&#13;
bigger than a hog pen again as&#13;
long as you live! I'll publish your record&#13;
wherever there Is a newspaper to&#13;
print It!" He pounded on the desk&#13;
with his flst—"I'll do it—money can&#13;
do It! More than that, you'll never get&#13;
a smell of that Chtgrlngo mine—you&#13;
nor Dave Masslngale!"&#13;
Broulllard tossed the paper-knife Into&#13;
a half-opened drawer and squared&#13;
himself at the blotting pad.&#13;
"That Is your challenge, Is It?" be&#13;
said curtly. "So be It Start your&#13;
machinery. You will doubtless get&#13;
me, not because you have money, bat&#13;
because for a time I was weak enough&#13;
and wicked enough to climb down and&#13;
stand on your level. But If you dont&#13;
hurry, Mr. Cortwright, 111 get you first.&#13;
Are you going? One thing more—and&#13;
it's a kindness; get your son out of&#13;
town before this Masslngale matter&#13;
comes up for adjustment It will be&#13;
safer."&#13;
"Is that all yon have to say?*&#13;
•Pretty nearly all, except to ten you&#13;
that your time Is growing short and&#13;
you and those who are in with you had&#13;
better begin to set your houses In order.&#13;
If you'll come over here at eight&#13;
o'clock tomorrow night prepared to do&#13;
the square thing by David Masking*la,&#13;
m withhold the publication of that&#13;
letter which win stamp you and your&#13;
associates as criminals before the lawr&#13;
but that Is the only concession I shall&#13;
make.**&#13;
•"You've got to make at least one&#13;
more!" stormed the outgoing magnata.&#13;
'Yon dont have to set any dates or&#13;
anything of that kind for your damned&#13;
drowning act!"&#13;
"In Justice to a good many people&#13;
who are measurably Innocent I shall&#13;
have to do that very thing," returned&#13;
the engineer firmly. T h e notice wffl&#13;
appear in tomorrow's Spotlight"&#13;
It was the final straw in the stocky&#13;
promoter's crushing wrath burden* His&#13;
fat face turned purple, and for a second&#13;
or two he clawed the air, gasping&#13;
for breath Broulllard sat back In his&#13;
chair, waiting for the volcanic upheaval&#13;
But tt did not coma. Whan ha&#13;
bad regained a measure of self-control&#13;
Mr. Cortwright tuned slowly and want&#13;
out without a word, stumbling over the&#13;
threshold and slamming the door&#13;
heavily as be disappeared.&#13;
For a time after the promoter's&#13;
wordless departure Broulllard aat at&#13;
his desk writing steadily. When the&#13;
but of the memorandum sheets waa&#13;
filled be found his hat and street coat&#13;
and left the office. Ten minutes later&#13;
be had penetrated to the dusty den on&#13;
the second floor of the Spotlight office&#13;
where Harlan waa grinding copy for&#13;
his paper. Broulllard took a chair at&#13;
the deak end aad laid the sheets of&#13;
penciled government paper under the&#13;
editor's eyea.&#13;
(TO BE COKTIXUEOUI&#13;
Temperance&#13;
Wofes88&#13;
(Conducted by th« Ntttlonai W u m a n ' s&#13;
Christian Temperance Union.)&#13;
DRINKING DISCOURAGED.&#13;
"The men who drink alcoholic&#13;
liquors, even if they axe not known to&#13;
become drunk, are not advanced to responsible&#13;
positions."—A_ M. Byera&#13;
Company, Pittsburgh, Pa.&#13;
"In our work we cannot use a man&#13;
who drinks liquor. Men who use It at&#13;
all are not In a condition to work anywhere&#13;
in it with the man who lets it&#13;
alone. We hope the traffic in liquors&#13;
will soon be voted out of existence." —&#13;
Mclrmea Steel Company, Lid., Corry,&#13;
Pa.&#13;
•'The efficiency of a man is reduced&#13;
in exact proportion to the amount of&#13;
alcohol he drinks. The total abstainer&#13;
ranks above the moderate drinker&#13;
in reliability and efficiency in all&#13;
classes of wqrk nearly as much as&#13;
the moderate drinker does above the&#13;
heavy regular drinker."—Follansbee&#13;
Furnace Company, Follansbee, W. Va.&#13;
"We give bonuses to abstainers&#13;
among our foremen. Our aim is tokeep&#13;
our organization free from&#13;
liquor and we base this upon its commercial&#13;
value to us." — Delaware&#13;
River Steel Company, CheHter, Pa.&#13;
"Moderate drinking is detrimental&#13;
to efficiency and reliability."—Penn&#13;
Steel Castings and Machine Company,&#13;
Chester, Pa.&#13;
"Drinking, even moderately, interferes&#13;
with efficiency and reliability."—&#13;
Nicetown Plate Washer Company,&#13;
Nicetown, Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
"No one remains a moderate drinker.&#13;
They either stop altogether or become&#13;
heavy drinkers. We discharge&#13;
without mercy men who report for&#13;
work under the influence of liquor."—&#13;
Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe-Bending&#13;
Company, Harrisburg, Pa.&#13;
"We use every moral force to keep&#13;
men out of saloons and we never advance&#13;
any man who drinks."—Wyoming&#13;
Shovel Works, Wyoming. Pa.&#13;
We know from general observation&#13;
that a man's efficiency is reduced 30&#13;
to 50 per cent through the use of alcohol."—&#13;
David Bradley Manufacture&#13;
lng Works, Bradley, 111.&#13;
CAUSE OF LOWE8T DEATH RATE.&#13;
Why has Kansas the lowest death&#13;
rate in the United States? This question&#13;
was asked by doubting federal officials&#13;
after they had investigated the&#13;
report of W. J. V. Deacon, state registrar&#13;
of vital statistics, showing that&#13;
the Kansas death rate was only 9.8&#13;
per 1,000. The answer of Mr. Deacon&#13;
as given to Samuel L. Rogers, directors&#13;
of the United States bureau of&#13;
census, gave this reason among others:&#13;
"Kansas is a prohibition state and&#13;
has been for a generation, and In Kansas,&#13;
prohibition really prohibits. I do&#13;
not mean by this there Is no alcohol&#13;
consumed In the state, but the absence&#13;
of the saloon means much to&#13;
our growing boys and young men,&#13;
who, In the absence of any bar room,&#13;
find more healthful pastimes than loafing&#13;
In an alcohol laden atmosphere.&#13;
"Another and more Important fact&#13;
concerning prohibition Is that the&#13;
wage of the laborer or mechanic is not&#13;
dissipated, but goes to supply those&#13;
necessities of food, clothing and housing&#13;
most essential to the wellbelng of&#13;
their families and themselves."&#13;
EDITOR'S CHANGE OF HEART.&#13;
During the wet and dry campaign&#13;
of the state of Washington, the Seattle&#13;
Daily Times worked vigorously&#13;
for the wets. After one month of prohibition&#13;
this is what the editor said:&#13;
"We fought prohibition on economic&#13;
grounds alone. We believed that in&#13;
a great seaport city with a population&#13;
of upwards of 300,000, prohibition&#13;
would he destructive; that it&#13;
would bring on economic disaster.&#13;
We believed that under the license&#13;
system we had the liquor traflc as&#13;
well controlled as it could he; we&#13;
wanted to let it alone and we fought&#13;
as hard as we could fight. But In.&#13;
spite of all we could do, prohibition&#13;
carried and want into effect January&#13;
1. Its moral effect has been tremendous.&#13;
Seattle had 190 saloons and&#13;
we had an average of 2,300 areats a&#13;
month for crimes and misdemeanors&#13;
growing out of liquor drinking. la&#13;
January we had only 400 arresta and&#13;
60 of these were made January 1.&#13;
aad were the result of hang-orarav&#13;
from the old year."&#13;
PROHIBITION AND TAXES.&#13;
Kansas wet. in 1880, had a tax rata&#13;
of 6.5 mills oa the dollar. g t m y *&#13;
City dry. la 1911 had a rate of U&#13;
mills. Wet Nehraaka hat lurinasml&#13;
her tax rate from 1.9 la 1SS0 to 7J&#13;
mills la 1914. Atlanta. Oa, |g tartar&#13;
than Toledo. 0„ aad nearly as torsja as&#13;
Columbus, 0. Dry Atlanta's tax rata&#13;
to $7 JO par thousand, walla the ts*e&gt;&#13;
in wet Columbus It SUaw far&#13;
sand, aad la wat Tosado $14 f i r&#13;
a*&#13;
tr&#13;
- . / • • •&#13;
t&#13;
V.&#13;
-«£SI&#13;
V ,&#13;
31&#13;
r •&#13;
,l * - •-•&#13;
- • &gt; . - • • ' • * • • • .&#13;
rV .;,&#13;
M&#13;
"•. k-~ii&#13;
? &amp; • * •&#13;
*«: -r *:m M —4n'&#13;
• ^ F ~ /&#13;
*«y : . &gt; $ • '&#13;
. • • C t e C ^ &gt; - ^ A 1-.*!.:• V v ' ^ ^.J'v'J ^ B W - ' *&#13;
"it&#13;
V •&#13;
V-v-&#13;
* •&#13;
H&#13;
!&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
DDDODDD THE VALUE&#13;
of well-printed&#13;
aeat-appearing&#13;
itationery at a&#13;
means of getting and&#13;
holding desirabl* bui»&#13;
nets has been amply&#13;
demonstrated. Consult&#13;
us before going&#13;
elsewhere&#13;
DDDDDDD&#13;
L_&#13;
A dUkl Utktse Vr. Mi)OH' I A H I I H J Tab-&#13;
Wlthout Uilnklnjf -&gt;r ujcdloue."&#13;
O n e&#13;
F a i n F i l l ,&#13;
t h e n -&#13;
T a n * i t&#13;
F t * N e m r a l f U , B a t h i n g i e&#13;
h a t t a r t h a n Dr. M i l e s '&#13;
A » t i - P » i n P i l l s&#13;
U a a d a y t h o u s a n d *&#13;
f a r a g e n e r a t i o n&#13;
Those who have suffered from&#13;
neuralgic pains need not be told&#13;
how necessary it is to secure relief.&#13;
T h e easiest way out of&#13;
neuralgia is to u«c Dr. jfliles'&#13;
Aoti-Fain Pills. They have relieved&#13;
sufferers for so many&#13;
years that tlu-y have become a&#13;
household m ee.ss;ty.&#13;
"T have t&amp;kT. I r Mlifn1 Anti-Fain&#13;
Pill* for flv&lt; \f-ut« hnd tht-y a r e t h e&#13;
Cftly tLii.f tK.ti &lt;\ve&lt; ni(: a n y good.&#13;
T h e y have rclx-^c iituralflst in my&#13;
he&amp;4 in fl/iet n n.-nute.-. ; i.u\t» a.lso&#13;
t a k e n them I'M- rhfcuivmtijsm, hfadache,&#13;
peine in the 6r*nst, toothache,&#13;
*aj-a.che m.u | ! . : i * i:. :!,»• bowHs a n d&#13;
Km Li*. I ).;. \ !• C J ..(. ;:.!: J to&#13;
t-qual them .- d t:.&lt;y k-e a:: t h a t Is&#13;
Claimed fur t '.•:::&#13;
J. W, S E I H , I V i . ;-j rlne«, Me.&#13;
At all a"rug a V.s—2 5 Corcr. 25 ccnte.&#13;
Never i d d In I,uIk. I&#13;
M I L E S M E D I C A L CO., E l k h a r t , Ind.&#13;
an «7 pound dumbbell with hie left&#13;
hand. More than that he could lower&#13;
hla hands to his shoulders and slowly&#13;
and Blmulutneoubly put both dumbbelln&#13;
above hla head the aecond time.&#13;
A muscular youth, he wua recommended&#13;
by his principal to the "prudential&#13;
coninoluee" that (ailed at the&#13;
academy in IjincaBter on a hum of a&#13;
teacher for their district school. The&#13;
school was then closed—a group of&#13;
the large boys having carried t h e&#13;
teacher into the road, slammed him&#13;
down in the dirt and warned him&#13;
never to return-&#13;
"Llck 'em and lick e.m good," the&#13;
prudential committee aaid. •'We'll&#13;
back you up if you do."&#13;
•'The third day/ Captain Weeks&#13;
told me, "a big, red-faced boy took&#13;
his pen iu hand and laboriously began&#13;
to write a letter that is, he' was&#13;
I seemingly engaged in writing a letj&#13;
!er, as a matter of fact, he was ahow-&#13;
I Ing off befor* the school and experi-&#13;
| minting with the new teacher. When&#13;
**A great many. It has shown the&#13;
value of aeroplanes, which are now&#13;
i known as the eyes of the fleet. They&#13;
; are very neceasary aa scouts. Leav-&#13;
| leg the deck of a Ye seel, they can&#13;
' easily locate the enemy and are therej&#13;
fore of the greatest possible use in&#13;
; the events that occur before a battle.&#13;
"The submarines, too, It has been&#13;
learned, are of a real and practical&#13;
service. All officers think they have&#13;
become a permanent addition to&#13;
every navy, hut there is some dieagreement&#13;
as to their general utility.&#13;
Can a swarm of submarines, for Instance,&#13;
go to sea, meet a fleet and destroy&#13;
it? The question cannot be&#13;
j answered until such an attempt h a s&#13;
i been made and either failed or suej&#13;
ceeded.&#13;
j "I asked one of the highest military&#13;
j authorities in the country if 1,000 sub-&#13;
•' marines, along with mines, could safeguard&#13;
the United States against invasion—&#13;
the mines to blow up the enemies'&#13;
ships off shore, if any happened&#13;
to get that near, the submarines&#13;
having met the rest and destroyed&#13;
them before they came within striking&#13;
distance of our coasts. The answer&#13;
was that such a measure of protection,&#13;
an invasion of t h e United&#13;
States would, to say the least, be&#13;
made very difficult,&#13;
"You see, no one can tell a s yet&#13;
what part the submarines will take&#13;
In the wars of the future. Their usee&#13;
are slowly being developed, and we&#13;
cannot know what they are capable of&#13;
doing until the French or British&#13;
fleet meets the fleet of Emperor&#13;
William.&#13;
"Also, It has been learned that battle&#13;
cruisers are required to bring a&#13;
navy up to its highest efficiency.&#13;
Cruisers formerly were used as scouts&#13;
and to hunt down and destroy t h e&#13;
merchant ships of an enemy. They&#13;
were swift, but not heavy enough to&#13;
take a place in the battle line when&#13;
large vessels were engaged.&#13;
i&#13;
A Sea Battle F l r t t&#13;
"The modern cruiser, however, can&#13;
hrht, being covered with armor and i&#13;
armed with large guns. Steaming 30 ,&#13;
knots an hour, it can run all around i&#13;
a fleet of dreadnaughts and pump&#13;
shells into them from a long distance&#13;
and from any angle. Our navy must!&#13;
have battle cruisers, besides a g r e a t '&#13;
many submarines and aeroplanes, if |&#13;
we mean to be In a position where&#13;
AUCTION!&#13;
H a v i n g sold my tarn) wii! ~eil the- following pergonal p u o p e n v a t&#13;
a u c t i o n on t h e p r e m i s e . ; , G .niles west of C h u b b ' - Corner-, . m d 7,&#13;
m i l t s w o t a n d 3 m i l o n o r t h o!" Pin -knew o n&#13;
Tuesday, May 23rd&#13;
we can protect 0.&#13;
Jury, insult or dishonor.&#13;
"It should be alwaya remembered,"&#13;
Captain Weeks went on to say, ' h a t&#13;
our navy will be our first line of defense.&#13;
American ships will meet rorelgn&#13;
ships before there is a battle on&#13;
shore. If the United States goes to&#13;
war with any nation in Euorpe or&#13;
Asia, the tleeta of the two countries&#13;
will tight for the supremacy of the&#13;
sea.&#13;
"No invading army will set out for&#13;
America until it Is safe from attack by&#13;
our fleet- So long as our fleet is afloat,&#13;
no tirai) will venture to start for our&#13;
shorec. Moving troops from one country&#13;
io another" 1B an Immense undertaking,&#13;
even when it is safe to do so.&#13;
"Kour hundred- large ships, for example,&#13;
would be required to transport&#13;
an army of 260,000 men from&#13;
Japan to the United States. Armies&#13;
traveling by water have to carry their&#13;
own artillery, ammunition and horses.&#13;
Japan would not send 400 large troop&#13;
ships out into the Pacific unless its&#13;
tleet had fought and defeated our&#13;
fleet. Nor would Germany or any&#13;
other country in Europe attempt an&#13;
invasion of the United States so long&#13;
as our fleet, decks cleared, was waiting&#13;
in the Atlantic.&#13;
"Looking to the East, I can see nc&#13;
probable danger that is likely to occur&#13;
' in the near future, unless the allies&#13;
are thoroughly beaten by Germany, or&#13;
unless Germany Is thoroughly beaten&#13;
by the allies. If the war i t practically&#13;
a draw a t the end, the efforts&#13;
of all the great nations to maintain an&#13;
equilibrium of power will keep them&#13;
entirely engaged for some time with&#13;
their own affairs."&#13;
"Do you believe that a trade war&#13;
against this country Mill follow the&#13;
restoration of peace In Europe?"&#13;
"Such a war will come—there is no&#13;
doubt of it. Loaded with debt, burdened&#13;
with taxation, Europe will turn&#13;
with energy and ferocity to the works&#13;
of peace. The factories in Europe, ex&#13;
cept in Belgium, Poland and Northern&#13;
France, hare not been shut down nor&#13;
burned. Indeed, new ones have been&#13;
built. Industrially, save in the place*&#13;
I have named, Europe is better situ&#13;
ated now than when the war began.&#13;
Facta to Be Faced.&#13;
Things have been speeded up in&#13;
Great Britain, Germany and France.&#13;
The factories, old ones and new ones,&#13;
are running. They will be running&#13;
after the armies at the front have&#13;
been sent home, but instead of making&#13;
cannon and ammunition, as at&#13;
present, they will be operated night&#13;
and day in the production ot goods&#13;
for the American markets.&#13;
All Americans, n&lt;.,&gt; matter whether they&#13;
vail tnemselves Democrats or Hepubli-&#13;
•jHnti, (Light to have courage enough and&#13;
rt'u-m;ttj enough to fact the facts. Europe&#13;
Is going to take jiussess-ion of the markets&#13;
in this ''oui.try if wo do not defend our-&#13;
•elve*. Vi'ii j»pnke of a n Invasion by soldi*'!*&#13;
Ti,&gt;.-n L'Uti uiso be an Invasion with&#13;
pi odi'Cte.&#13;
1 r?vor all Kinds of defenses—military,&#13;
minirurcial, financial and industrial. And&#13;
right here a t home I think some of us&#13;
need defeime against fallacious ideas. F o r&#13;
:nM'-Mu-e: Tills is a great business nation&#13;
aiid yet we hear many suggestions that&#13;
buf&gt;in-_'Bs bo taken out of (lie ownership&#13;
iinu management which have developed It&#13;
urid made It wonderfully successful, so&#13;
that it may be turned over to the national&#13;
government.&#13;
HiiPim-sg ought to be regulated, but we&#13;
have l e g j l a t e d the railroads »0 vigorously&#13;
that no more- a r e being built, althougn&#13;
they are surely needed In some p a r t s of&#13;
the country. Furthermore, t h e time h a s&#13;
come when the railroads cannot borrow&#13;
money for short periods on a s a d v a n t a g e -&#13;
liu.-s tfi'trn a? can other lines of big business&#13;
And yet transportation, next t o&#13;
agric nlture, la our most important industry.&#13;
Would government ownership a n d operation&#13;
improve the situation?&#13;
No: the situation would be made worse.&#13;
State ownership and operation lias failed&#13;
h; Frnnr*,,.r_fijiada a:i&lt;j_ ot her countries.&#13;
AUCTION!&#13;
H a v i n g decided i o quit farming J will ^eil t h t following p r o p e r t y a t&#13;
a u c t i o n on t h e Jas- H e n r y farm. 1 '-4 mile-, vwsi oi L a k e l a n d a n d tour&#13;
unless east oi Pincknev , on&#13;
Friday, May 19, '16&#13;
c o m m e n c i n g ai 12:30 o'clock&#13;
Sorrel M a r e 14 yrs old, Sorrel Gelding 9 y r s old.&#13;
S H e a d &lt;yt Ottttle&#13;
D u r h a m cow, 7 y r s . old, giving milk, J e r s e y cow, 8 y r s o l d , giving&#13;
milk, D u r h a m cow, 4 yrs old: yearling D u r h a m heifer, 4 - m o n t h s - o l d&#13;
calf. 4 S h o a t s , 4 0 P l y m o u t h R o c k H e n s , 5 S * e y D u c k *&#13;
1^iii*in ing- Toolh&#13;
M c G o r m i c k grain binder, Deering mower, A m e r can c u l t i v a t o r with&#13;
Bean-puller a t t a c h m e n t s , Milford c u l t i v a t o r , 3 one-horse c u l t i v a t o r s ,&#13;
good G r a i n Drill with Seeder, Oliver plow N o . 9&gt;, oo-tooth Steel d r a g ,&#13;
Flint W a g o n , W a g o n box a n d rack, D o u b l e buggy, Single c a r r i a g e ,&#13;
C u t t e r , 120 foot new h a y rope, 6 0 new crates, C a l d r o n k e t t l e , G o r d e n&#13;
c u l t i v a t o r new, B l a c k s m i t h F o r g e new, D &gt;uble h a r n e s s , 2 Sing-re n a r »&#13;
ness, q u a n t i t y of Seed B u c k w h e a t , C o r n a n d P o t a t o e s , small q u a n t i t y&#13;
J of C o r n , q u a n t i t y ol cull p o t a t o e s a n d b e a n s , 2 corn a n d 2 p j t a t o e&#13;
' p l a n t e r s , 3 horse b l a n k e t s , R o b e , D a i r y M a i d C r e a m S e p a r a t o r 500 l b .&#13;
•capacity, W a t e r S e p a r a t o r new, C o r n sheller, C a r p e n t e r bench n e w ,&#13;
G r a i n b a g s , focks&lt;shovels, post-hole digger a n d m a n y o t h e r places t o o&#13;
n u m e r o u s t o o m e n t i o n .&#13;
One-half Interest in 14 Acres of Rye.&#13;
Household Goods&#13;
R o u n d O a k R a n g e , R o u n d O a k H e a t e r , coal or w o o d , S h e e t Iron&#13;
heater, D o u b l e Dish C u p b o a r d new, M e t a l bed, with springs a n d M a t -&#13;
tress, C a r p e t , C o u c h bed, d i s h e s , l a m p s s t a n d s a n d o t h e r articles.&#13;
rFw ermM&#13;
All s u m s o? $5.00 and under, C a s h . All s u m - &lt;&gt;\ cr t h a t a m o u n t , a&#13;
credit of six m o n t h s time will be given o n good, b a n k a b l e n o t e - 1'earing&#13;
interest a t six per cent interest. Mrs* Elias Roof.&#13;
R. Clinton, AuctV. Arthur Shehan, Clerk.&#13;
I&#13;
Pear's.&#13;
Black pearls arc the most vnlunUe,&#13;
pink come next in value, then white&#13;
and lastly yellow.&#13;
vV her ever it ca* i&gt;f r n tried, expanses a r e&#13;
increased a n d deficits created. On t h e&#13;
Western Railroad of France the operating&#13;
charges went up &amp;0 per cent in thr.'e&#13;
veare. More than 6,200 new me:, tvera employed—&#13;
r.o workers on the tracks, engl-&#13;
•ieer*. i-nnohu tors or brakemen, but clerks.&#13;
pTttets a n d other little politicians, n ! a c ^&#13;
for whom were found «round the general&#13;
offices a n d a t the stations.&#13;
Government ownership In t h e United&#13;
Ste+e* would add 1,700,000 men to our office-&#13;
holding class, and congres* would fix&#13;
their salaries. Freight rateB, I am sure,&#13;
would he higher than a t present a n d t h e&#13;
consumers—the men who work —would be&#13;
loeers and not gainers.&#13;
WATCH CHILD'S COUGH&#13;
c'rilriti, nmnirig of ucs*, eon'inued&#13;
irritation of The mucous membrane&#13;
if neglected may mean Catarrh later&#13;
Don't take t h e chances—do&#13;
something for your child! Children&#13;
Nvill not take every medicine, but&#13;
they wiil take Dr. King's New Discover}'&#13;
and without bribing or teasing,&#13;
Its a sweet pleasant Tar Syrup&#13;
and so effective. Just laxative enough&#13;
to eliminate the waste poisons. Almost&#13;
the first dose helps. Always pre&#13;
parexl, no mixing or fussing Just&#13;
ask your druggist for Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery. It will safeguard&#13;
I V&#13;
Beginning a t 12 o'clock s h a m&#13;
Ci H O I ' H O H&#13;
, *•*. B r o w n G e l d i n g 7 y r s old. wt n o o ; Bav Oeuimcr. i r v r . n l d . wt i m o ,&#13;
| : f e \ v B r O W n M l r C ' ' ° y r &lt; °! f 1 ' w ~ I i ; 1 ' ] ' B a v M a r c ' 5 &gt; T - "old. wr 1 1 5 0 ;&#13;
§!fc^ B r o w n M a r e , 4 y s s old, \VL I 2 0 J : Bav M a r c wr i ^ c n&#13;
battle;, ^liec»p JI iid HOJ^M ^£fl&#13;
| | - V G r a d e Holsicin Cow, 5 yr* oM. T e h : D . i r h i r n Cow. •&gt; vr&lt; old. due&#13;
0:4* S e p t e m b e r ; G r a d e H o N t r i n Heifer, d n c in N-iv. H,'ih,r r d f .&#13;
y p : : I 9 G r a d e Black T o p Kwe&lt;. i s L.imhs. Hla-k T o p R a m .&#13;
I Each Person Sending an Answer to the Mysterious 33 Puzzle will Receive a Beautiful Fountain&#13;
Pen (whether answer is correct or not).&#13;
You Get a Pen Just Like This Absolutely F R E E&#13;
B r o o d Sow „ncj Pi^-c.&#13;
, . E N D i X Y O U R A N S W E R I M M E D I A T E L Y&#13;
Can You Solve This Puzzle?&#13;
I^ftrm. TOOIK a . . • .&#13;
L a n d Roller.-Side D e ! i \ e r \ R ikL G d e Ritiin.t; P,&#13;
%£&#13;
C r ' . 9 ! 1 V e « ? . ? . w / &gt; ° ^- ( : - l l c S P H I K d o o t h H a r r o w . o&lt;!-r,,orh 'l )r,-:^&#13;
2 r t d m g Willie C-iiItivaiors. Ajax Cii!.'ivi;„r. H a v Tedfler A^ibvankep&#13;
'f?°y*Tr\A^vankee Grain Biml.-r. ( l . d e B-an' Puller nou-, I P o n - V&#13;
G r a i n D n l l , C o r n &gt;hrll»-r new. ?ei &lt;^ !i, S r . l e s . L u m b e r W.icrnn.&#13;
F a r m T r u c k , VV.igon f &gt; o x . ' r o p Box and Spring S , , n . Road Wa'r^on.&#13;
T o p B u g g y , R o a d C a r t . D o u b l e B n ^ v . C u r i c r . 2 set of Buh Sleighs,&#13;
n n d h t o n e , VVagon J a c k , H a v F o r k a n d n o ,r ol ropr Set L i c h t&#13;
i v m g H a r n e s s . 2 Single H a r n r , . . 2 sft W o r k IT :rncs^. u FP^rse Cn\-&#13;
W , 3 n e w , 2 sot . v ^ &gt; r s r \ V h i i T l c t T ^ s . 2 Corn P l a n t e r s . C r o ^ r n t&#13;
~ t r S : • ^ n w ' C r i t o s - &lt;lT*clin ^ - ^ - H o r s - B l a n k e t s a n d R o h r s&#13;
" i - L c g , ? ? l s ' 5 M f ) k ( t n s ' I o n H e n &lt; - l^° h » u ' &lt; - 1^' IHI Seed B e a n s&#13;
T i m o t h y H a y . Alfalfa and Alsyko. Mixed H a v . 4 :*u Ser-d P o t a t o e s&#13;
- | &gt; a r r p l 9 V i n e g a r , quantity- of H o u s e h o l d ( , - ^ 1 , . F o r k s . S h o v e l s&#13;
—IOW a n d o t h e r small articles t o o n u m e r o u s to m e n t i o n .&#13;
1 4 7 1 ) ^ A I 1 SUm&gt; o f ^ : ° 0 J n f ] unaer. ra^h; , : i a d &lt;un^ over t h a t&#13;
a m o u n t a creel;: ol one v r a r s time will b e t i v o n on good&#13;
n o t e s with interest a t six nor cent.&#13;
•( i \ ; ' 1 ': i 1 \&#13;
S T A AI . \ &lt; • • - 1 I , " 1 - r.&#13;
&lt; o M A &lt; c \ V. ^ ' l A I I l l . C f &gt;i 'a I ! I ' \ ' : I ! &gt;&#13;
hris&#13;
f# Cllnf^n, AirctJortccr O W. T c ; p ! c , Cfcrfc&#13;
l"&lt; &gt; J-". &gt; ' 1' I ft ! Y\i&gt; &lt; i ^. i ! - !&#13;
. \ \ \ \ : : [ 1 s ] ,. 11 •; ' •' : • • 1 • • r . ' 0 r i . . ^&#13;
,. i'n;, n o . m ; " - l i 1 , •' r . :• •-1 : &lt;,: i . "• . : . •".••• &lt;&#13;
^ v ^ . • • • ; : &lt; : , t / - 1 . , _ / • . , ' '] '&#13;
&gt;• p . ' ; ; ' 1 " :-' : •• •" .'. ' . ' • &lt; • ' &gt; • . • &lt; . •&#13;
j . : . &lt; ' . • . . !•• . - . • • ; . , , . - , ; . . . : -&#13;
'.'. n ! [J* i:. &lt; )i .1 r. &lt; ; '..&lt; 1. : • . r i . ' •. » . . . - , • r .&#13;
. • ' l ) i ' S ' 1 ' S I . \ ' " .' . , : . • y : ' : ', ,1 ' • .' . ' h '. . : '&#13;
- ', ci']^ m .';&gt;• • • &gt;r , , , i i i 1' "". i l C '"1 i r » . . • -f-v.&gt;-&#13;
l . ' ^ . l ' ! ! [ ' , ! )&#13;
1 •• . &lt;&lt;\i&#13;
' • -• , 0 v •,&#13;
J K . r e . ' . ' . M&#13;
' . ; i . - * . • P :&#13;
REMEMBER IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY-YOU MAY WIN A MASHIFICENT PRIZE&#13;
J U A . M O V n m \ a C H K S T o i s i i . \ i ; n&#13;
T h i r d &lt;liok*r&#13;
&lt;,&lt;&gt;1.I» W A T C H&#13;
Contest Positively Closes May 13, 1916. Mail or Bring- Answer to&#13;
MAHER BROS. MUSIC GO.&#13;
120 £. MAIN ST, JACKMN, MICH.&#13;
ALL CONTESTANTS WILL&#13;
BE NOTIFIED B? MAIL&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
mmm&#13;
CITY&#13;
mmm*&#13;
''»V'&#13;
•'ilta'.*'&#13;
'it. .^. i-&#13;
/&#13;
--M.&#13;
'• t " &amp; ' ' : * * + •</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 18, 1916</text>
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                <text>May 18, 1916 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>C.J. Sibley</text>
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