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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 DISPATCH&#13;
JfcflOME WtNCHELL, PUBLISH tR.&#13;
188UBD TBUB»nAYB.&#13;
Subw*iption Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVEHTISING RATSS .&#13;
fransient advertisement*, 26 cent* per Inch tor&#13;
first insertion and ten cents per inch for each subee-&#13;
S " t SISrtloi. Local notices, 5 cente per line for&#13;
2«h insertion. Special rates for regular advertisements&#13;
by the year or quarter. ^ ^ ^&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.^&#13;
T\ H. GREENE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
**•' PLAINRELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention riven to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the Haroat and lunga.&#13;
TAMES MAR&amp;EY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent. Legal papers mjde on&#13;
short notice and reasonable terms. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Poetofflce Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
ALICE LAWRENCE, V^ KA8HIONABLB&#13;
DRESS AND CLOAK MAKER,&#13;
Plain and fancy sewing of all kinds; cutting and&#13;
fitting a specialty. Prices reasonable, and satisfaction&#13;
guarantied. Northeast cor. Main Street&#13;
and Howell Koad, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
• prams,&#13;
Family&#13;
RIMES &lt;fc JOHNSON,&#13;
G Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
fAMES T. EAMAN,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Office in the Brick Block, PINCKNEY&#13;
t r r P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR In CHANCERYOfflceover&#13;
Sigler'sDrug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
HALSTEAD GREGORY,&#13;
DEA1.EHIN&#13;
GRAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, &amp;c.&#13;
Highest market price paid for wheat. A good&#13;
stock of LumlKT always on hand. -Doors, aasli&#13;
and all building materials furnished on slmrt notice,&#13;
GREGORY, MICH.&#13;
TTETKHINARY Sl-BOKON, How.'ll, Mich.&#13;
V Mr Wine^ar will attend to calls promptly&#13;
night or'dav. Milk fever and other diseases in &lt;&#13;
cattle and horses a specialty. IVsius reasonable.&#13;
Resilience o* Bvrun Koad. Telephonic connectlon&#13;
with wntral office at Howell.&#13;
CHARLES MACLEAN, 1». D. S. J\ENT18T, Graduate of the Dental Depart-&#13;
Jment of the University of Michigan. Office in&#13;
reenaway Block, over Post Office, Howell.&#13;
f&amp;-Particular attention paid to the preservation&#13;
of colic, cramps, cuts, bruises,&#13;
etc., a box of Dr. A. H. Davis'&#13;
Pills, for constipation torpid liver,&#13;
kidney difficulties, headache, bones&#13;
ache, and fever symptoms. 25 cent&#13;
sizes will cost only 75 cents for the&#13;
outfit.&#13;
My Six Year Old Daughter.&#13;
DR. C. D. WARNER: Dear Sir—I received&#13;
the complimentary bottle of&#13;
White Wine of Tar Syrup you so kindly&#13;
sent me. Our little six-year-old&#13;
daughter had a very sore throat, badly&#13;
ulcerated, and coughed almost incessantly.&#13;
We gave the medicine according&#13;
to directions, and she began&#13;
to improve immediately and soon got&#13;
well. Please accept thanks. Mrs.&#13;
Groves and I have recommended it to&#13;
others. I shall want to get some of it&#13;
at the beginning of winter, as I consider&#13;
it a very superior medicine. •&#13;
Yours very respectfully v&#13;
Rev. H. D. Groves,&#13;
Clarksville, Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.&#13;
For sale at C E. Hollister'B, Sigler Bro'a, and&#13;
WlncheU'e Drug Store.'&#13;
ITEftS OF INTEREST.&#13;
J^'-Thoae receiving their papers with • red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will pleaae notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with next number. A bide X&#13;
signifies that the time haa expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until aubscjiption is renewed.&#13;
School Stationery and school supplies&#13;
at Wine-hell's Drug Store.&#13;
All persons owing . me on account&#13;
made previous to Feb. 11th, 1884, are&#13;
requested to call and settle at once.&#13;
W. B. Hoff.""*[ ville schools for another year&#13;
A very desirable house, barn and&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of T.&#13;
Grimes or on the premises -of Mrs.&#13;
^Jridget Eagan.^&#13;
Large cake fine Toilet Soap for 5c,&#13;
at WineheJTs Drug Store.&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at Bush's Planing Mill, Plainfield./&#13;
of the natural teeth. ,&#13;
Will be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPL:E/&#13;
^BANKERf-&#13;
Does a General .Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued cfn time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS/A SPECIALTY.&#13;
PINCKNEY PJtOBUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
Sept. 4, « £ * . / TOMPKINSdUSMON.&#13;
Wbe*,l*&gt;. /white, I .78-&#13;
s** No/8 white, 70-&#13;
X u Nd.2red,.. , 76&#13;
" No. 8 red 70;&#13;
^ J H * t . , , / i • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • i m i 111111 i i i T i t r r f f f y ^ ' I T - - *WO~ Corn/. r«~ --^ -80'&#13;
. ^ = = = = = : : ! Sti S Dried Apples 08*® .07.&#13;
Potatoes, •• -80-&#13;
Batter, • • 1 -1»&#13;
Sgga, 12*.&#13;
T \ ? - „ _ J I W i n . . .L^r innsi« : 7 7M1H on&#13;
JJTBBMU **UKB, per 1TWJDS ^ rwjpo»w.&#13;
Dressed Chickens -..--.. »•&#13;
Clover Seed Sp~e~c ial -.N^7o. tices, 4 00 © 4.S0.&#13;
To any onybody who has disease of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
cured the same complaints in other&#13;
cases. Address,&#13;
E. T. HASKLTINK, Warren, Pa.&#13;
No family can afford to be without&#13;
the following Remedies in the house&#13;
" Cure your neuralgia or "headache&#13;
with a Menthol Pencil, only 10c, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
All the best Patent Medicines, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
A man will iaugh at a woman endeavoring&#13;
to sharpen a ^ i c l pencil, but&#13;
he does not reflect that if he were to&#13;
try ever so hard he could never trim&#13;
a last year's hat so it would look likenew.&#13;
.&#13;
Call on Teeple.it/Cad\velFfor coal for&#13;
fn resh i ng engines,;'&#13;
./ ' *&#13;
We keep the largest and finest assortment&#13;
of Cigars in town, at&#13;
V\ incliell's Ding Store.&#13;
LOCAL JOTTIXGS.&#13;
Mrs. 0. F. LaRue is quite ill.&#13;
A light frost is reported, from some&#13;
parts of the county Sunday night last&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Rose are visiting&#13;
Bay City friends. '&#13;
Lansing has a new society paper.the&#13;
Sunday Siftings.&#13;
Mrs. A. R. Griffith is visiting friends&#13;
at,Plain well, Allegan county^&#13;
Mrs. Squiers, of Mason, is the guest&#13;
of Mrs. Geo. R. Ismon.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Campbell is the guest of&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Marble, of West Putnam.&#13;
Mrs. J. D. Bennett, of Saginaw, i3&#13;
visiting her mother and other Pinckney&#13;
relatives and friends.&#13;
Mrs.E. A. Mann and Mrs. W. S.&#13;
Mann are visiting Saginaw and Bay&#13;
City friends.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown will run the Grammar&#13;
school "department of the Fowler-&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Mann returned Friday&#13;
last, from a brief visit with her son&#13;
at Saginaw.&#13;
A. L. Hoyt has the job of repairing&#13;
the old school building, being the lowest&#13;
bidder for the work.&#13;
Patrick Welch, from Pettysville, has&#13;
rented E. A. Allen's building, on Howell—&#13;
street, and will open a shoe shop&#13;
therein.&#13;
H. O. Barnard, the genial landlord&#13;
of the Monitor House, is visiting&#13;
friends in New York State.&#13;
Milford, First &amp; Bradley, and Ann&#13;
Arbor Cultivator Teeth, at&#13;
F. L Brown's.&#13;
The King of Portugal is anxious to&#13;
start a newspaper He observes that&#13;
editors can be out later nights than&#13;
any other'men without making their&#13;
wives suspicious. = =—&#13;
DISSOLUTION OF P A R T N E R S H I P .&#13;
Notice is herebyv given that' the&#13;
partnership existing between Frank L.&#13;
Brown- and Charles L. Collier, and&#13;
known by the firm name of Drown it&#13;
Collier, is this day dissolved by mutual&#13;
consent. Frank L. Brown will continue&#13;
in t^CDUsiness at the old stand.&#13;
Will receive all debts due said firm&#13;
and become responsible for all existi&#13;
n g debts of said firm.&#13;
Dated Pinckney, August 16, 1884.&#13;
_^ Chas, h- Collier.&#13;
Frank L. Brown.&#13;
Three cakes of finest toilet soap and&#13;
a Turkish Toweling washrag all in&#13;
neat box for 25 cents, at ' '&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Fright at cholera is as fatal as cholera&#13;
itself. There is danger in cholera&#13;
in phantom as well as by the Asiastic&#13;
reality.&#13;
to use in case of emergencies, before a&#13;
physican can be called—often times&#13;
saving calling one, and also saving the&#13;
livesofthe little ones: A bottle of&#13;
HatctT's Universal{Jough Syrup, which&#13;
curen coughs, colds, croup, &amp;c.; a bottle&#13;
of Home Relief fpr sudden attacks&#13;
f School and business ataliuneiy, Urge&#13;
stock and low prices at&#13;
WJncheU's Drug Store.&#13;
of Gloves and Mittens which we ofter&#13;
ctoeap. Call and look at them.&#13;
Ho*U IUff.&#13;
Doan's Gasolene for 12} PQSiji per&#13;
gallon and 11} cents by the bijsft(Ht at&#13;
Frank L. Brown's.&#13;
We shall be in in Pinckney about&#13;
one week more. Those wishing pictures&#13;
taken would do well to come in&#13;
right awav.&#13;
G.E.Gould,&#13;
A "good bye party," was given as a&#13;
compliment to Mr. and Mrs. Friend&#13;
Kishbeck, at their residence in Marion,&#13;
Friday evening last.&#13;
Floyd Reason has started a meat&#13;
peddling wagon which visits the village&#13;
and vicinity at as frequent intervals&#13;
as he can "cover" the territory.&#13;
The school census taken bv Mr. Bailey&#13;
shows 205 children in this 'district!&#13;
an increase of ten during tfce~ pastfttrey didn't.&#13;
year.&#13;
The young people had a social dance&#13;
at the Monitor House, Saturday evening.&#13;
Music by the Pettysville Band.&#13;
About forty couples participated.&#13;
le-Bennott returned Saturday&#13;
from East Saginaw, where she has&#13;
been the guest of Mr. J. D. Bennett's&#13;
family.&#13;
The School Board met Monday evening&#13;
and elected the following officers&#13;
for the ensuing year:&#13;
Director, Frank L. Brown.&#13;
Moderator, Justus Swarthout..&#13;
Assessor, F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Mr. Harrington started the first oi&#13;
the week for New York State&#13;
with another car load of sheep&#13;
which he purchased in this vicinity.&#13;
He will probably" continue shipping&#13;
for some .time.&#13;
Dr. Wm. Clemo, of Memphis, Mich.,&#13;
is the guest of his father-in-law, Moses&#13;
Fuller. Dr. Clemo, who is a Methodist&#13;
Miss Lucy Abbott, of Marion, fractured&#13;
one arm a few days since by being&#13;
thrown from a horse.&#13;
__M_iss Rena Roberts, of Chubb's Corners,&#13;
has been the guest of Salem"and&#13;
South Lyon frtends the past week.&#13;
The Brighton and Plymouth game&#13;
played Monday at Brighton, resulted&#13;
in favor of Plymouth, not Brighton,&#13;
as appeared in Tuesday's Detroit Post.&#13;
Score 9 and 8 in favor of Plymouth.&#13;
In ten days or two weeks they say&#13;
the telegraph wire will reach this&#13;
place. A force of 20 or more men are&#13;
working on the line from Jackson this&#13;
way. }&#13;
Miss Jennie Osborne,Infan, of Washtenaw&#13;
county, is the guest of Hattie&#13;
Placeway.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon bought 1,200&#13;
bushels -of wheat Friday last, and&#13;
quite a large amount has been taken&#13;
in every day since.&#13;
Two ot the new Brooks wheels for&#13;
the Pinckney flouring mills arrived&#13;
Tuesday. Although only 21 inches in&#13;
diameter they are guaranteed to do&#13;
more work with less water than the&#13;
40 inch wheels which were just remov&#13;
ed. The third wheel is delayed by the&#13;
breakage of some machinery at the&#13;
factory where they are made.&#13;
Dan'l P Markey, Esq., son of Jas.&#13;
Markey, of this village, is the nominee&#13;
on the Republican ticket for Representative&#13;
in the State Legislature, from&#13;
the district composed of Otsego, Iosco&#13;
Oscoda, Crawford, Alcona arid Ogemaw&#13;
Counties, Mr. Markey has served for&#13;
some time as Judge of Probate in his&#13;
own count}, and the people have found&#13;
him so faithful aservantthey propose&#13;
to send^im to the legislature and see&#13;
what he can do for them as a law maker.&#13;
The Howell Base Ball Club came&#13;
down Friday for a match game with&#13;
the Pinckney boys. The home club&#13;
had some difficulty in getting a "team"&#13;
together, as several of the regular nine&#13;
were away from town—and it was&#13;
generally supposed that the Howell&#13;
boys would score an easy victory.—but&#13;
The game was played&#13;
near the Grand Trunk depot and the&#13;
ground was new to both elubs. Some&#13;
very good playing was done. The result&#13;
was 7 for Howell at the end of the&#13;
ninth innings, and 13 for Pinckney&#13;
We have just received a large'lme~^i n i ster-as^elLaAPb'sicia^preached&#13;
Having purchased a new Kynett&#13;
hand carpet loom, I am prepared to&#13;
weave carpets in the very best manner.&#13;
Mis. E. Q. Carpenter,&#13;
Pettysville, Mich.&#13;
WANTED.—A man and wife to take&#13;
chargrof a farm. Enquire of&#13;
G. W. Teeple, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
at .the M. E. Church Sunday evening&#13;
last.&#13;
G. W. Harrington, son of H. ^Harrington,&#13;
of this township, formerly&#13;
manager of C. R. Mabley's large clothing&#13;
store in Louisville, Ky., will open&#13;
about the first of October, a new hotel&#13;
(the Cosmopolitan) at Braidentown,&#13;
Florida. Florida is becoming the&#13;
with one innings to spare.&#13;
The Republicans of Howell are arranging&#13;
for a grand Mass Meeting at&#13;
the Opera House, in that village, Monday&#13;
evening next, Sept. 8th, Among&#13;
the speakers announced for the occasion&#13;
are Gen'l Jasper Packard, ot Indiana;&#13;
Gen'l R. A. Alger, of Detroit-,&#13;
and Dr. Jas. C. Wilson, of Flint.&#13;
The annual school meeting held&#13;
Monday evening was not very largely&#13;
attended, and very little done except&#13;
the election of Trustee for three yeara&#13;
—F. A. Sigler being re-elected to that&#13;
office. It was also decided to repair&#13;
the old school building by putting on&#13;
a new roof and laying a new floor, over&#13;
the old one. No action was taken with&#13;
reference to a new building though&#13;
the matter wag discussed at some&#13;
en"'*&#13;
ThUPoller skating rink was opened&#13;
Monday evening, with a very successful&#13;
exhibition, quite a number of visitors&#13;
being present from Dexter and&#13;
Chelsea. The fancy skating by Prof^&#13;
Hayton was excellent while some of&#13;
the ladies from Dexter and Chelsea&#13;
are very graceful amateurs. The repopular&#13;
resort for those who seek to, cejpts for the evening were very ^atis-&#13;
.^ : c XT n . . . ...:- f^tory—the rink being crowded to an&#13;
almost uncomfortable extent. Prof.&#13;
Hayton gives the best satisfaction as a&#13;
New York Photograph Galleryv ;.. |^eeape1*te vigor of our Norther/^win&#13;
ters by temporary residence in a warmer&#13;
climate, and Mr. Harrington will&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Tools, at&#13;
New stock&#13;
A full set of Butchering&#13;
Teeole &amp; Cad well's&#13;
school stationery and"&#13;
School Supplies at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
be prepared to accommodate about 800&#13;
such guests at the Cosmopolitan:&#13;
Mr. Miller has sold the Howell Republican&#13;
to Orin and E. D. Stair, the&#13;
foimer recently publisher of the Saline&#13;
Observer. The new publisher, judging&#13;
from what we have seen of his work,&#13;
will givflthe_jgo^e_oi_^i9connty a&#13;
first class local paperT^We~wiah- hhir&#13;
the utmost success,&#13;
General Sup't Spicer and other officials&#13;
ot the Grand Trunk were at&#13;
Pinckney this morning.&#13;
Coleman &amp; Reason are contemplating&#13;
putting in a fruit drying factory and&#13;
will erect an addition to their planing&#13;
mill building to accommodate-it.&#13;
A young man living on James Morgan's&#13;
farm in Unadilla, was quite seriously&#13;
injured the other day, being&#13;
kicked by a horse. His face was very&#13;
badly bruised and disfigured.&#13;
Mort Green, who has just returned&#13;
from a trip through Ohio aad Indiana*&#13;
says the corn crop in those States does&#13;
rnot promise nearly so well as in Michigan.&#13;
We had the pleasure, yesterday, ot&#13;
looking over the herd of Aberdeen&#13;
cattle recently imported by Mr. Auld,&#13;
and while too late this week to speak&#13;
at length of the herd, we shall give&#13;
something of a description ot them&#13;
next, as well as the history of the celebrated&#13;
family of polled cattle, and other&#13;
matters which may interest our farmer&#13;
friends.&#13;
Major Anderson announces that on&#13;
Saturdaw, Sept. 13th, a free excursionto&#13;
subscribers to the railway bonus&#13;
(and their wives) will be given over&#13;
the Air Line from Pinckney to Jackson.&#13;
This excursion is intended for&#13;
subscribers in and west of Putnam.&#13;
An excursion for those in Hamburg&#13;
and eastward, will be- given-at a later&#13;
date. Particulars may be learned by&#13;
apDlying to Jas.T. Eaman, Esq.&#13;
- Monday evening last, between the&#13;
hours of eight and nine, two men (one&#13;
of whom was masked) walked into the&#13;
residence of Thomas Rabbitt, in Dexter&#13;
township and (as he says) demand-.&#13;
ed his money, which he refused to give&#13;
them and grasping a mattrass from the&#13;
longue attempted to shield himself&#13;
with it. His assailants fired several&#13;
QW*t nnp nf which'took effect in his&#13;
arm, another in the shoulder and third&#13;
in his hip.- The other persons on the&#13;
premises at the time were his mother&#13;
and their hired man, the latter of&#13;
whom was at work in the barn, where&#13;
Mrs. Rabbitt went to call him when&#13;
the men commenced shooting. Rabbitt&#13;
received the third shot while on&#13;
his way to the pantry to get a butcher&#13;
knife, and his assailants seeing that he&#13;
was determined on further resistance,&#13;
Tied. The wounded man will recover,&#13;
probably, though the injuries are quite&#13;
serious. No. clue to the identity of the&#13;
assailants as yet.&#13;
Dame Rumor says (every body&#13;
knows who Dame Rumor is) that Uncle&#13;
Jake Quick was seen the other day with&#13;
his arms around one of the handsomest&#13;
widows of the village.—We begin&#13;
to suspect Jacob, notwithstanding his&#13;
^atiquty, isn&gt;4~80-much so much- of a&#13;
'saint44 as he is advertised to be, we&#13;
feel compelled to advise our friend, in&#13;
the language ot the elder Weller: "Beware&#13;
of vidders, Jacob, beware of&#13;
vidders."&#13;
Common Council Proceeding*.&#13;
PIXCKNXY, MICH., SKPT. 1st, 1884.&#13;
Council convened and was called to&#13;
order by President Grimes. Present,&#13;
'" ustees Mann and McGuiiiess.&#13;
Motion to adjourn one week.&#13;
Motion carried.&#13;
W. B. HOFF, Clerk.&#13;
MARRIED.&#13;
teacher and some of our village people&#13;
are already making good progress in&#13;
the fascinating recreation1 of&#13;
skating. The rink, though not very&#13;
large, is handsomely finished and lighted&#13;
by four large Chandeliers (beside&#13;
small lamps). I t can be very readily&#13;
transformed from a skating rink to a&#13;
Tnrbtifl hall whnn needed for meetings&#13;
or entwrUinmenta, — — v ~&#13;
—ALthajeaidenceotthe bride's mother, In Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday, Aug. KHh, 1884, by Rev. K. H.&#13;
C;r»ne, Mr. N. H, Mann and Miss Gracie Camnt&#13;
«n, both of thii village. ^&#13;
The wedding was a ''quiet" one, only&#13;
a few of the immediate relatives being&#13;
present The cermon&gt; was pronounced&#13;
at 8 p. nr.,"8nd:afteT pttrtakufg"~dT"&#13;
the elegant collation ot cakes, fine&#13;
fruits, etc., and receiving the congratulations&#13;
and good wishes of the guests,&#13;
^oujide were escorted to their&#13;
beautiful new residence on Unadilla&#13;
street, where they at one* set about&#13;
house keeping on their ow» account&#13;
They are among the most popular of&#13;
Pinckney'8 young people, and a host&#13;
of M e n d s join with U B U M&#13;
a long and happy life. W;ft&gt;&#13;
. » * T V&#13;
.3«&#13;
+&#13;
.!%fci!l&#13;
&lt;HL&#13;
f&#13;
* 1: l " " * * &gt;&#13;
'.&amp;.'•::ir[Si&#13;
'.us--- rl&#13;
-. v ; 1&#13;
d&#13;
* " ' ' • .&#13;
-ft&#13;
.{_?**&#13;
«*?¥&#13;
Ihi,'...&#13;
mmmmBmummmm*±*mm*rmk i uu. ti't&gt;it''mmmmmiWff^^'mismmm&#13;
» " " "&#13;
^i&#13;
l*t r,fi x&#13;
Sf&#13;
•JsZL&#13;
t&#13;
^&#13;
)*m&#13;
&amp; &gt; :&#13;
SSfc&#13;
&gt;»*':&#13;
v*£;&#13;
OPH NEIGHBORS&#13;
BRIGHTON.&#13;
Mrs. Cashing in company .yrith W.&#13;
J). Biding au4 wife, started for Nejbraka,&#13;
the fijst of tbe week,&#13;
Hartlaod's saloon keeper is said to&#13;
iJuve skipped aad tjjat seyeral persons&#13;
are iij the lurch flaancially.&#13;
Manly Be^aett has bought the""'Jirai&#13;
Smith houat *nd is moving it upon bis&#13;
farm, juaffc south of the Almon Maltby&#13;
place.&#13;
While tearing down the old buildi&#13;
n g on the site of the new roller skating&#13;
fink, the workmen found a set of&#13;
dies for making counterfeit nickles.&#13;
Where they came from, who used them&#13;
.a^ukwhen, is what the people are talking&#13;
about now. _&#13;
The D. L. &amp;. N . will give one ot&#13;
$¥?tr popular excursions to Petoskey.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept 9, the fare for the round&#13;
trip to be $5 from this place. Excursionists&#13;
will be allowed to return on&#13;
,iny regular train until Sept. 18th.&#13;
Chester Hazard, for many years a&#13;
prominent resident ot Genoa^townjjhip,&#13;
was found drowned in Long&#13;
Lake last Thursday morning. He had&#13;
gone down to the lake to make prejparationjS&#13;
to go fishing and it is supposed&#13;
he was taken with swoon or a&#13;
/it, while standing in the boat, which&#13;
,was fastened to the shore, as his feet&#13;
"land legs" w m in Llm, buaL when ho wao&#13;
discovered.&#13;
D E X T E R ,&#13;
from the Leader.&#13;
The census of this - school district.&#13;
just taken, gives 394 children ot school&#13;
*£ge—seven less than last year.&#13;
Those farmers who have threshed&#13;
•their oats, not only find them more&#13;
£han usually heavy, but that the&#13;
yield per acre is above the average&#13;
jsome going in excess of fifty__biishels.&#13;
H. W. Booth and son Wilber left&#13;
/or their new home in the woods of&#13;
,Otsego county, near Gaylordrbis post-&#13;
/&gt;ffice, last .Monday. Mrs, Booth will&#13;
follow in a few weeki,&#13;
One ot the most marked scciety&#13;
jeventa of the season for the quiet lit -&#13;
lie village of Dexter, occurred Wednesday&#13;
afternoon at the residence of A.&#13;
B, Beal, Esq^it being the occasion of&#13;
file marriage of his elder daughter,&#13;
Miss Mattie Beal, to Mr. Marquis E.&#13;
tSiU, of this yillage, and son of Geo. S.&#13;
jStfl, one of our hardware merchants.&#13;
'The ceremony was pronounced by Rev.&#13;
jil. S. Angell, of New Baltimore, Mich.&#13;
Vyhe young couple left on the 6 p. m.&#13;
jt^raia for the west, on an extended&#13;
bridal ^rip. They will visit Chicago,&#13;
Albany, Wis.^-{where the groom ha.s&#13;
A sister residing)—Milwaukee,.Petoskey,&#13;
Alpen*, and Detjpit, before they&#13;
Pliil Stimpson has given.up his position&#13;
with the American Express company&#13;
and goes west- • t-hi.s week. He&#13;
expects to meet his brother in Omaha,&#13;
and they will proceed together to California&#13;
where they will go into business&#13;
son,&#13;
LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER.&#13;
W^ will ^11 Lumber at the following prices.for tin; ni-xt &lt;»() days,&#13;
X X X M inei» Shingles, per thousand&#13;
Clear Hutts IS inch Shiiigli-s, per thousand.&#13;
\iov thousam&#13;
feet,&#13;
o°. ( )0.&#13;
o ' &gt; :&#13;
Cull .Shingles IS inch, per thousand, 1.20.&#13;
Mrs. M. C. Shewcraft's little son,'No 1 Lath, per thousand tivt y "'-SO.&#13;
aged ten years, took eleven morphine No 2 Lath, per thousand feet 4.00.&#13;
pills Tuesday morning'while his moth- Hill Shift, including l.Sft No. 1, pi-r thousand feet, 14.00.&#13;
efwasaway. it-was only bv prompt J*01'1' . 1 ^ 1 ^ F r tbnusaud t,vt ' r u l n " ^ ™&#13;
act,i. on t,h,a t. \th.e b, oy',s l.i.f.e. wJ as' s al ve,d . ' , Harn Lumber, per thousand tcivt lo.OU to I &lt;.,&gt;u.&#13;
Miss Carrie Comstock, for some time&#13;
teacher in our public schools, has&#13;
been appointed to a $900 position in&#13;
Washington. She is congratulated by&#13;
her many good friends on her deserved&#13;
good fortune.&#13;
The matrimonial event ot the weekwas&#13;
marriage of Dr. T.|J. Sullivan ant\&#13;
Miss Kate McManus, hoth of this tut}-.!&#13;
at St. Thomas' church, Tuesday morning&#13;
at nine o'clock oy the Ivev. Fr.&#13;
Fierle. The bridal couple left the&#13;
same evening for a two weeks' tour in&#13;
eastern cities. They will bo "at home"&#13;
September 25. -&#13;
Shipping Culls, per thousand feet, [-).()(1&#13;
Fencing per thousand (Vvt '10.00 to 14.00.&#13;
Finishing Lumber pei tinmsind !'&lt;-"t 20.H0 to .Ml.00.&#13;
Siding per thousand Jeet 14.00 to 20.()0.&#13;
.1*0SITIVELYN0(JR'EDLT..&#13;
A. L. HOYT, Manager, —Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
The enfranchisement of woman is&#13;
evidently working satisfactorily in&#13;
Washington Territory. The Seattle&#13;
Intelligencer savs: Seven hundred and&#13;
fifty-nine women registered before the&#13;
late election, and it is safe to say t h a t&#13;
700 voted. They displayed as much&#13;
interest in the principles at stake, in&#13;
the candidates and in the exercise of&#13;
tftfler^TOCK-Mifr GOODS.&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE IS STILL&#13;
HEAD-QUARTERS&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
BARTON &amp; CAMPBELL,&#13;
JEWELERS,&#13;
their new privileges as did the men,&#13;
and ifanything displayed more interest.&#13;
They were earnest, active, intei-&#13;
Jigentand conscientious, strong and&#13;
determined.&#13;
In describing a recent swimming&#13;
match between three Obrcinnati belles,&#13;
a local reporter says. "When taken&#13;
from the water, neither lady was exhausted,&#13;
but what followed was the&#13;
most trying circumstance ot the. day.&#13;
The ladies fell to kissing.' the swimmers&#13;
with tft'e greatest rapacity, and&#13;
continued the exercise until Uju^tno&#13;
were worn out. Such expressions as&#13;
'You dear sweet/ 'iim^awfully magnificent&#13;
you do swim,' 'Weren't you&#13;
afraid the horrid iish would hire yon ?•&#13;
and 'How-trii-e you/do look,' were heard&#13;
on every hand."&#13;
SOUTH LYON.&#13;
JProm the Picket.&#13;
Lizzie Helmuth and Etta Deake will&#13;
(MtotT the Normal Sept. 9th for a year's&#13;
^ard labor. Success to them,&#13;
Capt. We^therhead is building a&#13;
yery pleasant little cottage on Liberty&#13;
/ftreet opposite John OdelTs. ilohaj&#13;
j^lcCuen is the builder,&#13;
John Blair, of Bloomfield, this county,&#13;
lost two children aged respectively&#13;
J l and I ? years, last w«ek, with diphtheria.&#13;
Money nun be.the root ot evil, but&#13;
send on the root- we'can't do without&#13;
it.—Pretzel's Weekly.&#13;
It is now said that the crazy quilt&#13;
originated -with a country editor's&#13;
wtte".~7She got the idea from the patches&#13;
on her husband's clothes.&#13;
'"Was Venus' father a doctor?"&#13;
sweetly asked a damsel of her father.&#13;
-^NevTH^v-^bild; what a silly questhm-,--&#13;
'•Well, I thought he was," pursued tin?&#13;
fail one, "for I was reading about a&#13;
lovely statue called the Venus do&#13;
Medicine."&#13;
, Beware ot the man who pretends to&#13;
have a contempt--for newspapers. He&#13;
has done something he is ashamed of&#13;
and.does not kilovv at what moment&#13;
I the newspapers mav get hold of it.--&#13;
[Philadelphia Call."&#13;
Putting a stave the less in an apple&#13;
barrel is the same thing as stealing a&#13;
pocketful of apples out of tt. yet the&#13;
father who does.the former thing is in&#13;
the habit-of whipping the son who&#13;
does the latter—Chicago Current.&#13;
jTljiember o'f'tlle Kentucky 'legislature&#13;
who attended a service of the&#13;
Episcopal church at Frankfort, was&#13;
asked how he liked it' and replied:&#13;
"Purty well, Iriz up and fell with&#13;
them every time.11&#13;
-==—3^TDRY&#13;
GOODS AND GROCERIES,&#13;
AND EVERYTHING IN THE&#13;
LINE OF GENERAL ,&#13;
MERCH kT&#13;
E. A. MANN, Eas&#13;
BUYTHEXEEEgftffHP&#13;
St., Pinckney.&#13;
^CHE STITDEBAKER&#13;
Buggies and Carriages&#13;
are unrivaled for BEATJTT, SrREuaTn, E L E -&#13;
o,vNCE,EASEOPErDixa ANDKUNNINO. Send&#13;
for new illustrdted catidogue, or call and&#13;
poo c u r work at o u r CHICAGO REPOSITORY,&#13;
233 STATK £'TBEET. Wft mako all&#13;
AND I ))•:.U.KKS IV&#13;
.SP()RTlX(i (JOOI)S.&#13;
.lust reeeiveii a full line of&#13;
FISHING TACKLES&#13;
ALSO OF&#13;
ILLER BROS.&#13;
CELEBRATED POCKET CUTLER}&#13;
AND MERMEN SILVER&#13;
PLATED WWE,&#13;
the best in the market, and can givo&#13;
prices that will Mirprisr^-you. Pleaso&#13;
niaiii,;. examine our stock a.ud get&#13;
prices.&#13;
RI'SJM^CTFrLLVr&#13;
l i A R T o N .v &lt; A M P R K L L ,&#13;
AVest Main S t n r t , l*in&lt; Uncy, Michigan.&#13;
••»•71 *."-a [*•** g w ua&#13;
a^-9 A favor;'., pr'-;••! ipMon o f o n e Of t h&#13;
iuo-.r i i;t,, \ . ,, i •.-..,... U l ; ., ..-i.Liisi • in tlieU.SL&#13;
&lt;"0'v ! •!.!• I : '"it., ,-t .,* i -.',)•, tum nihility t&#13;
i o * ' -'.&lt;..'-.' • • , i ? ., :. ,-•.-::; ,,&gt;;,f thru If .Setlt^&#13;
iHpiu.u.... .,\:\ t :;v . i J),../ .•..•••. 1 P'.;-^!-its call fiillt.&#13;
Addreir 1J;L WAHD &amp;aCO. Louisiani. Mo.&#13;
-* T H E B^MillerftrriasrCor&#13;
T »r o- • J." , i Whv is the orb of night called the&#13;
on one of his eighties for his son Chas.&#13;
" p T h V I ^ u ^ t u r i n g Co. are the build-&#13;
/%}fL A4.W?' *?tfe *n&lt;^ daughter, arrived&#13;
in tpwn Saturday eyening for a&#13;
phort visit ainong friends, E, M.. will&#13;
erect a building on his lots west of&#13;
David Dunlap's on Lake st. east.&#13;
P. W. Callen's little boy while playing&#13;
around the tea-table swinging a&#13;
£carf whkh he had in his hand, in some&#13;
manner caught the teapot tipping i t&#13;
/over and pouring its contents down&#13;
JiU arm and side ^aiding him quite&#13;
i&gt;adly.&#13;
'd&gt;&#13;
s&#13;
^ -&#13;
f*cpi%Regl*t«r.&#13;
A ten-year-old son of Mrs. Jacob&#13;
Baal, Bridge water, yr as kicked while&#13;
feeding ahorse Sunjay and had his&#13;
jrigb^wipbroken, ." " ' ^ .&#13;
fljjT; S; p . A,damp, of Jh$ Boek&#13;
Biye^M. E. conference in Illinois, has&#13;
Rented i^e Otis place on West Huron&#13;
^stmtt | l e cornea here to rest and to&#13;
l^ujajfce Jus phUdren, " " " V * -&#13;
Stndebakcr W^gon,&#13;
With TATEXT GAf?T, a n d FA&gt;TDAOE FATENT&#13;
STEEIJ, bK.fc.iH \ TRUSS A X L E ; 1'ATENT U V \ , V&#13;
EDGED T I R E ; wood work, after years of seasoning,&#13;
80A*rD IN BOIMNO OIL ; Skeins of L M-.B k l n ^ r ^ A R R l A G E WORK, from th, FINEST&#13;
buPERiottiBON; boxes forced into Hubs A\ I ULANDAU duwu to tho LltuiTJ ST Bi'CK'rY, t&gt;.ihydrn.&#13;
ulic press*, instead of being wi^Up-d; aides tho BF.BT LINK OF ALX. CLAa«*a OK firms a&#13;
SroKKH, SixiPK-SnotTLPER; best of workman- Wt'"K, ^fforca to tho tra&lt;lo.&#13;
C i V AGO&gt;.b. •• bond for Iicw Cataloguo. South Bind, IL^IHA.&#13;
PfN€KN£¥=ftftKHtt-IHtL&#13;
Manufacture a large variety ef&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, AC,&#13;
A.fter the most approved rlosipns attheverylowdit&#13;
prices cousistont with good workmanahip.&#13;
Wo are w^w pn&#13;
Planing, Resawing,a!l ki&#13;
Bracket-Sawing, Carving aad Turning&#13;
In wood: and will soon he able to do tnniii;&#13;
repairing; Wo are also agents iur W. S. .I^hn-&#13;
Packing, Mill'Boards, Folts, Uotdin^, ( \-\\w\&#13;
in inifi and general machine&#13;
Ashostos Material^ J^n^ino&#13;
\U—u^it-lo and oiitsidt^ Liquid.&#13;
Paints, Barn, Koof and .Fire-proof Faint-.&#13;
PINCKNEY PLANING MILL&#13;
Near Gniml Trunk Depot, P I M ' K X K V , JIIC.'H.&#13;
*=J%-&#13;
about fiere^tryin1 to gi£ "skeered.1 I&#13;
_am3glad he's out pf the way, for he&#13;
mout've spread the glanders among&#13;
~the work tyaniS," v - •&#13;
TThon t h e w c r d Ustey o r th.0&#13;
w o r d -Crero.u i s raontioued. t h e y&#13;
^ - ^ W g r ^ t i f&gt;V? oChcrt BO "Widely&#13;
k n o w n a n d BO popular a r e tuiTln-"&#13;
stru:-acn'.3 anC t l J •s.-.c^kzx:-.&#13;
l i v e letters in eacii cf t b c '.wc&#13;
words a r e rcminderu ox'eujcyuient&#13;
in-multitudes of hemes. Illustrat&#13;
e d Cataloguo mailed free t o a l l&#13;
applicants.&#13;
GRAND OPENING!&#13;
girl of her bestHSeau the otheFevening&#13;
"Cause there's a man in it, dear, and I&#13;
don't think he could have got up there&#13;
if he hadn't been chased.'1&#13;
An Irishman was requested by a&#13;
ladv to do some work for her, whieh he&#13;
performed to her complete satisfaction.&#13;
"Pat," she said, "I'll treat, you."&#13;
"Heaven bless your honor, ma'am!"&#13;
"What would yon prefer-a pint of&#13;
porter or a tumbler of grog V"' "Well,&#13;
ma'am, I don't wish to be troublesome,&#13;
so I'll take the one whilst you're mak«&#13;
ing the other."&#13;
.1 am pleased to announce that I have just started a general store at&#13;
He Mont'ave Spread tbe glanders. . ',&#13;
• Honest old farmer who never cheated&#13;
a man. "Yes, this is our family hoss,&#13;
an' I wouldn't sell him if times want&#13;
so hard." -&#13;
"He's sound, I suppose?"&#13;
"Sound as a dollar."&#13;
Man buys the animal. When the&#13;
farmer returns home his.wife asks:&#13;
"Did you sell old Bob?" ^^__&#13;
uYes, art'got-^-good^ trade. -UToVt&#13;
cough but once aurin' the sale an'["Everybody call and exaniine/Tur stock of goods,"" Highest price paid for&#13;
then I yetted;' what air - ytn^-smrrtir^-Tj^UT't^R^^^B-^^GS. jivrirything wold at rock bottom prices. -&#13;
My line consists of a large and-^ttwed assortment of&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries^wts &amp; Shoes. Clothing.&#13;
Don.'t-ibrgut,&#13;
ti/ ^L. y&#13;
P. CUNNINGHAM. Gregory, Mich,&#13;
—00,000 voliiolea—&#13;
of our manufacture urn nf&gt;w_ln uso in this »nd&#13;
foreign countTies and attent' tho excellence of&#13;
our goods by the TinlviTBaloatisfat-tion ^uichthey&#13;
give.—Ererf tchlclc is WAKHA&gt;'TED.-*p«cUI&#13;
att«atioo will be given to mail ordcrf.&#13;
D. W. Mirier Carriage Co.,&#13;
X. Fifth St., Culrert St. and Egffleiton lf*.f&#13;
CINCINNATI, 0 .&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOB THE CAMPAIGN. W e w i l l s e n d t h e W E E K L Y F R E S&#13;
P R E S S u n t i l a f t e r e l e c t i o n f o r only SUL&#13;
CENTS.&#13;
Addrow&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
ST. L0C1N.&#13;
VBL&#13;
;]PRO'f.HA;ifi!S'PASTILLE REMEDY&#13;
luutiv 3i»»o ftfi^l oitRra who iuffe/&#13;
:r&lt; :u N.ri-ona and fh/sloal Dibit.&#13;
TTy, PreinaiurB Kxh»u«'loo Mui&#13;
tiiuir Djr\ny gliiomj conWqucDOM,&#13;
.a.r,.o- /.j(uuiiu^Kmly; manual r[oKaiiiccaanllyy ccoi red..&#13;
TSe Remedy it put tip In boxci. tin. I (lasting a month), f t ,&#13;
No. 'i (enough 10 • !Te,-1 &amp;cure,.un]cn« In icvcrc c»«fR,1 ( 5 | j|a&gt;f&#13;
(lasting thr»e rn»dihs), g j . Kent by mail la plain ivapper*.&#13;
Dlrfftlonp for I sing arromiianj. earli Hot, Faniphletdescrfc&#13;
UfiJ Uda diMM* IUIII nouUu of tur» »tjj4 «v*Jed on ajtplicatta^&#13;
00YOtrkNOMf i'HAT&#13;
J LORILLARD'.S CLIMAX&#13;
n.u&lt;; TOBACCO.&#13;
W i t h l.Vil 'I'in Tjiir. ;.-» I-'i.' In-)'.' 1.-( ( l i e p u r e s t ;&#13;
i- U I \ I V ,_d ilt;.!|;,i.\! with LT;IU'U&gt;I', hurvti's, m i i -&#13;
la-sc-i'^iT .uiy (1 '.. • f' - r J &gt; 11! -* i-llLTl-iMlit'Ittrt, 'ad i s t h o&#13;
I'.IM' w'u ii nisi iv .ither ioS.ii (• )^,&#13;
LOKlf.liAKD'S R!)SK. LEAF FINE&#13;
( I TTOIJACCO&#13;
is also IIKHII1 of tin- line, t-tuck, and for aromatic&#13;
H d l l ' W i l , ' / IJllillilV IS S i T l U l l l t i l 1)(111(1.&#13;
I.OXIM&lt;AI{l)'s' NAVY (MPPINQS&#13;
talci* !*rsi nui'-; ;IH a solid iluraUIi- Hiuokinj,' t o b a c -&#13;
ni wiii'i»'V«T iiitrmlui't'd,&#13;
LORIliLAKD'S FA^nTT?rS5lTFFS&#13;
!i,i\o licon uscil f o r o \ i ' r IvM yi'urs, and tiro s o l d t o&#13;
ii tar^'cv I'Ment tlijiu any others'. wsmnanui&#13;
wstmrw Secure HeAlthr'&#13;
action to the Idvaf&#13;
ar.d relieve all bil«&#13;
lone troubles.&#13;
Pw»i7 7i£tUU&lt;; Nc Or.i.\zg. Prlc*25o. All firaffUla&#13;
- « ^RIVJB _ ^ ^ ^ _ _ ^&#13;
In afucawcu nftlic niond. 8k la andIBOAM.—N«rroai DfWllijr,&#13;
latpolrnrr. Orvmbi Mf(«ka&lt;w«, Onaorrl^tta. BnaUMk and&#13;
•rrcnrfai Affwtlnn*. 8rlriitiflc treatraoit; tare and rart&#13;
remedies. noforniiHpi Treatrd. Call or writ* fcf lUt ea*&#13;
que»tlon»to bn annwerrd h/1ho»o detlringtiratmeot bf mail. &lt;Pfi-w»« aafffptnafhnn Raptnr* iknata Maa Owhr »iii»taa,%&#13;
•od Inra wmothlnrfotlwlf adTaatatir&lt;. HHaotatrmaa.^&#13;
Addrr« Ilr. ('. I,. I.aBARdK. Prm't and Pk^Maa la Charffa&#13;
C«atr»l K«d. A Marc. f»«tltntf,9l}0 Lorant at., M. Laala, l a .&#13;
•Uicccwor to Dr, Butta' Diiponaarr. KaUblliaia M Y«&#13;
l have mnv on Iwitxt a larger and liettor stock ef&#13;
lliirne.-'st th.iti ever heforu to^etli^r with a grand&#13;
HAlt-\ESS GOODS!&#13;
AIHO whips* mid La-dies*, AH ^ood as the lwst and&#13;
eheiij) an the elii&gt;w|M'j&lt;i. Carruiu''' (riminiiis; and.&#13;
repairing neijlv ami'proTriptlv (l&lt;^n»!. See lof&#13;
fyrjm^ctt.&#13;
FAVlvi'TK REASON, '&#13;
[OCKBHiOGE, MlCHtOAN&#13;
"^&#13;
../&#13;
-mm&#13;
6 PlrtCOt Oplniou in Corktown.&#13;
"Oh, mc hart is'broke wid * hat&#13;
Icathric loight, Mrs. Doyle. It wits&#13;
the bad luck that brought it into this&#13;
neighborhood." "Yerra! phwn('s tho&#13;
ipatther wid ye, Mrs. Daly? ijshuru,&#13;
it's bright as day here. It won't cost&#13;
yg a cint fer ile all the winthpr. I&#13;
could t p d tho pupor on yer back stips&#13;
#t tin CttMk. Look at me, that's&#13;
iivin' ^ tbere on Sixth sreet among&#13;
.the threes, »a' it's afraid to sthick me&#13;
jbead out ofthe door aftlier siviti tor&#13;
fear it's a crack of the skull I'd git.&#13;
Ye have a dale to grumble about,&#13;
wid a tower right here at yere door!"&#13;
"Oh. thin, if me prayers wud move&#13;
it up to you're house, begorra it ud&#13;
floy."&#13;
"WhM's the throuble wid Jit ony&#13;
v&amp;yT*&#13;
*Dt'e see that! there goes another&#13;
«ffr[ Jist luk at that, shpinnin around&#13;
Jc^&gt; . IB ZEE !B IB 5&#13;
UNDERTAKER,&#13;
&gt; .&#13;
A M ) DKALKU I.N&#13;
FURHITURJL....&#13;
picture, Kraiiiiai;, licpairin^, rphulfti'mitf. R K&#13;
WKST MAIS KTIiKKT,&#13;
PINCKNEY • MICHIGAN.&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROWN,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All kinds of custom work, and genera)&#13;
repairing, including&#13;
it dhropsT*&#13;
*ptf&amp; sick, shure. It'll be all right.&#13;
GtVt it some water; it's chokin'."&#13;
- "That'sthe way the re all goin'.&#13;
Fourteen foine bins all dead since&#13;
Sathurday noight."&#13;
"An' what's the tower got to do wid&#13;
dehins?"&#13;
"Doesn't that loight kapc 'em&#13;
awake all noight? Nary a wan uv&#13;
'im hat- been to roost since it \yu^ lit.&#13;
There's another one'. Luk^tt it! Oh,&#13;
moy, what a sharue^"&#13;
"Whatia-tbe wurruld ails that&#13;
dogj'Mrs Daly; cryin' like a Ban-&#13;
^sHee!".&#13;
"There's sum more av it for ye.&#13;
Not asowl in moy house has had a&#13;
wink of sleep wid all the dogs in the&#13;
neighborhood thinkin* it's the moon&#13;
and barkin' all noight long." If I&#13;
only had Falvey boy the nick whin he&#13;
voted for it I'd a made a corpse of&#13;
'im;"&#13;
•'It's a dale of throuble yer in, but&#13;
thin^hat's thrown out of a job boy it&#13;
are a^grate dale worse. Didn't Tim&#13;
get foired last week bekase they quit&#13;
loijrhtin' tbe lamps."&#13;
." What's the matter-w&gt;4MfsJIradyJL&#13;
Luk at her head all toid upf wYe don't know half the throubte~~&#13;
thim towers have done this week.&#13;
TheyP8htuck a goy posht in Irunt- of&#13;
her house, an' she cum out in the dark&#13;
_ftn' shtruck her head agin it, an* loike&#13;
—to'broke her mik."&#13;
"If ye" only heard Jimmie Pmrk&#13;
swearin1 about one uf thim poshts the&#13;
other noight 'twould ha done ye good.&#13;
About a year ago the lbiremen-put one&#13;
ibreninst liis house. Purtysoon a new&#13;
tilitfraph company came along: and.&#13;
put.another one roiyht ah'mgsoide the&#13;
other, and be the powers of war if Hum&#13;
villuns ot "krtlinc loiu'ht niin didn t&#13;
have the gall to put one widinten lee't&#13;
of the-tw-nl_-_VVeU dimmie was woild&#13;
entoirely."&#13;
"If it was in front of jnoy house&#13;
they_done that Mike would have sawed&#13;
them down afore inornin'.''&#13;
"But wait till I tell ye the 1»&#13;
it,..,. A little fellow bv the nam&#13;
FOR CASH&#13;
35c. " u&#13;
20c. Coffee for....&#13;
18c, " "&#13;
16c. " "&#13;
15c. Raisins for..&#13;
(linger&#13;
Pure Cinamon^...&#13;
35&#13;
18&#13;
IB&#13;
14&#13;
..12&#13;
?.H&#13;
..20&#13;
..25&#13;
15&#13;
a&#13;
u&#13;
n&#13;
u&#13;
.1&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
ti&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
t l&#13;
u&#13;
U '&#13;
u&#13;
I!&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
((&#13;
11&#13;
4 .&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
4i&#13;
l l&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
..&#13;
! Bird Seed 6&#13;
! Crackers, 7&#13;
\ Silver Gloss Starch.8&#13;
'Oat Meal, .4&#13;
Saleratus, l&gt;&#13;
Twin Bros. Yeast Cakt&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
..&#13;
u&#13;
i .&#13;
u&#13;
JS,.&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
&lt;(&#13;
U&#13;
.(&#13;
.5c. pei&#13;
a&#13;
u&#13;
u&#13;
((&#13;
(&lt;&#13;
((&#13;
((&#13;
&lt;• pkg.&#13;
...&#13;
HORSE SHOEING.&#13;
Shop back of Mann's Block, "PIXCKXKT&#13;
ESTABLISHED4S64I&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
Obtain for Mechanical Devices, Coni-&#13;
•pounds, Designs and Labels.&#13;
All preliminary examinations as&#13;
to patentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our "Guide to Obtaining Patent,"&#13;
is sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS BAGtfER &amp; C0„&#13;
SOLICTORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D C .&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
READY FOR' BUSINESS!&#13;
Bread and Buns Fresh Every Day.&#13;
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED FIRST CLASS.&#13;
ALL OTHER GOODS&#13;
GREATLY REDUCE* f R I C K .&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL. -&#13;
HOFF Sc HOFF.&#13;
This Horse IS TELLIXQ&#13;
THIS MAN*^—&#13;
That if h e don t KCII Lis Heavy Draft, IIooMvJrilling&#13;
Hinder, and buy an&#13;
EASY RUNNING&#13;
DEERINQ TWINE BINDER&#13;
• t o n e d , every horee on the farm will IOOD b e dead&#13;
W1LUAM DEERING &amp; CO., Chicago, III. ~&#13;
BIMDEB3, REAPEU8 AMD MOWEBft&#13;
T H 6 H O R 3 E 8 ' F R 1 E N D 8 .&#13;
FOBSAJUtBT&#13;
S. ANDREWS..... HowelirMich.&#13;
TO THE PEOPLE OrPWCKME1 v , v K X E&#13;
i1 av&#13;
of Shaw&#13;
eaine along and wanted to boord up&#13;
' f.hft f.hfW^ |wi.-jli&lt;,&gt; f u r ; t r l l l l l hn.iFt.l f o r feli&lt;;•&#13;
opera house. The divil sach ^uwu'in"&#13;
ye niyer beard since ye wor 1) irn."&#13;
"I'm tould that voting Li/./.ic Bums'&#13;
fellovy has tfiv^ti. lu«iLt.lL-l.il!LlliP-,'__&#13;
. *To bes^ure he has. He used to&#13;
titan the slips till 12 o'clock, • bllF'TTuT&#13;
lljlfht makes thim as bright as day an'&#13;
| » low sits on Mary Aifn MeLau^hlin's&#13;
&lt;3oor stip, where the threes grow&#13;
thick."&#13;
**WUi,t"s all that growd of min doin'&#13;
over there?"&#13;
"Ther.e raisin1 a pole to put a Hindthricka&#13;
flag an' it."&#13;
"Well, may the Lord help us; wid a&#13;
lanin' tower an' one soid av me hou.se&#13;
an1 a bignag pole an1 the other, whin&#13;
ajstorra comes .up.^we'll have to go&#13;
down in the cellar till the clouds roll&#13;
boy."&#13;
And the four lights on the nearest&#13;
tower flickered out, and Mrs. Daly&#13;
borrowed a candle to light her way&#13;
home.&#13;
Warm insula and ltmche* ut nil hours. Oy*toi&gt;-&#13;
iiiui all drlu'ui'it'H in Uirir .reason. \\ V l u t v c a 1 i n*-&#13;
of fri'sli &lt;_'ro('cri«'f*, a !_'«'ud assortmi'iit of tea from&#13;
•jnto?,") cents a pound, Highest jirico paid for&#13;
Hatter anil K«.'e&gt;. COIIM' and s«ef&gt; n&gt;. Nt'e will yi\u&#13;
vim (,'iiml piuii.'* and fair prices.&#13;
VS. U. LAWRKXCK, PHOPU.&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
Wlit'ti y-iii \ i - i t or lea\e New York City KIV»J&#13;
"nTi.v.'aje J,\|ij-r,-&gt;a^'e jind t'urriai,*e Hire ancj tstop&#13;
nl tlii' iirainl r n i o n Hotel opposite G r a n d Ct'n-&#13;
C C it. J J ) e p o t .&#13;
Kletran! rooms fitted up at a &lt;'ost of o n o m i l .&#13;
lion dollars, reduced to J l mid u p w a r d s p e r day.&#13;
Kui'opi-iin plan. Klevatur. IJesiaurant Buppiied&#13;
\vith tlic best. Horse cars, stages and fle\-at*'d&#13;
railroads to all depots, families can live better&#13;
fni' less money at t h e (irand 1'niou Hotel than"&#13;
a n y o t l i e r first class hotel i n t h e e i t y .&#13;
'•M- AND VICINITY.^; •• '•*J r - — -O*-*&#13;
Please bear in miud the following low prices, and profit thereby&#13;
is now full of the latest style of&#13;
Our store&#13;
SLAP! BANG!&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN!&#13;
Attain to the front, in h i s n e w store, w h e r e , for&#13;
the next sixty days from t h i s date, f o r cash. I&#13;
promise to L'i&gt;e to nit my p a t r o n s m o r e quantity&#13;
and b e t t r r cju.tlity for less money, any of the fo£-&#13;
luwinL' articles, than any other dealer i n the&#13;
county, si'/:&#13;
PAINTS! DRY OR&#13;
MIXED.I&#13;
PRINTS, GINGHAMS,&#13;
WHTTE GOODS,&#13;
SILK VELVETS, VELVET RIBBONS&#13;
Ladies' Neck Wear, Cashmere Shawls, &amp;c&#13;
In fact the fineat line of Dry Goods ever shown in Pinckney.&#13;
(n any quantity, Best Linseed.Oil—raw o r bolWd&#13;
Turpentine,- h u b Varnishes, Flowing Varpi£he«&#13;
Dryers*. K n o t t e r ' s Putty, and P a i n t e r s ' Snppliea&#13;
t.of ail kinds. A n y sliade of color deairfed mixed&#13;
| and ready for applying, ten per cent, c h e a p e r than&#13;
any other house in town. Paper hSnainij, frescoing,&#13;
ela.-.s staining' and ^ruininir .specialties. Oive&#13;
UB a call and sari-ifc yourselves that we only B«y&#13;
what we mean, and mean all that we sav.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8^ 1884,&#13;
Tiiiibcrcd Land for Sale or Exchange.&#13;
I have eighty acres of t i m b e r land in the tovm-r&#13;
ship of White o a k , Imrhain L'o., which 1 will sell&#13;
for cash or trade for other land* or property i q&#13;
goutlieru Livingston county. Address,&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
Pinckney, &gt;fich.&#13;
U E T H O I T &amp; C L E V E L A N D&#13;
StearaL Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
,Crtjljf Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland arid Detroit-Leave from fool&#13;
of Third St Detroit at 10 p.m.-Leawj&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at8.30p. m.&#13;
T H E S 2 . 2 5 R O U T E&#13;
/eek days-Standard Time."&#13;
T H E $ 3.0C R O U T E&#13;
Nervous .E&amp;hausiion,&#13;
Premature Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood. An 80-patre-Hfoth-hound Book o[ Advice to&#13;
•~ Tmrmrortttrtdte^a«»d Mnnwtth. nrescriptlons&#13;
for Self-treutni'Mit nv ;i Regular Physician.&#13;
C C M T P D P P m receipt of two three-cec*&#13;
O a i ^ I r n &amp; E stamps. Addr^M&#13;
T. W I L L I A M S &amp;, CO.. MILWAUKEE, Wt&amp;&#13;
Michigan Buggy Co.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
• AH tbe way from Arkunsaw.&#13;
Restaurant proprietors are not alb&#13;
«d masters. "Here!1' called a&#13;
"Jawing an impatient gesture&#13;
^jfifckly brought the negro vvait-&#13;
^"Thisis the worst piece of beefik&#13;
I ever saw."&#13;
•'Whut's de matter, wid it, ' boss?&#13;
Ain't it healthv?" . .&#13;
"Healthy! why it was fed on the&#13;
Banting system—all muscle and no.fat.&#13;
Can't you bring me a better piece?"&#13;
"No, sah, dat'sde bes1 we's got."&#13;
"I saw a boy go through here just&#13;
now with the finest kind ot a steak/'&#13;
"Yes sah, but dat was fur de cook."&#13;
"For the cook!"&#13;
"Yes sah. Jwe's sort behind wid de&#13;
cook's wages, sah, and we has ter feed&#13;
him well ter keep him Ironi leabin' us&#13;
in de lurch. Cum 'roun' ^ome time&#13;
When we's sauar' wid dtf gennonnanan'&#13;
we'll feea yer in great shape, sah."&#13;
• "Love is blind £ maybe that is how&#13;
the gas is so often turned down in the&#13;
parlor when ldve takes possession, because&#13;
being blind there is no use in&#13;
wasting gas to make light for it.&#13;
•**"The Hft'Cnre—helping heavy girls&#13;
in ajod out of a carriage-—It cures the&#13;
slender dude of the disposition to be&#13;
c•'"rtt'i-nnt in gallantry- ^, -&#13;
TPfcolet&amp;le Mann factor era of all klndi of Open l a d&#13;
Top BIGGIES and ROAD CARTS. Affeata wasted&#13;
ertrywhere. Write for catalogue «Qd pricoliit.&#13;
H U E WORK A SPECIALTY.&#13;
Wo al&lt;m mannfactnro » full line of CUTTERS,&#13;
including Svrcll Dodfy Portland, Sqmaro Box&#13;
two aoat Portland and Ponej Sleigh*.&#13;
Band for cmta and pricea before purchaaing.&#13;
( MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Wda»&#13;
~UN1)EU NEW MANAGEMENT!&#13;
READ THE DETROIT PtJST&#13;
The Best Newspaper in Michigan,&#13;
/ '&#13;
D i i l y - S " I^T W a r ; 60 O n t a per Md'nth.- Weekly&#13;
—tine Dollar por Y«ar,&#13;
DSON, MOOftE .4 CO.&#13;
VVHOI.K^VliE DEALERS.IN&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
rrETROIT.&#13;
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD&#13;
BEST r^nmrrsmrRfNFREW GINGHAMS, IO CTS. YD.&#13;
[WE WILL CONVINCE EVERYBODY THAT OUR&#13;
.ityof Mackinac-—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayn«-SL Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
• Mondays and Saturjla^s at 10 P. M. '&#13;
For Marine City St Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena HarrisviJia&#13;
Cheboygan St. Ignace and&#13;
i K.TURFSOLM: M A C K I N A C&#13;
•oldersfree^—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
illustrated book of 120 pages,&#13;
ft LAKETOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKIII«S&#13;
historical and descriptive of this&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
Ho* fO W a y n e s t . . D e t r o i t , Mloru&#13;
R A P I D T R A N S J T&#13;
GOODS ARE THE BEST AND LOWEST&#13;
We must net forget to mention our Grocery line. Call and jiet prices on&#13;
sugars. WTe want all the Butter and Eggs we can get, and will&#13;
pay the highest market price.&#13;
Thanking you for past favors, we remain, Respectfully yours,&#13;
y&#13;
TON I C ^&#13;
FACTS HECAftQMQ&#13;
Br. Bute's Ira Tania&#13;
JUwlil purify mid enrich the B L O O O . p«fraUt«&#13;
m i T T , , , _ ., „ . . „ T „ „ „ , m n -w-k. -. - » « • • , ^-&lt;-^ne LIVER and K I D N E Y 8 , and KICSTOHK TH»&#13;
successors to THE WT. S. MANN ESTATE. P l l l c k l i e V M i e t t / S ! " ^ 1 3 an&#13;
(&#13;
diVIQOR?f&#13;
(&#13;
YO0&#13;
(&#13;
Tl!,l,,.^Uti?f!b&#13;
•*• i " v i » . n v j X T X J ^ / I I I diseases reo ul ring act' rtain and efflclentTONIC,&#13;
'-—*-' ^-^ | especially DyspepsraVWKllLof Appetite.Indlaea*&#13;
_ J tlon. Lark of Strength, etc.. Its use 1» marked&#13;
— *Tnrifti!lStl urate and wonderful results. Bone*,&#13;
muscles and n e r v e s receive new fore?. Znllfaaa&#13;
the mind and supplies Hraln Tower. A&#13;
I a n i C Q suffering from »11 complainta&#13;
k A U l fiO_pecullar to Uielrsex will find 1»&#13;
WL HAHTKR-a IRON TONIC a safe and speejjr&#13;
enre. " - ' -• * •-- • - -&#13;
NOW IS THE TIME T O BXJ*Y- It (fives -x clear and healthy complexion.&#13;
strongest testimony to the value of D&#13;
B A R T H K ' ^ I R H S TONIC IS that frequent attemi&#13;
The DM.&#13;
H A R T H K ' ^ I R H S TONIC IS that frequent attempt*&#13;
at countcrrVirliurhave only added to the popular*&#13;
We will sell all goods m our line tor asliortrtrnnrt'HEAPER-^han ever before&#13;
WE WILL MAKE&#13;
-—-TIKE&#13;
GOODS MOVE.&#13;
CALL AND GET PRICES&#13;
AND BE CONVINCED.&#13;
BARGAINS IN TINWARE,&#13;
BARGAINS IN MACHINE OIL.&#13;
LARGE ASSORTMENT OF HORSE POKES,&#13;
STEEL GOODS WE WILL SELL AT Cf&#13;
CARRIAGE PAINT AND VARNISH,&#13;
CULTIV ATORjiETrTETC. _&#13;
\ F. L BROWN.&#13;
Ity of the ortclniil. If you earnestly desire health&#13;
d o u o t experiment—jretthe OhiOiXAL AND BKST.&#13;
rSeo.1 roar Hddreaa to The Dr. Harter Med.Oo.\_&#13;
St. Louts, Mo., for our "D&amp;XAJf BOOJL"|&lt;&#13;
( ^Full of strsoga aod useful Information, f i e e)j&#13;
O R . HARTER'S IRON T O N I C IS FOR S A L E BY M - &gt;&#13;
DRUOQISTS AND DCALER8 E V C R Y W H I R S .&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned at 5 cents per volume,&#13;
for 7 days,&#13;
6 Tickets for gfcte&#13;
IS " " . . .&#13;
New books arefwnjfaddedevery&#13;
week, ardJke^froceeds wjll be devof0^&#13;
increasing and improving&#13;
w library&#13;
For books or further information&#13;
* ' apply at&#13;
WINCHELL'SlTRUG STORE^&#13;
rr:&#13;
I f - '&#13;
^\&#13;
--f"&#13;
Jm* I&#13;
i1&#13;
t%i&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
.1&#13;
ginckncii §hp;ttcl\.&#13;
JEROME W1NCHELU KDITOU.&#13;
KiiteroU at tho l'oatoffica as 2d class matter.&#13;
CURREtfr TOPICS.&#13;
« J I I K elaborately carved Italian marbty&#13;
column of the ex-Go v. E. D. Morgan&#13;
mausoleum, In Cedar Hill Cemetery,&#13;
at Hartford, was ruined by tire a&#13;
few days ago. The temporary house&#13;
built around the shaft to protect tho&#13;
carvers in their work was burned,&#13;
and the heat was sufficient to ruin the&#13;
stcne. The loss will be upwards of&#13;
$15,000. St. Gaudens was the designer&#13;
of the mausoleum. *&#13;
Tin-; monument placed on the spot&#13;
whero (Jon. Custer's command wasmassacred,&#13;
near the Big Horn river in&#13;
Montana, is reported to be rapidly disintegrating&#13;
under tho influence of the&#13;
weather. Some time since a high iron&#13;
railing was p u t up to protect tho memorial&#13;
from injury at the hands of relic&#13;
hunters, to whom nothing is sacred,&#13;
but the action of tho sun, wind and&#13;
rain proves even more "destructive than&#13;
Were the clippings of the vandals.&#13;
A NEW tire-escape lias just Leon exhibited&#13;
in New York. Ii&#13;
two iron tubes suspended ia&gt;m ;ui-iru&#13;
trawler, which is s-&gt; arranged on'the&#13;
edge of the roof as to he easily moved&#13;
along the front of a building to any location&#13;
required. Th;; Uuos serve ais&#13;
sruides for a wire cab, which commitnicates&#13;
by steel ropes with a weight in&#13;
each tube. T h e special advantage of&#13;
tho invention is thai u can bo used for&#13;
hoisting hose as TveTl lis~Toira~tirc -escape.&#13;
WAHKANTS have been issued for tho&#13;
arrest of several Philadelphia mill own-'&#13;
ers and others for polluting the Schuylkill&#13;
river from which the greater pari&#13;
of tho city's drinking water is obtained.&#13;
The report of an expert .appointed to&#13;
collect evidence shows that among other&#13;
pollutions the ,"refuse from public&#13;
water closets, dye houses, and all kinds&#13;
of mills is drained directly infrS the&#13;
stream. Amou^AhifaaiiiLtur discharged&#13;
into tho river within the city limits are&#13;
bluesfcones, aniline dyes, soda asn and&#13;
tho water after washing rags and'shoddy&#13;
waste in a number of factories.&#13;
have one or two more wives. 'Not&#13;
much, lsarel Pijnkham.' says 1; 'we've&#13;
traveled together thus fur, and no Mormon&#13;
will separate us now. Y\e'vo got&#13;
two sous and a darter back oast, who&#13;
shan't have anybody poking fun at&#13;
them, and there's tho two little boys&#13;
that we buried back in Maine, who&#13;
won't have no occasion to p'int their&#13;
lingers at us when we cross over to th«&#13;
other shore. This thing has gone just&#13;
as fur as it's *roiug to; Israel Pinkham,&#13;
we're goinj; back to Maine,' says I,&#13;
'and whether we've got one year or ten&#13;
years to live,we'll end this here pilgrimage&#13;
decent, as wo begun it.' Ain't&#13;
that what 1 told y o u ? " said she, addressing&#13;
the old man. who had been a silent&#13;
listener. He smiled in a faint way, and&#13;
nodded assent.&#13;
D e p a r t m e n t of S t a t e .&#13;
OFFICE OF THK SKCKETAKY,&#13;
Landing, Aug. i&gt;, 1*S4.&#13;
In the following table is presented,&#13;
by counties, the total population of&#13;
Michigan in each of the years 188-1 and&#13;
1880, and tho increase or decrease in&#13;
188-4 as compared with 1880. Tho table&#13;
is complete except for the counties of&#13;
Isle Royal and Ontoiiagon, ami the&#13;
township of Burt in Schoolcraft county,&#13;
from which the census returns for 1884&#13;
have not beerr-peeeived. The totals of&#13;
1884 are the results of the lirst&#13;
count of tho-population as shown by the&#13;
schedules returned to this olliee by census&#13;
enumerators, and are still subject&#13;
to corrections.&#13;
The population June. 1, 1884, of all&#13;
of the counties named in the table was&#13;
1.85U.y2f). The population in 1880 of&#13;
Isle Royal and Ontonagon \was_2,ti^LL-|&#13;
If there has been neither increase nor&#13;
decrease in these counties tiie populaeon&gt;&#13;
ist« of ! tioil of the L.ta'e J u n e 1, 188-1, exclusive&#13;
OJ Burt, iu Se!HkiU'i'ilfi county, was 1.,-&#13;
73,54^.~ an. increase, of *21ti,L'ii8 compared&#13;
with 1880. The lownship of&#13;
Bur: was noL or^aniz-'d until 188'J.&#13;
ilAUi.'v A. C O N A N T .&#13;
T H E peoplo .of St. Joseph, Missouri,&#13;
aro reported to have gone daft on astronomy&#13;
since the advent of Professor&#13;
Richard A Proctor, who has become a&#13;
resident of that city. Even thet(young&#13;
ladies talk about Mars and Jupiter instead&#13;
of ice cream and the fall fashions.&#13;
Sewing circles have given place to&#13;
astronomical societies; babies are named&#13;
after tne stars; furniture wagons are&#13;
ornamented with pictures of the aurora&#13;
boreali»; " S a t u r n " cigars and "Venus1 1&#13;
-soap are among the novelties of the&#13;
market; the newspapers contain' able&#13;
articles on tho perturbations of Uranus&#13;
and other subjects of the sort; and the&#13;
craze is still spreading. There are fears&#13;
that it will yet be necessary to wall in&#13;
the town and call it a lunatic asylum.&#13;
AN eight-year-old child at Bridgeport,&#13;
Conn., lately7 removed froai her under&#13;
jaw a decayed tooth which hung only&#13;
by a shred of skin. The child held up&#13;
COCXTiT.&#13;
Alcona&#13;
A l l j . r a n . . . .&#13;
A l { v n \&#13;
A n t r i m . . .&#13;
A r e i ' a • , . . .&#13;
B a r a g a . . . .&#13;
Harry&#13;
Uay&#13;
BCLZ 0&#13;
Herrit TI. . .&#13;
B r a n c h . . . .&#13;
Ciilli a l i i . . .&#13;
&lt;-as?.'&#13;
Onrlevoix..&#13;
I Jieiioygau.&#13;
Chippewa ..&#13;
|. Clam..»..._,&#13;
I (JiinUm&#13;
CiMwf'onl...&#13;
: i) IMI&#13;
' Kiton&#13;
K l l l M i t T&#13;
(ilad A i u . . . .&#13;
(i.\Tru\VS;.'&#13;
( i r a t i o :&#13;
J l . l l r i U l r . . .&#13;
Hou-ihtun..&#13;
Hul-on&#13;
h,-L:iin&#13;
I • i • i a.&#13;
I.;s,v&#13;
KtheiU&#13;
.1-, J v s o n . . . .&#13;
Ki'Wcen:i',V . .&#13;
Kulkasiia . . ,&#13;
IrM.&#13;
4,'=:'?&#13;
U 7 1 7&#13;
• \ : "&#13;
4,'".'.&gt;&#13;
;i,()t(;&#13;
•J I,'J 17&#13;
4. :-[.U&#13;
:*7.S;4&#13;
27, &lt;&gt;?&gt;&#13;
2i,5&gt;i&gt;.S&#13;
i),i5 S&#13;
S) 1*7:!&#13;
S 37-J&#13;
i&gt;M)'&#13;
:!^t)7&#13;
ccretary of Slate,&#13;
Jr.- D'e.&#13;
crc is^ ore.;&amp;i.' l.^li&#13;
It .9&#13;
•I » t &gt; S&#13;
y,r&gt;r&gt;;i&#13;
l , ! U l&#13;
l,£3t&gt;&#13;
r,.-r&gt;7&#13;
xltni&#13;
1.S.I4&#13;
2\&lt;&lt;:7&#13;
:-:..151&#13;
• ; * , 4 -&#13;
•J .'H4I&#13;
:{s.4VJ&#13;
. \ i i . )&#13;
••V.'4&#13;
5 ^ s&#13;
4 1&gt;7.&#13;
K i - n t&#13;
lj;ikc&#13;
L a p e e r . . . . . . . .&#13;
Lit lana'.v&#13;
Lenawi i'&#13;
Livingston&#13;
Mackinac&#13;
M a c o m b . . . . . . .&#13;
Manistee&#13;
M a u l t o u . . . ' . . . .&#13;
•J 7, la&gt;&#13;
!l.i'i&lt;7&#13;
ai u.u&#13;
i, i 4&gt; i&#13;
V.:&#13;
;:n&#13;
! J , n l&#13;
:.'*« i '.i&#13;
^ ( i l . j l&#13;
L'4 •')•") I , : ::4,':&gt;r&#13;
.'•U.C'VJ&#13;
lo,r,.j&#13;
Ui,&gt; 77&#13;
•I .\ o.V.J&#13;
4.(177&#13;
:;j.4i7&#13;
4.4! 'J&#13;
t.i.'.'.i&#13;
i » . &gt; •:&#13;
:-t!.'j-:»—&#13;
i; :».-i'.*&#13;
1,1.7&#13;
s.4iJ&#13;
. ,'.r;i)&#13;
;;:.'i:«&#13;
^,47:-5&#13;
SM) •'.)&#13;
'.',:&gt; do',&#13;
0(5 t&#13;
!,l^t)&#13;
';V;74&#13;
•S449&#13;
•i.VM&#13;
1,100&#13;
741&#13;
£'35&#13;
' Trfi&#13;
n i ^&#13;
b. i.vi&#13;
:!.(i7s&#13;
4..«'iJ&#13;
JJ'JS&#13;
,U;S&#13;
l . ^ &gt;&#13;
tfi&#13;
T h e S w i m m i n ' P l a c e .&#13;
Burlington Hawkeye.&#13;
1 mean "swimming place?" Not.&#13;
much. L do not. 1 mean swimuiin1&#13;
place. I never heard it called anything&#13;
else, and Tvo been right there at&#13;
the place, ami swum—no, not swam,&#13;
swum; we didn1t swam in those days,&#13;
wo swum—swum it a thousand times,&#13;
and you never saw tho place 1 doa1i&#13;
suppose. There was one boy, come to&#13;
think, who called it a swimming place.&#13;
lie came from Vermont; his uncle was&#13;
a judge or governor or shoemaker or&#13;
something of that kind, lie said "awftanoon"&#13;
and said it was a charming&#13;
swimming place, and asked Hud Peters&#13;
if the "watah was w a h m . " Hut he told&#13;
him how w«nn it was, and then said it&#13;
was cooler and nicer in the thade, right&#13;
where the big ilat rock was. And this&#13;
boy who called it a swimming place, lie&#13;
went down, to tho big rock--you remember,&#13;
under the ice chute? and jumped in.&#13;
There were two things that combined,&#13;
as Hud Peters had truly said , to&#13;
make the water cooler for all, and n icerforsomepurposes.&#13;
rightby the big tlat&#13;
rock. Ono was a living spring of clear&#13;
cola water that came gushing up out of&#13;
the deep, cold, suuless caverns of the&#13;
earih right there.Tho other was,this rock&#13;
was also the terminal point of a drain&#13;
from the big ice houses, and the water&#13;
from the melted ice, whenever it melted,&#13;
mingled its-frostiness with the limpid&#13;
currents of the spring, and thus developed&#13;
a latent heat that couldn't have&#13;
been much latenter in an icoburg. As 1&#13;
remarSed, right her&lt;- the boy who called&#13;
it a swimming place ju.mped in..&#13;
Now, if a L&gt;oy ieeLs to say thai he&#13;
Would"Ifte to'liolIvi'~,~Tam"'ImT" 611 e To&#13;
get lip every tune and move the unanimous&#13;
eoiLseut of the house thai he may&#13;
holler with a free course and no i v :&#13;
straint or embaiTas&gt;jLier:t. So wher&#13;
this boy, after jumping into about live&#13;
feet of ice water,gave one horrified ga.sp&#13;
that was enough to curdle tho ;c •,&#13;
and then held his breath for a second&#13;
-and stood with his two eyes standing&#13;
away out past his nose and thrust his&#13;
hand with ins tinkers extended! high into&#13;
the air, 1 knew that lie was seized&#13;
with a strange u5*n'i.&gt;id desire to make a&#13;
noise, so I s^id to my comrades: ''Fellows&#13;
stand back and give him plenty of&#13;
room. He's going to holler, ami he'll&#13;
need all the air he can get. 1 fell oil'&#13;
the chuto into that spring once myself."&#13;
You see how a broad cxpeiicnce in&#13;
this life enables—us—to pufr-ourse 1 ves&#13;
more thoroughly in our neighDorV&#13;
places, and deepens and intensities our&#13;
sympathies. ^ "&#13;
The next moment my glywrhy f(»rehodings&#13;
were realized. "iThe boy "iiollcred.''°&#13;
A wild, frejHtowl, thai spread&#13;
its sweeping pinifihs on the blast und&#13;
went booming over iho waste of water&#13;
like a-tiling of life, and awakened a&#13;
Then wo did lay down ami pound&#13;
the sand with our heels in an immeasurable&#13;
ecstacy and laughed till wo&#13;
cried, ami felt so good thai we didn't&#13;
ciiro to live any louger, but wanted to&#13;
go right into ihe lake aud drown where&#13;
tho water was warm. Tho shivering&#13;
Vermonter had made a complete and&#13;
easy capture of a dozen or fifteen wild&#13;
westerners in one fell swoop; wo liked&#13;
him that moment from tho ground up&#13;
and never after made up a party without&#13;
him. And when Hud Peters, with&#13;
a funny kind of grin on his sorrowful&#13;
face, walked over to the Vermont boy&#13;
and held out his hand, the enthusiasm&#13;
went oft' like a rocket.&#13;
What an honest animal a boy is, any&#13;
how. What mean tilings lie can do;&#13;
what cruel tricks lie can play on a fellow;&#13;
how generous is his impulses; how&#13;
braro and manly tho bettor side of his&#13;
nature; how much of his badness is&#13;
pure thoughtlessness, t h e heedlessness&#13;
of a young colt; under his noisy, rough&#13;
boisterous, turbulent surface, what a&#13;
sonsitire, shrinking heart there is, proud&#13;
ambitious, timid, foolishly ashamed to&#13;
show its bettor impulses, fearful that&#13;
you might discover its ambitious&#13;
dreams; he loves a boy who can make&#13;
the longest jump and run tho swiftest,&#13;
and ho hates with equal fury a sneak&#13;
ami a bully; he will throw oft" his coat&#13;
and jump into a tight and take a&#13;
"licking" ,uny time from a friend, and&#13;
will walk around two blocks out of hii&#13;
way rather than meet a girl to whom&#13;
ho will bo expected to speak; as different&#13;
wiien you get him ai'ono from what&#13;
he is in a erowd that you think he may&#13;
be two entirely „ different boys. A&#13;
strange, hones , capricious, tenderhearted,&#13;
tyrauuteal, loving, cruel,&#13;
thoughtless, dreaming, shouting, complex&#13;
animal, this boy of ours. Often&#13;
badly taught, worse trained, hajf di*-&#13;
fiplineil, whipped and petted, .scolded&#13;
; ud caressed, he tries our patience, destroys&#13;
our quiet, wastes our mono)-,&#13;
wrings our hearts, neglects us, loves&#13;
us, understands us better many times&#13;
than we understand him, and wo chide&#13;
him to his face and praise him to our&#13;
hearts; we follow him, humor him, pray&#13;
for him and love him -God bless the •&#13;
boy how 'we do love him'.&#13;
P ENSIONS T O ALL&#13;
SOUJIKUS it WAtUABlk&#13;
who «ntn (lihdblcit hv wumuin, (IIMUIIHC, att"&#13;
or otlicrwiHOjtlH;IOHH of a toe, jilk-j,, VHI'ICOHUI&#13;
chronic diwrhiDU, ru^lmu, luitd y£ feUjht y r ,&#13;
liuli.vKo), luHfi of lioaritiL', fall in y hacK of inr&#13;
rhnimiiiliMii, uuy diuahility, no nmttor liowi..&#13;
jjivt'ri you ii IXJUHJOII. flew tutU Jlonorctble&#13;
vhatyot (tbtuini'tl- Widows, ihihlrmi, riiobtorp*&#13;
and fttlliors of Hoklierw (tviti;.; in tho H«rvic«i, or&#13;
iiftorwanln, frotu (liriun.be i outraoted or w o u m i i r o - .&#13;
I'oivetl while in the hoivice, two untitled to pension.&#13;
Hejocteii ami iibuiKloned clainis a apoi'ialtjf ^&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND Honsc CLAIMS C O L .&#13;
LECTED.&#13;
INCREASE YOUH T E N S I O N .&#13;
A oennion cun lio incri'iiHod at buy tim« wiie»&#13;
thu ainahility waj'iuiit^ it. As you grt&gt;W oid«r th»t wound \i&amp;* LiiuinHllv tutdormiiittd tluj«al|sttV«liwu&#13;
tUu diaeimt' has made ynu more hednjMp,' 4 k M 0 &amp;&#13;
maimer thu ditniltillty lias iiu'reum'fl; &lt;M (Mbr *or&#13;
AH Jncreauu at oiicn. ^ ' ' j ^ p w i&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS S O U R E D&#13;
Mr exverinnco, und bi'iu^ hore at headq«urt«w&#13;
table mo to attend promptly to all claims agaktth&#13;
,e Wovernmt'iit. Circulars froc. Addro^, wlfh&#13;
un&#13;
the&#13;
Htaunp :&#13;
Box 485,&#13;
M. V. TTPRNEY,&#13;
WASHINGTON. D. C.&#13;
I G Q R O U S H E A L T H F O R M E N&#13;
HARRIS'&#13;
A Eadical Cv.ro&#13;
FOB&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
A N D&#13;
IMPOTENGYa&#13;
K ' i r T o a t e d f o r o v e r O&#13;
yor.ra b y n s e in thcu&gt;&#13;
B o n d s c" CODOB.&#13;
^ Tf?iAL&#13;
"* PACKACE.&#13;
torn. Lm«3&#13;
SE ^D ADDRESS&#13;
orgUiij \venluieM naA (&#13;
cay, lui nunwroal&#13;
•OQrO dlKMC«t&#13;
skillful {ibTklaitai, l&#13;
tram youthful led&#13;
tlona, loo free lodu&#13;
on4 over brala irot_ _™.&#13;
not tomnorlzo wMlo I04p&#13;
ciicoiies lurk lnyoori&#13;
Avoid being Inp&#13;
tu by preceutloui claim*&#13;
cher rcait'ilics f°t *••&#13;
troublei, (jut our frco clJO*&#13;
1 .r ami trial packago w&#13;
l.aru Important fu«U Ueftj^&#13;
tikuij troutniL&gt;ptcel»e«hM&amp;&#13;
V:kku a rriucdy tliot has e o r u&#13;
t:.(H!satvl&lt;, autl docs not tc&#13;
U--ftiia votli Rttcntlou tu l)WHnous&#13;
or cause pain or )M0B&gt;&#13;
vriili'oco. t'ouudixl ou KU&#13;
r:&gt;iilia mciiiivil j&gt;r!neipl&lt;^i.&#13;
CrowitiR in luvor OBcl rvpuMtun.&#13;
DiroctO'prtilcntlaulO tflo&#13;
tent of dl*t'asj n:Kliiis IU spcclflo&#13;
latlucucu ftdt w-illioirt&#13;
uclay. Tho natural fuu«-&#13;
tioui of tLo liunmn urgUi:&#13;
iu uro rcttorud. To«&#13;
animstini? tlcitouta of&#13;
li.'o Mtiich havu bec*&#13;
w^tcd CM given bac&gt;,&#13;
Tho pniiont bcca:s«4&#13;
c h e e r f u l and g»lua&#13;
Btrcugt^i ripiJly;&#13;
H A R R I S R E M E D Y CO., M'fg Chemist,&#13;
U()«''a North 10th St., St. Louis, S!o.&#13;
Qii ifcMTH'3 TREATMENT, $3:2 VCWTHS.$5 ; 3 MONTHS. $7,&#13;
II'. I oil&#13;
4.'J ;&lt;i&#13;
•i.::7i&gt;&#13;
Marquette ..&#13;
Mason&#13;
Mecosta.. .^,..&#13;
Menomiuee&#13;
MtrHand : .T&#13;
64,iO'i&#13;
7,o 74&#13;
•-ifi, i i s&#13;
7,'LM&#13;
4y,;i.4&#13;
-l,o \i&#13;
5.UV-J&#13;
31,:330&#13;
111,^59&#13;
31,370&#13;
13,431&#13;
19,129&#13;
srryr&#13;
73.&#13;
3,&#13;
3ij:-i-r&#13;
6 'i.*&gt;3&#13;
4s,:j4S&#13;
•2'L'2'A&#13;
31,(527&#13;
i,334&#13;
25,234&#13;
10,(X55&#13;
13,973&#13;
11/JS7&#13;
3.711.'&#13;
3,'JI.S&#13;
4^7 •&#13;
l,i Uo&#13;
1,.-1; j&#13;
"3 n,r,i2&#13;
Isi 4,341&#13;
20&#13;
SJ5L&#13;
2,2ti'l&#13;
M i s s a u k e e . . . . \ 3 , 3 8 S&#13;
Monroe S3 344&#13;
Montcalm 35,423&#13;
Mt.Morency... 84tf&#13;
Muskegon 37,(581&#13;
N e w a y g o . . . . . 19,055&#13;
O a k l a u d . . . . . . . 41,lh'7&#13;
Oceana 14.557&#13;
(hjemaw 3 (541&#13;
Osceola 13,98'J&#13;
T57S93"&#13;
1,553&#13;
33,624&#13;
33.14S&#13;
7,057&#13;
^9715&#13;
3,3tit5&#13;
0,059&#13;
7,142&#13;
1)76&#13;
-^rtrr-&#13;
6-11&#13;
1,891&#13;
1,835&#13;
2,275&#13;
846&#13;
26.586 11,095&#13;
4 376 14.6S8&#13;
41,537&#13;
2,»0&#13;
the tooth for her mother's inspection.&#13;
The mother examined the child's mouth&#13;
and discovered what looked like a now&#13;
tooth. ssJJpon being touched it fell&#13;
out. It wa? about the size of a s m a H l Wexford^.'&#13;
kernel of corn, white and tocT bard I Totals&#13;
to be cut with a kjwMT Another&#13;
new tooth instanUj,fttIed up the freshly&#13;
opened c a r i j ^ J i n d that in turn with 18&#13;
-others^we're removed by the mother.&#13;
4t^thi3 junction she became alarmed&#13;
and sent for a physician. He shortly&#13;
arrived and removed 24 more, making&#13;
a total of 42. Doctors say there has&#13;
been cases of three or four teeth following&#13;
each other in quick succe&amp;sion, but&#13;
never has such a wonderful case as this&#13;
come within theit knowledge.&#13;
Oscoda&#13;
Otsego......&#13;
Ottawa&#13;
Presque Isle&#13;
Roscoiiirnou&#13;
Saginaw&#13;
Sanilac&#13;
Schnolcralt&#13;
Shiawassee.&#13;
St. C l a i r . . . .&#13;
St.Joseph&#13;
Tuucola*..&#13;
Vu.:i-BuyHi&#13;
\V^wrtei.ia\v&#13;
ajne&#13;
1,376&#13;
.3,1117&#13;
36 31H&#13;
4 067&#13;
2,610&#13;
75,81.3&#13;
2 9 6 2 3&#13;
,3,5.16&#13;
11,690&#13;
1,914&#13;
10,777&#13;
- 467&#13;
1,974&#13;
33 126&#13;
3.113&#13;
1.459&#13;
59,095 16,(&#13;
2o,34! JtfS-i&#13;
U&amp;T 1,941&#13;
tfiau um&#13;
46.197 6 1 6&#13;
2,858&#13;
1,7'27&#13;
3,212&#13;
9 9&#13;
1,933&#13;
3,182&#13;
9 "4&#13;
1,151&#13;
165,4-14 22 &lt;.m&#13;
6.545 3 993&#13;
l,8&gt;0,rJ2') 1,634,317 Jg5,2gS 8,62&gt;-&#13;
« AR published in compendium of the Tenth&#13;
U. S. Ccn?ii«, hut 1.23) greater tiian the footing&#13;
of township a n a city totals.&#13;
N o t M u c h , I s r a e l P i n k h a m , B a y s I . "&#13;
New York Evangelist.&#13;
Israel Pinkham and wife moved from&#13;
MaUie many years ago to Utah Territory.&#13;
They passed through Salt Lake&#13;
ihe* Other day on their way to their old&#13;
home, and the old lady made no secret&#13;
on the cause of their return. To the reporter&#13;
for a Gentile newspaper she said:&#13;
"My husband and I have liyed together&#13;
these forty-two years, and though we&#13;
joined the Mormons twenty years ago,&#13;
nothing was ever said about polygamy&#13;
until this spring. Then some sneaking&#13;
priest came round and got the old m a n&#13;
worked up with the idea that he must&#13;
T h e K n i g h t w a s F i r e d O u t .&#13;
R. J. Burdette.&#13;
The clock on the mantel toliod 1 a.&#13;
m. and a little past and still the knight&#13;
lingered, trying to think of something&#13;
to say, although it Was plainly evident&#13;
that tho baron's daughter was just too&#13;
slsepy for anything.&#13;
"1 am afraid,"' ho said at last, " 1 am&#13;
like an auger.'"&#13;
"Wherefore, sir knight,'' «"ho asked,&#13;
yawning with that high-bred courtesy&#13;
appertaining to the upper elassew.&#13;
"Becauso I boro yon,"' he said, smiling&#13;
proudly at his good right wit.&#13;
thousand di:H:orci:intH'eh&lt;&gt;u.s in the distant&#13;
hills heyotid tho »tart!ecj hike; and tin:&#13;
halt'-chui \&gt;o\6 &lt;&gt;n ihe pcb'dy .shore,&#13;
danced Iiko wild cannibals in their&#13;
savage gh.ie, aud .shrieked in&#13;
mocking echo oi' tho nice bin's&#13;
liovvt. and cast sauil upon each&#13;
tuber's red ribbud bricks to show their&#13;
jt&gt;3. And when that boy lloundered&#13;
| ai.d fluttered ashore, and stood there,&#13;
shivering and gasping in the life-giving&#13;
rays of the July nun. we lay down on&#13;
the ground, and held our aching sided&#13;
with penitent hands, and only psked the&#13;
one pour booo, that tho ice house might&#13;
fell over on top of us right then and&#13;
there. Only one boy who had enjoyed&#13;
iumselt more thah the oTITersT asked&#13;
that some kind person would amputate&#13;
his limb, or as he rudely expressed himself&#13;
in song, * -saw my leg off." Then we&#13;
rubbed the cold boy with dry sand until&#13;
we got him nice aud warm a"nd red and&#13;
real tender, and ho became a good boy&#13;
and went wi'.h us often, artd learned&#13;
rtiH.ii v things, and we eventually taughj&#13;
him to say "swimmin' hole." B u ^ t o&#13;
the end of hisdays his provineiitliiccent&#13;
clung to him and hespellejd^fat "ah-a-t-,&#13;
r-r-r-rat;M and eafledra war horse a&#13;
"wab hoss." ^ ^ " " "&#13;
'Hut howis-fhe mischief of the wicked&#13;
returned upon his own head, and&#13;
his^vfbfent dealing come down upon his&#13;
own pate. Bud' Peters, who had&#13;
suggested the advisability of plunging&#13;
into the more bracing&#13;
waters of the shady place, was placidly&#13;
swimming on his back when the curtain&#13;
went up, and the red lire east Us lurid&#13;
:.. 1 tight upon the tableau. It made him I { , ¾ ^ ^ " ^ ^ ^ . . ^ g 0&#13;
^ T t Tfezerl s—o g,..o,,o.,d1 t/uh_at. • h-.:e. f5o,r-g-o:t: .-w^-h^e7r^e h.e I o^'ovtts-^ratmBtg-t gi roi rmr " tho whole&#13;
was aud tried to sit up and hold his&#13;
sides and laugh, aad ot course he went&#13;
d o w n With a " l i a J m . " t.lin.t. tttilod nfV i n&#13;
a jjurglo like a sinking well bucket and,&#13;
the minute he got his eyes above water&#13;
lid tried to "holler" a little on his own&#13;
account, but made a failure of it bv not&#13;
waiting until his mouth was out of tho&#13;
treacherous wave. So down he went&#13;
and up he came, and lie got rattled and&#13;
lost his stroke and splashed and spluttered&#13;
ashore dog fashion. When he&#13;
came up on the fhoie leaning wearily&#13;
against the big cottonwojd tree, he&#13;
looked likes a boy who hadn't had any&#13;
fun at all. His eyes were red, he wept&#13;
freely at tho nose, and it appeared not&#13;
only by his general appearance, but upon&#13;
his own candid admission, that on&#13;
his voyage to the pebbly strand, a short&#13;
trip of about thirty-five feet, ho ha.!&#13;
drank n tub full of warm lake water,&#13;
J o s h B i l l i n g s ' L o o k s a n c f T a l k e , .&#13;
Saratoga Cor; New York -Tribune.?&#13;
Mr. Henry W, Khaw (Josh Billings)&#13;
is now ^topping with his sister. Mrs.'&#13;
BabcutdcTat her homo here. Tho house&#13;
is acjmtnodious old mansion,surrounded&#13;
by tail trees, and is now offered for&#13;
sale. Mr, Shaw has a large family, and&#13;
most of his children and grandchildren&#13;
are around him. Some of them are&#13;
scattered as I'ar as Smith America, and&#13;
others ire sojourning at .Nantucket. A&#13;
Tribune correspondent paid him a' visit&#13;
recently, and found the aoo^tie of p h &gt;&#13;
notie spelling and dr\ humor in ihr&#13;
barn sihoki.ng a cigar. Ho is now six &gt;-&#13;
six \ ears old. hut retains Ids phy.-'eil&#13;
vigor, and his tall figure and g i a \ e face.&#13;
seamed in tho Jong gray-broiVn hair,&#13;
hardly suggested su ripe an ugi.\ He&#13;
took pleasure in sho.vino Ids team"Tom&#13;
and Jerry.'" whi.cn lie drove all the way&#13;
from JSTew York to Saratoga last J u n e .&#13;
'•We were seved thus coming," he&#13;
related, "and drove oitl}' until noon&#13;
each day. Oar expenses averages&#13;
about $8 a day, and is was a ven- pleasant&#13;
ridj. Last summer 1 drove them&#13;
to the White Mountains. t I came up&#13;
here for the air and the rest. 1 do not&#13;
care for the mineral.water" My lee.&#13;
the other evening was very well attend&#13;
od. I have read the lecture^drundreds&#13;
of,times under d i f l o r e n t i t l e s . But it&#13;
doesn"t pay as w e l l a s d t used to, though&#13;
I always have^fuu houses. But tne&#13;
business has-"run down. 1 romember&#13;
the crojrof humorists that came on befpre^&#13;
Artemas Ward. They were none&#13;
of them rich enough to pay foT~1freTf&#13;
own funerals. I met a lot of them one&#13;
night, and we had a jolly time. But&#13;
after that it began to pay. Ward&#13;
made., some money, Petroleum V.&#13;
Nasby is worth §200,000. Burdetle,&#13;
the " H a w k e y e " man, and " T b e Free&#13;
Press," "Norristown H e r a M , " apd&#13;
other humorists are saving money. But&#13;
the business is overdone. * Every paper&#13;
now has its funuy man. No; 1 never&#13;
joke about religion If thero is anything&#13;
in me it's reverence. I am a firm believer.&#13;
-I like a m a n who believes some-&#13;
WITH OOTMEDICWE.&#13;
T H I S M A G N E T I C B E L T I S&#13;
WAPRASiEP TO CUREr^ar© Er&#13;
,(&#13;
o&#13;
1 i\vin,&lt; " diseases&#13;
1: iTIC r I'ulu 1*i t h c b s i e l . , hli&gt;». hcinl. o r&#13;
&gt;•., :i ;-\ H:H iK'tjlll(yfliiii:l.;\^o. f i T crnS clfl'ili tj",&#13;
•.'iin.il.ri, |).ir.-,!;»h, :i;'Uriilyii:, n-l:\liru, &lt;3J»«a»-&#13;
1 t!..- !, ;,.,i. \ i.duliiiij dUoiwl-K, tor,-ltd l l v v r , Bout,'&#13;
.0:1.1 ; iiiixuliuip, iitipntrrnj , i;\tlimu. IlfSrl dta-&#13;
', 11.'' I{»&lt;'|IK!II, 1 IIII. t !|III! ' I'I, » r y«lp&lt; l i s , l u d l p o s -&#13;
'. 11 ruin &gt;o- i-njjlurv, cutarrli, tiUcn, o ^ i ^ i i s y ,&#13;
'i 1&gt; U : ' • &gt; • . « 1 r .&#13;
I: no- rr &lt;horr",&gt;:r'i:A' Tvr:ost:;\xs&#13;
" . 1,1-1.. v i i u U l y , lin'k vf ncr\ i\ I &gt;rro UHII \ 1^0.-,&#13;
v.. Out wenl.iiowiun, und n i l tlioxo (.i»i-asc « ul' u per*&#13;
i[ s u t u r e , ! turn \i liatcvi r ('»»'.&gt;, ti,o c.olitii'.'.ioi.:,&#13;
...|'i&gt; irin-tTJr-Ma^iii'tmin tKTn»'.'itlig t !iroim!i l l i o pnrtu&#13;
IIIUHC rfv-tore l i t e m li&gt; a faoijlthy a t l l o u . Q.'ii«-1'0 U Bo&#13;
Jr i.iljiti* ,,iju'.it ! hio uj)[iliiiiict.',&#13;
"ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER. 1&#13;
S f TO THE LA0IES:-^:,VK4M&#13;
er, tiianorm ueotiaone o r u o i a jreet, awolle: .&#13;
w e a k A n l l f N or SwoUenFcet, an AbdomlniU Belt&#13;
NouralKlo, Hte r rou&#13;
r _ ^ _ _ „ — , „ . . . . . _ ^ . „ w — — . J « I J r -&#13;
Kldnof*, lleoJaohe or Cold Feet, SwoUf«L«r~&#13;
Exh«r»tlon,D7»p«p*la,orwItli lll»e»»e«pftfc&#13;
and a pair of Mafrnotlo Foot BattorleB hayo no superior&#13;
In tho relief and cure of all the»B complaints. Tbcy&#13;
carry a powerful ua&amp;gneUo force to the Mat of ttw&#13;
disease.&#13;
For Lamo Back, Weafcaeisof tho Sslne, Fall,&#13;
int, or tlm womb, Lcucorrhoea, Ch ronlo lnflvmmi.&#13;
tloh and UlceraUon of the Woiab, Incidental Hemorrha&#13;
«« or Flooding, Patnful, Suppressed and Irrccalar&#13;
McnutraaUon, HarrenneM, and chance of&#13;
I.lfs, this U tho Most AppllanOB and Cnratlvo A c e n t&#13;
Known. -&#13;
yor all forms of Female iMflcaHles i t la unsms&#13;
paised by anything" before Invented, both asaaajraUro ,&#13;
agent and as a soui"cc of power an d TttaUzatiotit,&#13;
Prlrjeofeltli .r Belt with MafrncticFoot BatterHsvl&#13;
Sentby exprosaC.O. D ,and exnmlnatlonaJloT"' "&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In ordering, send&#13;
waist and sl«e of Bhoo. Remittance coo be i&#13;
rency, sent In letter at our risk.&#13;
Tbe Magneton Qaruicnts avo adapted to all ages, are&#13;
worn over the undorclothing, (not next U&gt; t h e&#13;
body like the many Gulvanla and K l c e t r l o &amp; • • «&#13;
bu»s advertlm-d no extenaivefy) and shoold b#&#13;
taken off nt nljjht. Th^y ho! i tlteir;x&gt;Mer/or»»#r,ftna&#13;
are worn at all seasons &lt;if t'u&gt;&gt; ear.&#13;
Senrl stamp for !!:•• "'Xfw ' &gt;.^.ii'tini»in V«v&lt;&lt;^1 Traattnent&#13;
W i t h o u t iietJlcluo,"'Vitli UiuiuacdMof. testirno*&#13;
Ol&amp;lB.&#13;
T H E MAGNlVTON.APPr.IANCECO.1&#13;
M18 Stato tiu, C h i c a e o , JOl,&#13;
The Magnetic appliances,may be seen&#13;
at Winchell's D n \ g Store, tfPicknev&#13;
Mich. ' .- —&#13;
"Ah, n o , " she said, "vbu remind me !vS though he were a camel preparing&#13;
of an old flint-lock mu-ket." - , to cross the desert.&#13;
"Spoken like a soldier's-daughter," Now, warm lake water may bo very&#13;
quoth he; " a n d as to how9 " " : nutritious but it is not nalatable.&#13;
"Takes you so long to go off," she&#13;
said kindly.&#13;
At 1:15 a. m. the portcullis fell with&#13;
a clang the drawbridge was raised and&#13;
the castle slept.&#13;
Iosco county supervisors object to&#13;
paying the $2,000* demanded hyf the&#13;
Pinksrton detectives for their services&#13;
(?) at the recent strike at East Tawas.&#13;
The nice boy from down east, who&#13;
was still standing in the sun, blue and&#13;
whito and shivering, looked at Bud's&#13;
relaxed, drooping figure and languid&#13;
expression, and said kindly, but with a&#13;
certain firmness that not even his&#13;
chattering teeth could conceal:&#13;
"i'ou'lT find the watah coolah and&#13;
pleasantah for drinking purposes; Bud,&#13;
in the shade by the big ilat rock."&#13;
of the road. I like to hit a subject in&#13;
the rear, if I have anything to say I&#13;
can say it in three lines, and after all&#13;
it's the paragraph or sentence or even&#13;
phrf.se that's remembered rather than&#13;
pages. Some of my sayings are mere&#13;
platitudes,. XJaase never excelled somo&#13;
things wiiich I wrote in my &lt;Kssay on&#13;
a Mule,' my first venture, and'sold' for&#13;
$1.60. 1 am willing to talk on anything&#13;
out politics a n d religion. Autograph&#13;
hunters? Yes, three or four a day. I&#13;
never refuse t h e m . "&#13;
And as the correspondent left ho carrier&#13;
away ft history of "JoBh ' on which&#13;
was written: "Yours without a struggle,&#13;
Josh Billings'."&#13;
• — —&#13;
Courtship in Truxillo is a simple matter.&#13;
A young man ^goes up to a 14-&#13;
year oldgiri and m a t e s her a present&#13;
and then invites her to come and live&#13;
with him. She goes if she likes him.&#13;
If ho gives her presents she will remain&#13;
with him. If ho neglects her in that&#13;
respect she will leave him for another,&#13;
kinder and finer looking.&#13;
A young woman walking near, a precipice&#13;
ii&lt; England slipped and fell over the&#13;
edge. The bottom of her dross caught&#13;
on a stump and was pulled up over her&#13;
head and arms, checking her decent but&#13;
rendering her helpless. In this position&#13;
about ten feet from safety, she starved&#13;
to death, her position boing unsuspected&#13;
by any one, and her cries being inaudible.&#13;
LU&#13;
so&#13;
C3&#13;
L U&#13;
CO&#13;
CO&#13;
- / * MANDRAKE PILLS, CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liver&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
N O T I C E . — W i t h o u t a partic^of doubt, feer-&#13;
QKIU'S l'ills'ure themost popular ofany on the mar-,&#13;
uet. Having been before the public for a quartonof&#13;
a century, and h*ving always^performed more than&#13;
WHS promised for them, they/merit the tucoeas Chat&#13;
they have Attsinnd. ' I » r t « S e , 2 5 c . p e r 1M&gt;JU&#13;
For sale by all druggists.&#13;
, Kermotts PiilX always in stock a t&#13;
Winch*.l's DrXg Store, Pinokney, Micb&#13;
/&lt;•*&#13;
i a « « i M i *- - . vPROHIBITION&#13;
TICKET.&#13;
; *f * l | v i d Preston of Detroit Heads It.&#13;
j l n f a r u e i t a u d E u i l i u « l a i t t l c C o n veilt&#13;
i o u of r e m p e r H a c e P«»o p i e - T h e&#13;
P l a t f o r m A d o p t e d .&#13;
The Prohibition state convention WM called&#13;
to order at 10:15 a. in. Wednesday, August 27,&#13;
by Samuel Dickie, chairman of tue state central&#13;
committee of the uulou party, and prayer&#13;
was offered hy Kev. M. M- Callen of Portland.&#13;
Mr. Dickie made one of&#13;
tiu characf rifttl(y addresses outlining&#13;
the policy of the party and denouncing&#13;
In cauatle terms the hypocrisy of the Republican&#13;
jprly on the temperance question.&#13;
He closed by naming 1). Jt\ aagenUorph of&#13;
Charlotte, as temporary chairman, and Dr.&#13;
SweetluU'.l uf Edwurdsbur^, us temporary&#13;
^ecjetfcry.&#13;
Mr tiageiu'orph simply thanked tne convention&#13;
f jr tue J'.ouor und&#13;
fKOOBEWED TO JiL'SlNESel.&#13;
The several congressional districts presented&#13;
one nanio each for the several committees, 1LcludlnK&#13;
a committee on finance, and after preltoiaary&#13;
orahnlzation the convention took a&#13;
until $ o'clock,&#13;
the convention was called to order iu&#13;
ju, the report of tne committee on&#13;
„, la was first in order aiid was called&#13;
f t * The committee reported that tney had&#13;
Blued the credential of a tuta' number of&#13;
delegates and found them satisfactory.&#13;
i motion the reading of the list of delegates&#13;
.£•» dlsuensud with and th«: report adopted.&#13;
"^^The committee on permuneut organisation&#13;
and order of busiuews. next reported, and rtc&#13;
Otumended the Lames of the lion. W. (J. Uage&#13;
for permanent chairman and Prof. J. b. 8teere&#13;
for peruiaututtccrttury. The vice-presidents.'&#13;
•ph'oseu by the several district delegates were&#13;
approveu. The r-eport of&#13;
accepted and adopted.&#13;
At the close of the chairman's address a motion&#13;
waB made and carried that the convention&#13;
proceed to the Domination of candidates for&#13;
governor while waiting for the report of the&#13;
commiitte. ,&#13;
When the first/d'etria was culled Mr. E. 8.&#13;
Woouman of Norhviile, came forward and&#13;
presented the/is amy of David Preston of D.-&#13;
trott.v~ Kepi/^eutativuii from each district sup&#13;
ported the^loiulnation iu appropriate addresses.&#13;
The nouihiuliuu was finally made by aetlama-&#13;
-tion. / ^&#13;
The/r&#13;
low&#13;
Sagmavy City is to have a n electric I&#13;
•light p l a n t costing $30,000. |&#13;
PUo's Curtf for Commadptton liTnotoaJy please** I&#13;
totakobut It,In sure to cur*. . |&#13;
Ann Arbor wants a street railway.&#13;
T*o new combination of biaart Weed and I&#13;
Balladonna, as used in Carter's Backache Plas- |&#13;
tera has proved to be one of the best that could&#13;
be made. Try one of those popular plasters&#13;
la anv case of weak or lame back, back ache,&#13;
rheumatism, neuralgia, soreness of the ebest&#13;
or lungs, (fee, and you will be surprised and&#13;
pleased by the prompt relief. In bad cases of&#13;
chronic dyspepsia, a plaster over the pit of the&#13;
stomach stops the pain at once. Aak for Cartel's&#13;
Bmart Weed and Belladonna Backache&#13;
Plasters. Price 25 cents.&#13;
Thirty&#13;
l e a n&#13;
Ilecord.&#13;
M B l D t&#13;
fMfl^Fmdotei l .&#13;
the committee ^was&#13;
:et of the ticket vas filled cut as fol-&#13;
"KOUOU ON I'OUN.S," 15c. Auk for it. Complete&#13;
cure, hard or BO ft corns, warts. UL.UOEB.&#13;
HAY FEVEK. 1 haye used E'y's Cream iialm&#13;
for Hay Fever, and have experienced g n a t relief.&#13;
1 recommend it as the beat of ail t i e&#13;
remedies 1 have tried.— T. * Jenkr, lawyer,&#13;
Grand Kapids, Mich. Price Li) cents*&#13;
"ITJOHU-PMBA," Quick, complete, cures a l l . a n -&#13;
noying Kidney and Urinury Diseases, (1&#13;
MENSMAN'S PEPTONIZED J5BKP TONIC, the li&#13;
preparation of beef oontainlnK its entire nutritloi&#13;
properties. It contains blood-uiaktng, force-goner&#13;
atlng and ltfe-sustainlng properties; invaluable for&#13;
INDIOEHTION, 1&gt;YHPKPSIA, nervous prostration, and&#13;
all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled&#13;
conditions, whethar the result of exhaustion, nervous&#13;
prostration, tfverwurk, ur acute disease, particularly&#13;
1? resulting from pulmonary complaint*. CAKWKUi&#13;
H A Z A R D &amp;• Co., Proprietors, .Now York. Sold&#13;
by ''.aggista.&#13;
"HOUGH O.V PAIN." Quick cure for Cellc. Cramps,&#13;
Diarrhoea, Aches, 1'aluH, dpralns, Headache.&#13;
A C A R D — T o all * n o are- suffering from&#13;
errorB and indiscretions of youth, nervous&#13;
weakness, early decay, loss of manriuod.Jfcc^I will&#13;
send a recipe that will « « e you. fcKKB Ofr&#13;
CliAfcl&amp;^L This great remedy wax discovered bv a&#13;
nttffionary m Bouth America. Send self-addressed&#13;
envelope to Ksv.JoaSPH T. lSMax. Station L»,N. \ .&#13;
"ROUUft o k ITC11" cures humors, eruptions ringworm,&#13;
tetter, salt rheum,frost.d feet, -chilblains.&#13;
IT 13 A SPECIFIC&#13;
Kidney &amp; Liver Troubles,&#13;
Bladder, Urinary an&#13;
Liver Diaeaaea, Iwopuy,&#13;
Gravel and Diabetes.&#13;
Endorsed&#13;
PhysU&#13;
c l a n s .&#13;
IT 18 R I D A B L E&#13;
la curing1 Bright'*&#13;
Disease, Pains in the&#13;
Back, Lolnj or Sides,&#13;
Betentlon or Non-He tention&#13;
of Urine.&#13;
HICHLY RECOMMENDED,&#13;
It curea Biliousness, Headache, Jaundice, Sour Stomach,&#13;
Dyspepsia, Constipation and Pilau.&#13;
IT WORKS PROMPTLY&#13;
e n d cures Intemperance, N e r v o u s Diseases, General&#13;
l i o b i l i t y , Xxeeeee* and^Female WoaiLneua.&#13;
USE I T AT ONOE.&#13;
It restores the K I D K E Y S , L I V E U a n d BOWITLH, to&#13;
a h e a l t h y action t a d C U B E S w h e n all otiiermecL'oinea&#13;
txil. H u n d r e d s h a v e been Baved w h o h a v e been ji&gt;- &gt;a&#13;
up t o aieTjy friends a n d physietans.&#13;
P r i c e $ 1 . 2 5 . Bend for Illu»tratou P a m p h l e t t/&#13;
H U N T ' S K E M E D Y CO., P r o v l d c u c c , I t . . .&#13;
BOLD JBY AT.TJ D S U G G t S T B . »&#13;
L A D I E S !&#13;
Do vour own Stamping by ui-loe; B r l K * ' T r s i i -&#13;
f e r F u t t « r a » , Send for samplt, ' ,&#13;
O. L, FOX, Dwtroit, HkhJffn&#13;
We want a good, live agent in ttii* t o w n .&#13;
H E A D QU A R T J3RS&#13;
' (FOK) Campaign Flags &amp; Banners.&#13;
DEAN, GODFREY &amp; Co,&#13;
u'yj a»ri \Uj (Jriswold St, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
Oorrt;s[)ondcnce solicited.&#13;
A SK.IN OK HKALTY IS A IOY K O K S V S K .&#13;
( K J L B A C D ' S O r i e n t a l C r e a m o r ITIatfical&#13;
K W **5fICJ8ATH ^ * l ^&#13;
'HAY-FEVER.&#13;
I have been a Ha\-&#13;
Fever sufferer three&#13;
years; have often&#13;
heard Ely's-Cream&#13;
Balm spoken of in&#13;
the highest term?,&#13;
did not take much ;&#13;
stock'in it ?;Maufe&#13;
of the many quack&#13;
mt'dtcliyti • A tri^nd&#13;
C ATA R RE&#13;
m . l l l&#13;
&lt;"qr l i o u t i n a u t - s c v c r n o r , A l o n z o Shtrv/ood&#13;
l l e r r i e u ; t e e r e l a i y Ol state, Zaceheus Uliase&#13;
4JT ( j e u c - e e ; t-tate treasurer, A. li. Client v o l&#13;
/ K e n t ; aiinltoi-JieiU'ral, O. E. D o w n i n g of Mar-.'&#13;
' -quette; eommijsioner state land oflice, W. \V.&#13;
b a r k u s of .Muskegon; atrormy genera!, J. II.&#13;
TatiiiiOL K e n t ; sur.&lt;jninei.tV.nt of p u b l i c j n r i ^ u u ,&#13;
etruction, J. B. c?teeie oi. VVusntenaw; u u m i e r ^ v&#13;
o f state buuiu of eiiucatiou, J, \ \ r . M c K e t v e r&#13;
,;-ol A l l e g a n .&#13;
FQK rUEsIDENTTAL tLCCTeHS.&#13;
~* Atl»rg^, John Kussell, Samuel Dickie; first&#13;
dllWJet, Frank (Jtessy oi \V:e&gt;ne; second iiistrlck,&#13;
Frank li. Waning of Lenawee; third&#13;
districr, li. W. VVurrtn of Charlotte; fourth&#13;
district, D. A, Grangir_of Van iiureii; Jifth&#13;
district, E. A. Kicharda o'F Sanilh.c; sixtii district,&#13;
D. A. StOLewell of JlolJy," fceventh district,&#13;
Mark Carrtugtou of fort Austin; eighjli-'&#13;
district,E. L. Brewer of hhiawasaee;jUrfuthdistrict,&#13;
O. M. DroiiBorrot EvcreUi^wfith dlstri&amp;&#13;
t, Brtnt. Iiardiugof Bay ^jieVentlnliBtrict,&#13;
not represented; to ue&amp;up^iiedby^tatecentral&#13;
comrnittee.&#13;
persuaded me to&#13;
try ttie 3alui, and&#13;
with the most woai|&#13;
derfulsuoeees—T.8.&#13;
^Geer, Syracuse, .N.&#13;
C r r n m B u l i u is, a&#13;
y.fmuiiiiil on a.&#13;
BITTERS&#13;
'i'liu ropiuaiuKi ol&#13;
Hostetter'B S t o a -&#13;
aeh Iiltier» aa a, prevontivts&#13;
of epidem&#13;
les, a stomachic, un&#13;
inviiurnni a g e n e r '&#13;
al res'.oratlTe, a no a&#13;
specific for fever&#13;
and ague, lndi«eatioHi&#13;
twillou* ttllw;-&#13;
tlone, rheumatism,&#13;
nervous d e b l l i ty,&#13;
consUtuttonal wean&#13;
nesc Is estatjlished&#13;
upon tnesoond bab-&#13;
Is of more than&#13;
twenty years experience&#13;
_aud can&#13;
no more be shaken&#13;
by the claptrap nostrums&#13;
ol unscientific&#13;
preteuderMhan&#13;
the everlaaiiog hills&#13;
hy the wind that&#13;
ru»tie through btoelr&#13;
defiles. For sale by&#13;
ail druggists and&#13;
dealere generally.&#13;
* » i *&#13;
D K . T . bzhix&#13;
B e a u t l f l e r .&#13;
Henjoves tan,&#13;
Plnjples,**rec)i&#13;
l e s . X o t h&#13;
Patches. Hash&#13;
and skin dise&#13;
a s o s , and&#13;
every bleraUn&#13;
• n beauty, and&#13;
detits detection.&#13;
It baa&#13;
«u&gt;^d the test&#13;
ot thlny years&#13;
and is BO harm&#13;
less we ta*te&#13;
it to be sure&#13;
the preparation&#13;
is proper&#13;
ly made Accept&#13;
no counterfeit&#13;
of Bin.i'&#13;
larname. Ur.&#13;
_ . U A . rtayrtti&#13;
DO THEY TKOLBLE Y O U ? H A V E THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D WITH OUR N E W TEST LSNSE.S&#13;
BY W H I C H W E 0 * T E N S U C C E E D WHEJf&#13;
OTHERS F A I L .&#13;
ROEHM &amp; WRIGHT,&#13;
IMPORTERS, J E W E L E R S A N D O P T I C I A N S ,&#13;
H O W O O D W A R D A V E . , D E T R O I T MICH.&#13;
K. n. n. RADWAVS&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF,&#13;
In from one to twenty minutes, never fails to r*»&#13;
Ueve PAIN with one thorough application. No&#13;
matter bow violent or ezcradating the pain, the&#13;
Rheumatic, Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous,&#13;
Neuralgic, or prostrated with disease may suffer.&#13;
BADWAY'S UKADY BELIEF will afford inatani&#13;
ease.&#13;
said to a l a d v h a u t t o n (a patient.)— 'An you Udles&#13;
will use them, I recommend ti'juraud's ('r am' as&#13;
the least hRTrmful of »11 Sirin -pT^Paratiens." One&#13;
twttle w&gt;ti lafst six months, nsin-^it every day. Also&#13;
1'oudre Sub.iio removes supertluouB ba.r without&#13;
injury t J the skin.&#13;
MJLE M. B i ' l ' O O U H A U D . S o l e P r o p . ^ Bond St.,&#13;
N. Y. ForjHle by all Druggists and Fancy Gooda&#13;
Dealers. p f B e w a r e of bHse imitations. $1,(11 Reward&#13;
for ajjrestund proof of anyone selling ihe same&#13;
BOWEL COMPLAINTS,.&#13;
DYSENTERY, DIARRHCEA, CHOLERA&#13;
MORBUS.&#13;
It will, in a few minutes, when taken according&#13;
to directions, cure Cramps, Hpasms, Sour Stomach,&#13;
Heartburn, Hick Headache, BUMMER COMPLAINT,&#13;
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind In the Bowels,&#13;
and all internal poliim—&#13;
* * *&#13;
PiKKHAM'S&#13;
HAY-FEVER&#13;
PLATt'OKM./&#13;
rt of the comrnittee on resolutions&#13;
was-netened to attentively, and a vote was&#13;
aken on its aeiopticn wlhoht dibcustdon. The&#13;
platform wa6 not, adopted unanimously, however.&#13;
A lone woman in the sixth district arose&#13;
and voted u uo " The resolutions follow;&#13;
JtetoUted, That this convention, recognizing&#13;
.Almighty God as the ruler and governor of all&#13;
things, ana asking His blessing on our work,&#13;
does this day present to the people a fuU, clean&#13;
ticket for olflcers of the state of Michigan.&#13;
We aBk for it the moral and political support&#13;
of: vl« All who would abolish the legalized&#13;
traffic in intoxicating liquors. 2. All who favor&#13;
the intrusting of the affairs of the government&#13;
to honest, capable and sober men.&#13;
3. All who. believe in the adoption of the most&#13;
rigid rules of civil service reform.&#13;
jlesolved, That capital is necessary to the&#13;
employment of labor, and laboring men should&#13;
look favorably upon the development and in-&#13;
•creaae of capital* But capital without Tabor&#13;
is useless. The great army of tollers is the&#13;
foundation of our prosperity. Their lhterest&#13;
and sacred rights should be maintained by appropriate&#13;
legislation. No one' thing will so&#13;
effectually do this as the suppression of the&#13;
liquor traffic, therefore, we invite all laboring&#13;
men to unite with us, pledging ourselves to&#13;
favorable actiou in behalf of their interests&#13;
and we) It are.&#13;
correct (li&#13;
cil upon;&#13;
IOC,&#13;
iitrnofs of iliis disc isu :tnl n n !&#13;
^o e. driiL'.;i.sts, I'm e m i l l , a n;&gt;&#13;
h X Y ISttO'S, Drui^Wts. O w - n o ,&#13;
is d&#13;
e h;&#13;
, X.&#13;
.•pdnrt&#13;
.'tie I:&#13;
V . rvk&#13;
* * r;. * * * *&#13;
• . L Y D I A E.&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
-t^*j&amp;A.^06iavm ccjaE FOE »* *&#13;
All t h o s e - p a i n f u l Complaints;&#13;
- und HcnkiK'SM'X so conwntm"*&#13;
* * * * * * t o o u r b e s t * * * * * *&#13;
* * FF.5IA1E rOPrL.lTIOX. * «&#13;
Trice $1 la liquid, pUl or lozenge furr-..&#13;
•» Tts purpose is noJeti/ for the legitimate Sailing of&#13;
disease ami the relie/ (rf P«i&lt;h and tliat it does ail&#13;
it claims to do, thousands of Indies rangtaJly testify. °&#13;
* It Avill cure entirely nll'uvailaTi t roubli/s, Inttii'jimatign&#13;
arwi 4&gt;ljeratuj:v'F*il4lliJ- ^u J - fl&gt;p&gt;cCni'-'nt.-, and&#13;
c Msemient fctpiji:a "Wcakiiufs, ana U partiutflarly&#13;
n.KiptJd to tha chantfe o f life.-* » • » * * *-m* - * -*&#13;
It reiii'&gt;vi'sFaii itm^Sijgiatiilenev&#13;
fiil.ren'.'veB v&gt; La&gt;:&#13;
v-, tlc-troysidl cmvin^r&#13;
nioaniKr. •'iiea^tclii-?,&#13;
•Ii;;btHiy. Shi- piea^!ieaiervoiis&#13;
fro^tiatien,/&#13;
"BLprt'^.--ion »ncl lndi-,&#13;
jr^stiiiiu- *!iat t'ueliriK.'*f beai-ing duwa,ca\«sWr pain,&#13;
a n ! ti'Lek'iclK'. 5su.livuvs permanently cured liy its u.-c.&#13;
* s -rici st:aii[&gt; to I.Vnn, M.i-i-i., for j/i'iiohlet. Letters of&#13;
iiiinai-ycuail luiitially aii-w.-xvd. !•'••)• mile at tiruyjtilfa.&#13;
) PURGATIVE&#13;
r&#13;
P o s i t i v e l v c u r e S I C K - H E A D / C T I E , L i l i o u s n e s s . nr.d all LTV'E'Ii and B O W E L Comp]aint^, MALABTA&#13;
B t O O I i P O I S O N , and SktB - D i s e a s e s (ONB P I L L A 'lOSEi. F o r F e m a l e C o m p l a i n t s ttyeco &gt;*IILh&#13;
a v s n o eou;U. " I find t h e m a v a l u a b l e Cathartic and l^iviT P i l l . — D r . T. K. P a l m e r , M o n t i c e l l o , -r'la '&#13;
" r-i r-iv riruetice X UMO no o t h e r . — J . l)f&gt;nn:»on, M.D., D o W i t r . I O W J , " S o l d e v e r y w h e r e , or s e n t D?&#13;
Vil for B 6 uls. i u »'-«-"&gt;»• \r.Mi« &gt;i« ^ . i - ' i o n VHKR. T ; O f l N U O N St OO B O S T O N . M/V?**&#13;
ITBS mam nmi&#13;
Liver and Kidney Remedy,&#13;
| Compounded from the wKll knowr [&#13;
Curatives Horn, MaJt, Buc'oa, Mandrake,&#13;
Dandelion, SarsapariUa, CaScar&#13;
» Sagrada, ^tc^ combine&lt;l»itlLAi^&#13;
agreeable Aromatic Elixir. • \&#13;
|TEY CUF.L WJ^'ik &amp; IBIGESTION,!&#13;
Act «?on tho Liter and KiJneyi,&#13;
[They cure Rheumatism, tna «J1 Urinary&#13;
troubles. They invigorate,&#13;
nourish, strengthen and quiet&#13;
the Nervous System.&#13;
As a Tonic they have r o Equal-,&#13;
_Take none but Hops and Vzlt Bitters.&#13;
— FOR SALE Bf ALL DIALERS.&#13;
- ^ - ^ - ^ - I • ' • • • • • - I M ^ J — • • . . ! • • ! • • • •&#13;
Hops and Malt Bitter's Co.&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
TON&#13;
Travelers BhooM always carry a bottle of RAILWAY'S&#13;
READY .RFXIEP-gltQ-theiru A f e w dropj&#13;
in water will prevent aiclcnesa cr pain from change&#13;
of water. I « a better than French JJrandj or Bitt&#13;
e n as a stimulant.&#13;
THE TRUE RELIEF.&#13;
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF 1B the only remedial&#13;
agent in vogue that will instantly atop pain. It&#13;
-Instantly relieves and Boon cures headache, whether&#13;
eicii or nervous, toothache, neuralgia, nexveuaneat,&#13;
and sleeplessneae, rhenmatiam, lumbago, pains and&#13;
weakness in the back, spine * cr kidneys, pains around&#13;
the liver, pleurisy, swelling of t i e joints, Bpraine,&#13;
bruises, bites of insects, and paina of all kinds, IUdway's&#13;
SvSady Relief will afford immediate ease, and ita&#13;
. continued use for a few days effect a permanent core.&#13;
MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS.&#13;
FEVER AND AGUE.&#13;
There is not a remedial agent in tne, world Uiat will&#13;
.cureFfiser and Ague and all other Malarious; Billion?,&#13;
Scarlet, and other fevers, (aided by Radway"»&#13;
Pilih) so quick cs Radway's Ready Relief. Price fifty&#13;
cents. So!d by druggists.&#13;
STEKETEE'S&#13;
?fE¥RALftIA DROPS! -A SURE CUBE FOB- NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM &amp; KIDNEY DISEASES.&#13;
JRewiwd, That we regard it altogether inexpedient&#13;
for us to endorse the candidates of any&#13;
other political party for any office, as it&#13;
tends to weaken our own forces and entourage&#13;
political parties who are organically&#13;
disqualified to deal with the question of prohibition&#13;
.'•;&#13;
Kewlwi, We do not believe that sex alone&#13;
should debar any citizen from all the rights ot&#13;
•citizenship! We declare ourselves favorable to'&#13;
VOWT USE THE KNIFE.&#13;
A HEM ARK ABLE CASE,&#13;
Doctors gave her up as incurable and 3her&#13;
lfW bone must be removed.but It is saved by the&#13;
use of Steketee's Neuralgia Drops, The undersigned&#13;
herewith wishes to say to Mr. Steketee&#13;
and the public what a remarkable cure&#13;
Steketee's Neuralgia Drops has done in curing&#13;
the undersigned of neuralgia. She had been&#13;
troubled with pain in her jaw for a long time.&#13;
I employed one of the most pkillful physicians&#13;
in this city. After treating me for several&#13;
wppks trip wry heat he knew at great expense,&#13;
his treatment was of no benefit, to me.&#13;
Finally be counseled with other equally skillful&#13;
physicians in reference to my case. The&#13;
result of said counsel resulted in a decision&#13;
tkat my caec was incurable unless my jaw&#13;
. bone was removed. The proposition was proposed&#13;
to me. which Idecllned to accept. My&#13;
mother and I called upon Mr. George G.Steketee&#13;
for adyice iu the matter. He advised me,&#13;
and will hall the coming 0¾ expense of—Mr. Steketee's/advice was BD&#13;
he marie a d1ftt.inr&gt;t and'-..cents, the price I paid him for one bottle.&#13;
)tmmj&#13;
the time when tt can be;made&#13;
yrominent political issue.&#13;
1imohtdm That! Wfi fully endorse the platform"&#13;
d life National Prohibition party and will&#13;
ipport its candidates.&#13;
*, That we call the attention of members&#13;
of thti democratic and greenback parties&#13;
to the Bhameful and ignoble position in which&#13;
the greedy office-seeker a who control those organizations&#13;
have placed them. The direst foes&#13;
t o flood government never proposed a scheme&#13;
a distinct and 1 cents, the price I paid him'for one bottl&#13;
T snan always recommend/the use of Steke-&#13;
~ tOithoi&#13;
after having examined ray case, tousehiR Neu&#13;
raigla Drops. The result of using one half&#13;
dottle of said Neuralgia Drops has entirely&#13;
OUred me, and without the use of a knife or&#13;
.violence. I therefore publicly express my&#13;
Tfcatiks to Mr. 8tekete« for his rtvicc. Tutni&#13;
toe's Nouralgia Drtapa tOithoao suffering with&#13;
be&#13;
more destructive of politics!&#13;
dicial to the people's Interest than the" open&#13;
bargain and sale arrangement made by these&#13;
fu8k&gt;nlsts for the mere purpose of political&#13;
spoils. No reform in the existing abuses&#13;
of government can take place if we put&#13;
on* state In thA r^ntt'r&gt;1 ^&gt;f m^n who trade&#13;
their principles for office—If they will&#13;
barter their votes before -election they&#13;
cheat the people after,and cannot be trustbring&#13;
about those reforms which the/&#13;
so muchdemaDd. We present a cleapr&#13;
overshadowing in its importance all ( ,&#13;
-.^jriutir, which affects alike the poor and rich'.&#13;
^ - m a n ' s home. We earnestly appeal to all voters/ "&#13;
to come with us, and by their votes contribute K&#13;
to a victory which means a grand uplifting of&#13;
the human race, rather than the mere parceling&#13;
out of spoils as brigands divide the&#13;
planner they have gained by a successful raid.&#13;
jfcM&amp;ed—That the resolution adopted by the&#13;
state convention of the Republican party at&#13;
Kalamaaoo two years ago and reaffirmed at the ^&#13;
late convention held at Detroit as a suhetltutA, t(E£f&gt;&#13;
for the report of the committee o a BlatJornVJ _g\^&#13;
upon the subject of temperance, Is an acknowlelgment&#13;
of /Its inabiity to&#13;
grapple with the /Question of prohibition&#13;
of the liquor traffic, inasmuch as it Is a&#13;
confession that there is no unity upon the subject&#13;
In Its own ratiks. Even the demand which&#13;
it makes for the submission of a constitutional&#13;
amendment is of verv little value, as the leadin*&#13;
organ of the party of, this state frankly&#13;
confesses that "no state cotveatlon can prohibit&#13;
voters from sendinga republican to Lansing&#13;
who does not favor, pro! lbi .ton or submission&#13;
either." The convention "cannot bind&#13;
local constituencies." Therefore we cannot&#13;
secure the election of proper candidates in a&#13;
party having such various opinions and convlc- tions upon ttc eubject. :&#13;
pain.» /&#13;
/ Miss- G. ROBST,&#13;
Corner of/Clancv and Cedar Sts.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec:5,18S3.&#13;
- / — - -&#13;
FROM BOSTON.&#13;
It must be so, for people write away from&#13;
Boston that S^ketee's Neuralgia drops cured&#13;
fht yeara Buffering. tOSTON HioULANDS, Jan. 3, 18S4.&#13;
teketee&#13;
Sir—Far the past eight years I have suffered&#13;
the most terrible pain in my head. I have tried&#13;
a great many remedies, but nothing gave any&#13;
permanent relief. About ten weeks ago I&#13;
taklttgTOUT Neuralgia Drops, and I&#13;
rrievmede dmieosr,e beI nehfaitv ef rotamk elnt ttbmunt ftrwomo baollt toleths ,&#13;
and am a great deal better than I have been for&#13;
a long time, and have had but one attack of&#13;
neuraJsrlasince I commenced taking your Neuralgia&#13;
Drops, and I think It will effect a permanent&#13;
core. I would recommend it to all auflererft.&#13;
from neuralgia. Yours,&#13;
MRS. J. S. ROUNDS.&#13;
AND STILL THEY COME I&#13;
Mr. Oe-. O. Stoketee:&#13;
D'ai S'r—I h*ve been troubled with Rheumatfim&#13;
for a long time, tried many remedies&#13;
.ttftiur*', b u t found none, at great expense to&#13;
* — jfihallv 1 tnade, for your Neuralgia Bror&gt;&lt;*&#13;
Pfet l i n o f t e l y one bottle of your N«nrai-&#13;
-gla-Drops 1 am happy to say I am entirely&#13;
cured. , Respectfully,&#13;
MRS. T. GORIIEK&#13;
Gratui Rapids, April 14,1SS*. 70 Hilton St,&#13;
TMBEE YEABS AGO.&#13;
The Rev. A. Krickard was cured of Neuralgia&#13;
by the use of Steketee's Neuralgia Drops&#13;
—read what he says:&#13;
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., Dec. 36, 1SS3.&#13;
Rev. A. Kriekard—Dear Sir—I have your&#13;
writing of Dec. 9, 1880, a n i Dec. 11, 1SSJ,&#13;
wherein you declare of having been cured of&#13;
Neuralgia by the use of my 'Stelcetee's Neuralgia&#13;
Drops. What say you now as to whether&#13;
you have obtained a permanent cure as the re&#13;
suit of using Steketee's Neuralgia Drops three&#13;
years ago. Respectfully,&#13;
GEORCTB G. S T E K E T B E .&#13;
GEAND RAPIDS, Mich.,Dec. 27, 1383.&#13;
DearSIr-^ln answer to yours of yesterday I&#13;
would say: Having obtained a permanent&#13;
cure, as I stated in the above dates, I have no&#13;
further Use for any medicine for Neuralgia,&#13;
and I continue to recommend your reraedv.&#13;
A. KRIEKARD,&#13;
Pastor Third Refoxm. Church, Grand Rapids,&#13;
Mich&#13;
FBOM A PHYSICIAN.&#13;
STCRGIS, Mich., May 3,1SS3.&#13;
Mr. Stcketee—Dear Sir—Your Neuralgia&#13;
Drops are «11 that could be desired, when&#13;
used according to directions.&#13;
DR. J. 8: K B N T O * .&#13;
DR.. B A D W A Y ' S&#13;
SARSAPARILUAN RESOLVENT&#13;
The Croat Bioed Purifier.&#13;
""Fbr""crire of all chronic diseaaee, Scrofula, Consumption,&#13;
Glandular Disease, Clj*rs, Chronic Ilheulaatiam,&#13;
Erysipelas, Kidney, Bladder arid Liver complaints,&#13;
Dy^Tienoia, Affections of the TA:rifTS and&#13;
Throat, purities the Blood, restoring health aivl vig-'&#13;
vor.&#13;
THE SKIM, •&#13;
After a few tiavn' use of Ilia Saraapaniliim beoonies&#13;
claar end LeLutifn!. I^mples, l)Iotdic», black Bpot3,&#13;
ar.d skin crviTitioiiu nr,- rWovcd; nor, s zz.d ulcgra&#13;
soon cured. Pcr^oun 8T3fl&gt;rinpr from ccofula, eTTj^""&#13;
dvo diao-s;.s of tj.o ej\:;^, r.io.ith. fur:&lt;, logo, throat&#13;
•:.vf i.C'-uti.nlated-nnd ppro.-.d, either&#13;
•j.-.s or iu:ir;:ur;.', ):-.:-.y rely upon a&#13;
iiari!!i;::i is i-o'-.tin-'od a enfRcient&#13;
: P'.'c.-r ivju on ti:c nysi^i.i. J-old by&#13;
RAO WAY'S REGULAT1HG PILLS.&#13;
The Grout Liver and Stomach&#13;
Remedy,&#13;
Perfect!y'Ur*tele*'S. Me^untly coate&lt;l with sweet gum;&#13;
pur^e. rr&gt;'iv.l:.tc. purify, cloanso. and erremgthen.&#13;
K\I)^','AV'S PILLH ior tho euro of all disorder*&#13;
of the Siomaoh, I.ivpr. lioweta, Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Pain in the bar A, LOSS of Appetite, LauRUOP, Nervous&#13;
Diseases, Headache. Constipation, Costiveneaa,&#13;
Indi.TesticD. Dyspepsia, BUioasness, Fever, Inflammation&#13;
of the Bcmela, Piles, ahdaHderaugeicentaof&#13;
the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, i ontaining&#13;
no aaerenry, minerals, or deleleriout drags.&#13;
A few doses of RAD WAY'S P I L L S will free tfl*&#13;
tjitem of all the above named disorders&#13;
PRICE 25 CENTS PER BOX. Sold by all draggiatfc&#13;
Read "FALSE AND TRUE."&#13;
Send a letter stamp to B A D W A Y A C O . ,&#13;
No. 3 2 W a r r e n » t „ Wew Vorkw tW^&#13;
formation worth tbotuands will be sent to yon.&#13;
• CURED RHEUMATISM.&#13;
Mr. Steketee—The remedy vou recommended&#13;
my wife to use (Steketee's NeuralgiaDrops)&#13;
for the cure of rheumatism is worth praising,&#13;
for it cured her.&#13;
J. ZlJILMAN*,&#13;
174 Center street.&#13;
W g A T THE OfrAKP RAPIDS P03TMA8TBR SAYS:&#13;
et*e—r u s e ! one half&#13;
a Drop's for Neuralgia.&#13;
II. N. MOOKB.&#13;
Mr. Geor**-fi&#13;
bottle of your Neural&#13;
It cured me.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
ONCE MORE&#13;
the Rev.&#13;
Neuralgia&#13;
W. H. Frielinc; says of&#13;
Dreps and Steketee's .&#13;
Read what&#13;
Steketee's&#13;
Liniment.&#13;
The undersigned takes pleasure to declare&#13;
without hesitation, and cheerfully recommend*&#13;
Steketee's NeuralgiaDrops and Stektte. 's Lin&#13;
Iment as answering In every respect the pur&#13;
noses for which they were Intended and n eommended&#13;
providing they are used *&lt;.• ord&#13;
log to directions.&#13;
REV. W. II. FRIKI.ISO&#13;
Pastor Holland Christian Reformed Ctiutvh.&#13;
enue^JGrand^Rapids, December:'"&#13;
1883. '~&#13;
A CRIPPLE FOR TEN YEAR3.&#13;
Cured of Rhem&amp;tism bv the use of Steketee&#13;
Neuralgi» Drops and Liniment.&#13;
LAKE HAKBOK, Mich., April H, ibSS.&#13;
JMr. Georee G. Strk«&gt;tee:&#13;
I wish through this to express O T everlasting [ ' e d ^ ^ c thnrik* to you for havlnk iiivente&gt;ljour S:eu'U't&gt; « "• " T w o s ' w a Neur«ljr*a DWH1" :ll1rt ".mtnient. 1 hnve been crip, "ntlrolv i S(e&lt;from Kh0»ni:Hb&gt;nxnearly it) . . . « . K - &lt;""'«&#13;
aM not aldfc to. w*l* »ion«.&#13;
OH, MY BACK!&#13;
Pain In the back cured by 8teketee's Neurwlgia&#13;
Drops, a case of twenty yfars standing&#13;
cured bv the use of one bottle, the expense&#13;
only 50 cr nts. Read the following:&#13;
GEAXD RAPTDS, Mich., D-c 28, 1888.&#13;
GnorgeG. Steketee, Proprietor of Steketee's&#13;
NeuralgiaDrops:&#13;
The undersigned wishes to express his thanks&#13;
to you for having cured him of kidney and liver&#13;
disease by the use oryourTSeuralgia Drops.&#13;
1 suffered with pains in my back for over 20&#13;
years. I was treated by som« of the most skillfull&#13;
physicians In Holland, E iropp, and of this&#13;
city, and1 none of tliem (iureii mt'. I u^ed lfss&#13;
than one bottle. I am only too happy to say I&#13;
believe I am cured for I have had no more pain&#13;
since I u*ed your remedy. It is praiseworthy&#13;
and a very cheap remedy.&#13;
PIKTERSVEIJSR.&#13;
Fulton street, east of the citfciimits.&#13;
STKKKTKK'S NKIRA1.GU DHOP3 C U R E 9 -&#13;
THY IT.&#13;
— Northampton. Maan.. Sttn. 2. IS*;.&#13;
Gri&gt; 1). Sffcetec—Uoai .MI'—'Jim patient, my wifg,&#13;
),a* ha.t nearn'sia rpcolarly with the approach of&#13;
c&gt;Ul weather for three successive years growing In&#13;
cc-erity eneh vea'-. nnit contlnninit throuuh the&#13;
winter and awr'ng. ha* used one bottli' of yourStefcc&#13;
ee's NeuraltjlM Drops ami thus far has not had&#13;
ncura flit. Vours, F. W. UOrtAKD.&#13;
RKAO BOMIT-STOnitJ-lt»»U8tATI3irr--CtTRBD&#13;
)oCtrom Kh0iim:Hb«nxnearly it) your*, most of the&#13;
alt iho itrue suffering&#13;
from pnln and unnatur.tt clrrp. »nd m&gt;ist i&gt;f&#13;
the ttnio Mrasconrlni'd to my hod After rriving Dftid&#13;
nut hundreds of d"H:irs u physicians nn.t fur nuMiclneswtUKiu:&#13;
bom»tit:to me. I w«a advlstHi to U M&#13;
vimr .x**edy, and after qslitf but. npu bottle of&#13;
Neural** 13-oi&gt;!« and t h r e r f l C . i ^ e «Urii.Anpptto&#13;
s a y x o \ou und th« publfr; T ciTi wuTKHIone .nrd&#13;
more i&gt;nd"» oep as well as ever&#13;
vour rem(Mv tho «reste»t blessing&#13;
cure for rheaujflttMU Known. 1 »ni on'.y t&lt;» i iiliui to&#13;
say to suffering lnimsnitr, trv ?te^' tee's Nour«li:i»&#13;
lirops and Steketee's Liniment. MRS A.LAMK.&#13;
bv the use of Steketet'Artmralgft Drops andLlnttrioTit:&#13;
(ioo. (i. Steketee, Ksq.. (Irar.d Rapids, Mich —Dear&#13;
Sir— Ueing taken during the past winter with NeartikiaHnd&#13;
nc-ute Rheumatism in my shoulders and&#13;
baolt, anriBunVrine intensely for 3» hours, t was induced&#13;
to try v lur N'eura'g'n rjrops and Liniment. I&#13;
was so bad I had to b • Inted, It seemed to me that&#13;
1 coul') nof'tuovo, but thanks to your remedies I&#13;
cording t&gt; direction* and in four ray's&#13;
ilktoK once more. I consider myself&#13;
VDureiv cur^d at the present time Hoping that&#13;
, ou n ay still continue to relievo tne d Btre*sed,&#13;
I am ; ours trulv Mrs. M. 1'. DOLK.&#13;
April !0, 1!&gt;&gt;1. iVSScnbner st Grand Kapids, M.&#13;
Jndfrl^nt1.?. 1?vi' i&#13;
from r.'.viT.-c 1 u •&#13;
euro if 11:-7 ^ ir.-:&#13;
'lime t:i 11•:':'.:•' ,;s i&#13;
d n i g f i i ; ^ . .i'l-ico&#13;
TO THE PUBLIC.&#13;
Be sure and ask for Badway'a and see that tt»&#13;
name of "Badway" is on what you buy.&#13;
TUP T l g g - l t f WeUBorjngA&#13;
MACHINERY!&#13;
For Horse or Steam Power&#13;
Hundreds of the best men in 30 States&#13;
and Territories use it and will have no&#13;
other 1&#13;
RELIABLE! DURABLE! SIMPLE!&#13;
Established over 35 7 e l » , w « htve anrptr&#13;
faalities to fill orders p r o m p t l y , and .&#13;
to satisfaction of our customers. Catalogue&#13;
FREE. Andreas&#13;
L O O X I 9 &amp; JTYMAN, Tiffin. O h i o .&#13;
ELASTIC TKUSS&#13;
Hata Pad dli&amp;rtni from al 1 oitxn,&#13;
k con«k»p«, wUE Sali-Adjiiftttsc&#13;
Bail la r*atar, adapttk Utlftc iU gritton* of th« 6*Jy, wall* ttk.&#13;
U U a th« rap pnaaas bask tlM&#13;
latatthi—Intiaa apanaa waakl&#13;
witk l*a Jfocan .Wiia llgat&#13;
i lb* Herolab btld tranij&#13;
tayuxltxlghi, aada nUkalctnacrlfcln. lata T , tawi&#13;
ItiacasaD. StatbyauU, Ckcolui baa.&#13;
E60JLESTUV TRUSS CO^ ChJeMO. IU.&#13;
Uerm&amp;a A&lt;thrs» Cars neve^ns^o^iv?7m"|&#13;
udiaU relit/in the worst cases, insnros con&#13;
art able sleep; effects enrei wbereall others fa&#13;
L-t trial convinct* tht mott *4':epticah- Pric&#13;
5 0 c . and 8 1 . 0 0 , of Druggists or by ma&#13;
Jut.pie F r e e for stamp. Dr. B. SCHIBFIMAN,&#13;
St. Paul. Minn.&#13;
a M E B a l a M a ^ H M&#13;
JOSEPH GILLOTTSi&#13;
STEEL P£NS&#13;
SatDBrALlDE^J£R&amp;lHa«3ucH(MrTNcWGRLD|&#13;
COLDMEDALPARHS: E X P a S | T I 0 N - l 8 7 B .&#13;
/5PLSO'$ C U R E FORr&#13;
CBIES WNtRE AU ELSt FAHS.&#13;
Best Cou«lifcy rup. Tastes good.&#13;
Use In time, aold by druggists.&#13;
' C O N S U M P T I O N .&#13;
Hori.ML I l t a t a . ex-Mayor of Chicago, Indorses Mr.&#13;
Ste*6tee. Kt»d wtaathw*&lt;tys:&#13;
l mereknciW^Alr. Geo Q. tUcketee for a number&#13;
hefure. 1 cons'i'i'r of %ears. and have found him to be an hhoonnoorraabbllee,,&#13;
sln« und the Mirest relinhleDusTneiiSTiisn. slid I betleTO that he would&#13;
not knowingly publish any ata'euidntor recomaiendatli-&#13;
n ihht was not tru»' in every word.&#13;
'.•ht.aK0.11l„Jttn.a, ls*4. M.URATH.&#13;
l l i e above testimonials and recommendation* must sat;sf» tho ro»dor that •'t-ketos's Neur.klgU i)ropi aro r.o hunibus 1-claim s n l warrant to care&#13;
K«arnlgi», Hheumn-ism, Baokschoor l^iverand Kidney i;is&lt;?a&gt;os with th &gt; remedy, if ut Micine is u»ed acconimg'to dlrocuon*. i*or Khcum it Ism and Kidney&#13;
di»e ^es-the patient shou'd use dtekotoo's Lintmonlln cormect'on w;tu thn Xeur.iUla Props. I hiivu more certlrtcates of a* cure, but spuce will not allow.&#13;
Kveryone produced ispenuine. If vou call for st-kwretfs Neum'gla D I V J * at tho &lt;}ru* *t &lt;re nitd they h n v e n » t » t o n sale, or w.U n o l « t it t or vou, then»ena&#13;
to the undersigned, I win send two bottles Neuralgia lirops &lt;,n r#ceint ot One Dollar to anv address, or one botilo Liniment and two bottles NouraW* Drops&#13;
'for Oae iXil'ar and Twenty-Five Cents. Send only draft-; or posl v flBeemonev orders, Addrt sc.&#13;
GEO. G. STEKETEE, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH&#13;
AiaosoiB proprietor Steketee's Pin-Wertn Destrover, the only erndieator of the ptn worm known. Price, 35and 50 cents. Ask your drurjists for It. T a l i&#13;
advertisement will appear but one time. Cut it out and send to the proprietor for this remedy,&#13;
Revolvers,&#13;
^ Rifles,&#13;
"" "to.&#13;
L S U V A g 6 n t S B e n t etnployment&#13;
anii s$od utary -setlroa QHIMII City&#13;
» l d r t u d SUcklnarSiiPPortisi-s e t c&#13;
Sample ou'.fit F r e o . AJ&gt;rr»s$ Q a e e a&#13;
City S « a * e a d « r C«., Ciocutoiti.O,&#13;
I d r T f l l l l Relieved immediately and eared&#13;
\Xl H i l l l byu«irmOONiASTU«A.po|t«uiBoa&#13;
i»KJ 1IILHX1 p ^ e |3 per bottle or 3 bo*,tle# fo gdeirrered. Addrew OR, C. MattKiN Manager,&#13;
amllton,Ohio. _ r _.,/' ' f&#13;
w.N.r. i&gt;-»—a«&#13;
n o r p h i n * Clavwsi&#13;
asiMAaya. 9»*piK&gt;ejAi&lt;&#13;
l^J.wanoocsyl^UowvVrWSk&#13;
•y&#13;
i a ^ H attaV- l ^ - i—'^t .''. •^MA^M&#13;
! '&#13;
«1&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
HQWEf.J,.&#13;
From our Comiapopdenf.&#13;
The funeral of Geo* F. Coleman on&#13;
Sunday was very' largely attended.&#13;
The band took part in the services.&#13;
The Howell Republican has been&#13;
Bold to two young men—Stair Bros'.&#13;
on# from Fargo, Dakota, and the other&#13;
from Saline, Mich. They take immediate&#13;
possession. L. ft Miller will continue&#13;
to reside in Howell and his attention&#13;
will be given to his real estate.&#13;
The Republicans advertise a grand&#13;
rally onSept, Stb, at the Opera House,&#13;
with Gen. Jasper Packard, of Indiana,&#13;
Gen, Alger, and Dr. J. C. Willson, as&#13;
attractions.&#13;
Th§_J, D, Jfehan concert in the Opera&#13;
House on Friday evening next&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
From ofx Correspondent «&#13;
Mrs, Green has lots of company this&#13;
week,&#13;
Pluma DuBois baa gone to Leslie&#13;
for a visit&#13;
Bertie Watson, has returned from&#13;
bis visit to Bancroft.&#13;
Eva Pickell began her school Monday&#13;
last, in the Collins district.&#13;
Ella Stewart is helping Mrs. J. Morgan&#13;
take oare of the "new baby."&#13;
Frank Arksey, ot Ann Arbor, visited&#13;
Fred and Mollie Livermore last week.&#13;
Peach festival at the M. £. church&#13;
basement this week. Where is the&#13;
fruit coming from, I wonder.&#13;
School commenced last Monday, and&#13;
the children are happy for they have&#13;
Frankie Burch for their teacher again.&#13;
Mr Chs.ristina Craig, of Stockbridge&#13;
has come to spend a few weeks with&#13;
her daughter, Agnes Marshall.&#13;
Those wicked boys have gone camping&#13;
again, and intend to kill every&#13;
thing they see, (if they can.) from a&#13;
snipe to an eagle, but I'm afraid they&#13;
won't do it though.&#13;
CASH TELLS THE STORY.&#13;
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE, WE OFFER:&#13;
Best Prints for 5 cents, worth 7 cents. 27 inch Alpacas, half wool, 10 cents* worth 121 cents.&#13;
27 inch Cashmeres, half wool, 15 cts., worth 18 cts.; K 27 inch Plain Ottoman Cloths, haU wool, 20c, worth 25c.&#13;
27 inch Brocaded Ottoman Cloths, half wool, 20 cents, worth 25 cents.&#13;
We are showing the above goods in all the new and staple shades, ;ill fresh and new, no, old stuck. Ask to see our&#13;
38 inch Black Cashmere, all wool, at 50 cents; it is a bargain. Full line of lluick and Colored Cashmeres&#13;
at better bargains than ever before. Black and Colored Silks and Velvets, complete line and at&#13;
very low prices. Broadhead and Kent Alpacas always in stock—best goods for the money&#13;
in the market, we call special attention to our line of&#13;
-By far the largest line ever shown here, and at the lowest prices.-&#13;
DOMESTICS WERE NEVER SO LOW AS NOW!&#13;
Atlantic P. Sheeting 6 Cts. pr. yd. L. L. Sheeting 7 Cents per yard&#13;
Lonsdale Bleached, 10 " " Best Shirting 10 "&#13;
Staple Ginghams, 8 Cents per yard.&#13;
PARASOLS, GLOVES, MITS, ETC., AT GREATLOE0UCE0 PRICES TO CLOSE.&#13;
Full line Denims, Tickings, D. &amp; T. Cottonades, Jeans, Table Linens, Ginghams, Fancy Shirtings, Double- widt&#13;
Sheetings, Flannels, Etc., and all at the lowest possible prices.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE.&#13;
from our Correspondent.&#13;
Some weeks have passed since my last&#13;
communication. Although I have&#13;
been quiet Stockbridge has not.&#13;
The repairs on the Ryan House are&#13;
completed and now in the hands of&#13;
Chas. White, who is giving the house&#13;
a new coat of paint and of much lighter&#13;
shade than before. Nine new bed&#13;
rooms and a sitting room have been&#13;
added, and the Proprietor, Mark&#13;
'Smith, has been to Jackson this week&#13;
and bought new carpets. The Kyan&#13;
House is now in good shape and the&#13;
only three story building m Stockbridge.&#13;
Philip Taylor, of Mason, who has&#13;
the building of the three brick stores&#13;
is hard at work with a force of hands&#13;
and soon the stores of Kellogg, VVillxnor*&#13;
and Stanley will show up big.&#13;
And still we grow—South Hampton is&#13;
an anex, all that part of our village&#13;
pouth of the G. IV B'y; five new houses&#13;
have been built this-spring and summer&#13;
over in Brooklyn (that is what&#13;
used to t&gt;e called Brewnell's addition)&#13;
and isiust over the river east of town.&#13;
There has been nine houses, one cooper&#13;
shop, and now Mrs. Force is building&#13;
another house making ten houses and&#13;
one cooper shop built in little more&#13;
than a year, and the four that were&#13;
built before makes 15 houses in all in&#13;
Brooklyn. Canada is just east of Brooklyn&#13;
which takes • in Clark's flouring&#13;
jniil Which is nearly completed; the&#13;
jgtockbridge fair grounds where many&#13;
improvements have been made this&#13;
season in tha way of building, etc., also&#13;
a cider mill which is in process of&#13;
erection and will be ready for the fall&#13;
applea and the fair.&#13;
The M. E. Society have begun their&#13;
church, which is situated on the corner&#13;
of Water and Elizabeth streets—-it&#13;
We bought, last week, from a large clothing house going out of trade, 500 pairs pauts and vests and suits at prices&#13;
that enable us to sell them for&#13;
LESS THAN THE CLOTH COST.&#13;
The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN, bearing&#13;
Aug. 26th, 1884, reported expi&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., W«S&#13;
chanical Experts and Solicitors of Patents,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
Adams, jJ. U., Caro, Ditching machine,&#13;
304,056.&#13;
Brown, N. E., and W. R. Wilcox, St.&#13;
Joseph, Machine for making wooden&#13;
trays, 804,116.&#13;
Buckler, Uavid, and E. NrP^l^er,&#13;
loma, Side spring vehicle, 3 0 1 ¾ ^&#13;
Case, C. N., Battle Creek, Owfe *jbarator,&#13;
308,982. :**7^&#13;
Gadway,P. P., Detroit, Reek frill,&#13;
304,093.&#13;
Mark, C. E., Flint, Car coupling,&#13;
304,115.&#13;
Morse, O. M. Jackson, Bolting apparatus,&#13;
304,223.&#13;
Morse, O. M., Jackson, Flour bolt,&#13;
304,224.&#13;
Morse, O. M., Jackson, Middlings&#13;
puriher, 304,224. ^&#13;
Murdock, H. B., Detroit, Injector,&#13;
304,227.&#13;
Peck, D. B., Jackson, Churn, H*U&#13;
022. yw--&#13;
Plowman, J . G., White PiMJJMb&#13;
Chalk rack, 304,233. ™&#13;
Rousseau, P. J., Detroit, Telephone&#13;
switch board, 304,135.&#13;
Sword, P. L., and C. D., Adrian,&#13;
Brick machine, 304,283.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
PANTS FOR BOYS,... , .85 AND $1.00.&#13;
PANTS FOR YOUTHS AT. 75, 85,90, $1.00 AND $2.00,&#13;
PANTS FOR MEN AT 75,85, 90, $1.00, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, &amp;C.&#13;
We expect to sell these goods In 30 days. COME EARLY and&#13;
Secure Bargains! &gt;&#13;
IN OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT WE OFFE&#13;
GRANULATED SUGAR, 7 l-2c. COFFEE A. SUGAR, 7c.&#13;
EXTRA C. SUGAR, 6 I-2c. BEST ROASTED RIO COFFEE, 18c.&#13;
.GOOD" JAPAN"-TEA; USUALLY SOLD FOR 50c, AT 40 CTS&#13;
WE WANT BUTTER AND EGGS. HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAID. REMEMBER THE PLACE.&#13;
_--=SESE2CASH S T O R E S -&#13;
A GOOD MINE WELL WORKED.—The&#13;
Dane mine, which was purchased some&#13;
months sinc% by the company represented&#13;
by Mr. T. J. Eainan, has, under&#13;
his able Supervision, an exceptionally&#13;
fine record as a bullion producer. A&#13;
four-stamp mill was started on the ore&#13;
from this mine on the 12th of June. In&#13;
two months from date of starting 900&#13;
tons of ore were crushed, which paid between&#13;
$50,000 and 160,000. From&#13;
August 1st to the 19th the net bullion&#13;
product has been $26,000. The mine&#13;
has paid the original purchase money,&#13;
all running expenses; there are on&#13;
handthree months* supplies of material&#13;
and the surface only has- been&#13;
broached, so to speak. The mine is&#13;
undoubtedly a good one, and Mr. Eaman&#13;
is one of the few milltnen who&#13;
know just exactly how to profitably&#13;
work such a bonanza.—Prescott Morning&#13;
Courier.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
"X&#13;
is thought they will have it completed&#13;
this falL&#13;
Wm. Singleton had the misfortune&#13;
to have a valuable colt get into the&#13;
barbed-wire fence that the G. T. R/y&#13;
have been building. The colt is badly&#13;
hurt in the hind leg, in fact all the&#13;
legs are cut, also about the head and&#13;
peck, Much fault is being made with&#13;
said fence, some claim that it is a, foot&#13;
on their land and that it is not a fence&#13;
according to the state law, as it will&#13;
not shut out hog*; some have forbidden&#13;
the company from building the&#13;
_fence,.._..&#13;
- T h e village square is fenced on the&#13;
west side and a part on the north side&#13;
and a little on the south side, all&#13;
this has been done by private enterprise,&#13;
Ww. O, Kiohols, the Sec'y of the&#13;
Stockbridge Union Agricultural Society,&#13;
is circulating the premium list&#13;
for our fails to be held on Tuesday,&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, October 7th,&#13;
gtband&amp;th, 1884. A special pacing&#13;
race hat been prepared by private individutU,&#13;
to come of at the fair,&#13;
• V .&#13;
VACATION IS OVER AND WE ARE READY FOR THE FALL TERM&#13;
WITH A FULL hlKf fiy&#13;
SLATES, SCHOOL BAGS AND STRAPS,&#13;
PENS, PENCILS, INK AN0 INKSTANDS,&#13;
Writing Books, Tablets, Composition Brioks,&#13;
E R A 5 E R S , CRAYONS, PENCIL HOLDERS, INDELIBLE PENCILS,&#13;
And a great variety of School Stationery.&#13;
PRICES THE&#13;
Don't forget us when buying your school supplies fqrthe fail term. Also, please remember r W&#13;
stock of drugs, patent medicines, toilet articles, eto., of/best quality and at unifc r e m e m b e r that&#13;
WINCHELI/S DRUG STORE&#13;
Will There Be War.&#13;
The Chief of Police of Pittsburg has&#13;
attained a lamt* Iu1 rv&gt;ver dreamed of,&#13;
by a proulainatii.il against street obstructions.&#13;
Anions the supposed of-'&#13;
fenders against the city ordinance was&#13;
ustro-Hungarian Consul iSi'hamberg,&#13;
who was ordered to haul down the&#13;
Austrian tin;/, at the Conciliate.- which&#13;
was declare-1 to li" .an oUtruction.&#13;
The Consul prot 'siedt*ni:d appealed to&#13;
the Minimi of Aoviro-Hungary at&#13;
Washington, who referred the matter&#13;
to the State Department. There it&#13;
was decided thai under the treaty the&#13;
Consul has the riyht to display the •&#13;
flag over his Consulate^ A Iter _ the&#13;
manner of tlie circunilocution office the&#13;
matter is now on its way back, the&#13;
State department having referred it to*&#13;
the Governor of Pensylvania, and the&#13;
latter sending it to the Mayor, who&#13;
says he will consult the city Attorney,&#13;
Two great nations now breathle^fy&#13;
await the able opinion of that learned&#13;
and eminent jurist, who may be expected,&#13;
under the awful weight of tt^&#13;
sponsibility which rests upon him. tpw&#13;
the possible consequences of his cticision.'&#13;
to give some time to the consideration&#13;
of this conflict of international&#13;
law with municipal police regulations.&#13;
In the meantime, let us hope for a&#13;
peaceful solution of the trouble.—Detroit&#13;
Evening Journal.&#13;
&lt;&gt;&#13;
Gold is now coming into this Runt7: and business men are encourage_&#13;
Alas for their delusion! Patti is coming&#13;
in November,.and she will drain&#13;
itr^- Boxbury Advocate.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table,&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
STATIONS. WEST BOUND TRAINS.&#13;
No. 6.&#13;
Mixed.&#13;
RlDQCWAY »:5&amp;a. m.&#13;
Arm M M , . . . 10:10&#13;
Borneo ...10:80&#13;
Rochester 11:53&#13;
Pontile 1 »r-..W:46p;m.&#13;
1 , , ^ ) dep. 1:15&#13;
Wlxom, 8:90&#13;
Hamburg, 4:06 BINCKNEY 4:40&#13;
otint Ferrier,... 5:15&#13;
Stockbridge, 6:85&#13;
Henrietta, 1:06&#13;
JACKSON • 6:48 n.m.&#13;
STATIONS. ' |&#13;
No^4&#13;
P&amp;M.&#13;
tCAr&#13;
fc'V&#13;
Ir&#13;
^ "&#13;
&lt;t&#13;
fc&#13;
8:M&#13;
* • • • • • * « ! { . .&#13;
10:10&#13;
10:40&#13;
11:50&#13;
11:1«&#13;
11:80&#13;
11:5a&#13;
18:08 p. m&#13;
I S * )&#13;
18:¾) p. m.&#13;
EAST BOUND TBXlNft.&#13;
* • » » - " •&#13;
EVER KN0WN1&#13;
have good&#13;
, tflCH,&#13;
uniformly low prices.&#13;
PINCKN&#13;
No. 5.&#13;
Mixed.&#13;
-.-, ... 7:00a. m.&#13;
•nrfotta,......... 7:46&#13;
gtockbridge..... 8:15&#13;
5Mount Ferrier,. 8:88&#13;
INCKNEY •••-• 9:10&#13;
amburg, 9:40&#13;
South Lyon { ^ ¾&#13;
Wi*0tfc..,rr......^-lt;8e&#13;
Rochester, 1:40&#13;
Borneo,&#13;
Am '&#13;
8:85&#13;
8:05&#13;
OQSWAY~ 8:80 *»•«»»•*•« «&#13;
z.&#13;
AU train* ran by &gt;&lt;Wtf&#13;
AU trains r '&#13;
No. 8&#13;
Pass.&#13;
4;8Q&#13;
4:48&#13;
5:06&#13;
5:15&#13;
5:55&#13;
«:08&#13;
8:80&#13;
8:50&#13;
IXtT&#13;
8:15&#13;
8:86&#13;
»106&#13;
Superintendent. Osnsrai Manager.&#13;
'•flPpW'&#13;
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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 Dispatch September 04, 1884</text>
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                <text>September 04, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2671">
                <text>1884-09-04</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</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>PINCKNEYDISPATCH&#13;
JbROME WINCHELL, PUBLISHbR.&#13;
ISSUED THUKBUATS.&#13;
SHbwrlptlon Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
f raaale&amp;t advertisements, 25 cants per inch for&#13;
first Insertion aad ten cent* per inch fur each aubaequant&#13;
insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
each Insertion. Special rates fur regular advertisem&#13;
«nU by the year or quarter.&#13;
From Elk Mills, Missouri.&#13;
DR. G. D. WARXKK: Dear Sir—&#13;
This is to certify that 1 have used nearly&#13;
a bottle of your White Wine of Tar&#13;
Syrup, and I can safely and conscientiously&#13;
recommended it to any person&#13;
as the best medicine I have ever used&#13;
for throat and lung diseases, and if it&#13;
cost five dollars a bottle I would keep&#13;
it on hand if I was able.&#13;
Thankfully, yours truly,&#13;
Elder T. Stephens.&#13;
For sale at C. E. Hoiliuter's, hitler Bro's, and&#13;
Wiucliell'e Druy Store.&#13;
D&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS^&#13;
M-GREECE, M. ».,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON"&#13;
PLAIN FIELD, "^ MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. , Special attention given to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and limys.&#13;
TAMES MARKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Agent. Legal paper* made on&#13;
abort eetlce and reasonable terms. Office on&#13;
Alain S t , near Post-office I'lnckney, Mich.&#13;
ALICE LAWRENCE,&#13;
FASHIONABLE *&#13;
DRESS AND CLOAK MAKER,&#13;
Plain and fancy sewing of all kinds; cutting and&#13;
fitting a specialty. Trices reasonable, and satisfaction&#13;
guaranteed. Northeast cor. Main Street&#13;
and Howell Road, Pinckney, Mkk.&#13;
GRIMES A JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Ptnckney, Michigan.&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
ROLLER SKATING RINK.&#13;
• • • - - ^ -&#13;
TAXES T. EAMAN,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
id Justice of the Peace,&#13;
OBoe in the Brick Block,&#13;
p. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
PINCKNJBV&#13;
w ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR In CIIANCKRYOfflce&#13;
over Siglers Drug Store. ' PINCKNEY&#13;
HALSTEAD GREGORY,&#13;
DKALKH IN&#13;
GRAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, &amp;c.&#13;
Kfrgbaat market price paid for wheat- A good&#13;
etock of L\uuber always on hiind. . l/oorn, ntuih&#13;
materials furnished on short no-&#13;
GREGORY, MICH.&#13;
This Rink will be open to the public&#13;
ON&#13;
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday&#13;
Evenings.&#13;
Sets, for LADIES lOcts. for GENTS.&#13;
SOCIAL DANCE,&#13;
AT THE RINK, , '&#13;
Friday Evening, September 19th.&#13;
TICKETS 50cts.&#13;
Music by H0FF'&amp; LARUE'S BAND.&#13;
W. B". HOFF, Floor MaiiaVer.&#13;
ITE.US OF INTEREST.&#13;
Sarah Bernhardt has gained six&#13;
ounces since she left America, and now&#13;
considers herself "very fat."&#13;
TTKTER1NABY Sl'RUKON, llow.'U, Mk'h.&#13;
y Mr, Winegar will attend to calls promptly&#13;
night or .day. Milk fever and ol'ner di*s&gt;aN&lt;'n in&#13;
cattle andTTiorBea a specialty. Tivuuari'iwonable.&#13;
Residence on Byron Road. Telephonic counectlon&#13;
with central office at Howell.&#13;
CHARLES MACLEAN, II. 1). S.&#13;
kEJJTWT, Graduate of the Dental Depart-&#13;
^Js&amp;BL ot U e University of Michigan. Oillce in&#13;
Gieeuaway Block, ovef-iUjat-OflteviluMuill,&#13;
$&amp;"Particular attention paid»tu the preservation&#13;
of the natural teeth.&#13;
Will be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
a W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^BATMKE R,|^&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
jJPeposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. ,&#13;
PINCKNEY PRODUCE MAR]&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
gap*. 11,1884. TOMPKINS &amp;ISMON.&#13;
-—School amHrusinesS"stationefy,"large"&#13;
stock and low prices at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Western Timothy Seed, at&#13;
Teeple A Cadwell's.&#13;
School Stationery and s-chool supplies&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn and&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of T.&#13;
Grimes or-on the premises of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Icelanders prefer their drinks hot.&#13;
Large cake fine Toilet Soap for 5c,&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Bushls Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at Bush's Planing Mill, Pluinfield.&#13;
Cure your neuralgia or headache&#13;
with a Menthol Pencil, , only 10c, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store!&#13;
All the best Patent Medicines, at&#13;
' Winchell's Drug.Store.&#13;
Call on Teeple k Cadwell for coal fulfil&#13;
reshiny" engines.&#13;
We call the attention of our readers,&#13;
and especially the trade, to the advertisement&#13;
of D. D. Mallory &amp; Co. in this&#13;
issue. The house of Mallory &amp; Co. is&#13;
the largest of it* kind in America.&#13;
Their immense stores are literally&#13;
crammed with geodsfor fall and winter&#13;
trade, and it needs no words of&#13;
ours to convince those interested that&#13;
that they can always buy to best advantage&#13;
where stock is largest and&#13;
most complete to select from. When&#13;
the retailer buys his oysters from D. D.&#13;
Mallory &amp; Co. ne buys from first hands&#13;
is always sure of obtaining fresh goods,&#13;
and at bottom—prices. Tne stock of&#13;
hermetically sealed goods, pickles, preserves,&#13;
etc.,"is lull and complete in&#13;
every detail.&#13;
C&amp;Thoee receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expiree with next number. A blue X&#13;
alanines that the time has expired, and that. In accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
LOCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
Our worthy postmistress, Mrs. S. P.&#13;
Young, has been quite ill the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Many of our farmers are already&#13;
cutting their corn, and report the crop&#13;
an unusually abundant one.&#13;
Quite a number of pupils from the&#13;
country are attending the higher departments&#13;
of the Union School.&#13;
Misses Lizzie and Hattie Campbell&#13;
are visiting friends in .New York&#13;
State.&#13;
Mr. Auld went to Chicago, Monday,&#13;
and will probably stop at the state&#13;
fair, at Kalamazoo, on his return.&#13;
A match game of base ball is announced&#13;
for to-morrow on the fair&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white $ .73-&#13;
, ait&#13;
We keep the largest and finest assortment&#13;
of Cigars in town, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Three cakes of finest toilet soap and&#13;
a Turkish Toweling washrag all in&#13;
neat box for 25 cents, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
BEANS WANTED !&#13;
We have an order for 1,000 bushels&#13;
of beans, and for the best quality we&#13;
wilt" pay the highest market price.&#13;
Be sure and give us a chance and we&#13;
wi|Kmake you money '&#13;
y/ Teeple k Cadwell. /&#13;
Having purchased a new Kyn'ett&#13;
hand carpet loom, I am prepared to&#13;
weave carpets in the frery test planner.&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Carpenter, -&#13;
Pettysville, Mich. /__&#13;
WANTED.—A man and wife to take&#13;
ehargenf a. tarm. EnQjflire of : *__&#13;
grounds at Howell, between the Howell&#13;
and Pinckney clubs.&#13;
Maj. Anderson, the well known railroad&#13;
solicitor, was in town Tuesday,&#13;
completing arrangements for the "subscribers'&#13;
excursion."&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Bennett and Mrs.&#13;
Fred Parker, of East Saginaw, are&#13;
visiting friends and relatives in Pinckney&#13;
this week.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Jenksr of Brighton, was&#13;
in town this morning.- He is looking&#13;
after the interests of the Union party&#13;
in this locality. -&#13;
The building for the new fruit evaporator&#13;
is already nearly completed,&#13;
and the institution will be ready for&#13;
business soon•, Chas. Bailey is to be&#13;
the manager and proprietor.&#13;
Ross McGee, after a brief visit among&#13;
friends about home, last week, started&#13;
for Sioux City, Iowa, where he will be&#13;
employed for the coming year as agent&#13;
for fruit trees and nursery stock.&#13;
D. Roberts, of Chubb's Corners, found&#13;
in his orchard the other day a limb&#13;
about 20 inches long on which were&#13;
30 nice, plump, sound apples. Who&#13;
will say this is not a prolific season.&#13;
Georgie Mitchell brought to this&#13;
office, the other day, 3 potatoes grown&#13;
in his fathers garden, the combined&#13;
weight of which was 4 lbs. and 15 ozs.&#13;
They were of the White Star ' variety&#13;
and very smooth, fine looking tubers*&#13;
The public schools were not opened&#13;
Monday, having.been delayed one day&#13;
Indications are that there will be a&#13;
very large excursion Saturday.&#13;
Mr, Barnard, of the Monitor House,&#13;
returned from New York yesterday.&#13;
The entries of livs stock for the&#13;
State Fair are the largest ever known.&#13;
F. A. Sigler attended the meeting of&#13;
the State Pharmaceutical Association&#13;
in Detroit Tuesday.&#13;
As noticed elsewhere, a party will&#13;
be given at the skating rink on Friday&#13;
evening of next week, Sept. 19th,&#13;
Rev. K. H. Crane and wife have&#13;
been visiting friends at Hart land Centre&#13;
this week.&#13;
1 Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Mann started&#13;
yesterday for a trip "around the&#13;
Lakes."&#13;
Misses Mary and Mabel Mann have&#13;
been visiting friends at Fentonville&#13;
the past week.&#13;
/Elmer Braley and Miss Percie Wood&#13;
were married at Plainfield, Sunday&#13;
night, Rev. Henry Pettit, officiating.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Dailey is the new pastor&#13;
ot the Methodist Protestant churches&#13;
at Plainfield and Parker's Corners.&#13;
The Pinckney Cornet Band spend&#13;
coas^erable time in practice lately&#13;
and are in good shape to render some&#13;
very fine music.&#13;
With a good crop of corn, oats,&#13;
beans, potatoes, etc., farmers should&#13;
fare pretty well this year, notwithstanding&#13;
the low price of wheat.&#13;
The Michigan Conference of the M;&#13;
E. Church is in session at Lansing, this&#13;
week. The Detroit Conference of the&#13;
same denomination will meet at East&#13;
Saginaw, on the 17th inst.&#13;
The Republican Convention for the&#13;
nomination of county officers, and&#13;
Representative in State Legislature&#13;
will be held at the Opera House, in&#13;
Howell, on Monday, September 22d,&#13;
convening at 11 arm;&#13;
Valentine Dinkle was bitten on the&#13;
foot, the other day. by a small massasauga.&#13;
He was gulling beans, and on&#13;
account~rjftJie~heathad iMtiisfLJiisi&#13;
by the repairs oeing macro t o t o o otfr&#13;
school building.&#13;
The refreshing rain on Sunday last&#13;
was just the thing for the many acres&#13;
of wheat which had already been put&#13;
in as well as that which has since been&#13;
sown.&#13;
The tide of northern excursionists&#13;
is growing thinner of late, and will&#13;
continue to do so until tie * snow falls&#13;
and ye Nimrods take to the north&#13;
woods.&#13;
boots. The injury is not considered&#13;
dangerous. ~-!&#13;
The weather bureau predicted that&#13;
to-day would be the warmest ever&#13;
known in Michigan. They didn't hit&#13;
it by a long way—the cold wave which&#13;
struck us last night couldn't have been&#13;
on their programme.&#13;
The Sixth District Congressional&#13;
Convention of the Union (Prohibition)&#13;
Party will be held at Mozart Hall,&#13;
Howell, on Tuesday next, Sept. 16th,&#13;
for the purpose of nominating a candidate&#13;
for congress.A: county convention,&#13;
for nomination of candidates for&#13;
county officers, will be held at the&#13;
same time and place.&#13;
Rev. F . E. Pearce will preach his&#13;
farewell sermon at the M. E. Church&#13;
Sunday neat, and the morning, service&#13;
at the Congregational church will be&#13;
omitted in consequence. Mr. Pearce&#13;
has been with the church two years,&#13;
and has done a great deal of very hard&#13;
work, the church having been extensively&#13;
repaired during his pastorate.&#13;
He and his estimable wife have won&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Bennett, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. J . D. Bennett and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Parker are visiting in Brighton for a&#13;
few days this week.&#13;
The Coroner's duty is usually supposed&#13;
to be inquests over the dead—&#13;
but just now one of them has charge&#13;
of the property of the Detroit Evening&#13;
Journal by order of the court.. The&#13;
paper seems to be rather a lively&#13;
corpse though.&#13;
The bean crop is one of no mean&#13;
proportions in this section, this year.&#13;
A number ot farmers report, from 100&#13;
to 300 bushels of beans grown on summer-&#13;
fallow which would otherwise&#13;
have produced little or nothing of&#13;
value* The price is from $1.00 upward,&#13;
according to quality. Some&#13;
pieces yield 20 to*25 bushels per acre. -&#13;
A pleasant reception was given last.&#13;
evening by Mr. and Mrs. Geo. R. Ismon,&#13;
in honor of Mr. and Mrs. A. A.&#13;
Squier, of Mason, who are their guests&#13;
this week. Mrs. Squier is an accomplished&#13;
musician, and with Mrs.&#13;
A. T.Mann and Mr. and Mrs. G. W.&#13;
Sykes made the occasion a very pleasant&#13;
time for the guests.&#13;
Monday, Last, Jay Allen, son of E.&#13;
A. Allen, of Dexter, (recently of Pinckney)&#13;
shot himself in the thigh with a&#13;
Springfield rifle while putting it in a&#13;
boat in which he and a companion&#13;
were out hunting. The charge was&#13;
shot, which entered the fleshy part of&#13;
the- thigh and made a very bad wound.&#13;
He is doing weU, but as the shot cannot&#13;
be removed, the result may be&#13;
very serious. .&#13;
We had the pleasure, last week, of inspecting&#13;
the herd of Aberdeen polled,..&#13;
cattle, recently imported by Mr. R. C.&#13;
Auld, and now quartered at his place&#13;
on the banks of Portage Lake in this&#13;
township. Although the Galloway&#13;
stock is not new to this part of the&#13;
country, the Aberdeen is, and some&#13;
have unfortunately been impressed with&#13;
the idea that the two breeds were nearly&#13;
or quite identical. We found the&#13;
"diflerenceTmore marked tHan~ we had&#13;
anticipated,. the Aberdeen being of&#13;
finer bone, plumper build, and in several&#13;
tespects a more comely animal.&#13;
Mr. Auld was from early years the&#13;
portege of his uncle, the late Wm«&#13;
McCombie, M. P., of Tillyf our, the acknowledged&#13;
champion, breeder of polled&#13;
cattle—and who, during his lifetime&#13;
took more prize medals than any other&#13;
man in the realm. Mr. Auld was a •&#13;
careful and valued assistant~ln his&#13;
uncle's stock-raising enterprise,and at&#13;
Mr. MoCombie's death was enabled *to&#13;
make a prudent choice from the very&#13;
best strains of blood represented by&#13;
the herds of noted breeders with whom&#13;
he had become acquainted. As a result&#13;
he brings td this country a herd&#13;
representing 14 of the very best families&#13;
of polled Angus cattle. The herd&#13;
now at the farm numbers 28, to which&#13;
will be added 15 or 20 more next&#13;
spring, as Mr. Auld informs us%&#13;
Among those we saw were many fane&#13;
specimens, but the handsomest, we&#13;
thought were a jet black two-year-old&#13;
heifer, and the eighteen-months-old—&#13;
No. 2 red,&#13;
S o . 3 red,...&#13;
76&#13;
TO-&#13;
25'&#13;
&amp;r&#13;
1 O0@l M-&#13;
1 SX&amp;.l 75-&#13;
.0«4&lt;ii .07.&#13;
80-&#13;
1 -K-&#13;
, Vi\i,&#13;
SeTjttofis, per lOOlbs ., 7 75®8.0O.&#13;
xjrrvssed Chickens „^...........^^.....i&lt;&gt;, »_ 1&#13;
CloVer8e*4.. 4 00® 4.M.&#13;
G. W. Teeple, pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Special Notices.&#13;
irv^&#13;
To any onybody who ha* disease of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send p'rafof&#13;
that Pisa's Cure tor Consumption/ has&#13;
cured the same complaints in/ other&#13;
cases, Address, /&#13;
% T. HAZKLTINE, \Vatren, Pa.&#13;
I HAYE TRIEiUT.&#13;
DEAB DOCTOR:—I/have tried your&#13;
medicine, and believe that any pnewho.&#13;
is troubled with^Cough, Hoarseness or&#13;
I^axneness about the chest or lungs can&#13;
not well afford to be without the White&#13;
4¥iseof ^ar-Syxup—_.&#13;
your thankful friend&#13;
/ ..^.. Rev.- (x. W. Pattison, •&#13;
Pastor St/Chartes M. E. Church.&#13;
5 t Charles, Iowa.&#13;
FOR SALE-**-A full sot of Butchering&#13;
Tools, at 7 Teeple &amp; CadweiPs .&#13;
New stock school stationery and&#13;
School Supplies at&#13;
/ Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
NOTICE TO CATTLEBREEDERS.&#13;
A'chance yet for cows that are behind.&#13;
11. C. Auld. to meet a widely&#13;
Expressed wish, will allow the use of&#13;
his famed polled Aberdeen bulls, for&#13;
the ridiculously low price of $3 each&#13;
cow, cash" down, calf insured—for the&#13;
remainder of the season. Apply at&#13;
the farm. _R. C. Auld.&#13;
REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.&#13;
The Republican electors of the township&#13;
of Putnam will meet in caucus at&#13;
the office of J. T. Eaman., Esq.. in the&#13;
village of Pinckney, on Saturday, Sent.&#13;
19th, 1884, to select delegates to the&#13;
County Convention to be held at Howjjjj^&#13;
ji^Ln^ay^ Sfpicjuber 22d, for the&#13;
many warm friends in Pinckney and&#13;
we hope they may meet with abundant&#13;
blessings and pleasant surprises while&#13;
''toiling on" in the work of the Master.&#13;
/&#13;
Maj. Anderson desires us to say that&#13;
the free excursion train for subscribers farm*&#13;
purpose of nominating Candidates for&#13;
Countvrofticers aiutLRepresentatioh in&#13;
State Legislation.&#13;
By order of Committee".^&#13;
The campers at "Oak Hill," Portage]&#13;
Lake; returned to their homes Thursday&#13;
last. This spot is becoming more&#13;
popular every year, and Mr. Aula in&#13;
forms us that he will endeavour to add&#13;
some attractions another summer.&#13;
The Republican Convention for the&#13;
Twentieth Senatorial District, comprisiug&#13;
the counties of Livingston and Shi-&#13;
| awassee, vrrlHjff behr-at Owosso,&#13;
Wednesday, Sept 24th. Each county&#13;
will be entitled: to 8 delegates.&#13;
to the bonus of the Air Line Road will&#13;
leave Pinckney at 9 a. m. on Saturday&#13;
next, and that tickets will be handed&#13;
out at the station by the agent and Mr.&#13;
Eaman, to aH subscribers (and their&#13;
[/Wives), that persons giving right-ofway&#13;
be regarded as subscribers also.&#13;
The tickets are good only for that day&#13;
11 and for-the special train.- named,-.and&#13;
are not transferable. The excursion&#13;
on Saturday, 13th, is for subscribers&#13;
in and west ot Putnam. An excursion&#13;
for those in Hamburg and eastward&#13;
will be given from Pontiac to Jackson&#13;
on the 20th, but that tiain will not&#13;
on | stop at Pinckney or otfaer^ptaces w^str&#13;
very&#13;
bull, full brother to "Knight of St. Patrick,"&#13;
now owned by a stock association&#13;
in Missouri, and conceded to be&#13;
one of the finest animals ever imported^&#13;
We apprehend that this breed /will&#13;
meet with much favorvamong&#13;
in this vicinity, as the animals&#13;
compact, easy keepers^^eSjeelling in&#13;
both milk and beef^ana are exceedingly&#13;
docile and comely. Mr. Auld havfing&#13;
recently purchased* property of 300&#13;
acres and upward, handsomely located&#13;
on the banlp* of Portage Lake, may&#13;
well take' pride *y&amp; pleasure in im*&#13;
Pg°.Y'ng ** and^iiocking it with tha,-&#13;
animals wh^n, having seen, we cannot&#13;
wonder arfhis special favorites. A1-&#13;
thoug^the cattle have but recently ar-&#13;
' red and are not all in good flesh Mr.&#13;
aid will be pleased, when at home, to&#13;
show them to all who favor him with a&#13;
/&#13;
ward—«o all named for first excursion&#13;
wilf please look/but for tickets the 13th.&#13;
rt ho may find his Michi- ^ - ^ 'L-^-^Z.—&#13;
gan venture not only -pleasant but,&#13;
profitable withah&#13;
T O C O R R E S P O N D E N T S . tentlon Is paid to the law In relation to the des-1 tall man with a ruddy face and an abundance&#13;
t ruction of affected trees. Here is a charcc of white hair and lonj; white whiskers. Sever-&#13;
All communications for this paper bhould bo ao.&#13;
ooBsanled Sr the name of the author; not nec«»-&#13;
S r r for publication, but as an evidence of good&#13;
Ca on the part of the writer. Write only on one&#13;
the paper. Be particularly careful la giving&#13;
D.n&gt;«. and datos, to nave the letters and flkureB&#13;
nTainand dlnttnct. Proper uames are often difficult&#13;
fc decipher, because of the careleaa manner In&#13;
which tney are written, _&#13;
fal&#13;
•Id&#13;
"MICHIGAN MY mlCHIGAN."&#13;
HIC.H-HANOED OUTRAGE&#13;
Forcible Abduction or a Y o u n g Girt In&#13;
R i g a , L e n a w e e County.&#13;
Ore half mile west of Riga village, on the&#13;
south side of the road, is the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Parker, who live there with their daughter,&#13;
a girt of 16, and a little son. On Monday last,&#13;
says the Adrian Times, Mr3. Parker went to&#13;
Bliesfleld, and the daughter and her little&#13;
brother were alone In the house, while the&#13;
father was at work on the farm. During the&#13;
mother's absence there came to the bouBe a&#13;
thick-set mac, with black hair, whiskers and&#13;
eye, who said he wanted her to sign a paper,&#13;
which he presented. She demurred, saying&#13;
she knew nothing about It, and, at last, the&#13;
fellow grabbed her, and in the brief&#13;
scuffle that ensued tore the front of&#13;
her dress. Her little brother coming around&#13;
the corner of the house frightened the fellow&#13;
into deserting, and he went away. On Wednesday&#13;
afternoon Mrs. faikei wuut to Riga&#13;
village, leaving her daughter and little son&#13;
trome as before. About dusk tie girl went ou l&#13;
yard, and the same heavy man who had&#13;
it the house on Monday, jumped up&#13;
/ditch and seized her. He picked her&#13;
•'ttjrtirnls arms, forced a bunch of grass into&#13;
her mouth to stifle her cries, and started with&#13;
her In a southerly direction to a cornfield.&#13;
Here another man was met, the new comer&#13;
wearing a black hat, red shirt and blue overalls;&#13;
and was barefooted. The two went some&#13;
distance with the girl to the read, where they&#13;
iiad a top bu?gv and a pair of small-sized&#13;
black horses! During the time they were carrying&#13;
the girl the big man told her that in two&#13;
hours they would "come up with the rest of&#13;
the gang," that they were bound to have her&#13;
anyway If they went after her 500 times.&#13;
When they got to the buggy they bouud her&#13;
. hands behind her with a strap, and she thinks&#13;
they must have chloroformed her,&#13;
for" she lost consciousness for a&#13;
time and only recovered it when the buggy&#13;
stopped. When she came to herself she found&#13;
that the smaller of her two captors was busy&#13;
in the fence corner, apparently examining the&#13;
UdntmtB uf a muuei, She felt that the swap&#13;
which bound her had become loosened, aud&#13;
as her companion in the bugey stooped forward&#13;
she gave a yell, jumped from the vehicle&#13;
and made a bold cash for liberty. The&#13;
large man started in pursuit, but it was already&#13;
dark, and fear lent speed to the girl's&#13;
feet. He pulled a revolver and hred four or&#13;
five shots, but his aim was untrue, and the&#13;
girl got into a corn-field unharmed. Here she&#13;
eluded her pursuer, and soon made her way to&#13;
the house of Frederick Alderman, nearby,&#13;
and found she was two and a half miles cast or&#13;
Riga village. Before the news of the girl's escape&#13;
had reached BUssfleld, information of&#13;
her capture got there, creating the greatest excitement.&#13;
Some 400 or 5JO men and boys armed&#13;
with every conceivable weapon scoured the&#13;
country for the bold abductors, and the ex&#13;
citement only abated whenj news was received&#13;
that the girl had reached home safely, about&#13;
10 o'clock.&#13;
Heavy Failure.&#13;
Loster, Blackman &amp; Co., a heavy Big Kap-&#13;
Ida lumber firm, also operating at Baldwin,&#13;
Lake county, and at other points on the Detroit,&#13;
"Lansing and Northern road, have filed a&#13;
chattel mortgage of *3S,034 in favor of the&#13;
for the YUIIOWB commissioner to exercise his&#13;
authority.&#13;
The following prescription, written by a certain&#13;
M. D. of this village was found at one of&#13;
our drujr stores, and on account, ol its originality,&#13;
we copy It: "Four (Jollier' X o Tic*&#13;
Reubarb, H o Tick Camnre, W o Lauulnm, Dot&#13;
from8 to b draps to bea taken."—8J. LouU&#13;
Republican.&#13;
Augustus H. Meshon, state inspector of lumber&#13;
lrom the time the office-was created-until&#13;
the law providing for it was repealed, has been&#13;
afflicted with softening of the brain and has&#13;
been pronounced irsane. He was one of the&#13;
most widely known and respected of the prominent&#13;
lumbermeu of the valley.&#13;
John Wilcox of WellsvUJe, a 10 year-old boy,&#13;
was pi ay lair at a camp meeting held near&#13;
RldBtwuy, Sunday Aug. 31, when ho stumbled&#13;
and fell In front of a pair of horses being driven&#13;
rapidly through the grounds. The horses&#13;
reared and one of them plunged its foot in the&#13;
boy's breast, killing him instantly.&#13;
0ETBOIT MAEKETS.&#13;
Wh.-at^-No t. wblte I S5 &lt;U! £V&#13;
Wlu-*t~ne* red ,. ^0 (^ Srt&#13;
Flou • + W (¾ 4 75&#13;
Cort • • f&gt;0 yt 54&#13;
Oatb 34 ««• *i&#13;
Barkv -½ ($ '.'&#13;
Rye..' » i . . b O&#13;
Clover Seed, * bu 5 75&#13;
Timothy seed 7$ bu 8 75&#13;
Dried Apples, V ft 6&#13;
Peaches... 13&#13;
Cherries • ,••• *•»&#13;
Apples per bbl 2 00&#13;
Butter, w 1b Trrrr.—:«*&#13;
Potatoes.. .. 40&#13;
Onions, per bbl., 2 25.&#13;
Koney -A&#13;
Beans pic ked —^- .2 _35&#13;
Beans, unpicked 1 50&#13;
Hay.?..... 9 00&#13;
Straw 600&#13;
Pork dressed,* 100 S 00&#13;
Pork, mess 17 25&#13;
Pork, family 17 25&#13;
Hams 13&#13;
Shoulders.... £&#13;
Lard. v . S&#13;
Beef extra mess 12 00&#13;
Wood, Beech and Maple 5 75&#13;
Wood, Maple 6 25&#13;
WoodHlckorv 6 25&#13;
N E W S N O T E S&#13;
John Hunl, who forged a draft on the Market.&#13;
Bank of Detroit, Mich., for 19,500, and received&#13;
from the Bank of Deadwood $6,000 and&#13;
a certificate of deposit for ¢3,000 in-exchange&#13;
fui Ike uute, was tiled iu Duadwood, eoavktedarid&#13;
sentenced to ten year6 at bard labor in the&#13;
prison at Sioux Falle. Hunt defrauded banks&#13;
at Milwaukee and other western cities.&#13;
A UORK11LE CASE OF CANNIBALISM.&#13;
A case of misery at sea which exceeds in&#13;
ghastly horror the cannibalism of the Greely&#13;
expedition was brought to light recently by the&#13;
arrival at Falmouth, England of the German&#13;
bark Montezuma from Rangoorj, having on&#13;
board the survivors of the wreck ol the yacht&#13;
Mignonette. The yacht was of only thirtythree&#13;
tonB burthen, but she sailed from Southampton&#13;
for Australia on May 19. On June 11,&#13;
when near the equator in the Indian Ocean, she&#13;
encountered a storm which sent her to the bottom.&#13;
Four of her company, the commander,&#13;
f!apt.. Dudley, two seamen and a boy named&#13;
a) years ago he was unfortunate enough to be&#13;
a#licted with hlood-polsoaimr caused by partaking&#13;
of Baltimore partridges which nad&#13;
fed on the poisonous berries of the kalmla or&#13;
American" laurel. This brought on a severe&#13;
illness, and tbe evil effects lingered long in his&#13;
system* He often complained, iu fact, that&#13;
he never made a thorough recovery. He and&#13;
his qolleagus, the late Uen. Burnslde, were inseparable&#13;
friends, aud hU death caused him&#13;
tnuch sorrow. He was stricken down with a&#13;
aevere illness in April last, but after several&#13;
weens of suflVi'lntf rallied sufficiently to resume&#13;
his ordinary occupation. It has been noticeable&#13;
for some tine that Senator Anthony's&#13;
health was falling. His eye had nearly lost&#13;
its sparkle, his memory was not so good as it&#13;
had been and be found It Korr.ctlmea a difficult&#13;
matter to concentrate his attention on any&#13;
given subject. Washington will miss the kind*&#13;
ly, genial senator, and hid native state will&#13;
miss a thorougly business-like honorable man&#13;
whose reputation wan stainless and unimpeachable.&#13;
JDEATH'S ANGKL&#13;
Visits the Hcmept Secretary Charles J.&#13;
Folger.&#13;
f&#13;
s u d d e n T e r m i n a t i o n of a Noble U l e .&#13;
F H O n A F O R E I G N S H O R E .&#13;
AN IMMENSE UBHOV6TKATION.&#13;
Aulmmanse deuvm.urat'.on lu favor of the&#13;
Franchise.bill occurred the other day at Glasgow.&#13;
Seventy thousand persons took part in&#13;
the procession, which ^stretched to the enormous&#13;
length of ten miles from the starting&#13;
point. Tbe procession was headed by&#13;
400 carters and 40Osurvivore of the reform agitation&#13;
of 1833. Numerous banners and emblems&#13;
were carried bearing stinging legends&#13;
attacking the House of Lords.&#13;
_ CHINA G0IKO INTO THE PBIYATaBKINw BUSINESS.'&#13;
••-_-.-•&#13;
It is reported that Chinese agents in Glasgow,&#13;
Liverpool and London are tr|JM to arrange&#13;
privateer commissions with thpPvjtct of&#13;
preying on French commerce. Vanity F«lr&#13;
publishes a memorandum which Gen. Gordon&#13;
prepared for the Chinese government in 18*0&#13;
on the power of China to make a privateer&#13;
war Gen. Gordon lays stress on the legal necessity&#13;
jthat a privateer must start under letters&#13;
of marque from a Chinese port&#13;
the&#13;
S T B A Y S T R A I T S .&#13;
Stanley, the African explorer, favors&#13;
Nile route for the relief of GoidonT&#13;
Frauds of $400,000 discovered in the Egyptian&#13;
ministry of finance. High foreign officials&#13;
Implicated. •, . - - .__&#13;
Oliver Wendell&#13;
7Srh hlrrhri*y&#13;
Holmes .has just passed his&#13;
—D . - p ° ^ i f e g ^ f of. t3?'0,34 J5 '"V"t^L^XJ-£Q_Ptinueauntu tney rcscuea. uy tue&#13;
^ i g mpIds^Tauonai oauE ancTone ° T t m r twdfth day In favor of the Grand Rapids National bank. every shred of the turtle including&#13;
Both mortgages are to secure commercial and&#13;
accommodation paper, and cover all the lumber,&#13;
lath and 6aw tog«~at the mtltB and itr the&#13;
vicinity of Baldwin, and also a stock of tjoods&#13;
at Baldwin. A trust deed has also been give&#13;
u t o E . F. (Jul, president of the Grand Kap-&#13;
Uls National bank, and D. Coiastock, president&#13;
Parker escaped in a dingy. All the provisions&#13;
they were able to throw into the boat before&#13;
the vt66el satik consisted cf a few tins of turn-&#13;
IDS, and they were absolutely without water.&#13;
They subsisted for five days on canned turnips&#13;
and on the fifth day caught a small turtle.&#13;
They had been terribly tortued bv thirst and&#13;
on the eighth day their ' sufferings&#13;
were so , maddening that they began&#13;
drinking ' urine, which , practice tncy&#13;
•continued until they were rescued. By the&#13;
of the Big Kapids National, to secare certain&#13;
creditors. It u thought that the liabilities of&#13;
the firm, Including tuelr indebtedness on pine&#13;
lands, will exceed $100,000, aud that their, assttH&#13;
will, if well bandied, t-xceca their liabilities.&#13;
The firm is compOhid of Chspin B. Foster,&#13;
Elias D. Gailowav and WiiDur W. timith&gt;&#13;
m&#13;
IN T H E K X A T E .&#13;
Evait Is Loa&amp;ting of a genuine &lt;4sheeps-skln"&#13;
bond.&#13;
Mrs. Hannah Aktr6 of Nottawa, St. Joseph&#13;
^ouuty was 100 years old September 1.&#13;
Hunters are already {locking to the Upper&#13;
Pi-ninsula in large numbers to shoot deer.&#13;
Joseph Wilder of Whitehall,; while intoxicated,&#13;
fell out of his wagon, breaking his neck.&#13;
Mis. Ella Depew^of-St. Louis iu a moment&#13;
of drunken fretay, shot herself, dying Instantly.&#13;
Cxss City longtlh intensely for 'ta agrkrul^&#13;
t.ural implement factory. Libera! ImiuCLments&#13;
arc held out by tne cltizens.-&#13;
The^Evart Review are pu-trffsbing from week&#13;
to week an historicaUM^etch ol Oscoda county.&#13;
The; articles arejwclT written.&#13;
John LpwfjTthe embezzling cashier of the&#13;
CalujaetTand Hecla minine company, has been&#13;
tenced to live years iu Jackson.&#13;
W. H. HeinbougbTof Mendon7'"3T.Tosepb7&#13;
countv, claims to have refused an offer of |SO0&#13;
for his Lexington colt, "Little Turk."&#13;
F. E. Depaull of Michigan, i has been appointed&#13;
to a $1,000 clerkship in the War Department&#13;
uno&gt;£ the civil service rulei.&#13;
The Tibblts property consisting of the opera&#13;
^house, rink, etc., valued at $54,000, brought&#13;
$250 at the sale this week; they were sold ,by&#13;
creditors.&#13;
Thomas Mills of Muskegon shot Mj«s Carrie&#13;
White, Sunday, Aug. 31, because she refused&#13;
to marry him. The wounds are not serious.&#13;
Mills is in jail.&#13;
A correspondent In the Frceland Star writes&#13;
from VVa6niugton Territory saying among&#13;
other things: My advice to young men back&#13;
east, is to fctay there.&#13;
Isjui'- B. Tracy, a highly respected young&#13;
inau of Vermontville, who was a member of&#13;
the class of '£3. Olivet college, has been engaged&#13;
as prlncial of the academy at Port Byron,&#13;
IU.&#13;
From January 1st to June 80th, 1S84, the&#13;
Grand Trunk car ferries Huron and International&#13;
transferred 100,000 railway cars at this&#13;
i*iiut, representing «bout 1,000.000 tons of&#13;
lrelKht.— Port Huron Weekly Tribune.&#13;
Flint authorities haye been figuring very&#13;
closely on an electric light scheme, thereupon&#13;
the ciiv uaslight company offers to furnish gas&#13;
fur $1.50 per mouHaul ftwt. The tunc fur re*l&#13;
ceivlng bids for electric lightly has been extended.&#13;
Mrs. JeEse De Coureey one of the oldest&#13;
residents of Eaton Rapid* died Sept 1, aged&#13;
68 years. She attended to her household duties&#13;
until Saturday afternoon, when she was stricken&#13;
with apoplexy and remained unconcious till&#13;
she died. -&#13;
While a son of C. W. Thorp of Little Prairie&#13;
Ronda, was lifting a gun from a boat on Do-&#13;
Waglac River Monday morning, Sept, 1st,&#13;
the hammer caught and discharged the gun,&#13;
killing thr young man instantly. He was 17&#13;
years old&#13;
A. Cheshire, Allegan county, farmer makes&#13;
complaint that the yellows are quite prevalent&#13;
its skin had been consumed and there wa6 absolutely&#13;
nothing left to cat in the little boat.&#13;
The boy Parker was the weakest of the four&#13;
sufferers and it was evident that be was slowly&#13;
dylnij. The others hungrly watched his&#13;
symDtoms of dissolution. Ou the twentieth&#13;
day after the entire party haei betn without a&#13;
pat-tlcle of food for ei^ht days the captain hastened&#13;
young Parker's, death by opening a vein&#13;
in his arm. Tbe three survivors freely dranK&#13;
of the boy's blocd as it ^uthtd lrom his arm,&#13;
and they cut his llesh from his bones and ate it&#13;
uncocked, but with some degree of moderation,&#13;
the captain keeping possession of the carcass&#13;
aud serving out to himself and the two&#13;
sailors only tuch daily rations as were ne'ees-&#13;
TjaTjrto"preserve their lives. They prolonged&#13;
their wretched existence in this way until&#13;
July 5, when they were seen and rescued by&#13;
the Montezuma. During the twenty-four j&#13;
that had elapsed since the sinking oi the^yaciit&#13;
the dingy had drifted 95&gt;0 milfcs.^&lt;rhc three&#13;
men have been placed uuutr arrest by order of&#13;
the Board of Trade, aiui.thC'' ileatu ot tlte boy&#13;
will be invcatigatejj^-^&#13;
TJ DKADSENATOR.&#13;
Henry R. Anthony, Senior United&#13;
Slates Senator, Dead.&#13;
Henry B. Anthony, aenicr Senator of the&#13;
United titateis and ot Rhode island, died at his&#13;
resident in I'rovidence, Sept. 2, aged &amp;' years&#13;
5 months and 1 oay. He was in more than usual&#13;
health the day betore his death, having spant&#13;
some hours iu the Journal office and manifested&#13;
his usual cheerful good spirits, when not&#13;
oppressed by pain ana weakness, his chronic&#13;
disease. He passed a comfortable night and&#13;
took breakfast about 10 o'clock with good( appetite.&#13;
Shortly afterwards he was observed&#13;
growing pale, and was attacked by uremic convulsion&#13;
from Which he did not recover, airl&#13;
passed away at 1:45. For many years Mr.&#13;
Anthony was a conspicuous object iu the&#13;
United States Senate. He entered that body&#13;
in 1859, and BeWeUcontinuou^ty^incejthem&#13;
Hannibal Hamlin and tic were the only members&#13;
of the 8enate who witnessed the departure and&#13;
return of the senators from the rebellious suites.&#13;
tie was born ln'CoventryTRTT&#13;
In some CK-Teids in that town, and thut no stJ-Ju*y otter&#13;
on the 1st of&#13;
April. 1815, and came from a good old Quaker&#13;
family. In 1833 he graduateu at Browu-university,&#13;
and some fe,w years later became editor&#13;
of "the Providence Journal. He made his&#13;
influence felt and ra&amp;idly marched to the&#13;
front in municipal and national politics, in&#13;
1^4¾ he was elected govtmor of Rhode Islaiiii.&#13;
He'was re-elected in the following year, but&#13;
declined to be a candidate for the tnird term.&#13;
He took his seat in the United States senate&#13;
in 1859, having been elected as a Union Republican&#13;
to succeed Philip Allen, a Democrat.&#13;
He was re-elected In 1865. 1S71, lt»8, and&#13;
1&amp;S2. . He served at the head ol the printing&#13;
committee and was a member of tue committees&#13;
on ctalme, navtl affairs and postofSces and&#13;
post roads. He was also a meoaber of tae national&#13;
committee appointed to accompany the&#13;
remains of President Lincoln to Illinois, and&#13;
was one of the senators chosen by the Senate&#13;
to attend the funeral ot Gen. Scott iu 186».&#13;
That same-year he was a delegate to the Philadelphia&#13;
"Loyalist" convention. Anthony&#13;
was president pro tern of the Senate in 18by&#13;
and 1871. He amassed considerable wealth as&#13;
a newspaper proprleter and was popular as citizen,&#13;
governor and senator. It was In Washington&#13;
society that the late senator especially shone&#13;
He was as great a diner-out as Sam Ward, and&#13;
at making felicitous after dinner speeches he&#13;
was surpassed by few. As a bachelor an"&#13;
bon vivant he was In great demand, I&#13;
senate he spoke but seldom and rarefy&#13;
cussed politics, but on questions of irt and&#13;
letters he was very weU^ruTormed. It has&#13;
been said ot Mr. An^uoCy that be delivered&#13;
more funeral oratfdns of dead colleagues than&#13;
Berber has been captured by followers of&#13;
the False Prophet, who committed the most&#13;
horrible outrages upon its citizens.&#13;
Gen. Gordon has annouueel that Khartoum&#13;
cannot hold out until Novemter.&#13;
The cholera is still increasing in Italy.&#13;
The public debt statement for August shows&#13;
a reduction during the month of $8,542,850 26;&#13;
decrease since June 30, ls*4, $12,536,141 09.&#13;
Three men have been_arrested in Toronto&#13;
for threatening to thrash every dude they&#13;
met.&#13;
Gov. Hoadley made a personal Investigation&#13;
of the situation among the miners in the Hocking&#13;
Yalley, Ohio, and found it so serio'us thot&#13;
he ordered but three companies of troops.&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton cast her first&#13;
vote in Johnstown, N. • Y., Monday, Sept. 1.&#13;
It is now positively kno n that Melville has&#13;
been offered the command of a private polar&#13;
expedition.&#13;
The .New Xork Tribune is authority for thestattment&#13;
that a Cuban girl was sold at Sara'&#13;
toga recently for $1,200, She is sail to be 20&#13;
years old, aud her purchaser is to present her&#13;
"frrhis intended bride at Havana.&#13;
During the month of August gold coin and&#13;
bullion owned by tbe government increased&#13;
from $119,000,000 to nearly $122,500,000.&#13;
Over $10,000,000 were drawn from the United&#13;
State treasury fbr pensions during August.&#13;
Japan claliab to possess sovereignty over the&#13;
Loo Choo Islands,.and will argue the point&#13;
with China.&#13;
The Min river is open to traillc as far as&#13;
Foo Chow'."'&#13;
ANesvYork builder is under arrest for&#13;
building house Wills hollow and filling them&#13;
with sand.&#13;
There is every' probability that the Swaim&#13;
court martial will be further postponed until&#13;
sf ter inauguration.&#13;
The Tallapoosa disaster is attributed to color&#13;
blindness. The matter is to be investigated.&#13;
Admiral Miot cables that he" seized Pas?andava&#13;
Bay, Madagascar,without resistance. The&#13;
French still^oecupy TamaUve.&#13;
The-gCvernment of New South Wales has&#13;
ibited the importation of dynamite and&#13;
nitroglycerine for six months.&#13;
It is stated that the English Government has&#13;
sent the guuboats Sampson and Elk to protect&#13;
the Englisa fishing licet in the North Sea.&#13;
The King and Queen of Sweden recently gave&#13;
an entertainment iu honor of Gen, Thomas&#13;
GKNSVA, N. Y., Sept. 4.-Secretary Folger&#13;
died at 4.45. Tie only persons present were&#13;
Mrs. Hart,hla deceased wife's slsU'r^Dr. Knapp&#13;
and his law associates, his family physician,&#13;
Dr. A. B. Smith, and his colored servant&#13;
James. Dr. Smith and Capt. J. S. Lewis had&#13;
left him but a few minutes previously. Dr.&#13;
Henry Foster, who has been here two or three&#13;
times as consulting physician, arrived on the&#13;
4.45 train, and was conveyed to the Folger mansion&#13;
by Dr. Smith. Mrs. Ernest, the secretary's&#13;
sister, arrived by the same train. After the&#13;
three last namedentered, the dying man gasped&#13;
twice or thricf, and all was over. Secretarv&#13;
Folger's two daughters are in the Adiroudacks,&#13;
the elder in very feeble health. His si&gt;u,&#13;
Capt. Chas. W. Folger, is at Alexandria, Va.&#13;
All have been written to conn; to Geneva. The&#13;
telegraph has not been earlier resorted to as&#13;
so sudrteu a termination of the father's malady&#13;
was not apprehended. Capt. Folger will arrive&#13;
to-morrow.&#13;
The secretary returned for the last time to&#13;
Geneva Wednesday evening, the 20th ult. He&#13;
called bis family physician the next morning,&#13;
who gave tbe following diagnosis of the case:&#13;
"Great feebleness of the heart's action; congestion&#13;
ot the middle lobe of tbe right lung,&#13;
and capillary congestion of the bronchial tubes L&#13;
torpor of the liver, albuminous discharge of&#13;
the urine, showing disease of the kidneys." The.&#13;
doctor was informed that the secretary&#13;
had had hemorrhage o l the luncs three times&#13;
of late before his return. The first was while&#13;
out yachting with friends at New York, on&#13;
wnTch occasion he discharged about a pint of&#13;
blood. Secretary Folger rode out daily until&#13;
and including the 29th ult., since which time&#13;
he kept his room, but did not wholly abandon&#13;
official work. He- continued to answer&#13;
Important letters and telegrams up to yesterday,&#13;
and seemed reluctant to give up. Yet be&#13;
was by no means unconscious of his critical&#13;
condition. He entrusted to his personal friend,&#13;
Capt. Lewis, final messages to his family, and&#13;
Mother directions of a confidential nature.&#13;
Within a few moments after the sreretary&#13;
expired telegrams announcinjj the sad event&#13;
were dispatched to President Arthur at New"&#13;
port. Assistant Treasurer Coon, Frank Sper-&#13;
Ty,;7n^^iTvaTu becreWyrtnTE^gnT Thwr*£-&#13;
Actbn, assistant treasurer, at New York, and&#13;
J-rtdge-"Andrew», Syracuse.—General glooi&#13;
Visiting his brother, the United States Minister&#13;
at Stockholm.&#13;
The Commissioners appointed by the Canadian&#13;
Government to visit British Columbia and&#13;
report on Chinese linmljiration have returned.&#13;
It is understood they recommend that Chinese&#13;
immigration be regulated, if not restricted in&#13;
some measure.&#13;
, o&#13;
In the coffin of Wee Kee, the Chinaman&#13;
lately murdered at Albany, were&#13;
deposited an extra Chinese gown, an&#13;
additional pair of Chinese shoes, and a"&#13;
ftjvv oLher articles, that the dead person&#13;
might be attired through his journey to&#13;
-tiie uaknowjaiamL- J ^ o r e ,lhj}_ bi^in.-_&#13;
pervades the people of Geneva over thi6 sadden&#13;
removal of thei: beloved townsman, men of all&#13;
parties and all conditions in life joining in expressions&#13;
of sorrow. The first emblems of&#13;
mourning displayed were above the entrance&#13;
to the quarters of the S4th separate company,&#13;
"Foleer corps," N. G. S&lt;. N. Y.f at the Geneva&#13;
Nationel bank, and upon the large Cleveland&#13;
and Hendrlckjnarnrenuspendcd across Seneca&#13;
street. The secretary will be*burled in Geneva&#13;
by the side of his wile, who died seven years&#13;
ago. —&#13;
Appropriate action will be taken by the&#13;
heads of the treaaury bureaus and otber government&#13;
officials in respect to the memory of&#13;
the deceased secretary.&#13;
•&#13;
G L E A N I N G S .&#13;
If not overloaded Esquimaux dogs&#13;
will easily draw a sledge sixty miles a&#13;
-day.&#13;
An American company is laying&#13;
artificial stone pavements in the City of&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
Bucks County, Pennsylvannia, is&#13;
credited with a young lady whose hair&#13;
sweeps the iloor.&#13;
It is one of Gladstone's peculiarities&#13;
that ho cares ycry little What he eats,&#13;
when lie eats it, or where.&#13;
Paris is tho Cincinnati of Europe.&#13;
Of 300 men tried for murder during tho&#13;
past year only live were convicted.&#13;
Turtle-fighting is one of the rare&#13;
amusements of the civilized denizens&#13;
of Staten Island. It is said to be&#13;
more enjoyable than cock-fightiug.&#13;
The oldest apothecary shop in Berlin,&#13;
which in 1888 might celebrate tho 400th&#13;
anniversary of its existence, has just&#13;
been sold for the sum of $300,000.&#13;
A Washington correspondent says&#13;
that a Senator h*as to pay out of his&#13;
own pocket from eight hundred to a&#13;
thousand dollars for postage stamps.&#13;
A ninety-year-old colored man of&#13;
Tallahassee,while out huutingrecently,&#13;
killed three bears, ao alligator, arattlesnako,—&#13;
ten skunks, and cuTThrce -bet&gt;-&#13;
The genera!, of course, moves in the&#13;
very^highe'st circles of wociely. and&#13;
during tho season lm has* been introduetHfto&#13;
hundreds of lad it's :wul ijentjuinen.&#13;
lil! '•&gt; o m ' *'f l ' u ' l m ) -s l I'ullio and&#13;
:i«ree':ible of gentlemen, and II:H a perfect&#13;
horror of olVeuditiLr an\ one ilu\&gt;ugu&#13;
an intentional oversight. After the&gt;&#13;
general had been to a lew receptions&#13;
ho found that he was totally tmablv to&#13;
recall the names and nven the lace;* of&#13;
fully two-thirds of the pursom who&#13;
had beoii introduced to him. Di'ivcu&#13;
to desperation, he :uiopwd tin* noved&#13;
plan of bowing to evi-; vbod.v.&#13;
oue thinks of introducing a&#13;
Uen. Slierietan. The proper&#13;
society is to iuiroiiuee your.--&#13;
«;oueral won't know the dilly;'&#13;
he will irreet yon wi;ii aU-'ine&#13;
of an old friend.&#13;
Now&#13;
'riend&#13;
thln:r&#13;
)IO&gt;&#13;
to&#13;
in&#13;
Y\. T-ie&#13;
nee. and'&#13;
i liability&#13;
A U H C f o r Sa\v«liisf.&#13;
It is generally easier lor .; miii-owner&#13;
to dump his sawdust in the .stream for&#13;
tho water to wash away than it is for&#13;
him to Jburn it or cart it off.' The sawdust&#13;
kills the fish in tho stream, but he&#13;
would bo an idiotic mill-owner who&#13;
would allow such a public loss tointerfere&#13;
with his private gain; and so he&#13;
dumps the sawdust, kills tho iish, puts&#13;
his hands in his pockets, and asks the&#13;
public: "What are you going to do&#13;
about it?" Tho states havo enacted&#13;
laws forbidding this disposition of sawdust,&#13;
and prescribing penalties for tho&#13;
offense, and the offenders eithor manage&#13;
to evade tho law or ignore it entirely.&#13;
Thousands and thousands of&#13;
j t r e a m s which oneo harbored excellent&#13;
food fish havo been ruined by the sawdust.&#13;
In the last report of the New&#13;
York Commissioner of fisheries, it is&#13;
stated that "of all the causes there is&#13;
probably none that has exerted- suchan&#13;
influence in expelling both salmon;&#13;
and trout from our spring streams as&#13;
the ^ r e s e n c e ^ ^ s a w d u s t . ' ' And the&#13;
commissioners go on to state that'&#13;
a statute governing^&#13;
useless because&#13;
ning of the services a fan was placed in&#13;
the left hand of the dead man and a&#13;
pack of Chipese playing cards in the&#13;
other. The native missionary who&#13;
conducted the proceedings read a portion&#13;
of Scripturo and made ar addrass&#13;
of 15 minutes in Chinese. After the&#13;
concluding prayer the 13 Chinamen&#13;
present marched twice around the coffin,&#13;
'f ke officiating Chinaman s^ng a song&#13;
in Chinese during these proceedings.&#13;
The body was then taken to tho rural&#13;
cemetery and interred. Candles made&#13;
in their country and joss sticks were7&#13;
lighted and stuck about the open grave.&#13;
Then pieces of paper about a foot in&#13;
length and seven inches in width/known&#13;
as " y u m p o , " a specie of Chinese money,&#13;
were distributed among the celestials,&#13;
and each lighted several pieces&#13;
and held them in his hands until they&#13;
were entirely consumed! This was ex*&#13;
plained as necessary in order to famish&#13;
the dead man with lunds in h i s ^ a f&#13;
away j o u r n e y / t o the other laffttTthe&#13;
burning of^the " y y m p o ^ b e t n g as esj.&#13;
sential aa/ibe dissoluAhm of tne body.&#13;
The grave wa^ttren filled up and the&#13;
Chinamen^departed, leaving the joss&#13;
sticks^tfrning in order to keep away&#13;
spirits.&#13;
"Painting rod" has become so oommon&#13;
a term to denote the. doings of the&#13;
alcoholically^ hilarious that a saloon&#13;
keeper, in a western town has p u t m &gt; f&#13;
tr of the atiute. He was*&#13;
t h e s i g u • 'artist's material?" in his wind&#13;
a w . • - •&#13;
trees.&#13;
Tho 'fatuous Rugby colony in Tennessee&#13;
is about .to turn its attention to&#13;
vine-growing. It has proved a failuro&#13;
in evofy~other direction except the&#13;
moral one.&#13;
—-During—the - iirst six months of this&#13;
year nearly $80,000,000 has been invested&#13;
in buildings in New York, an&#13;
increase of ^:),000,000 over tho corresponding&#13;
perioel last year. ^&#13;
A Calcutta paper tells of a railway&#13;
station in India who- recently scut the&#13;
following- dniKrteh—to—hoa'dquarters^&#13;
"Train just due. Tiger jumping about&#13;
the piriform. Piease ttsiegraph orders."&#13;
—It-haa come out in a trial at London&#13;
that the boquels presented by enthusiastic&#13;
adorers to tiie queens of" son"* are r1- song&#13;
ninny of them sold at once. T h l T&#13;
prima donn-fv disposes by contract&#13;
great&#13;
of&#13;
all the bouquets she receives.&#13;
Lighting- reecntiv struck a tree-on&#13;
Governor Stanford's California -ranch,&#13;
uttfl tho Chinamen employed on - the&#13;
/f)iaco could not be induced to pick up&#13;
the debris, ns they considered that it&#13;
was the work of an.evil spirit.&#13;
Bayard Taylor's father and motffcr,&#13;
still living up in the nineties^rn years,&#13;
inhabit tiie beautifuljiKrfintry house&#13;
which Bayard built&gt;«tir3 ago at Kennett&#13;
Square, Pa., aiwTwhich since his death,&#13;
has,fruitlessly been offered for sale.&#13;
lough Baltimore ' is termed the&#13;
lonumental City" there arc really&#13;
fewer monuments to be seen there than&#13;
in almost any other place. Tho only&#13;
monument of note is that erected by&#13;
tho stato as a tribute to Washington,&#13;
An English iirm of soap manufacturers&#13;
spends about $160,000 a y e a r advertising.&#13;
, It employs capable artists,&#13;
essayist and poets, and sends a package&#13;
of soap gratuitously to each of the infants&#13;
whoso birth is anribunoed in the&#13;
London Times.&#13;
No end of amuiSEKEEtiM&#13;
ihis, it is practically&#13;
carelessly worded.&#13;
The destruction of fish is not all that&#13;
the sawdust must answer for. I t kills&#13;
human beings. W a t e r s polluted by&#13;
sawdust spread malaria, and make miserable&#13;
the lives of those who dwell upon&#13;
tho banks of tho plague-bearing,&#13;
stream. This is notably the case with&#13;
tho Raquetto River, whose whole&#13;
lower course is cursed with chills and&#13;
fever; and Potsdam, where one of tho&#13;
StattrNormal Schools is located, has&#13;
become a very undesirable place of&#13;
residence from this cause.&#13;
When urged to burn, or in some other&#13;
way dispose of their sawdlist, lumbermen&#13;
have objected that they could not&#13;
afford tho cost. There is hope that the&#13;
question of dealing with this nuisance&#13;
may now bo solved, for a process&#13;
has been discovered by—which tho re-,&#13;
fuse sawdust may be made to yield a&#13;
handsome profit. . When dry it- is carbonized&#13;
in iron retorts, and iu tho process&#13;
is given off 8.0 per cen^. of volatilo&#13;
products, the remaining 20 per cent,&#13;
being granulated charcoal, which can&#13;
be used in making gunpowder, iilters,&#13;
lining-refrigerators, ;ind, as a disinfectant,&#13;
and with a very little tar it could&#13;
be pressed into bricks and used for&#13;
fuel; 22 of the 80 per cent, of the volatile&#13;
product is in the shape of fixed&#13;
gases, which can be usoel for lighting^&#13;
beating, etc.; 47 per cent, is pyroligeenous&#13;
acid, which is crude acetic acid,&#13;
and after being purified and concentrated&#13;
is used in. white lead, color,&#13;
print and vinegar manufactories.&#13;
There remains 10 percent, of Tar arid"&#13;
1 of wood alcohol. The tar has the&#13;
same properties as coal tar, tho almost&#13;
endless uses of which, such as pitching&#13;
roofs, lining water tanks, covering the&#13;
bottoms of vessels, protecting iron from&#13;
rusting, covering tho wounds made in&#13;
pruning trees, and in the form of benl&#13;
o i c r naptha, carbolic and sulphuric&#13;
acids, and the whole splendid scries of&#13;
analine dies, constitute one of tho chief&#13;
glories of modern chemistry. The&#13;
wood or inethylic alcohol is used as a&#13;
solvent for gums,' in varnish making,in&#13;
the manufacture of analine colors. °&#13;
-The sawdust fromzycilow pine and&#13;
other woods rich in resin yields also a&#13;
considerable amount of turpentine* in&#13;
the gathering of which so many trees&#13;
are each year sacrificed.&#13;
It is estimated that in sawing incl^&#13;
boards of pine, hemlock, etc., the onefourth&#13;
inch sawkerf uses up one-fifrftof&#13;
the log. When lumber is sawed by the&#13;
billion feet, one can easily see that tho&#13;
question of using the sawdust in a way&#13;
to yield a profit^ instead of aiirst class&#13;
nuisanee, is a very, import ant one.—&#13;
Forest and Stream.&#13;
Shoving the Queer in 'P,'rTiissp jar&#13;
said the hand-&#13;
I just wanted&#13;
in Washington during tho past winter&#13;
strver the mistakes of Gen. Sheridan.&#13;
There is a cheap clothin-g dealer on&#13;
Kearny, near CalifpKiTa, whoso confidence&#13;
in manj^dTlias received a severe&#13;
s c t b a c k ^ T h e other day an honest *&#13;
lookiirgcountryman walked into his&#13;
ore and said : '&#13;
Yon remember that second-hand.&#13;
overcoat I bought hero for $8 yesterday?;'&#13;
"Never dakos pack anythings ven&#13;
vonce soh, my front,"&#13;
~mc-dowTrer.&#13;
"Oh! that's all right.&#13;
to say that I found this $500 bill sowed&#13;
in the lining. Perhaps the owner may&#13;
callfor.it."&#13;
" O f g o r s o h o vill—ho has already,&#13;
my tear front," exclaimed tho dealer,&#13;
.. oagerly capturing tho money. 4,You&#13;
ish..von honish man. Here, I gif you&#13;
leefty tollar ashjS revard. Dot vill be&#13;
all right." \&gt;&#13;
When tho honest customer got&#13;
around tho corner he muttered softly:&#13;
•'1 guess I'd better take this fifty and&#13;
skipupjoPo^rnahorbefojre" that Sheeny&#13;
tumbles to thar^ouhTerfoit" It's getting&#13;
mighty hard to shove the 'queeF"&#13;
around these parts, and t h a t ' s a fact.—&#13;
San Francisco FosL. _&#13;
/&lt;&#13;
\&#13;
.un-m, '&#13;
^ .&#13;
flBftKni . * W * w '-• T:')«&lt;li"\«V^'"J,!''t»t**-,&lt;*»'»«»- ,K,,&#13;
^ ^&#13;
• • • &gt; * '&#13;
"nirfrtm&#13;
2&#13;
tlit-d,&#13;
"KOWK D A Y . "&#13;
•^omc iluy," a merry school-boy sar^,&#13;
AH forth from toll he strode,&#13;
Ami o'er the fluids his shout rung,&#13;
Anil fur aclowri the road.&#13;
"jonu1 day,"' a maiden chanted low,&#13;
As Bhf plucked u, roHttbud fair,&#13;
And licr fact; j:i'«'W unwound IHT footsteps MIOW&#13;
Asi-shf bound It with her hair.&#13;
Hut the thoughts of both wire fur away. .&#13;
Idly dn•HinlnR of Unit "tome day."&#13;
From the sc.'iool-boy's lips the Kay sopy&#13;
WhtU' Hit* maiden cast the rose aside.&#13;
"Some dav," n hopeful youth did say,&#13;
Asiif looked at the the morning sky,&#13;
"I shall be rich and yreat some day,&#13;
If I onljwork and try."&#13;
"Smie d a j , " the maiden softly said,&#13;
Whilst she looked at a swinging bird,&#13;
Then blushinc she dropped her pretty head,&#13;
And the wish was neyer heard.&#13;
The youth's swift thoughts were far away,&#13;
Building castles on that "tome day."&#13;
From the maiden's ll^s there dropped a sigh, ,&#13;
Heard by \hc bird as he flitted by.&#13;
"Some day," said the youth, to manhood&#13;
grown,&#13;
'•I'll harvest the fruit of my toll; &lt;-&#13;
Well must I reap, for well I have sown,&#13;
Nor will heaven my lift-work spoil."&#13;
' "Some day," 6lgned tho maiden, a woman now&#13;
"My love will come buck to me."&#13;
Atd a look of hope lit up her brow&#13;
As she gazed far ovtr the eea.&#13;
but the man reaped not as be. had sown,&#13;
For fortune's smite from him had flown *,&#13;
i n d the abseutlover never barae back&#13;
-T» join the walrirj In ilft-,'js..rouKb track •_.&#13;
"Some .day," said the,m&gt;m with lock of gray,&#13;
"Oh,' will my soul ne'er be&#13;
Gladdtneirwith that jouged for -some da}'&#13;
'Which never ean cornet:) me J"&#13;
/"Some day," atd a woman's peaceful face 7 J.ooked'up at a fleecv cloud;&#13;
But she turned with a steh Irom Its soft embrace,&#13;
And her head on her bosom bowed;&#13;
And the man In his heart wondered why God&#13;
Had ordered such paths by his feet to be trod,&#13;
Ruv from the woman'* heart ascended a prayer&#13;
Heard only by One as it rose on the air.&#13;
"Some dav," the old mat slowly said,-&#13;
"Although In life I fail,&#13;
Although the soul's fond hope teems dead.&#13;
There's fruition beyond tW vail,"&#13;
*LSome day"—and from under the whitened&#13;
hair&#13;
A woman's eyes looked clear—&#13;
"Some day I'll rain sweet rest up there:&#13;
At last it. seems so near."&#13;
The old man bowed his forehead white&#13;
And Faith from his soul drove forth the night&#13;
O'er the woman's face spread a pallor gray,&#13;
And her soul found rest in a glad "some day."&#13;
—Inter Ocean.&#13;
own niiml, even when she accepted&#13;
Fred's father, for whom she never&#13;
cared a farthing, and who, after ruining&#13;
himself and family, shot himself in&#13;
a. gambling saloon to add to their trouble*&#13;
Fred, stayed at Mrs. Hazard's, and,&#13;
she, with a rich woman's iniluence, soon&#13;
placed him where—if he had perseverance&#13;
and ability-there was a prospect&#13;
of a good career for him.&#13;
Lo! now there came a new face into&#13;
the household—a new step, a new voice.&#13;
The dull, quiet evenings were over.&#13;
Chat and laughter iilled the little parlor.&#13;
Mrs. Hazard woke out of the lethargy&#13;
which, being quite alone with each&#13;
other, will Ming about the lives of women,&#13;
and declared herself ten • years&#13;
younger.&#13;
She went to the opera with *red.,&#13;
taking Sybil along. She gave a little&#13;
party. She grew astouningly gay;&#13;
and as for Sybil—well, the world was&#13;
growing very bright to her, not so much&#13;
because of the opera going and the&#13;
general waking up as because a little&#13;
poetry had at last been brought into her&#13;
life&#13;
Fred. Haliburton had-begwi to make&#13;
love to her.&#13;
There are men who feel their way to&#13;
women's hearts, slowly, cautiously,&#13;
prudently. FrerirHalitmrton was not&#13;
one of them. His looks, his manner&#13;
said from the first: "I love you, and 1&#13;
MRS. HAZARD.&#13;
BY M.- K. 1).&#13;
Sybil Stanton stood at a window,&#13;
looking at the stars and wondering&#13;
whether anything lay before her besides&#13;
the dull monotony of life, which seemed&#13;
wearing her o u t Companion to an&#13;
old lady—well it did not seem such a&#13;
hard life, after all* to others.; A good,&#13;
luxurious home, a liberal salary, light&#13;
duties; yet—oh, yes—yet it was so dull!&#13;
Other girls, not so pretty, had been&#13;
wooed and won, and she «ad not one&#13;
lover.&#13;
"I suppose I shall die an old- maid,&#13;
sighed Sybil. "There's no romance in&#13;
store forme, no poetry. It is all harsh&#13;
prose. There ought to bo something&#13;
more in life, or why should I loDg for&#13;
it."&#13;
"Miss Stanton, it's 9 o'clock and&#13;
polly's cage isn't covered yet," cried&#13;
Miss Hazard from her inner room.&#13;
~" Sybil sighed. The parrot was part&#13;
of her prose. There were the parrot,&#13;
the canary and the poodle. She nearly&#13;
hated them all. There was the collection&#13;
of sermons to bo read at nights,&#13;
anit there wa3 Mrs. HazardV,false front&#13;
morning,&#13;
that it&#13;
St!&#13;
faste,&#13;
to curl in the morning. There were&#13;
caps to make, and bows to put upon&#13;
them. There were the long shopping&#13;
hows- —! , . n ^ 4'I ought to rejoice in tho canary,'&#13;
she said, bitterly. "If I were like&#13;
other girls, perhaps I should; but I&#13;
only long to open its cago and let it go.&#13;
And yet the ease is the safest place for&#13;
the bird, as this house is forme."&#13;
And then Sybil- who had thought all&#13;
this, not uttered it—read the forty-ninth&#13;
sermon by the Rev. Paul Predestine,&#13;
and bade Mrs. Hazard good-night.&#13;
She overslept herself next&#13;
and awoke to the consciousness&#13;
was late and that Mrs. Hazard's false&#13;
irdnt was not curled, but lay, rumpled&#13;
with that lady's latest nap, on&#13;
near by. Sybil dressed herself&#13;
and then dressed the fror^tind,)perching&#13;
it upon her hajidrlSounced it into&#13;
Mrs. HazardVdrelsing-room, in an impetuous&#13;
manner peculiar to herself.&#13;
Jn-tne middle of the room she stood&#13;
ipetrified with astonishment; Mrs. Haz&#13;
iird, in a shawl and mourning cap, was&#13;
holding andience with a yjung gentleman—&#13;
a very handsome young gentle-&#13;
~ man—who strove to look sedulously uuconscious&#13;
of the * 'front.''&#13;
••No matter, Miss Stanton," said&#13;
Mrs. Hazard, "it's only my nephew.&#13;
He knows I wear curls. Why not? It's&#13;
customary. Fred., this is Miss Stanton.&#13;
Suppose vou put them on the bureau,&#13;
Sybil."&#13;
And Sybil escaped to tho adjoining&#13;
room.&#13;
"She's pretty," said Fred to his aunt.&#13;
"She's very good—that's better,"&#13;
said Mrs. Hazard. "Beauty fadea. Til&#13;
see you at breakfast, Fred."&#13;
And Mrs. Hazard retired to' her be 1-&#13;
room, leaving her newly arrived&#13;
nephew to amuse himself as he chose.&#13;
He prudently betook himself to tho garden.&#13;
That was the first of it, not the la»t.&#13;
The nephew, a sort of rolling stone&#13;
gathering BO moss had been nent to&#13;
Aunt Hazard to be doco something&#13;
with—to bo recommended somewhere&#13;
or to get into something good.&#13;
A puzzled Toother, with many other&#13;
responsibilities and a very small income,&#13;
had suggested this in an incoherent letter&#13;
which accompanied her eldest son.&#13;
—And there was nothing for it, a* Mrs.&#13;
Hazard said, but to trv to help that ridiculous&#13;
Lottyv who never knew her&#13;
mean to make you love me&#13;
This wild young Fred, saucy and gav&#13;
and charming, always looking handsomer&#13;
than men who were really finer&#13;
of figuro and feature, won his way easily&#13;
and*"naturally with^ybil. If he was&#13;
not gravely sensible and sedately prudent,&#13;
Sybel liked him all the better.&#13;
She had had enough of gravity and&#13;
prudence, of trouble and serious&#13;
thought. "Some one to laugh and chat&#13;
with, some one. who say the ludicrous&#13;
side of everything and had no prudence&#13;
whatever, was the very man for her&#13;
-It inight have been better for her to&#13;
have admired the professor with snuff&#13;
colored hair, who was writing a dictionary,&#13;
and who came to Mrs. Hazard's&#13;
tea parties with some 'of it in his&#13;
pocket; but she didn't. She&#13;
could have thanked Heaven for the&#13;
fresh young springtime that seemed to&#13;
have come Into her life with this lover,&#13;
who had no mere years to remember&#13;
than she had herself, and who had&#13;
never known a sorrow, or taken one to&#13;
heart if he had, which is much the same&#13;
thing. And perhaps we have told&#13;
enough injtelliug that he loved her and&#13;
that she returned his love.&#13;
Where Mrs. Hazard's eyes were, or&#13;
her ears, or her brain, that she did not&#13;
see what was going on, it is impossible&#13;
to guess. That »he did not seemed certain,&#13;
when, one morning, entering the&#13;
parlor suddenly, she found Fred with&#13;
his arm around Sybil's waist in the&#13;
very act of nopping the question.&#13;
Mrs. Hazard stood still, glared upon&#13;
the two ferociously and inquired with&#13;
sarcastic politeness:&#13;
"May I ask what this means?"&#13;
"It means," said Fred., "that I have&#13;
just asked Miss Stanton to be my wife."&#13;
"And what has she said?" asked&#13;
Mrs. Hazard.&#13;
"What could I say, whon I liked&#13;
Fred so much?" asked Sybil.&#13;
Mrs. Haxard sat down in a chair.&#13;
"1 suppose I was nobody," she said-.&#13;
"Oh, no," cried Fred., "we meant&#13;
to tell you." '&#13;
"Thank you. Said Mrs. Hazard, more&#13;
sarcastically than before. '"'Thank you&#13;
what it was, and announced to&#13;
her master that "that young&#13;
couple had come." And down&#13;
stairs walked the clergyman and wile,&#13;
with tho benignant mixture of smile*&#13;
and gravity which seemed fitting/or the&#13;
occasion; for, as we may &gt;mppose,&#13;
Sybil and Fred, had entered the parsonage&#13;
for the purpose of being made&#13;
OQO for life.&#13;
A few polite words - a blush on the&#13;
part of the bride—a little nervousness&#13;
on that of the bridegroom—a soft, expectant&#13;
lluttering of the clergyman's&#13;
wife's black silk, and they were all&#13;
standing, ready for the marriage .service,&#13;
when the doorbell rings furiously,&#13;
and, as it was opaned, a voice they well&#13;
knew, cried:&#13;
"Not at home, fiddlestick*. Keep&#13;
me out if you dare! I will go in," and in&#13;
walked, or bolted, Mrs. Hazard, very&#13;
much excited— Bridget behind her, crying&#13;
in anxious explanation: She would&#13;
come. Murther, 1 couldn't kape her&#13;
from yez."&#13;
"Ah! I'm in time, I see," cried Mrs.&#13;
Hazard "You're not married yet.&#13;
You thought to deceive me, eh? Come&#13;
Fred., I will give you one chancefor&#13;
you are poor Letty's child; give&#13;
up this folly and come home with me,&#13;
and I'll leave you everything."&#13;
" - " Y o u ' r e my aunt, madam," cried&#13;
Fred.* "and an old woman, so I'll try&#13;
to be cool; but, by George, I wonder&#13;
what you ta*e me for! 1—I— sir, if you&#13;
please go on withtho ceremony."-&#13;
"Stop a minute," said Mrs. Hazard.&#13;
"Sybil, my dear, I've been very good&#13;
to you. Come home with me; you&#13;
shall have all I leave. I cut him off.&#13;
I—"&#13;
"Mrs. Hazard,", said Sybil, "you&#13;
have been kind, and I grieve to offend&#13;
you. but all the world could not bribe&#13;
me to leave Fred, now."&#13;
"He'll be a beggar," said the old&#13;
woman.&#13;
"Then I'll help him beg," said Sybil.&#13;
"Why, don't you know—you were once&#13;
wife vourself— that there are things&#13;
M a r y C l e m m e r .&#13;
Mary Clemmer was but a mere girl,&#13;
more precious than gold, or silver ?&#13;
And then Mrs. Hazard coming close&#13;
to Sybil caught her in her arms.&#13;
"Why yes I do," she said. "Didn't&#13;
you know that before, child? Have&#13;
vou been So completely taken in?&#13;
I've been trying you both, children —&#13;
trying yoar love' for each other, and&#13;
your honesty and truth to me. If for&#13;
the sake of my money, you had broken&#13;
faith with each other, not a penny&#13;
should either of j-ouever have had from&#13;
me. How could I know it was not my&#13;
heir you were willing to marry, Sybil&#13;
Stanton? How could 1 know V.ow&#13;
earnest your love was until it was&#13;
triedr I've put you both to the t e s t -&#13;
knew of your love making all along,&#13;
read your notes, and heard all your&#13;
plans; and, by the way, there's poor&#13;
Barbara Druler in the carriage yet and&#13;
I mu*t have her in to see your wedding."&#13;
And so, with Mrs. Hazard in hig&gt;&#13;
glee, Barbara all a chuckle under her&#13;
best bonuet, tho clergyman .blandiy toerant&#13;
of human absurdity; his wife in&#13;
sentimental tears; the brido blushing,&#13;
and the bridegroom smiling'; the little,&#13;
scene ended bhthely in n wedding. After&#13;
which, Mrs. Hazard conveyed the&#13;
young people home with her, and has.&#13;
so rtinior declares, followed Captain&#13;
Cuttlo's example, and made her property&#13;
over "jintiy."&#13;
•oaree out of her teens, when shfc began&#13;
to write lettors, tint for The Springfield&#13;
Republican, and soon after for the The&#13;
Independent, from Washington. That&#13;
was during the war, and from that day&#13;
her name has been more closely identified&#13;
with The Independent than that of&#13;
any other one of our correspondents.&#13;
Winter after winter we published her&#13;
letters every week, and when she was&#13;
not able to supply them it was a matter&#13;
of regret to us. Many a mother, many&#13;
a clergymen, many a statesman has&#13;
turned first, as he opened the paper, to&#13;
see if it contained **A Woman's Letter&#13;
from Washington." They made her&#13;
famous; for there was nothing like them.&#13;
Mary Clemmer's father was a Pennsylvanian/&#13;
ond her mother a native of&#13;
the Islo of Man. She was verv proud&#13;
of her Manx blood, and took great&#13;
pleasure in visiting, three years ago,&#13;
ner mother's early home. She was&#13;
born in Utica, N. Y., in 1839, and was&#13;
educated at the Normal School at Westfield,&#13;
Mass. It was the reading of Alice&#13;
Cary's poems which first stirred her&#13;
literary ambition, and she became, in&#13;
later years, the warm friend and biographer&#13;
of tho two Cary sisters.&#13;
At a very early period in her lit srary&#13;
career the "compulsion of work&#13;
was put upon her by the failure of her&#13;
father's health and tho necessity Of&#13;
providing for her parents and educating&#13;
her sisters. This responsibility&#13;
controlled the rest of her life. For this&#13;
she worked with intense energy-. One&#13;
of her great ambitions was achieved&#13;
when she was able to have a house _pf&#13;
her own in Washington, "with a'door&#13;
in the middle," and take her father&#13;
and mother to her own house. There,&#13;
until he died, the old man, scarce able&#13;
to move and needing every attention,&#13;
occupied ono of the rooms by the front&#13;
door, where he could sit by the window&#13;
and see what passed on the street.&#13;
The charm of Mary Cttemmer's-^writing&#13;
wai her utter sincerity, arid naturalness.&#13;
She wrote right out what she&#13;
thought. She had wonderfully keen&#13;
power of observation aud quiok instincts,&#13;
with remarkable natural gifts.&#13;
She had great natural advantages, a&#13;
magnificent physique, a superb body,&#13;
that did not seem made to wear out,&#13;
tall and strong; and with it intellectual&#13;
powers of a very high order. She married&#13;
before it w„as possible to secure&#13;
what would now bo called a thorough&#13;
education, had her means allowed it,&#13;
and she was early thrown into the best&#13;
of all training schools, the company of&#13;
tho most intelligent and cultivated men&#13;
and women. Her letters commanded&#13;
h^r a position in the selectest society of&#13;
Washington, and she took her rank as&#13;
a recognized leader in. the literary circles&#13;
of the city.&#13;
Mary Clemmer was not a woman to&#13;
hang about lobbies and galleries, and&#13;
buttonhole Congressmen, to pick up&#13;
material for her lettors. For s»n:o she&#13;
knew that was necessary .and she pitied&#13;
them. It was. not necessary for her.&#13;
tion gave her special anxiety from fear&#13;
that she might be prevented from doing&#13;
what she felt she could do. She&#13;
did not want to die without doing better&#13;
work. This gave a certain sadness&#13;
to her later days. She had, however,&#13;
exhausted her strength, though her&#13;
friends would not believe it. by the excessive&#13;
draughts she had made on it.&#13;
'Siie-imsiong^HTjfferedtroiD what sremwfc^-^&#13;
neuralgic pains in her head and eyes.&#13;
A dangerous fall from a carriage some&#13;
three years ago, gave her system a furthe&#13;
severe shock. Her vis'it to Europe&#13;
gave her no permanent relief, although&#13;
she resumed her work in part, and&#13;
wrote her sonnets and a number of letters.&#13;
But her strength grew gradually&#13;
less and less, until, a few months ago&#13;
the decline became marked and alarming,&#13;
and at last the bursting of a bloodvessel&#13;
gave rest to her overtasked&#13;
brain. She was buried with the services&#13;
of thejfepiscopal church, of which&#13;
for some ypars she had been a devout&#13;
member, ^jjust as the golden rods were&#13;
blooming, J among which she wished to&#13;
rest.&#13;
H a p p y a t L a s t .&#13;
very much. What if 1 say I won't have&#13;
it, eh?"&#13;
Fred's eyesJlashed.&#13;
-—HirWtrf-ageT^-he said. :&#13;
"Your bread and butter depend on&#13;
my word," said the old lady. "I am&#13;
rich, as vou know. I mean to leave&#13;
you well off, Fred., if you obey «ie; and,&#13;
Sybil Stanton, your place is worth something&#13;
to vou, and I should not forget&#13;
you in my-will. So, have done with this&#13;
nonsense. Marry, indeed; a pretty pair&#13;
you'd make. There's Miss Roberts,&#13;
Fred., quite a little heiress; and as for&#13;
you. Sybil, why Professor Sturgeonsuch&#13;
a dictionary as ho is writing, clever&#13;
manr-you ought to be proud of it—is&#13;
feally'serious in his attentions. I've&#13;
said enough, I hope. I'll fergive all&#13;
this nonsense, lfjt stops here; but don't&#13;
make me angry, or I'll leave you a beggar,&#13;
Fred.," and Mrs. Hazard marched&#13;
out of the room, beckoning Sybil to&#13;
follow her. But SybiUingered.&#13;
Fred., with his cheeks flushed, and&#13;
his eyes glowing, Hew to her tide.&#13;
"Darling," he said, --promise me&#13;
that you will not let her partus."&#13;
»Y"" must not give UP so much for&#13;
Troy Tiine6.&#13;
Bishop Williams,-of.Connecticut, is&#13;
celebrated as a reconteur. lie tells of&#13;
a Canadian lady who lived for years&#13;
unhappily with her husband. The man&#13;
was a good, easy-going fellow, but his&#13;
wife's temper was ungovernable, and at&#13;
length arovo him into a premature&#13;
grave. At his death the wife seemed to&#13;
feel great remorse for the past, and&#13;
deep mourning and constant weeping&#13;
bore testimony to her grief. Some&#13;
months after tho funeral she went to a&#13;
spiritualistic medium and was placed in&#13;
communication with the spirit of her&#13;
departed spouse. A long conversation&#13;
followed, during which she asked:&#13;
"Are you happy now. dear hnsband?"&#13;
"Oh, very happy," he answered,&#13;
"Happier than" when you were in&#13;
this world?" she asked. "A thousand&#13;
times," was the reply. "1 am so glad,"&#13;
she said "and whero are. you, darling?"&#13;
"Oh,I'm in h—1." came the reply.&#13;
Remember&#13;
!" cried Fred.&#13;
me, Fred.," said Sybil,&#13;
she is rich; she—"&#13;
"A fig for her money&#13;
"I have hands and eyes and health.&#13;
I'll make mv own fortune. I'd rather&#13;
have you than all the wealth of the&#13;
universe—if you'll share tho life of a&#13;
fellow who hain't much to offer you,&#13;
just yet. but his whole heart.&#13;
And Sybil gave him her hand and&#13;
hor lips, and" tho compact was sealed&#13;
and they parted&#13;
Two daps after this a note came to&#13;
Sybil through the hands of Barbara&#13;
Druler, the housemaid, and through&#13;
the same, instrumentality an answer&#13;
was returned. That afternoon Sybil&#13;
took a walk. It was a long one, leading&#13;
into the heart of the city. There,&#13;
at a corner, Fred, met her and offered&#13;
her his arm. S\bil wore her best&#13;
dress. Fred, also was attired with&#13;
tasto. They took their way to a little&#13;
parsonage, which stood in the shelter&#13;
of a very huge church, and v red. rang&#13;
tho bell. They were ushered into a&#13;
parlor. There, as they waited, each&#13;
drew off an outer pair of gloves, and&#13;
revealed white ones under the deceit-&#13;
Congressmen and Senators and members&#13;
of thft Cabinet and their families&#13;
she met on an equal rank, in the samo'&#13;
society, as ono whom she knew and&#13;
with-whom she talked as ono among&#13;
them, ami this 'gave her opportunities&#13;
which tho ordinary letter-writer&#13;
could not get. Then she judged&#13;
tbera with an absolute honesty&#13;
of purpose. Her opinion was very seldom&#13;
at fault. She had a true woman's&#13;
admiration for manliness and coutage&#13;
and truth, and never tired of praising&#13;
it. She had a contempt for what was&#13;
false and cowardly, and seldom hesitated&#13;
to tell it. Hei powers of description&#13;
were remarkable, and with a few&#13;
touches sho would put a man's face and,&#13;
soul before the world as if it were a&#13;
photograph of his whole self.&#13;
For all that she had to write so freely&#13;
and criticise our public demigods so&#13;
sharply, she was a remarkably womanly&#13;
woman. She would have shrunk from&#13;
posing befofe the public gaze, or being&#13;
seen in public places. Sne loved home&#13;
cares, to attend to the house, to go to&#13;
market, to dress with a woman's elegance,&#13;
to identify herself with woman's&#13;
life and woman's duties and hopes. She&#13;
looked at things and men from a woman's&#13;
standpoint, not a man's. Though&#13;
deeply interejaeci in the movements for&#13;
helping women, we are not&#13;
certain that. until within a&#13;
comparatively brief time, she.&#13;
A C h a t with t h e Boos.&#13;
The aversion shoWnTt3^Tnosr~B'oys to&#13;
reading political matter is to be deeply&#13;
regretted. Nine out of every ten boys of&#13;
the present day had far rather peruse&#13;
the pages of some novel of the blood&#13;
and-thunder order than to read a siigle&#13;
campaign speech.&#13;
This aversion on the part of the boys,&#13;
is, we say, to be regretted. The boys&#13;
of to-day will be the voters of a few&#13;
yearn hence: and that we may have'intelligent&#13;
voters our boys must be edu-"^&#13;
cated in public affairs, and be familiar&#13;
with the political history of the country.&#13;
Do not confine yourself to tho history&#13;
of any one party/ Read carefully&#13;
the hiitorj of our country, which includes&#13;
the histories of ali parties, a&#13;
thorough familiarity with which will&#13;
better enable you_to discharge intejli-&#13;
-gtmtly the dtrties-of-eltizenship.&#13;
An admirable plan is for the boys of&#13;
a neighborhood or district lo band&#13;
themselves together in a society for the&#13;
discussion of the events of the day.&#13;
Several very great advantages wdl&#13;
bo secured by this arrangement. Not&#13;
only will the members become familiar&#13;
with and able to discuss intelligently&#13;
the current news of the day, but the&#13;
mind will be disciplined and habits of&#13;
thought formed which, will be of incalculable&#13;
benefit in-after years. Another&#13;
great consideration will be the acquirement&#13;
of ° knowledge of parliamentary&#13;
practices, for the society should be organized&#13;
and carried on in a strictly business&#13;
like manner&#13;
All these things will have a tendency&#13;
to broaden the ideas of the boys and&#13;
enable them to better do the duties;&#13;
which come with every dawning. For a&#13;
mind well disciplined enables ah individual&#13;
to bear up under the many temptations&#13;
which are the lot of man.&#13;
Remember boys you are important&#13;
factors in tho future history of our&#13;
country. Let the realization of this&#13;
fact imoressyou with a sense of the responsib•&#13;
i lities resting upon you a—s ffiomen&#13;
to whom will soon be entrusted tho&#13;
government of the grandest nation the&#13;
world, has over known. In all your&#13;
reading read for the good it will&#13;
do you, and not merely to pass away an&#13;
idle&#13;
tory,&#13;
you&#13;
then&#13;
Our&#13;
ful covering. There&#13;
on foot' plainly. The&#13;
was something&#13;
servant guessed&#13;
Whjle a Burlington girl was singing,&#13;
"FieVas a bird" to her young man a&#13;
sudden noise disturbed her, and she&#13;
turned around Just in time to see irer&#13;
father chucking the young man through&#13;
the window. He appologized for his&#13;
slowness to take tho hint the next time&#13;
he met her, and explained that he&#13;
thought she was only fooling.&#13;
"Brethering an' sisters," said Sister&#13;
Grimes, "I have known this sister who&#13;
just departed from aour midst, as a dear&#13;
friend, for a long time. Wo have toiled&#13;
and labored together in the vineyard;&#13;
we have suffered and rejiced together&#13;
for more than two centuries."—Boston&#13;
Globo.&#13;
A Pas!&gt;aic man was lately married&#13;
ar*d his brother-in-la v at once presented&#13;
him a bill for his wife's board and&#13;
her fare from the old country. When&#13;
he refused to pay, his wife was seized&#13;
and held as security for the debt.&#13;
A deaf and dumb couple near Rochester&#13;
have a baby that squeals at tho&#13;
top of a very vigorous pah* of lungs,&#13;
but as neither of them can hear it, it&#13;
makes little "difference.&#13;
Mice dive into shoal water in the&#13;
tributaries of the great lakes and bring&#13;
up and eat the .spawn of fishes. Black&#13;
would have ranked herself with the supporters&#13;
of female suffrage. She never&#13;
appeared on a public platform or made&#13;
a public speech, it would kave been&#13;
impossible for her, much as she admired&#13;
many who could and did. She was"&#13;
always ready to give help and sympathy&#13;
to women struggling for support,&#13;
especially as writers. They all visited&#13;
her; and she was not only patient with&#13;
the legion, but gave taeni all the comfort&#13;
and aid she could.&#13;
She had an intense love for tho counmoment.&#13;
If biography, hisfiction,&#13;
travel, or whatever&#13;
read, select the best and&#13;
read carefully, and studiously.&#13;
opinions are formed } a r g ^ v p 7&#13;
what we read, and in order that we may&#13;
think and converse intelligently our&#13;
minds should be well stored with the&#13;
best thoughts.&#13;
Holy writ tell us "as a man thinketh&#13;
so is he," and that our thoughts be pure&#13;
and holy, we must avoid all that Can&#13;
contaminate.&#13;
Our character decides our destiny,&#13;
and our character is formed in early life,&#13;
while the mind is free from, the cares&#13;
and anxieties which CODIP with the&#13;
years. :~&#13;
So you see, boys, how much depends&#13;
upon the associations you form and the&#13;
books you read. Aside, from the great&#13;
pleasure to be found in intercourse with&#13;
pure minded intelligent people, there is&#13;
the greater joy of knowing that you are&#13;
strengthening your character, enriching&#13;
the mind, and fitting&#13;
yourself to fullfill the obligations enjoined&#13;
upon ever? man.&#13;
buYt oyuo um wayil l• nboet ^obneceo omf et haen opfofiscsee shsoolrds eorf,&#13;
that gift so sacred to all free men—the&#13;
ballot—your God-given right, and one&#13;
which you should exercise in the fear of,&#13;
therLord. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning^&#13;
oTwIsdom," and'a faithful disc'harge&#13;
of every duty is the outgrowth.&#13;
The lamented Garfield, in one of his&#13;
addesses, said: "One thing I am afraid&#13;
to do; I am afraid to do a mean thing."&#13;
Such a fear is not debasing but enables&#13;
a man to look beyond the present into&#13;
a hright and glorious future of usefultry.&#13;
Her business it was to write prose ness during the period of our earth-life,&#13;
about the artificial life of men in the- ainirto a brighter, more glorious day.&#13;
bass and large trout are' often found&#13;
with their stomachs full of mice;&#13;
capital. Her pleasure it was to live in&#13;
the fields and woods, and wTite poetry&#13;
about pine trees and golden rods.&#13;
'The sn me charm of unstudied naturalness,&#13;
which is a virtuo in letters,&#13;
gives its own merit to her poetry and&#13;
her stories. And yet she hoped she&#13;
might do something more worthy of&#13;
permanent memory than wha- had&#13;
given her reputation. Letters, she said,&#13;
were mere bubbles7 of, the day, forgot- |_J&#13;
ten to-morrow. The volume of her&#13;
poems, published last year, showed&#13;
work more catefully wrought-and studied.&#13;
She had written all her verse as a&#13;
brook flows, without thought or&#13;
style*, o r / a r t , or correction. Now,&#13;
when she was learning the art&#13;
of Nature, she was verv ambitious of&#13;
when we shall have finished our duties&#13;
and have crossed over the boundary&#13;
line into the "Land that lieth beyond."&#13;
_ I — : : • '• .&#13;
J. Patrick of Garfield, Mich., has a&#13;
two-legged pig eight months old. The&#13;
little porker is said to be the most&#13;
thrifty one in a litter of five, and handles&#13;
himself very nicely on-his two forelegs.&#13;
A Patterson woman on Tuesday nighl&#13;
hung a towel out of the window to dry *&#13;
It got dry. A man: up stairs threw out&#13;
a cigar. It fell into a fold of the towel&#13;
and set the towel on fire. The towel&#13;
set the house on fire.&#13;
About «,000 palace, sleeping and1 hotel&#13;
cars are now operated by the Pullman&#13;
writing better novels and better poo-• I company in lids country and 4n—£ag&#13;
try. The depressing nervous exhaus-1 land.&#13;
/ :&#13;
tti&#13;
r&#13;
S'&#13;
V&#13;
'%\&#13;
\&#13;
'»•*« u i n n ,1,' mmr— mmvm&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
BRIGHTON.&#13;
F r o » the C i l ^ e n ,&#13;
Charles Bryant went to Holly Monday,&#13;
where he goes into a hardware&#13;
jtore.&#13;
Jacob Reed, o£ Qreen oak, threshed&#13;
ijis beans last weefc, and had an average&#13;
yield ,of twenty busheia to the acre.&#13;
The firm of Hartshorne Bros, is dissolved,&#13;
Holjnes retiring, and Dh&gt;k continuing&#13;
tfie business.&#13;
Dr. Lawson was appointed health&#13;
officer for ,the village of Brighton by&#13;
^lie coijjicjj Thursday evening.&#13;
J . H . S c o t t has gone to Morgan&#13;
Pax|c, 111., .where he will attend the&#13;
iiaptist T^ologtcoi Seminary.&#13;
The friends and neighbors of Mrs.&#13;
JSsther Morgan gave, her a surprise&#13;
»fcar#iday party at the residence ot her&#13;
*OJJ Oeorge, Tuesday, it being her&#13;
jievantieth birthday. About fifty were&#13;
present, and the day was pronounced&#13;
£ pleasant one by all present.&#13;
SOUTH LYON.&#13;
pxova Jhe Picket.&#13;
Joseph Helmuth will enter OWrlin&#13;
^college next year.&#13;
Burglars entered David Farley's&#13;
fcouse Sunday, and stole clothes and&#13;
mqjaey so the amount ot about $150.&#13;
jNo cjae as yet.&#13;
Jfrs. Daniel Hannan, wbile standi&#13;
n g njion the porch in front of her&#13;
residence on Sunday, suddenly fainted&#13;
And fell to the ground injuring her&#13;
fluite severely.&#13;
A delegation from Prosperity Lodge&#13;
# o l 25 I . O, O: P. attended the burial&#13;
of Randall Schuyler, of Washtenaw&#13;
-No. 9 at Ann Arbor Saturday. Mr. &gt;S.&#13;
was the oldest oddfellow in Michigan&#13;
jftt the time of his death.&#13;
An uninvited man entered Chas.&#13;
Lookwood's house Monday evening&#13;
^whiLa Mrs. Lockwood was sitting in the&#13;
room, and after seating himself for a&#13;
tew minutas, took the lamp and boldly&#13;
.walked into the parlor. TheL .hired&#13;
fix&amp;n gave the alarm and he soon tied&#13;
yritJL} two companions who were waitjftg&#13;
outiide. It is supposed the} belong&#13;
to the same gang that raided&#13;
Pave Farley's the day before.&#13;
A N N ARBOR.&#13;
From the Courier.&#13;
—- fffoftiiff WaHaee- reports--that^thgrr&#13;
Are 11 prisoners in jail at present, 8&#13;
pf whom are bound over to the October&#13;
^erm of the circuit court for trial.&#13;
Jaa. Richards, of Superior, was takfin&#13;
to the asylum for the insane at&#13;
Pontiac last Monday.&#13;
S, W. Beakes, who canvassed Ann&#13;
Arbor with the view of establishing a&#13;
jdaily paper, gave up the project, and&#13;
has gone to Adrian, where he will&#13;
ptivg out the Record again as a daily.&#13;
The gentler sex showed its adaptability&#13;
to politics at the School election&#13;
Monday. They came by the bus and&#13;
^a«kload and marched-io the ballot box&#13;
similar to. the marching of a state&#13;
^ropp company to mess, with ballots&#13;
all 'fixed, and no "back talk" from&#13;
'workers a t the polls. They voted&#13;
straight every time.&#13;
J . E . Robinson, better known to&#13;
Ann Arterites a« Emmet, who lyis&#13;
Jbeen £he Ann Arbor correspondent of&#13;
ibe Detroit Free Press for about two&#13;
years past, leaves to-morrow to take a&#13;
position upon the editorial staff of the&#13;
?aper. Emmethaa^eendeputycoiin^&#13;
never headed in the face. The .races&#13;
whieh has been, indulged in heiween&#13;
Dexter and I'helsea have resulted, with&#13;
one exception, disastrously to the former&#13;
place. Would it not, thereiiure,&#13;
Lie well for Dexter to let Chelsea alone&#13;
and tackle some smaller town?&#13;
LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER. j E W E L E k s ,&#13;
Compliment of the Season.&#13;
"I understand," said a cow-county&#13;
politician, walking into the ojhee ot the&#13;
local paper the other day, revolver in&#13;
hand. "1 understand that you railed&#13;
me a liar in your paper this morning?"&#13;
"So 1 did, my dear sir," said the editor,&#13;
calmly, "but 1 only said you were&#13;
a campaign liar.''&#13;
"Uh ? Is that all ?" said the mollified&#13;
intruder; and after tendering the&#13;
molder of public opinion his tine-cut,&#13;
he walked peacefully out.&#13;
His Mistake.&#13;
"Say, Moses," said a customer to a&#13;
retail clothier, "what is this story i&#13;
hear about you?"&#13;
"Votsthory Vsh'dot sthory?"&#13;
"Why, a friend ot mine said you&#13;
made i-. mistake the other day and sold&#13;
him a $10 coat for $5."&#13;
"How ish dot?"&#13;
"I don't know. He said he saw the&#13;
figures on the ticket, and that your&#13;
boy .sold it to him."&#13;
"Veil, veil, vot a schmart. poy dot&#13;
Chonnie ish. Yoost like his fodder.&#13;
I tole dot poy he coot haf all vot he&#13;
make oier two tollar apiece on a chdb&#13;
lot off last chear's goats, unt dot ish&#13;
der vay he peats his ole fodder unt fixes&#13;
der trade. He marks dose goats up&#13;
unt den yoost like a innochent Iced I e&#13;
sheep, he don't see der price, und der&#13;
gushtomer dinks, vot a schmart veller&#13;
he ish to beat a poor leedle boy., in dor&#13;
stiiore. Dot Chonnie vill coom oiid on&#13;
der high side off der pile unt be a grcdit&#13;
to his fodder."&#13;
A good deal is heard about woman's&#13;
rights. You don't hear a&gt; much about&#13;
the "lefts." They are_n_sual_ly men.&#13;
"Xo." said the eloping woman,^1 here'&#13;
isn't the least likelihood that my Holland&#13;
will discover our whereahout_s.&#13;
He's a New York detective." "~~&#13;
Magnetic girls are becoming so common&#13;
that a girl who does anything&#13;
shocking will try to excuse herself on&#13;
the plea that it was magnetism.&#13;
"Trust men, and they will trust&#13;
you," said Ralph Waldo Emerson.'&#13;
"Trust men and they will bust you,''&#13;
savsan ordinarv, evervdav lm&gt;ine&gt;s&#13;
man.&#13;
lockup'&#13;
papers.&#13;
was a&#13;
Tl;&#13;
A "honeymoon in tinrecent&#13;
item in. the citv papers, JLIM&#13;
seems all right, considering that honey&#13;
i* always found in cells.1 -••J,ittsburg&#13;
Bulletin.&#13;
A Louisville paper head-; an article&#13;
-"-Atr-fid rtror "in" t t i u re h." ! ,o u i &gt; v i i I e&#13;
papers spare neither pains nor expense&#13;
to obtain full particulars of phenomenal&#13;
occurrences.&#13;
Natural red hair&#13;
We will sell Lumber at 1 l o i i o v.'ing priced for the next t&gt;0 days.&#13;
.?:*.!»(&gt;.&#13;
.2.2-).&#13;
X X X IS inch Shingles, per t!;ousand&#13;
Clear Hutts IS rueh Shingles, p,r thousand,&#13;
Cull Shingles KN inch, per thoii&gt;and, , 1.20.;&#13;
No 1 Lath, per thousand feet 5.80. j&#13;
No 2 Lath, per thousand feel,...'... 4.00.;&#13;
Hill Stuff, inelucliiig ISi't Xo. 1. per thousand feet 14.00.&#13;
Hoof Hoards, p e r ' thousand feet H..W to 11.00&#13;
Harn Lumber, per SS\W\\ liUmoei-, [ thousand feet Lr&gt;.00 to 17 50.&#13;
Shipping Culls, per thousand feet LLOO.&#13;
FcnV'iitg^per thonsaivi t'^l .".'. '.. . ,HU)0 to 14.00.&#13;
Finishing Lumber p.-t thousand b - t &lt; 20.00 to 50.00.&#13;
Hilling per thousand feet ' POSITIVELY NO CREDIT.&#13;
A. L. HOYT, Manager, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A Nit OI'AI.I IK: 1\'&#13;
SPORTIXO (JOOI)S'&#13;
.1 ust i'ccci\cd a full line of&#13;
FISHING TACKLES&#13;
ALSO OF j&#13;
MILLER BROS.&#13;
LARGE STOCK/NEW GOODS.&#13;
THE OLD REM ABLE IS STILL&#13;
HEAD-QUARTERS&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
luio to jo.ou.;CELEBRATED POCKET CUTLER)&#13;
AND MERIDEN SILVER&#13;
PLATED WARE.&#13;
thobest iu the market, and can give&#13;
pric«s 1 hat will surprise you. Please*.&#13;
call and examine, our stock anil g e t&#13;
prices.&#13;
IJES-i'KlTEl'LLY,&#13;
LAKToN A - V A M P H K L L ,&#13;
West Main St reef, i'lnckiiey, Michigan.&#13;
*\'?'~7iL - T&lt;&gt; ^'"* F'' ! ? * l i&#13;
^ • Y ^ r-'"'i ffipi v t'••;•! r ^ n n i ^&#13;
xisr-&#13;
DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES,&#13;
AND EVERYTHING IN THE&#13;
LINE OF GENERAL _&#13;
'MERCHANDISED&#13;
E. A. MANN, East Main St., Finckney.&#13;
m&#13;
11:11M I', " n , _ , .&#13;
i t ! &gt; r . i l l : - . , - , . , ( . • . ' ,.&#13;
""_ ••'•' ' ••! '&lt;T (.n,i r»f t h&#13;
- -•: £' i . : : - : . . . i.-.i -, i 4 s i Ui.-i-.^.-&#13;
h ",\*,v (, 'i.t. J I - I fiff.iseill&#13;
• •/&lt; r .I - : : ^ . 1 - 1 . - : i u ' u t l l i l t .&#13;
Address J;il, V M f f D &amp; CO. Louisiana. Mo.&#13;
t THIC .• • D.W. Miller Carriage Co.&#13;
BUY THE CELEBRATED _THE STUDEBAKER Buggies and Carriages&#13;
aro unrivaled" forBEAFTT, SraENOtH, ELEGANCE,&#13;
EASE OP HIDING ANDlttrNNraa. Send&#13;
for new ilhiBt rated catnloguo, or call and&#13;
pro owr work at our CHICAGO REPOSITORY,&#13;
233 STATB STBBZT. WO mako all&#13;
Studebaker Wagon,&#13;
With PATENT CART, and PANDAOE PATFNT'&#13;
STEEL, SKLIN ; Tnrss AXLK; 1'ATKNT OVAI^&#13;
EDGKDTIRE; woodwork, nftorvcttrs of ficasening,&#13;
SOAKED INBOH.IN0 01L; htc-uis ot LV,-«ft|nflH„f CARRIAGE WORK, from the FINEST&#13;
SfPlcr.imtlr.oN; b o x e s l o r c e i l i n t o H u b s w I! li L A N D A C duwu t» tho L U r i i T i s r Bi GOV, bu-&#13;
! h y d r a u l i c j»re&gt;s, i n s t e a d o f beincj wi-d'.^'d; KHICH tim UKST LINK OK Axi(CLAJJBKSuir Kvuisa&#13;
SI'OKES, SLoi'i:-StioruH-:iv;l&gt;&lt;&gt;st o f w o r I ; ; i i ; n i . W l , 1 ; K , | , | T ' ' l ' ' ' l U o t , l 0 t r a i l ° '&#13;
O F &gt;&gt; AGO&gt;, b. fc)L'ud t o r l i e w C iitivloLjuo. g u u U jjead, Inuuia.&#13;
iLUdlti-en to twenty&#13;
fj qlerk tor the past two years, and&#13;
las Rained many friends by his pleasant&#13;
and accommodating ways.&#13;
DEXTER.&#13;
From tbe Leader.&#13;
Win, Yager has gone over to Plymouth&#13;
for the purpose of building a&#13;
skating fink. We understand it will&#13;
|&gt;e modeled after the Dexter rink.&#13;
Mill*, the baker, has returned to&#13;
Jackson, an opening for business in&#13;
his line presenting itself to him in the&#13;
Central City, which he considered of&#13;
sufficient valjie to justify him in accepting&#13;
i t&#13;
Rev. Mr. Mosher left last nigjit for&#13;
a tour in Minnesota, where he expects&#13;
tor«main. Toe pulpit will be filled&#13;
next Sunday by Mr. Fred E. Britten,&#13;
cf Ana Arbor, and the second Sunday&#13;
f»y Rev. F. B. Arnold, of Ypsiianti.&#13;
is worth from&#13;
dollars an ominv&#13;
So when you find a crimson &gt;'fraud in&#13;
the butter you may he sure that no&#13;
low priced article is being Served- to&#13;
YOU.&#13;
"Halloo!" shouted one boy to another&#13;
whom he saw running wikUy duwn.the&#13;
street. "Halloo! Avt- you training&#13;
tor a racey'' ''No,1' called hack.the tlyin^&#13;
r boy, "I'm racing for a train!"&#13;
'•Have you lived alwaysy" asked little&#13;
brother of his bij_r sister's most persistent&#13;
admirer, up Hi.land avenue,&#13;
last evening. "No, . my little man,&#13;
why do yon ask:?" "because, when&#13;
you were walking up the j:;ith si&gt;ter&#13;
said, 'here comes- that eternal Mr.&#13;
.Smith;' " and the .scales fell l'rum&#13;
Siwith's eyes. Hut there was a sadeyed&#13;
bov((in that household before bedtime.—&#13;
Pittsburg Bulletin,&#13;
'-Why will you persist in drinking&#13;
ftea and coffee?" asked the doctor,- "A&#13;
milk diet is the healthiest, ft contains&#13;
all the elements of the human&#13;
bloods" "Nery true," replied Fogg,&#13;
swaflowing his third cup of coffee,, but&#13;
then, you know. I am not bloo^-thir*- wr.—:&#13;
"Brick" Pomeroy is again heard&#13;
from. This time he is editor of a democratic&#13;
weekly paper, through which be&#13;
endeavors to induce his "friends" to&#13;
take stock in a new company which&#13;
proposes to dig a tunnel through the&#13;
rocky mountains. "Brick" is president&#13;
of the company and of course requests&#13;
that remittances for stock should&#13;
be addressed to him. Great "Brick-—"'&#13;
that man Pomeroy.&#13;
PINCKNEY PLANING MILL&#13;
Manufacture a lar^e variety of&#13;
I LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
; CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, &amp; C ,&#13;
; After the most approvort tlppjpna at the very lowest&#13;
prieeH consistent \yith good workmanship.&#13;
! — 5 0 , 0 0 0 -volxlolofei—&#13;
of our maimfarturo r»ro now in uso In this and&#13;
foreign countries ami attest tho exi-fcllMicn of&#13;
our goods by the universal satisfaction whieh they&#13;
g i v e , - - B U T T Tehirle Is WA Kit A &gt;'TE1&gt;,—Special attention will be piven to mail orders.&#13;
CATALOGUES ..FREE.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
• E. FinhSt,, Culvert St. and E&amp;gleiton Ate.,&#13;
CINCINNATI, 0.&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOR THE CAMPAIGN. W e w i l l e e n d t h e W E E K L Y F R E B&#13;
I P R K S S i i a t J L _ a f t a r _ e l e c t l n n f o r o n l y 8¾&#13;
C K N T S . Addreaa THE FREE PRESS CO..&#13;
13etrolt. Alloh.&#13;
/ \ \ V \\\\\ 1 • r i \ y ; ; L i - -x', i ; • i • i• i MlSliOlM^I^L 6T. IMV\&#13;
%Zr&#13;
Planing, Resawing^al! k^ids of plain and fancy&#13;
Bracket-Saw^g, Carving and Turning&#13;
In wo&lt;wX: ;nid will sunn bo able ;•&gt; ']••&gt; tin niu;! iii iron and ^'etHM'al niacliine&#13;
rt^-airin^. ^^y are al.-o a^'ciil- ba- \Y. S. ,Iohn&gt;' Asbestos^ Materials, Kn&lt;:iiie&#13;
l'ac.'Uing, Mill Uoards, Fi-ltfi, lioojiilp-. ('rineiit, in.-ide ' a n d outside Lhpiid&#13;
Paints lla.rn, Hoof and Fire-proof Faints.&#13;
• i-;M&#13;
' ^ 1 ',•"''"« f'I^'I-MMTIHI XOIH Vrop'i ot&#13;
- &gt;ri0F.n'A„;.:8P/\3ftiLLtfiEME0ir&#13;
&gt;&lt;&gt;'injr .Vch fi!rl/p;|i,.r , « ho suffer&#13;
•rom . . . r v u n s » u a i'^vsimi Dtbil.&#13;
'y, 1 rm.^y:- K O,nus«joo Kid m&#13;
r i X C K X K Y PLANING M I L L&#13;
Near (Jrand Trunk Depot, riXCKNKV, MICH.&#13;
The race aiTBe rink lastTriday evening&#13;
called out a large crown a:id re-&#13;
^alted in a victory for Swarthout. \H«&#13;
Ud tStejt the first few^ rcujads, and was&#13;
Air — • • • » * ' •&#13;
/&#13;
When tho -wcrX Estey or th©&#13;
^&#13;
. word Crgp.u is xnontionod* they,&#13;
\ each eucsost tho o'.hcr. so vrlde^y&#13;
/known and oo popular oro the in-&#13;
"~V" «tir.ncn'»3 c^ad tlio rocker:&#13;
|V» Tive letters in cccl* of tlio twe&#13;
words are reminders of enjoyment&#13;
in amltitudoa of imA&amp;L' niugtra^&#13;
tod Catalogue mailed free to all&#13;
Mrs. De l i i a e k - " W e l l , ' I will try&#13;
you it you have a ^ood recominendation&#13;
from your last place."&#13;
Domestic—4tA what, raum ?"&#13;
"A recommendation, a character."&#13;
,lA charack-ter, is it, ye want? An'&#13;
sich as you ask rae, me for a charackter?"&#13;
.&#13;
"Well, well, and why not?"&#13;
"You, mum—you, the wife of a&#13;
snake-thafe, a WackleK, a villain, the&#13;
man what murdered his grandmother/&#13;
sure, and stole the pennies fram a d&amp;aa&#13;
JiajipexAey^rzO^QUzr:"&#13;
"Mercy cm us! What are you talktm?&#13;
about?" ' . 1&#13;
"Ye'r villain of a husband, of.coorse.&#13;
Sure didn't I rade the papers when he&#13;
wa,^ runnin' fur office?' -('all.&#13;
DO YOU KNOW THAT&#13;
) LORllLARDlS CLIMAX&#13;
I'LUG rOBACCS&#13;
1 - ' ! i '-^&gt;.-+Tiiryti'ti&gt; q j o -&#13;
\V,rfli i.'.'i'.Ti;] T ' I : ' . :&#13;
\A ]\&lt;-\ IT , (I , ,t i .. •&#13;
•iu^^fs, !&gt;:• ,uiy il -i-• ri• i-i• &gt;:i-* i11_ri*•• ILTM11H, 'UH i s th«&#13;
case wit 11 iniuiv ntln'r toinu'ros.&#13;
LOKIl-LAHir'H KOSK LEAF FIXE&#13;
CITTOHACCOi&#13;
« also tnmlf of tin- iino-t ^1:^-^, anil for sroinatlc&#13;
chr'A iiiu (|iin!ity i&gt; M'i oiid to tiont&gt;.;&#13;
-LOJUWrA^Hi^r^v A T T T T T F P I X G S&#13;
taki" tirst r:iT,kan a siliil diirsiiil^ Hniokinir tohac-&#13;
(•(i \* lii•!•«•%•*• r intnuliK'i'il.&#13;
lOItn.KAUD'S FAMOUS S M ; F F S ~&#13;
IIHVI' born iHi'd foro\ or V2\ yviirn, ntid »re yuld to&#13;
a liirL't'rt'Ntfiit tiiiiii any nt!ioi&gt;.&#13;
]\Iy line consists of a large and vtiriud assortmont of&#13;
Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing&#13;
Everybody call and tiximiiiu'~oui' slock of goods: Hottest jinco paid for&#13;
B i r r T K K A N D P : G G S . Everything sold at rock bottom prices.&#13;
Don't forgot, CAT ' '&#13;
?. CUNNINGHAMr Gregory, Mich./&#13;
ywmmiki&#13;
7ESEMEFIIU&#13;
Secure Healthy&#13;
action to the Liver&#13;
«i.diellevnalrhil«&#13;
•_ • ••-•••• "tnnatroubles,&#13;
Fw«ls7 VigeUtle; No SiLpIss- Price 25o. all ZrtH&amp;&amp;k\&#13;
In discuses oft ho BloodTsTln udTHuii**.—&gt;*r»on« UrUllQr.&#13;
•rrrurl»f AffitrtJon*. dolcntifln treatment; tere and tuff&#13;
remfdlo*. rx-fonnitlpi Trenlod. Call or write' for Hit g?&#13;
qnortloni to bo an iwored h/1 hi&gt;«o AetMng tirnfment by maO, C+*na»* rafrrlnrfrnm Raptor* iboald Mad tfcob- Ml4r«M,%&#13;
kad1*aranmrUilnvfnfh&lt;i|r iuf»»Btait*. It!»no&lt;« trau.^&#13;
Aiirtn* Dr. f. h. F.nlHROK, Prfn'f And rfiynIrluB la (Tlirfe&#13;
r«nlral led. * Rant. Inntlfnte, 020 L&lt;xa«t it,, fit. Lnalt, So,&#13;
&lt;kiccc«&gt;or to 0r. ljutu'DitDenwrr. KitablUtod »!&gt; Yaanu&#13;
Hurni'HH than i'\i r Ix'i'ui" t• ---^1 •!lit-r with a ^nitxl&#13;
8U|I|PIV of : ~rnrnxr:ss coons;&#13;
SrocKbKiuoL, MICHIGAN&#13;
r&#13;
N&#13;
--Z-&#13;
/&#13;
•S&#13;
**&#13;
w • * = ' * * * • ^ * &lt; : •&#13;
v-WWWtowvi$m:m-m^*?cm*m^ *™n»*-» ,.*.,. '-WW****!*'-' ,,(,. 44.VS4Z- • ***•* •• ,-#mvmmsi&amp;i&amp;torMa*ij&amp;-&amp;.^ '&#13;
y&#13;
A U v s - L t i i t ' i i U l i ' . J.,, . T ;&#13;
A ponsim ! u . -i&#13;
&lt;*(Hl»l' t o II I). IU !ilm:&#13;
h o p w l t o S'-!! : !i MI. ! i,- d,o! -,: ;•&#13;
ritlOk Ul 111.- i i . m ' ] . ; : : • ! . i'i • i. t'&#13;
lie did nol t.r'M' Id • ;' ••• d-, .M J:&gt;! &gt;•• .• ,i&#13;
m u c h con-.iii.nvii i&lt; ,11. 1 do m.i ! .!,•:&#13;
h i l l l , llOWCVCI' ; l i r U :1.- ;:l) \ , ' &gt; l l - \&lt;&gt; ; o '&#13;
t o t h e m a r k e t in timo to m a k e ;t j-roli!.&#13;
a m i not. only tfvi&lt;~&gt;&gt; 1ml, un'ii HIM-I &gt;r.!'-&#13;
i e r if t h e y h i n d e r ;_rain.&#13;
T h e geese, l i o w e v r , did nol io-ik on&#13;
r 3 " R K H4 h-1^&#13;
UNmii'iTAKKK,&#13;
.'i i n : \ I . J : I : I N&#13;
-• - • • • f * i ' n r&#13;
N t ' T i n ' ' E t t&#13;
w.i&gt;r v • o; .•!•; ,,.-^-&#13;
FOR CASH&#13;
, , : r i&#13;
it'll -&#13;
MICHIGAN.&#13;
t h a m a t t e r in t h a t Ii:.rhl. an.! ...ri .. D / , , ^ , , , . . . . ,&#13;
iflg t o meet a t r a v e l e r w a l k i n g aloinc r / -d'u'A/V L f&#13;
t h e - r o a d , thev junin •&lt;!• iortd i n u r &lt;•&lt;&gt;,,,-; _ ^&#13;
§ i w t X ' " n ' h ' ' " ' " " " Kl"Vwal CHRISTIAN ULiOWN,&#13;
**Where « a n you tiii'l LT«'•'-'• niuiv unh&#13;
a p p y t h a n w e a r e ? See hmv 11 * i -&#13;
p e a s a n t is h u r r y i n g on Idi- way ;n.,j&#13;
t h a t , a n d d r i v i n g u s as t h o u - ! , we&#13;
w e r e only c o m m o n g e o c . I^iiiiraut&#13;
fellow a s he is, h e n e v e r think'.- h o w he&#13;
is b o u n d t o h o n o r a n d i-e i.-ei ,; .:: \\lV&#13;
w e a r e t h e d i s t i n g u i s h e d il-'-i " m l a n t s&#13;
o f those very geest; t o whom K o i n e .&#13;
o n c e owed its s a l v a t i o n , so t h a t a fe.-t iv&#13;
a l w a s e s t a b l i s h ^ ! in their honor."&#13;
" B u t for w h a t do y o u &gt; \iiee; to !„.&#13;
d i s t i n g u i s h e d voin-.-elve-?" a-ked (lidj ,&#13;
^f1";,.,," , ~ -KSTA1JIJSHEIJ,1864.&#13;
••Jieeause o u r a n e e s t o r s&#13;
- Y e s / 1 k n o w ; I have read iill a h o n t i M f J P A T C M T N O P A Y&#13;
it&gt; W h a t I w a n t t'o kimw i-: wliat ! ^ U r t t I L U I I I U T M I&#13;
g o o d h a v e you yourseive- d o n e ? "&#13;
" W h y . o u r a n e e - i o r - .,, v, • !; ;: e'."&#13;
"Yes, y e s : hut \ \ h : l \y\v y«.*i r i m e&#13;
of t h e k i n d ? "&#13;
" W e ? N o t h i n g . "&#13;
w&lt;Jf w h a t good a r e y o u . t h e n ? 1 So&#13;
leave y o u r ance&gt;tor- a t r&gt;rar". T h e y&#13;
w e r e honored for t h e i r deeds, hut y o u .&#13;
l a y friends, a r e only li' for roastlnir."&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All Kinds of ciislom w o r k , a n d g e n e r a l&#13;
n ; : ;; iiiy-, i n c l u d i n g .&#13;
HORSESHOEING.&#13;
S h o p Uaelc of ?.[,inn'.s Ulock, P I N C K N K T&#13;
u&#13;
An AstmiKliott llusjjaud&#13;
A w o m a n is t a r ' m o r e sensitive t h a n&#13;
J?L m a n . She h a s finer feeling- a n d a&#13;
m o r e delicate m i n d . T h e r e a r e a / v e r y&#13;
few m e n who reali/.e thi&gt;, a n d in cor.-&#13;
s e q u e n c e w o m a n is m a d e t o / ' t'lidu'.v.&#13;
m u c h u n n e c e s s a r y s u t l e r : n g / -One nV&#13;
o u r m e r c h a n t s w a s o o i i w / d o &lt; h m / f i&#13;
w i t h his wife mi S n m / y ..morniu'.:-,&#13;
w h e n she s u d d e n l y slopped and \y\\ Imrj&#13;
J i a n d on h e r head. - "VVliaf- \}/&gt; n i a i - l&#13;
tei^." h e a s k e d , s t a r / ' d hy. t i n / l o o k &lt;m '&#13;
h e r face. " O h ! I / l i a v e gfd on my |&#13;
b r o w n h a t ? " • , I / i ? " e j a i / l a t e d liie a - - |&#13;
t o n i s h e d m a n . .-She h u r - r into I-MIO. i&#13;
" W h a t . M a r t / a . w ! i a / i . - ' t h e ma'.ier '&#13;
. w i t h you ?"./fui d e m . / i d e d . " ! ! - : i ' ; vmi&#13;
«ee w h a t is'tlm m y i ' " ! ' ? " -he l-etnrned,&#13;
in a sohl/ine; v o / e . " i ' v e o,,| o l l ,,,v&#13;
b r o w n / l i a t wij-li m v - t r o - - d -ilk. i &gt;h. |&#13;
what-'' will / peo|,,e -,i&gt; •-" 'f &gt;a;i!.iirv :&#13;
Ne,.ws. /&#13;
/ n o i i l ^ ' i i o l Uanh a'.iainsl Vvu\ i.ience.&#13;
I f ' w a s on a 11,: lo a a ,^v-i'! Tea a ao r(, ..&#13;
evelone was di-eerua .] a ; :&#13;
: e ';,; ;•'&#13;
.zon. A &gt;• tf '.--v d,i ,&lt; d ],-v a !. '.,n&#13;
. / w o r k i n g in hi- do,,r \ ;, ;, a n d P a : d:&#13;
/ " G e t into y o u r e e d a r ! a' \ ••m- : f •."&#13;
" S h - s h , don't m a k e -o mi; a d "&#13;
a b o u t it," said 1 he m :a. ••: a •, •'• i , , y&#13;
ty in t h e p a r l o r wa i i \. w aid •,•• e&#13;
to -go in. I le wa m - ' e. •- ; '• &lt;'•&lt;•' ;d d , ; I ' d "&#13;
" W i i n i ' h a i r d-'o Id ia ••! . ;•• ey . d o ; :&#13;
q.ukk.1'&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
O h l a d i for d\I• '-Ti;uiie?11 D e v i c e s , C o m -&#13;
p o u n d s , Dr.sigil- a n d L a o e l s .&#13;
Al! '^'irm'inunary e x a m i n a t i o n s a s&#13;
to p a t e n t a b i l i t y o f i n v e n t i o n s , free.&#13;
/ h i r " ( i u i d e t o O b t a i n i n g P a t e n t , "&#13;
is sent free o v o r v w h e r e .&#13;
A . i , : , . - , ^&#13;
;.&lt;&gt;ns diAtaiER &amp; co„&#13;
•S-lLIClTOnS-OF PATENTS,&#13;
V/Ai5!tl!iGT0N, D. C&#13;
50c. T e a for '17 cents p e r p o u n d - P r u n e s , 6 cents p e r p o u n d&#13;
:J5c. " " 2 5 " " " ' R i c e , 7 " " u&#13;
20c. Coffee f o r . . . . ..18 " " " C o r n s t a r c h 7 " " "&#13;
18c, " " 16 " " " Bird Seed 6 " " "&#13;
16c. " " H " " " C r a c k e r s 7 " " "&#13;
15c. R a i s i n s f o r . . . . 1 2 " " " " : S i l v e r Gloss lstarch.8 " "&#13;
M u s t a r d , 2 8 4' " " O a t Meal, 4 " "&#13;
i.iinger 2 0 " " " ; Saleratus,|. 6 " "&#13;
P u r e C i n a m o n , 2 5 " " '• T w i n J5ros. Yeast Cakes,, ,5c, p e r p k g .&#13;
Allspice, 1 5 * . " " ' "&#13;
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED FIRST CLASS.&#13;
ALL OTHER GOODS&#13;
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL.&#13;
H O F F &amp;c :H:O:F:F-&#13;
-s&#13;
1? TINT O "PC 3ST l E T y&#13;
Bakery ^-Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
!{i-:.\]&gt;v i-"&lt;&gt;;: -4irsixp:ss!&#13;
Urcai! and linn'- I'ravh Kv&lt;&gt;rv Day.&#13;
-&gt;•.i-1• 11. W'c luivi' a liu*'&#13;
i: ; i - - u | - ! iiic.ii! (it It'll f n u t l&#13;
I I i.-ili'-I ] i f i r , . ))ltjl[ fillo&#13;
n ; -1-,, ii.-. \ \ ' , , \\\U LTiv,'&#13;
TO THE PEOPLE OF PINCKNEY&#13;
«» *w- ^ A N D -VICINITY.-CC&#13;
Pleaae bear in mind the following tow-prices, and profit thereby.—Our store&#13;
U now full of the, latest style of&#13;
This Horse i s TH:.I.:V&gt;&#13;
=TH!3 MAN —&#13;
Thatif hedont soil Ida Heavy i-.-^t, iioroo-kiljins&#13;
Binder, and bay an . ^&#13;
EASY RUNNING&#13;
DEERING TWINE BINDER&#13;
Bt once, ©rery horee \n the farm will ^oon be dead&#13;
WILUA* DEERIffG- &amp; CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
B X S D E B 8 , R E A P E R S AND M O ^ E K 3&#13;
T H E H O R S E S ' FR E N D S .&#13;
FOB 9AUC D?&#13;
S. ANDREWS. Howell, )lh&gt;h.&#13;
SLAP! BA~NGT&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN! V L\KLEAuain&#13;
to ttif front, in his n^w -t -r&gt;-. \\ l^-n', f.or&#13;
the iii-xt -ixty ^ 1 . - - f:'oiii : ;- &lt;.'•-'. {,&lt;:• •••{-''. I&#13;
projiii^f tn ;_'i\••• •,&lt; .ill riy ],.i';',.!:.- ;:;or,- .jimntity&#13;
ami lu.'tt-^-f 4}Uitlicy f• • f \~i— ut*'Ht~y,- jtft-y---t»l- thf f&lt;4—&#13;
tDTTtn It HTtii-n -H , dnuuT" a a v - utTT^r (TT^T-T Hi UY^"&#13;
cvuulv. \i/.: PAINTS!DRY 0R&#13;
M4XED.I&#13;
'•sir-. *r;i.- ..:.:&#13;
Lf'Uor rip. l»nt ii&#13;
t o r . J ain't ,i:'v: tr&#13;
iiience 1J\' warn in&#13;
'.: ii&#13;
^\^ l i . L A \ \ ' l i K - N V J ; : , I ' H O I M J .&#13;
I I - ' O l M A N ' r .&#13;
' • • . . ; ,' , - : : , - - 1 0 - N . - ' A V u r k C i t y s»iiv.«'&#13;
:• •'• •' -.-.,: i ;i: ri :i _'o M i l e a n d h t o ] i&#13;
•- [...-•.! I i -'.-l o i ' j , o - U ( ' ( i i ' u n d Ci'iii&#13;
' . • • . : " i 1 ;i ;r a r o - l nt iilH' m i l&#13;
, ', &gt; ! a ; : o ii: ^^'i'I'cl^&lt; p i T d a y .&#13;
'••••• :'' -!'. i! i.i :;i ;LIit. SUji))lit"'(l&#13;
''• ! I • •: - • i :,1 -, -I,'i o-&gt; m i d r l c \ i i t t ' d&#13;
' •, .;.: -.,.;,, • . . • ] ' ,: ;|! j , . - i•:iEi l i v o b e t t e r&#13;
••• " '•:•:;•,•• I v;ir,u h o t r l t h l i T r&#13;
o ,- - ' ! • • : ' ; , • : ; , • i • i t \-.&#13;
: &gt; VS&#13;
c o n o , F i i ' i ' i n r n ' s ' ! ; : : ! ! . . \ IK:I A : l i . n \&#13;
D a t e . S e p t . 1-:. Ooo;;~ioti, - d . o . d&#13;
b o a r d ck'L'iion.&#13;
Fir.^t \voni;;n - I I a \ o y n r y t \n\:v&#13;
t i c k e t , M r s . W a - l i ; n _ t . ' n ' :&#13;
Seoond \vi.iinan—-" Y»•&gt;. I Inil) d;it.&#13;
M r s . O ' F l a h a r i y ^ i b d i s to [, u : i ' . - : i ; ,&#13;
ho\y d a t ' s ' l c r i ^ l u k i t i d . &gt;II;I!I. n&lt;&#13;
nikstake. N o , M i&gt;.-n ~. y o : r:in'L oji&#13;
n o r u b b o r g u i n s l i p p n l n n u T (I is yi-ah&#13;
p i e c e ob j)apah. I'/A I[O p;u'a a-- o b&#13;
m y c h i l h i n a n ' v o u &gt; a z l'/.r a'Miin&#13;
t e r ! D u z y o v h c a h mi''.""—Ann A r -&#13;
J^BT C o u r i e r .&#13;
Kddrvcus Exhaustion,&#13;
Pi'cri'd-diiire Decay,&#13;
~ nK^tTofManSoo^;r&#13;
v.&#13;
! • * : ; * '&#13;
-io ml I'.nok of Ailvioo to&#13;
• '&lt;\ .'.'i-ii.witli prosxTiptions&#13;
•i !; i.-'ilur I'liysieian.&#13;
" n •, .-..I;•; &lt;if two three-cent&#13;
_.i; -i ,:'i [ s A&lt;i i rt-KM&#13;
V.,'li.iu^ft.o 6L C O . , MILWAUKEE, Wl&amp;&#13;
ichigen Buggy Go.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, M i c h .&#13;
The Old Horse.&#13;
T h e o l d h o r s e r e n u i i v s m n-e tinn- WiIbiosiipMannfactnroM of all kinds of Open and&#13;
to eat hjs meal* ^ - 1 - ^ u ; . ^ ^ ^ . , - . , TopprwqKsan.i uoin rtirrs iff.ni.w»t&gt;4- - ^ v - ii • l i liL-iix^i t—. 4+w—-Hvrvir s crcrjnhero. Writo for catalogue 4fid price lilt,&#13;
U t a l l a m n i a l s , t h e .old lmr&lt;e i&lt; t h o n &gt; ,-£ V O K K A SPECIALTY.&#13;
w o r s t a b u s e d . A l t h o u g h ho has b r , n |&#13;
o u r m o s t f a i t h f u l a m i |»r i(ii;iii! • M-I•- '&#13;
v a n t , y e t i n his old a ^ e t h e la.s'i i.&gt; a p - ;&#13;
p l i e d t o forc*e o u t his y o u t h f u l v i ^ o r .&#13;
T ^ € o l d e r h e g r o w s t h e n m r e hv l',i I..&#13;
. . t h e U ^ l l . H t ^ - j s o f t r l l tUl'llrd o u t o f !&#13;
d o o r S i t o g i v e ^ I a e e lo t-be eultv,- T o n&#13;
often t h e neglect a n d a b i w h e is ,-ub-,;&#13;
jecte*! t o , b e e a u s e he is a little n i d i ; TV0 alS(1 manufacturo a full lino of CCTTZBS,&#13;
r e s u l t s ill a g r e a t e r lo^s t h a n is nyadr lnrhnling Sw-cll I'.oilf, Portland, SquATO Bo»&#13;
Uplri".the"care t o r t iiTrvomej,' boi~r&gt;'. fwo"scafrurtTiiml a»uTToiejSTcfglis/&#13;
T h e last p a r t o f a llnr&gt;e's life m a v be Send for cuts anil rricogbeforopurchaaing.&#13;
m o r e p r o f i t a b l e if r i - h t l y u . v d . t V m ; • MICHIGAN BUGGY C O . ,&#13;
t h e first p a r t . U u n v is nno-e e,,i..-' . KALAMAZOO, Kick.&#13;
f o r t a n d less danu'or in w o r k i n o ,,1,),, - *&#13;
h o r s e s , W e u n d o r s t a i i d t h e m " a n d 1 \ ! )VM N IAV M A N . V t i E M E X T l&#13;
a n d t h e y u n d e r s t a n d u s ; a n d \w-\ • _&#13;
s h o u l d b e a s \vilbn;d; t o e o n l b n n t o 1 - - , - T l l » . _ _ _ . . . _ r\r\t\^&#13;
t h e i r n a t u r e as t h y a r e t » &lt; u f . r u R L A L ) T H C D t T n O I T P O S T&#13;
t o o u r \vis!K',&lt;\ L \ \ ; i ! l b e m o r e ; T h e l?es( &gt;'c»spap&lt;, r in Michiirau. *&#13;
h u m a n e as'Avell a&gt; p r o l i t a b l e t o u s&#13;
t h e m ' a s , t h e y s h o u l d b e . a- b n ; a&#13;
w o u l d p a y , a n d t h e n taf.e tfidnt m n .&#13;
ftntlshoot t h e m d r ^ i . Ibit t h e \v;cl&lt;-&#13;
BrTpracliee is to knock- j!«ein alv.mi a -&#13;
t h e y w i n b e a r a n d p'av well, a n 1 tii-:i&#13;
t r a d e t b e n i oll't-o stune ::i u'e i n h u m a n&#13;
W r e t c h t h a n t h e m ^ - i v e s . T h e oU\&#13;
PRINTS, GINGHAMS,&#13;
WHITE GOODS,&#13;
SILK VELVETS, VELVET RIBBONS&#13;
Ladies' Neck Wear, Cashmere ShaWIs,&amp;c.&#13;
I n f a c t t h e finest l i n e of D r y G o o d s e v e r s h o w n in P i n o k n e y .&#13;
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD.&#13;
BEST CANTON AND RENFREW GINGHAMS, 10 CTS. YD.&#13;
[n &amp;n&gt; iiii»ntif/. ]|.'.-r Li'i~,-,-(1 oil--niv.- or ln.il«*fl&#13;
Tur|)t-ntin»7 I;,;', \ \ n ' ! : I - : . - - . 1-^-.. v.::..' \' w:.i&gt;h&gt;-*&#13;
Urvvr^. Kn? ttcr'.- I'uTt'.. n:.,' S'.ii:.?••:•-' s.:;&gt;jUiH-¾&#13;
of all kimi.4, Any ^hud.'- ,,f ,-. ,*:' • :• ,;--:;•-"( mixt'd&#13;
and rt-ady for applying, t.-u ;,,-r ,.-,-:ir 1.:1-:11.,.: t h a n&#13;
any oth^r IHXI^.- in •nwn. P;n-T !:;e'ij:-,_', tv-^olnsr,&#13;
ilhirfi -t:iiTi;!i_' ;ui'l uT.ii:.;:'. _• -:,--, -;d:\. •-. &lt;-i'o*&#13;
UB a call iirnl sa;i-fy-.-jt;r&gt;r;-.,.-o.'it u -• nalv say&#13;
what wi- mean, and u'i.-a:i .ill t!:d,r %v,- ~ eo&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8 1«.?.4.&#13;
T i m b e r e d I,ami t o r Sale o r MxcliaiJu'o.&#13;
I hiivc t'ijhty ii.r,-- ,,f !;-. .'• --r l:-.n,: :-v ' h " ti&gt;«nehij)&#13;
1 d Wtiit.-'oak. 1:001:1::: &lt; '-, , wh:.-., 1 -,\ [[] -,-:1&#13;
for ra-ili or tradt* f r ,-':i,-r !e:il- or ; .rnjnTty in&#13;
sontUtIrn"l.iviij.,'rt,j; n..i;;i;tv. AMil:----.,&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
l'i:i,-];:..-y, Mich.&#13;
DETROIT A eLEVgtAfWO^&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
,City of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third St. Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leava&#13;
from 23.River St. Cleveland at 8.30 p.'m.&#13;
T H E $ 2 . 2 5 R O U T E .&#13;
Week cays-Standard-Time.&#13;
I HE S 3.0C R O U T t . City of Mac.kmac—C:ty of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from'foot of Wayne St. Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
For Marine City''St. Ciair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisville&#13;
Cheboygan-St. le^ac-e-and •&#13;
ricriiRFSou€ MACKINAC&#13;
•oldersfree—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
illustrated book of 120 pages,&#13;
A LAKE TOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKINAC&#13;
historical and descript,ve of this&#13;
• Great Historic Summer Rosort&#13;
and Sanitarium,&#13;
^ JW' 0 o Y1i0? 'W^?a0yfVn,eh ' SCt.e. nD'Ie tProniat3, . MAicghe,n. t,&#13;
R A P I.O.:i ^ R A N S J ^&#13;
WE WILL CONVINCE EVERYBODY THAT OUR&#13;
/&#13;
GOODS ARE THE BEST AND LOWEST. . / '&#13;
/&#13;
We must not forgot to mention our Grocery line./ Cull and get prices on&#13;
sugars. We want all the Butter :m&lt;l E ^ we CJRJU get, and will&#13;
pay the highest "murkcy price.&#13;
/&#13;
Thanking you for past favors, we remajtf, Respectfully yours,&#13;
MANN BROS.&#13;
successors to T H E &gt;V. S. MLAXN ESTATE. P i l i c k l i e y M i d i .&#13;
IRON1&#13;
TONIC&#13;
F^CTS RECARDINC&#13;
DtiMr's Irca Ionia&#13;
HERE IS A GOOD CHANCE&#13;
FOR YOU TO BUY A BIPvi&gt; e A S E r LOOK A T - O t T R r O F F E R \&#13;
THIS COUPON |&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 5 CENTS, !&#13;
ON PU&amp;CHASE OF&#13;
BII^D CAOE&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S.&#13;
^ :CCUT THIS CARD-OUT # ^Co&#13;
i f i &gt; i&#13;
y&lt;&#13;
s e r v a n t luis li'on." anion-- -ii'ano:&gt;'r-,&#13;
a n d he r e c e i v e s rrrr'.vymjnUiy' in h i s '&#13;
-»• hi-*f eX'trenniK's-.-&#13;
,ov \ -Mr; . '•« ^ O u t : * por &gt;fiV&gt;Uh. Weekly&#13;
i &gt;w !•&gt;!&gt;!',,-ii" ]&gt;IT Year,&#13;
DSON, fVIOORE i CO.&#13;
'A HfiU^s.vi.!-: DKALEUS IN&#13;
DRY COODS&#13;
DETROITr&#13;
Anil we will allow you 25 cents for it on the purchase of any Bird Cage at&#13;
our store. We will also give a Bird ('age F R E E to the one who will&#13;
cut out and bring to us the givatest number of .these cards.&#13;
To be brought to u*&gt; September 20th. This will i e l p you to get a Cage&#13;
aheap, and some one to get a Cage for nothing/ Who will be the lucky&#13;
one. . .-••""" FrEdBRGWN.&#13;
It will pr.-ilA ;i:,.l fiiri,;Ii II.L- B L O O D . ' ' i-'ulafo&#13;
t h e LIVER arul K I D N E Y S , ~v.A i:i.«ii,i;! n i i i&#13;
H E A X T H a n d VIGOR ^f Y O U 1 H ! I;; ;i.. :•• n s t diseases reiiuirln^r ;i oi-rt:iiii :uul i ilicii-m I' 'NIC'.&#13;
eapcutttlly L»yf.pep.-.ia. Want oi Apju-tii.'.ImU^vstlon,&#13;
L»fli of Stren.Kth, i:U..i;&gt; u-t- i&gt; mcirkctl&#13;
with ltuiutMlliiit! »iul wonitrrVu! v.-nils. Kuiii'S,&#13;
musclt'S ami nervt's reci wv IU w [,&gt;ra-. Kulivt-us&#13;
tbe mind ami aupp)iL-s Hr.un l'ow&lt;'i'.&#13;
• » n i B Q . suffering irom all complaint*&#13;
k # % V I B O peculiar to tlicirs( -\ will rim! In '&#13;
!&gt;&amp;. H A R T E H ' 8 IRON TONIC a safe ;im! si^-tdy&#13;
onre. U Rives -i oU'ar ;inil lu;;»liliy i-unijilfxioK.&#13;
The strcjtiitest testtmonv tn tfio valui- nf I&gt;n.&#13;
P A K T K K ' N Ilti'iN T I I V . I C i-s'llmt fr. iHH-Ttt : i l t f i i i j i t s&#13;
at countorfriMmr lia\ c onlv nrl'lnl tMlu- |iM)&lt;irur*&#13;
Ity of tilt' oriynni.—li' &gt; ,,ii \ , t&gt; i- 11 &gt;- &gt;U • in- lit-*i11&gt;—&#13;
d o n o ^ - e x p f r l i m n t —L'I t tin- t u : n ; i \ vi. AND liKsT. CSentl Toor mitlrpss toTh&lt;» Hr 11,'tnr MP&lt;1 ('. - V&#13;
St-Louu, Mo., for on: " D K E A M B O O K . " !&#13;
Fallot strsoBB iiatl useful information, free. J&#13;
D R . HARTTR'S IRON T O N I C I S ' F O R S A L E BY AUIDRUOOISTS&#13;
ANO DEALERS EVERYWHERECIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRAR^&#13;
Books boned at 5 cfnts per vor.&#13;
ume, for 7 days. /&#13;
6 Tickets for - - / . . 2 . ^ 8 .&#13;
13 " " • • / - - . 5 0 "&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and ikeproceeds will be devoted&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
tkeiifran&#13;
£or books or further inform.ttioB-&#13;
/ apply at " ^ -&#13;
W;ikciIELL'S DRUG STORE,&#13;
-s»&#13;
Agmckmj&#13;
§iwMJ.&#13;
EKOMK W I N C H E L U KDITOH.&#13;
KnUred at the I'aetoftlod as 2d claa* matter.&#13;
. !&#13;
A P l e a l o r S i m p l i c i t y . .&#13;
Inter Ocean.&#13;
Kins In the nobler modes of life,&#13;
With sweeter manners, purer lawts.&#13;
Thus sang the poet iaureate of England,&#13;
while the poet of Concord took&#13;
up the strain and exclaimed: " F r o m&#13;
day to day the capital facts of human&#13;
life are hidden from our eyes. Suddenly&#13;
t h e mist rolls up and reveals them,&#13;
and we think how much good time is&#13;
gone that might haVo been saved had&#13;
any hint of these things been shown."&#13;
While his thoughts were echoed and reechoed&#13;
through the pines of " W a l d e n , "&#13;
as Thoreau eagerly questioned, " W h v ^&#13;
do we live with such hurry and waste T&#13;
We are determined to be starved before&#13;
we are hungry. Men say that a stitch&#13;
in time saves "nine, and so they take a&#13;
thousand stitches to-day to save nine&#13;
to-morrow:1' And if men take a&#13;
thousand women take a million.&#13;
Yes, u million, useless steps ancr&#13;
stitches, which we will begin to study&#13;
how to obviate, when " t h e mist shall&#13;
indeed roll away, and we realize how&#13;
much good time is gono that might&#13;
have been saved to nobJer uses.11&#13;
For instance, the boy with youthful&#13;
enthusiasm, touched and rounded bza&#13;
the glories of God's wonderful creation,&#13;
comes rushfcs into the home, calling&#13;
^'Mother, mother, t h e lake is glorious&#13;
"now; can't you come for a row with&#13;
me?1'&#13;
" N o , indeed,11 is the reply, voiced in&#13;
tones of almost indignant surprise:" No,&#13;
indeed. I must make some apple pies&#13;
for dinner and a loaf of angelsM'ood&#13;
cake for tea.11&#13;
"Oh, never mind the pies, the apples&#13;
are better r a w ; and wo can have1 the&#13;
cake some rainy day when we can't&#13;
have the boat on this glorious morning.&#13;
" ^ —&#13;
That mother really thinks it is duty&#13;
t i makn tho pie and cake, and so allows&#13;
her boy to miss all the beautiful, helpful&#13;
lessons of the morning, and to drift&#13;
away toward a game of cards or a game&#13;
of jump with " t h e boys." Years latbr,&#13;
when the wiser, sadder mother reviews&#13;
life's opportunities, she will discover&#13;
that there are things of more vital import&#13;
to youth than r.pple pie or angelsfood—&#13;
many kinds- of pie and cake boing&#13;
well-made angels-food, since they&#13;
tend t o m a k o angels rather than healthy&#13;
children.&#13;
The first thought ifTcOnuection with&#13;
the duties we owe to our children is the&#13;
value of the first live or six years of&#13;
child-life. The permanency of impressions&#13;
then made and the inealcuable results&#13;
upon character of early impressions.&#13;
I n , reviewing our childhood do&#13;
wo not realize that the noblest aspirations,&#13;
the highest conceptions of duty&#13;
come to us, voiced by the woods, the&#13;
flowers, the musical silence of the forest1'&#13;
the silent music of the waters, the&#13;
g?ory of sunsets, or the thrilling, throbbing&#13;
messages of starlight nights; and&#13;
let us harvest as golden opportunities&#13;
days in which we can give our children&#13;
these glimpses into " t h e hearts of&#13;
thinga."&#13;
We are "owned by our furniture,--,&#13;
our trinkets, our homes, our clothes,&#13;
instead,-of our owning them.&#13;
J u s t here we imagine a choirs of&#13;
vf.s™g PYP.)n.iTvnnfr, "Oh! it is very well&#13;
to theorize, but. the boy will return"&#13;
from his morning row or walk half&#13;
starved, aBU tfieu ho will appreciate&#13;
, the practical, motherly&#13;
housewife." To those who willfully misunderstand&#13;
our meaning it woujd be&#13;
useless to explain. So long as there&#13;
are nine hundred and ninety women&#13;
who sacrifice their lives, loves and&#13;
friendships to complicated housekeeping,&#13;
ornamental stitching, and the tyranny&#13;
of dust, there isno danger in one&#13;
little, earnest plea for simplicity in&#13;
cooking, in dressing and living.&#13;
A few days since, returning from the&#13;
pier from which we had waved adieu&#13;
to departing guests, we turned quite&#13;
eagerly to the really pleasant labor of&#13;
"setting one's house'in order.11 Scarcely&#13;
had wo entered the house when the&#13;
irrepressible boy met us with a most&#13;
-gymnastic kiss and hiig»,.j?xclajhiirjgi&#13;
into Now Orleans, "and as I had noth&#13;
iuw to do 1 dropped into a concert, and&#13;
heard a slick-looking Frenchman play&#13;
a piano in a way that made me feel all&#13;
over in spots. As soon as he sat down&#13;
on the .stool, 1 ):new by the way that&#13;
he handled himself that he understood&#13;
tho machine he was running. He tapped&#13;
the keys away up one end, just as&#13;
it they were gauges and he wauled to&#13;
see if nc had water enough Then he&#13;
looked up, as if ho wanted to know how&#13;
much steam ho was carrying, and the&#13;
next moment he pulled open the throttle&#13;
and sailed out on tho main line as&#13;
if he were half an hour late.&#13;
"You could hear her thunder over&#13;
culverts and bridges, getting faster and&#13;
faster, until tho fellow rocked about in&#13;
his seat like a cradle. Somehow 1 thought&#13;
it was old '36' pulling a passenger train&#13;
and getting out of the* way of a 'special.&#13;
1 The fellow worked the keys on&#13;
the middle division like lightning, and&#13;
thea ho How along the north end of the&#13;
lino until the drivers went w o u n d like&#13;
a buzz saw, and I got excited. About&#13;
the time 1 was fixing to tell him to&#13;
cut her off a little, he kicked tho dampers&#13;
under tho machine wide open, pull^&#13;
od the throttle away back in the tender,&#13;
and—Jerusalem jumpers! how he&#13;
did run! I couldn't stand it any longer;&#13;
and yelled to him that she was&#13;
pounding on tho left side, and if he&#13;
wasn't careful lieM drop his ash pan.&#13;
" B u t he didn't hear. No one heard&#13;
mo. Everything was Hying and whizzing.&#13;
Telegraph polos on the side of&#13;
the"track looked like a row of cornstalks,&#13;
tho trees appeared to be a mud&#13;
bank, and all the time the exhaust ot&#13;
the old machine sounded like the hum&#13;
of a bumblebee. I tried to yell-out but&#13;
my tongue wouldn't move. He went&#13;
around curves liko'a bullet, clipped an&#13;
eccentric, blew out his soft plug, went&#13;
down inade tiftv feci to the mile, and&#13;
by the meeting point at a mile and a&#13;
half a minute, and calling for moro&#13;
steam. My hair stood up like a cat's&#13;
tail, because I knew the game was up.&#13;
"Sure enough, dead ahead of us was&#13;
tho head-light of the 'special.1 In a&#13;
daze I heard tho crash as they struck,&#13;
and 1 saw car's shivered into atoms,&#13;
people mashed and mangled and bleeding&#13;
and g a t i n g for water. I heard&#13;
another crash as the French professor&#13;
struck tho deep keys away down on the&#13;
lower end of the southern division, and&#13;
then I came to my senses. There he&#13;
was at a de.^d aland-still, with the door&#13;
of the fire-box of the machine open,&#13;
.wiping tho perspiration off his face a n 4&#13;
bowing at the people before him. If I&#13;
live to be a thousand years old I'll&#13;
never forgot the ride that Frenchman&#13;
gave me on a piano."&#13;
H a w k e y e M u s i n g s .&#13;
Burlington Hawkeye.&#13;
The papers of a neighboring town&#13;
are pitching into a good m a n and calling&#13;
him a nypoeri^o and all manner of&#13;
names because he violently and successfully&#13;
opposed tin; location of a saloon&#13;
next door to h\s home, and yet&#13;
takes hi:; nips quiet and regular at the&#13;
gin mill .seven or eight blocks away.&#13;
Nonsense. Let up un him. A man&#13;
may enjoy a good beefsteak for ureakfast&#13;
and a jui'-.y roast for dinner, but&#13;
that is no reason why he should want&#13;
a slaughter house erected in the front&#13;
yard.&#13;
The voice of the summer boarder is&#13;
heard in t h e country, lifting itself up&#13;
in -eomplaint, - T h i s w about all the&#13;
summer boarder can find time to do,&#13;
He complains and groans and grumbles&#13;
because&#13;
Tho steak is tough.&#13;
F o r t h e F a r m e r .&#13;
Carrion in a cow pasture will1 affect&#13;
tho milk of tho cows:&#13;
A well-drained farm is .said to improve&#13;
the health of domestic animals&#13;
that live upon it.&#13;
The experiment oi shipping butter to&#13;
England from New Zeal ami haw not&#13;
proved successful.&#13;
An increase of one-fourth in the&#13;
milk-producing qualities of a cow is&#13;
doubling tho net profits.&#13;
It is much better to pay a little more&#13;
for reliable harvest help than to rely&#13;
on tramp laborers.&#13;
In some parts of Kiuope the suutlower&#13;
is cultivated for an oil that is extracted&#13;
from the seeds.&#13;
Remember that thorough drain ago&#13;
will lengthen the season on heavy and&#13;
damp soils at least two weeks.&#13;
An experimenter affirms that squash,&#13;
lima beans and other Hat seeds will&#13;
germinate quicker ami grow bettor if&#13;
tho seeds are placed edgewise in tho&#13;
soil.&#13;
For fodder tho yield of sweet corn&#13;
aud sorghum is about the same. Tho&#13;
former, however, is better relished by&#13;
stock, while the latter endures drouth&#13;
better.&#13;
A Michigan farmer drained a bog on&#13;
his farm last year at considerable expense,&#13;
but reports that the profits of&#13;
last year's t-rop from the laud mere&#13;
than compensated him for his outlay.&#13;
It is said that a solution made of&#13;
water aud poultry droppings will prevent&#13;
the striped bugs from injuring&#13;
squashes. The mixture should bo allowed&#13;
to ferment, and the application&#13;
should be made frequently. It will also&#13;
greatly assist in hastening tne growth&#13;
of tho vine.&#13;
The Iowa llomittcud finds no trouble&#13;
not a confounded brake sot. She went t r r makiu^ a hog fence of wire. Use-&#13;
The coffee is tnict.&#13;
for a day. Won't you go to tbejLookout,'&#13;
and let us make a camp-fire, and&#13;
boil corn and roast potatoes?' itow we&#13;
were just in tho^mood to really enjoy&#13;
putting the^gUcst-cbaniber in perfect&#13;
order^atfd so we were obliged to think&#13;
a-few moments. Only ten days more&#13;
of vacation, and then tho long pull of&#13;
the school year. The guest-chamber&#13;
can be in order during all those months.&#13;
For the sake of the children we- will&#13;
flood the room with sunshine and lock&#13;
it up for a more convenient season.&#13;
Tho temptation to yield to houswifely&#13;
proclivities was overcome, the boys&#13;
and girls from a neighboring camp invited,&#13;
the tables bountifully adorned&#13;
with ferns and golden rod, the campkettle&#13;
swung, corn and eggs boiled, potatoes&#13;
and apples roasted.&#13;
And when at night the good-night&#13;
kiss and prayer was supplemented with&#13;
an earnest tbank you to*the All Father&#13;
for our beautiful world and this happy&#13;
day, the mother instinct whispered that&#13;
the hours had not been misspent.&#13;
There is a fiy in the milk.&#13;
The piejcrust is tough.&#13;
The berries are sour.&#13;
The eggs are boiled to hard.&#13;
The napkin is soiled.&#13;
And says he never has te put up with&#13;
such things at home and isn't going to&#13;
stand it out here. Ho is right; because&#13;
at home&#13;
Instead of stake he eats livor.&#13;
" " coffee " drinks chickory&#13;
" milk " ' " ?&#13;
" " pio " eats grocery cookies.&#13;
.&#13;
" " berries" " dried primes.&#13;
" hare eggs ho eats stale&#13;
limed ones.&#13;
Instead of a soilecl-mvp'kin he uses the&#13;
tablecloth. ^ - ^&#13;
You can-usually tell what luxuries a&#13;
six wires, and posts ahoJiL_a_rud_ np-3i:L.&#13;
Use hog wire for the lower strands, and&#13;
put the lower wire quite close to tho&#13;
ground, and the second four inches&#13;
above the first. They are cheaper than&#13;
boards and in every way better.&#13;
In Central Illinois the lieu Davis&#13;
applo trees, which in 1882 and 188.'}&#13;
bore largo crops, are reported dying to&#13;
an alarming extent. A correspondent&#13;
of tlvo Prairie Farmer thinks their decay&#13;
is due to a lack of moisture, and&#13;
recommends digging a ditch around&#13;
each tree far enough away to catch the&#13;
drip, throwing the earth toward thu&#13;
tree. In this way he thinks the feeding&#13;
roots will get the most water.&#13;
In the door-yard of Delos Hotchkiss,&#13;
at Cheshire, Ct., stands an apple tree&#13;
which is supposed to be the oldest,&#13;
largest and most fruitful in New England.&#13;
It is the last survivor of the&#13;
orchard tyJiieh was set out by the first&#13;
settlers of the neighborhood, and popular&#13;
belief fixes its age at 180 years.&#13;
The tree is'sixty feet high, and the tips&#13;
of its uttermost branches are 104 feet&#13;
apart. Mrs. Hotchkiss allirms that she&#13;
has picked l'1'i bushels of sound apples&#13;
from it in,a single year.&#13;
A farmer's wife, writing to the Couti-.&#13;
fry Gentleman, tells how.she keeps cabbage-&#13;
worms away from her plants.&#13;
She always has nice cabbages. She&#13;
keeps an old tin pan full of dry line&#13;
earth, and every times she goes into&#13;
the garden she sifts a teaspoonful or&#13;
more of this dust over the cabbages&#13;
aud the worms never molest them.&#13;
Also by putting plenty of sawdust&#13;
around currant bushes she saves them&#13;
from the worms, and it makes them&#13;
bear larger fruit, as it'keeps the ground&#13;
moist and rich.&#13;
but very interesting. Ho then asked&#13;
me to go to a small sachel, open it, aud&#13;
bring to him a package 1 would find&#13;
there. I did so. He opened it and&#13;
brought forth this watch, which he&#13;
told mo had been in his , family for&#13;
hundreds of years, handed down from&#13;
ono generation to tho other, and that,&#13;
although many times in need of the&#13;
necessaries of life, he would not part&#13;
with it. He then presented it to me,&#13;
thaukiug mo for many acts of kindness&#13;
during his stay in tho infirmary. It&#13;
was an affecting scene. Tho next day&#13;
ho died, and I had his remains decently&#13;
interred in tho cemetery. The watch&#13;
keeps remarkably good time considering&#13;
its age, and 1 would not part with&#13;
it for the world."&#13;
This is tho kind of a story Mike tells of&#13;
tho watch after he has looked upon the&#13;
grape juico when it was red. Some&#13;
enemies of his'say tho watch is no&#13;
good; that ho bought it in a pawnshop&#13;
down street, and that ho has to wind it&#13;
up every ten minutes. Mike is a gay&#13;
deceiver—sometimes. — Cincinnati Sun.&#13;
A ltaco W i t h a W h a l e .&#13;
Recently the schooner Hattlc Rebecca,&#13;
Captain Edwin A. Dodge, sailed&#13;
from Kloek Island with a swordlishing&#13;
party. About (J:30 o'clock a. m., when&#13;
some two miles off South-east Point,&#13;
Capt. Dodge called out, "There sh1)&#13;
blows," and pointed to a whale sporting&#13;
a mile or so- to seaward. He soon&#13;
disappeared,/' however, and whiio- all&#13;
were scanning the wave in the distance&#13;
a white cloud of spray was blown* upward&#13;
from .the surface of the ocean&#13;
not more than 500 yards away, off the&#13;
starboard quarter. His hugo black&#13;
bulk/could be plainly seen for about a&#13;
minute, and then, diving, he reappeared&#13;
just in front of the bowsprit,&#13;
with his head toward the vessel. A&#13;
column of water shot up, as from the&#13;
explosion of a email torpedo, but only&#13;
for an instant,.for as soon as ho realized&#13;
his closo proximity he plunged&#13;
directly under the schooner, the water&#13;
closing above him iu swift moving&#13;
eddies of foam. While under tho water&#13;
this time he turned completely&#13;
around and soon came up, pulling and&#13;
blowing, not less than fifty feet to the&#13;
larboard. He was headed in the same&#13;
direction as the schooner, and moved&#13;
"leisurely along for more thau-a-rain-Hie,&#13;
apparently intending to give those on&#13;
board fiiTllj^portunity to inspect him&#13;
closely. He extended a good distance&#13;
beyond the vessel in both directions,&#13;
some of the party thinking that ho was&#13;
fully twice as long. The length of the&#13;
llattie Rebecca is forty-six feet. All&#13;
agreed that- his total length was not&#13;
OENSIONS T O A . I - I L '&#13;
NuU&gt;! Kh'S A NAH.uWS&#13;
win i \wro dii-alili'ii tiy woiuicV. tii.- t'.iH&lt;», urt'itlwit&#13;
nr ollirrwit^tlH' loJn of i\ to*-, |)ilwt , v:trk&lt; .-&lt;• \ &lt;•«»*, .&#13;
cbnuiic iliarrlui'ii, rnptiiro, lo*.s of t-i^lit or (|«MtUill&gt;&#13;
t-o), Ions of lit'iirin^, fulling bftcfc of un'iuuen,&#13;
rti&lt; u'niKtifiio, HII.V ilinabilK/, no tn;iKiT how PIMJK,&#13;
nivrvi von ii pension. M^\v ami ll&lt;.iiorttf*l* IMm*&#13;
di4injvt* (U)taini'd. Widow*, eliildrun, mortiera.,&#13;
am) fiitlitsr* ot" Boldirr* dyinr in tln&lt; M-i'vii'n, or&#13;
at'U'rwunlf, from dint'ti^' contimt&lt;'d or &lt;vound.s rutoivi'd&#13;
vs'liili-in tin' HiTvim, "an outLtlod tu p*nnion.&#13;
Hfjtvti'd mid uhiuidoiit'd oiainiM u special*?.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS COL&#13;
IKCHKASE "Y()i:» TENSION.&#13;
A iiHiiHion cim In- iurreast'd ;it uny t'utw wliaa&#13;
liic rtitfjibillty warrants it,&#13;
As you grow older ttw&#13;
' ed tlktooimtitutlow,&#13;
tbo dieeaKi.'&lt;haH madt&gt; ynu imiw bidpieHn. in H O I *&#13;
iu apply f»»r&#13;
wound has i;»ndually umWuiined tint constitution,&#13;
dieeaKi.'TiaH made bidpl" '" ""&#13;
inaiintr tlin dim»Wlity hu* !»'ri'am'ii:&#13;
au tmwAHi1 at unci&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED&#13;
Mjr expedience, and lining h«T« at tit-adquurtajj*&#13;
nnahle m* to uttfttul promptly to all rlaiaiH u ; a m (&#13;
Ihe Unvfrnmcru I'lmihirri friM&gt;. Addrp**, with&#13;
utainyi:&#13;
Box 485,&#13;
M. V. T I F K N E Y ,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHFORMEN&#13;
P R O F .&#13;
HARRIS&#13;
A Radical Crrc&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
IMPOTKNGY.&#13;
JfcS*Tooto&lt;l for ovor O&#13;
yoaru hy u s o in thou-&#13;
Band3 ot c&amp;sso.&#13;
lcm.&#13;
? TRIAL&#13;
PACKAGE.&#13;
NERVOUS PRBLMTS&#13;
org&amp;ato wtiiucm mil d&gt;&#13;
cay, tu4 Diuiieroo* &lt;*&gt;•&#13;
t&gt;:aro dlwuei, bifflJaj&#13;
skillful pbvbtclkn), r««t*&#13;
from youthful ladtecr*-&#13;
tlons, too free hx&amp;vJgtnoc,&#13;
Rid over brat a wart. Dp&#13;
Dot temporize whll» tacp^&#13;
cacpiiiM lurk Juyourtyl-&#13;
. Avoid being »npot«I&#13;
en by ijretrQtlokU claiiaa (S&#13;
cthcrV rcuRMka for &amp;a««&#13;
trouble. Ut't our fro* ci»e»-&#13;
l-vr nuil trial jackagu kttl&#13;
leftru lmriortiuit faO» 'otf»S&gt;&#13;
Hiking triatiimul clsuwheTq.&#13;
Tuito arvruvdy timihat carat&#13;
tliougaul.i, »:i3 4JU3 not U&gt;&#13;
tcrfuro ivifh atti'nUijD te business&#13;
or cuujo jiulii o* Inconvenience,&#13;
I'tiuuiled on •fieiitiflo.&#13;
ine&lt;lkul principles.&#13;
Crowing in. fuvor BO4 n-putfttion.&#13;
Direct apri'k1110111" tho&#13;
fo»t of dl'c.mo makcA Ita «pertflc&#13;
influencc*rt-»ilhotiC&#13;
culay. Tho natural funt"&#13;
tioa* of Ho haauw org«»-&#13;
l*ni are restored. Th#&#13;
Bnlma!in)r e!erc«nl« of&#13;
life wMch havo bees&#13;
wasted am ghefi back,&#13;
Th« pilieat bvconic*&#13;
c h e e r f u l uni gsta*&#13;
-SEND ADDRES •trnigih roptdty. ,_&#13;
HARRIS REMEDY CO., M'fgChcmhti,&#13;
8 0 0 ½ North 10th S t . , St, Louis, B o .&#13;
Que MOUTH'S TRUTMEKT, $3; 2 MONTH3,$5 ; 3 MONTHS. $7,&#13;
-At a rocept meeting ot tl]SFijnH»viva^&#13;
mg.-.exclaiming. m a n J ^ o ^ s t o m e d to in his city borne,&#13;
"Now we can have you all to ourselves, 4 j f t h e amount of growling he does a t a r&#13;
country boarding house.&#13;
''• You ought to be able t&gt; overhear&#13;
H e w T h e y P l a y t h o P i a n o In N e w&#13;
O r l e a n s .&#13;
Tlmo Di'ititicrat. /&#13;
"1 *a* loaring around th&lt;i streets&#13;
last iiignt,M said J i m Nelson, one of the&#13;
oldihl ltcomotive engineer? ruuning&#13;
all that goes oil," remarked the dominie,&#13;
gazing derisively a t the long ears&#13;
of "the patient ass.&#13;
" I do,11 replied the patient ass. " G e t&#13;
on."&#13;
Tne dominie climbed upon the patient&#13;
back, and when his long legs were adjusted&#13;
he smote the patient ass with his&#13;
umbrolia, and said.&#13;
" G e t u p r&#13;
"1 will!" replied the patient ass,&#13;
"since you insist upon i t , "&#13;
And then lie "get up1 ' his back in a&#13;
sharp hump and bucked the dominiy&#13;
over the loug gray ears, clear through&#13;
the O.-iage orange hedge into the guinea&#13;
hen's nest on tho other side. Tiie patient&#13;
animal reached for a thistle andlaughed&#13;
a low, mournful laugh.&#13;
"You bet your cassock,1' he murmered,&#13;
" I over ear everything that goes on&#13;
my back.. Little pitchers have great&#13;
ears, b'.it their beet holt lies in the projectile&#13;
tissues of the back bone.1"&#13;
And in all tho pleasant meadow there&#13;
ciirae no nound save the soft sighing of&#13;
the bummer wind, toying with the bendi&#13;
n g grasses, and the hushed breathing&#13;
of a holy man, scraping from his som&#13;
bre garments tho debris of tho long,&#13;
too long, hoarded-, wealth ol the guinea&#13;
hen's hiddea nest.&#13;
nia Horticultural Association the question&#13;
was raised as to whether bees do&#13;
or do not puncture grapes and peaches.&#13;
Kome present tJio.ught they never disturbed&#13;
fruit unless the skin had been&#13;
previously broken.but there were others&#13;
who knew that they punctured grapes&#13;
and peaches when llowers were scarce.&#13;
In Germantqwn, a suburb of Philadelphia,&#13;
bcH:s arc'regarded as one of tho&#13;
obstacles in the path of grape culture,&#13;
many growers using, p a r e r bajrs to&#13;
protect their fruit.&#13;
A R e m a r k a b l e W a t c h .&#13;
"Did you" ever see a watch like this?"&#13;
inquired Mr. Husscy, superintendent&#13;
of the city inlirmary,"exhib;ting a curious&#13;
watch of French pattern, from its&#13;
appearance uianv years old.&#13;
"Nover did. Where did you get i t ? "&#13;
asked the tsun. ; ~~—:—-——&#13;
"That watch has a remarkable nisv&#13;
•-teryj-T-Several years ago there came to&#13;
the infirmary a man whose sands of&#13;
life had about petered out. (Mike is&#13;
noted for his flowery expressions.) -He&#13;
was a gentleman, a person could see&#13;
that at a glance; I became very much&#13;
interested inhim. He was i n t e l l i g e n t -&#13;
something above the ordinary man—and&#13;
1 spent many happy hours" with him.&#13;
Shortly before his death he called me&#13;
to his bedside and told mo that he&#13;
knew he had not long to live, and that&#13;
ho wished to tell me something of his&#13;
history. Ho asked me to arrange his&#13;
pillows anil prop his head a little higher.&#13;
(Right here is where Mike gets in the&#13;
dramatic effect.) He then told me&#13;
that he was a French count, belonging&#13;
iR_jono of_J.ho most noted families' in_&#13;
France; that ho had been disappointed&#13;
in love when a young man, and,&#13;
as many others had done before, dasTfcdT&#13;
into the wildest kind of life. He became&#13;
a regular roue, and, of course,&#13;
Lhis friends gave him up, and gradually&#13;
^o fell lower and iower in social life.&#13;
He lost his estates little by little, his&#13;
creditors forcing him to the wall. At&#13;
last he had to leave France. He came&#13;
to America, Here his lite was one of&#13;
privation, and suffering. At last he&#13;
reached Cincinnati, where, becoming&#13;
sick, he managed to get into, the in"&#13;
^^TTfinary. His history was a .'sail ono, '&#13;
less than seventy feet, and in view of&#13;
the splendid, opportunity afforded for&#13;
making a fair esLimate,' and the character&#13;
ot the spectators it is safe to accept&#13;
this report as eorreet.- Captain&#13;
Dodge puts the length at from seventy&#13;
to sevunty-live feet.&#13;
As the schooner sailing under an&#13;
eight-knot breeze, k^-pt even pace for&#13;
nearly half a minute; with her living&#13;
competitor, the party began to speculate&#13;
as to which would beat in the&#13;
race. But the wiiaie had biven swimming&#13;
lazily, but as soon as his Hakes&#13;
begun'to quicken their . motion it became&#13;
evident that it would not be Safe&#13;
to bet on the"schooner. In about two&#13;
minutes the water closed .once more&#13;
above the black moving mass, aud&#13;
when next he showed himself it was at&#13;
the distance of more than a mile. He&#13;
disappeared in the direction whence ho&#13;
came. One can not help wondering if&#13;
he saw the schooner," and made this&#13;
trip solely for tho purpose of examiniw-&#13;
f :v thing that had excited his curi-_&#13;
"C^JIV. t"THl*«*®._&#13;
The party was still further favored&#13;
beyond what is usually the privilege of&#13;
amateur lishermen, for they saw a&#13;
shoal of porpoises, two shovel-nose&#13;
sharks, two very large sun-fishes, and"&#13;
captured a swordiish which weighed,&#13;
when dressed, 2'Jb pounds.&#13;
T H I S MAGNETIC .BELT IS&#13;
WARRANTED TO G U R E ^ r s f c .&#13;
•.•i''i •:: rii''':'i&lt;'incv • 1'nln In t h e b a c k , h i p i , h e u d . o r&#13;
)ln. t.r, iit-rvuiiH &lt;lcl»illty,Iu ::iL&gt;ago. g e n e r a l d e b i l i t y ,&#13;
vn!••."!uiNm, piiruly*!*. r.i'urnl«clii, Mclntlca, dl«eiu-&#13;
'.'* ut i a i' Llihu'vo.Kplnul d lot tines, toi-[)l&lt;l llvt'r, g o u t ,&#13;
• K'm!;;»U enilrttloim, Impolviwy, nxlhran, licnrt dl«-&#13;
f i&lt;i/i. IKTIIIU o r rui&gt;tur«t c u t a r r l j , i&gt;ll«.vi, cj)IK"&gt;»f,&#13;
:'." :nh t»r;ii&lt;-. e t c .&#13;
v i.,.,1,111^-&lt;ici,Hityof4b»4JK3ti:iiATIVK OIK: A.N*J&#13;
' . - . ln»t v i t a l i t y , luck o f n i T M i I'nrcu utid v l c o r ,&#13;
\,.: •! iua wi'iil.neMctt, a n d o i l tliono d U r u s r * o f n in-r-&#13;
Minul nuturi.", from \yhatover c a i w . " t h o j&lt;,,&lt;mtimnJi'.n&#13;
MIW.IU of Matcni'llstn jM&gt;rmi'(itiiiJ tltrou^Ii ttii&lt; [iiirti*&#13;
i.umtrentor* thrru t o n h c n l t h y a c t l u u . TUs-'iu If no&#13;
n.i.TTST&gt;&gt;Ujiiut this tn&gt;i&gt;iiam.v.&#13;
Careful Mothers a n d a S t u p i d Nurse.&#13;
^Jacob Etzel, the proprietor of the&#13;
NVashington Headquarters Hotel, at&#13;
Wall and" Beaver streets, is a bird-fancier.&#13;
His window is full of cages, and&#13;
the cages are full of mocking birds,&#13;
orioles, robins, blackbirds, thrushes&#13;
canaries, and finches. Under the&#13;
ea.vcs of the house several soarrows&#13;
have built their nests? These colonists&#13;
contracted the habit of feeding on seed&#13;
scattered by the caged birds. As the&#13;
young sparrows grew" they attempted&#13;
to imitate their parents in this r e s p e c t&#13;
and three of them were caught. They&#13;
were p u t in a big cage where a lot of&#13;
birds were kept." The parents of the&#13;
.fledglings at all hours fluttered ,to the&#13;
sides of the cage, and fed, the little&#13;
ones through the bars. There are twb&#13;
mothers to the prisoners, and neither&#13;
mother ever makes a mistake and feeds&#13;
tho other sparrow's offspring. The&#13;
three orphans, however, stand close to&#13;
each other, and twitter, sleep, and&#13;
lintf comfort in each other's society.&#13;
An imprisoned robin watches the feeding&#13;
process, and whatever.eithcr mother&#13;
drops the robin picks up and feeds&#13;
to the young sparrows. He is a stupid&#13;
fellow, however, and can't tell the&#13;
birds apart, and in consequence gets&#13;
scolded up and down, hill bv the moth-&#13;
-crs for feeding the&#13;
York Hun.&#13;
IAD|EMAGNETIC&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER, m&#13;
TO THE LADIES:—S^TIBRJSEK&#13;
IW I I I U k n w i k u i N«!r«l«l*, NerroM&#13;
Bxhftr«tion,Pyip«»i!a,orivIt!i DUetae* of the U T -&#13;
«r. Kidney*, llcBdnche o r Cold Feet, Swolle* or&#13;
W«ak Ankle*, or Swollen Feet, an Abdominal B«lt&#13;
and A pair of Mngnetlc Foot Batteries have no superior&#13;
In the relief and euro of «11 these complaints. They&#13;
»»rry n p » f r f . i l ln«|p*t.lq f^rpe t o too »eat Of Ulg&#13;
For t n a e Back, W e a b a e t a o f t h e Bplne, Falt-&#13;
Infc of tho womb, Leneorrbota, Cbronlo l n f l i M a i .&#13;
tlon and Ulceration of the Woaab, l a d d c n U l Utmorrhace&#13;
or Flooding*, Painful, Suppreaaed and l r .&#13;
recalar M»Mat»«Q«icm, l t o ^ . , n t . ^ . . . and oh ante of&#13;
Ufa, thU la the Beat Appllano* mad CuraUvo Afjeat&#13;
Known.&#13;
For all forms of Female DtfBenltlra It la n n i w .&#13;
pawed by ajiytlurip be:oi-e Invented, both a* a cuiatiTa&#13;
ajrent and oa a source of power and vltaliratton.&#13;
Prtoe of cither Belt wUh JT&amp;frneuc Foot Batteries, 110.&#13;
Bentby express CO. D. ,aod examination allowed, or by&#13;
maJ! on receipt of price. In onlprinj,', sond measure of&#13;
waiat and Rite of shoe. Remittance can bo made la currency&#13;
sent In lettor at our risk.&#13;
The Magneton Garments are adapted to all ages, ore&#13;
worn over tho underclothing, (not next to t h e&#13;
body like tho many Galvanic and RleetrteHnni.&#13;
buga advortUrd ao cxtenntvfly) and ahould be&gt;&#13;
token off at niRht; Th;&gt;v hold theirpotoerforever,aad&#13;
arewornatall seo.-onsof thcyenr.&#13;
Semi stamp for the "N'i'v.'i)o[nvfuro In Medical TreaV&#13;
tnent Without Medicine," with UiouaaDdaof teatinto*&#13;
T H E M A G N E T O N A P P L I A N C E CKK.&#13;
» 1 8 Statu tit.? ChicsmroTllaV&#13;
Tlie Magnetic appliances may be seen&#13;
at Winchell's" Drug Store. Piokrf*%&#13;
Mich. feKERMOm&#13;
wrong child.— XL-IO&#13;
I—&#13;
Naomi was 580 years old before sho&#13;
was married. Tho ice-cream business&#13;
must have got a good start during&#13;
Naomi's maidenhood.&#13;
The operators of the Hai'linon; and&#13;
Ohio teii".;Taph company arc chosen&#13;
wan regard to the plainness of their&#13;
!i and writing&#13;
Thirty-two million dollars1 worth of&#13;
candy is manufactured in the United&#13;
States annually,&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liver&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
r i O ' r l C f v . — W i l l i o u i u particle of doubt, Ker.&#13;
ni'i i'&gt; I'ills nrn thpiiiost popular of any en tho in.u-&#13;
K r. Mriving tiecn In'NiA-f tu- pit til te for n quarter uf&#13;
a r^iiiiirVj fttnl hr&gt;vinn nlv7;tj'» [MTt'ortaed more than&#13;
| tv:u* pnmntscd for thLiii,'hvy merit the auccew that&#13;
(.!:»•&gt;• huvi^ .ucum'it. B » r i c c , 2 5 c . p e r tM&gt;9Co&#13;
For sak&gt; tiy all dru^nihts,&#13;
! Kermotts Tills itlwavM—HI stock at&#13;
I Wincfie 1's Drug Store. Vinckney. Mi -h&#13;
/•~&#13;
N&#13;
"v&#13;
"S&#13;
r&#13;
w •v-^; - N&#13;
s &gt;&#13;
A S T O R Y O F W E B S T E t t .&#13;
T h e ( J r r u t J'Jx|&gt;oiimli*r a n d H o w H o&#13;
H e l p e d a T e u m s t t i r .&#13;
A.&#13;
Jsuuator Siisbue, of Salem, contributed&#13;
the foljowin^ atjecdoto to t h o s e&#13;
told i l l u s t r a t i n g tho r u r a l instinct of&#13;
Mr. Webster. Unci! w h e n t h e g r e a t&#13;
e x p o u n d e r was r i d i n g alone in his&#13;
chaise from Huston to Marshfield ho&#13;
overtook in Scituatc a w a g o n e r w i t h&#13;
on« horse, deeply " s t u c k in the m u d , "&#13;
w i t h a load of staves. T h e r o a d w a s&#13;
eo n a r r o w at this spot t h a t it p r e c l u d e d&#13;
t h e p a s s i n g of a n o t h e r vehicle. H o w&#13;
far Mr. W e b s t e r w a s influenced by the&#13;
q u e s t i o n of d e t e n t i o n did not appear,&#13;
"but lie i m m e d i a t e l y in a kind m a n n e r&#13;
offered his assistance to the m a n in&#13;
difficulty, which was. g l a d i y accepted.&#13;
H n v i n g ' s t r i p p e d off his coat, a t ik ho&#13;
w e n t to help his now client out of the&#13;
s l o u g h .&#13;
I n the iirst p l a c e , ho took the reins&#13;
of tho old horSe, w h i c h h e belabored&#13;
with l i g h t blows, while the c o u n t r y m a n&#13;
h o v e a t the w h e e l . T h i s p r o v i n g&#13;
ineffectual, Mr. W e b s t e r placed his&#13;
own s h o u l d e r to one of tho wheels,&#13;
w i t h t h e w a g o n e r a t the other p l y i n g&#13;
tho lash upon oUl Dobbin, but it was&#13;
" n o go.1 ' Some rails were then p r o -&#13;
c u r e d from a n e i g h b o r i n g fence a n d&#13;
t h e p o w e r of tho lever tried. T h e r e&#13;
sat tho s t a t e s m a n astride the elevated&#13;
e n d of one, t u g g i n g with all his rniglit,&#13;
now jokiug, a n d n o w e x p a t i a t i n g on the&#13;
virtues of the leyer, a n d the m a n of&#13;
A TOUCHING INCIDENT.&#13;
A \ Y o u a f f G i r l ' s D e m e n t i a — H o w i t&#13;
w a s O c c a s i o n e d — S o m e N e w&#13;
a n d S t a r t l i n g T r u t h s .&#13;
T h e St Louis e x p r e s s , o n the N e w&#13;
Y o r k C e n t r a l road, w a s crowded o n e&#13;
e v e n i a g recently, w h e n a t one of t h e&#13;
way stations, an e l d e r l y g e n t l e m a n , ac- e a t b l f t c k b e r r i e s » , . -&#13;
c o m p a n i e d by a young; l a d y , e n t e r e d ^ _ J _ -&#13;
the cars a n d l n a l l y s e c u r e d a seaT.~~X? " ~'~ "~&#13;
the c o n d u c t o r a p p r o a c h e d the pair, the&#13;
y o u n g . l a d y arose, a n d in a p l e a d i n g&#13;
voict said:&#13;
" P l e a s e , sir, d o n ' t let him c a r r y m e&#13;
to t h e a s y l u m . I a m n o t c r a z y ; 1 am a&#13;
little tired, but n e t m a d . Oh! no ins&#13;
t a v e s on the other, and each s h o u t i n g&#13;
at tho' old frame of a horse, but all t o&#13;
n o purpose. O u r h e r o was not to bo&#13;
foiled in this way, nor give u p his case&#13;
w i t h o u t another* e x p e d i e n t a n d trial.&#13;
" W e ' l l try a n o t h e r additional a r g u -&#13;
m e n t , " said he. So his own horse&#13;
w a s t a k e n from the shafts of his chaise,&#13;
and, with a p a r t of his own . h a r n e s s&#13;
a n d by means&gt;of a rope, was a t t a c h e d&#13;
-to-th-o- r e l u c t a n t In ad ahead, of t h e old&#13;
pony. There! w a s s t r e n g t h e n o u g h&#13;
n o w i r r t h e - t e a m to lift the load from&#13;
the, mire, but t h e r e was not a perfect&#13;
coincidence of eilbrt in the two horses.&#13;
He of the w a g o n was a raw-boned.&#13;
deed. W o n ' t TOU prorrxt? h a v e p a p a&#13;
t a k e m e back h o m e P ' '&#13;
T h e conductor, a c c u s t o m e d t h o u g h&#13;
ho was t-&gt; all p h a s e s of h u m a n i t y , looked&#13;
with a s t o n i s h m e n t a t t h e pair as did&#13;
tho o t n e r p a s s e n g e r s in their vicinity. A&#13;
few w o r d s from t h e fiUhor, hewever.sufficed,&#13;
a n d tho c o n d u c t o r passed ' o n&#13;
while the y o u n g l a d y t u r n e d h e r face&#13;
to tho window. T n o w r i t e r c h a n c e d to&#13;
be seated j u s t behind the old g e n t l e -&#13;
m a n a n d could not forego t h e desire&#13;
to s p e a k to him. W i t h a sad faoo a n d&#13;
a t r e m b l i n g voice t h e father said:&#13;
" M y d a u g h t e r h a s ^ e e n a t t e n d i n g t h e&#13;
s e m i n a r y in a d i s t a n t town a n d w a s&#13;
succeeding r e m a r k a b l y . H e r n a t u r a l&#13;
qualities, t o g e t h e r with a g r e a t ambition,&#13;
placed ker in the front r a n k s of ;&#13;
the school, b u t she studied too closely,&#13;
was not careful of h e r h e a l t h and h e r&#13;
t o n e s : 4I call t h e a t t e n t i o n of the men&#13;
who h a v e obeyed m o s o u n q u e s t i o n i n g l y&#13;
t h a t t h e r e lies n o t m o r e t h a n five paces&#13;
in front of t h e m t h e finest p a t c h of luscious&#13;
b l a c k b e r r i e s I ever saw in m y&#13;
life. I discovBred t h e m yesterday, a n d&#13;
after t a s t i n g t h e m I resolved to m a k e a&#13;
s e c r e t raid. A n d here we a r e . T h e&#13;
m e n will stick t h e i r rifles, bayonet d o w n ,&#13;
in the g r o u n d , a n d p r o c e e d to pick a n d&#13;
IMPORTERS, JEWELERS, AND OPTICIANS,&#13;
At least three men on the averge jury&#13;
are bound to disagree with the rest just to&#13;
show that they've got minds of their o w n ;&#13;
but there is no disagreement among the&#13;
women as to the merits of Dr. Pierce s&#13;
" JFavoritq: Prescription." They are all&#13;
tm:--a--m—m••-a uT m pro'nTuTCtng^tt ttre b e s t&#13;
r e m e d y in the world for all those chronic&#13;
diseases, weaknesses and complaints peculiar&#13;
to their sex. It transforms the&#13;
pale, haggard, dispirited woman, into o n e&#13;
of sparkling health, and the ringing laugh&#13;
again "reigns s u p r e m e " in rhe happy&#13;
household.&#13;
By a n e w electric headlight for locom&#13;
o t i v e s t h i r t y - t h r e e t e l e g r a p h poles c a n&#13;
be c o u n t e d a h e a d of the engine on a&#13;
d a r k n i g h t . T h i r t y - t h r e e poles c o v e r&#13;
a b o u t o n e mile.&#13;
&amp; H P EY.ES&#13;
DO THE1' TROUBLE YOU? HAVE THEM&#13;
EXAMINED WITH OUH NEW TEST LENSES&#13;
BY WHICH WE OFTEN SUCCEED WHEN&#13;
OTHERS KAIL,&#13;
R O E H M &amp; W R I G H T .&#13;
H E A D Q U A R T E R S&#13;
(FOP) Campaign Flags &amp; Banners.&#13;
DEAN. GODFREY &amp; Co..&#13;
67 aid l.^GrisCwoorrldes pSotn. denceD soElTicRitOedIT. , j / i t ' f l .&#13;
H U M A N C A L V E S .&#13;
worn-out animal,TTnTbther a h i g h - s p i r -&#13;
itod, powerful horse. T h e ' word to&#13;
s t a r t being given.-WH&gt;-leader, Uy -a-sud--&#13;
deu spring, would jerk his h i n d e r ' c o m -&#13;
p a n i o n d o w n upon his knees before he&#13;
was r e a d y to give a r e g u l a r " d r a w . 1 '&#13;
. T h e lash was Uien applied to the t a r d y&#13;
. a n i m a l , which w o u l d set the one of&#13;
m e t t l e to p l u n g i n g a n d kicking.&#13;
T h u s they w e n t on, a l t e r n a t e l y p u l l -&#13;
ing a n d holding back, iirst one a n d&#13;
t h e n tho other, tho .countryman " h a w -&#13;
ing a n d g e e i n g " a n d Mr. VVebster n o w&#13;
a n d then lifting his lion voice, but all&#13;
r e n d e r e d useless by w i u t of concert in&#13;
action on the p a r t of the horse; T h o&#13;
scene h a d now become one of a aighlya&#13;
m u s i n g c h a r a c t e r — tho s t a t e s m a n ' s&#13;
s t r a w hat, which h a d been t a k e n off by&#13;
the wind and l o d g e d in tho bushes, his&#13;
s w a r t h y features s w e a t i n g in the h o t&#13;
sun, his polished boots a n d line linen&#13;
considerably b e s m e a r e d with m u d . So&#13;
a m u s i n g had the scene now become&#13;
t h a t my informant, wjio had bean a&#13;
concealed s p e c t a t o r behind an e l d e r&#13;
h e d g e which divided the r o a d from t h e&#13;
m e a d o w where ho w a s at work, involu&#13;
n t a r i l y g a v e a n audible laugh. T h i s&#13;
i m m e d i a t e l y c a u g h t tho c a r of Mr.&#13;
W e b s t e r . " H o w is t h i s ? " said h e ;&#13;
" w o have an evidence in the c a s e&#13;
w h i c h m u s t be b r o u g h t on to help u s&#13;
c a r r y our p o i n t . "&#13;
T h e n a r r a t o r was accordingly d i s -&#13;
covered and s u m m o n e d to the s t a n d ,&#13;
a n d by this a d d i t i o n a l a i d ~ t h c mun in&#13;
l i m b o was soon s e t on his legs a g a i n .&#13;
His jojT at deliverance was g r e a t a n d&#13;
Ills t h a n k s profuse. "Bv _gorry." s a i d&#13;
he, " w e m u s t h a v e a d r o p of something"&#13;
totaled after such a t u g , " a n d p r o -&#13;
d u c e d a q u a r t Husk and a tin t u m b l e r&#13;
from his w a g o n r - Mr. W e b s t e r k i n d l y&#13;
consented, at his e a r n e s t solicitation,&#13;
to p a r t a k e of a little of iiis beverage,&#13;
diluted with w a t e r from the brook,&#13;
c o u n s e l i n g him, by way of a toast, t o&#13;
kocp himself clear in future of the l a w&#13;
and 'mud-holes. After r e a r r a n g i n g&#13;
m a t t e r s , and a p a r t i a l ablution in t h e&#13;
brook, Mr. W e b s t e r took hisy d e p a r t -&#13;
ure. T h o a s t o n i s h m e n t of tho coun«&#13;
t r y m a n was g r e a t w h e n informed t h a t&#13;
it w a s n o less a m a n t h a n t h e g r e a t&#13;
D a n i e l W e b s t e r w h o had' been lifting&#13;
a n d p r y i n g at the wheels, a n d h o&#13;
ttemnfy d e c l a r e d t h a t h e would h a v e&#13;
his vote for the n e x t p r e s i d e n t . — B e n :&#13;
Perky Foorc in Boston Budget.&#13;
A N e w Coin.&#13;
p o o r brain has been t u r n e d . I a m taking&#13;
h e r to a p r i v a t e a s y l u m w h e r e we&#13;
hope she will soon be better.1 '&#13;
At t h e n e x t s t a t i o n t h e old m a n a n d j l " n S s ) * s°!"es&gt;. u i c e " &lt;&#13;
nis d a u g h t e r left t h e c a r s , but the inci- k l n d r « &gt; a u c t i o n s . Dr&#13;
d e n t so s u g g e s t i v e of S h a k e s p u a r o ' s&#13;
Ophelia, a w a k e n e d s t r a n g e t h o u g h t s in&#13;
t h e m i n d o f the w r i t e r . I t is an absolute&#13;
fact t h a t w h i l e t h e p o p u l a t i o n of&#13;
A m e r i c a increased t h i r y p e r c e n t d u r i n&#13;
A n exchange says:—"Nine-tenths; of&#13;
the u n h a p p y marriages result from human&#13;
calves being allowed to run at large&#13;
in society pastures." Nine-tenths of the&#13;
chronic or lingering diseases of to-day&#13;
originate in impure blood, liver complaint&#13;
01 biliousness, resulting in scrofula, consumption&#13;
(which is but scrofula of the&#13;
kin diseases and&#13;
Pierce's '.-Golden&#13;
Medical Discovery" cures all these. Of&#13;
Druggists.&#13;
tWtfecaa^elbM&#13;
sanity increase was over one hundred and&#13;
thirty-Jive p e r c e n t for t h e s a m e period.&#13;
T r a v e l l e r s by rail, by boat, or in c a r -&#13;
r i a g e s in any p a r t of the l a u d , see l a r g e&#13;
and e l a b o r a t e buildings, nod inquire&#13;
w h a t t h e y a r e .&#13;
I n i a i i &amp; j ^ y l u m s !&#13;
W h o . b u i l d s t h e m ?&#13;
E a c h s t a t e ; every c o u n t y ; h u u d r t c U&#13;
of p r i v a t e individuals, a n d in all c a t e s&#13;
their c a p a c i t v is taxed t o tho utmost.&#13;
W h y ? "'&#13;
Because m e n , in business a n d t h e&#13;
p r o f u s i o n s , w o m e n , a t h o m e or in society,&#13;
and c h i l d r e n a t schaol o v e r t a x&#13;
their m e n t a l a n d n e r v o u s forces by&#13;
work, w o r r y a n d c a r e . T h i s b r i n g s&#13;
a b o u t nervous disorders, indigestion&#13;
a n d eventually m a n i a .&#13;
I t is not always tjoublt? with tho h e a d&#13;
t h a t causes insanitj'. I t far oftcner&#13;
arises from evtrs-in o t h e r p a r t s of. t h e&#13;
body. T h e n e r v o u s s y s t e m d e t e r m i n e s&#13;
the s t a t u s of the brain. A n y one w h o&#13;
lnv« pcriodi'.j hqjul a c h e s ; occasional&#13;
dizziness; a dimness of vision; a r i n g -&#13;
ing in the e m s ; 'a feverish h e a d : freq&#13;
u e n t n a u s e a or a -sinking at the p i t&#13;
of the s t o m a c h , should tnko w a r n i n g&#13;
at unco. T h e st-.nmn.eh Rr.d hrrid ^T/P in&#13;
d i n et s y m p a t h y nnd if ono be i m p a i r e d&#13;
t h e o t h e r ' can never bo in o r d e r .&#13;
A e u i e dyspepsia c a u s e s m o r e i n s a s e&#13;
suicides t h a n a n y ocher k n o w n a g e n c y ,&#13;
a n d the m a n , w o m a n or child whose&#13;
s t o m a c h is d e r a n g e d , ,-s not a n d c a n n o t&#13;
be safe from t h e c o m i n g on a' a n y&#13;
m o m e n t of m a n i a in some o n e&#13;
of its m a n y t e r r i b l e forms.&#13;
T h e value of m o d e r a t i o n a n d iho i m -&#13;
p e r a t i v e necessity "of~"caT\'r~irf~kceping&#13;
tho s t o m a c h r i g h t m u s t therefore "be&#13;
c l e t r to all, T h e least a p p e a r a n c e of&#13;
iniiijrnxt.lrin. nr-mal-nfisimihilirm of fond&#13;
A C i n c i n n a t i l a w y e r has u p ttie sign.&#13;
" N o politics discussed except on busin&#13;
e s s . "&#13;
G&#13;
. . . . T h e pile tumors cured TuHferT&#13;
days, rupture-&gt; in one month. Phamphlet&#13;
two (jCt.) .-tamps. World's Dispensary&#13;
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
San key denies tho r e p o r t t h a t he has&#13;
lent iiis voice. H e expect.? to g o on&#13;
vitii his work t h e c o m i n g a u t u m n .&#13;
a r b o l i s a l v e is the favorite HonsohcM&#13;
Uemedy for the cure of Cuts, Wounds, Chilblrunes,&#13;
Poisons, Bites of Inserts, and Skin (licenses.&#13;
Get the Kenuine. 'JOc (inrt7&amp;c., at DrunsjiHts&#13;
•"!'&gt;• (r.iiil. J. W . C O L E fitCO^Bha-k liivcr Fulls, \Vi„.&#13;
T h e ^ F o r r W o i t h ('TRzette says t h e inc&#13;
r e a s e d t a x on c a t t l e for 1883 over t h a t&#13;
of 1882 ^ ^ 8 ^ 7 ^ 8 7 . 2 3 5 .&#13;
Ono reason wby dis'.'ascfi of the bladder aud&#13;
urinary orgaus are so difficult, to cur&lt;; Is that&#13;
th'ev frequently have tio pronounced svmn'cms.&#13;
HUNT'S [Kidney and IvyerJ ^EiiEnv U peculiarly&#13;
adapted to The cure of tbesc&#13;
ccrapiaints, and go«-« at once to the scat 61 the&#13;
trouble plving relief at once.&#13;
N e b r a s k a furnished t h e largest p a i r&#13;
of c a t t l e on exhibition at the K a n s a s&#13;
City F a t Stock Show.&#13;
I n v a l i d L a d l e s A U e u t l o u .&#13;
F o r full p a r t i c u l a r s in r e g a r d to tho&#13;
new. (piiek.and painless method of curing&#13;
F K M A L E D I S E A S E S , so far as- to"&#13;
J ay- nshlo all s u p p o r t e r s and -pres.sarios.&#13;
W r i t e to I)vs.' P e t e r r n a u , M a r s h a l l ,&#13;
M i c h i g a u . N . B . —All Physicians c a n&#13;
q u i c k l y cuT;e t h e i r invalid lady patient::&#13;
With this t r e a t m e n t .&#13;
N e a r Q u i j a t o a , Arizona, while the&#13;
p r o s p e c t o r s were c x a m i n i u g the l e d g e ,&#13;
they pried out a sheet of native c o p p e r ,&#13;
HAY-FEVER&#13;
C A T A R R H ' 1 " ™ ™ "&#13;
I can recommend&#13;
Ely's Cre&lt;un Balm&#13;
to all Hay Fever sufferers,&#13;
it being, In&#13;
my opinion, founded&#13;
upon experience&#13;
and a sure cure,. I&#13;
was fcinlcted with&#13;
Hay Fever for twenty-&#13;
five year?, and&#13;
never befor:-. found&#13;
permanent relief.—&#13;
W B B S T S B H. H A S -&#13;
Kixs.Ma'-shfleldrVt.&#13;
C r e a m B a l m is a remedy fou/ided|on a correct&#13;
diagnoisof this (iisp.-i^; ;tp(j .-.in hp. dgpt»n.lt..t upon.&#13;
50c at drus'tri'-.ts; 6cc by mnil, sample bottle by mail&#13;
10c,^ ELY BROS,,Druggists O v . ^ o , X, Y,&#13;
ROGKFORDWATGHES&#13;
Are unequalled hi EXACTING SJER VICE*&#13;
VzeA by t h e Chief&#13;
M e c h a n i c i a n of t h e&#13;
IT. sj. Coast S u r v e y :&#13;
••oinman'l ins in t h e&#13;
L . &gt;'. N a v a l Observatory,&#13;
f«&lt;r A s t r o -&#13;
n o m i c a l '.vork; a n d&#13;
b y L o c o m o t i v e&#13;
L i i f f i n u L ' r s , Con«&#13;
ductorn an«i K a i l -&#13;
w a y m e n . T h e y a r o&#13;
r e c o g n i z e d a s&#13;
,for a l l U8J8 in w h i c h c l o s e&#13;
t i m e and d u r a b i l i t y are rej&#13;
o.u'*ite8. S o l d in principal&#13;
fitit&gt;s and to«Tff*J&gt;y tlu* COMPANY'S&#13;
exclii*ivo A e e n t s&#13;
CUadiacJeweleri.) w i i o g i v o a FiiU W u r r a n t y .&#13;
LOSS AND GAIN,&#13;
CHAJTBK I.&#13;
"I was taken elck aye»r a^o&#13;
With bilious fever"&#13;
"'My doctor pronounced me cured, but I got&#13;
elck atfain, with terrible pains In my back and&#13;
sides, and 1 got so bad 1&#13;
Could not move!&#13;
I aurunk!&#13;
From 32« lbs. to 1201 i had been doctoring&#13;
for my live-,but It did me no good. I did not expcetto&#13;
lire mart, tbanttbiei uiontha&lt; I bt)»»nuse&#13;
HOP Bitters.plrectly my appetite returned,&#13;
my painfJeft me, my entire system renewed&#13;
as if b / masrlc, and after using w-vsral battles,&#13;
I am not only as sound as a sovereign, but&#13;
weigh more than I did before. To Hop Bitters&#13;
I owe my life." R. FITZPATKCCK.&#13;
Dublin. Jmu: '• 81.&#13;
fSBAVTKH I I . —&#13;
"Maldui, Mats , Feb. 1 ISio. GeLtlemen-&#13;
I Buffered with attacks of oick headache "&#13;
Neuralfiia, female trouble, for yeare in the&#13;
moet terrible and excruciating manner.&#13;
No medicine or doctor could inve me r^iei&#13;
or cure, until I used Hop Bitters. u Tbe first bottle&#13;
•Nearly cured m e ; "&#13;
The second made me a* well and btnn&lt;* as&#13;
fffcen a child, , m&#13;
"And I have'been so to thic d a } . "&#13;
My husband was au iuvalid for twenty rears&#13;
with a serious "&#13;
"Kidney, liver and urfnary complaint&#13;
I know oftb?'8 ° f y &amp; U t B l t t e r S CUI*ed hlm a a d&#13;
"Lives of "eight person*"&#13;
yo"u.r ^bXitt^erVs, ^ ^ ^ ^ d . ^ a t bave beun saved by&#13;
DeAnnendt .m any more are ualnjrthem&#13;
"Th«yalmoFt&#13;
Do miracles V&#13;
How&#13;
with great&#13;
—JTw. E.D. Mack.&#13;
TO GKT SICK.—Expose vaumplf ^Q«.&#13;
MdDjRKl; eat too much w l t t S H S c t e ?&#13;
work too hard without rest: doctor all 'he&#13;
time; take all the vile nostrums advisS and^&#13;
2 « i y o u w I ! I w . n t to know AoW toS'S&#13;
Bitters !9 a n s , v e r e d ! n t h r e e w o n t e - T f i l Hop&#13;
„Bg""None genuine without- •'bunch of ereen&#13;
Hops oa the white label. Shun-all th&lt;f S&#13;
poisonous stuff with "Hopper "Hops" in theS&#13;
YOUNG MEN&#13;
CAN SAVE MONEY fiY ATTENDING THE&#13;
Btff&amp;fi&#13;
Tho reputation of&#13;
Ki&gt;s.tetter'» Stomach&#13;
Bitters m si prev&#13;
e n t i v e ut eptdent'-&#13;
ics, ;i stomachic&#13;
an inviKurant.a general.&#13;
restora.Uve.and&#13;
u specific for fever&#13;
a n d iiifue, indigestion,&#13;
billions affections,&#13;
r h e u m a t i s m ,&#13;
nervutiB d e b i l i ty.&#13;
constitutional weak&#13;
nes»», is established&#13;
upen the found basis&#13;
of m o r e t h a n&#13;
t w e n t y years experteuce,&#13;
nod can&#13;
no m o r e be shaken&#13;
by t h e claptrap nost&#13;
r u m s cit unsctentitte&#13;
pretenders,tha i&#13;
t h e ev«rlustintj ntlls&#13;
by tho wind t h m&#13;
rustle through their&#13;
deftles. Kor side t&gt;y&#13;
nil drutfclst.t and&#13;
d e a l e r s avuo ally.&#13;
College at Kalamazoo, Mich. Send for Journal.&#13;
•F. If". PARSONS, fres't.&#13;
one foot in l e n g t h&#13;
a n d ono inch iti t (&#13;
t&gt; four in bivndt!&#13;
should bo w a t c h e d :is carefully us iho&#13;
liv&amp;t a p p r o a c h of an i n v a d i n g a r m y .&#13;
M a n y m e n n s i:avo&#13;
,1,&#13;
been&#13;
— F r n n " " hnr j u s t nHmititfjilntfrfjMTowship&#13;
tho latest a d d i t i o n to tho g r e a t&#13;
family of E u r o p e a n coins. T h o coin&#13;
c a n n o t be called a success. I n t h e&#13;
case of k i n g d o m s or e m p i r e s t h e n u -&#13;
m i s m a t i s t has n o t m u c h scope for i n d e -&#13;
p e n d e n t design. T h e h e a d of t h o&#13;
r e i g n i n g sovereign neccssawly-oxicupies&#13;
-oaie surface. T h o execution of course,&#13;
' v T M i c s w i t h tho skTlt"oTTtiO'"engraver.&#13;
P r o b a b l y t h e t w o h a n d s o m e s t m o d e r n&#13;
coins a r e tho sovereign of G e o r g e I V&#13;
a n d t h e 4Q-franc_j&gt;lece of N a p o l e o n t h o&#13;
G r e a t , with the legcncT d e s c r i b i n g liim&#13;
a s K i n g of Italy. B u t w h e n tho fancy&#13;
of t h o a r t i s t is allowed scope, t h e r e -&#13;
s u l t is m o r o i n t e r e s t i n g . T h u s t h e g u l -&#13;
d e n a a d thaler, of F r a n k f o r t , w h e n i t&#13;
w a s still a free t o w n , . h a d a v e r y b e a u -&#13;
tiful f e m a l e head, a p o r t r a i t of t h e a c -&#13;
t r e s s J a n a u s c h e k , slightly idealized.&#13;
T h e n e w Swiss coin is s i n g u l a r l y c o m -&#13;
m o n p l a c e . Ono side r e p r e s e n t s t h a t&#13;
fat, "expressionles s h e a d of H e l v e t i a&#13;
u s e d o n t h e r e c e n t nickel coinage, b u t&#13;
n o t o n t h e silver pieces, w i t h t h e L a t i n&#13;
l e g e n d , " C o n f o d e r a t i o H e l v e t i c a . " T h e&#13;
—Gtncrjjide-llias i h e Swiss cro_ss1_withr&#13;
d a t o a n d v a l u e , s u r r o u n d e d by a g a r -&#13;
l a n d . T h o n e w piece is a n addition,&#13;
b u t n o t a n o r n a m e n t , to.jtho gold coina&#13;
g e of E u r o p e . •&#13;
T h o cnttlo n o w o w n e d in C o l o r a d o&#13;
advocated for&#13;
m e e t i n g such a t t a c k s , but all h a v e&#13;
heretofore been m o r e o r less defective.&#13;
T h e r e can be little d o u b t however, t h a t&#13;
for t h e p u i p o s o of r e g u l a t i n g the s t o m -&#13;
ach, t o n i n g it u p t o p r o p e r action,&#13;
k e e p i n g its n e r v e s in a n o r m a l c o n d i -&#13;
tion, a n d p u r i f y i n g t h e blood, W a r n e r ' s&#13;
T i p p e c a n o e T h e Best excels all a n c i e n t&#13;
or r e c e n t discoveries. I t is absolutely&#13;
p u r e a n d v e g e t a b l e ; it is c e r t a i n to a d d&#13;
vigor to a d u l t s , while it c a n n o t by a n y&#13;
possibility injure even a child. T h e&#13;
fact t h a t it was u s e d in t h e d a y s of t h e&#13;
f a m o u s H a r r i s o n f a m i l y is proof positive&#13;
of its m e r i t s as it h a s so t h o r o u g h -&#13;
stood the test of t i m e . As a tonic a n d&#13;
revivirier it is s i m p l y wonderful. I t&#13;
has relieved the a g o n y of- t h e s t o m a c h&#13;
in'.thousands cf cases;.soothed t h e t i r e d&#13;
n e r v e s , p r o d u c e d peaceful sleep a n d&#13;
avtvrtcHt the c o m i n g on uf u r m a n i a - m o m&#13;
io be d r e a d e d t h a n d e a t h itself.&#13;
Rewivroofthe tnclpiertt-st.'wes&#13;
Take i'no's (Jure in time. of consumption&#13;
iiH'kuos?.&#13;
B&#13;
INDIAN'HISTORY.&#13;
CHENEY'S&#13;
Stomach $ Liver&#13;
REGSHTOR&#13;
CURES CONSTIPATION,&#13;
. . LYD1A C. PINKHAM'S • •&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
*«* is A rosrnvi: CUKE FOU * . &lt;&#13;
All tiiose painful. Complaint*&#13;
* anil Weaknesses so com man *&#13;
* * * * * * to our best * * * * * *&#13;
* * FEMALE POPVLATION. »- »&#13;
Prlft $1 la ll«aJd, pi)! or loztage fans.&#13;
* Tfs purpose is solely fev the Ugiti.nati healiny of&#13;
disease and the relief of jxu'n, asii that it doej all&#13;
it claims to do, thousands of ladies can gladly testify. •&#13;
* It wiU cure entirety ull Ovarian troubles, Inflaairaa&#13;
tiun and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, anu&#13;
consequent Spinal Weakness, aad id particularly&#13;
:iJaj&gt;tu'd to the change of life. • « * • • » • # • « • « •&#13;
* It removes Kaiistnisx, Flatulenrv.cV^stroysaU craving&#13;
v^r ctiimilant.&lt;, and roL-'v^x Weakness of the Stomach,&#13;
I : cares iiloating, )U (niacin s; Nervnu.* lYoxtrntmn,&#13;
Gvn.ral IVbility, Sleeplessness. Di.'jjfesiUon and Iiuligestioiu&#13;
That teelin^ of l&gt;..-.iniiff down, ^ausjnjr rjain,&#13;
and baclrachi\ is alw wrs rx-imiiientlv en red by its use.&#13;
* Send stamp to Lynn, iLiss., t'orpmnpt!&lt;&gt;t. Letters of&#13;
inquiry conlldentUliy answered. /•'.&gt;»• sale at druggUts.&#13;
Pr oK&#13;
The Icdian of falcon /,'lanon and lion V-cariu,&#13;
theme of toucbhm; bal!u«'i is? *:OIH&gt;; but Petr^.&#13;
leuui :hey discovered, now made into Ci\roi&#13;
line, the National Un^-^xhtrrr. .';&gt;ftv4W^^u-&#13;
TorpidLiror, Icdipcstion, LTfartburn, Malaria,&#13;
Klicuraati-m. I'liljiiutioa of the Heart when&#13;
r.r^ irnrfronrrnrrrjtrjtroTJ -orrlrransed conditt&amp;ar&#13;
'••i the 8tomac).2, Siei ITendaehe or Mig^aia,&#13;
r:!ti«. nad Femr.lo coiaplaiats. The oaly med- ; ' m i n the- world thai&#13;
U.S. STANDARD _&#13;
J ONES! WAeQM SCALES&#13;
O F I * " " ' " " BViGHAMTGld SS&#13;
T^rt B«»m tnd Btun Eox,&#13;
and JONES he ,-.»!» iMfrtlght—for fr»&#13;
Pr;c« L!&lt;t m«nU&gt;n thtl B*p«r and&#13;
•ddreM JOMESOF BINSHAHrON,&#13;
DiaeliaxMtoa. N. V.&#13;
l O r a n&#13;
p o d cToto"&#13;
d r a w e r .&#13;
3 nU l e m o n s&#13;
iu s o n p a p e r&#13;
kr.ep best w r a p -&#13;
Trarr l a i d in a&#13;
S i .00 T&gt;rr bottle : (i 'oott'.eB, 83.00* '&#13;
^ When you visit or ioave Xt:w Vork L'ir.y, v:.i&#13;
Crntrul aepot gave Baggage Express-.i&lt;z&lt;' u\'A&#13;
t&amp; Carriage Hire and ttopat the Grund Vn'mv.&#13;
II"tel, opposite saidde(&gt;ot. Six luadroil il--&#13;
p;ant rocras fitted up at the cost , i cvc. inillo:;&#13;
dollars: #1 and upward pur dav.—Eur^pr.'tifplaij.&#13;
Elevator and Ri&gt;staUrat t supplied with&#13;
the best. Hor*e cars, etatres aad.i-ievated railroad&#13;
to all depots. Families can Hvt horti-r&#13;
fories* tnoaev at the Grand Union Hotel :l:av'&#13;
at any other first-class hotel in the.eirv_..&#13;
P a t t i ' s p r o p e r t y iu W a l e s is wort:!&#13;
8300,000; h e r d i a m o n d s about $-200.000..&#13;
a n d h e r m o n e y i n v e s t m e n t s a r c v a i u c d&#13;
at twice these a m o u n t s .&#13;
E7ery nervous person should {try Carter's&#13;
Little NERVE Pills. They ar- made esu-eii'-&#13;
ly for nervous and dyspectio men and \v'onu:&gt;,&#13;
a:idarejii&lt;t the raediclre needeil by nil v&gt;crsous&#13;
who, from any c;use, do not sleep wel;,&#13;
or who fail to gcf. proper strength from f.f'eir&#13;
food. Cases of weak stomach, dndfgottlor,&#13;
'"TTVFpepsirtr-ij^fvauji--and_siek_Jieadachi\ A •.,&#13;
retidlly jfeld to the use of tfie~ LittleT^TTTr-&#13;
Vilts, particularly if combined with Carter's&#13;
Little Liytr Tills. 11-&gt; viais.at £5 cents.&#13;
i-ssr) yoiuc:act'i.A:".s, vr.2L.&#13;
F. J . C K E t f E Y ii C O . , P r o p ' r s ,&#13;
T O L E D O , O .&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, ItlirSiC. Vocal anil Instrumental and Tuning.&#13;
- A t t T - Draaia^ i'-Unting, ModeLns ar.4-P-&gt;&gt;Ftt*liaT*,&#13;
J U t A T O U l . L i t e r a t u r e a n d I^anirnasec.&#13;
HO."&gt;l£. K!t&gt;r;;Tit accommodations for 600 ladvstunejiti&#13;
-a-Wl^.fj T1IH3I beiano t'rpttllth. beautifully Iil a&#13;
('al'iKjiir free. Ad,1r&lt;S3 K. TOt'KJER, Director.&#13;
F K A X K L m M i U A B E , B O S T O N , M A S S&#13;
The r.fYi:ns' (It'ini: is Issued Sept. !&#13;
-and Man4*reaf4*-yeftr-i 221-pages, S \ x 1 H i&#13;
inches, with ovor J 5 , 3 0 0 illustrations— j&#13;
a whole picture gallery. Gives wholesales 'j&#13;
prices divert to consumers on all goods for j&#13;
personal or ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ family use. j&#13;
Tolls how to / ¾ ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ..order, and&#13;
gives exact Sff^ ^ B cost of everything&#13;
you 8 R ^m use, drink,&#13;
cat, wear, or V M V h a v e fun&#13;
with. These ^ ^ H ^ ^ " invaluable&#13;
hooks contain information gleaned from&#13;
the markets of t!u&gt;world. \\"e will mail&#13;
a copy F r e e to any-address upon receipt&#13;
of tliG postage'-S cents. Let us hear&#13;
from you. » Kespec tfullv,&#13;
rVIONTGOMERY WARD &amp;. CO.&#13;
SJ57 A- 220 Wabuoh ATCnue. Chicago. IU.&#13;
S3ESS23H3 CUSES WilERE ALL ELS! FAILS.&#13;
i'ts: 0011^1¾ SSy rap. Tastes good.&#13;
Use in time. Sold by draggiata. •Aissni&#13;
BTJSTXESS COI.T.EGE,&#13;
{Kstabllshed ISTtiJ lT6Plumsu&#13;
/ Detroit, Mich.,is the placo to&#13;
'A xi»ecureaUioroushbu5laes»edueatlon.&#13;
Book*«»ping, axithnrtic,&#13;
crnrnmar, b«stnei*s and: ornamentaJ pf'nmaaship.&#13;
Threenjontha, $13, JLifo scholarship,^.&#13;
OLDIER • h^ir* r.end st'.imfi forcircix-''&#13;
i-, showing who is entitled&#13;
r&lt;i fensior" bounty, lie. i . C'.&#13;
WOOD, Pension Atty., k'.xshingtoc, t&gt;. C s&#13;
w . i f . u . i&gt;«a--3t&#13;
5SB,£l ^S«rt.:.lMo Cubit S'arod t a U&#13;
UixVfinj*. \in pji,r n it C a r e d .&#13;
Uu. J. oTiLi'uiw&gt;^, Lebunoa, Ohl(fc&#13;
A n E c o a n t r i c O a p t a i n .&#13;
Our captainJ'vas s t r n i g u t&#13;
Are v at ¢40,(00,000.&#13;
u p a r i l&#13;
down di^ciplinariftu, a n d was a l w a y s&#13;
ru.-hinc u s i n i o a i J g h t . " .said a v e t e r a n&#13;
to a 'Chicago l u t e r - O c e a n iyoasiper.&#13;
• O n e day, while in earup in W e s t \T ir-&#13;
-gtrtt*. be-tmlered t b o - c o m p a r y l o H n e d&#13;
i u liffl)" lighting o r d e r , a n d . c o m i n g o u t&#13;
of his tout, placed himself a t the h e a d ,&#13;
and without e x p l a n a t i o n we m a r c h e d&#13;
a w a y at a s w e e p i n g q u i c k s t e p . S c a r c e -&#13;
ly a." ;vord w a s s p o k e n during; t h a t&#13;
m a r c h of three or four mites u p a&#13;
m o u n t a i n road, but, as t h o c a p t a i n directed&#13;
tho m a r c h aloDff a bridle p a t h ,&#13;
tho boys n o d d e d to e a c h o t h e r as m u c h&#13;
as to sayV " " T £ i s ~ i i i e a n s t r o u b l e for&#13;
s o m e b o d y . ' 1 ' W e m o v e d alone: this p a t h&#13;
u n t i l wo c a m e to a r i d g e . Wo s k i r t e d&#13;
t h e e d g e of this until c a m o tho o r d e r t o&#13;
front face a n d deploy. W e w e n t u p&#13;
tEeTull s t u m b l i n g uver stones and—briar?,&#13;
tho c a p t a i n e x e r t i n g himself, t o&#13;
k e e p t h e line w i t h o u t a k i n k o r c u r v e .&#13;
S u d d e n l y he g a v e tho o r d e r t o h a l t a n d&#13;
to fix b a y o n e t s ; - Thir-fcoyfr-fcega&amp;-*o~&#13;
t h i n k t h e old c o d g e r h a d lost his senses&#13;
w h e n he t h u n d e r e d ~ w r t in m e a s u r e d&#13;
HAY FEVEH. One ana out-half bottles &gt;f&#13;
Eiv\s t'ream liahn entirely cured me of 11 -y&#13;
Fevu' of ten je.'ir.s' f tamlim:. Have; Juul no&#13;
trace of it for two ye»-:rs.—ALBEUT A. I'EitiiY,&#13;
Srutthitoro. N Y. ' Trice 5Dc.&#13;
KKUVOUS Weakness, !&gt;y&lt;ipppsitv, Sexual&#13;
curetl r&gt;y Wolfs Health Kencwer. De'JiKty&#13;
roaitively cure STCKH/'iDAOlfB, U.'.iousne^s. nrji* r,&#13;
ft&#13;
. T ^&#13;
BLOOD 5pdfsON.'_I-ici .S-.i&gt;v r.^o.-jivij^OJJ'/" TILiJ" X'_DOSi:j....^0^ F|emal*»_CojjpiAlnto* t h e i e P i l i i&#13;
n w o i:0 equal. ** I&#13;
•In tu:.' prftotlof I&#13;
-»i: f o r &amp;f&gt; *!*• I n&#13;
i*.-:n avn)\ .ib!» f .-•b.irt^ .via 3" i"or ViU.—Dv. T. M&#13;
j i-.tiwr. — .t._Don:::»on. M.Tv.. 1 &gt; W&#13;
Eli and B O W E L Cotapl-iiaU, MAT.AB.TJ ~ _ " *P aCloawepru, UMnotno ttteheelileo ,P TUla1_,-&#13;
;r^t , al.o Jvo-fVt-'N s8o0a1r 4 &amp;fl vccory.w. sUoeerex,o oaru e«nt b* XXAJC&#13;
HAY FKVEK 1 waa&#13;
'Tt*j~tr&amp;Vef~T0~f 2f&gt; years.&#13;
Balm ami tl.'e ett'ect wn&lt;&#13;
perfect C U K . — W M . 1\&#13;
Tastor, Eiizabetb N". «i.&#13;
severely arlliete.1 with ! •&#13;
I trleit- Kly's Cff«Hvf&#13;
imrvelou*. It is a !&#13;
1/AKR, Presbyfcriau I&#13;
Pri^' 5L'c. " !&#13;
STINGING irritation. Inflammation, all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary Complaints, cured by "liuchu Palbft." $1. $500 CASH .IE!&#13;
rnticCon-LivKKOiLmado from seiectod livers&#13;
on the se*-shore, by ("A.SVVKU«HAZAHO&amp;VO., New&#13;
York. Itts abaolutety pure and sweet. Patient*&#13;
who hare once taxen It to all other*. Physicians&#13;
hare decided It superior to any of the other oils in&#13;
market.&#13;
CHAPFKnllAViH KACK. PiMPi-ts audrougnski&#13;
cured by uittm Juniper Tar Soap, made by &lt;'A&#13;
WBJJ* HAZAltD Jtco.. New York.&#13;
BBD-BUGS, fllw, roaonos, ants, mice, cleared out&#13;
by "ROUGH ON RATS." -&#13;
all who are sutferlnji rroWT^&#13;
yduVnTnerT«&gt;&#13;
of manhood, Ac. LwAlL*e.nAr.eu&amp;^T*ce,P* t h a i "l"&#13;
A C A R l &gt; - T o&#13;
rors of youtnTnerT«us weakness, early ate cay. loss&#13;
cure you, PREH'OF ClIAKCte&#13;
was cfisi&#13;
,_, , \hts(treat remedy&#13;
coveoed by &lt;OBla*tunary in Sonth America.&#13;
Rend self-stressed onvelope is KfiV. JO«UPiI T.&#13;
tWMAitvmewwr^VN^w-yogk. 1&#13;
"itoUQH ON RATS" dears out rats, mlcejlie*&#13;
roaches, bed bugs, unts, rfrmln, chipmunks. Me.&#13;
J Ttfroffer the above amaUnt of money and T l W » X T - M V i S ©OI^U W-4.TCMBB, F r e e to 1&#13;
the first 1 * 8 Persons answering tlie followln* Bible ouestlon: Wh&lt;-re t i U i e w o r a ttraad&gt;&#13;
1 snother found in the B i b l e 1 Mention the Tiook, Chapter a n d T e » e . " .&#13;
The nrst porson1m4wcrl&amp;« this question correctly, on or before October 15th, wiltrecetre f75 cash,&#13;
i it wSZiclll° 1lur^ thanjeaacorrect »aswer, the second will receive #70: the thtnLW; the fourth. «35;&#13;
1 thirteenth. «3; thirty-five 6 0 L f r W A T C H l 9 to ttoe next thiryr-flTe correct iaawers, and one dollar&#13;
each to the next one hundred peoJrhKanswerlng It correctly. If yoa are not first,remember tlut'&#13;
you may be second or third, so you stand rgood chance for; a large prlie. Each competitor must U j&#13;
evTetrHyfE casJeR, sXenJd3 fFiOtE ce, ntsl |fo| r« JSiafm%pl4e fpMa i&#13;
* Huca as the ciMwut-u iieadd or Europe use. lu&#13;
ROYAL with their answers.&#13;
UNADULTERATED W W% W# % # \m^/ L X C ^ D _&#13;
u tlie cruvi-ut-a Imported direct&gt;^Th« first time the'Roral Tea ha^ev.r j&#13;
beru unreduced In Amerio*. A revolution to American le%tt^^ 0^^^r^»c^r\T^u\&#13;
u»r.d la the RoyaU&gt;«. The fresh 1^V&lt;M a-drle&lt;l and prepared^^h^away «t&lt;IretalcitJiSclr&#13;
or.t^v --Ci.-*,! ;i strength anil body. One trial of RoWsTea and you will forever&#13;
E I A X OPCJBJK ! To introduce&#13;
Roya}-TTi; vfF*S5tt^™^&#13;
delicate aroma aud fiV or, to^oCi.-r w&#13;
I r¥?5?X wi:it »U Imjmre. hiKii f.vlor*'-! una poisonous articles. S P £ C I A X . O'&#13;
dtlnie, lith.) ea&#13;
i uny H.iiivi&gt;ss o;i rei-efpt ofonl^ij cents, one pound^ba&#13;
&gt;\ Royal loa so you pay nothing fi—&#13;
• SSOO more tcTpe&#13;
l^hlaJrcaJn Aia^rica.KjijtLU^xjLlluiiiudjIme, (until October ma,) send (sample l&#13;
i&gt; H,17in&gt;sso;nvefpt o f o n l ^ J cents, one pound^boxTprepi&#13;
achdedaitpio nfo tro n tahneip o thei prize*, we offer to-T&gt;leo r^ Mcovmldepde teionug afollry ;o n(«e5 o fe strhhe) a tboo vt*h e nr?&#13;
•^aJm^pr^leP R*o™ya*l! T1*ea' . "eDTbaHfn tmt «o»ntehye w c to ri rbeec pt raonmswpetlry t soeinnte t oa tbhoev es uqcuceesssdfoual oanneds ,s endlnjj II for one-poua&#13;
orter, postal note, or regUtercd letter. S a p t w a i a , but lendyour u&#13;
stamps taken. ruU tnstruj^ions to a^nts hew U m»W W » day&#13;
[ with eaeh sample box # L A 4 4 m » M A V ^ X J C , t S T&#13;
A&#13;
Send one dollar In P. O.'&#13;
your answer as once. Postage&#13;
IntroduclDg ths Royal T£a_gixeaJ&#13;
4 » UU» SL, Chfcago, C ^&#13;
3 «&#13;
\i&#13;
3S3S&#13;
jOUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
r ~ ' HOWELL..&#13;
From our Correspondent,&#13;
Ed. JL Nay lor has. sold his entire&#13;
jstock of Hardware, and contemplates aj&#13;
wrcafcward movemeat»-T&#13;
S. 13. Lock wood-J^ayery fine hick&#13;
pry pole—Cleveland and Hendrick&#13;
to be raised this week.&#13;
The fippublican rally on Monday&#13;
flight- wa.s la-rflflly att.pndpd, many _oi&#13;
the audience being in uniform. A&#13;
£ne tqrcn-light procession fcheaded b)&#13;
Wo bands drew well. Gen'l Packard&#13;
proved to be a fine speaker and bis&#13;
speech will be a lasting benefit to his&#13;
party here.&#13;
Archie McConnel will be examined&#13;
before Justice Riddle on Friday next?&#13;
on a charge of simple, larceny, preferred&#13;
by Mrs. Link.&#13;
Ezra Whittaker wag buried here on&#13;
Sunday, wtth Military honors.&#13;
TbejCleveland—Hendricks club holds&#13;
\A weekly meetings in Mozart Hall,&#13;
and evinces considerable energy.&#13;
• ^ " T&#13;
PETI;T aiURORS.&#13;
The "folio wing are the jurors drawn&#13;
to serveaf the October term of circuit&#13;
court!&#13;
(•Hies Ross, Hart land.&#13;
i CLJIStowyloseQ^: - —&#13;
iliram Paddock, Marion.&#13;
Martin Berlin, Oq?ola.&#13;
C, D. Van Winkle, Putnam;&#13;
J . H."Slayton:,Ty r o n e. ^&#13;
Samuel Placeway, Unadilla.&#13;
J . Hilton, Brighton.&#13;
Geo. Sales Cohoctah.&#13;
Adam Mvers, Conwav.&#13;
0. W. Clark, Deerfiefd.&#13;
J3- Garlock, Genoa.&#13;
Win. H. Green, Genoa.&#13;
JJdward \Vheeler,-Hamburg.&#13;
Heman Bump, Howell.&#13;
—John DomereskHandy;—&#13;
T. N. Jones, Hartland.&#13;
Geo. Kern, Iosco.&#13;
Ira E. Holt, Marion.&#13;
John Walker, Oceola.&#13;
David Roberts, Putnam.&#13;
Albert Fletcher, Tyrone.&#13;
Silas Hemingway,-ilnadilla».._&#13;
Ira Bradley, Brighton.&#13;
CASH TELLS THE STORY.&#13;
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE, WE OFFER:&#13;
Best Priate for 5 ceuts, worth 7 cents. 27 inch Alpines, half wool, 10 cents, worth 12-] cents.&#13;
27 inch Cashmeres, half wool, 15 cts., worth 18 cts., 27 inch Plain Ottoman Cloths, half wool, 2uc, worth 2.V-.&#13;
27 inch Brocaded Ottoman Cloths, half wool, 20 cents, worth 2"&gt; cents.&#13;
We are showing the above goods in all the new and staple shinies, all m-4i a-tut-u^w, mi old *tork. A*k-to .see our&#13;
38 inch Black Cashmere, all wool, at 50 cents; it is a bargain. Full lim- of I&gt;\ack ami Colored Cashmeres&#13;
at better bargains than ever before- Black and Colored Silks uid Velvets., complete tyne and at&#13;
very low prices. Broad head and Kent Alpacas alwavs-in steiw—best LJOOIU for the money&#13;
in the market., we call special attention i&lt;&gt; our line of&#13;
H A M B ' C J R G&#13;
-By far the largest lin&#13;
EZS^TB^ o I D :B:R,"Yever&#13;
shown here, .and at the lowest prices,-&#13;
DOMESTICS WERE NEVER SO LOW AS NOW!&#13;
Atlantic P. Sheeting 6 Cts. pr. yd. L. L. Sheeting 7 Cents per yard&#13;
Lonsdale Bleached, 10 " ._'!_ Best Shirting ,10 "&#13;
~""~" SrapIe~TSinghams, 8 Cents per yard.&#13;
* PftRASOLS, GLOVES, MITS, ETC., AT GREATLY RtDUCtH PRICES TO CLOSE.&#13;
Full line Denims, Tickings. U. Ov T. Cottonades, Jeuns, Table Linens, tJin*:imms, Fancy Shirtings, Double- widt&#13;
Sheetings, Flannels, Etc., and all at the lowest possible prices. _ \ _. [&#13;
A Hint to Bank Directors.&#13;
An eastern man who was in Wisconsin&#13;
a few days ago stepped into a&#13;
bank in a small town to get a 850 bill&#13;
changed. The cashier uounted out&#13;
$30 and then spoke to the book-keeper.&#13;
The latter spoke to the janitor,&#13;
and this individual put on his hat and&#13;
crossed the street and returned in&#13;
company with a man who turned out&#13;
to be president and chief stockholder.&#13;
This person stepped around to the&#13;
safe, ami by the uid of the bookkegp*&#13;
er opened it and handed the cashier&#13;
about $"5, and charged' it to hiw on&#13;
a'day-book. Later in the day, :is he&#13;
met the eastern man on the street, he/&#13;
exclaimed:&#13;
"Perhaps that transaction looked&#13;
queer to you, but nye years ag» \&#13;
made up my mind that if my caaaiertook&#13;
a noli oh to skip he'd have to\&#13;
pawn his boots to get beyond Chicago.'&#13;
The bookkeeper watches the casbier,&#13;
the janitor watches the bookkeeper,&#13;
and 1 keep such a-wateh on all threethat&#13;
depositors are paid fiye per cent&#13;
interest, and not a game of poker or&#13;
faro has ever Ueen played in this&#13;
town.&#13;
We bought,"last week, from a large clothing house Lroing out of trade. "&gt;0O&#13;
that enable us to K'11 them tor&#13;
pairs pants and ve.-ts and suits at price:&#13;
DEPARTURE OF MR. R. C. AULD FOR&#13;
AMERICA.—Yesterday Mr. R. C. Auld.&#13;
nephew of the late ^1 r. MTombie, of&#13;
TifiyfoTIrTleft Aberdeen en route for&#13;
the United States. We believe he intends&#13;
to commence farming in one ot&#13;
£he Western Stale s h a k i n g a permanent&#13;
settlement on the other side of&#13;
the Atlantic. Mr. Auld takes along&#13;
with him a valuable lot of polled Aberdeen-&#13;
Angus cattle, of which he has. al-&#13;
1ESS THAN rpTT n H&#13;
timate knowledge of the origin .and&#13;
progress of this popular race of cattle&#13;
should be turned to good account in&#13;
'aying the foundation of a new herd ;n the land of his adoption. The conp&#13;
gnment, which numbers in all 25&#13;
' iead, includes several members of the&#13;
-Queen;1 the "Victoria," the "Jennet,"&#13;
fclie "Barely," the "Duchcos," and thed-&#13;
Pride" tamilies; in fact, all the^best&#13;
grains are represented ejxeept the&#13;
'•gricas." With such,, material, Mr.&#13;
Auld should soon^imlke a name as a&#13;
breeder of 'iblackskins." Several of&#13;
the anijnals are not only of good breeding,-&#13;
15ut of considerable individual&#13;
iherit, especially among the two-year-&#13;
/)14 heifers, and a "Pride" heifer calf&#13;
*vhich we saw the other day is quite a&#13;
beauty. The cattle sail from Liverpool&#13;
to-day for Boston.—Aberdeen&#13;
Daily Free Press, April 26th, 1884.&#13;
PANTS FOR BOYS, ,,...-. ....,...:::.8011) %%M.&#13;
PANTS FOR YOUTHS AT ^ "», S5, ilO, 81.00 ANT) $2.00,&#13;
PANTS FOR MEN AT 75,85, 90, $100, $2.00, $2,50, $i00, $3.50, 4C.&#13;
We expect to sell these goods in :50 days. jGOJVIE EARLY and&#13;
Secure IJaryain^-K ;&#13;
IN OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT WE OFFER:&#13;
^ The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN* bearing date&#13;
Sept. 2d, 18847 reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., Mechanical&#13;
Experts and Solicitors of Patents,&#13;
Washington, 1). (\&#13;
Abbott, J. 1)-, Reading. Saw handle,&#13;
304.:ii&gt;o\ • ' •&#13;
Hatten, John} Detroit, Fire escape,&#13;
:!01.5LU&gt;.&#13;
Hi'nster,E. M.. Detroit, Flour sifter.&#13;
;:04.4U4. - - - : - : ' ' ~&#13;
Jb-ailt, Wm. [)n Jackson, Wash&#13;
stand and dressing case, 304,407.&#13;
liiakler. David, and E. N. Peker,&#13;
Ionia. S[u'iug wagon, 301.292»&#13;
Case, Horare, Freeport Pruning instrument,&#13;
301.293.&#13;
'Church, M. H., (Jrand Rapids, Mixing&#13;
and proportioning granular or&#13;
p!a&gt;tic mjite»'ials lor alabastine, etc,,&#13;
304,615. "&#13;
Drake, F. K^Grande Mail bag catcher,&#13;
304,509.&#13;
Eaton, R,.&amp;,''Bravo, Barbed picket&#13;
fence, 304^:¾).&#13;
Hagan, J. A., Three Rivers, Grain;&#13;
car door mechanism for freight&#13;
304.683.&#13;
Kleffman, Peter. Detrottr^Doc&#13;
304,433.&#13;
cars,&#13;
r mat,&#13;
GRANULATED&lt;SiTJ§AR; 7 l-2c, COFFEE A. SUGAR, 7c.&#13;
EXTRA C. SUGAR, 6]l-$p. BEST ROASTED RIO COFFEE, 18c.&#13;
TEA USUALLY SOLD I&#13;
D&#13;
WET WANT m^PPER AXT&gt; KOGfi. TU&lt; ill V.ST AfARKKT 1MMCK&#13;
K&#13;
P±tit&#13;
5( ic, AT 40 CIS'.&#13;
UKMKMBKK Tlllv 1'LAt•!•:.&#13;
CASH STORE.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
Eeal Estate Transfers,&#13;
The following transfers are reported&#13;
for the PINCKN'EY DISPATCH by Register&#13;
Dudley, for two weeks ending&#13;
tfept,"*6th, 3884.&#13;
Jared L.Cook to Fred Kuhn, lot in&#13;
ilandy, ¢1,500.&#13;
• Harry J. Haven et al. to Bradlev N.&#13;
i'ott et »1., 80 acres, in Cohoctah, '»480.&#13;
E. Brown, by A dm. to Seymour&#13;
Brown,Te^cres in Conway, ¢1,425.&#13;
Bradley NTtaott to Owen Kells, 40&#13;
iicres in Cohoctah.&#13;
• Owen Kells to Brad leyU^T^ott, 40&#13;
acres in Cohoctah, $600. ; Betsey B. Hudson to Chga. G,&#13;
land i n Howell, $15.&#13;
" Geo. W. Lake to Wm. Mc Pherson,&#13;
Jr., 49 acres in Howell, $2,450.&#13;
' Elizabeth R. Gay. to Harriet C. Gay,&#13;
hind in Howell and Handy, $500. 1 Charlotte J. Weller to Eugene C.&#13;
Heed"etal., Vacre"inMaHonf $1^000^&#13;
James Amos to Harriet M. Amos,&#13;
73 acres in Marion, $2,000.&#13;
Nftknn Green to Oliver Mead. 48fr&#13;
.ta&lt;j^x_^jtt£Daiiv»j 1't*1 I • K S H I H a&#13;
Townsend, Wm. H., Grand Eapids,&#13;
Device for thinning the backs of txind&#13;
saws. 304,172.&#13;
Walker, llejijamin, Detroit, Stencil,&#13;
304,476. ,&#13;
Weaver, John, Rochester, Plant&#13;
stami. :.K)t,:-&gt;o.&#13;
W l m i i &gt; ; u « ' O f i U c : H I O S T K I ( S ,UIU K O H K K J N T K U I T a&#13;
Munnfjivturprc of HtTiiU'ticjiDy SealecJ Ouoda /&#13;
l'ickli'pj Preserve's, vtc., /&#13;
M, ") and r&gt;7 .TefftTHon, - U B . . DETHOIT, MUltt^&#13;
THK DETROIT TIMi:S Is a bright and&#13;
'npwsey paper. Itst*»l»*;raphic news cornea by&#13;
spwial wire from the news coolers of the connphi&#13;
though It IB by no mease neutral./ Every'jnat&#13;
VACATION IS OVER AND WE ARE READY~F0R THE FULL TERM&#13;
WITH A FULL LINE OF&#13;
&lt;righ&#13;
com&#13;
_f the c&#13;
try to its editorial rooma. Like moat people&#13;
ublitlca, »T&#13;
„ - - - - - - - " . — . . . / E v e r y jnafc&#13;
cause receivee fair and adequate treatment from&#13;
IS THE PAPER TM TI™£ While 85&#13;
TiMBs gives more attention to Kuainese than to&#13;
murdera, it never negletta mnwlers or any real&#13;
news, and it isn't scared br Keint; called sens*-.&#13;
tionaVr The people like Tug 'TIMES because It la&#13;
published eolely in the interest of its readers&#13;
YOU ran have the l&gt;ailv TJ&gt;MK* aent to vour ad*&#13;
F O R T H E P E O P L E . cheaa one month fol&#13;
40 cents; or you can have the Daily and Snndav&#13;
seven papers a week; sent you "for SO cents i&#13;
month. This is the/best investment offered thi*&#13;
fall. Address ^ ^&#13;
TIMES PUBLISHING COWPAIY,&#13;
• DETROIT, MIQH,^&#13;
.PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located, % of a mile well&#13;
Stock'iridire. Apple, cherry peach and paar or-&gt;&#13;
-ehitrtK met*—htnrs&gt;e, f.'ood well and cist«rn, ont&#13;
buildings, well fenced, ^IXHI soil. Apply OQ&#13;
pr/inisert. LORENCE RICE,&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table*&#13;
MICH. AIK LINE DIVlS10y.~&#13;
KST.VTIOXS.&#13;
SLATES, SCHOOL BAGS AND STRAPS,&#13;
PENS, PENCILS, INK AND INKSTANDS,&#13;
Books. Tablets. Composition Books,&#13;
iicres in^Conway, $125&#13;
' W-rt". Mc Pherson, Jr. to Geo;—W;-&#13;
i:ake, 100 acres in Deerfield, $1,500.&#13;
JaredL. Cook to Edwin A» Sheldon,&#13;
T &gt;t in Handy, §350.&#13;
Judson A. Canfield to J, F. Crane et&#13;
;iL, lot in Handv, $1,750,&#13;
Chas. E. Hollister to Tbompeon&#13;
' i rimes, 40 acres in Putnam, $215.&#13;
Wa^R-Goolej " "T ^ ""&#13;
WEST BOUXD TBAIN8,&#13;
No. fi.&#13;
Mix.nl.&#13;
RlDGEWAY «:&gt;Vi a. m.&#13;
Armada, 10:10&#13;
Romeo 1():20&#13;
R&lt;»chester, 11:52&#13;
Pontine J »f--.1¾:45 p.m.&#13;
Wlxom, 2:20&#13;
BonthLjroaj • » ; » ; »&#13;
Ilamhnrjj, 4:05&#13;
PlNCKNCY. 4:40&#13;
Mount Ferrier,.., 5:15&#13;
-sttwkbridge 5:S5&#13;
"enrieUaM u u u u jL06&#13;
JACKSON fi:45p.m.&#13;
No. 4.&#13;
Pass.&#13;
5:55 a. m.&#13;
fi:15&#13;
fi:35&#13;
7:10&#13;
7:85&#13;
7:45&#13;
8:28&#13;
8:55 .&#13;
STATION'S.&#13;
N o . t . | k&#13;
P « &gt;&#13;
7:45ft. m% 8:0t&#13;
8:20&#13;
8;52&#13;
B:15&#13;
9:25&#13;
10:10&#13;
10:40&#13;
11:50&#13;
11:12&#13;
11:30&#13;
11:5c&#13;
12 M p. m,&#13;
12:20&#13;
12:A0p. m.&#13;
EAST HOUND TRAINS,&#13;
No.&#13;
Mixed.&#13;
1^6 acrelin" Brighton, $1,500.&#13;
-' Wm. Town to Nancy "Wiley, lots in&#13;
-LTtghiou, $200. . \ _ L&#13;
^ t . _ ERASERS, CKAYQy.S, PENCIL HOLDERS. JNDKLIBLK PK\Y-TTSJ&#13;
And a great variety of School Stationery.&#13;
PRICES TH LOWEST -EVER KNOWN&#13;
JACKSON T:ooa.m.' lli'iirit-ttu 7:45&#13;
St.ockbri4i;i'? 8:l.r)&#13;
&gt;f«).uiit Ferrier,. 8::12&#13;
, PlNCKNEY »:U) t&#13;
[.lluinbiii-j; !):40&#13;
South LJ vonM-ll]&gt;y 1^0K:55'&#13;
Wi-Mmi ,...11::¾)&#13;
Hoclii'stcr, 1:4o&#13;
Honii'o 2::15&#13;
No. 3.&#13;
Pays.&#13;
stock of druggTpatent medicines, toilet articiesT&#13;
WINCHELL'S DRUG, STORE,&#13;
oui' oohool flttujplies for the fall term. AlsoTTnr^irTciTmirrijef t|iat we~na,vp Trnn^&#13;
met articjes, etc.vof best'quaTity and at uniformly low prices.&#13;
.«i _ . MICH.&#13;
Annudii,&#13;
4:20 p. m.&#13;
4:45&#13;
5:05&#13;
5:15&#13;
5:35&#13;
«:08&#13;
«:20&#13;
«:50&#13;
7:20 -•&#13;
H:15y&#13;
«:-iy&#13;
«:t)5&#13;
tt;M&#13;
No. 1.&#13;
-P-asar&#13;
5:00 ft.ru&#13;
5 : »&#13;
6:00.&#13;
6:10&#13;
6:85&#13;
rtiDGCWAYr-&#13;
JU1!5_ Hi:20&#13;
- J h a o - — T o r a r&#13;
J?:»&#13;
7:8ft&#13;
Aj) J™)0" ™n &gt;jy •"wntral 8tandiird;' Ume.&#13;
All trains run daily, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W.J..S!&gt;U'KK, JOSEPH HICK80N,:&#13;
Superintendent. General Manager&#13;
J&#13;
N&#13;
— /&#13;
~N X \ . • N .</text>
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          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="36148">
              <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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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2673">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 11, 1884</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2674">
                <text>September 11, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2678">
                <text>1884-09-11</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
JtROME WINCHELL, PUBLISMhR.&#13;
[ssi I;D Till/KSUAYS,&#13;
Huhwription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
f rtineient advertisements, '-15 csnte per Ineh for&#13;
first insertion and ten cents j&gt;er Inch (or each subsequent&#13;
Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
each insertion. Special rates fur regular advertiaementH&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
I .&#13;
BUSMESSJIARDS.&#13;
TS M. UREENE, M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SCRGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Sp(&#13;
1 of&#13;
From Elk Mills, Missouri.&#13;
D R . C. D. WAUVKR: Dear Sir—&#13;
This i.s to certify that I have used nearly&#13;
a bottle of your White Wine of Tar&#13;
.'Syrup, and I can safely and conscientiously&#13;
recommended it to any person&#13;
as the best medicine I have ever used&#13;
for throat and lung diseases, and if it&#13;
cost five dollars a bottle I would keep&#13;
it on hand if I was able.&#13;
Thankfully, yours truly,&#13;
Elder T. Stephens.&#13;
For tale at C. E- Hollister's, Sigler Bros, and&#13;
Winchell'e Drug Store.&#13;
TKAM you SALE!&#13;
I offer for sale at a bargain my span&#13;
of Koan Mart's, S years olu\ sound,&#13;
well matched, and .excellent workers.&#13;
Any one desiring sueh a team will do&#13;
well To look at them.&#13;
Jiimes T. Eaman.&#13;
Having rented the Pettysville Cider&#13;
Mill am ready to receive apples lor&#13;
cider and jell v.&#13;
S. M.Cook.&#13;
Pinckney will soon be telegraphically&#13;
connected with the rest of the&#13;
world.&#13;
South Lyon had a "destructive" fire&#13;
on Thursdoy last. It consumed a barn&#13;
anththe-coutents thereof:&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention «iven to_&#13;
eurjjery and diseases of the throat and lun^s.&#13;
TAMES MARKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
A-nd- Insurance Agent. Legal papers made on&#13;
ehort notice and reasonable term*. Ofli^e on&#13;
Alain St., near Postollic-e J'inckney, Mich.&#13;
ALICE LAWRENCE,&#13;
KAMUuNAlH.K&#13;
DRESS AND CLOAK MAKER,&#13;
Plain and fancy sewing of all kinds; cutting and&#13;
fitting a specialty. J'rlces reasonable, and eatlaiaction&#13;
guaranteed* Northeast cor. Main Street&#13;
,&amp;ndIlo«ell Road, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
GRIMES &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
— 7 : — v Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUS-&#13;
/ TOM MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in/ Flour and Feed. Cash paid for a*k|&#13;
kinds of gfaia. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
TAMES T. KAMAN,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
• and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Oftlce in the. Brick Block, PINCKNEY&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
ROLLER SKATING RINK.&#13;
•—•—• .&#13;
This Rink will be open to the public&#13;
ON&#13;
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday&#13;
Evenings*&#13;
APMISSION,&#13;
5cts. for LADIES lOcts. for GENTS.&#13;
SOCIAL DANCE,&#13;
BUGGIES AND CUTTERS.&#13;
Having the agency for the Kalama&#13;
zoo Buggies and Cutlers those wishing&#13;
to buy a good buggy cheap would do&#13;
well to call ou me.&#13;
Emmett Murphy,&#13;
at Pinckney Livery Barn.&#13;
fSPThoae receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription explreB with next number. A blue X&#13;
siguiflris that the time has expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be. discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
A T T O R N E Y ^ C O U N S E L O R ^&#13;
and .SOLICITOR in CHANCERYOffice&#13;
over Siller's Druj: Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
HALSTKAD (iRK(K)RY,.&#13;
DKAI.fcll IN&#13;
GRAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, kv.&#13;
Hiirhe'st'Jnark"t price paid for wheat. A good&#13;
Htock of Lumber nlwuys on hand, Doors, wash&#13;
ami nil building materials* furnished on cbort mitice.&#13;
v GREGORY, MICH.&#13;
A- "WINEQAR,&#13;
VETER1NABY Sl'MiKON, Unwell, Mich.&#13;
Mr. Wine^ar will attend to carh&lt; pnmi_ptiy&#13;
* ~ ATTFfER IN K,&#13;
frhfqjrihmfngr'Septe^r 19th:&#13;
TICKETS 50ets.&#13;
Music bv HOFF &amp; LARUE'S BAND.&#13;
W. B. HOFF, Floor Manager.&#13;
ITE.HS OF INTEREST.&#13;
REPUBLICAN CAUCUS.&#13;
T]he Republican electors otthe township&#13;
of I^utnam_wiJljn£etdn-caucu.s at&#13;
the office of J. T. Eaman, Esq., in the&#13;
village of Pincknev, on "Saturday, Sept.&#13;
19th, 1884, to select delegates to th&#13;
County Convention to be held at Howell&#13;
on Monday, September 22d, for the&#13;
purpose of nominating CandidalUsior I MrE"; Conference&#13;
County officers and Representation in&#13;
night or 'day. .Milk fever unil other diiyjat*!"* in&#13;
cattle and horses a specialty. Termjn,e'af*on*ble,&#13;
itesidencn on iiyroii Knail. Tele-ptTonii cnunec&#13;
tlon wifli central ofnce at lioAveTl.&#13;
CHAULEJUtACLEAX, 1). II. S.&#13;
DENTIST,- iiradnate of tht* Dental Department&#13;
of the University of Michigan. OJnce in&#13;
&lt;jrevnaway Block, over i'ost Otlice, Howell,&#13;
{^"Particular attention paid to the preservation&#13;
of the natural teeth.,&#13;
Will be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
EiUCKXEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^BArNKER,^&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Honey Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
v Deposits received.&#13;
State Legislation.&#13;
By order of Committee&#13;
FRESH MKATS. ^&#13;
I will be in I'inckney ^&gt;*r^i uesday,&#13;
Thursday and Saturday" mornings of&#13;
each week, andw-itTsupply nice fre.-di&#13;
meats at reasonable prices.&#13;
., - Floyd lieason.&#13;
- ' f a l l on, Teeple k Cadwell for coal for&#13;
'threshing engines.&#13;
We keep the largest and tiuest assortment&#13;
of Cigars in town, .at&#13;
\\ inchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Three cakes of finest toilet soap and&#13;
a Turkish Toweling washrag . all in&#13;
neat box .for 25 cents, at&#13;
Winchells Drug Store.&#13;
BKANS WANTED!&#13;
We have-an order for 1,000 bushels&#13;
oi' beans, and tor the best quality we&#13;
pay the highest market price&#13;
LOCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
The skating rink is being prepared&#13;
for a social dance to-morrow evening.&#13;
James Markey is atTCalamazoo this&#13;
week exhibiting the Hero Reaper, at&#13;
the State Fair.&#13;
Th os. Bi rkett went to Cheboygan&#13;
this week, to look after some lands he&#13;
has in that section.&#13;
It was cold enough for a frost last&#13;
night, but, probably owing to the&#13;
wind, none was seen this morning so&#13;
far as we are able to learn.&#13;
Jay Allen, who was badly wounded,&#13;
by the shooting accident last wee,k&#13;
is improving rapidly.&#13;
—Rev. F. E. Pearce is at Sagina^Tat&#13;
tending the Annual Sessjoa^of&#13;
will&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A ^ - P O T A L T Y&#13;
He sure and give us a chance ahii~ we&#13;
will make you money&#13;
Teeple iV Cud well.&#13;
Having purchased a new Kynett&#13;
hand carpet loom. I am prepared to&#13;
weave carpets in the very best manner.&#13;
Mrs. E, G. Carpenter,&#13;
Pettvsnlle, Mich.&#13;
WANTED.—A man and wife to take&#13;
charge of a tarm. Enquire of&#13;
G. W. Teeple, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
F O ^ S A L E — A full set of Butchering&#13;
T k ^ k u a i — -4^epIe^!M^dwiFi5—&#13;
Bro. Placeway, of the Brighton Argus^^&#13;
jam us a brief visit Monday,&#13;
while in town with the Base Ball boys.&#13;
The telegraph line gang will arnve&#13;
at Pinckney to-morrow. About 2u&#13;
of the men will tind/piarters here lora&#13;
couple of weeks.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ransom Lake, of Ithaca,&#13;
Gratiot County, are visiting at the&#13;
home of Mi&gt;. Lake's parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. S. X. Whitcomb. - -&#13;
One-^oi4he-Brighton boys—had—hts-&#13;
The squirrels are going for the nuts&#13;
nowadays, and ye Ximruds are going&#13;
fur the squirrels.&#13;
The Democrats will have a grand&#13;
"pole raising and mass meeting'' at&#13;
Howell, on Saturday afternoon next,&#13;
Sept. 20th. Among the speakers announced&#13;
are John J. Euright, of Detroit,&#13;
and Gov. Begole.&#13;
A newspaper could not live at&#13;
Mackinaw City, so the editor has pulled&#13;
up stages and squatted at WTayland,&#13;
Allegan County, and we predict&#13;
that the last state of that editor will&#13;
be worse than the first. Wayland is a&#13;
good town for newspapers to die in—&#13;
notwithstanding many excellent people&#13;
live there.&#13;
-The Brighton Base Ball Nine came&#13;
over Monday, and "downed" the&#13;
Pinckney Club by a score of 8 to 3.. It&#13;
is only justice to the Pineteney club to&#13;
state, however, that they hacf only&#13;
about half their regular nine in the&#13;
recent games with Howell and Brighton.&#13;
It was w-ith difficulty that they&#13;
could get a nine together at aljU-dii&#13;
Monday. ^---'&#13;
The Annual Fa,u&gt;tff the Livingston&#13;
County Agjieultural and Horticultural&#13;
Society will be held on the grounds&#13;
^&lt;( Howell, Sept. 24th, 25th and 26th.&#13;
Although preparations for the fair&#13;
have been rather tardy it is hoped the&#13;
reorganized society may be able to&#13;
make a better showing than usual.&#13;
We are sorry to see so much wheat&#13;
being put in this fall on ground very&#13;
imperfectly prepared for it. Much&#13;
seeding is being done on corn ground&#13;
rH*4-a&lt;&gt;t it little of the corn ground&#13;
Harry Courtaine, who was a few&#13;
years ago one of the most popular of&#13;
young American actors, has been reduced&#13;
by drink until he is now a ragged&#13;
beggar on the London streets.&#13;
T h e free&#13;
PINCKyEiHPROIHICE MARKET;--&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
- TOMPKINS&amp;4SMON,&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white&#13;
'« No, 2 white,&#13;
" -No. 2 red,&#13;
" No. 8 red,&#13;
$ ,ro-&#13;
»rt^»it«r»»tT&lt;&#13;
New stock school stationery and&#13;
School Supplies at&#13;
" Wincbell's Drug Store.&#13;
NOTICE TO CATTLEBREEDERS.&#13;
foot badly hurt the other day by a&#13;
Pinckney boy lighting down on it&#13;
with a sharp heel cork.&#13;
Mr. Harrington, having returned&#13;
from New York, is purchasing his&#13;
third cargo of sheep which he expects&#13;
to be able to ship next week.&#13;
.las. T. Eaman intorms us that he&#13;
will be "on the market" here next&#13;
week and thereafter for the purchase&#13;
of apples for shipment.&#13;
The prohibition nartv convention at&#13;
Howell Tuesday, nominated Leander&#13;
C. Smith, of Howell, as candidate for&#13;
Congress and also put in—the—field a&#13;
full ticket for county offices.&#13;
The Pinckney Base Ball nine played&#13;
a match game with the—Hcwell club&#13;
vi't'y weedy and it is being drilled in&#13;
or dragged in with no farther cultivation.&#13;
A fanner friend tells us that&#13;
last ve^ir he divided a held making&#13;
edch half of equally good soil and the&#13;
other part he. put in after the usual&#13;
manner, while on the other he spent a&#13;
day extra to each arTe-hr"cultivating&#13;
iind dragging. The part whic had ^r- j ents, Wa..&lt;hin^rnn, D Q&#13;
dina '&#13;
excursion given by the&#13;
Grand Trunk Air Line, Saturday last,&#13;
under management of Maj. Anderson,&#13;
was a "big thing'' lor Jackson. Not&#13;
less than 1,800 people were carried inexcuision,&#13;
Over 500 of these were&#13;
taken on^at Pinckney, and a merrier&#13;
crowd we have seldom seen. The&#13;
Pinckney Cornet Band made musie&#13;
for the crowd while the teftins were&#13;
waiting to be filled. The cart of the&#13;
first secjtion were so heavily loaded&#13;
that the train having stopped on an&#13;
'•up grade" was twice obliged to back&#13;
down to level track before they could&#13;
get a start. On arrival at Jackson the&#13;
Mayor and Board of Alderman were&#13;
in waiting and escorted a part of the&#13;
visitors to the fair ground where&#13;
Mayor Mabley made a neat little&#13;
speech ot welcome, tendering them the&#13;
"freedom of the city," etc.!. Large&#13;
numbers visited the state prison" and&#13;
the many extensive jaantifactories for&#13;
which the "Qeutfal City" is noted.&#13;
The hotels and restaurants were liberally&#13;
patronized and the stores were&#13;
crowded with customers all the afternoon.&#13;
The Jackson papers pronounced&#13;
the visitors a very civil and well&#13;
behaved class of people. Of the hundred&#13;
who availed themselves of the&#13;
free ride we do not learn oPmore than&#13;
three or four who disgraced themselves&#13;
by filling up with Jackson whiskey&#13;
and coming home drunk. It wasn't&#13;
the kiad of a crowd to benefit the saloons&#13;
very much. Another excursion&#13;
will be given on Saturday nextr4Sept.&#13;
20th,) for the people along the line from&#13;
Hamburg to Pontiac. It also goes to&#13;
Jackson. It is understood that this&#13;
excursion will not stop at Pinckney or&#13;
points west.&#13;
~u»4&#13;
.25"&#13;
&lt;Coro '.. 30',&#13;
Barley, 1 ax&amp;i 50-&#13;
Beans 8CX&amp;1 1».&#13;
Dried Apples .' 0 6 ^ ® .07.&#13;
Potatoes i 30.&#13;
Putter, 15.&#13;
EggB 124,&#13;
Dressed Hoes, per 1001r&gt;s 7 75@S.Q&lt;&gt;.&#13;
Dressed Chickens _ H&#13;
Clover Seed 4 00 ¢4 4.S0.&#13;
Special Notices.&#13;
To any onybody who has disease of&#13;
ihroat or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
Cured the same complaints in other&#13;
cases. Address,&#13;
E. T. HAZELTINE, Wa^-en, Pa.&#13;
I HAVE TRIED IT.&#13;
DEAR DOGTOR:—I have tried your&#13;
medicine, and believe that any one who&#13;
is troubled with Cough, Hoarseness or&#13;
Lameness about the chest or lungs 'can&#13;
not well afford to be without the White&#13;
Wine of Tar Byruo.&#13;
Your thankful friend&#13;
_ Rev. G. W. Pattison,&#13;
Pastor St. Charles M.-R.^fturctT,&#13;
St. Charles, Iowa. ^ ^&#13;
—A chancery el fonmws that are behind.&#13;
R. C. Auld, to meet a widely&#13;
expressed wish, will allow the use 01'&#13;
the ridiculously low price of $3 each&#13;
cow, cash down, calf insured—for the&#13;
remainder of the season. Apply a t&#13;
the farm. R. C. Auld.&#13;
School and business stationery, large&#13;
stock and low prices at&#13;
Wincbell's Drug Store.&#13;
WTestern Timothy Seed, at&#13;
Teeple cV Cad well's.&#13;
School Stationery and school supplies.&#13;
at Wincbell's Drug Store.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn ai.l&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of T.&#13;
Grimes or on the premises of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Large cake fine Toilet Soap for 5c,&#13;
at • Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at Bush's Planing Mill, Plainfield.&#13;
Cure 3^0ur -aenfalgia or headache&#13;
with a Stenthol Pencil, only 4 0 c , at&#13;
&gt; Winchell^ Drug Store.&#13;
AU t)ie BesTTaTerit MeaTcTnesT at&#13;
- ——WwieheH's Drug Store.&#13;
on the fan grounds at the county^seat;&#13;
Friday last, and were "left in the rear"&#13;
by a score of 8 to 18. *^&#13;
JTompkins k Ismon took in four car&#13;
loads of wheat Tuesday. In spite oT&#13;
low prices farmers are selling quite&#13;
J'reely and they know when they bring,&#13;
wheat here they get all the K market&#13;
will allow.&#13;
An unusual number of "commercial&#13;
travelers" have been seen on the streets&#13;
the past day or t^vo.&#13;
No village is anything of « town&#13;
now unless it has a skating ring.&#13;
The members of the Chautauqua&#13;
Literary and Scientific Circle are requested&#13;
to meet at the residence of F.&#13;
LrBrown, Monday evening'riexfT for&#13;
the purpose of re-organizing for the&#13;
work of the ensuing year. All persons&#13;
desiring to join the circle are cordially&#13;
invited to be present, at this meeting.&#13;
"An itinerant auctioneer with a bugle&#13;
to call the crowd set up his dry goods&#13;
box in front of the Monitor House last&#13;
night, and amused, his audience- bv&#13;
playing occasional snatches bT^musTci&#13;
r\ cultivation yielded a little less&#13;
than 20 bushels to the aero, while tha;&#13;
which had »• tra cu rivation yielded an&#13;
;-vtj _e'. _', bushels to the acre, and&#13;
;.S.U-UYU i-44 pv+x-Hi4-r^-&gt;wa4ry -better reeding&#13;
A c ihe w : iea: was takeu off. He&#13;
conclu 'es that he was well paid for&#13;
the extra labor expended and says t h a t&#13;
hereafter.he will put in less wheat and&#13;
cultivate his .ground more thoroughly.&#13;
At Philadelphia a day or two ago a&#13;
young man named Barry was discussing&#13;
with a lady the tragic ending of&#13;
Bill Sykes' career, as portrayed by&#13;
Dickens. The murderer, it will be re^&#13;
Trrembered, tics one end of a rope in a&#13;
The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN-, heaving date&#13;
Sept. 2d, 1S^4^ reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louts-Bagger AVCo., Me^&#13;
chanical Experts and Solicitors^ot' Pat-&#13;
Adams, T. VV., Big Rapids, Trunk&#13;
follower. :304,772.&#13;
Bagley, Allen, Ypsilanti, Fish joint&#13;
for railway rails, 334,895.&#13;
Ellsworth, J, J. and M. Rogers,&#13;
Riverdale, support for vehicle shafts,&#13;
304.922.&#13;
Flynn, John, Roscommon, Log binder,&#13;
:304,815.&#13;
Frank, Henry, and C , Berrien&#13;
"Toop-knot about his body, and making&#13;
the. other fast to a rafter attempts to&#13;
lower himself to the floor below, when&#13;
the rope slips from his body to his&#13;
neck, and he is suddenly confronted&#13;
with the fact that he is his own executor.&#13;
The young lady-said she did&#13;
Springs, Threshing machine, 304,816.&#13;
Heart, T. J., Detroit, Lubricator,&#13;
304.999.&#13;
Larson, J . E., Ishperaing, Device for&#13;
lowering and raising smoke-stacks,&#13;
304,739.&#13;
Siraonds. F. A., Grand Rapids, Firealarm,&#13;
304.96^.&#13;
Tavener, R. W., Bay City, Stavejointing&#13;
machine, 304,873.&#13;
B*al EsUte Transfers.&#13;
and selling them shoddy stationery&#13;
aira" otheL^aTTwaTesIatTone hundred&#13;
percent above theit t*eal value.&#13;
not think such an accident possible^&#13;
Barry said he could demonstrate it.&#13;
He shortly afterward retjred to his&#13;
room. He was next found uy his father&#13;
hang by a rope dead. The supposition&#13;
is that after leaving the lady, he&#13;
concluded to test the feasibility of&#13;
Sykes' accident with the view of illustrating&#13;
it to, his friend as ho had promised&#13;
to do. With this end iu view, he&#13;
took with him to his room an inch&#13;
rope. One end he made fast to the&#13;
knob on one side ot the door by a simple&#13;
cross hitch and threw the other&#13;
over the top of the door. This end&#13;
contained a loop-knot. It is thought&#13;
that he plaeed this abhut his waist and&#13;
let himself down from the top of the&#13;
door, adjusting the loop so that it&#13;
could have easily slipped to his neck.&#13;
i t is thought that ne fell Trom—the&#13;
door, or that the rope tightened upon&#13;
his neck unexpectedly. The corner's&#13;
[jury retumeda_Yerdiot of accidental \&#13;
death. -~ l&#13;
The following transfers are report-&#13;
~ed for the PIXCXXEY DISPATCH by Kegitster&#13;
Dudley, for the week ending&#13;
Jkpt-,13th, 18&amp;i.&#13;
, Eugene C. Reed et ah to Charlotte&#13;
A. Weller. 120 aeres in Hartland,&#13;
$3,500. _&#13;
Lyman Lee to Henry H. Wyrnan,&#13;
20 acres in Hartland, |60O.&#13;
Robert YV\ Griswoid to Wm. R .&#13;
Garraon, 40 acres in Oceola, 12,000.&#13;
Charles E. Young to R. C. Auld,&#13;
260 acres in Putnam, $10,400.&#13;
Jonas Young- to Chas, E. Young,&#13;
260 acres in Putnam, $7,000.&#13;
J. M. Eager to Fred J . Lee, lot in&#13;
Howell, $280.&#13;
Pusie V. Warren to Prank A. Burk."&#13;
hart, lot in Howell, $750.&#13;
Claussa Gay to W m . M. Beanh, lot&#13;
in Howell, $1,350.&#13;
Geo. H. Bailey to Geo. Coleman, 70&#13;
acres in Marion, $3,200.&#13;
Eveline Fishbeck et al. to Andrew&#13;
J. Russell, 120 acres in Marion, $8,000.&#13;
Benj. Preston to Wm. H. Bake well,&#13;
40 acres in Conway, $1,400.&#13;
Wm. W. Starke) to Italy A. Starkey,&#13;
158 in Han4y, $10,000.&#13;
Geo. Cole»an to^Geo. fl. BaUey, 40&#13;
acres in Iosco, $2,000. ~f&#13;
James Sullivan to John H. Cox, 144&#13;
acres in Tyrone, $1,550.&#13;
y • /&#13;
(Ssac— 4L?*+*T&#13;
^^m^Jm&#13;
TO COHBB8PONDE(rVT8.&#13;
.n&lt;*&gt;tinm for this pai&gt;«r should bo no,&#13;
&gt;nipHnledb7tnon»w a n „ T l d e n 0 ? 0 f good&#13;
try for I3UDIIW*W» . 1 ^ y j r t w r W i - i l a n n l w n n (Ann&#13;
¾artlcularl&#13;
ave tho&#13;
8ary f'»' {^""^y.V {hai writer. Write only on one&#13;
'Btidfel Mof htnWeppapewrr. . BeP^a rticut lha0r lyle iio#an refuan 1o . \nfigniivrienBg&#13;
" f ? " ^ di-iSioL.' Proper uawea *r« often MBoulV&#13;
W e c T P b e r b e S : u . V T t h ? careleJ manner In&#13;
whlclxW are written.&#13;
I Henry B'ce of Portland picked up a dynam- 1 lto cartridge In the street* «* that village the&#13;
other night. Henry was curious to know what&#13;
was inside of it, so llehted a match to find&#13;
out. The cartridge went off, and so d d two&#13;
fingers and a thumb which before time belonged&#13;
to Henry's left haud.&#13;
The body of a youag Englishman named&#13;
Henry Abbott was found _oati*g in the east&#13;
aide canal at Grand R a r ^ " He was a machin-&#13;
EXCITED ATMOSPHERE&#13;
u MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN/'&#13;
T H E 8 1 A X E F A I B .&#13;
S o m e of i_&lt;5 E n t r i e s .&#13;
At the fair grounds, Kalamazoo, on the 9th,&#13;
every thing was progressing nicely for the exhibition&#13;
to commence the third week In September.&#13;
The department* are generally very&#13;
etroDg except that of needlework. Entries in&#13;
the department of cattle were already closed&#13;
and numbered 558. Those of horses numbered&#13;
300, sheep about the same, and swine half as&#13;
many. Among the new varleth s in stock are&#13;
Victoria swine, Swiss cattle and red polled or&#13;
Norfolk cattle. The season Is favorable for a&#13;
tine exhibit of Michigan fruit*. Tho yroapicit&#13;
were also good 'or dairy ami general agrieu1-&#13;
tural exhibits. One erhtbitor enters 600 vaii&#13;
eties of potatoes, the largest ever shown, tl.e&#13;
next l a t e s t being at IndianapAi&amp; and the next&#13;
at the centennial, 340 varieties The art department&#13;
Is very strong, Including the fatuous&#13;
Bajsietlne collection, the most notable single&#13;
collection at the Detroit art loan. Another&#13;
large collection came from Chicago and there&#13;
are private loans of pictures from various&#13;
sources. T&#13;
TSe preparations for the state fair at&#13;
Kalamsz x&gt; on the 13tb, are in a good state of&#13;
forwardness. I b e entries are Very large aud&#13;
the goods arg being placed in position.&#13;
The difficulty with the agricultural invn was&#13;
adjusted after a stormy session by the fair&#13;
folks agreeing to Issue exhibitors' tickets,&#13;
though the whole forenoon was used up In the&#13;
dlacussion and the trucks loaded with ma&#13;
chlnery were stopped outside the gates.&#13;
Tbe first week's are as follows: Farm produce,&#13;
429; dairy produce, 110; bees and honey,&#13;
150; cattle 790; horse3, 510; sheep, 523; hogs,&#13;
312; poultry, 433; farming Implements, 410;&#13;
needle-work, very full.&#13;
The art gallery will be very attractive.&#13;
Entries In the departments which have&#13;
closed overrun in every department compared&#13;
with last year, averaging nearly 25 percent. In&#13;
four departments of stock, and in agricultural&#13;
implements being four times as great. The&#13;
management has just ordered 200" additional&#13;
stalls for stockist&#13;
by trade, but was compelled by sickness to&#13;
give up work. His money was soon exhausted,&#13;
and becoming despondent he ended his existence&#13;
by drowning himself.&#13;
^&#13;
George Holland of Evergreen, Montcalm&#13;
county, was killed by melon thieves one^night&#13;
last week^~ttelTPara the men In his garden,&#13;
and taklog a shot-.jcuu chased them out. He&#13;
shot at our* of the intruders uud ral»6ed him.&#13;
The lellow then turned and wresting the gun&#13;
from Holland, struck htm over the ticad, killing&#13;
him instantly.&#13;
Jay Fye-Soo faile 1 tb lower his record at&#13;
Kalamazort the other day. The day was cold&#13;
and windy aud the true!; heavy. Tlie horse&#13;
had ft nervous chill in the wanultiL-uphe.it,&#13;
aud was uiut.Me m do hi-* trt^t work. The mile&#13;
JO1,;. I'heift&#13;
oueh VuLiL all&#13;
1-1. P.iatlas t&#13;
.; -:H)',.&#13;
L-t i'.r the day on&#13;
I lis i-iijjiifceiiieuts&#13;
,)iu d Mirer lien's&#13;
of forest prodiivts fr.&gt;m S.IJT&#13;
for tiif jv^t week were a* foi-&#13;
Bav City.&#13;
115,567,000&#13;
:2,5&gt;05,&lt;&gt;00&#13;
«,140,000&#13;
9,000&#13;
14,900&#13;
WiiS'ini'lt* i;i&#13;
tl!f ,:f!&lt;ii:iu: »';i-.&#13;
have I'eeti «• n i*.&#13;
in 'J ^4 Jiv*1, (1-.&#13;
'i'tie shipment&#13;
hi'.iw Uivvr port&#13;
1OA&gt; :&#13;
Saginaw.&#13;
Lumber .8,371,000&#13;
Snlnales, pieces i,80O,00i)&#13;
Lath, pieces ~. 400,000&#13;
limber, cubk.feet&#13;
Salt, barrels&#13;
The Methodist conference^ In session at Lansing,&#13;
spent a small part of a day iu the transacuoii&#13;
of" routine business. The temperance&#13;
committee then reported. A substitute for the&#13;
report, virtually indorsing the 6 prohibition&#13;
party, was offered, and called out a warm and&#13;
ion? continued discussion. The whole question&#13;
of temperance was finally re-committed to&#13;
an enlarged committee, to be reported upon&#13;
later. ^__&#13;
Pareon's Business College. Kalamazoo: All&#13;
who attend the State Fair at Kalamazoo,&#13;
ParsonViftistncss College, also&#13;
Human Lives Taken By&#13;
Cyclone.&#13;
a Monster&#13;
N O B T H W E S 1 E R N V E T E R A N&#13;
F i r s t An n u a l R e u n l o it R e e d CUV.&#13;
The first annu^retinlon of the soldiers and&#13;
sailorsof JJortuweste.-n Mlchiglh closed Saturdayjoigfit.&#13;
About 500 veterans were pre?-&#13;
' comprising G. A. R. post* from Kalkaski,&#13;
Cadillac, Luther, Hig Rapids, Mautet.ee,&#13;
Ludlugton and Chase. The posts from Kalkaska,&#13;
Cadillac and Chase brought bands with&#13;
them. The address of welcome to the veterans&#13;
was delivered by Col. C. H. Holden, commander&#13;
of the Reed City Post, the address&#13;
of welccme by Willis M. Slosson,&#13;
president of the village, was rebpoueed&#13;
to by Col. T. J. Thorn. The&#13;
veterans were also addref sed by B. M. Cutcheon&#13;
and Col. 8. Fowle of Manistee and Gen.&#13;
Bronsonof Big Rapids. The ladies of Heed&#13;
City tendered a batquet to the veterans, and&#13;
and presented the Sleadman Post, of that place,&#13;
with a bsautiful silk fiig. The city is eaily&#13;
decorated with flags and evergreens. The association&#13;
comprises the Ninth Congressional&#13;
District and the counties of Emmet, Grand&#13;
Traverse, Leelanaw, Benzie and Isabella. The&#13;
officers elected are: President—C. H. Holden;&#13;
Secretary—L. A. Baker; First Commander ot&#13;
the Department—C. H. Holden. It was votfd&#13;
to hold the second annual reunion at Reed&#13;
City on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of&#13;
the first week in September, 1885. About 2y&#13;
500 visitors were in town besides v e t e r a m y '&#13;
T h e S a u l t C a u a l . *- s "&#13;
The following Is the report of tnebusiuiss&#13;
of the Sault canal for August:&#13;
1383.&#13;
No. of vessels through lock 762&#13;
No. of passengers. 9,104&#13;
Registered tonnage 356,755&#13;
Freight tonnage ~. 418,943&#13;
Coal, tons 121,469&#13;
"Skit, bbls 40,310&#13;
Grain, bu 311,614&#13;
-Iron ore, tens. 178,328&#13;
Copper, tonB. 4,5£6&#13;
Lumber, M ft 23,051&#13;
Mlfcellaneous mdse, tons..-30,691&#13;
Sliver ore and bullion, tons..&#13;
enouia visit&#13;
eiamine his Beautiful specimens of penmanship&#13;
on exhibition at the.fair. Prof. ParsoLS&#13;
has been established at Kalamazoo for 16 years&#13;
and by close attention to business has made his&#13;
school one of the finest in the state. His Batrons are from nearly every state In the&#13;
nion. • - „ :''.. __.._•&#13;
A man named .Barl^llvlm? on the farm of&#13;
Mort Cartejy-ftiur miles west of Flint, was&#13;
walkimTacroas the barn-yard, when he was attacked&#13;
by a ferocious hog, which knocked him&#13;
down and literally chewed him up. The most&#13;
serious wound is in his back, where the hog&#13;
took out a large piece of fiesb. Had he not&#13;
rolled down an embankment where the animal&#13;
could not reach him he wtuld have been killed&#13;
on the spot. As it Is it is feared that his&#13;
wounds will prove permanent if not fatal. Dr.&#13;
Bates called.&#13;
Articles of association were filed in the cfMce&#13;
ot the secretary of state during the week&#13;
ending September 13 as follows: The Michigan&#13;
Dairy Company, Newaygo, capital #15J,&#13;
000; Detroit Fis-hing and Hunting Association,&#13;
Detroit, capital 120,000; Funeral Benefit Association&#13;
of North America? Detroit; Sim&#13;
mons .&amp; Kfunc Planing and Manufacturing&#13;
Company, Muskegon, capital 110,000; Pittsburgh&#13;
and Lake Superior Railway Company,&#13;
capital Io0,00&lt;); Mason Center Lodge, Knights&#13;
of Honor of Scottvillc.&#13;
• Considerable Indignation exists among German&#13;
citizens in Ea»t Saginaw over the dls&#13;
covery of the dastardly conduct of Prof. HanB&#13;
Saro. musical director of the Germ&amp;nla society.&#13;
The allegations are that Saro, who has been instructing&#13;
a number of young people, daughters&#13;
of prominent members of the society, has&#13;
been taking undue liberties with one of them.&#13;
Saro has confessed, and has been ordered to&#13;
I leave the city. He was formerly a graduate of&#13;
I&gt;QB Lelpsic conservatory of mus-ic and went to KEast Saginaw from Stillwater, Mln&amp;=—Ho was&#13;
1S84.&#13;
9S8&#13;
11,477&#13;
480.314&#13;
496,452&#13;
148,740&#13;
49,844&#13;
6&lt;2,5U9&#13;
S31,289&#13;
10.079&#13;
6,541&#13;
2^,908&#13;
30,900&#13;
3,9^6&#13;
IN T H E S T A T E .&#13;
_ A Battle Creek capitalist will erect a large&#13;
hotel at Gangac Lake, near that city.&#13;
Wm, C. Maybury ^haa been nominated for&#13;
xongress.in Wayne county, by the democrat s.&#13;
The 49 th annual conference of. the M. E&#13;
church for Michigan convened at Lansing, September&#13;
10.&#13;
The Kalamazoo street railway was formally&#13;
opened to the public by an excursion train of 22&#13;
cars Saturday last. ~&#13;
Joseph Knap pen's saw mill near&#13;
3 Ben ten county, turned Saturday&#13;
Lets t9,0£0; uninsured.&#13;
The ntv, barracks of the Michlean&#13;
Academy were completed last week.&#13;
etudents are entered at present&#13;
One of Forepaugh's jugglers is a gueBt of&#13;
the Battle Creek Sanitarium. He amuses the&#13;
other guests with his dextrouB tricks.&#13;
Mrs. George Dennis of Owosso township&#13;
was bitten bv a rattlesnake Sept. 3, and after&#13;
great suffering died Sept. 7th. She leaves four&#13;
young children.&#13;
Joseph McCracken of Royal Oak is boasting&#13;
because he threshed 2,207 bushels of wheat iu&#13;
one day, 1,870 bushels of which was threshed&#13;
Coloma,&#13;
mornirjjr.&#13;
Military&#13;
Over 100&#13;
a fine musician and conducted the late tnrngerfeet.&#13;
r - .&#13;
A wind-storm recently visited" Alpena with a&#13;
velocity of 48 miles per hour. Rain fell to a&#13;
depth of over one inch in eii*ht minutes.&#13;
Thomas Scarf was 6truck by lightning nnd&#13;
killed on the street. Another man had his&#13;
arm brok-en. A house, a mill, smokestack and&#13;
a number of piles of lumber were L-lowtn ov6r&#13;
lntothe lake; also a part of the roof torn of.&#13;
The tornado was not very wide, and lasted&#13;
about fifteen minutes. Oa the same evening&#13;
lightning struck the Spencer house at Cheboygac,&#13;
tearing the lath and plaster off of a great&#13;
number of rooms and breaking nearly all the&#13;
windows. Ocfc side of the house was tcorched&#13;
black, but no fire was started.&#13;
_ The Detroit Evening Journal is in trouble,&#13;
there being two faction* of stockholders.&#13;
The feud dates back to the publication by that&#13;
paper, of the Cleveland scandal, when the&#13;
editor-in-chief,Mr. Breeze, forcibly ejected Mr-^-&#13;
Ilubbard, the managing editor, from his sanctum,&#13;
and cook possession of the editorial&#13;
work. Hubbard claims -that Brczee consented&#13;
to the publication—in fact wrote part of the&#13;
matter himself. Now Mr. Hubbard seeks to&#13;
gaiu posceeslon of the business, and has enjoined&#13;
Brezee from meddhng. Replevies and&#13;
other cross suits are numerous, and the only&#13;
safe prediction which can now be made is that&#13;
the lawyers will get as much out of the contest&#13;
as any one.&#13;
W U e o n v l n V i s i t e d t u l e T i m e .&#13;
I A cyclone struck Clcnr Lake late the other&#13;
afternoon, aud devastation was the result. The&#13;
greater portion of the town Is In ruin?, aud&#13;
three lives are lost. The scene after the siorui&#13;
pasted ovur was horrible In the extreme. Men,&#13;
women and children were running about in a&#13;
perfect frenzy of excitiment and fear. Here&#13;
and there people could be seen coming out of&#13;
their cellars almost oarahzed with fear. The&#13;
strongest man was as a little child for no human&#13;
pjwer could resist the terrible force. One&#13;
house of brick veneer was taken from Its foundation&#13;
uud turned completely round while the&#13;
brick* wir,* felled froru the woyd as if sliced&#13;
off. A large barn was blown away&#13;
leaving me Uoor and _ mangers&#13;
with horses peacefully eating their supper. A&#13;
little child was taheuin thearrasof the teinpi-.it&#13;
and landed in the branches of a tree but slightly&#13;
injured. One :arne frame house was blown&#13;
completely cut of ^isrlit. Not a particle of the&#13;
hoUi&gt;e o~ furniture could be found, though&#13;
search for a mllo was made In the track of the&#13;
storm. The family bad fortunately taken&#13;
refuge in the cellar. Many families are left&#13;
destitute With not a vestige of their worldly&#13;
possessions remaining.&#13;
At Marine fifteen or twenty houses were destroyed&#13;
and a number of people were-Injured.&#13;
The house of David Lyman, on the road to&#13;
Marine, was blown down and some of the Inmates&#13;
injured. Ouly a small portion of the&#13;
storm struck-fltlllwater, striking some of the&#13;
tents at the fair grounds and tearing them itP&#13;
to ribbons.&#13;
Half of. the lighter structures iu Clayton&#13;
were blown down. The cyclone struck about&#13;
6 o'clock, doing nearly all of the damage ID&#13;
fifteen minutes.&#13;
At Chippewa Falls the storm was the *orst&#13;
of the st ason. The river September 10th. was&#13;
between sixteen and seventeen feet above low&#13;
water mark and still rising rapidly. Competent&#13;
judges look for a much higher rise in this&#13;
case. The upper bridge over the dam will&#13;
probably go out. It Is badly strained now.&#13;
"Bll! Nye," of Laramie Boomerang notoriety,&#13;
watt drivtoe with his brother about three&#13;
miles east of Clear Lake wheu the tornado&#13;
struck them. UB111" was lifted clear cut of the&#13;
wagon by the force of the wind and dashed to&#13;
the side of the road with his right leg broken&#13;
in two places below the knee. His brother,&#13;
who waa slightly injured, walked back to&#13;
Clear LaKe, secured help, and it was six hours&#13;
before the injured man could be brought to&#13;
town, owing to the road being blocked- with&#13;
fallen trees. About 40 buildings were wrecked&#13;
iu Clear Lake, including the Methodist, Congregational&#13;
and Lutheran churches, Humboldt.&#13;
«&amp;.Co.'s mill, three miles east/'was destrojed;&#13;
loss $10,000.&#13;
•«». ,&#13;
F A I L U R E ACVD SUICIDE.&#13;
A R a n k 4'asnler a n d P r e s i d e n t E n d&#13;
their Earthly Existence to Escape&#13;
a Worse F a t e .&#13;
A TOWN WILD WITH EXCITEMRXT.&#13;
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J.,1s shaken to its censtill&#13;
talking over the situation while the bank&#13;
examiner and clerks were trying to ascertain&#13;
"zaetlv how much had been lost by the doings&#13;
ot theniento whom the-management of allalts&#13;
had been confided.&#13;
Durlug the day in auswir to a note sent in to&#13;
Examiner Shelley asking what Information he&#13;
had to give concerning the bank's condition&#13;
that olllclal stnt out the answer that from examination&#13;
already made he was satisfied depositors&#13;
would te paid Iu full. The capital&#13;
stock of the bank at the last report was (250, -&#13;
000 and the amount of deposits on hand about&#13;
1800,000. Stockholders will probably be assessed&#13;
u.uite heavily to do thi«, and the affairs&#13;
of the bank will be wound up.&#13;
It eaunot be learned that President Runyan&#13;
had any share In the plunder of the institution&#13;
for political purposes except to the extent of letting&#13;
Hill do as he pleased with the assets.&#13;
That, as reported, the bank was a great&#13;
financial aid to the city,there is uoquestlou but&#13;
its failure does not leave the city in the bankrupt&#13;
coudltlon that Mayor Strong pictured. She&#13;
has fl,5DO,0.0 bonded dt ht, on an asset-scd valuation&#13;
ot lesh than $5,(00,110, but then it is said&#13;
that the assessed valuation do&lt;s not repreHent&#13;
more tli^n a quarter or ,i third Jf the actual&#13;
value ot the city's property. The JluatlJgiiebt&#13;
Is $2,000.'H,0. ^&#13;
n K U ' N N O T K i i&#13;
AX EXTENSIVE 1'JKJi.&#13;
Forty acres of ground have been left in a&#13;
black and charred condition along the lake&#13;
front In Cleveland as tbe result of a fire ot&#13;
September 7th and. 8th The loss will not exceed&#13;
$ 1,000,000.&#13;
MAINE UOES KBPUDLICAX.&#13;
The state of Maine voted September 8th for&#13;
Governor, four members of congress, 31 state&#13;
senators, 151 representatives and full boards&#13;
of county officers. The Republicans succeeded&#13;
in electing Governor Robte by from 12,000 to&#13;
15,000 plurality, the first figure being conceded&#13;
by democrats. They also elected the four&#13;
congressmen, and probably carried all the other -&#13;
offices.&#13;
PoumiND, September 9, 2:30 a. m.—Two&#13;
hundred and siKty-seven towns give Kobie&#13;
61,318; Redman, 45,001; scattering, 2,414; plurality,&#13;
16.254. The 6ame towns in 1882 gave&#13;
Roble 56,195: Plalsted, 47,510; scattering,&#13;
1,467; plurality, 8;685. Tuc towns to hear from&#13;
gave Roble 16,286, and Plalsted 16,411. Robie&#13;
will have over 16,000 plurality In a total vote&#13;
of about 140,000. The vote of 1880 gave a&#13;
total pluralltv of 169. So the galu this year&#13;
will be 16.C0J on the gubernatorial vote of 1880.&#13;
The Presidential vote that year gained 9,000&#13;
on the gubernatorial vete and probably w!!l&#13;
gain in November considerably on t'-.is. All&#13;
four Congrsssmeu are elected and the legislature&#13;
will be overwhelmingly Republican.&#13;
ter. Bank Examiner Shelly has dlscoveted a&#13;
deficit of over $1,000,000 In the surplus cash&#13;
and securities. The towu Is wild; men rush&#13;
franticallv to the doors of the National bank&#13;
only to be told that the business of the institution&#13;
has been suspended for the present.&#13;
Ira Voorhees' estate is partially ruined. Cashier&#13;
Hill was left as custodian of this estate and&#13;
of the bonds and securities he made away&#13;
with. In all over $19,000 was taken here. In&#13;
the G. B. Adrian estate over $30,000 is gone.&#13;
Mahlou Runyan, who committed suicide, had&#13;
$66,000 In government bonds. HiU negotiated&#13;
for the sale of those and consummated&#13;
the same three days before his death. Runvon&#13;
knew nothin=gf o t Hill's doing and trusted him&#13;
in theaiternbon.&#13;
L. L.Skinner of Grand Rapids haa been appointed&#13;
receiver of the Michigan Fire Insurance&#13;
conpany. His bon-1 of $40,000 has teen&#13;
filed with the circuit court.&#13;
Prospects for a pucce&lt;6ful fair at Ypsilanti&#13;
ar. p o d and Unoro^lDgdatry. The reputation&#13;
ofihii Easkrn Miobigan Agricultural 60Clety&#13;
ii flrhtclat8 and will be kept up.&#13;
- Miss Lorlnda Davie, one of the oldest settlers&#13;
in Piymouth, died Thursday at her hr&gt;me, aged&#13;
_8'l_yeaM ShtLh&amp;cLbeen,. a resident of Canton&#13;
towEBhip for fifty years and [was a member&#13;
of long standing in the Wesleyan Methodist&#13;
church.&#13;
During the month of AugUEt 1,456 emigrants&#13;
entered the United States in,the District&#13;
Huron, as follows; E ogland, males 31; feuwries&#13;
23; Norway, ma'es 34, f»nialee 24&gt;-tiweeden,&#13;
roiilefll47, lemalcs 123; Quetjec-lwid Ontario,&#13;
635, fem ales 440.&#13;
A Cheshire, AUjegsff county, farmer makescomplaJntth&gt;&#13;
tr-&lt;Cf|e yellows are quite prevalent&#13;
in some&gt;ercnarfla in that town, and that no attejtf+&#13;
tJnis paid/to the law in relation to the destruction&#13;
of aifected trees. Here is a chance&#13;
for the Yellows commissioner to exercise his&#13;
authority.&#13;
McLeon'rt BMlMf, *-woall lumber village on&#13;
1 he Chicago &amp; West Michigan Railroad, betwe&#13;
n N« waygo and White Cloud, M as burn* d&#13;
on the afternoon of the 13:h except a few&#13;
abanlles. The total lose, including lumber, Is&#13;
80,000,&#13;
•warpt'd&#13;
Trains&#13;
b.&lt;d-v.!&#13;
w(re delayed, the"raHs biing&#13;
DETB0IT MABKETS.&#13;
Whedfc-No 1, white $ 85&#13;
Wheat—new, red 80&#13;
Flour 4 50&#13;
Corn 50&#13;
Oats 34&#13;
Barley..... 55&#13;
Rye. 55&#13;
75&#13;
75&#13;
6&#13;
Clover Seed, * bu 5&#13;
Timothy seed $ bu 3&#13;
Dried Apples, * ft&#13;
Peaches 13&#13;
Cherries 19&#13;
Apples per bbl 2 00&#13;
Butter, %* lb 16&#13;
Eggs 14&#13;
Potatoes .. 40&#13;
Onions, per bbl., 2 25&#13;
Koney -4&#13;
Bean^ picked 2 35&#13;
Beans, unplckea 1 ,50&#13;
H a y . . . . . 9 00 ($12 00&#13;
Straw 6 00&#13;
Pork dressed, ¢ 1 0 0 . 8 00&#13;
Pork, mess 17 25&#13;
Pork, family..., 17 25&#13;
Hams 13&#13;
S h o u l d e r s . . . . .&#13;
Lard.&#13;
Beof extra mess . ^ - ^ 7 . .12&#13;
Wood, Beech and J4scf&gt;le.&#13;
Wood, " "&#13;
Wood&#13;
implicitly. The crash In Wall street in May&#13;
last -took-the-bulk of HUHa-steallngs. Runyon,&#13;
although quite popular, was ignorant of financial&#13;
matters and was a willing tool In the hands&#13;
of the designing cashier.&#13;
11111 committed suicide by allowing four gas&#13;
jets In his room to remain open during the&#13;
night. _&#13;
September the Slh the strain became so great&#13;
upon President Runyan that he committed suicide&#13;
in one of the private rooms of the bank bycutting&#13;
his throat. He was 60 years old and&#13;
had been president five ycare. He had implicit&#13;
•fatth in Cashier Hill and allowed him tokdb as he pleased.&#13;
WILD WITH EXCITEMENT.&#13;
—A telegram from New Krunswlck on the 8th&#13;
1&#13;
00&#13;
Oranges and lemons keep best wrapped&#13;
close in soft paper and laid in a&#13;
drawer. ________&#13;
l n r a l l d Ladles Attention.&#13;
For full particulars in regard to the&#13;
new. quick, and painless method of curing&#13;
FEMALE DISEASES, so far as&gt; to&#13;
lay aside all supporters and praas-ries.&#13;
Write to Drs." Peterman, Marshall,&#13;
Michigan. N.B.—All Physicians can&#13;
quickly cure their invalid lady patients&#13;
'vrtth'thtS'tTBatment.&#13;
Stanley, the African explorer, will join Gen.&#13;
Wolseley in his exocdltion to the relief of Gen.&#13;
'&gt;.-'li.»:i.&#13;
said&#13;
The. scene at the bank beggars description.&#13;
Blocd had flowed from the room iu which Runyan&#13;
suicided out upon the marble floor, staining&#13;
It a distance of four feet.&#13;
—"MyUod!'1 exclaimed Director Stoddard,&#13;
"the whole city will „o under. The city debt&#13;
is now nearly $2,000,OOJ, and the bank held Its&#13;
paper. The 6a7ings banks have gone under&#13;
and we have their capital."&#13;
"Was Mr. Runyan about to be arrestedl"&#13;
"So I have heard."&#13;
"What, for?" Please don't ask me. I am&#13;
nearly dead myself."&#13;
Martin A. Howell, who withdrew as director&#13;
eight years ago, said: J*i^saw it coming.&#13;
C_ailey Hill was too liberal. The Republican&#13;
party went, to him as a banker for funds. He&#13;
doubtless took the bank surplus to aid friends.&#13;
Knowing the condition of affairs, I quietly&#13;
withdrew."&#13;
"Why did you uul let the public know of&#13;
your suspicions iy'&#13;
" I was advised not to do so." l&gt;By whom?"&#13;
"By a director."&#13;
The effect on the town is crushing. The&#13;
wildest excitement prevails. The streets are&#13;
thronged with country depositors. Fears of a&#13;
raid on the bank are increasing. A hundred&#13;
special policemen were sworn in by the Mayor&#13;
to surround the bank property. The coroner's&#13;
jury iu the case of Maalon Riinyan's death returned&#13;
a verdict of wilful suIcideT^&#13;
"What&#13;
ki&#13;
Acting Cashier Campbell was seen,&#13;
do you know*'' the reporter asked,&#13;
amazed and horrified over the affatfT My&#13;
heart's blood might have beepjspfft for Charley,&#13;
but when I see wbatjji^rrjout to occur, the&#13;
fall of be whole Instiwrtiou, my heart bleeds;&#13;
but," he added*'**! am innocent. Hill was&#13;
never mv^^oljfident, although £• undertook&#13;
soinei^H^fils gicatef't missions. As a messenger&#13;
Hellgarton &amp; Co. to New York I have&#13;
taki n money for investment to them: don't&#13;
know the result; have had fears of the present&#13;
result for six months, but kept my mouth&#13;
cosed. I feared expulsion by the directors."1&#13;
• Joseph Fisher, Sr., custodian of the Voorhees&#13;
estate, refused to divulge why he had not&#13;
signed the releafc proilcred by Hill, when a&#13;
sale of bonds might have beet, effected. "No,&#13;
sir," he saio, •'! am not such araBcal as to take&#13;
a landed m a t e lrom the Voorhees boys, and&#13;
you will rind me always on toe side of the&#13;
weak."&#13;
IN D R U A D F l _ S U S P E N S E .&#13;
Ordinary business was practically suspended&#13;
in New Brunswick Sept. 9th. The dreadful&#13;
suicide of President Runyan of the national&#13;
bank of New Jersey following so closely on&#13;
that of Cashier Hill, the prostration of several&#13;
of the directors, practical bankruptcy of the&#13;
city and the ciuse that led thereto were things&#13;
people bad to talk about. They had'little or&#13;
no time for anything else. The doors of the&#13;
bank were- vioswi yxcept to a few. Policemen&#13;
were stationed on the steps aud efforts were J&#13;
made tq_keep the sidewalk clear of a crowd,&#13;
but ihey wtr* not. vety successful. Inside, the&#13;
direuofs win wire ftill fitted, for duty were&#13;
SECKKTAKT FOLGEK'S FUNK1UL.&#13;
Six colored men who had at different times&#13;
been in the employ of the late Charles J. Foleer,&#13;
bore on their shoulders the casket containing&#13;
his remains to their resting place Sept. 9th.&#13;
It was a gratuitous reuuest that the committee&#13;
of arrangements made when it asked that no&#13;
business be done that day.|The old friends and&#13;
neighbors of Secretary Folger irast-raorc than&#13;
they could do to keep tears from their eyes,&#13;
and not a store was open. The pretty little&#13;
village looking down on Seneca lake was one&#13;
mass of black cloth. From roof to cellar of&#13;
almost every house It was hung in solemn folds,&#13;
The^ village was filled with visiters. Tbe&#13;
"President and suite arrived at noon aud&#13;
alighted from the cars one mile south of the&#13;
station, whence the president was conveyed&#13;
to the mansion of ex-Senator Hammond, whose&#13;
guest he was while in Geneva. Gov. Cleveland&#13;
and his party arrived by the same car&#13;
and were driven to the residence of&#13;
William J. King, Jr. Secretaries Tell-r&#13;
and Frellnghuyseh, tPofctmaBter-General Ores&#13;
ham, Judgt s Rapallo, Miller and Andrews, aiid&#13;
Clerk Perriu arrived earlier in the day. Secretary&#13;
Chandler was with the president's&#13;
party. Trains iroin every direction aftei&#13;
noon brought crowds. The weather as oppressively&#13;
warm, and caused much discomfort.&#13;
'The body of Judge Folger was unostentatiously-&#13;
laid out at his home, and&#13;
only those with whom he had&#13;
been officially associated and a ie* of&#13;
his more intimate friends among the townsmen&#13;
were afforded an opportunity to view it. The&#13;
b'jdy was placed in 1he casket at 11 o'clock.&#13;
The casket bore this inscription: "Charles J.&#13;
Folger, born April 16, 1818; died September&#13;
4, 1S84" The only flowers in the room was a&#13;
crown of white roaes sent by Samuel M. Blatcb&#13;
ford of New York. At '.I p. m. the church was&#13;
crowded. At the request of the family the&#13;
decorations were simple. About the platform,&#13;
and galleries and sides were hung folds of&#13;
black cloth. An impressive.entrance was made&#13;
by the prcsidental party and Gov. Cleveland&#13;
and staff. Rev. [Mr., Mercy, acting pastor of&#13;
the church, read the scripture, and prayer was&#13;
m_de, by Dr. Upton, oi Albany, who delivered&#13;
the address. At the close ot the funeral oration&#13;
the procession started. In the line was&#13;
the village president and trustees, civic and&#13;
military-oreanizations of Geneva,., the fire department,&#13;
President Arthur, Gov. Cleveland&#13;
and state atd federal officials and hearse, followed&#13;
by citizens. The burial was in the&#13;
faraiiy plot in Glenwood cemetery, beside Mr6.&#13;
Folger. The casket was borne from the church&#13;
to the hearse and from the hearse to the giave&#13;
by the colored men. At the grave Dr. Upton&#13;
read the burial service.&#13;
SHE BID TRY IT.&#13;
The truth in regard toLlllie A. Runyon's attempted&#13;
suicide Is out. The story was told by&#13;
stableman Atter. While Mlas Runyon aud a&#13;
lady friend from Maine were driving from&#13;
Bound brook ah Ignorant farmer told her that&#13;
her father, president of the -New Brunswick&#13;
bank, had killed himself in the bank building.&#13;
She wheeled the horse around and drove&#13;
furiously towards her home. Sprlngine out of&#13;
the wagon she ran towards a well 30 feet dee&#13;
with 10 feet of water In. It, and threw herse&#13;
over the railing. Aaolph Runyon, a coasTrj,&#13;
caught her an'i prevented her fror_^tSarrying&#13;
out her purpose. Since thensljetias frequently&#13;
threatened to kpl hergi^tfT'She is kept under&#13;
strict surveillance^J-s-ls feared that her reason&#13;
has glvtw way&gt;-Wtie is '.'4 veais old&#13;
TUB VOTE IN MAINE.&#13;
Unofficial fiaures Kivethe Republicans a pluralliy&#13;
exceeding 20,000.&#13;
A TKMKinLE FAMILY TKALiKDY.&#13;
At Hoonton, N. J., as Edward Decamp wa»&#13;
driving past the cdttage of William W. Messer,&#13;
formerly fuperlntendent of the paper mill,&#13;
with bis sister, about 8 a. in. the other day he&#13;
heard a woman shriek. Immediately afterward&#13;
Mrs. Messer, the aged wire of the owner&#13;
of the house appeared in the doorway and&#13;
screamed: "Send Dr. Ryerson here at once."&#13;
Mr. Decamp whipped up MB horse and drove&#13;
to Dr. Ryerson's, telling Enoch Hammon and&#13;
Mary Jeukics, wnom he met on the way to go&#13;
to the Messer house as something waa wrong.&#13;
They started at once and Decamp trrlved with&#13;
Dr. Ryerson shortly.after they did. The first&#13;
thing to be seen on (ntering the cottage was&#13;
the body of Mary Metier who lay stretched on&#13;
the floor of the sitting room which also is used&#13;
as a hall. She was alive and conscious, b u r&#13;
was evidently terribly .wounded. In the adjoining&#13;
parlor, Mr.-«. Messer sat on a chair in&#13;
the corner. She also w»i« seriously hurt.&#13;
When the door of the liinmfc-ryuii in the rear,&#13;
which was shut,w_s forced open, the dead body&#13;
of Mr. Mrsser was found lyu.g au'alu.^t it Iu a&#13;
pool of blooU. A uS calibre revolver, four bairels&#13;
of which had been discharged, lay beside&#13;
him. A bullet holewas in his right temple.&#13;
According to the ante-moitem statement&#13;
which Miss Meeccr made to Justice Deunis,&#13;
acting as coroaor, she and her mother had sat&#13;
down to brenkfast in the dining-room shortly^&#13;
before 8 a. m. Presently Mr. Messer entered,&#13;
aud setting In the corner nearest to the door&#13;
leading to the sitting room, began examining'&#13;
a revolver with which lie bad shot a dog the&#13;
previous Sunday. Alarmvd at the sight qf the&#13;
weapon, Miss Messer said : "Father, put up&#13;
that pistol ;"T don't like to see it. 1' you don't&#13;
Sut It away I shall leave the room." As Mr.&#13;
[eager did not comply with her request, she&#13;
arose and walked past him toward the sitting&#13;
room. She had just got past him when he&#13;
fired at her, the ball striking' her in the back.&#13;
"SHeTwalked a few steps further, into the front&#13;
room and then fell where she was subetqueptly&#13;
found lying. Mrs. Messer In terror tried to&#13;
follow herrlaugtiter, but as she neared her&#13;
husband he fired two shots. Her face was&#13;
toward him. One bullet hit her in the breast&#13;
and the other a little below. She tottered a&#13;
few steps further and laid herself tSown by her&#13;
wounded daughter. While mother and daughter&#13;
thus lay side by side they heard a&#13;
fourth plRtol shot in the dining-room. After&#13;
shooting his wife and daughter Mr. Messer&#13;
put the pistol to his right temple aud shot&#13;
himself through the head. Death must have&#13;
been Instantaneous. Mrs. and Miss Messer&#13;
wereboth alive late- at nleht but neither waa&#13;
exoectcd to recover. Miss Meeser's spine&#13;
was injured and both less were paralyzed.&#13;
The bullet which entered Mr§_ Messer's breast&#13;
came out at the back. The other passed&#13;
through the liver.&#13;
The cause of the shooting, as the jury's verdict&#13;
declares, was insanity. Mr. Messer was&#13;
sunstruck early In August, and his brain was&#13;
sensibly affected. He disregarded the advice&#13;
of his physician, Dr. Carpenter, and recently&#13;
exposed Limself to the sun. The intense heat&#13;
of the past week caused him to grow worse.&#13;
Before his sunstroke he had the reputation of&#13;
being eccentric. He ate but one meal a day,&#13;
like (1 jethc, and that at 4 o'clock In the afternoon.&#13;
He smoked incessantly, sometimes almost&#13;
continuously for 16 hours at a time.&#13;
Metser went to Boonton about four years&#13;
ago, Previous to that he was Interested in&#13;
gjid mines in Colorado. Before that he was&#13;
In the sugar business in Boston, where be is&#13;
said to have had Warren Fisher, the father of&#13;
Blaine's friend, Warren Fisher, jr., for a.partner.&#13;
A PRINTER'S ERROR.&#13;
/Sweet .-ire the uses of adversity, the&#13;
printer's copy said, but he sot it up,&#13;
sweel are the uses of advertising. Sweet,&#13;
indeed, to those who in sickness and&#13;
suffering have seen the advertisement&#13;
of some sovereign remedy, which upon&#13;
trial has brought them from death's&#13;
door. "The tJest thing I ever saw in&#13;
my paper was the advertisement of Dr.&#13;
Pierce's 'Golden Medical Discovery' '"&#13;
is again and again the testimony of&#13;
those who have been healed by it of&#13;
lung .disease, bronchial afteqtions, tumors,"&#13;
ulcers, liver complaints and the ills&#13;
to which flesh id heir.&#13;
Nebraska furnished,the&#13;
of cattle on exhibition at&#13;
City Fat Stock Show.&#13;
largestpair&#13;
the Kansas&#13;
TltS-IWA.IOKITY.&#13;
[t is thought the final figures en the Maine&#13;
flection will show a Republican majority of&#13;
11),000. The Senate will be Republican without&#13;
an exception.&#13;
FALLING INTO UNE,&#13;
The irenpral c^mtnltteo of Tammany halt&#13;
has [decided to support Cleveland and Hen&#13;
dricks. A long report was made, cmbraciug&#13;
tl.e following resolution :&#13;
Rtao'.ved, That we, the democratic-republican&#13;
Hencral committee of the city and county&#13;
of New York, iu Tammany hall assembled,&#13;
hereby ratify aud indorse the nominations&#13;
made by the "natiwia1 democratic convention&#13;
held in Chicago on July 19, 1884, for president,&#13;
Grover Cleveland of New YorU; for&#13;
vice-president, Thomas A. Hendricks of Indiana,&#13;
and hereby re-pledge ourselves to an&#13;
earnest and cordial support of the candidates&#13;
so nominated.&#13;
The reading of the resolutions was ireeted&#13;
with great applause rfilngled with hiBses. Gen.&#13;
SplnoiH, chairman e^f the sub-committee, then&#13;
took the floor and said that at tlie national convention&#13;
the members of Tammany hall explained&#13;
the stt.t,e (jf affairs in New Ye&gt;rk and asked&#13;
for candidate* t.'mt could win. They had no&#13;
appiouy to nuke. They wanted a democratic&#13;
preside-nt and uie.ent'o have one if it wer.e&#13;
wtt'.iin their p.iwer. The elemercracy waa not a&#13;
happy family to-day, but if every democratic&#13;
voter huckled on his armor "Cleveland would&#13;
be ^elected. [Cheers ] Gen. Spinola then&#13;
rn&lt;&gt;vcd ihe adoption e&gt;l the address.&#13;
F.x Sffiator Thomas F. Grady rose&#13;
giv&gt;U i.xzitcrru-nt, an el ctacfrliig.niid opposed its&#13;
uvioption. He will support ButJ&#13;
* • * * Loss of power in either sex,&#13;
however induced, speedily, thoroughly&#13;
aud permanently cured. Address, with&#13;
three letter stamps for repljT and b»ok&#13;
of particulars, World's Dispensary&#13;
Medical Association, 663 Main street,&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
By a new electric hoadlight for locomotives&#13;
thirty-three telegTapXpoles can&#13;
be countetl ahead of the engme- on a&#13;
dark night. Thirty-three poles cover&#13;
about one mile.&#13;
" N I P ' T I N THE UUD!"&#13;
Sad to say, many agoodJJiHi^attains&#13;
to nothing more thana-fttir beginning.&#13;
On the other haniHt is a matter for&#13;
congratulatiei£that the growth of sorae&#13;
eviltjhjngs may be also promptly frvS-&#13;
*!&amp;&amp;£$. A largo proportion of the cases&#13;
of the most wido spread and fatal of&#13;
diseases—consumption have their inception&#13;
in nasal catarrh. D r . . S a g e s&#13;
Catarrh Remedy is pleasant, soothing&#13;
and effectual. 'Try it. 1&gt; has cured&#13;
thousands. All druggists.&#13;
A Cincinnati lawyer has up the sign:&#13;
No politics discussed except on busi- i i ness.&#13;
CARBOLINE3.&#13;
Sorrow and gloom the soul may meet, » '&#13;
Yet love wrings triumph from defeat:&#13;
And the coarsest hair can still be tiae&#13;
By using Mai/ic (Jarboliw.&#13;
A Jacksonville, 111., man claims to&#13;
wear 'lie championship hat—a number&#13;
ten. The size of the head is 31 inches.&#13;
. When you visit or leave New York Clty,^via&#13;
Central depot save Baggage _xpressag«' and&#13;
*8 Carriage Hire and stop at theNirjind Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. Six hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at the cost of one millon&#13;
dollars; $1 and upward per day, European&#13;
plan. Elevator and Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the beBt. Horse cars, stages und elevated railroad&#13;
to all depots. Families can live better&#13;
for less monev at the Grand Union Hotel&#13;
at any other first class hotel In. the&#13;
Tho F o r t W o t t h G a ^ u t t ^ ' s a y s t h e inc&#13;
r e a s e d tax o n c a i ^ e i o r 1888 o v e r t h a t&#13;
of 1882 wasjfc37^87,28o.&#13;
T\ It I&#13;
•riv«r U c r a n i i for all abraBlon«Toftho&#13;
nil all illsoivaes or tho fi'Ot of Horsed and&#13;
'('nttli\ Invalu'iMrt to Htocltmon. e'ole'n Veterinary&#13;
Carholianlye. In Mo-nnd J1.00 enns. At Druggist*&#13;
or by mntl. .'.W.UOLE&amp; Co,. lTop'S, BlackBiT«f&#13;
1'allB.Wlu.&#13;
/ S&#13;
g | _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ •vgk^^^^L&#13;
T i n : N i l T I I * ' S I * I : A K E K&#13;
\Yir.ii voice ul1 liiisky ami worn,&#13;
Willi I'li.'Mj.-' hwolli'ii ami HOT.*, -&#13;
'['hv i.ruler slainiB on H uawed-olf HUIUJJI&#13;
Antl polltU'rt doth outpour.&#13;
TaJJs, talk, talk,&#13;
In Wfafti'T liotli wet nixi dry ;&#13;
Atjil stll), for the matter of dollars nmlueutH,&#13;
lie Uftttli Mi'voice on tiiyti.&#13;
Talk, Talk, talk&#13;
While Lb audience yfclb aid cheer?;&#13;
Ami talk, talk, talk,&#13;
Till his words rlu* in their tars!&#13;
It's O! to be a slave,&#13;
Along with the terrible Turk,&#13;
When an orator wastes bis time and breath&#13;
By such ('XbauBtluK work!&#13;
Talk, talk, talk,&#13;
• Till each bead begins to swim !&#13;
Talk, talk, talk,&#13;
Till the iilck'rlng lamps grow dim!&#13;
State, and tariff, and trade.&#13;
Trade, and tariff, and state,&#13;
Till the weary llst'ners fall asleep,&#13;
And dream ot their candidate.&#13;
&gt; &lt; ,&#13;
Oa, men'with active brain*!&#13;
Oh, men with minds intev&amp;e!&#13;
It is but wind you're list'nlng to,&#13;
And not the soundest sense.&#13;
Talk, talk, talk,&#13;
Till the band begins to play !&#13;
Sarutng at once, by a single stroke,&#13;
Cheap fun as well as pay.&#13;
Ob, but to hear him talk.&#13;
Of the deedB of gallant men,&#13;
Or the wondrous and winning words&#13;
Of the wlelders of the pen! %&#13;
But ht'll talk, talk, talk,&#13;
Till the hot campaign is o'er, i,&#13;
And then if he fails to get a berth,&#13;
He'll only talk the more.&#13;
— N. Y. JOL'HXAI,.&#13;
•*-&#13;
T H E B A B Y ' - P K A Y E f t .&#13;
She knelt with her sweet hands folded *.&#13;
Her fair little bead bowed low;&#13;
While dead vldes tapped at the, window&#13;
And the air was thick with snow.&#13;
Without, eauh dumb with winter;&#13;
Within, hearts dumb with care;&#13;
And up through the leaden silence&#13;
Rose softly the baby prayer.&#13;
Bless all whom! love, dear Father,&#13;
And help me be good," she said.&#13;
Then, stirred by a sudden fa»cv,&#13;
She lifted the shining head.&#13;
Did she catch on fan frozen maple&#13;
Some hint of tHpAprll green,&#13;
Or the breath 4» the woodland blossoms,&#13;
The drifts ostfeu snow between I&#13;
k The beautiful she whiBpered,&#13;
"Where the orioles used to sing;&#13;
They are tired of the cold, cold winter,&#13;
Oh, help them 1o grow in Bprlng;&#13;
And the flowers that I loved to gather,&#13;
Lord, bring them again In May,&#13;
The dear little violets, sleeping&#13;
Dnwn deep In the ground to-day."&#13;
Ah, earth may be chill with snow-flakes,&#13;
And hearts may be cold with care,&#13;
But wastes of a frozen tilence,&#13;
Are bridged by the baby's prayer ;&#13;
And lips that were dnmb with sorrow&#13;
In jubilant hope may t-ltig;&#13;
For when earth is wrapped in winter&#13;
In the heart of the Lord'lis spring.&#13;
^ » -&#13;
T H E H U E S OF H E A L T H .&#13;
Listen to each simple rule,&#13;
As to conduct and to diet;&#13;
You must keep serenely cool&#13;
Though the cholera run riot.&#13;
Eat the best of all things &amp;ood,&#13;
Ne'er a dish that Very nice is&#13;
Hurtb you, while it's understood&#13;
You avoid too many icee.&#13;
You may eat all sorts of hsb,&#13;
Those Who say you mayn't talk gammon ;&#13;
But a-prudent man won't wish&#13;
Too much cucumber with salmon.&#13;
Flesh and fowl are yours to eat,&#13;
Every dish a toothsome comer;&#13;
But the chops of pork are meat&#13;
That you need not try in summer.&#13;
You may smoke, too, hut take care&#13;
Your cigars are swtet as manna;&#13;
When-disease 16 in the air,&#13;
Only use the pure Havana.&#13;
Keep yourself from worries free;&#13;
If you've lawBUite, you must gain 'em;&#13;
Thus quite easily, you sec,&#13;
Yow 11 preserve the corpus sanum.&#13;
^ _ —^Loypoy PUNCH.&#13;
HER BROTHER.&#13;
"New-elL do you know that splendid&#13;
j ^ n l a n ? " . enthusiastically exclaimed a&#13;
distingue-looking man, who shone as&#13;
one ot the chiof " l i o n s . " at Mrs. De&#13;
Gray's soiree.&#13;
Milo Newell looked about him with:&#13;
an indolent glance and replied:&#13;
"Well, as the room is full of yplondid&#13;
womoH whom I have tUe honor / '&#13;
**You know which one 1 mean,'/ imn*&#13;
tiently interrupted the first speaker.&#13;
r&#13;
T ^ h e queen of them all. of course; t h a t&#13;
glorious creature in the mauve crepe,&#13;
with the yellow lillios in nor h a i r . "&#13;
"Of course I know whom Vou m e a n , "&#13;
laughed Newell. ''They /are always&#13;
smitter* when they tirst s»0 her. 1 was&#13;
myself. Yes, that's.Miss' B u r k h a r d t . "&#13;
"Miss B u r k h a r i t ? " /&#13;
"Yes, General Burkhardt's daughter.&#13;
He was killed in the /Mexican war, you&#13;
know. Left all his wealth to his wife,&#13;
and she died and left it to her daughter&#13;
—about oight years ago. Miss Burkhardt&#13;
is the richest heiress in the state.&#13;
D e n ' t see why/me hasn't married. She&#13;
is twenty-three, and has had offers&#13;
e n o u g h . " /&#13;
"Will voii present mo to.her?"&#13;
"Of course, you've got to go t h r o u g h&#13;
with a grand passion for her. Evorybody&#13;
'does&gt; it is the regular Living And&#13;
the sooner you havoji-crvcr the better.&#13;
She ^ o n ' t hayvi-ytTu."&#13;
'vVViiv^^&#13;
t know, but .she . won't. She&#13;
^ h t rue that she never would m a r r y .&#13;
Would a t tell mo why. 1 proposed to&#13;
h e r , " s*id Milo cooly. "Men do, as a&#13;
general thine:. But they all get the&#13;
same answer. She never will m a r r y . "&#13;
"Upon-my word, you don't seem to&#13;
take your disap'pojntruentvery h a r d ! "&#13;
laughed his companion.&#13;
"Oh. I recovered long ago, " I t ' s . n o&#13;
use pining over what one can't h e l p , "&#13;
said Newell, philosophically. "If there&#13;
was any hope I'd have persevered; but&#13;
it would be useless. I'd advise you to&#13;
avoid her, if it would do any good; but&#13;
you would go on all the same."&#13;
lie lowered his voice at brst, for they&#13;
were approaching the largo group, of&#13;
whom Mis-; Burkhardt was the center&#13;
of attention. She was standing with&#13;
her hand resting on the back of a sofa.&#13;
Truly .she was a splendid woman. A&#13;
very queen she looked surrounded by&#13;
her subjects. Her features were notbeautiful&#13;
in the least, but her form was&#13;
regal in its stately grace. Her heavy,&#13;
black hair was magnilieent, and her&#13;
great, dusky eyes, glowing with a soil&#13;
of repressed light, like smouldering lire,&#13;
possessed a strange weird attraction, a&#13;
species of magnetism, altogether indefinable,&#13;
but irresistably fascinating.&#13;
Yet the unbounded admiration which&#13;
she excited wherever she went could&#13;
hardly bb owing solely to her wonderful&#13;
eyet. There was some curious, indefinite&#13;
attraction about her —this dusky&#13;
haired, queenly woman. Among the&#13;
many men who had laid their hearts at&#13;
Dianora Burkhardt's feet, very few&#13;
could have told what it was in her that&#13;
so enslaved them.&#13;
"Miss Burkhardt, will you allow me&#13;
to introduce a friend to y o u ? " asked&#13;
Newell, after making his bow.&#13;
" W h a t friend?1' asked Miss Burkhardt,&#13;
carelessly.&#13;
"Otto Delavan, the artist, who has&#13;
just returned from I t a l y , " was Newell's&#13;
anjwer.&#13;
Miss Burkhardt grew deathly pale,&#13;
and grasped the sofa, as if to steady&#13;
herself.&#13;
" W h a t is the matter? Are you ill,&#13;
Miss B u r k h a r d t ? " cried Milo, astonished&#13;
at her strange emotion.&#13;
"Yes; a sudden indisposition," faltered&#13;
she, " 1 will go out in the air a&#13;
moment; apd when I return I shall be,&#13;
pleased tb receivo your friend. Will&#13;
you give me your aim, Mr. B r o w n ? "&#13;
to a middle aged brother of Mrs. Do&#13;
Gray.&#13;
Mr. Brown w a s , of course, "delighte&#13;
d , " and Miss Burkhardt walked away&#13;
with a step sufficiently tirni and stately&#13;
for an "indisposed w o m a n . "&#13;
Presently she Returned, looking her&#13;
usual calm ^self, and, with a bow* and&#13;
word of thanks to her companion,&#13;
turned to Milo Newell, saying quietly:&#13;
"Now, Mr. Newell, I shall beliappy&#13;
to know vour friend," and the introductory&#13;
ceremony was performed.&#13;
Otto Delevan was prafoundly deferential;&#13;
Miss Burkhardt, quietly courteous.&#13;
She was used to being introduced&#13;
to distinguished m3n, and it was not&#13;
to bo expected that she would be as&#13;
much impressed as some young ladies&#13;
by the popular young artist, whose&#13;
growing fame-trad—long preceded him&#13;
to his native land, from which, tor rive&#13;
yoars he had been absent. A great favorite&#13;
was Otto Delevan. He was&#13;
about twenty-eight or nine years old,-&#13;
and very handsome, in the fair saffron&#13;
stylo. More than one young girl among&#13;
that gay throng would have given a&#13;
fortune for Miss Burkkardt's power&#13;
that she mi^ht bring him to her feet.&#13;
"You are iust from Italy, I hear, Mr.&#13;
Delevan," said Miss Burkhardt, by&#13;
way of conversation.&#13;
"1 arrived twro days a g o . " lie answered.&#13;
"Have you been lonq; a w a y ? "&#13;
"Five years," said Olio. "It is good&#13;
to bo back in my own country a g a i n . "&#13;
" Y e s , " said Miss Burkhardt, absently,&#13;
" a n d it h four years since———"&#13;
She stopped abruptly and began,&#13;
with fingers that trembled, to adjust the&#13;
flowers in. her bouquet.&#13;
"Since w h e n ? " he questioned. ^ - - -&#13;
"Since I was in Italy," Diai;ora "said,&#13;
in a hasty way, and ohangell the subject.&#13;
^,--—&#13;
Otto staj^ed-iSeside her through the&#13;
evening, escorted her to the music&#13;
jroom, attended her to her carriage,and&#13;
went home to lite bachelor lodgings as&#13;
hopelessly in love as it is possible for&#13;
a passionate, enthusiastic jaature, such&#13;
as hte, to be. Milo Newell's caution&#13;
was, not forgotten, but unheeded.&#13;
fl will m a r r y that woman within a&#13;
year or die!" he said deliberately, after&#13;
a half hour's reflection, and in the inj/&#13;
most depths of his soul he felt the meaning&#13;
of the words.&#13;
Two weeks passed. People began to&#13;
remark—some lightly, some bitterly—&#13;
that Otto Delavan was Miss Burkhardt's&#13;
last conquest. Little cared Otto. Ho&#13;
-thought ot nobodyrt)f—nothing, except&#13;
Dianora Burkhardt. She was the one&#13;
woman in the world to him. He believed&#13;
she loved him. But would she m a r r y&#13;
him? He felt-that his life had no other&#13;
hope. Thinking thus one evening ho&#13;
suddenly started from his seat, exclaiming:&#13;
••I will wait&#13;
ponso is worse than despa&#13;
know mv fate this verv&#13;
i h o u r ! "&#13;
And this impulsive young m a n at&#13;
once prepared "to go and propose to Dianora&#13;
Burkhardt.&#13;
As lie laid his hand upon the door&#13;
there eaire a rap from the outside. A&#13;
dainty&#13;
She was all the more courted for \wr&#13;
self-seclusion'.&#13;
Shu r.u'fived Mr. Delevan in a pretty,&#13;
eo/.y lit tin parlor, which, with its hangings&#13;
of pule bull* and dark green, and&#13;
its light, graceful furniture, made one&#13;
l e d twice at much at ease as in the&#13;
grand drawing room and reception parlor,&#13;
where she received more formal&#13;
visits.&#13;
Neither was sho in her society mood,&#13;
though Otto had never seen her look&#13;
lovlier.&#13;
She did not often look beautiful; but&#13;
that evening she was more than that.&#13;
Yet there was a sad, weary look upon&#13;
her usually haughty face, which mado&#13;
her lover long to fold her in his arms&#13;
and soothe away whatever sorrow or&#13;
care had brought it there,&#13;
She roso to greet him as ho entered,&#13;
but he quietly reseated hor, and then,&#13;
standing before her ' with both her&#13;
hands clasped in his, he told her at&#13;
once, and without preparation, all, his&#13;
love and his aspirations.&#13;
She sat silent, with drooped head and&#13;
downcast eyes, and heard his story&#13;
through. She did not withdraw her&#13;
hands from his hold ; and he felt them&#13;
tremble as he finished with a passionate&#13;
appeal for love, and an earnest request&#13;
that she would be his wife.&#13;
Then she spoke—quietly, firmly, but&#13;
with an undertone of pain in her steady&#13;
voice :&#13;
" I expected this, Mr. Delavan, but I&#13;
am sorry you have said i t ; I am very&#13;
sorry, for I can not m a r r y you, and it&#13;
is very hard to giro you pain, O t t o . "&#13;
She spoke his name at the last, with&#13;
almost a wail, it was so full of grief a n d&#13;
' P o o r&#13;
but I&#13;
" B u t my brother?" she said. '&#13;
Walter, no, Otto, I do love you;&#13;
cannot desert him for even y o u . "&#13;
"You need not desert him, dear&#13;
love, said Otto, tenderly. ' I could&#13;
not bo so base as to ask it. If you&#13;
will become my wife, I will aid you to&#13;
cherish i«nd care for him. I will love&#13;
him as a brother, and do for him all&#13;
that you could d o . "&#13;
And Dianora, though at lirst she&#13;
hesitated, finally allowed herself to he&#13;
persuader..&#13;
ARCTIC CANNIBALISM.&#13;
Q a p t . M o O l i n t o o k of t h e F r a n k l i n&#13;
E x p e d i t i o n S h o t a n d E a t e n .&#13;
Cincinnati, September 8.—John D&#13;
Caldwell, an old and respected citizen,&#13;
is authority for the statement that the&#13;
body of Capt. McClintock of the Franklin&#13;
arctic expedition was shot and his&#13;
body eaten by his famishing comrades.&#13;
T h e story wa3 told Mr Caldwell by&#13;
Capt. Hall, who commanded the expedition&#13;
for the relief of Sir John&#13;
Franklin. Lady Franklin and Miss&#13;
Sophia Carcraft," who was to have been&#13;
married to Capt. McCliDtock, oame to&#13;
Cincinnati to see Capt. Hall. He could&#13;
not tell fliem of Capt. MeClintock's&#13;
terrible death, but afterwards related&#13;
the cireumstannes to Mr. Caldwell.&#13;
Suppressing his voice to a whisper he&#13;
s a i d : ' ( ' a p t . McClintock was shot."&#13;
They had reached the point of starvation&#13;
where it became a question whether&#13;
all should perish or one should die that&#13;
the othBrs might live. Lots were drawn&#13;
to see w h i should die first, and the fatal&#13;
lot fell to Capt. McClintock. He yieland&#13;
she drew her-haads-a-way-1 ded with -composure to his fate. He&#13;
face&#13;
against&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
sorrow ;&#13;
from him', and covered her&#13;
them, leaning her head&#13;
table beside her.&#13;
He had stood looking at her in almost&#13;
angry despair; but when she uttered&#13;
his name in that sorrowful tone he&#13;
caught his breath with a sharp gasp,&#13;
and, leaning over her, he said :&#13;
"Dianora, I know you love m e . "&#13;
She made no answer, only a slight&#13;
sob. • .&#13;
"Tell me, do you n o t ? " he urged&#13;
"Yes!" she answered almost sharply.&#13;
"Then why will you not become my&#13;
wife? Tell mo, Dianora^-I-have-aFighV&#13;
to know."&#13;
"Because I am determined 1 will&#13;
never marry—I must not. My duty&#13;
forbids it," she answered tirmlv.&#13;
" B u t w h y ? " cried Otto.&#13;
" i will Bot-tell -you! The knowledge&#13;
would do you no good," she replied.&#13;
"Go home and forget me if you c a n -&#13;
nay, I know it is hard to forget Heaven&#13;
help us all who would but can not."&#13;
"Dianora—"&#13;
—^^Don't" she interrupted; "why will&#13;
was shot and his body became food for&#13;
the others. Whether the shooting of&#13;
others followed by lot, Mr. Caldwell&#13;
says Capt. Hall did not state. He was&#13;
requested to keep what had been related&#13;
to him an entire secret which he&#13;
has done until to-day.&#13;
[In connection witf the above associar&#13;
ted press despatch it may not be unin*&#13;
terestmg to note that Capt. McClintock&#13;
returned alive and well from his Arctic&#13;
expedition and was knighted for his&#13;
distinguished services.]&#13;
no longer. This, snsir!&#13;
I will&#13;
this very&#13;
you torture me when I have told'you it&#13;
is useless? I tell you 1 shall never marry.&#13;
Now will you g o ? "&#13;
Without another word he went.'&#13;
, For hours he walked the streets,&#13;
iug homo at length, calm with the&#13;
bitterness of bis detpair.&#13;
The tirst thing tnat met his eyes&#13;
his sister's letter.&#13;
He did not read it then. He could&#13;
govery&#13;
was&#13;
not,&#13;
Not until late in the following d&#13;
did he open it ; and then after JlKffirst&#13;
half-dozen lines he. read :^,--""&#13;
"By the way,^JtetoT'they write me&#13;
that yon are Jfwtying attentions to Miss&#13;
Burkliar-cilf You had best not fall in&#13;
p-ortf with her, for she will not marry&#13;
you. I knew her m I^aly. It was in&#13;
Florence, while you were in TSome.&#13;
"She was thee»e with her brother;&#13;
perhaps you do aot know that she has&#13;
one. She keeps has existence to herself,&#13;
I believe and yery properly* You&#13;
see he is i n s a n e ! Ho was -well, the&#13;
truth is, he fell in love with mo ! He&#13;
was a splendid young fellow, handsome&#13;
as a picture, but only a boy, not more&#13;
than eighteen, a*d, of course, I could&#13;
not think of marrying bini^..But I'm&#13;
afraid I did flirt a little with him ; I&#13;
meant no harm, of course, and Florence&#13;
was so dull at that time. I know you&#13;
will be terribly7 shocked, and really I've&#13;
had some twinges of conscience myself.&#13;
But I don't think I was responsible&#13;
for—well, lite insanity ; indeed, I&#13;
do not. He was inclined that way, the&#13;
physicans said, and that was the reason&#13;
his mother left all her fortune to Dianora.&#13;
" B u t - s h e just idolized her brother,&#13;
and when ho went raving mad she chose&#13;
to blame me.; frightened me half out of&#13;
my senses. And chat brings me to the&#13;
reason why I toll you this. I want to&#13;
warn you against settingyour affections&#13;
on Dianora B u r k h a r d t /&#13;
"You see she had two or three offers&#13;
after that before they left Itaiyt She&#13;
refused .them all. and said she should&#13;
never marry. And one of her lovers—&#13;
a fierce young Jtulian he was—determined&#13;
to'know the reason, and he gave&#13;
her no peace till she told him abou^&#13;
her brother, and that she considered it&#13;
letter. He just glanced at it; a d a i n t y j her duly to devote her life to him, and&#13;
lite envelope, a prettv, gracefully I for his sake she meant to remain single.&#13;
written address and a European post- Well, of course ho did not persist after&#13;
mark." He tossed it carelessly on the that. 1 never heard of anything so&#13;
table, saying, as ho went out.&#13;
"Fi&lt;»m Delia. It must wait till I r e -&#13;
turn. I c;m not now stop to n a d one&#13;
of her long, gossiping missives."&#13;
Truly, Mr. Otto Delovan, you could&#13;
hardly be called a very devoted brother.&#13;
T o n s of T y p e .&#13;
Western newspapers am boasting&#13;
over a printer in the employ of the&#13;
San Francisco Chronicle who has completed&#13;
a half a century of a sit at the&#13;
" c a s e " There is a printer in Erie, Mr.&#13;
Michael J. Quinn, who has" a longer&#13;
string than the "Golden G a t e " man.&#13;
" F a t h e r " Quinn was apprenticed when&#13;
a lad to a printer in the City cf Waterford,&#13;
Ireland, in 1830, and after ierving&#13;
his apprenticeship got a " s i t " on the&#13;
Lohdou Times, and had several "fat&#13;
t a k e s " of the account of the Queen's&#13;
marriage. Coming to America Mr.&#13;
Quinn gov cases on the New Y o r k&#13;
Evening Post, which he held lor seven&#13;
years. Turning his fjvee westward he,,&#13;
came to Erie and served nealy twea'Ty&#13;
years on the Erie Dispatch^-"" He now&#13;
holds cases on the J&gt;kf"l)aily Herald,&#13;
and although^i-HJost 70 uses his eyes&#13;
withoitt^thtT^'aid of the optician or&#13;
IgiasselT.&#13;
P-y^l " F a t h e r " Quinn's years of toil and&#13;
labor represent startling&#13;
of tiguros. For in -&#13;
rate of&#13;
10,000&#13;
5,000&#13;
day,&#13;
it will&#13;
Ve~fbuh~d that the enormous amount of&#13;
119 ,.340,000 ems of matter have been set&#13;
up bp this compositor during the past&#13;
two or three years more than half a&#13;
century. In setting this it was necessary&#13;
to hanple over 358,020,000 pieces&#13;
of metal twice over including the distribution.&#13;
It will further interest the readj&gt;&#13;
know that-the type so set wciuitfweigh&#13;
187,WOO pounds, or njaety^four tons,&#13;
which this old m a n has lifted piece by&#13;
piece in the specified time. Ln setting&#13;
type the average distance over which&#13;
the hand travels is a foot a n d a half or&#13;
thereabouts. Consequently his hand&#13;
has travelled over 516,000,000 feet, or&#13;
a matter of 97,727 miles, or within a&#13;
a fair average&#13;
wearying&#13;
features in the way&#13;
stance, assuming&#13;
speed taken from his best at&#13;
ems and his rate of&#13;
ems at the present&#13;
giving 7.500 ems for an average&#13;
Miss Burkhardt was " a t h o m e " to&#13;
him as she would not have been to every&#13;
one that evening. She was r a t h e r&#13;
retired in her habits^ did not go much&#13;
into society and saw but little company.&#13;
Once or twice a year sho t h r e w o p e u&#13;
her doors to her " d e a r rive hundred&#13;
friends," and then her house was&#13;
crowded with a mo res brilliant assemblage&#13;
than ever filled the rooms of gayer&#13;
and_niQi;e iasliioDable mansions.&#13;
For Miss Burkhardt knew all the celebrities;&#13;
m a n y a distinguished charac&gt;&#13;
ter was proud of h g r ^ i c q uainjAirrieT&#13;
n&#13;
foolishly romantic. She might send&#13;
him to an asylum and make a good&#13;
match, instead of keeping him with&#13;
ner, ami refusing so mauy splendid—."&#13;
Otto road no further. With blazing&#13;
eyes and lips curling with contempt ht&#13;
few hundred feet of being four time the&#13;
circumference of the earth. This does&#13;
not include the distribution, which&#13;
would increase the distance to about&#13;
live and a half times around the globe.&#13;
" F a t h e r " Quinn's " s t r i n g " would fill&#13;
aboiit 16,015 columns of 'space: IT&#13;
stretched out in a continuous line it&#13;
would form a belt two miles wide byover&#13;
seven miles in solid reading matter.&#13;
P u t the lines in one continuous&#13;
lino and it would extend 158 mites.&#13;
__ _«».&#13;
C h o l e r a a n d W a t e r e d S t r e e t s .&#13;
M. Pasteur entirely dissents frdm Dr.&#13;
Koch's startling advice to discontinue&#13;
the practice of watering the streets duri&#13;
n g J h e prevalence of the cholera epidemic.&#13;
He admits that the dust may be&#13;
full of microbes at such a time, and&#13;
thsvt water is their native element.&#13;
But, argues M. Pasteur, if thev are GO&#13;
dry as to have lost their vitality, water&#13;
will not bring them to life again. If,&#13;
on the other hand, they possess suflicient&#13;
humidity to bo susceptible of resuscitation&#13;
and of doiiiiT ini^clueX,- the&#13;
watering process, it tho suppi&#13;
of the fluid is adequate&#13;
M y s t e r y of t h o L a k e s .&#13;
N. V. Suu.r&#13;
"If vott were ever drowned in Cayuga&#13;
Luke your fnynd« need not go to&#13;
the expense or trouble of dragging the&#13;
lake for vour body, for they'd never&#13;
find it."" i&#13;
This was tho cheerful remark m a d e&#13;
by a resident of Ithaca, who has a taste&#13;
for geological research, and who h a s&#13;
indulged it during the past few vears&#13;
in investigating the bottom of Cavuga&#13;
Lake.&#13;
" F r o m all 1 have been able to discover."&#13;
said he, "the bottom of Cayuga&#13;
Lake is a series of large openings and&#13;
cavities, many of them resembling the&#13;
craters of extinct volcanoes. Some of&#13;
these are a hundred feet in diameter,&#13;
and all are surrounded by raised rims&#13;
like the sides of a milk pan. These&#13;
crater*, as I believe they are, lie at&#13;
difleront depths, or rather are of different&#13;
heights Their depth I have never&#13;
been able to sound, although I have&#13;
lowered many hundred feet of plumb&#13;
line into them. They are undoubtedly&#13;
fathomless, and have become receptacles&#13;
of the bodies of hundreds of persons&#13;
who are known to have been drowned&#13;
in the lake during ihe pasthaif century,&#13;
and of undoubted thousands of people&#13;
killed in tierce battles that were frequently__&#13;
fought on the chores of tho&#13;
lako between hostile tribes of t h e&#13;
'original people' years before the white&#13;
m a n appeared_on ti.is continent.&#13;
It was in T ' a y u g a Lake that t h e .&#13;
wretch Ruloff lowered the bodies of his&#13;
wife and child, enclosed in a chestv&#13;
after Le had murdered them, -twenty&#13;
years ago. The weeksthat were spent&#13;
in dragging for the chest was time&#13;
thrown away, for it had sunk into the&#13;
mouth of one of these dead volcanoes,&#13;
and, if i t is not sinking yet, is no ddubt&#13;
floating about in the bo'ttomless depths&#13;
where, in the ages past, fire and smoke&#13;
and ashes were the dominant elements.&#13;
Within forty years between two and&#13;
three hundred,per3ons have been drowned&#13;
in Cayuga Lake, to ^recover the remains&#13;
of whom the grappling-iron and&#13;
drag have been used industriously, but&#13;
in vain. If it were possible for one to&#13;
make the rounds of this lake's craterlike&#13;
bed, h e w o u l d beyond doubt, encounter&#13;
hideous chatnel houses beyond&#13;
number—caverns where thousands of&#13;
grinning skeletons have fonnd their own&#13;
sopulchre, subterranean catacombi0&#13;
without end. Water taken from a depth&#13;
of 300 feetinCayuga Lake—which must&#13;
have been taken from one of the cavities&#13;
— is strongly charged with carbonic&#13;
acid, and the carbonate of lime, potash,&#13;
soda and magnesia.&#13;
Cayuga Lake has also a mysterious^&#13;
tidai motion. It is irregular in itsocenf^&#13;
rence, but very decided ^jThe'phenpuienon&#13;
lias been known-tcTappear twice&#13;
in a year, andthenr'two years or more&#13;
ha?e elapsedr"between its periods. The&#13;
i vvajjBirfrequently recedes fifty feet. T h e&#13;
reob is gradual, but the floLd tide comes&#13;
in with considerable force and rapidity.&#13;
This phenomenon is also noticed on&#13;
Seneca Lake, which is divided from&#13;
Cayuga by the high Seneca countvhills."&#13;
The surface of Seneca Lake is&#13;
sixty feet above that of Cayuga Lake,&#13;
but'l believo its bed is of the same remarkable&#13;
character. Seneca Lake rises&#13;
and falls as—mueh-as-three foet during&#13;
the time of its tidal commotion, which&#13;
is also irregular io, its period.&#13;
I believe there is a subterranean river&#13;
running from Lake Superior, t h r o u g h&#13;
Lakes Huron a n d Michigan, u n d e r&#13;
Lake Erie, and emptying into Lake&#13;
Ontario. There is no other way in&#13;
which to explain certain mysteries connected&#13;
with our great lakes. T h e surface&#13;
of Lake Superior is about 650 feet&#13;
above tide, while its bed is.2filLfeet belowjide^&#13;
ievel. Lake Huron's surface&#13;
0 feet below that of Superior's, and&#13;
its bed &gt;is about on a level with S u -&#13;
perior's. The surface of Lake Michigan&#13;
is 100 feet lower than Lake Huron's,&#13;
and its bed is suuk a corresponding&#13;
distance to the' level of the other&#13;
two lakes. Lake Erie's surface is&#13;
nearly as high as Lake Michigan's, being&#13;
^65 feet above tide, but its bed is also&#13;
above tide, being 350 feet higher than&#13;
the ocean level, consequently its bed&#13;
is 250 feet higher than those above it.&#13;
Lake Ontario's surface is the lowest of&#13;
all Ihe great iakes, being less than 500&#13;
feet above tide, but its bed is 260 feet&#13;
below the pcean, or about the same&#13;
I level as Michigan. Huron and Sn»eritore&#13;
the letter into fragments, and* thetr-j-have the effect of sweepi&#13;
that burned&#13;
in tones of&#13;
in&#13;
incast&#13;
them into the tiro&#13;
the grate, exclaiming&#13;
dignation:&#13;
" I knew that Delia was as shallow&#13;
and heartless as she is beautiful, but&#13;
did not think her capable of stich^wtfer&#13;
heartlessness as this. " ^&#13;
That evening ho a£pirr*went to Dianora&#13;
and told hcj?^0This sister's letter;&#13;
assured b&gt;&gt;r*triftt her brother's misforid&#13;
not affect his desire lo&#13;
her his wife, and entreated her to&#13;
recall her refusal.&#13;
m into&#13;
the limbo of the spw^rT,'where they&#13;
will be pow-erh^Ktor further evil. If&#13;
they &amp;reJd*tr*Tn the streets to be blown&#13;
&gt;y every wind, they are as likely&#13;
e blown in contact with the mucous&#13;
m e m b r a n e o t passing pedestrians as&#13;
with anything else, ami that offers an&#13;
ideal field foj? tho recovery -and development&#13;
of these of them whose vitality is&#13;
not absolutely extinct. M. Pasteur's&#13;
reasoning has been accepted by the&#13;
French faculty, and it seems unanswerable.&#13;
or, So there is a continuous fall from&#13;
Lake Superior to Ontprio, and all the&#13;
outlet that tbe upper lakes have thr.t is.&#13;
known i; the comparatively insignificant&#13;
Detroit river. T h a t stream never&#13;
j can care for all of that great pressure&#13;
and volume from above, and the theory&#13;
of an under-ground river, such as 1&#13;
mentioned, seems to me most reasonable.&#13;
All the St. Lawrence fishes aro&#13;
taken in every one of the lakes but&#13;
Lake Erie. Why? Because they follow&#13;
the course of the subterranean&#13;
j stream, passing 300 feet beneath the&#13;
bottom of Lake Erie, and enter&#13;
waters of the upper lakes. llhfTg'rea't&#13;
lakes above Lake E r i e _ h « v e a n occasional&#13;
ihix and re^ltf&lt;of tbeir waters,&#13;
tH)iTespondm^-^wtth ocean tides, saye&#13;
in regjuJ&gt;rifyT&#13;
resubtetranean rivcv, according to&#13;
m\ theory, becomes occasionally ob«&#13;
siructed by great obstacles that aro&#13;
constantly moving down from the lake&#13;
bottoms. Then the channels of the&#13;
outlets are insufficient to carry off the&#13;
great volume.of water, and they are&#13;
dammed back, and the lakes rise.&#13;
Finally, these obstructions are swept&#13;
away by the irresistible pressure, the&#13;
river flows naturally oji.ca_mor&lt;», and&#13;
tho dammed water subsides. T h a t is&#13;
the whole mystery of the rise and fall&#13;
of the tides in the great lakes.&#13;
•&#13;
There is a girl in Turner, Me., who&#13;
smokos, chews, shaves, swears, and&#13;
wears a man's hat.&#13;
I .&#13;
I&#13;
O U R N E I G H B O R S , ^Saturday, a $70 full blood mireno ram H&#13;
only a few months old. His line ileecc&#13;
ANN ARBOR.&#13;
F r o m the C o u r i e r .&#13;
T h e r e were 31 new members received&#13;
into the M. E . church last Sunday,&#13;
• e a r l y all of yinmijhad been probationers.&#13;
'&#13;
Chas. Norton, of Dixboro, who went&#13;
west for his health some time since,&#13;
died at Burlington, Kansas, of consumption,&#13;
a n d his remains reached&#13;
here Saturday last. He was 24 years&#13;
old. F u n e r a l held Monday, from fct&#13;
.Thomas' church.&#13;
HL D. Piatt, Benj. Brown and J . VV.&#13;
W i a g , commissioners in the estate of&#13;
JToJbuu Henley, met at the probate office&#13;
Monday, and partitioned the real est&#13;
a t e of t h a t estate among, the h e i r s -&#13;
consisting of three daughters, T h e&#13;
value of t h e entire e-tate was about&#13;
$26,000.&#13;
| l i s s Carrie M. Comstock, of this&#13;
ci£y, who received a~$900 clerkship at&#13;
Washington, recently, in the secretary's&#13;
Oifice of the treasury department, und&#13;
«r the civil service rules, has reported.&#13;
for, and been assigned to duty. Miss&#13;
Comstock is a high scholar ot '80, and&#13;
has since been a teacher in the 3d&#13;
w a r d sellout; ' :&#13;
build, etc., making him very promis- LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER. »T'S.&#13;
We (Jen'l Manager Spieer, of the M. A. vviilst'Il Lumber a! the i',i!lowing price&#13;
L. R'y, let out the information d i n i n g X X X IS inch S h i n g l e s prr ;liou-and&#13;
a recent visit here that the lickets for Clear Butt- i s inch Shin;&gt; l.&lt;, p, r tin'ii-aiu&#13;
all the railroads catering liere would &lt;-till Shiiio'Ks 1* inch, per thousand&#13;
be sold at M. A. L. depot shortly, and : ? ° .! | ^ ( M ^ ' llnmsand nVt&#13;
l i e 11'• \ t t;o i l a y s&#13;
!)()&#13;
&gt;) •;;&#13;
., . , , . ,, Xo 1 Lath, per thoii.-atiil feet&#13;
ali passenger trains would stop there ,..,, .., ,, • i r t^r. v t .i i *• .&#13;
1&#13;
r ---- ' Hill Mutt, including Isjt No. i, per thousand teet,&#13;
only making what was supposed to be K o o f u,,.,,.,]^ p ; T ' t Imuran i 1&#13;
the case at the time the M. A. L. depot.; Hani Lumtn'i\ per ih&#13;
H l &gt; a ! i i l 11 e l&#13;
( ' i '&#13;
WAS built, a ITuion depot.&#13;
F O W L K K V I L L E .&#13;
Frora t h e Kevflew,&#13;
Mr. J . L. Cooper was thrown from&#13;
his road c a r t o n Sunday and his left&#13;
arm dislocated.&#13;
Sixteen tickets were sold at this&#13;
place for the exclusion to Petoskey on&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
-Addie Teachworth cut her foot severely,&#13;
with an ax on L'rid.iv, while attempting&#13;
to split wood.&#13;
Kella, a live-vear-old son of ( ' . H .&#13;
Cli&amp;pman, of Cohoctah, died of cholera&#13;
infantum on Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Hannah Dunnville died on&#13;
Sunday at the residence of her daugh-&#13;
--.ter, Mr*, Frank Drew, of cancer, aged&#13;
I.2D.&#13;
o.SO,&#13;
....• 4.00.&#13;
M.oi&gt;.&#13;
s,.-.() to 11.(W&#13;
lo.DUto 1 7..")().&#13;
Shipping Culls, 1 liou&gt;aini ti-ei lo.OU.&#13;
Fencing per thousand I'e, I ' U&gt;00 to 11.01),&#13;
Fin ishiug L I C I I L T pei tiiou-aiiu i*-&lt; t 1. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . .:.0.00 to ,'iiu»0.&#13;
Siding p e r i!,ou&gt;aud feet l-l.oo to JO.00.&#13;
lUSITlVFLV NOCHI:J)IT.&#13;
A . L . HQYT, f&amp;snajjer, 3&lt;r&#13;
BARTON &amp; CAMPBELL,&#13;
JEWELERS,&#13;
, \ \ n N K A I . K K S I \&#13;
ffn^kfiey, i^ich.&#13;
SI'OllTIN'O GOODS&#13;
.1 u s l r o e e i v e d a f u l l l i n e o f&#13;
FISHING TACKLES «&#13;
FILLER BROS.&#13;
CELEBRATED POCKET CUTLER)&#13;
AND MERID'EN SILVER&#13;
PLATED WWE,&#13;
M. M. Peck, formerly clerk at the&#13;
$ t . James, whose illness has been noticed&#13;
in these Columns, died Tuesday&#13;
ittoo&amp;rhis disease being typhoid malaria.&#13;
Funeral services were held in&#13;
the parlors of the hotel Thursday forenoon,&#13;
conducted by Rev. AY. H. Rider.&#13;
Wis remains were taken to Ypsilanti&#13;
for interment.&#13;
Two Pclacks who were working on&#13;
t h e new building in the rear. of the&#13;
postoffice, wheeling stone into the&#13;
4e&amp;My^«re severely injured la*t F ri&#13;
day forenoon by reason of the plank&#13;
breaking upon which they were rolling&#13;
down a large stone, and precipating&#13;
toiem to the bottom. One was injured&#13;
q u i t e severely about the head, and the&#13;
*o*ther about the body.&#13;
6') years.&#13;
Mr. H. L. Ide, of Argentine., has taken&#13;
up his residence in this village and&#13;
will open a meat market in the Mc-&#13;
Keever.building next week.&#13;
The reports ot the Methodist Protestant&#13;
conference locates the Kcv. 1'.&#13;
C. Cyphers at Fowlerville during, the&#13;
LARGE STOCK. NEW GOODS.&#13;
Till': OLD UNLIABLE IS STILL&#13;
HEAD-QUARTERS&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
t ite o r :&#13;
p r i c e ;&#13;
( M i l , . ( .&#13;
pfiL'CS.&#13;
the n,arket. and can give&#13;
will -11 rprise you. Please&#13;
.amine our stock am] g e t&#13;
I3STco::&#13;
ung year.&#13;
BRIGHTON.&#13;
F r o m the Citizen,&#13;
A. Tock, of Hartland, raised 357&#13;
-bushels of oats' from five acres.&#13;
District No. ,5 fr., which includes&#13;
this village, has 271 children.&#13;
_ _ Badgers have been burrowing in the&#13;
Gardner cemetery in Tyione, a n d hum&#13;
a n bones have been lound n e a A h e i r&#13;
holes.&#13;
Wm. Cooley has sold his interest in&#13;
t h e Skank farm and returns to near&#13;
N e w York City. He drives the entire&#13;
distance with a horse and buggy;&#13;
Eddie Marrin, ot Tyrone, lacks a&#13;
p a r t of three fingers, which were shot&#13;
off by a companion while hunting&#13;
squirrels.&#13;
T e n persons took the train at this&#13;
place Tuesday for Petoskey. On reachi&#13;
n g here there were 324 aboard the&#13;
train.&#13;
1 • George Broadraore is the possessor of&#13;
ft pumpkin, raised on the farm of Wm.&#13;
Neundorf, which is, according to the&#13;
Irishman'sexpression^'Equal to none!"&#13;
It is 5 feet-and 9 inches in oircumfcrence&#13;
one way, 5 feet the other way,&#13;
weighs, 66 pounds, and c&gt;Mi$ains pie&#13;
timber enough to last an army a&#13;
month.&#13;
/Mrs. Truman B. Worden died Tuesday,&#13;
the 9th, and was buried VVednes-&#13;
Iday afternoon from the M. E. church.&#13;
iirs. Worden was a resident of this&#13;
Village and vicinity since 1836, having&#13;
0. D. Weller has purchased the h 1 idware&#13;
"stock of II. Naylor. at Helved,&#13;
and win carry" on the business there.&#13;
Mr. W . Y . l l y h e , of this ,;lace, wilT&#13;
have charge of the books.&#13;
Marshall Witheral. of Cuhoctah, and&#13;
Lousia G. Fowler were married at&#13;
this place on Saturday evening by&#13;
W m . H . Pullen, Esq.&#13;
W. H. Taft and Ollie Monroe, of&#13;
Howell, have leased the Spencer House&#13;
and will take possession, on Monday.&#13;
Mr. Spencer has also purchased {he&#13;
bazaar stock of Mr. Taft. at Howell.&#13;
DR Y G 001 )S AX 1.) 0 ROC EM FS,&#13;
AND EVI«;KYTHING IN THE&#13;
JJNU.OFUEXIWAL&#13;
^ROHAXDIiSti. j 1 »&#13;
E. A. ItiANN, East Main St., Finckney.&#13;
BUY THE CELEBRATED T H E S T U D E B A K E B&#13;
Buggies and Carriages&#13;
n r o u n r i v a l e d f n r BKATTTT, S T R E N G T H . , E L E -&#13;
G . V K C E . E . V S E O F K I D I N O A N D I I U N N I N O . S e n d&#13;
f o r n e w i l l u s t r a t e d c a t d o g u o . o r c a l l r . n d&#13;
POO o u r w o r k fit o u r C H I C A G O K E P O S I -&#13;
T O K Y , 2 3 J S T A T E S T B E E T . W O m a k o a l l&#13;
''Money o'oes a trreat way nowa- i&#13;
days." observed a New York hank I&#13;
cashier, as he porketed S.aO.OOli of the ;&#13;
bank's funds and set out -for Canada.'&#13;
Write it on your heart t i n t every&#13;
day is the best-in the year. No man&#13;
has learned anything rightly until he&#13;
knows that every day is Doomsday.—&#13;
Emerson.&#13;
"Make your husbands comfortable&#13;
at home, and they will not JJTO out in&#13;
the evenin^Oexclaimed a Cincinnati&#13;
preaeher lately. The next day Cincinnati&#13;
wives were .anxiously inquiring&#13;
about the price of beer by the keg.&#13;
Studebakcr Wagon,&#13;
W i t h r.vTKNT C A S T , a n d F A N I U G E P A T E N T&#13;
S T E E L , K K L I N ; T i a s s A X L K ; 1 ' A T I : N T (JV.VLE&#13;
i ) u i , D T i u K ; w o o i l \ v o r k , u U c r v e a r s o f sca-;&lt; a i -&#13;
' i n g , ROAKrp IN isoii.iNO O I L ; S k , i n s o f L •. , ^ k t n ( l s , n f CARRIAGK WOHK. from thn FINEST&#13;
S u P K R i o i t l i m \ ; IJUXCS l o r c e d i n t o H u b s ^ a i i.ANDAU d&gt;.wu t«» tho J.l&lt; iUTi s T lii i H ! \ , boh&#13;
y d r a a l i o p r e s s , i n s t e a d o f In i'ti£ wcil&lt;„v-d; snl&lt; s tho HKSX L I N E OF ^Ux. Ci-A^exa u i ' ^ i u i s c i&#13;
S P O K I : S , !SLoi'i:-Sn(&gt;Ti.ni-n; 1&lt; s t of W o r k m a n - W I , " K " ' ^ r ^ a to tim tra.lo.&#13;
Oi 1 WAGO.N^ . fccndiorii^wCutuloguo. . ..._fiauUi Bend. lIanuuaanna .&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
\v 1 a r e ;u C ' a i ' e&#13;
A young gentleman wishes to know&#13;
which is jiroper to say on leaving&#13;
young lady friend after a late- call&#13;
good-night or good-rTening. Never&#13;
tell a lie, youn'g m a n . Say good&#13;
morning.&#13;
•Out of .fiftv-fi&#13;
ywfr^iving where~the Methodist parsonage&#13;
now stands. Her husband was&#13;
the second person who- died in this&#13;
town after its settlement, he having&#13;
&amp;ed the next year after taking up his&#13;
residence here. Mrs. Worden's age&#13;
y*s 77 years.&#13;
fi^UTH LYON.&#13;
from the PkfcoL&#13;
Packing, Mill i&gt;oa&#13;
P a i n t y P a m , Poof&#13;
N » w (iraml' i' iM n i&lt;&#13;
i In 'wood : aii'l will&#13;
v-nve medical papi rs | r ( T , a ' l ' ' n r - ^ ' c :m&#13;
started in 188;], seventeen have died.&#13;
And why shouldn't they? That ,was&#13;
the only way they could reach tiie majority&#13;
of their .suh&gt;cr;iicrs. -liv&gt;!on&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
A.section of the Canadian Pacilic&#13;
Railway reaching over the broad dominion&#13;
of the Northwest, territory has&#13;
not a dram shop ov the line. A ' redcoated&#13;
officer, in Aer Majesty's service,&#13;
enters every train that crosses the border,&#13;
and remorselessly' seizes everv&#13;
drop of liquor that he 'finds, even t\,&#13;
the halt emptied flask* of the traveler,&#13;
and prohibition prohibits on that railway..&#13;
• n u l l he a i d e i ) ( [ u&#13;
a !&gt;o a;_'•«• u.!-. ji &gt;r V,'&#13;
' e -, e 1 i ! - , P u n i i i i " "&#13;
a i a l P i&#13;
,1 1&#13;
o r o i&#13;
N&#13;
&gt;e&#13;
(.' i v 1\ [•&lt; v V i&lt; A Is \ X (J- M UA,-&#13;
PIXCKNPY, MIClf.&#13;
^ ¾ ^&#13;
settled here with her husband in thatj- _Tho average wages paid to mann-&#13;
"At the special election last Thursday&#13;
She proposition to bond the village foi | Tumbl"^ ff&#13;
, ,fi,000 for fire protection^ wai carried&#13;
factifring employes in Massachusetts&#13;
is nearly double the amount paid tn&#13;
similar employes in Great Pritian:&#13;
while t l n r a v e ' i g e amount paid for all&#13;
industries in the former State is 70&#13;
per cent, higher per week than in the&#13;
latter country.&#13;
"Ever had a cyclone here?" asked a&#13;
Kansas man who was visiting a country&#13;
aunt in the east.. " A cyclone? (),&#13;
yes," said his a u n t ; "Deacon Brown's'&#13;
son brought one from Poston a&#13;
\Th2-3. t l i o w c r J L E i t o y o r t h e&#13;
• w o r d C r j r u - i i-&gt; i n 3 n t i o u . e d , t h e y&#13;
C2.cli cv.~~C£t t h s c L l i c r , :zo "7.Tidely&#13;
k n o w n a r . d co p c ^ u l a r a r e t h e i n -&#13;
S t r i ; r ; - i ^ ^ ^-^:1 t l . o v^ilzcxz.&#13;
F i v e l e t t e r s i u c a c l i ^ - t L u . ' . v c&#13;
\ 7 o r d s a r e r e m i n d e r s o f e n j e y m e n t&#13;
ixi m u l t i t u d e s o f b c r a e s . I l l u s t r a -&#13;
t e d C a t a i o g r u o m a i l e d f r e e t o a l i&#13;
a p p l i c a n t s .&#13;
&lt;pell&#13;
. -it.&#13;
every time he tried i t . '&#13;
ago; but, law; he uould't ride".it&#13;
^y 3^ to 24&#13;
James Van Atxa has engaged u part*&#13;
aer witi E. M. Selloi&amp;n in the agriculiarai&#13;
implement business under th/&#13;
krm »ame of Sellman fc yanAtta. /&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, P. H. Mosher" were&#13;
m*de happy by the Addition of a 10|&#13;
ponnd daughter on Saturday tnornii&gt;?&#13;
^ p i p t 6th. Mother and d^ifbfer both&#13;
~^SSeii^&amp;t^A tathBTTir charge ofit&#13;
iruArdiAn.&#13;
If:&#13;
"I've j u s t found out why ' lightning&#13;
never strikes twice in the same place,"&#13;
said fanner F u r r o w to the deacon- as&#13;
stood under a tree d u r i n g a thunderstorm.&#13;
^ W h y is i t ? " asked fhe deacon.&#13;
"lieeause, sir, the same place is never&#13;
there after the lightning once hits it."&#13;
# Th« latest a r g u m e n t against tobacco&#13;
is_tlut it is*one of the causes of lo,s&lt; of&#13;
affeetiot\ and divorce, through paralyziiiff&#13;
the nerves of the heart; and the&#13;
yitfeburg- -IJullotin—riseij to—hrquire&#13;
GRAND OPENING!&#13;
I am pleased to announco'that I have just stalled a general store a t&#13;
My line consi^t&gt; of a large i;in: varied assortni(Mit.of , -&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
WrXI'IvCTl'TLl.V,&#13;
West Main Street, l'liickney, Elicitigan.&#13;
H ¥ , V - l f ,&#13;
I \' 1 » v.&#13;
r&#13;
- Wi .i&#13;
M i l / ! , .&#13;
/ . / . . • • • . ' / .&#13;
•1H1 \r&#13;
aV&#13;
"•• ; v \ - T ; /:::,1:1 o f o n e o f th&#13;
- 1- &gt;-.&lt;:: - r.i MI f h e U A ^&#13;
• •". »•• .".'&gt;,-', 1.*}j&lt;*t&gt;Uitffp&#13;
a / / - . i i^t'ij-,: .iJiilfllifB&#13;
-Fjl.' &amp; CO. Loi.:;c»n3. Mft.&#13;
-i T H K : D.W. Miller Carriage Co.&#13;
Manufiu turc-a large variety of&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, &amp; C ,&#13;
After the most npprnvtvl rlosipna at the very IowMt&#13;
prifos cousiBtent with good •workmanship,&#13;
— - S O , O O Q &gt; v e h . i o l o a —&#13;
f o u r mntii]f:irturo a m n n w in u s e in t h i s a n d&#13;
iroi^rn countries ami attest tho excellence « f&#13;
u r (joiiils by t h e universal satisfaction which tbcjr&#13;
ivo.—Kv«ry vehicle is WUJHA.VTED,—Sp«l*I&#13;
fWfftl«A^riini(urlven-]m mall Orders. "&#13;
CATAL'OCfCES F l l E E .&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
E, Fifth S t . , Culrert S t . a n d E?gIeitoa i n . ,&#13;
CINCINNATI, 0 ,&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOE THE CAMPAIGN. W e w i l l Bend t h e W E E K t X V R X B -&#13;
P R E S S u n t i l a f t e r e l e c t i o n f o r o n l y gft&#13;
C E N T S .&#13;
AddreM ;-&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
I &gt; e t r o l t , Alloli.&#13;
1 Planing, Resawis.g,a[j kiaHiis of piais. a:ia fincy&#13;
Bracket-Siiwins, Carvinq and Tuirainq&#13;
nnil Hull, Prop', tf&#13;
PASTiLLE-fttMEOY&#13;
*r« who lutfer&#13;
't'jsijal D«bil.&#13;
(hausMoa M 4&#13;
""'rrqiirnim.&#13;
:^ Mi iron ;ui(i ^cnci'iii iTiaciimc&#13;
• I111- .\&gt;'M'&gt;I'I- Mntt-riuls, J'ji^inc&#13;
e l i t e i!i.-nlc' ;;iiil o u t s i d e !,".&lt; • 11 i d "&#13;
( I wA .«ff,nnr'h"&gt;- *? - S &lt; n t fay n"«U In plain -&#13;
U.J U ^ U i ^ u,a ^ i ' J V i " J ^ ' ^ t T a l ^ n S ^&#13;
v»pper».&#13;
amph&gt;Dt(ie«crfc&#13;
DO YOU KNOW T H A T&#13;
L T T 1 ! &gt; T---&#13;
\\&#13;
i.Ai-lDS" CLIMAXVIA'V,&#13;
I'OIJAOCS.&#13;
1 - U . ' K ' i (I , , : • . ,&#13;
1,-t-- I -.-, n: u | i l i - l - 1 . ! • ! , , , ; .&#13;
I ' u . - c u i l : i i i i . i i i \- , , ; : , ! • [ • ; , , : ,&#13;
FINE&#13;
•"•' ' I-' tho p u r e s t ;&#13;
"i -'•'', liurytoH, m u -&#13;
i'_ri&gt;(licius, 'iw ia'th©&#13;
LOiilM.AIIirs UUSV.' M - H F&#13;
&lt;TI" TOitACCO&#13;
i s : i i H ( &gt; m : i , ! t . u | ' , 1,,, - . , , . , t . , , , , , ^ U U ( , f ( ) r a r o I n a t l c&#13;
' . U ' \ M ! . . 41:,11.1.-, 1. :-,.,-,,,,,( t o m m , . .&#13;
U&gt;K!!.&gt;.A!!iPS XAVY CLIlTIXfiS&#13;
' " « M'ie\ ,•,• Hi, nxlui &lt;'d."&#13;
l-OlMLi.AlilJ.'S J-'A'.M(K:S S N U F F S&#13;
!:av,; I,,,.,, ,,,,,1 (,., , „ , . , [;M ; lMlU B o l d t o .&#13;
U l,u 1,'rrrNt, ht i!i;,n un\ o t h e r s&#13;
nmnmia&#13;
7SSET&amp;BLSFIUS&#13;
Secure Healthy&#13;
action to the Live*&#13;
and relieve all bil*&#13;
&gt;~.»ious troublee,&#13;
Pw«i7 7«g«UUo; Ho Gi.^iag. price 2&amp;. All 8 » ^&#13;
• • d RoapiT^lVorTOM*&#13;
)Dr. La Barge,&#13;
/mWK'BHHOR TO Itfali»t'n«nnitTh r-itroii&#13;
I n n&#13;
fC treatment bjrmafi,&#13;
KiUblbacd I 0 T .&#13;
how it is the 'divorced?-in--THieh a c«se,&#13;
-j-mana^es to get, alon^ so lovinglvT with&#13;
W. J . Gage took from the train, On the second venture. • *&#13;
- _ — V —&#13;
Kvcnybody. &lt;"il_l and examine --our stock •&gt;{' n'oods. lti^lic.&lt;t price iiaid for&#13;
B U T I K K 'A X I ) J'XiliS. Kvn-ytliing $o\t\ ut rtu-k hottoin iirices.&#13;
Doirt"i"or"r?o£7' f&#13;
« P. CUNNINGHAM, Gregorj^Mie^&#13;
^ • O l l&#13;
f*»trml ,„&#13;
^uocciBor to Dr. llutt.' IilatKjnuirv.&#13;
supply ot • - ' " - ' , h " x ( l t l 1 * ifrand&#13;
lIAUXJiShKiOODS!&#13;
„ - ^ I^VJ-j'TI^KKASdN,&#13;
S r o C K i w D G g ^ M i C H l Q A l K&#13;
s*&#13;
The 'Confiii'imvit of Titles in Canada.&#13;
The recent invcstinrjit &lt;tf another"&#13;
W t c h of eoiispicLiMiis (';iM;i.]iail&#13;
t h e title of "Sir.&#13;
X J 3 B E E B E .&#13;
W i l l i OIL&#13;
vui h&#13;
S, |,v UNDHRTAKKR,&#13;
tlje (jih'cn of Kn^html has n'li.'Wt'u&#13;
n the Canadian press t h e &lt;li.-cii--i.jii&#13;
•of the significance of Knighthood in&#13;
general, and some conferments of it&#13;
in particular.&#13;
I t has long" been t h e pronounced&#13;
* iopinion, if hot :ui established principle,&#13;
of the Liberal political! across&#13;
the lines that titles a r e at variance&#13;
with the democratic ideas for which&#13;
t h e y contend, a n d contrary to t\[y&#13;
spirit and tendency of the age. On&#13;
t h e other hand, conservatism, with its&#13;
professed superior regard iov monarchical&#13;
institutions, is the avowed&#13;
champion of these decorations.&#13;
W h e t h e r her majesty believes that&#13;
.attachment to t h e crown can be most&#13;
cheaply secured by dropping in,a few&#13;
Sir K n i g h t s among thetoo democratic&#13;
upper-crusts of Canadian Society now&#13;
a n d then, or whether it i s simply a&#13;
scheme the shrewd Conservative leader&#13;
has for rewarding the Sir Admiral&#13;
P o r t e r s wi,o have paid assiduous a t -&#13;
tention to governmental door-knobs&#13;
a n d have been placed by fortune&#13;
a b o v e .those gratifications of a pecuniary&#13;
kind which most commonly reward-&#13;
political henchmen, is a question.&#13;
n o t answered. Hut it is observable&#13;
t h a t with every renewal of the debute&#13;
on Canadian independance or annexatton,&#13;
such as they have recently had,&#13;
her Majesty is pleased to confer t h e&#13;
the cognomanal atlix K. (J. 13. upon&#13;
such ot a-number of her loval Canadian&#13;
subjects named by her P r i v y&#13;
Councillor, the Conservative leader, as&#13;
shall express a .proper appreciation of&#13;
the honor. T h a t these conferments&#13;
have any affect in slaving the independence&#13;
tendencies of the Canadian&#13;
mind seems doubtful, in view of recent&#13;
events over there. While the late&#13;
Hon. George Brown, the Horace u r e e -&#13;
• -ley of' Canadian journalism and the&#13;
real leader of the Liberal party in his&#13;
lifetime with the Hon, Alexander Mackenzie,&#13;
the lately deposed nominal&#13;
leader, persistently declined with&#13;
thanks these tinsel .decorations a m l y e t&#13;
remained loyal to imperial wuhection&#13;
we find Hit hard Cartwright, an ei'stwhile&#13;
Torv of the tilt ra degree, though&#13;
latterly assisted with the Liberals, acc&#13;
e p t i n g the title of ""Sir" ami almost&#13;
immediately afterwards giving utterance&#13;
t»&lt;the most pronounced independence&#13;
-want iments.&#13;
&amp;tifl the bestowment of titles in Canada&#13;
goes on, and in the last batch • we&#13;
find two characters quite typical oi&#13;
where the merit ol t h o e cheap decorations&#13;
of fanciful conceit is s u p p l e d&#13;
to inhere. They are 1&gt;. L .Mai-plnT-oii.&#13;
»of 'iT-wronto, and J . W. i^nvsoii, of&#13;
Montreal. The first is a Senator, by&#13;
-virtue ot the nominating" powei in the&#13;
P r e m i e r . To say that he ha- nevci" hg-&#13;
•ured in Canadian politics would hardly&#13;
be|tair as he is the.alleg»'d an: bur ol 'a&#13;
phamphlct on the vit. 11 i/.::ig in! 1.u-11,• • •&#13;
of a protective ta-riIf. which is simply&#13;
r u n n i n g over with-figures. Dr. Ihuvson&#13;
"is admittedly one of t i c -diohirs of&#13;
Canada, associated for year- with her&#13;
educational institutions, a -dentist&#13;
- — t — \ Mi, i.m.u.u; ii.v.&#13;
FURNITURE.&#13;
pii-Oiri' KriinnuL', I 't-jjruji n,.-, I' jihol^ti'riri},' K u&#13;
WKST M.WS' VI'KKKT,&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIGAN.&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROWN,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All khi&lt;ls of cnsloin work, and gciwral&#13;
repairing, including&#13;
_ HORSE SHOEING.&#13;
Shop back -of Mann's Hloek, TIN-CKNKT&#13;
ESTI1JL1SHKD 1864. ~&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
Obtain for Mechajiieal Devices, Compounds,&#13;
Designs a n d Labels,&#13;
All preliminary examinations as&#13;
to.))atentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our "(iuide to OTrtiTmmg " P a t e n t , "&#13;
is sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS li AUGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHillGTON, D. C.&#13;
B akery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
READY V()\l liCSINKSS!&#13;
Ureail ami Unas Fresh Every Day. &gt;&#13;
Wjirtii u i r u l s ;HII| l u n e h e * .0 a l l h o u r s . Oysters*&#13;
a n d (ill &lt;li-l iviicit's in t S.rir .,'U&lt;ui!. We h a v e a l i n e&#13;
"f fi'c-lL LTiH'crics. -i L' I ;issnrl iiifiit o l t e a f r m n&#13;
•-'e i " '."iVciit- a p o u n d . J l i i ' l u ' - t p r i c e p a i d f o r&#13;
!'••!' t'O' :!&gt;H1 l-:_'u'&gt;. ( ' " m i ' a m i M T U - . W e w i l l j : j v c&#13;
yi m ^IKIII ;;ui)(|- a m i fair p : ' h v - ,&#13;
W. II. L A W U L X C K , P H O P U .&#13;
n . l ' O K T A M .&#13;
N e w V&#13;
HAVING DECIDED TO QUIT THE&#13;
GROCERY B U S I N E S S ,&#13;
W E OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK&#13;
CALL AND GET PRICES.&#13;
BUTTER AND EGGS WANTEO.&#13;
WE HAVE A LARGE LINE OF&#13;
B O O T S AND S H O E S ,&#13;
GLOVES AND MITTENS,&#13;
WHICH WE OFFER CHEAP.&#13;
GET OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYINGHOPP&#13;
Sc HOPP.&#13;
TO THE PEOPLE OF PINCKNEY&#13;
This Horse 13 TEU.l.VO&#13;
-«THI3 MAN-—&#13;
Thatif hedont sc !1 Ida Hocivy Draft, H'-r"f Villing&#13;
Hinder, and buy on&#13;
EASY RUNNING&#13;
DEERING TWINE BINDER&#13;
*ionee,every horse on the farm will soon bo dead&#13;
WIUJAM DEER1MG &amp; CO., Chicago, Ht.&#13;
— — - H - AND VICINITY.^•A ±Hr&#13;
Please bear in mind t h e following low prices, and profit thereby. O u r store&#13;
is now full of the latest style of&#13;
count v, \iv.: PAINTS s s r In any quantity, Be-t U n v e i l Oil - r a w o r boiled&#13;
T u r p e n t i n e , Ituh \'arni-li.'4. Flowinu' V a r n i s h e s&#13;
Dryers, Knotter'* I'uttv. :uni I'.uiitrrr;' S u p p l i e s&#13;
«»f all kind.-. Any -Imlc ..f &lt;-,,i,,r ri.^irpd m i x e d&#13;
and ready fur applying, t.-n per cent, cheaper t h a n&#13;
any other house in tmi-p, I'ap.T hanuini,', frescoing,&#13;
ylafi.s st;uni:iLr ami _rr:uTiiriL: -peeialties. Give&#13;
us a call :md sati-fy \onrselcen that u e only s a y&#13;
what we mean, ami in. an all tliaf \\&gt;- Hay.&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8 1884.&#13;
Timbered Land for Sale or Exchange.&#13;
I have eiiihtv urn';) of tiruher land in t h e township&#13;
of White Dak. In_'liain ('o , which 1 will sell&#13;
for cash or trade f,ir other land.-' &lt;&gt;r p r o p e r t y i n&#13;
- southern Lis iiiLtBton enmity. Ail'lrc-*,&#13;
N O R M A N B U R G E S S ,&#13;
IMiickney, Mich.&#13;
PRINTS, GINGHAMS,&#13;
WHITE GOODS,&#13;
SILK VELVETS, VELVET RIBBONS&#13;
—M^tr^rrrtviT . vM( m IraM f i t v sav e&#13;
Ha .''_'a^'' 1. \pi'r.--a._-n a n d t ' a r i ' i a i r r H i r e a n d H o p&#13;
a t t i n ' ( . I M l l d I l l i i l l l l l n t i ' l l &gt; p i H ) r - i t c O r t t l l d C't'Ut&#13;
i a l 1 1 . . p . i t .&#13;
I'l. _-;111f i'.ui!ii&lt; I'itti'd u p at a c o s t of o n e m i l&#13;
li"U (l'ill.n&gt;, fi'ilaci'd t o j l a n d n p w a i ' d s J U T ( l a v .&#13;
K;;ntpi'aN p l a n , K i c a t o r . iO'-1 a u r i n t KU+i^livd&#13;
^ i:li tlic h.'st. H o i &gt; r c a r s . M a u . ' S a n d e l e v a t e d&#13;
t a i h ' o ; a l s t o a l l d . ' p o t - . I a m i ! i r - c a n live l i c t t e r&#13;
for ] . - s i a o n . . y at t h e O i ' a u d I ' n i o n H o t e l t h a n&#13;
a m oliii'r fn&gt;t cla-.- In'Sri in ( h e c i t v .&#13;
Laclies'NecJ LereShawls,&amp;c.&#13;
^_^_^ , &lt; » t&#13;
some distinction anl in v\,'\:y rTrjiort&#13;
personally worthy of any hanoi's t h e&#13;
countryrc-ould boMow upon h i m . In&#13;
the award ot' titles Mr. AbicpJifrs-.m"&#13;
has beeu made a Knight uf the Math.&#13;
while Mi*. Dawson is made: (inly a&#13;
KniglifBaTluilor. Over this aHotmcnt&#13;
of honors, as well as over *hc ^(Micral&#13;
question of the value of imperial titles.&#13;
t h e Caaadian press is having an interesting&#13;
squabble.&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion,&#13;
Premature Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
. n RO-paL'O C l o t h - b o u n d 1'ook of Advice t o&#13;
Yuuntf or Middle-a^eii M e n , w i t h p r o s c r i p t i o n s&#13;
for Self-tre.'itment hv ;v Ki'^(il;\r I'livslclan.&#13;
SC-NT F R E E K - n s ^ * ™ ^ - 1&#13;
•J. WILL'A^f53 &amp; C O . . MILWAUKEE, Wia&#13;
Michigan Boggy Go.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
How does P a t get over single ble&amp;s-&#13;
*^ness? He proposes to Bridg-it.&#13;
I n I n d i a .there is said to be a temple&#13;
•devoted to the (xoddes&gt; of Cholera. It&#13;
as supposed to be full of watermelons.&#13;
" W h a t is a lake?*' asked the teacher.&#13;
A bright little Irish boy raised his&#13;
: h a n d . ' " W e l l , M i k e y , w h a t , i s i t ? " Wholesale Manufacturers of all kinds of Open, t a d&#13;
•"Sure its a hole iu the kettle, muni." i TPP BIGGIES ami ROAD CABTS. Asenu want«4&#13;
,lT , , ,, . , , , , . . . , „ , . tTerywhere. Write for catalogue *ud price lilt.&#13;
"Indade, said Mrs. () bafferty. who •. ^% w o a K A SPECULTY.&#13;
was discussing the ,. -xii old times;&#13;
•"the paple who lived in the wurruld&#13;
whin there was not a livin' soul on the&#13;
fap* of the earth, had the best tonne of&#13;
i t that I can imagine."&#13;
A young lady admitted to her mot liter&#13;
that her beau had kissed her on the&#13;
.cheek. "And what did you do?" asked&#13;
the old lady, in a tone of indignation.&#13;
•"Mother," said the young kidy,"l cannot&#13;
tell a lie, F t u r n e d the other&#13;
cheek."&#13;
In fact the finest line of D r y Goods ever shown in Pinckney.&#13;
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD.&#13;
BEST CANTON AND- RENFREW GINGHAMS, 10 CTS. YD.&#13;
WE WILL CONVINCE EVERYBODY THAT OUR&#13;
GOODS ARE THE BEST AND LOWEST.&#13;
B I D D E R S , K E A P E K 3 AND MOWEB8&#13;
T H 6 HORSES' F R i E N 0 8 .&#13;
F O B 8 . 1 L E B *&#13;
S. ANDREWS, Hownll, Mich.&#13;
SLAPPBANGI.&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN!&#13;
T I S K L E&#13;
Aijain t o eh'.- front, in iiis n e w store, y h e r e , for_&#13;
the.jj^x't Rixty 'days from this 'date, ffrr'cash.^ 1&#13;
•p"romis»e to trivi'to all my p a t r o n s more q u a n t i t y&#13;
and better qmilirv for l.'-'s inonrv, a n v of t h e followinii&#13;
Hith lrJ, Lhaii rinv otheT itr'aler i n t h e&#13;
UETHOIT &amp; CLEVELAND&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
.Chy of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third S t Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leava&#13;
frbmTTRiver St. Cleveland at 8.30 p. m.&#13;
T H E $ 2 . 2 5 ROUTE:&#13;
Week days-Standard Time.&#13;
T H E $ 3.0C R O U T L&#13;
City of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne St. Detroit,.&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A-Id*—&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
For Marine City St Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisvilla&#13;
Cheboygan Sf. Ignace and&#13;
i K.TIIRFSOU4-: M A C K I N A C&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cents for &lt;xur illustrated bo2b k of 120 pages,&#13;
ft LAKETOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKI&#13;
histprical and descriptive of this&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
WOr IQWayneSt.. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
R A P I D T R A N S I T&#13;
We must not forget to mention our Grocery line. Call a n ^ g e t ~ p r i c e s on&#13;
sugars. W e want all the Butter and Eggs we can get, a u d will&#13;
pay the highest market price.&#13;
Thanking you for past favors, we remain, Respectfully yours^&#13;
MANN BROS.&#13;
successors to T H E W. S. MANN ESTATE. P i l i c k l i e y M i d i&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS RECAROMQ&#13;
Br, Barter's Iron taj&amp;&#13;
I t will purify and enrich the B L O O D , refrotafe&#13;
j t h e LIVER ami K I O N E Y 8 , ami H E S T U K K T H «&#13;
t R X A I . T H &amp;nd VIGOR of Y O U T H : In all tl.o«*&#13;
s t _&#13;
j. disease* reotttrlttff.a certain and etHclt-nt T O N I C ,&#13;
' " l)ys|iep ' " ""&#13;
t r t ' i i k t u i ,&#13;
1th liuiuetllate and woinU'iiul results. Hoitea,&#13;
especially liyspepsia. Want of Ap!&gt;tUte.lndl(r»»i&#13;
tlon, LacK of Strcnittli, d o . , its n&gt;e Is hiarked&#13;
HERE IS A GOOD CHANCE&#13;
F O R Y O U T O B U Y A B I R D C A G E . L O O K A T O U R O F F E R&#13;
1 muscles and n e r v e s receive new force. E U I I T B M&#13;
j the mind and supplies Brain Power.&#13;
• A m C f i Flittering from uil complaint*&#13;
; L A U I B O peculiar to t l i e i r s e x w l l i n n d In&#13;
I S K . H A R T S R ' S IRON TONIC a sale and opeedy&#13;
| cure. It ffives i clear and healthy c o m p l e x i o n .&#13;
The strongest testimony to t h e value of l)yt.&#13;
Population increases so slowly in&#13;
Italv that it has taken a century to&#13;
double. .&#13;
A beautiful woman is a practical&#13;
poem, .planting tenderness, liope ;uid&#13;
eloquence in all whom she a])proaches.&#13;
—Linerson.&#13;
1*rSU4sii£add..thaLa-vvv.;t'i.,i,ii woman h a s&#13;
beenunTfth injured by the bit c of the&#13;
bat. fiats are ' very dangerous, as&#13;
©very ^nipii-e knows.&#13;
The Artie regions a re nTir^wIflmuf&#13;
their pleasures. '$\w '1'^quimau i^irls&#13;
ure very pretty; tae.^-da-Hu1,-a-ml- ? n t ^&#13;
a n d do''not care for ice (:reaiu. Hot&#13;
d r i n k s and walrus-ULul&gt;h&lt;M". are their&#13;
peculiar vanities, and seal-skin s-acques&#13;
RfB^s^kl a t tvyo iron hoops ami ii tenpenncy&#13;
nail. -l?os[oji Transcript.&#13;
Wo also manufacturo a full lino of CUTTERS,&#13;
Including Swell Body, Portland, Square Bo*&#13;
two teat Portland and Pone; Sleighs.&#13;
B«nd for cuts and prices beforo purchasing.&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mick.&#13;
I X D K K N E W M A N A G E M E N T ! "&#13;
THIS COUPON&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 5 CENTS,&#13;
ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
AT F . L . B R O W N ' S .&#13;
HAIITKK'X Imiy Ti&gt;\ie :s that frei|ii«-&gt;nt a t t e m p t s&#13;
nlv addeil to the popular*&#13;
Jty of the original. If you earnestly tle^lre tu-alta&#13;
at counterfiltinL' liave only added th*&gt; popu&#13;
doiu&gt;t e x p e r i m e n t — £ e t the O I ; K ; I \ A L AND B K » T ,&#13;
r8end ynar midrens toThe Hr. Harter Med.Co.&#13;
St. Ixmis. Mo., for our " D R E A M BOOK."&#13;
^Full.of »traasr» und useful information. frM.i&#13;
P R . HARTCR'S lROW T O N I C IS FOR SALE ay A U -&#13;
ORUQOISTS ANQ DEALERS EVERYWHERE.&#13;
(8 I )&#13;
READ THE DETROIT POST&#13;
The Hcst Newspaper in Michigan.&#13;
D-iily- $ ; p,&gt;r V.•;!]•: MV, fits p e r Month. Weekly&#13;
o n e Hollar per Y*»ur,&#13;
fiSfflkBQflK -L CO.&#13;
«e W -L. JL ,JL fS CARD 0U.T»&#13;
A n d we will allow, you 2o cents for it On t h e purchase of a n y Bird Caj?e a t&#13;
our store. We will also jjivo a Bird (Sige F R E E to the "one who will&#13;
cut out a n d bring to us the greatest n u m b e r of these cards.&#13;
4V^ m 4 ^ S A l , E - T O . ^ ^ ^ T ! r x 0 b r o u g h t to i * 8opteniber l 20th. This will help y o u to g e t " i C a g e&#13;
I ^ p Y P f l n n C , c h e n p , a n d someone to get a (.age for nothing. W h o will be t h e l u c k y&#13;
1)¾1 lmtr.&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned tit 5 cents per volume,&#13;
for 7 dayi.&#13;
6 Tickets f o r / - . . . . 25cts.&#13;
1 8 ^ " «.*/.. . . . . 5 0 "&#13;
New books are being, added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds will be devoted&#13;
1o increasing and improving&#13;
the library - __&#13;
For books or further inform,ttion&#13;
apply aV;&#13;
^YiyCHKLL'S'PSUQ STORE,&#13;
P m t XXKY^^flClIKUM&#13;
:t~&#13;
"&gt; Js§&#13;
inchmu ^i^iitdf.&#13;
J E R O M E W1NCHKLL, E D I T O I I .&#13;
B»Uarod at tho l'OBtofflc*&gt; as 2d clase matter.&#13;
CURRENf TOPICS.&#13;
T H E season for tho rural huntsman to&#13;
mistake hia comrade for a squirrel is&#13;
again on.&#13;
IT :.S feared that Ben Butler wouiti&#13;
not make a good President, even i*f&#13;
elected. He could not look at important&#13;
measures with an unbiased glance.&#13;
Peek's Sun.&#13;
"General Butler is a buitling man,',&#13;
says one of his admirers; " h e has h«d&#13;
his great lotter printed and is sending&#13;
it all over the country." Good i d e a -&#13;
just about-the right size for bustles.—&#13;
Chicago Herald.&#13;
XiiKitK is n*&gt;tumca of a p a a c e party&#13;
in China just now, and at mere mention&#13;
of the word Frenchman,- the coolie's&#13;
pigtail will stick straight up in the air&#13;
with indignation. It is pretty certain&#13;
that the Chinese are madder than the&#13;
French.&#13;
• — &gt;&#13;
A soTEitEiUS WHO gives evidence of&#13;
such abject cowardice as is manifested&#13;
in the Czar'»j)recautions_for his journeyto&#13;
Warsaw does not deserve tho respect&#13;
of his subjects. He should be&#13;
-made t h e b u t t of ridicule the world over,&#13;
as he is.&#13;
Lutohiusky . ri-ad the • ' s t o r y " to&#13;
them, when Done day soino gemStirmes&#13;
entered thw village in search of sli-pj eted&#13;
Nihilisis and pounced upon yho prohibited&#13;
vulumo.&#13;
The unfortunate owner was arrested&#13;
.at once ami taken off to prison at Kiel!,&#13;
where ho remained in confinement&#13;
nearly two years. A few weeks ago a&#13;
court-martial assembled at Keill'totry&#13;
a number of revolutionary cases, and&#13;
Lutchiusky's was included among them.&#13;
Tho proceedings disclosed that tho&#13;
generous gentleman was Stefenovitch,&#13;
a noted|Nihilist,who had been traveling&#13;
as a propagandist when ho passed tho&#13;
smithy ana saw tho boy.&#13;
The Colonels composing the courtmartial&#13;
examined the peasants who had&#13;
listened to the readiug of the book, to&#13;
see whether the liberal principles propounded&#13;
by tho "Story of a French&#13;
Peasant" had left any traces on their&#13;
minds, but all they could get from the&#13;
witnesses was the narrative itself. As&#13;
Lutchinsky's advocate put it:&#13;
"The ignorant peasants cared nothing&#13;
for the moral drift of the books; all&#13;
they thought of was the strangeness of&#13;
the story."&#13;
This, however, had no weight with&#13;
the Colonels, and the lad was sentenced&#13;
to be exiled to Siberia for life.&#13;
THE QUtEiVS ESTATE.&#13;
H o r&#13;
Q u e e r F r e a k s of W a t c h e s .&#13;
Dc. A. H. Hopkinsou, editor ~of the&#13;
. M H . GLADSTONE is denounced by the&#13;
radicals for his moderation and by the&#13;
tories for [his recklessness. He iinds&#13;
comfort, perhaps, in tho reflection that&#13;
with reference to the franchise meas-&#13;
"air his ure critics are more or less hypooritical.&#13;
IT is too bad. Here is Mrs. Lockwood&#13;
running for the Presidency of the&#13;
United .States, and her alleged friends&#13;
say she was selected "because Elizabeth&#13;
Cady Stanton was too old,Susan B.&#13;
Anthony too much of spinlster, Mary&#13;
-±. Livermore too opposed to certain&#13;
cerrain classes, and Lucy Stone too narr&#13;
o w . " There are four good votes lost&#13;
at tho outset. That will throw tho election&#13;
into the House. —Boston Globe.&#13;
T H E K E are 35,000,000 people^n South&#13;
America who ought to buy from the&#13;
United States all manufacturers&#13;
-food- products which, they dajxtfr pro&#13;
duce at home. These iiniiTons of customers&#13;
south ofjLKrtire poor customers&#13;
fry now, as trade statistics&#13;
iy show. Their a.mual imports&#13;
amount to $300,000,000, only oneseventh&#13;
of which the United States supplies,&#13;
six-sevents comiDg from Europe.&#13;
A foreign policy that will advance our&#13;
commercial intefests below tho isthmus,&#13;
opening those great markets fot the&#13;
goods with which our own markets are&#13;
overstocked, is what the mass of&#13;
American citizens earnestly desire to&#13;
see adopted and carried out.&#13;
Jewler's Circular, gave to a Now York&#13;
Tribune reporter tho following curious&#13;
items of information: They -'possess&#13;
some unaccountable pecuUrities. For&#13;
instance, some timo about the beginning&#13;
of last summer, when there had&#13;
been a succession of tine displays of the&#13;
aurora borealis, it was estimated that&#13;
m a single night in" the City of New&#13;
York tho'main springs of not less than&#13;
three thousand watches broku. This e_s-_&#13;
timate is based on actual inquiries. Fine&#13;
sensitive watches are particularly liable&#13;
to he affected byelectrical atmospherie&#13;
disturbances. During the months of'&#13;
June, July and August, when these&#13;
phenomena are most frequent, there&#13;
are moro main springs broken than during&#13;
all the remaining months of the&#13;
year. They break in a variety of ways,&#13;
sometimes snapping into as many as&#13;
twenty-seven pieces.&#13;
I m m e n s e F o r t u n e unci W h a t&#13;
S h e m a y Do W i t b It.&#13;
Loudon Truth .&#13;
llor Maje.-ty possesses :m immense&#13;
fortune Her estate a'. Osborne is at&#13;
least live times as valuable as it was&#13;
when it was purchased by the Quo^n&#13;
and Prince Albert about forty years&#13;
ago. Tho Balmoral property of her&#13;
Majesty now extend-, over 30,000 acres.&#13;
Claremout was grauted to the Queen&#13;
for life in ISM, with rovusion to tho&#13;
country; and her Majesty purchased&#13;
the property outright, three years ago,&#13;
for £78,000. Probably its market value&#13;
is not much under £150,000. The&#13;
Queen also possesses some property at&#13;
Coburg, and the Princess Hoheulohe&#13;
left her the villa Hohonlohe at Baden,&#13;
one of the best residences in the place.&#13;
With regard to personal property Mr.&#13;
Nield leit the Queen over £500,000, and&#13;
the property left by the Prince Consort&#13;
is believed to have amounted to nearly&#13;
£600.000; but tho provisions of his&#13;
will have been kept a strict secret, and&#13;
the document has never been "proved."&#13;
The Queen must also have ^aved&#13;
a v a s t v s u m out of her income, which,&#13;
has always been very well managed.&#13;
Since the death of the Prince Consort&#13;
the general administration of the&#13;
Queen's private affairs h a s been conceded&#13;
to Lord Sidney, who is a consummate&#13;
man of business.&#13;
I have reason to believe that in due&#13;
course application will be made to Parliment&#13;
on behalf of the children of tho&#13;
Prince and Princess of Wales. Indeed,&#13;
there is to be a royal message on the&#13;
subject of Prince Albert Victor's establishment&#13;
next session. Tho country&#13;
will not, however, bo asked to provide&#13;
tot the yo»na;er members of tho royal&#13;
family. The Duko and Dutchess of&#13;
Edingburgh are already wealthy, and&#13;
on the death of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-&#13;
Gotha thoy will migrate to Germauy;&#13;
but the ConnaugoU Albanys,&#13;
Do NOT be too severe upon the servant&#13;
girl. She reasons philosophically.&#13;
If you pour water from a jug upon a&#13;
biasing tire the rejult is not usually&#13;
disastrous, ex^epT to the lire; the jug&#13;
stands it heroically. Similarly th6&#13;
maid servant arguas with regard to the&#13;
coal oil can. and with similar treatment&#13;
she looks for similar results. So when&#13;
she opens communication between the&#13;
bloae and the can with a stream of oil&#13;
she js^so- surprised at tho Te1SaTka"b1e~&#13;
consequences of tho combination that&#13;
she rarely recovers from i&lt;:, and the&#13;
coal oil « m shares in her demorali;&#13;
tion. But the servant is npi-&lt;6much&#13;
at fault. " S h o g a v e hej^casoning faculties&#13;
full play, and they betrayed her.&#13;
It is a fact that sinca the introduction&#13;
of the electric light has become so&#13;
general a large number of watches some&#13;
of them very line odes, have become&#13;
magnetized. While in this condition&#13;
they are uso less as time-keepers. This&#13;
defect used to be considered incurable,&#13;
and because of it thousands of watches&#13;
have been thrown away after much&#13;
money had been«pent on them in vain&#13;
attempts to persuade them to kcepgood&#13;
time. Among the moihoils_rj?sorted to&#13;
were washing the parts in garlic jutee&#13;
retinishmg and passing them thrpagh&#13;
tho tiro But all these devices-Wore ontire&#13;
failures or only bj^part elective.&#13;
man^Who had a tine and&#13;
ent which kept excel&#13;
He transferred it from a&#13;
to a second-hand, gold one,&#13;
it lost all its characteris-&#13;
I Know of a&#13;
valuable m&#13;
lent&#13;
or case&#13;
Immediately&#13;
tios of steadiness and reliability, and.&#13;
in fact, did not, keep timo at all. When&#13;
replaced i n t h e s i 1 v I T c a so TTkept good&#13;
time again. The owner, a jeweller,&#13;
puzzled himself and experimented in&#13;
vain to discover the cause of this strange&#13;
partiality on the part of his watcti for&#13;
silver. At length he sent it to an expert.&#13;
Ho disco veTed,clTai~Ttnr~ 1 ifttrrg^"&#13;
spring of the gold case had become&#13;
magnetized. On substituting another&#13;
for it, the watch kept as good timo in&#13;
tho gold case as in the silver case.&#13;
— " T h e r e u r e o c e a s i o n s \v_hen_it_js_ a&#13;
them. This completes tho thimble tint&#13;
w;!l last for years. Tho stool ined in it's&#13;
construction will scarcely wear out in a&#13;
long life-time, and the gold, if worn&#13;
away, is easily replaced.&#13;
OENSIONS TO ALL&#13;
U I in . » i T l&#13;
ur oliii'Vwi nO.Ult' li)Hrt of&#13;
Christians and Battenbergs will look to&#13;
the Queen for provisions, and so also&#13;
will any of the younger children of the&#13;
Princess Alice who may happen to make&#13;
poor matches. It will be seen, therefore,&#13;
that the Queen will have plenty to&#13;
do with her fortune, largo as it undoubtedly&#13;
is, and although in the event of&#13;
her Majesty's death tho country would&#13;
be asked to provide for Princess Beatrice,&#13;
yet she will naturally occupy animportant&#13;
place in ner mother's will.&#13;
T h e T h i m b l e — T h e Orlgin^oz t h e&#13;
U s e f u l Little&#13;
Dorcas Magazine,&#13;
Dutch invention&#13;
to England in&#13;
"began&#13;
London,&#13;
gaining thereby both honor and&#13;
proiit. Its name was dorivod from the&#13;
Icle,&#13;
Tho tinjuWe is a&#13;
tliat^w^tsllrst brought&#13;
i5 by one John Lofting", who&#13;
its manufacture at Islington, near&#13;
can&#13;
alar&#13;
irna&lt;n&#13;
'and&#13;
L a w in R u s s i a .&#13;
The courts martial in Russia havo&#13;
little mercy for persons.of an inquiring&#13;
turn of mind. Two years ago there resided&#13;
in a village in the provincs of&#13;
Kieff a boy of seventeen, who earned&#13;
his living us a blacksmith's apprentice.&#13;
Tho boy could road a bit, and was desirous&#13;
of inkling to his little store of&#13;
knowledge, but in this ho was met by&#13;
the difficulty that no books of any kind&#13;
existed in the nlacn.&#13;
The lad had still tho liuTTg^c for books&#13;
strong upon him, when 1 gentleman&#13;
passing through tho village made hiai a&#13;
present of a "Story of a French Peasant&#13;
" It is true that the work had not&#13;
stamped on the final p a g a t h e imprima&gt;&#13;
turo of the censor, but how was a raw&#13;
country boy to know of the technical&#13;
requirements of the Russian press laws,&#13;
buried as he was in the cornfields of&#13;
KieffP&#13;
' The fame of this curious book, rapidly&#13;
spread about the village* and tlie intersex-&#13;
the parrativa.eacited-wa&amp; au&lt;m_ahaflAuSxc.&#13;
the peawutfs came to hoar ' young j tions that havo bee* observed."&#13;
very serious matter to have your watch&#13;
magnetized. The most striking instance&#13;
in point is one which lately came&#13;
under my notice. Captain W. R. Smith&#13;
commands the steamer Delaware, which&#13;
piles between New York and New London,&#13;
Before putting to sea on a recent&#13;
voyage he was invito! to inspect an&#13;
electric light dynamo machine and examine&#13;
its parts closely. Soon after&#13;
getting: on board the steamer he observed&#13;
that the, compass became strangely&#13;
affected when he approaohed it.&#13;
Whether be stood on the right or on&#13;
tho left, or immediately in front&#13;
of the compass, the necdl&#13;
would invariably point to&#13;
Tho compass was worse ib&gt;rr**'uselcss&#13;
when he came near i t ^ - i t w a s dapgerous&#13;
and might vpxrfk the—ship.—Y-trtr&#13;
that this phenomenon&#13;
puzzled Capt. Smith not a&#13;
-At-iength-bo- recalled his visit&#13;
to th.o dynamo machine, and the true&#13;
solution of the eccentric behaviour of&#13;
the needle flashed upon him. H h&#13;
watch had become magnetized. When&#13;
he removed it tho needio resumed its&#13;
constancy to the polar star Oji his retain&#13;
to the city he took tho wAtch to&#13;
Mathey Brothers &amp; Mathev, who -demagnetized&#13;
it for him. This firm has&#13;
invented some machine, U10 magnetism&#13;
of which is a secret, by which they demagnetize&#13;
n magnetized watch speedily&#13;
.and effectually. Tlioygct Wdtohos sent&#13;
them from all parts of the world to be&#13;
thn3.,tiTatcd.&#13;
'•W.'ttclies frequently get magnetized&#13;
in iron mines or in machine shops,&#13;
where they are incautiously brought&#13;
near swiftly running bolts. I !;new a&#13;
workman who used to hang his watch&#13;
1 tot ween tho parts of. a running bolt.&#13;
He expended a small fortune on mini&#13;
springs.&#13;
" I t is a well-known fact among horolugi&amp;&#13;
U that no watch- -will keep 1 he&#13;
same timo with two people. The. cause&#13;
has not yot been definitely ascertained,&#13;
but it would seem that in some mysterious&#13;
way a watch is affected by the&#13;
temperament of the wearer The mere&#13;
physical differences in gait and movement&#13;
between different - people w not&#13;
words thum and bull, being for a long&#13;
timo called ^tluiKAble, and only lately&#13;
thimble Old records say that thimbles&#13;
were lirst worn on tho tnumbs; but wo&#13;
can scarcely conceive how they could&#13;
be of much use there. Formerly they&#13;
were mado of brass and iron only, but&#13;
of late years steel, silver, gold, horn,&#13;
ivory, and oven pe:irl and glass h a \ e&#13;
all been used for making -thimbles. I&#13;
saw soigio very beautiful ones in China&#13;
that, were oxquisitely carved. &lt;•&gt;( pearl,&#13;
and bound with gojd, and the end also&#13;
of gold. These pearl thimbles are&#13;
quite as costly and far prettier than&#13;
those made entirely of gold. Usually&#13;
there is a poarl sheath for the scissors,&#13;
and a dainty noedlebook of pearl, edged&#13;
with gold, to accompany tho thimble.&#13;
and the whole is inclosed in an exquisite&#13;
little pocket case shaped like a book&#13;
and bound in satin and pearl:&#13;
A thimble owned by the queen-eonsort&#13;
of Si am is shaped like a iotas bud,'&#13;
this being the royaT'flower of that country,&#13;
and almost everything about tho&#13;
court bearing, in. a greater or less degree,&#13;
some impress of tho lotus.&#13;
thimble is of gold, thickly studdjc&gt;d^with&#13;
diamonds that are so arpwrged as to&#13;
fofm^theTliryV nanie^Cod tho date of&#13;
her marriags^IWvas a bridal gift .from&#13;
the kingj^ftoThaving seen the English&#13;
and^Atfierican ladies at nis court usiug&#13;
bles, took this method of introducing&#13;
them anions* his ovvn people.&#13;
i n Naples,very pretty thimbles, composed&#13;
of lava from Mount Vesuvius,&#13;
-aye- occasionally sold, but rather as curiosities-&#13;
than for real—utility, being,&#13;
from the extreme brittlenessof thelava,&#13;
very easily broken. 1 have heard al»o&#13;
of thimbles.msclo of asphaltum^ from&#13;
the Dead Sea, and of one composed of&#13;
a fragment of the old elm tree r.t Cambridge,&#13;
Mass., under which Gien. Washington&#13;
stood when taking command of&#13;
the United Slates army, in July, 1775;&#13;
but I do not supposo that any of these&#13;
were ever intended to ba mod iu sowing.&#13;
In tho ordinary manufacture of gold&#13;
and silver thimbles, thin plates of the&#13;
metal arc introduced into the die,.and&#13;
then punched into shv.pe. But in P;n'i.s&#13;
the French have, a way of their own,&#13;
qui 10 different from ours, for m.iking&#13;
old-thimbles that are said to be much&#13;
• durable, than thoscj made in the&#13;
usual way. Pieces of very thin .'•lu'eiircin&#13;
arc cut into disks of about two&#13;
inches ia diameter. These, after hein&#13;
heated, to rod lies&#13;
of. ajL&gt;uuch iht&lt; _&#13;
a gradually increasing depth to give the.&#13;
proper shape. The thimbiu is then&#13;
trimmed, polished and indented around&#13;
its outer feufaco with tiny holes. It is&#13;
next converted into su e) by a process&#13;
called cementation, thin tempered,&#13;
scoured, and brought to a blue color.&#13;
After all this is Completed a thin sheet&#13;
of gold is introduced into tho interior&#13;
and fastened to the steel by a mandrel,&#13;
while gold leaf w attachcu. Arm iy..by&#13;
nt for 'all'the. varta- |_pressuro to the outside, tno edgeanberag/&#13;
seamed in a smaTI grdvb~mTrdo~io receiver&#13;
Choioo of O c c u p a t i o n .&#13;
Parents often complain that tlnur&#13;
sons havo been to school all their lives,&#13;
have no choice of occupation, or that&#13;
thoy choose to be accountants or clerks,&#13;
instead 01 manufacturers or mechanics.&#13;
Thes'j complaints are invariably unreasonable;&#13;
for how can one choose at&#13;
all or wisely when ho knows so little P \&#13;
i confidently believe that tho do&#13;
volopemont of the manual elements in&#13;
school will prevent those serious errovs&#13;
in the choice of a vocation which too&#13;
often wreck tho fondest hopes. It&#13;
is not assumed that evorv boy&#13;
who enters a training school&#13;
is to be a mechanic; his training&#13;
leaves him free. No pupils were ever&#13;
moro unprejudiced, better prepared to&#13;
look below the surface, less tho victims&#13;
of a false gentility. Some find that they&#13;
Imye no taste for manual arts, and will&#13;
turn into other paths—law, medicine or&#13;
literature. Great facility in the acquisition&#13;
and the use of language is often&#13;
accompanied by a 4*ek-—e#—either&#13;
mechanical interest or power, When&#13;
such a bias is discovered the&#13;
lad should unquestionably be&#13;
sent to his grammar and dictionary&#13;
rather than to the laboratory or draughting&#13;
room. On the other hand, decided&#13;
aptitude for handcraft is not uufreqnently&#13;
coupled with a strong aversion to&#13;
and unfitness for aostract and theoretical&#13;
investigations. There can be no&#13;
doubt that, in such cases, moro time&#13;
should be spent in tho shop, and less in&#13;
the lecture and recitation room. &gt;omo&#13;
who_ develope' both natural skill and&#13;
strong intellectual powers will push on&#13;
through the poly tuchinc school into professional&#13;
life, as engineers and scientists.&#13;
Others will find their greatest usefulness,&#13;
as well as highest happiness, in&#13;
the positions into which they will readiily&#13;
stop when thoy leave school. All&#13;
will gain intellectually by their experience&#13;
in contact with things. The grand&#13;
result will bean increasing interest in&#13;
manufacturing pursuits, more intelli&#13;
gent mechanics, more successfulnia-riufacturers,&#13;
tetter lawyers, mcwre^skillful&#13;
physicians.and more ii^eruTcitizens&#13;
A Parajfra^m n o t P u n c t u a t e d .&#13;
of the best example of tho imiortanco&#13;
of-punctation is given iu the&#13;
following odd paragraph. It may be&#13;
read in two ways, describing wh?n read&#13;
one way a -very bad man, and when&#13;
road the other way a very good man:&#13;
He is an old and experienced man in&#13;
vice and wickedness ho is never found&#13;
in opposing the walks of 'iniquity he&#13;
takes delight in the downfall of his&#13;
neighbors he never rej &gt;ices iu Jie prosperity&#13;
of any of his fellow-creatures he&#13;
is always ready to assist in destroying'&#13;
the peace 'of society he takes no pleasure&#13;
in servhjg the Lord ho is uncommonly&#13;
"diligent in sowing disorder&#13;
among his friends .and acquaintances&#13;
he takes no pride in—laboring to—promote&#13;
tho cause of Christianity__hc has&#13;
s n l . P I i:US A SAH.OHS&#13;
\NUlltulh, liis"1!!^, .liTJfkwl&#13;
it tiMi, ))ilo.-, vaiico^i vrinu,&#13;
liWi'iiiiic. iliarfliu'ii, rupture, I&lt;U&lt;H &lt;if hi;;lit or (.pnj-&#13;
Mrtll.vHo), loMHof lu'ariii^, f;i!liu^ luick &lt;&gt;f mxauJw,&#13;
rhuvuwitiMU, miy dinu!)iHly, no nwiftcr hoij hliglut,&#13;
i^lvt'K vim 11 ptiiiHioii. X»-w and llt.noraMe tH»-&#13;
oh/irjf*&gt;# Olit&lt;tlik&lt;d. V, ittuwH, rhildron, mnWumj,&#13;
fwul fnth«;rH of sultrier* drhiK in tho wrrifH, ftJ&#13;
uftvrwariLn, fmm tiisoa«*e routructod ur wotiuituro&#13;
oem«il while in the porvici', are entitled to_j&gt;«n-&#13;
(*ion. Hcji'ctfil wid ahiiiirlotieri ilniniH u ni)ffi*h|r.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HOUSE CLAIMS COLLECTED.&#13;
INCHKASK YOUR PENSION.&#13;
A nunDlop 91m l&gt;o iuorea»t*?u at any than w t a a&#13;
die uii&lt;abili»y wnxnuita it. AM you ^row older tat&#13;
vfouiul hjut gradually^ndormint'd thu coiiitrtlutlQi^&#13;
tliu rliutfase has ina&lt;do ymi moru helpleuH. In norm&#13;
Uiauiwr tho disability" lmn lurreascil; no apnly for.(&#13;
au Increase at OIK&lt;'.&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED&#13;
My eayflTiance, and n*ing horo at ln&gt;adqiiartaw&#13;
(in&amp;biu me to attend promptly to all claims a^akrft&#13;
thefctovorumerLt. Clreulars'frei'. Address, wflh&#13;
Htamii:&#13;
M. V. T I F R N E Y ,&#13;
Box 485, WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHFORMEN&#13;
XERYOUB DSBIMWt;&#13;
oTgmw v w i u n i fcttd d*&#13;
c»j, And puaieroui 0»&#13;
Kfti* dlMMd, biOta&#13;
•ktlirul pbyUoiui, rmM&#13;
from jou&amp;ful taUtec*&#13;
*&#13;
A Radical Cnra&#13;
rott^&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
IMPOTENCY.&#13;
K£T* Tested for over 5&#13;
ysara b7 uae~la thous&#13;
a n d s of caeea.&#13;
T.i eee TRIAL&#13;
PACKAGE.&#13;
SEND ADDRESS&#13;
HARRIS REM&#13;
. 806½ North 10th&#13;
(kaJcxws TREATMENT. $3&#13;
una, &lt;M rr« uanJinn&#13;
acdorcrbrftln wodb 0»&#13;
But tcnipqrUe while i&#13;
cucnilei lurk in your iy&#13;
tern. Avoid b«fng Inpo*&#13;
CQ by protcadiMM elkimi&#13;
c:her remedies for U&gt;«&#13;
troubles. ti«( our fr*« el&#13;
lir »nd trill pock&gt;&lt;e «qg&#13;
lcini important facU b«&lt;b4s&#13;
talfclnf iroBtmtnt ol*rwhert&#13;
Toko ft remedy lb W tiu COMB&#13;
t'.ioaiaaii, and doot not tottrtbre&#13;
with attentloa t» ba«-&#13;
ncsi or C»U»B p»lt» or toooovcDlenoe.&#13;
Kouoded oo M&gt;&#13;
imiiflo medical prlBcl()tw.&#13;
Growing In favor and reputation.&#13;
Direct application to tba&#13;
»eab of Alse«M mats 1W »pe~&#13;
rtflo inilucuco feh wiUwitt&#13;
delaj' Tna Btturml fOO*&gt;&#13;
that of the hamasoraw*&#13;
torn aro rettorad. Ti$&#13;
animating ctomCDf m&#13;
life *bloa b«ve t**&#13;
watted ar« (tvea back.&#13;
The patl«nt bcocntt&#13;
chetrfut and film&#13;
ttrengUa rapidly.&#13;
CO., MTg ChemliU,&#13;
St., St. Loals, Mo.&#13;
; 2 M«Trl8,$5jjjjyierlt&gt;f8. (7.&#13;
WIT^TMHJICINE,&#13;
'ft&#13;
m1¾ "^j;;::rii"&#13;
si&#13;
*ii&#13;
J-1 'O.N^Hi-'tr-.r&#13;
T H I S M A G N E T T C r B n r r&#13;
never beea negligent io_endeavornitj to&#13;
stigmatize all public teacherd he makes&#13;
no exertion to subdue bis evil passions&#13;
ho strives hard to build u p ' S a t a n ' s&#13;
kingdom lie lends no aid to the support&#13;
of the Gospel anion^ tho heathen ho&#13;
eontflUuleslargoIy to the evil adversary&#13;
he pays no attention to good advice&#13;
he gives great head to Satan ho will&#13;
never go to heaven he must go whore&#13;
he will receive the just recompense of&#13;
reward}&#13;
WARRANTED TO CURE&amp;ar&amp;a&#13;
vitbc 'ti t rnrdlflnn: — 1'iiln tn tho hoc 1., J&gt;lp». head, or&#13;
limb., iK'rvuuit &lt;l&lt;;l&gt;lIlty,luint&gt;uiro, jjrncrjtldobllitj,&#13;
t-heuniull.m, (&gt;iiralyn!n. ncuralcla, miatluu, dlaeatca&#13;
o&gt; ibe UlilniYK.iipliiul U!.oB.i'*,(orpl&lt;l liver, gout,&#13;
ucmlnul cinlHnlona. Impotcncy, n«thmi\« hcirt dt»&gt;&#13;
vu«i\ dynpoptilu, com tipntlou, orynlprlua, lii&lt;llgcitlcin.&#13;
IKTIIIH or rupturt, cutarrb, plUn, cpUi-guy,&#13;
'' v!" '•/luiy'dcl.l li'ty of tho G E \ r i ? . \ TIVE OUC \ N8 r it'i, lout vitality, luck of nervo l»i'&lt;'o uiid vigor,&#13;
\. n'tl-m weuUnoAnc*) anil oil tho.o dixratcR of u por&gt;&#13;
Mjiiul naiuru, from whatever causo, tho continuous&#13;
stri'.t'in of Mu(m&lt;!tism permeatlijj tlirougt) (he&gt; pnrta&#13;
Kiu.it restore thrra to a hrultby »ttlon. Tliui e i &gt; ua&#13;
j-i.i-tiLli:o ^itjout tliis aiipllaucu.&#13;
NONMAGNETIC&#13;
ABDOMINAL. SUPPORTER.&#13;
FKO.TI A F O K E H i N S H O R E .&#13;
UEA.TU t F MH3. T^PPA^&#13;
Mrs. J alia Livingston TappScu widow of the&#13;
late Dr. Tappan, dled&gt;t-Vevey, in Switzerland,&#13;
Atigust 31st lasVAtrthe age of 7S years. Mrs.&#13;
1 appati wajj^aruiember of tbe celebrated Llv&#13;
j^gftto&gt;-4amlly of New York. This country&#13;
roduced few women in whom were united&#13;
so many notable virtues, to say nothing of&#13;
those eUtrant accomplishments of which she&#13;
was possessed-. Her life was sing .larly beauful&#13;
in the dearer domestic sense as well as in&#13;
the more brilliant semi-public atmosphere in&#13;
which she moved for many ye.srs. Her station&#13;
WHS one of much responsibility. -Hos^&#13;
she filled it and adorned it—adapting herself&#13;
with exquisite tact to its constant requirements,&#13;
aud always giving forth the strengthening&#13;
breath of sympathy with her distinguished&#13;
husband^ high aims—is&#13;
known of all the world Her devotion to&#13;
him was absolute. She WHS more to him than&#13;
his right hand in all hlb undertakings; and&#13;
that i&amp; why all who knew aud lovtd the good&#13;
doctar, also loved her, no mutter wither she&#13;
was personally kno vn to them or not. A cheirfulness—&#13;
born of hope in a reunion not far&#13;
away—hovered ab.mt IHT aud made the closing&#13;
year of her life a pathetic bene diction on ail&#13;
who .held her dear, Her chlefest pleasure and&#13;
sweetest consolition were gained from ciiuvtrbations&#13;
with perEOUB who had known the doetor,&#13;
especially those who had clustered around&#13;
him at the University of ^Michigan, and who,&#13;
during all the remainder of his life, were p. rbajs&#13;
oftcsest and pleas'»r.test. In his thought^&#13;
• ""&#13;
n&#13;
m&lt;jn&#13;
ess, w K t r o e V hyTarjTin^, i i ^v w ^'h 'v ,Vh l ' &lt;:',ni"&#13;
&lt;»_aM^^^n_ojjioh^_ot_.L'jiiUtd States authort'.It&#13;
he Commissioners Appointed by the Canadian&#13;
tioveriimt'tt. to vit-ir. British Columbia and&#13;
fepurt OTI Chinese ImmitTaiIon have returned.&#13;
Ir, isuiulerrttooii they recommend that Chinese&#13;
irntniunui'tti be regulated, If not re&gt;trtctc.l in&#13;
sirne measure.&#13;
The enikration e.mmlasionfrs had a conferer.&#13;
ii: with Colltc-or Kobcrtron at New York in&#13;
regard to i in: Lit•ning ftrassi-sted liniijigranttt&#13;
from foreign |i &gt;rr.s. Nothing of what, tran-&#13;
.••:.lri.ii i.s nude public. 1', w\is uii ii-rstoo i,&#13;
miss&gt;iju-rs would pronquest&#13;
action of the&#13;
a to pill an end to this&#13;
&lt;vn.&#13;
.There 1.--. meat excitement at ' Benton, Montana,&#13;
ov:r the continuation of an important&#13;
gold di-envrry in Little Rochy Mouuiain, KK)&#13;
udU* tiorthvawtH+f trlvat place. When the ttt«-&#13;
Covery was llrn' r« p &gt;rtedv citizens of Benton&#13;
perrt-a committee t;j inveKtlgate. They have&#13;
telegraphe f that trn= mines are. good, and&#13;
•about UVl &lt;:)»tms are taken up. Tho^e worked&#13;
pay $6 to $11 per day to a man working with&#13;
an ordinary gold pan. There U one instance&#13;
of t*0(&gt; taken from a nit twentv feet square.&#13;
Jerry Collins, editor of tha Benton River Press,&#13;
ij^egrapha llat half trie cltlzenw of the town&#13;
^re either preparing to Jytu'the sUra-x-deor already&#13;
goru^&#13;
TO THE LADIES.—"^0" A«=SfiS&#13;
Exk«x«tion,Dra»«»«U»or&gt;kh U l M a m o f the Lhrfir.&#13;
Kidney a, Iload»ofee or Col* Feet* Swollen or&#13;
Weak Ankl«v o* Bwnll«a Feot« an Abdominal B«lt&#13;
and a pair ofMagmetlo Foot Batteries bare no •upgriar,&#13;
lntha relief anl cure of all these complaints. Thcy&#13;
-L-MJTT a powerfuO-BaagneUo foroe to tho eeat of ttw&#13;
.-(Cieaae. __ "— —&#13;
Tar L a n e Back, Weakmesaof the Bplne, Fall.&#13;
IB^ «f the woatb, Lenorrhcea, Chronic inflaainiotlon&#13;
aad Uleeratloa of the Womb, Incidental H e n .&#13;
orrhajre •&lt;* Flooding, Painful, Suppreaacd and I*.&#13;
remlar Henatraatlon, Harrenaeaa, andchanire of&#13;
JJJe, this U tho lleat ApplUaee and Curative Acoat&#13;
For all formi of Female DlGBcultic* it la nnrarpa&#13;
t e d by anything before lnrented. both ajacuratlTo&#13;
ajrafit and as a source of power and Tltalixatlon.&#13;
Price of cither Belt with Mapnctic Foot Batteries, tlQ.&#13;
Bentby express CO. D.ond exftmlnatlon allowed, or br&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In ordering, send neaaare oc&#13;
walitand site of shoe. Remittance can bo mado In currency,&#13;
lent In letter at our rink.&#13;
The Magneton Garment* are adapted to alt agree, aro&#13;
rrorn over the underclothing, (not next to the.&#13;
body like tho many Galvanic and F.loetrto l l a a «&#13;
bora adrertlaed ao oit^nnlvcly'i and should be&#13;
taken off at nl^ht, ThejJioUl tlitir.pow*r/»ret)«r,and&#13;
are worn at all seasons of theyear.&#13;
Send stamp for tho"Nfcw Dnimrture In Medical Trea*.&#13;
ment Without Hodlcinc," with thuua&amp;nda of teaUmo-&#13;
1 H E M A G N K T O N A P P L I A N C E C O «&#13;
» 1 8 Sttito SU, C h i c a c o . Ill*&#13;
Tlio Magnetic appliances may be .seen&#13;
at Wincholl's Drue Store, *Pickncv/$*&#13;
MVclu "~ •&#13;
aKERMOTTS&#13;
CO&#13;
CD&#13;
C-5&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CURESick-Headac/w, Dyspepsia, L*er&#13;
GompMnt, hdigesfrmr,-Consitpation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
T V O ' l ' I C E . - Without n pjrtiele of doubt, Kor.&#13;
mull's I'illsare thnruost popular of any on tho inuikct.&#13;
Having been before the public for n quarterol&#13;
••\ i'&gt;-n(ury. and h«vtnff always performed moro than&#13;
w,i:i promised for them, they merit the success that&#13;
•hcv have attained. P r i c e , 2 5 C p e r t S O X .&#13;
For sale by'all drungiats.&#13;
Kermotta Tills always in stock at&#13;
nev, Mi^h&#13;
I 4&#13;
-\&#13;
^ .&#13;
1¾&#13;
B!i;-i;. u EVER BE HAPPY."&#13;
H o w C h e e r f u l P e o p l e G e t A l o n g In&#13;
L i t e a n d in T r a d e .&#13;
Does the surly, cross-grained merchant,&#13;
know that good cheer is capitalP&#13;
T h a t a pleHtmnt smile and agreeable&#13;
manners ^o further with many customers&#13;
than "an endless variety ot goods&#13;
from which to select9 '' Does the sourvisaged&#13;
clerk kuovv that his unpopularity,&#13;
whieh keeps him on starvation&#13;
wages, is largely his own fault?&#13;
'•For Mercy's sake don't send that&#13;
vinegary man to wait on m e , " said a&#13;
•custodier in a store recently. She knew&#13;
nothing of his life or the grievous ills&#13;
too might bo heir to. His face carried&#13;
with it no suushino; hi,s manner was&#13;
that of one; who labored with eye-service.&#13;
A lady not long since came to Kansas&#13;
City, *»ays the daily Journal, in&#13;
search of health, yet she could not afford&#13;
to be idle. She had been left in&#13;
childhood an orphan with four little&#13;
brothers and sisters to support and edu&#13;
c a t e She had taught and watched&#13;
their youth develop with fond anticipations&#13;
of a future when they should bo&#13;
her companions. Hut one by one they&#13;
sickened and died; through those pro-&#13;
-longcd seasons &lt;-.f p ^ r *»h^ vyaMLi^l&#13;
over t h e n r r h e r earnings were swept&#13;
away, and her constitution undermined&#13;
ap that she could no longer endure&#13;
the 'confinement of the school-room.&#13;
Here she obtained a position as&#13;
seamstress; sin* did her work well&#13;
but the lady who had employed her&#13;
said: " I eanuot afford to keep hexrsne&#13;
never sings, and the doctor says I ought&#13;
always to have cheerful people around&#13;
me ""&#13;
Never,^singsl StraDge, wasn't it?&#13;
WjjJKrtit a relative on earth, a wanderer&#13;
in search of health by change of&#13;
-climate, yet doing the aduous work of&#13;
a seamstress! Write it a new wonder&#13;
of the world that this woman was not&#13;
bright and joyous. Send for the learned&#13;
men of the century t o diviuo, if possible,&#13;
why her voice was not lifted in&#13;
sweet songs night and day, and why j&#13;
her eyes did not mirror forth a soul&#13;
filled with ecstatic dedghtt But this is&#13;
the way of the world to choose that&#13;
which brings only agreeable results.&#13;
It is not interested in individual woes,&#13;
lie who learns this fact and brings the&#13;
knowledge to bear on his_own hue of&#13;
conduct has gained riches of a substantialkind—&#13;
at least without wings.&#13;
Secret cemeteries are a good investment,&#13;
in e v e r y b o d y ^ heart. If hopes&#13;
die bury them away, and suffer no resurrectionist&#13;
to dig them up and parade&#13;
thom around among your acquaintances.&#13;
Said a fortune teller:&#13;
I told a true story of the sufferings&#13;
which had befallen me, by which I&#13;
was disabled from work, and honest&#13;
people let me starve almost to death,&#13;
but 1 left off the recital ot my own&#13;
woes and began predicting happiness&#13;
fer others. Mark the result: i am&#13;
now owner of a neat cottage, jwitli&#13;
money in bank." Let the unsuccessful&#13;
learn a lesson from,.4\TS experience.&#13;
Is this advice heartless ? Not at all.&#13;
What good.is gained by an advertisemeutj&gt;&#13;
f gfiof by m e a n s of a niouniiag&#13;
cotfhtenance ? There can be brought&#13;
about a happier expression of face b;&#13;
cultivating a new field of thougtl&#13;
Eventually it. may occur to ynu that a&#13;
smile is not on© of the lost arts, o / at&#13;
least you have found it after many&#13;
days. Otherwise lot us follow tjio oxher*&#13;
tribulations and always concluded&#13;
her recital of them with a moan and&#13;
the exclamation : "Dear, dear, what&#13;
Troubles we do e n j o y ! " -&#13;
tend.&#13;
x &lt;&#13;
• B u r i e d in t h e S e&#13;
2icw YurK Herald , .&#13;
Three little boys sat digging in tho&#13;
sand on the beech at Long Branch yes&#13;
terday afterrioon. TheY had oeen "playing&#13;
I n d i a n s " and w / r e industriously&#13;
.making a cave to live in. One of tho&#13;
boys was Johnny Holbrook, who lives&#13;
with his mother pn Summit avenue,&#13;
Jersey City.&#13;
"Let's play/ I was dead said&#13;
J o h n n y , "and ^ o u fellers berry me in&#13;
the s a n d . "&#13;
"Injuns is/buried standing up, said&#13;
one of the others " I t says so i n ' W i l d&#13;
Bill the Ranger.'' We'll have to dig&#13;
&lt; the hole deeper so you can stand u p . "&#13;
So t h / b o y s dug tho pit deeper. The&#13;
water p i m e in from below and Johnny&#13;
quietly took off his shoes and stockings.&#13;
T^en the other boys packed the sand&#13;
abdut him till only 'his head remained&#13;
a^ove the ground. The work kept&#13;
lem busv 1 or more than an hour.&#13;
So intently had the lads laborec that&#13;
they had not noticed the rising tide until&#13;
a big wave dashed over poor&#13;
Johnny's head and,rolliog baok.left him&#13;
rasping for breath, with his mouth and&#13;
eyes full of sand. He struggled to pull&#13;
himself out of the hole, but the sand&#13;
held him like a vice and other incoming&#13;
waves had no nicrct, :_&#13;
Johnny screamed for help but there&#13;
was no one within hearing except the&#13;
two little boj8_and_a man too far oft&#13;
to be of any Immediate assistance.--!&#13;
And the t t H b l o waves tolled nearer,&#13;
licking Johnny's chin and threatening&#13;
to hide Ins hoad under s fatal coverlet.&#13;
- The littl«&gt; boys tried to pull J o h n n y&#13;
out,- but they were not strong enough.&#13;
They tried to dig the sand away&#13;
but they were so much frightened t h a t&#13;
they made little progress, and every&#13;
minute seomed an age.&#13;
When Johnny was finally extricated&#13;
his face was very white. When he&#13;
recovered his breath he began to cry.&#13;
- I t ' s too late for t h a t , " said a by-J&#13;
stander, "whaVs the use of crying&#13;
now?" , ,, ,&#13;
J o h n n y Jookcd__down ruefully a n d&#13;
answered:— - -&#13;
"What'll ma say about them ne;y&#13;
cloz!" v '&#13;
BAFFLED.&#13;
O n e of t h e m o a t U n a c c o u n t a b l e a n d&#13;
D a n g e r o u s of R e c e n t D e c e i t s&#13;
D i s c o v e r e d a n d E x p o s e d .&#13;
There is one mysterious troublo that&#13;
is attacking nearly every one in tho&#13;
land with more or less violence. It&#13;
seems to steal into the body liko a&#13;
thief in the nig^ht. Doctors cannot diagnose&#13;
it. Scientists are puzzled by&#13;
its symptoms. Ic is, indeed, a modern&#13;
myttory. Like those severe and vaguo&#13;
maladies that attack hordes and prostrate&#13;
nearly all the animals in the l a i d .&#13;
this subtle trouble seems to menace&#13;
mankind. Many oi its victims have&#13;
pains about the chest and sddes, and&#13;
sometimes i s the back. They feel dull&#13;
and sleepy; the mouth has a bad taste,&#13;
especially in the morning. A strange&#13;
sticky slime collects about the teeth&#13;
Tho appetite is poor. There is a feeling&#13;
like a heavy load upon the stomach;&#13;
sometimes a faint, all-gone sensation&#13;
is felt a t the pit n£ the&#13;
stomach, which food'does not «atisfy.&#13;
The eyes grow sunken, the hands and&#13;
feet feel clammy at one time and burn&#13;
intensely at others. After a while a&#13;
cough sets in, at lirst dry, but after.a,&#13;
few months it is attended with a greyish&#13;
colored expectoration. The...-afflicted&#13;
one feels tired all the while, and&#13;
sleep does not seem to- afford any rest.&#13;
He becomes nervous, irritable, and&#13;
gloomy and Has evil forebodings. There&#13;
is li^iddmess, a peculiar wliLrling sen^&#13;
sation in the head when rising u p suddenly.&#13;
The bowels become costive,and&#13;
then again, nutrlux intensely; the skin&#13;
is dry and hot at times; the blood grows&#13;
thick and stagnant; the whites cf the&#13;
eyes become tinged with yellow; the&#13;
urine is scanty and high-colored* depositing&#13;
a sediment after standing.&#13;
There is frequently a spitting/up of&#13;
food, sometimes with a sour taste, and&#13;
sometimes with a sweetish tafete; thia&#13;
is often attended w i t h / palpitation&#13;
of tho hearty The vision becomes&#13;
impaired, with spots befor/e the eyes;&#13;
there is a feeling of prostration and&#13;
great weakness. Most off these symptoms&#13;
are in turn present/ It is thought&#13;
that nearly one-third ot our population&#13;
Have this disorder in ssirao of its varied&#13;
forms, while medical/men have almost&#13;
wholly m i s t a k e n its nature. Some, have&#13;
treated it for one complaint; some for&#13;
another, but uearl^ all have failed to&#13;
reach the seat of the disorder. Indeed,&#13;
many physicians' are afflicted with it&#13;
themselves. The experience of Dr A.&#13;
G. Richards, residing at No. 468 Tremont&#13;
street, poston, is thus described&#13;
by himself.&#13;
" I had all/those peculiar and pajufut&#13;
symptoms tvhich 1 have foundatrlfcting&#13;
so many of my patients,aacTwhich had&#13;
so often baffled -trie. I knew&#13;
all t h e / commonly pstablishod remedies&#13;
would" be unavailing for I had&#13;
tried- / t h e m often in the past.&#13;
I'therefore determined to strike out in&#13;
a new path. To my intense satisfaction&#13;
I f/und that I was improving. The&#13;
dull, stupid feeling departed and I&#13;
began to enjoy life once more. My a p /&#13;
petite returned. My sleep was refresl/-&#13;
/tng. The color of n i / face which had&#13;
been a sickly yellow gradually assunied&#13;
the pink tinge of health. I n tho course&#13;
of three weeks I felt like a n e w man&#13;
and know that it was wholly owing to&#13;
the wonderful efficiency of W a r n e r ' s&#13;
Tippecanoe The Best, which was all the&#13;
medicine I took."&#13;
ample of the old lady who roi0Hittedr| Doctors-and-scientists often exhaust&#13;
their skill and tho patient dies. They&#13;
try everything that has been used by, or&#13;
is known to the profession, and then&#13;
fail. Even if they save the life it is&#13;
often after great atrd prolonged agony&#13;
Where, all "this can be avoided by precaution&#13;
and care, how insane a thing it&#13;
is to . endure such suffering ! With a&#13;
p u r e - and palatable preparation within&#13;
reach, to neglect its U3G is simply inexcusable.&#13;
" B u s t T o o V e l l y Q u i c k . ' '&#13;
Chicago Herald.&#13;
A Chinaman who was carrying some&#13;
clean clothes to a room in a businesj&#13;
block on La Salle street discovered a&#13;
tire extinguisher in the hall, a n d when&#13;
no one was looking ho touched a match&#13;
to the little end of the hose and ran.&#13;
One of the occupants saw just enough&#13;
of the performance to imagine.the rest,&#13;
and he called the heathen back. John&#13;
came up slowly and the m a n said:&#13;
4 Touch him off again." J o h n struck&#13;
a match and the m a n holding the hose&#13;
turned the crank at the same moment&#13;
t h a t the Chinaman applied the lire.&#13;
The escaping chemicals hit J o h n in tho&#13;
mouth and eyes and covered him from&#13;
head to foot with saleratus. When he&#13;
could breathe ho turned to tho man&#13;
who had by this time corkod ' u p the&#13;
machine, and, smiling hi a sickly way,&#13;
observed, "Jeiusalotu! Mclu;an man's&#13;
|JL'^c.lac.kfd_too velly quick. Him oustee&#13;
house wide-open some time."&#13;
"Mr. B . , ' ' said the pTtrtkient of - ar&#13;
bunk to his cashier, " I understand you&#13;
have sold your trotting horses ?"&#13;
"Yes, sir," replied Mr. B., uneasily,&#13;
" I found tho luxury too e x p e n s i v e / '&#13;
" A n d you declined an invitation to&#13;
attend a champagne party the other&#13;
evening."&#13;
• "Yes, sir."&#13;
The cashier was getting white now.&#13;
"And I also loam that you have taken&#13;
a class in Sunday school and have become&#13;
a member of the church choir ?"&#13;
. " Oh, sirXl_exclaimed the frightened&#13;
man, " t h e amount is less than §10,000.&#13;
and if you will give two days' time I&#13;
"Wil^-restora^very-cent."....&#13;
But the president was inoxorabTo—&#13;
Exchange.&#13;
Headache In Immediately relleyed by t h e m e of&#13;
i*fm&gt;'* Ktrtutwly for Ottarra.&#13;
Patti's property in Wales is worth&#13;
$300,000; her diamonds about $200,000,&#13;
and her money investments are valued&#13;
at twice those amounts.&#13;
Constipation Is positively cured by Carter's&#13;
Little Liver Pills. Not by purging and weakening&#13;
the bowels, but by rejrulatlng and&#13;
strengthening them. Tula is done by Improving&#13;
the digestion and stimulating the llv^r to&#13;
the proper secretion of bile, when the bowels&#13;
will perform their customary functions ic an&#13;
easy and natural manner. Purgative Pills&#13;
must bu avoided. Ask for Carter's Little Liver&#13;
Pills. PrU-e !J5 centB.&#13;
HAT KEVEH After txjiug in vain for *jlev^n&#13;
years to curt; my Hay Fever 1 purchase'! a bottle&#13;
of E!&gt; 'a Cream Balm, which entirely reiw-&#13;
yed mc—T. W. HAKKIS, Letter Carrier,&#13;
N'ewark, N. .) 1'rlee 5 J cents.&#13;
Mere outward application of so-called :erue-_&#13;
dlts for rheumatiBin and neuralgia must nee"&#13;
fssarily fail of their purpose because tim oriy*&#13;
in of the trouble la frft untouched. Ath!o;,h-&#13;
(jrod destroys t.ha root of the dibHHfic by clean Jing&#13;
the blood of the impurities that cau&gt;e&#13;
them. Athloplnros is perftc-Jy tuinnleB-,&#13;
while its action is quick and cenmi!. Prict; $1&#13;
per bottle. If your druegiet hasn't, it. t-t-nJ to&#13;
Athlopb/;ros Co., -113 Wait atreH, N--i'.-&#13;
Foa twenty years I was suffering 'luring the&#13;
summer inovths with HAT FEVER . i procured&#13;
a bottle cf Ply's Cream balm, and was cured&#13;
ty it* use— CHARLOTTE PARKER, Waverlv, h.J. ;&#13;
"KOUOII ON PAIN." PORUS PLABTKK, for Backache,&#13;
Pains In the Cheat, itheamailim. 26c.&#13;
Young m e n , R e a d Tbl».&#13;
THE VOLTAIC BELT CO., of Marshall, Mich.,&#13;
offer to send their ELECTRO VOLTAIC I3ELT&#13;
and other ELECTRIC APPLIANCES on trial for&#13;
80 days to men (young- or old) afflicted with&#13;
cervous debility,"loss of vitality and manhocd&#13;
and all kindred troubles. Also for rheuma-,1&#13;
tism, neuralgia, pardlysi.0, and mauy diseases/&#13;
Complete restoration to health, Vigor and&#13;
manhood gu^rante-d. No risk U incurred ia&#13;
30 days's tri*l is allowed. Wrlce them at- qtce&#13;
for illustrated pamohlet free.&#13;
/ .&#13;
'•ROUGH ON DENTIST** TOOTH PowDEiu/ Kine&#13;
Smooth, Cleansing, Keireshlng^-Preaervfttiye. Lie.&#13;
A K K S M A N ' S P E P T O N I Z I D B M F T O X I C /the only&#13;
preparatkmTrf-treef containing i u entire nutritious&#13;
properties. It contains blooa-maklojf, f&lt;?rce-generatingand&#13;
life-sustaining properties; invaluable for&#13;
INDIGKSTIOK. DT8PIPBIA nervous prostration, and&#13;
all forms cf general debility: also In all enfeebled&#13;
conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, uer-&#13;
TOUS prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly&#13;
If resulting from pulmonary corny '.atnts. CAHVVKLL.&#13;
H A Z A R D &amp; Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold&#13;
by Ornwrists&#13;
"ROUGH ON TOOTHAOHK " Ask for It. Instant&#13;
relief, quick cure. lie. Druggists.&#13;
A 9 A R 1&#13;
jrs or youth.&#13;
)—To all who are suffering from errors&#13;
or youth, nervous weaaness. early decay, loss&#13;
of manhood. _ c . I will send yea k receipo that will&#13;
cure you, KKBK OK OHA_&lt;V73 T h i s great remedy&#13;
was dlscoveoed by "Imlssloaary in South America.&#13;
Send self aiireasod envelope to HKV. JOSEPH Tr&#13;
1NJdAN, Station I&gt;. New York. , - -&#13;
BKINNVMEN. "Wells' Heath Kenewer" restores&#13;
health and vigor cures DyBpepsla^-inipotence. t l .&#13;
CUBES _ _ f j&#13;
DISEASES OP THE&#13;
--"1UDN_YB,&#13;
' _ r V _ a , BLADDER,&#13;
AND&#13;
Tn__fARY OHOANS,&#13;
DROPSY,&#13;
GEAVEL, DIABETES,&#13;
iaaiOHT's DISEASE,&#13;
PAINS tN THE&#13;
BACK,&#13;
LOINS OB SIDE,&#13;
NERVOUS&#13;
DISEASES.&#13;
mm Warn.&#13;
py tlio use of this B _ _ I _ D T , the&#13;
Stomach and Bowels speedily regain&#13;
their s t r e n g t h , and tho b l o o d is&#13;
purified. ——&#13;
' It is pronounced by hundreds of the best doctors to&#13;
bo tno ONliY CUBE for all kinds of Kidney Diseases.&#13;
It is purely vegetable, and cures •when other medicines&#13;
fail. Over 100 Physicians in the State of Bhode&#13;
Island on record testifying in its favor and who prescribe&#13;
it regularly.&#13;
It is prepared, expressly for these diseases, and has&#13;
never been known to fai\. One trial will convince&#13;
you. For sale by all drv^gista. PBICE*1.25.&#13;
Send (or Pamphlet of Testimonials.&#13;
J S T ^ I S T T ' S X ^ B a u S E X &gt; - 2 - C O . ,&#13;
rilOTIDEXCE^ll. I.&#13;
A. W. Brown, M.D-, of Providence, B. I., says:&#13;
"I havo used HUNT'S [Kidney and Liver] BEMBDY&#13;
i n my practice for thr&gt; past sixteen years, and&#13;
cheerfully recommend It as beinc c\ Bafe and&#13;
reliable remedy." 8&#13;
Stomach I Liver&#13;
j REGULATOR],^.&#13;
CURES COHSTIPATIOH,&#13;
Torpid Liver, Indigestion, Heartburn, Malar:s»&#13;
Rheumatism. Pftlpitation of the Heart when&#13;
urising from indigestion or deranged condition&#13;
of tho stomach, SICK Hendache or Mig'aln,&#13;
Piles and Female complaints. Tho onlymediciuei&#13;
n the world that&#13;
P o s i t i v e l y C u r e * C o n s t i p a t i o n .&#13;
I ' r i c c , »1.00 per bottle; 6 bottles, K&gt;.00«&#13;
SSND FOIWJItCULAKS, FREE.&#13;
F, J . CHENEY &amp; CO., P r o p ' r s ,&#13;
Xa&amp;sfactwi&amp;g ChtmiiU,&#13;
T O L E D O , O .&#13;
C A T A R R HAYFEVER&#13;
5 L Y&#13;
'fiSSS MBMS C&amp;S&#13;
rHWFEV£R®| i '&#13;
c V&#13;
•V&#13;
&lt;&amp;-* ll.&amp;A.&#13;
HAY-FEVER&#13;
C r e a m B \ l m is ;i n-medv&#13;
duitfriois of lliis IIISIMSO au&lt;i •:&#13;
I can rtcom mend&#13;
Ely's Cre'iin Balm&#13;
to all Hay Fever euffcrers,&#13;
It Keinp, !n&#13;
a&gt;y opinion, founded&#13;
upon experierce&#13;
and a sure cure. ]&#13;
\7as ftrlieted with&#13;
Hay Ki-ver for twenty-&#13;
five yeare&gt; :tnd&#13;
never before found&#13;
permanent relief.—&#13;
WfiiisxsR H. RASKINS,&#13;
Ma'ahfield, Vt,&#13;
(oiinde l|m a correct&#13;
in be dem'iuU'd vipoti.&#13;
s;inir&gt;!c r&gt;o»tU- bv inail&#13;
fc STOMACH^^#J •JraBK&#13;
The reputation ol&#13;
Hostetter'ft Storuach&#13;
Ultters :\s n provenllve&#13;
of eciUemles,&#13;
a RtoroauMc&#13;
aninvluor»nt.a«fiieral&#13;
ro*toratlve.and&#13;
H spectfle for fever&#13;
nr.a JW\N\ imU e»-&#13;
tKIII bt lions atToi"-&#13;
tiuns. rheumatism.&#13;
norvoui&lt; d e b I H ty.&#13;
aiTistUutlaiMl weak&#13;
ne^s, \* estHlillsilioJ&#13;
upt-ii the soundl&gt;ns-&#13;
1s or more than&#13;
twenty veur* experience,&#13;
iiid c;»n&#13;
i n move be slmke.i&#13;
by tno cluptra • i n s -&#13;
irmii* ot un&gt;*'ientitle&#13;
prctenilers.tfc.%&#13;
tho ovorhvstliiK niiis&#13;
liy the wind th*f&#13;
rustic throunh t!ej.r&#13;
iloillos. , V\&gt;r sikle. l&gt;y&#13;
nil drn«gl»t* unrt&#13;
dea'er* xvnn nlly.&#13;
1&gt;0 THEY TROUHLE Y O L ? 1IAVK THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D W I T H OUK N E W TEST LENSES&#13;
BY W H I C H WK OFTEN SUCCEED W i l E N&#13;
OTHERS KAIL,&#13;
ROKHM&amp; WRIGHT.&#13;
IMPORTERS, J E W E L E R S , A N D O I T I C I A N S ,&#13;
1 4 0 WO&lt;JDWARD A V E . . DETROIT MICH.&#13;
The BUYKRS' GUIDK is issued Kept&#13;
and March, each year: 221 pages, 8} x 11J&#13;
inches, with over ( $ , 3 0 0 illustrations—&#13;
a whole picture gallery. Gives wholesale&#13;
prices direct to consumers on all goods for&#13;
rjersonal or , ^ B ^ ^ ^ . family use.&#13;
Telia how to /^^^^^Kk order, and&#13;
gives exact mm | B | cost of everything&#13;
you m WM use: drink,&#13;
eat, wear, or ^ B ^ M ^ V ^ liave fun&#13;
with. These ^^m^^ invaluable&#13;
!&gt;ooks contain information gleaned from&#13;
the markets of the world. "We will mail&#13;
a copy F r e e to any address upon receipt&#13;
of the postage—8 cents. Let us hour&#13;
from you. ]Je.sp&lt;xtl'ullv,&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO,&#13;
8 » ? A.- S«tt V\ Mbm.li Avenna. Chicuco, 111.&#13;
* « 4 * * * * * • * * » « - i « • « » # *&#13;
. . LYDIA C. PINKHAWS . .&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPMT*&#13;
* »• ir&gt; A rositivK CL:I;!-: :&lt;&gt;::• .;&#13;
AH tlinsp pah.i'ul ( .ini'il.iiiit.H&#13;
" and WfjiWiii'Sscs so cumiiiuu *&#13;
* * * « • * t o our best * »•"* *• * *&#13;
t, * FEMALE POPULATION.' #&#13;
Price $1 !• Ilfuid, pill or l&lt;uong« fun*.&#13;
/*/ft» purpose U solely / o r the le$irtinati r.talin'j of&#13;
disease and the relief of pain, a&gt;\&lt;t~TKat it dues alt&#13;
fit claims to do, thousands of tallica can gladly tett ifu. •&#13;
* It will cure entirviy aitxjvarian troubles, Inflajiirar&#13;
tIon. and Ulceration, Fulling and Displacements, SJK.&#13;
consequent HpiiuU Weakness, and id particularly&#13;
adaljited to tho change of life. * « * * * • * • • • " • *&#13;
* It removes Faintm *&lt;, Flatulency, destroys all craving&#13;
for .stimulant-*, and relieves Weaine^s of the Stoma"li&#13;
It cures Bloating, Ueadaehes, Kervou* l'rostruflon,&#13;
General Debility, ISlceplessneHM, Depression and Indigestion.&#13;
That feeiini? ot iwanngr di&gt;wn, causing pain,&#13;
and backache. U always permanently cured l&gt;y it« use.&#13;
* 8&lt;!nd stAtnp to Lynn, Mu-»."., tor puinphlec Letters of&#13;
Inquiry confidentially answered. !•'•"• nn'.satdr. ^Uts.&#13;
* * * * * * * * o ^ . i - * « * » * « * ; » » * *&#13;
AUXILIAKY SHEETS&#13;
MICUIGAN EDITIONS OCK SPECIALTY. .&#13;
Person8 conteraplating the establishment of&#13;
ne^ epaperu will do well to corre&amp;jotid with o'&#13;
call at our office, 203 Woodward ave., Detroii&#13;
Westex^ftewspaper Union.&#13;
I I . B l . M K p p T E L D , M ' s ' r *&#13;
YOUNG MENS&#13;
CAN* *AVE MONEY 1(Y ATTBNDINO THE&#13;
Collude at Kalamazoo, Mich. Send for Journal.&#13;
W. F. rA RSONS, PretSt.&#13;
THE T t F F I N Well B o r i n g &amp;&#13;
Rock D r i l l i n g -&#13;
MACHINERY!&#13;
For Horse or Steam Power&#13;
Hundreds of the best men in "f&gt; States&#13;
and Territories use it and will have no&#13;
other J&#13;
RELIABLE! DURABLE! SIMPLE!&#13;
Established over &amp;&gt; years,we have ample&#13;
facilities to nil orders p r o m p t l y , and&#13;
to satisfaction oi our customers'. Catalogue&#13;
riir.i:. Address&#13;
JLOOMJS X &gt; Y M A N , Tiffin. O h i o .&#13;
A S.KIN OF HKA1 TV Is A JOY KOKKVfc'K. [&gt;K . T . FEI.IX&#13;
( i o i R u r i ' s&#13;
O r l e n i a l C r e a m o r ^ I a g i c a l B e a u i f t i e r .&#13;
*• ' ' — iiemoves t&amp;n,&#13;
Pirnples.Freck&#13;
1 e s, M o t h&#13;
Pstches, Hash&#13;
and vkin dtse&#13;
a B 68. and&#13;
every blemlBh&#13;
on beauty,and&#13;
defies detection..&#13;
It has&#13;
atood the test&#13;
of thirty vears&#13;
and is so harm&#13;
Hess we ta«:e&#13;
It to he sure&#13;
the orepara'&#13;
ttonls property&#13;
made. Accept&#13;
no counterfeltof&#13;
Bimi&#13;
^ _ ^ „ _ -.-. - lar name. Dr.&#13;
said to a lad) of the h«u tloii [k patient.&gt;—"Asyon&#13;
ludtes will use them 1 recommend Gouraud's&#13;
( ream as the least harmful of all the Skin preparations&#13;
' One bottle will last six montns, using it&#13;
every dny. Also i'oudre Sub'.Ue removes superfluous&#13;
huir without injur? to the skin.&#13;
MMB. M. B. T. UOUH A.UD Sole Prop.. 4S Bond St.,&#13;
N.Y. For sale by all Dru^cists and Fancy Goods&#13;
Dealers, JjriSeware of base imitations. #1 000 Reward&#13;
fot arrest *n&lt;t proof of any One selltng the&#13;
ARE YOU&#13;
CONSTIPATED?&#13;
If you arc bilious, dyspeptic&#13;
or constipated, a few bottles&#13;
of Hops and Malt Bitters will&#13;
cure you as they have many&#13;
ihers. Aii occasional use-of&#13;
Hops and Malt Bitters five's&#13;
tone to the blood, strengthens&#13;
die nervesjitnl promotes perfect&#13;
digestion. Do ^ o t be&#13;
persuaded to try so me thin:&#13;
else, said to !v i'ust as ijood,&#13;
but get 'the genuine. pFor •&#13;
sale by all deaiei-^ ~~ HOPS &amp; MhUX&#13;
BITTEKS CO.,&#13;
DETROIT. MICH.&#13;
K. K. H. KADWAY'S&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF,&#13;
Iu from one to twenty minutM, **6T«r fsili to i ^&#13;
Ueva PAIN wrth one tborougb »ppllc»Uon. S o&#13;
matter how violent or excruciating the pain, tb»&#13;
Rheumstlc, Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, N e n r o u *&#13;
Neuralgic, or prostrated with dlsaisfl m»y raffcr.&#13;
BAD WAY'S READY ILELIEF wtU afford. \xxUsA&#13;
BOWEL C O M P L A I N T 8 y&#13;
DYSENTERY, D1ARRHCEA„ CHOLERA&#13;
MORBUS.&#13;
It will, in m Tew loinutcs, when tskeu scoordln&lt;&#13;
to diroctioua, cure CrarnjiH, Hpaams, Sour Stomach,&#13;
Heartburn, Hick lieadat:ht\ iKJMMKH COMPLAINT,&#13;
DUrrhoea, Dyseiitery, Colic, V'iurl iu the Bowel»,&#13;
and sii internal pahis.&#13;
Travelers should alwava carr.' a bottle of RADWAY'S&#13;
HEADY RELIEF with lUeui. A few dropf&#13;
in water will |jrevent Hi&lt;-kiK-P8 cr p*iu from change&#13;
of »vater. It is better than Fwuch brandy or Bitter&#13;
« as a «ti:aulaiit.&#13;
.THE TRUE RELIEF.&#13;
KAbrtWY'H Ri'.ADY RELIEF la tho only remedial&#13;
a^ent in vo;;ue tlia* will instantly otop pain. It&#13;
luataiitly relieves find soon cures headache, whether&#13;
eick or ncrvou?, touthach.*. neurai^ia, nervousneai,&#13;
aiul^lcepieaEutaa, r.!:'imnutiwrj, huiil)Uf,-t&gt;, pains and&#13;
woakiu-Bo io ihi- back, Kjjine. vr h'.dueys, i)^ins around&#13;
the liver, pleurisy, swelling of the joint*, cpraine,&#13;
bruii-es, bites of insects, m:d pains of oLl kinds, Iiadway's&#13;
Iteidy Uciief wiD afford immediate nase. Atxa its&#13;
continued u»e for a few days effect a permanent care,&#13;
MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS.&#13;
FEVER AND AGUE.&#13;
There is not n remedial agent in the world that wih&#13;
cure Fever and A.i;ue and ail otiifr Malarious, LSihlous,&#13;
Scarlet, and other fot-rs, (aided by Railway'*&#13;
Pills) so r]uicU cs Ladway's Ready Relief. Prlc,e nftj&#13;
cents. Sold by druggiHta.&#13;
D R . R A D W A Y ' S&#13;
SAfiSlMlLUMRESOLVENT&#13;
The Great Blood Purifier.&#13;
For cure of all chronic diseases, Scrofula, Consumption,&#13;
Glandular Disease, Ulcers, Chronic Rheumatiiia,&#13;
Erysipelas, Kidney, Bladder and Liver complaints,&#13;
Dyspepsia, Affections of„_-the Lungs and&#13;
Throat, purines the Elood, restoring hoalth and vig-&#13;
THE S K I N ,&#13;
After a few days' use of the SarscpariUian become*&#13;
clear and beautiful. Pimple*, blotches, black spot*,&#13;
and skin eruptions are rcrroved; sores and ulcers&#13;
toon cured. Persona sufiefih^ from scrofula, eruptive&#13;
diseases of th^-eyc*. mouth, earn, legB, throat&#13;
and glands, thM-tfliva accumulated and spread, either&#13;
from nncurf:! t!ispaces or murcury, may rely nppo. a&#13;
cure, i f the hars.inariilinn is continued a sufficient&#13;
time to rnako its irrros:.on on the system. Sold by&#13;
druggists, Tri^i £ i per bottle.&#13;
RftBWAY'S REGULATING PIUS.&#13;
T h o Cre&amp;t Liver a n d S t o m a c h&#13;
Remedy,&#13;
Pcrfcclly tasteless, eleRantly coated with Bweef g u m ;&#13;
purge*, refjulate, purify, c!tin3e, und strengthen.&#13;
RADWAY'S PiLT-i for the cure of all disordert&#13;
tho Stomach, I.uer, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Pain in the baclt, Loss of Appetite, Languor, Nervous&#13;
Diseases, Headache, Constipation. CostiveneM,&#13;
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Bilioueneu, Ferer, Inflammation&#13;
of the Bowels, Piles, aodallderaagemeBUot&#13;
the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing&#13;
n o mercury, miner3&gt;. or deleterlou* drnga-&#13;
A few doses of RADWAY'S PILLS will tit* th«&#13;
system of all tho above named disorders.&#13;
PRICE as CENTS PER BOX. Sold by all dxugglBtfc&#13;
Road "FALSE AND TRUE.'*&#13;
Send a letter stamp to B A D W A Y A CO&lt;&#13;
\ « . a « W a r r e n Nt., New Y o r k , a r i n -&#13;
formation worth thousands will be sent to you.&#13;
TO THE PUBLIC.&#13;
~ Be sure and ask for R»dway'»-»nd see Shut th&gt;&#13;
uai* of "Bid way" is oa what sou boy,&#13;
i s pnc'.K&#13;
is short You will S;LV«&#13;
,u;in' :irn\ money by ohmininjj&#13;
a t!»oroui;h ami&#13;
[jr.ii/tical ltusincss I£du&#13;
vMtion ;it the (toldsmilh&#13;
Pryant and Stratton Business&#13;
L'niversitv, Drtroi.,&#13;
il courses ot slui.lv and OHin'iiij^ House&#13;
. : . . &gt; . j \ - i - . ] . . - . - .&#13;
or s&gt;:nj lor circulars&#13;
H.ill.&#13;
The Oldest Medicine&#13;
probably Dr. ISAAC&#13;
in the World is&#13;
THOMPSON'S&#13;
Actual Business-is uneijualcd, A'k our uradii'tes&#13;
and business men, Sb.nnh.in'1 and Ty pewntiujr Call&#13;
„_r .,„i ,-......: ' .-s. (iriswolil street, opposite Citv&#13;
_ \ \ \ _ F . J E \ V E : . L , principals&#13;
Uelebrated Eye Wate&#13;
This article Is a carefully prepared physician's prescription,&#13;
and has been In constant use for nearly a&#13;
century, and notwithstanding the many other&#13;
preparations that have been Introduced into the&#13;
market, the sale of this article is constantly Increas*&#13;
lng. If the directions are followed it will uerer fall.&#13;
Wiparticularly Invite the attention of physicians to&#13;
its merits.&#13;
John L.Thompson, Son», &amp; Co.. Troy, N. Y.&#13;
R&#13;
Tfl&#13;
icrman A s j h m a C a r e neve/ui*.* to give im~\&#13;
lediate nlijif'iin the worst cases, insures comfortableslevp&#13;
Reflects cores where ail others faill 1.4 trial convinces the rno»C sktptieal. Price"&#13;
SOc. and S l . O O , of Druggists or by mailJ&#13;
Simple F r e e for stamp. DT. U.-t»CHIFFi&#13;
MAN, St. Paul. Minn.&#13;
JOSEPH GIUOTTS&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DEALERSTHROUCK-UTTHE W 0 R LD&#13;
COLD MEDAL PARIS E X P 0 S f T I O N - I S 7 8 . (&#13;
= I WILL GIVE A&#13;
WATERBURY WATCH FREE!&#13;
and w.Mir.ANTED a KFMAM.B stem-winding timekp*&#13;
p*r, to any one who will pet a subscribers for&#13;
f**fH-B-4t*&lt;?l IIII All HUH L 11. K t * T T " - t h » RBKT-60-tfanta-.&#13;
a-year paper In the world. SAM-IM.B C o r n s SKXT&#13;
H:_KK! Address ANnRKWSlMoNSON. Kaclne.WiSi.&#13;
-:113311&#13;
CUBES WHERE ALL USE FAILS&#13;
Hi-r-.tl'otitfii^yrup. Tastes good.&#13;
L"s*&gt; in inue. * Sold by druggists.&#13;
•"$! CG?N S U M P T I O N&#13;
ASTHMA Kelieved immediately and curecLhj&#13;
U»in« COS! ASTESlA ^OSQUBKOH.&#13;
'i»riee fll per bottle or o ooltles fo&#13;
|8 delivered. Address DR. C. MAKKT, Manager&#13;
llamilton, Ohio.&#13;
^ a u J / l g C i l l O n e n t etnploympnt&#13;
nii.lg^xl salary selling Quevii City&#13;
sktrta^dstooVlnoSiiptjortci-sete.&#13;
S.-i::,^&gt;lc ou'.tit Free. Address QneeM&#13;
t'lty Sutacn^er COM Cmonrmi. (X&#13;
%&#13;
W.TV.U. t &gt; . . 2 — 3 3&#13;
OPtDM • • i u r i i l d n s i K v b l t C u r e d ! l n l i&#13;
u ^ O d a , r &gt; , x&lt;»pay t i l l C a r c d L&#13;
l)u. J. JTWUKNa, Lebanon, Ohitu&#13;
S PURGATIVE&#13;
?o«itivo&#13;
a^vo lio&#13;
•In m y&#13;
\,\U for&#13;
Ol 11 XEKJIIUOUS.&#13;
I V . M ) I U . . \&#13;
j7'i.j|ii .&lt;&lt;ui' Corrrc/KiniliVJt.&#13;
Mrs. Dr. I'vpcr is dan^ot'ousiy ill.&#13;
"(jravdiua" DuHois js sjiuwly recuv-&#13;
:er'iiiK from u very sev/ujo illness.&#13;
Mrs. Judsou liird, ui ,)m:k&gt;oi\, with&#13;
her two little Mirds and Mr*. (J. N.&#13;
Jiird, of hStockhrid^e, and Miss (Ami&#13;
Bird, o/Ami Arbor, are visiting t'»; '-&#13;
4illa liirdd this week.&#13;
Eugene M. Joslin and wife, ot Saginaw,&#13;
with Mi\s. J.'s mother, are visiting&#13;
their many friend* and relatives&#13;
jn Lyndon and I'nadilla.&#13;
Rev. (Jeo. W. Sl.gwe ha* received an&#13;
appointment ty preach in J)eLand,&#13;
Florida,'and intends to start with his&#13;
family next month for the sunny&#13;
south. Many are the regret* we hear&#13;
on everv side.&#13;
Mr*. Alice AIcHride, of Corunna, is&#13;
renewing acquaintance witli old school&#13;
male* and friends here, alter an al»:&#13;
sence of about twenty-live years. She&#13;
is the youngest daughter of Dr. Foster,&#13;
who was once a proctloiug physician&#13;
in tin* place. ~~&#13;
WEST L'NApJLLA.&#13;
The great event of the week has&#13;
pome and Kone, namely, the great ex-&#13;
- cursien of Maj. Anderson, more properly&#13;
called the Anderson , swindle or&#13;
jug-handle free ride for in en Mia t tfave&#13;
a bonus for ajjKailroad; and big ride to&#13;
it was for people that, had been to Jackson&#13;
for forty years, a ride of less than&#13;
19 miles after paying $30,000, then&#13;
next week will take the people of Pun- |&#13;
tiac and stations west who paid it&gt;s&#13;
than one-fourth as much as Stoikbridge,&#13;
over to Jackson, a distance ,of&#13;
80 miles. Now, Mr. Editor, if Maj A.&#13;
bad taken the people to Pontine or&#13;
Rigeway or to Port Huron then taken&#13;
those from the ea*t to Jackson it&#13;
would have given satisfaction theJ&#13;
|eagth of the line, but now he has not j&#13;
fulfilled his promise, nothing near it;&#13;
for he told the people that when they&#13;
paid notes they should have, a tree&#13;
ride to the east end of the road, so the&#13;
people are not satisfied and never&#13;
ought to have gone. 7 , . .&#13;
J'. H O P K I N S .&#13;
EFERMMJ GOES, CASH TELLS THE STORY.&#13;
i : :&#13;
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE, WE OFFER:&#13;
Rest Prints for Events, worth 7 cents. 27 inch Alpacas, half wool, 10 cents, worth 12-' cents.-!&lt;&#13;
27 inch Cashmeres, half wool, 15 c'Js,, worth 18 cts., 27 inch Plain Ottoman Cloths, half wool, 2Uc, worth 2oc.&#13;
27 inch Rrocuded Ottoinun Cloths, halt'wool, 20 cents, worth 2") cents.&#13;
We are showing tlu&gt; above goods In all the new and staple shades, all iivsij and now, no old stock. Ask "to see nur&#13;
US inch JUack Ciuslnnere, all wool, at .'»0 cents; it is a bargain, Full line of Hiack and Colored Cashmeres&#13;
at better bargains than ever before, Black and Colored Silks mil Velvets, complete line ami at&#13;
very low priues. liroadhead atid Kent Alpacas always in sti*'k—best goods for the money&#13;
in the market, we call special-attention to our line'of&#13;
R y f a r the largest line ever shown henyaud at the lowest prices.——&#13;
DOMESTICS WERE NEVER SO LOW AS NOW!&#13;
Atlantic P. Sheeting 6 Cts. pr. yd. L. L. Sheeting 7 Cents per yard&#13;
Lonsdale Bleached, 10 " " Best Shirting 10 "&#13;
Staple Ginghams, 8 Cents per yard.&#13;
PARASOLS, GLOVES, MITS, ETC., AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES TO CLOSE.&#13;
Fuji lifin Denims, Tickings. D. «&amp; T. Cottonades, Jeans, Table .Linens, Ginghams, Fancy Shirtings, Double-widt&#13;
Sheetings, Flannels, Etc., and all at the .lowest possible' prices.&#13;
Wo l-ught, h,,t w,ek, f,„„ a l«r s t . ,1,,,,,1,,, l.ouso g o i n ^ t ,,f tra,!,, o(,0 pairs p . , , * U„,I v c , b . « 1 „ , i ( s ,,, , „ , , .&#13;
that I'lmblc us tn M-11 tlicni (iir • ' l l &gt;&#13;
H TH ANTHEXLOm-COST,&#13;
l t The (leheacy of English wit i? sonic-&#13;
-ttrrmrtirat the American mind Jails to&#13;
aopm^wte,—An 17-n^li-h weekly urforpd&#13;
a p n ^ of.il l\n- the elevens ori^-|&#13;
inal anecdote tlmt &gt;hnuld be sent ft J&#13;
and thej^dluwing MYIHT,1 rhe nionrv:*!&#13;
' i was out at iunmll dinner pariv one'&#13;
evenmy;'recently. A U.v, evidently!&#13;
t r n r n * ' " ^ ^ T l - r o J , - \ ..liupTTlTJTl berll |&#13;
engaged, to m, i|H; waiting. W'li.'n lie&#13;
placed two dishes of tarts before ihe&#13;
hostess, she, probably thinking it m&gt;t&#13;
correct to know wh.f wa&lt; coming, a-kpd:&#13;
*\\ iiataiviln-.'.huncs?' Whereupon&#13;
the boy. pu.niing ij;.&gt;L too^e di'&lt;li&#13;
and then to the other, repln-d-&#13;
'Them s a, penny each, and them's two&#13;
for three half-pence.' "&#13;
An old batehelor who is a close 'observer&#13;
of femineiie peculiarities says,&#13;
'.'The plain girl may congratulate herself&#13;
on the oertainty that . she will&#13;
make a better looking/old lady' than&#13;
-herprotti 1'iaii sTsfer. Just as the&#13;
handsome, scrool-sawed ornaments on&#13;
a cottage for the time being look prettier&#13;
perhaps than brown stone.cpjumn&gt;»&#13;
PANTS FOR BOYS,..: » , 1 A , n i l m&#13;
PANTS FOR YOUTHS AT..: '"!&#13;
n s - c)() ifl t n r l w 7&#13;
• lAMfc 1-OkMbN A 75,85, 90, $100,52.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 &amp;C&#13;
| ^ e expect to sell these ^ ^ U, ^ &amp; COME EAKLY a , ,&#13;
IN OUR GROCERY DEPflRTMENT WE OFFER :&#13;
GRANULATED SUGAR, 7 l-2c. COFFEE A. SUGAR, 7c.&#13;
EXTRA C. SUGAR, 6 l-?c. BEST ROASTED RIO COFFEE IBc&#13;
GOOD JAPAN TEA, USUALLY SOLD FOR 50c AT-40'CTS&#13;
WK WAXTIH-TTKItAM.^GS. HIOIIKT MARKET P « i f J B PAID. ^ ^ .&#13;
~ ' ~^~- ""CASH S'l'URE:&#13;
Faj^e hair does not antedate falsi*&#13;
pride.- Pretzel's Weekly.&#13;
Spitting on the hands doesn't dig&#13;
the potatoes.—-Texas Sittings.&#13;
A screaming farce The performanee&#13;
of an anurteur o]jera singei's.&#13;
JJosfon Post.&#13;
i&#13;
Should a mustard plaster be clas.-ed&#13;
among drawing materials?—Oil City&#13;
Perrick.&#13;
A justice's pantaloons cm hardly be&#13;
called breaches of the peace.- Bo«Um&#13;
Bulletin.&#13;
Sleep, •'nature's sweet restorer," is&#13;
the best grindstone we know of to&#13;
brighten one's ideas. Kentucky State&#13;
Journal.&#13;
The man who discovers the North&#13;
Pole can knock plenty of persimmons&#13;
with it.—Philadelphia Chronicle.&#13;
The last rows of summer -Tho*r,&#13;
taken on the lake just before leaving&#13;
lor town.—Boston Post.&#13;
-The cream of a joke would be lost'&#13;
upon a milkman—lie wouldn't know&#13;
what it was. -The . J mi ire.&#13;
''Truth lies at the bottom of a well."&#13;
but in this•eiiligjitenejd....century men&#13;
are atile to carry,on the rame business&#13;
very successfully on top ot the ground.&#13;
--Brooklyn Eagle.&#13;
Kate Field's new lecture is entitled&#13;
"The Mormon Monster." It is inferred&#13;
that the Mormon in question refused&#13;
to give his plural wife money&#13;
for &amp; new _fall bonnets— Normtown- -&#13;
Herald. ' „ •&#13;
"Soled ayaiu !" exeljiiiiied the.youny&#13;
man as he went tlyinur down the front&#13;
steps for .the thi.nl time inside of n&#13;
week, propelled by the vigorous foot •&#13;
of his charmer's papa. --Ex.&#13;
"Xeyer sperulater my boy," said a&#13;
successful merchant to his youngest&#13;
clerk, as he tied up four pounds of&#13;
cohVe for a customer and'charged him&#13;
six pounds. "Stick to a saje. legitimate,&#13;
ijon'p&gt;t business, fillip in the end&#13;
j success will lie yours.,v&#13;
! "Lei's play we are married," said&#13;
little Annie to little Dick, "and you&#13;
put your arm« around me and kiss me,&#13;
and tell me you love me. Won't, that&#13;
be nice?" "Yes. but don't let's be&#13;
married. You be f nurse, and I'll be&#13;
some "ther little girl's husband.&#13;
That's the W'iy papa does."&#13;
HOLLAND BULBS.&#13;
Our Autumn Catalogue&#13;
of Bulbs and Seeds will&#13;
be mailed FREE to all applicants.&#13;
Address,&#13;
D 7 M . F E R R Y &amp; C O . ,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.l&#13;
~tmt~they won't stand the, wear of winter&#13;
winds and summer rains' half 'so&#13;
well."&#13;
The potatoe vines failing'longer to&#13;
furnish food for the bugs, 'the striped&#13;
rascals are wandering all about thP&#13;
s ••--&#13;
r^.&#13;
country a horde of insect tramp. .-&#13;
beekiugsome substitute for their natural&#13;
food. " W e saw one the other day&#13;
purched upon a .quid of tobacco which&#13;
some pedestrain had thrown upon the&#13;
sidewalk Jks bug,hip seemed to&#13;
think he had struck a bonon/a, fur alter&#13;
each luscious nmuthiul he looked&#13;
np and smiled with a satisfied express&#13;
i o n which seemed to s a y ''That&#13;
tastes kind £ natural, neare^ tnine to&#13;
tater vin.es Tve struck yet." ^&#13;
*WJ „oZf ?hi•s tlerri ypalfly, s-i np o ktehre beptfrceesr idetnhtaanl •&#13;
B o l n P o s t ! C e n t e r - T h e ^ - ^&#13;
- T h e J u d ^ - ^ * 9 u n d e r t ^ e r ' s . bill&#13;
-IY.5a cJ?ao p p i n f f t h e qu-tion-&#13;
Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, who is at&#13;
Newport engaged in social, literary&#13;
andartistie pursuits as her serious&#13;
pusiness, amuses herself by preach-in*&#13;
nearly every Sunday in some of the&#13;
&lt;Vll i »ti'.&gt;.•!•' Ut'iU I ." . n - U VHTIwi • i l i a K i ' l i K n . N n i t ' I T s&#13;
-Muiiul'acturerp ot ii&lt; r.n.'iit-illv- Si'nlt',1 (MUM!*,&#13;
1'icklep, l'n'Mer\ I'S, »&gt;u\,&#13;
.Vi, .V. and ri7 JefftTfi.a, A v e , -DKTKOIT, MlCJf.&#13;
ricwcey piipi'r. its tf'li'^r;it&gt;hlc nmvs comes by&#13;
siii'i'ial wirf from tht&gt; neivs cpntcre of tho country&#13;
to its wlitoriiilxoiiina- LiJiw-HWJet-fmmh'this&#13;
TrtTTTiiK Ti.MKfl ia independent in politic*, ultlton.&#13;
u'li it is !&gt;y no means neutral. Kv»-tv .just&#13;
cause receive?"firir and-ddequate treutment'from IS THK PAPER T H « TIXKS. While the&#13;
'I't.viKs L'ivew lirore attention to business than to&#13;
niurders, it never neglects murders or any real&#13;
newn, iirui it inn't scared by being called sensational.&#13;
The people like THE TIMKS because it ia&#13;
imliflshed eojely in the interest ot its readers&#13;
von ran have the Dailv TIMK'S sent \&lt;.\ vour ad'&#13;
FOIt THE PEOPLE. &lt;IIM« »a&lt;« w»Pth foE_&#13;
IOCUOUI; ui &gt;on can have the Uaily ahTl Sunday,'&#13;
seven papers a week, sent you for .Wcents "a&#13;
fmalol.n thA. ddIr'ehsiss is :lie best invest incut offered this&#13;
ffllES PUBLISHING COMPAPTr, - ~—&#13;
IUTROIT, MICH.,;&#13;
UlVU. AIR LINE niVISIpy.&#13;
WITH A FULL LINE OF&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE,&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located,?* of a mile west&#13;
Stnckbridu'e. Apple, cherry peach and paar orchards,&#13;
nice house, pood well and ctetern, nut&#13;
buildings, well fenced, jro(Hi_s(»M&#13;
premises.&#13;
i&#13;
SLATES, SCHOOL BAGS AND STRAPS,&#13;
PENS,^PENCILS.INK jANOIJNKSTAN0S,&#13;
Writing Books, Tablets, Composition Books,&#13;
^iffhj&gt;oring towns.&#13;
•EKASEB8, CRAYONS, M&amp;CH. HOLDKRS, TXDELIBLE PENCILS,&#13;
And a great variety of School Stationery.&#13;
PRICES THE LOWEST EVER KNOWN&#13;
- - - PpieXKEVrMKJH.&#13;
STATION'S. |&#13;
No, 6.&#13;
RlDGEVVAV 9:,Ysa.&#13;
^ r n i « &lt; ^ . 10:10&#13;
\l"nr\ W;;»&#13;
liochester U :5¾&#13;
Pontlac, &gt; »r-.-14-,44 p .&#13;
"'ljom, 0..3Q&#13;
.. , J u ( r t p . 3:30&#13;
PlNCKNEY.../...., 4:4ft&#13;
Mount Ferrier,... 5 J 5&#13;
StockbrlclKe, .... ^:35&#13;
"«nrletU, « : a s&#13;
JACKSON-..^..,..^41,:45. p.&#13;
STATIONS. I&#13;
WEST BOUND TRAW8.&#13;
m.&#13;
m.&#13;
Pass.&#13;
5:M », OH&#13;
K:I5&#13;
7:1*&#13;
T:S5,&#13;
7 : ^&#13;
8:«j&#13;
8:55&#13;
m.&#13;
No. •. l&#13;
Pa« ,&#13;
8:00&#13;
8:A)&#13;
8:52&#13;
H.-15&#13;
«:25&#13;
10:10&#13;
10:40&#13;
11:50&#13;
11:13&#13;
11:30&#13;
ll:5o&#13;
ia:08p. m.&#13;
12:80 /&#13;
12:.¾ p. m.&#13;
JHELL&#13;
that we have good&#13;
JACKSON.&#13;
Henrietta w ,&#13;
^tockbri(ij;e.&#13;
Mount Kerrler,&#13;
PlNCKNEY-....,.,&#13;
Hamburg , w ,&#13;
South Lyon-| 5»&#13;
Wlxon, \**&#13;
Pontiac, . { £ - . ;&#13;
Roc hPBter, ^ . , , „ ,&#13;
Konieo,&#13;
Armada,.. w ......&#13;
RiDflEWAy.........&#13;
All trains ru4i&#13;
run&#13;
No, 5.&#13;
3liAed,&#13;
7:00 a. m&#13;
. T^tfi. •&#13;
8:.15 *&#13;
»:32 **&#13;
. »:10&#13;
,.«:40&#13;
W:15,&#13;
10.-W&#13;
»1:30&#13;
W:80p /m&#13;
1:00 v&#13;
1:40/&#13;
2.:&#13;
KAST HOliyi) TJRAIX8.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
iOR&#13;
80&#13;
No. 3,&#13;
Pass.&#13;
4:20p. •iffi/' 5:15/ .&#13;
ft:Jfe&#13;
H/I08&#13;
/fi:20 •&#13;
6:5§&#13;
7:20&#13;
• 8:15&#13;
8:25&#13;
y.-oc&#13;
»:M&#13;
10:20&#13;
10:50&#13;
/No. 1.&#13;
: Pass.&#13;
5:00 a.ra&#13;
5 : »&#13;
6:00&#13;
6:10&#13;
fi:85&#13;
7:08&#13;
7:20&#13;
7:86/&#13;
All train*,„_&#13;
W. J. 8P1C&amp;R, aaiiy, Hundaya excepted. "&#13;
JQ3SPH m C K S O N ,&#13;
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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 Dispatch September 18, 1884</text>
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                <text>September 18, 1884 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>PlNCKXKYL\ M^ SPATCH&#13;
JhROME WK ^.lELL, PUBLISHhR.&#13;
K - M I : D ' n i v ' K s D A Y s .&#13;
Subscription L'ricc, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
A P Y H U ! 1-lNO K A T K S .&#13;
rrH nPl.'nt uiiv.Ti; - H I . n ' s , a'.'. r-ntH i ^ r Inch for&#13;
flr«t iriiU'itii'ii '&gt;i',; '••" ' g -&#13;
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nit'iitrt liy tin- \&gt;a, "'&#13;
, ci- i n c h fur e a c h Hube,.'-&#13;
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:!.-.-.&#13;
D.&#13;
BUSCifSS CARDS.&#13;
M. ( . K h : : ' - i: v h ,&#13;
From Klk Mills, Missouri.&#13;
Du. C. D. WAIIS-KH: Dear Sir&#13;
This is to certify that I have used near- ! • •'' '' 1H7t!"- Li,:i: t^'-xpir.-.t,;.•"! .'U'.,,y- -&gt;-&#13;
, . . ,. •' ..,.. . ..-,. , ,.,., in n o - w i t h ' t;r a:, •*, t h - \&gt;u]x-f v. 1 .;•: a a ' - n&#13;
ly a bottle or your uiute VY ine ut lar tiiiin-ii uutii sui.Ht rij^tioj: i.-t i-.-u-.-w.-ti.&#13;
..•"TIKI^H - -..ivim; tih'ir ;.- n-rn &lt;\-,&lt;h .-1 r • i 4 4 , ; j uiT.-Tt Wood returned from&#13;
/, iiM-r t h U pii. .',rapti, will p]i-iiH u - t i . •• th:e ' :..-.r&#13;
0&gt;&gt; Ti|;ti'&gt;!- &lt;• • ,,:i' JH with :.i'\t r. n - •••v. .Vhii ,&lt; -a&#13;
Syrup, and f 1::1:: safely and conscien&#13;
tiously recommended it to any person&#13;
as the best medicine 1 have ever, used&#13;
for throat ra..&lt;I lung di.-,aases, and if it&#13;
cost rive dollars a bottle J would keep&#13;
it on. hand it i was able.&#13;
ThaukfuPv, yours truly,&#13;
Elder T. Stephen.&#13;
For sale at (;. I-\ Hall'.^tcT'ti, si^hir Iirn'e, :wil&#13;
Wlnchc'll'i; Ur&gt;.iL' a &gt;r.-,&#13;
LOCAL JITTIXGS.&#13;
in • • ' .&#13;
ITE.W ' J MEREST.&#13;
F\ MKATS.&#13;
I will be in C ney on ""Tuesday,&#13;
PHY&lt;IC'l \ P f \ D S ERG EO"N, * | Thursday and Sat .ay mornings ot&#13;
_. .P.,-.P, r. ^ifMJir.Aivj. j e i u ' n week, and will supply&#13;
'i'wuiD i n ( ; a ^ at reasonable priees.&#13;
iv . :11 alomtay .&#13;
. V &lt;• . - a - . 1' i!i: Air Line con-&#13;
" - ;s ; u'.'.'u I J- .ay.&#13;
p. Wm. Rail took first prenrum&#13;
on his licrd of Shorthorn cattle at the&#13;
L. F. R o - , of7a&lt;;C7-'. Is spending &gt;s Hy., }', ,,- : ^ ; u l l this year.&#13;
7w 4 v.- .it. hia 0.1 li&gt;:. 1 i*r in this vil ,, ,. ., ,, , . , ~&#13;
, Jin-. I . E. I •:•ii'i:e has returned from&#13;
e lU'iTcnijt! rind is pr.-paring for re-&#13;
: - - r ^ ; k ; r k . of Fo-vb.n44e, is 3n,,v,Lj ,,, h i , n ,,,v r-h^-^e.&#13;
• '• &gt; : ;.arent.-, Mr. and JNir.-s. L.&#13;
II. ;; .-i. •. t';:.-. v.'eeV.&#13;
Mi— .M:IIII:'' i.''.Mbaejier, of Brigh-&#13;
•.'• ' )i i). I). Uennett's&#13;
PLAINFIELD, ICMIOAN.&#13;
Otllce ii.t n s u i r&#13;
^ n r ^ e r y ami ''•.&#13;
, j , , . . i;.', ' I t l ' l l t l u l l&#13;
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•f AMKS MAUKIIV,&#13;
NOTARY I T U ' L I C&#13;
g h „ r t n-.'i.v :e,.l v - ; - . : - v i - t . . r m * . - O l h c e o u&#13;
".Main St., ii-iii- I ' M - ' " ' " •- I'im-kii-y, Mich.&#13;
A LICE uwi:r: , N A 1 ! ! . K&#13;
DRESS A M ) I'EOAK MAKER,&#13;
P l a i n and fiin.-y ,.-\&gt;iT1;- -»f nil kinrtsj: c n t t i n - and&#13;
rittin"u-n«'ci;iilv. 1 ' v i - - P-a-i.iml.li-, «»»l witis-&#13;
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G1 I U M K S A; •!' ' i ! N s " N ,&#13;
r I'; 1 , ^ ! l . ' t o V ^ " I&#13;
PINCKNEY i"! )riMX&lt;; ANTTTJIT^&#13;
T*L\: .MIL! ,^.&#13;
n e i i . — . ;t Kl&lt;r:r -1-1-1 1-V.HI. .CU-!' ,iuii! for all&#13;
T A M E S T. E A M A N ,&#13;
ATT0 U X E Y \• 1' 1 &gt; I' N SK L(M AT I &gt; A W&#13;
:ITK1 ' ' I -&#13;
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nt t i l ' ' Ih'IU't',&#13;
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t ' . n . 1-- t t i c :_•&#13;
I&gt;Ir. aiiiMr... '.'l^s. .l/iih.'y^ _vj-i'&lt;'d fam:'h' this v.''" K.&#13;
the State r : &gt; •' X.-.i-.'ma/.'Xj,. 1-ist. Th--eh,^.1.- .'\-«v.dses for the Sunday&#13;
week. _ ydi, .,l :-T t:.&gt;.' Iv* u.an M/lio.d house, in&#13;
- R"v ,7. \ ' -;.-f • v ^':'11&gt;' -- :iti,ie'i \\'.;-t ]J'itn . w 1! oe :iir ai&gt; 4 p. m.-&#13;
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eircuitt.;e :•:.;.;": ye.r. '!';:,•:••!••:.'!• ^'1 !':•- H U- , v \ complete&#13;
A iitt'-i u.i ti.r 0-' -J. J . Li'.'- or- *')'M- -'i:it :'::d t!i•* 'Mek of . the in-&#13;
M::f 1 ^t the Grand&#13;
i-'loyd Reason.&#13;
Call on ^eeple &amp; Qadwell for coal for ;&#13;
threshing ei.gines. j&#13;
liEANS WANTED!&#13;
-4Vfr4mre-ftn-t&gt;Hfer-foir-i^JOO buyhel^^f"Pirpf'^i"V.-kets.&#13;
of beans, and for the best quali.y we&#13;
will pay the highest market price.&#13;
Be sure and give us a chance and we&#13;
will make you money&#13;
t of L'nadb.la. ".n t:;e pri/.e Hirt f'u:'" -tru:;..-ut M -.11&#13;
j at F, L. JJr ,1 .:7^7':or the largst number Trunk - v M . u&#13;
Mr. Wnghr. "i I''. ;»&gt;•: :-.'r of th.e&#13;
Mr, a-id.Mrs. Ow. E&lt;mion and :M'. (;r,Lnd Trunk IMiivay, of Canada,&#13;
ana ..Irs. C. H, Ivlerc^r. f Hartland. • v ''"n t ov-r-Ue1 Air ':.i\t :oad f.-d'^y.&#13;
were the gue^^ o( \Uv. and Mri. X. H&gt;- \ays Pinekney iias th6 neatest st^-&#13;
Teepie &amp;. CadweE. , H. Crane, for a few dav&lt; the nasi wu^k, ^ " n &lt;-11 Ttl,-: -n^'-&#13;
a. Kynett] T h e c o u n t v f a l l . i s i n , n . 0 „ r e , s at' A Hqiublh.-a.*. Mas, Meeting is an-&#13;
't loom, i am prepared to | rT ,. . . - . . • , ! ,,,-,,,.,. . 1 *-,, 1 f4 1, - , i .,t p ; _ , i , . D , .&#13;
iets in the ver\ r.est manner. --^^^11 . -•&gt; A C « - 'v' rt^ * .-'•' • . , J&#13;
Having purchased a new Kyr.ett&#13;
hand car} ?&#13;
weave carpets tne manni..., - . r . ,. . ,,&#13;
M'-s.E. U. Car}.enter, ' ^-v. - it .-• :: • w^arly t.. at.-&gt;rtain what r : l u : ' !':v&lt;-n-'-U. Oet .i-er Jd. Iren. 0.&#13;
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1 ' ht.'r&#13;
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Uf P. V.VNWI,;-.::,&#13;
ATT01JN 1-:Y ,U 'nC NSEE&lt;&gt;11 a' ^AW&#13;
Situi s i ' h i ' 1 i'1 »': [v l i i A ^ ' - K V&#13;
Ufflce&lt;ivorsi-/l.'i''-' !'vn : Miuv. l ' I N C K N E Y&#13;
-WANTED. A man aud w ie to tak&lt;- - [ ; / , ,,.-&#13;
charge of a larm. E n ( ; ' i c o f | , " ' . ' " ' .'• .&#13;
0 H', ToepK Pin- n-v, Mich. ; , V I l t ;-1 u " a&lt; &gt;tore. -.n&#13;
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• -. i Rev. H'mry Cartl- i . 7.:-&#13;
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1 :-, : uing. lie w i.l iilsv; i.r-.i'.-'i&#13;
: a . . : 11 &gt; :tlu.:i .. &gt;U.-e I'A l . a i l 1&#13;
c i i h : ; - ; j&#13;
:i iv ii"'.-: ' H e ' ' "' " ' '"&#13;
As we ;o to press, i he DUPATCH is&#13;
quietly h\'..,r. ied tha- the marriage of&#13;
our popular young v"Mage att.-r:icyf&#13;
"•.'/. P. Van Vinkle Esq , and Miss liatti?&#13;
Placeway wdl take place at ther.&#13;
sidenc3 of the bride's [areata this&#13;
atternoon.&#13;
The Prohibition Convention at How*&#13;
ell last week nominated the following&#13;
ticket:&#13;
State Senator— E. L. Brewer, of&#13;
U v . a v j ,&#13;
' w. Congrcis Sixth District— L. C.&#13;
Sm.tn, of Howell.&#13;
Sheriff—A.M. Wells, of Howell.&#13;
- ClerL—Dexter .FilkinCof Howell.&#13;
Register of Deeds—L. N . Clark, of&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
Treasurer—Theo. Welker, ofMarion.&#13;
Judge of Probate—Ira 1). Crouse, of&#13;
Hauland,&#13;
Pros. Attorney—L. H. Dean, of Howell.&#13;
Circuit Court Com'rs— Left to the&#13;
-County-Com-Huttee.&#13;
Coroners—Jos. Russell and G. W.&#13;
Jenks, .&#13;
Pinckney, in common with other&#13;
towns and the country for several&#13;
hundred miles east and west, waa considerably&#13;
shaken up by the earthquake&#13;
Friday afternoon last. The&#13;
shock struck this place at about 2:45&#13;
P., Mr^-and was of several seconds duration,&#13;
The motion" was irora east to&#13;
west, the oscillation of buildings be-&#13;
Fine "••.wiitw Y. .... ,J&#13;
fresh ami i Mia t&#13;
n--.v M.&#13;
' •'•••• &lt;' :: 7'-dge, is to be pasr&#13;
-:' 7 • M. E. C'.iurch in this village&#13;
•-- 7:-:-y-ir. , Mr, CartLedge was&#13;
at:&lt;.r: . 7ai Lia'^burG" v i l l a ^ t h e past&#13;
ar&#13;
NKTU V. TO V.'ATTLK:;I:K .' e-'as.&#13;
A elnjice yet 1'"»' co,v"&lt; thai i.re hehind.&#13;
R, C. Auld. w meet a wMeiv&#13;
expressed wish, will aEow the&#13;
his famed polled Aberdeen bul f&lt;&#13;
&lt; ; I ; A I N . i&#13;
l i ' _ ' l i . - l :, i:&#13;
t : '&#13;
• i : , 7 A*.&#13;
•r.id a! i&#13;
t i c .&#13;
r K T E i l P - '-'- &gt;&#13;
' M r , \v ii;&#13;
-&gt;ll_'!,f e l . , •:&#13;
...at 1,; ,u,a&#13;
[ { t ' ^ i i h ' i n " " i i ' ' . - • •&#13;
t i m i \\ i t l i i i-ii-- , 1&#13;
.-vrrr-rT-—rx-~z~n&lt;\&#13;
, • : . •• !•' !' . i n -&#13;
..:;•! I V , W h ' H . •&#13;
. , _ i ^ - ^ . ^ ,&#13;
: ! !i..' ri'l i-a.-.n-ly l"1-' |,flr- :,&#13;
I c, i\ , -a --r, • e vu, '-a w riii; r.&#13;
laai;:: ii.u-r .)! thf -'ea^!&gt;u .&#13;
t h - a t ' i n . )7&#13;
7l. v-: .:i'u Timovhy Si'i'-d. a&#13;
1 - l ' ] , i - A ; '&#13;
Irs. (ie,). Reynolds, who -l.a- '•&#13;
::..«: iViemU and rtdaMve&gt; . : ^ '&#13;
. : \' '; a1 . - - •• r : . w - :-; ;&#13;
&lt; v. f, .r i,- r • "!•• ,:i .'. . , - . - .&#13;
' -unty Convention&#13;
'.; 3I'.mday rrnrde the&#13;
•us:&#13;
• uil7 D. Smith.&#13;
a M •'&#13;
.C. A:, n.&#13;
n' a- i. a t t&#13;
: i — i . . '&#13;
V&#13;
a - , ii ' " t; - a • :&#13;
'A ih'M' 7.- •&#13;
'(.'HAlil.;&#13;
DE N ' i l s&#13;
i n c u t nt&#13;
IN'i 1&gt; I . l - •'&#13;
it t ! i ' . &lt; i.&#13;
(.iri'.'naway Eh i,-&#13;
^ ^ • " 1 ' i i r t i c u h i i : i ' -&#13;
tl\-&#13;
i,.,,-.,.I"-,.ii, n i n u i -&#13;
. l " i i . ' i ! .&#13;
',..:&gt;\ '». !). s„&#13;
,.• f.,,. D'OOal l)i'|,»ia-&#13;
^ ,-i Mi;-:.;.. .., Mil'iiv in&#13;
,; rn ::i&#13;
•i &lt; r&#13;
1-. . n - f&#13;
; ' - a -&#13;
1 l -°: i,'. \ • .&#13;
- ' J . 7 i t&#13;
' E-- :.:&#13;
:-', J 1&#13;
i - . ! 1 .&#13;
r 1 X . ' i .&#13;
i ,M 11,..,-,-. 1 1 : - - - 11;&#13;
,:, j , ; , -•&gt; tin- i,.v:,-:- . . a ' - n&#13;
A very i. --.rai'i • '•.&lt; .'i -.&#13;
iwij viii,.--.- :,.:^- [&lt; -aii.', .•aumteu u | n,'&gt;Kient :i;i.t piori'.er &lt;u' iJiii._-.vii w. -at --1" •&#13;
Mam Street. For .arms inquired' T. ; n o w ! h a king ai^ 1,.MU • in Cmn .-, - , . 1 1 1 ^ i&#13;
(i;-.tii"&lt; nv ml the lifemise.s ut Airs.: . . . , . ,&#13;
,-, i ,._.- v- vn.-, ^ v.siting in,- (.iaugi.t'-r. a r-a&#13;
iu::aget i_ igar. r- , , • , •, • • , , ,&#13;
U i ^ ^ i s and other rei-tiv,-a-.l-trn.;.'7 ha-.male its exlnbttipas notably sue-&#13;
. a r t .&#13;
T ' - -. 1- v Sherman.&#13;
, i';- t-7 \\ a, M. Horton.&#13;
1 ,-.. i - m l " ' ' 7 i.&#13;
;iu A' r. -v. ; (E Embler.&#13;
1 • •;'.-- ' 'an.; • a.r-. David&#13;
', •' ! '• j l : J i - i i _ J i i ' _ .&#13;
:;• ". Market Fair As,-oeia-&#13;
,- l' a. • r Aai. y t a. F;. :4^-*a-'4Ti -.'&#13;
:. i: image Uct. 7th to&#13;
dve. This society, by its&#13;
a , , , [ ' enterm: -ing and liberal management&#13;
at&#13;
T^ai'ge'cake^mVe TolTei: Soap "Mar 5c,&#13;
Winchell's Drug St&lt; ire&#13;
nsh's Beehives and ScrT'au I&gt;Me-. ot tat.1 nuUliah i'-' ,.,- -• f -. . i - ' - ' " • ••&#13;
Will ba at the Mnuiii.r Hon- P m c k - ' a t i; u ai7 Flaning Mil!. Pl.iiulhd&#13;
n e y , o n T h u r - d . . y . . f f a c h weeK. ,mt.-, A i h U . , „ , , , - ^ ^ j . ,&#13;
mencin,.&#13;
i,eiaaau&#13;
., .ueiit. , 's ! a-,.&#13;
m tin.- vi.initv.&#13;
PINCKNEY LAC:iAfiL. BANK&#13;
G. Vv7 TILEPLE,&#13;
^ B A N K E R . 7 -&#13;
Does o Genera! Banking Business.&#13;
Money Lonned on Approved"Notes.&#13;
poasltTiTrrTvarrTCertitiaale-&#13;
is-ued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable en demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
FIX KM:Y mourn: MARKET.&#13;
L O U U K I TKI&gt; W E E K L Y l . Y&#13;
Wept, ^r&gt;r^._i T0MP_K1 NS &amp; ISM0N.&#13;
Wh,^tT so; e -7.-11-777777.7.7777777.. %'''$.• a large stack or-Hair &gt;.,&#13;
" NM.JI-" it' i Switches t:.-han-ed av&#13;
.l'i-: : . 1.1 a&#13;
1 w - . a h . i -a , tia.it.&#13;
1U .' ' I !1, '' c:&lt; ; ' .'• i. '&#13;
I 4 ; . g •':!'•' '&gt;.- .: -i &gt;: , 1&#13;
\ 1 o-.. Is O'jl'o,-,' city ; ,&#13;
sea^ua.&#13;
' Thec7:eovat:: 1 1. .&#13;
in a-, in ,ai-&#13;
Rev. r . P. Pe.i r f ..a.- a ., -A&#13;
tou.A\ ayn'e (. .int'.r.v, f &gt;• th . aamirg:.&#13;
—rnrnvn- a \a ar7a"~ ;MT v. " f""n&#13;
! ,iii.!. i.-; t ' - i a ' l i . u .:; l a . . , -. . , a - AL&#13;
I&#13;
| i - n a .-:-1111. .&#13;
I Tha 7-nucrali- C.ain:\- 7 ii!- .:::&#13;
. .7:-- : i,r Thiuard v i.-v. , . '&#13;
ee-.fui.'' nh tinamdally and as a means&#13;
of I'll,- ••uruging competitive exhibitions&#13;
7v the- "irmersof Livingston County'&#13;
, I ' l i a i ' : , ' , -• J&#13;
^ r_.'' i.hiid--_^J_^_4jLt territory^ The abund^&#13;
an1&#13;
7 ' \ i .27. . . r o&#13;
' • ( • i i n t v , j i - ' :&#13;
C. R. .:"!!-:.•.&#13;
: 1-&#13;
• i.eae : -. I; ', r-..";&#13;
at - U e t ' t i l e * 7 a .&#13;
T-a.riv ia tiii- ca:.a; ". la a. J ta -r-a &lt;&#13;
a ai,' ! e no ace '-'en lar ta-i-a.&#13;
»r&#13;
this year and the good&#13;
'•7t : ::. . j0,•[ ty in-ure a better ex-&#13;
•; 7 " - y:--.1- than was ever made&#13;
'. -7'an a--iirtj a.ur fiends it&#13;
••• ;r*-.'.. tiie 7:i_-!itaai fair they&#13;
'. ' &gt;-\',a.-ii treated, and rind the visit&#13;
,. met, \! i- evg"- -n r-'&#13;
- aaa-&#13;
Secd.aig aiii] Peerta-.-. NVh.j iia- ha-I&#13;
a better vieid.&#13;
" N o . ••', ' . ' - i ,&#13;
O u t ?&#13;
&lt;.'oni&#13;
JJfti'l«'.v,&#13;
JJt'flll!',&#13;
D r i t v l A}).]ili'!&lt;&#13;
l ' o t l t l l ) ' " S ,&#13;
P.uttcr,&#13;
JiiiL?!1,&#13;
JJr(ir»Ht'(l lli»'_'r*, a-'1' "'*'•&#13;
Dressi'tl t'hicUi-ns&#13;
C l o v e r S e l l&#13;
.i-:s&#13;
The Township )'.,, rd of r!a- ...-,-n-i, , . (&#13;
ship of Riitnam^ v, ..1 ni.-^et :t : :0 ; u " '" ". • , ,&#13;
clerk's office in the , , &gt;rz •' . a , , ; . , ^a ^s • - :.;- a!,.. -,. a: 1. aa to .-. if. 'I :.&#13;
ney, Saturday, Oct. 11.'a. Irf^i. .' r rue v :.,.-a, wi-re Eariy i7.se.' iiurb.uPP&#13;
puaposc of'auditmg ace .niits anil transacting&#13;
such other bu-inL'ss a&gt; may&#13;
come before the board. j .&#13;
We like to know the weakness of&#13;
eminent parsons: it '-on-ol-r- us for our&#13;
HAH; GOO^S. ' infer4trt4trr—-Madaai- d-a I.amiirf.&#13;
'•^MTS. Lew'a of da. i.son. is here v;*h j&#13;
)-7. : v - v |&#13;
a. E- M&#13;
At a aa---,jt:r.a' ot the C. L.S. C. at&#13;
-- - tr?r--*7-au-eaa F. L. llrown on Mon-&#13;
;c i 0 | •"' ,-'••-,• t-vc ui;g. the f Plowing otficers were"&#13;
Electric Bitters, at WhichelEs Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
»v at the Tu-nitor Kouse,&#13;
t i •' l a , 1&#13;
La- •-. lent, W. P. Van AYinkle.&#13;
L-t \7-i- Rre-id-nt. Li//ie DaiTbw.&#13;
2-1.1 77-e Pre-eleut. iielle Kennedy, ,&#13;
• YarreHunding Secretary, Mrs. L. H.&#13;
Smler. .&#13;
Class Secretary, F. L. Brown&#13;
Treasurer. Hat tie Place way.&#13;
- The naxt reiruiar meeting will be at&#13;
the resieor.ee of Dr. H. F. Sigler, on&#13;
Charlie Jon-a a genial en Pn-er mi v r U a y t ,v e U 1 U i r &lt; Oct. od, ?&#13;
1 Air Line road. ta,4 a "Iwv l a f 7m ^, * . , , . . 0 , .&#13;
Mr. Au. 1 returned trom the State 11 a&#13;
w.&#13;
1 (WrA 5(1.&#13;
.::^,1 DO.&#13;
rtH,f^ .07.&#13;
rid.&#13;
If.&#13;
l . \&#13;
..,. • ; '&gt;:-&lt;TijS .on. u&#13;
I (XI (tl. "\.w.&#13;
one we-:lc.&#13;
oti ar lay. irui spent a I-1 v Hour?&#13;
tin ,'• \-rith Pir-.-kuov fa'.-". !-.&#13;
ing \ aite pe-ceptible to-the eye. The&#13;
sensation produced was in some -cases&#13;
very peculiar. People became dizzy&#13;
and supposed they were fainting but&#13;
of course recovered as soon as the&#13;
shock had passed over. Many rushed&#13;
ut of buildings thinking they were&#13;
being shaken up by some tort of explosion.&#13;
T'^- ---hone 'messages trom&#13;
neghboring towns soon confirmed the&#13;
general impre.-sion that all had been&#13;
jarred by a genuine earthquake. At&#13;
Jackson the shock was suhicient to&#13;
break several windows it is said, while&#13;
at most points throughout Southern&#13;
.Michigan theThunpon seems to have&#13;
been about the same as here. Teleg^'-&#13;
aph-R-F^por-ts—show the extent of&#13;
territory affect-.&gt;.l *- inPnde a portion&#13;
of West Virginia, Uluo, Southern&#13;
Michigan, Indiana and Illinois. Earthquake&#13;
shocks are not entirely new to-&#13;
Michigan. One was felt at Detroit&#13;
many years since, and another on the&#13;
Lake Michigan shore about 15 years&#13;
ago, but these were only local covering&#13;
a compa^r7aTiYeTy^ln^r~ter^6ryr&#13;
We believe that during the "civilized1"&#13;
history of this country, little damagehas&#13;
ever been done by earthquakes&#13;
east of the Rocky Mountains, while&#13;
on the Pacific slope they are becoming&#13;
less frequent as well as less destructive.&#13;
A little fellow, with a.tall, stalwart&#13;
wife, was askepl. by a friend if the con.-.&#13;
trast between them didn't often expose&#13;
him to mortifying remarks. l'Oh,^ I&#13;
don't mind that,'1 he said, cheerfully,&#13;
"but since Sarah's grown nearsighted&#13;
I have.to*look sharp for fear she'll sti p&#13;
on me." . •&#13;
The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN** bea; lug date&#13;
Sept. 23, 1884, reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp;, Co., Me-&#13;
Sm-.:1-:..-Caioa Pava. 1-.-&gt;', hv * .en; 7 ..up Jehu Piuv :u-ou. IP&#13;
in the : ai.'ka t&#13;
.','; .aheil's ' a : S;&#13;
ehanical Experts and '7 lieitors of P a t&#13;
Fair at lvalauuvr.o. ° Anrday, and |, :it.--, \Yashir.gt. / . .0- t\ '&#13;
star ai again Tuesday or Grand-^ap-&#13;
: -^n u -&lt;vr' ,i.P. -:aa&gt;e iie is in attendance at the&#13;
Special tiotices.&#13;
TEAM 'on SAL;;!&#13;
i-ar. -.v.:- t.,a a"..e&gt;! ot ' - :aer 'o :a.&#13;
and : th-a- Pinckney re...Pva-- tha 7:-t&#13;
of the' week.&#13;
To any onyiH.dy who has di^ase .of&#13;
throat or lung-, wo •will^scnd proof&#13;
that Piso's Ciire tor Consumption has&#13;
cured the .-ame . omplaints in other&#13;
Cas£s, A (hives-,&#13;
E. T. i! ., • i.i-iNK, Warren, Pa.&#13;
1 MAYi: T1UKUIT.&#13;
DKAI: Doehu:: t have tried your&#13;
medicine, and .7.-1 iave that any one who&#13;
js troubled with i'ough, Hoarseness or&#13;
Lameness ah , ,t the chest,or lungs can&#13;
not well all'a-d julieAvithout the White&#13;
Wine ot Tav Su-u&gt;».&#13;
Your thankful friend&#13;
"" Er.v, Pi. W. Pnttison,&#13;
. Pa.stor St. Charley ^E Chri-e.h.&#13;
St j A t e i '&#13;
\\'--'a.'u Michigan .Fair. In an item&#13;
e'ouH-'.I from tiie Aberdeen Free Press,&#13;
,. , , , , &gt;7..:7i aiu-eared in our columns two&#13;
1 otter tor sale at a bargain mv span i , . , x. . , f&#13;
of Roan Mnras. 8 ya u s cuhP sound, • The danoiug party .', t1:- ShaPn,- -.--.,-sm-a. it wa, stated tnat Mr.&#13;
Rink Friday evening 7i-r. w4l&lt; M.-- : ;...,'- hcial of yaPcd cattle included&#13;
very well p ^ .-•.•ni/eil the toy- net '. ••- me.a ar- of o-vevy noted family except&#13;
ing very -hungry'' for dancing ai - .'the --Pricas." Mr. AiPd determined&#13;
j that there sluiPd be no such exception&#13;
J,a s. ,L., . TE„a m.in, ,-,.- ..q., d, es.i re- u- ta&gt; and -o ha. s , im- r,c hased, t,h rJo-uJg h his sav t, o t. ,t ie peopl,e m, th, is. .vi,eu.r .i \' u .,t ,a a' a. ,n t in. S, c.ot.la„nd. , a ,. sp7l endid pri,z,e on and, alPte r \AT l.nd,a v, .,v ntM. -&gt;J7im- hi e' h.ai.i .er. '-Ex. i,m ai .E ric, a., 2 years old, and-one ot the finest i ndv iv.id, ua,l speci&#13;
;•-veil matched and exceibm;.' w -'kers.&#13;
" Any one desiring suan .t w- ' ••'••- do&#13;
well to look at them. /&#13;
Janies T. Eaman. .&#13;
Having rented the Pettysville Cider&#13;
Mill am ready to/receive apples tor&#13;
cider and jelly.'&#13;
/ S. M.Cool,.&#13;
Cure that cold. .711 the LauPng&#13;
Cough Rvmedies, at&#13;
WiuchelEs Drug St.u-e.&#13;
B r O d l K ^ AND ClTTTKliS?.&#13;
Having the agency-f for the Kahuna&#13;
, \ r - i -&#13;
l o h&#13;
Daki^AVTJ^amLiL^^Gnind HaY^_&#13;
en, Bit-brace 305,054.&#13;
Dug*w Jamesf Pinkster, Harrow,&#13;
305,162.&#13;
Garland, Michael, Bay City, and J.&#13;
G. Emery, Jr., Minneappohs, Minn.,&#13;
Log loader, 345,170.&#13;
Harael, Peter, Houghton, Yehicle.&#13;
journal and box, 305,387.&#13;
Harris, C. H., and R. C. Carpenter,&#13;
Jackson, grade level, 305,183.&#13;
~ HenchmahnPTFrt.; Nci^aTT-Stove "&#13;
and other pipes, 305,188.&#13;
Smith, F. fi. A., Charlotte, Ladder,&#13;
305,347.&#13;
Thum, Otto, Grand Rapids, Manu-&#13;
_ . . . , , —, ,,., facture of fly paper, 305,118.&#13;
himmett Murphy '-nay, Mr. -natidu. * ms time be-' v,-P attrai t considerable attention a t Wood Alfred, Detroit, Knitting 'TU*v&#13;
uLLmcIm.ey Livery Burn. t m v n rh»-t. ' • - b'ive-inrntmm-&gt;l.—-^^447^, nnxt V.MI, ^ - -^ -chine need 1 ^ 0 5 . , 4 0 3 ^ _ ^ . _ _ i i _ _&#13;
will be represented b\ competaut 1-uv- , , ' , , ' , ,. ., , ,, ,&#13;
ers at, Pin' ck, ney, H, ,a' mbi urg, .G,r' egor' v mens ot the celebrated Lallendalloch&#13;
and Stock bridge, aim will be pr-M«ared&#13;
• ' hercFof Sir Geo. M. Giant. The price&#13;
to purchase all th" ut-sirable \arietiejP p\ aid was 41)0 guineas, or more .than&#13;
$1,700 o^ American money. With&#13;
zoo Buggies and Cutters those wishing , * 4 4-* n ' this addition Mr. Auld teels that his&#13;
to buy a good buggy cheap would doT&lt;f- „ » ^ v t |)v.,-o .theretor. I r ,mc j ^ ^]{ ^ ^ ^ W Q ^&#13;
well to call on me. • &gt;lolt wif—e W laan oayer at 1 ;m *- t i v . i l i a t 6 l h a t ylr&gt; ;v aid's fine stock&#13;
Boughey, g. E., W. R. Kilborn, Petoskevi&#13;
Elevator and carrier, 305,279.&#13;
Cranev, Thomas, Bay City, Saltgraiuer'{&#13;
2 patents), 305,151 and 305,-&#13;
152.&#13;
Craney, Thomas, , T7;y City, Devie**.&#13;
for collectirg salt fr.m grainers, 305,-&#13;
^&gt;&#13;
*+,.&#13;
/&#13;
,-,&lt;«-_. ¥ - - - /&#13;
T O O O H U K S P O N D K N T S .&#13;
All oamnmnlCHtlons tor this paper ahould ' bfl ac&#13;
f mwSSS by the name* of the author; not noces-&#13;
?iVf&lt;»r iiuUllcaUon, but a* an evidence of wood&#13;
F / h ^ ^ h « . i r t of the writer. W i l e only on one&#13;
- , « ^ , V ° t S t a p e r Be puVtlcularly careful V g i v i n g&#13;
5f»^,l i n f l o w s to have the letters aud tt-m t&#13;
L f f i i n d d i s t f t k Proper n . m e . are of ten dlttev&#13;
'-decipher, because of the o a r e r s tuauner .a&#13;
to bicTfuiey"are written.&#13;
"MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN."&#13;
H e y o n d ***c R e a c h of P o l i t i c a l&#13;
e u c e .&#13;
I n f l u -&#13;
—I&gt;i tl.e Jackson Circuit Court Sept. 15, J u d g e&#13;
6 rid ley amiuuueed that the Croueh-liotceiuib&#13;
trial would be commenced Nov. 5. i.i tixii:u&#13;
a day for the trial ti'e Judge said;&#13;
"Of course, 1 have been thoughtful, or tried&#13;
to he, in regard to tide matter—one tu which&#13;
not only the people of thin county and i f the&#13;
Whole state, and indeed of all other states, are&#13;
«UT sldering with great interest, aLd I have indeuv&#13;
.Ted to give ii s u c h u t u u u »u and thought&#13;
tta 1 .»:-». eaiu.ble if d o i i g m order to do Iba1&#13;
which should s u m l o b e lluht u n c i r all tincircumstances&#13;
of the ease. To try it early in&#13;
tin:-term we should Lave t &gt; e mnicuce "the&#13;
Hid n&lt; xf wiek tu i i\ier that U mijjit be com&#13;
i ii':&lt; c Wcfi re the m x i teim to he held at Mason,&#13;
in luUnmi county. Judgi.ig from the&#13;
time spent In the e xauimattcu and from what&#13;
I know generally in regard to the ease, I can-'&#13;
Dot well do anjtning tUutshall interfere with&#13;
the holding of the term Iu that county for a&#13;
while, at leant, and alter cousuUiug with the&#13;
membeis of the profession In that county 1&#13;
have concluded u p o n taking u p th'- case on&#13;
the firtit day after ibe n e x t general election to&#13;
bo-held In thlB state, which, will bo • Wednesday,&#13;
thy 5th &lt;i»y of NejTi-next. A large number&#13;
of jurors will have to be summoned at t h a t&#13;
time for the purpose of selecting; a&#13;
jury to try this case, if, perchance,&#13;
we shall be able to find one that will be sultable&#13;
and competent to try and determine the&#13;
rights of the people and of the defendants who&#13;
are t o be put on trial t h e n ; and they have to&#13;
be, I find by the law, summoned to attend&#13;
forthwith alter they are drawn, so the time&#13;
will be occupied the first day or two in drawing&#13;
(tad summoning the additional jurors, and I&#13;
fancy, I hope, at least, that we 6hall be able to&#13;
hnvf a jnrylmpttfiplprt fur t.Tiri trial "'ftf t.Tm ease&#13;
John Johnstone's hardware store and carriage&#13;
tho'p,&#13;
On th&lt;- Fourth ,-trect side of the block, in&#13;
which the tire started, the barns of John Drew&#13;
and%. C. Grosser were burned, ami the roo's&#13;
of their houses were slightly damaged. On&#13;
High iVreet the cottage immediately adjulniug&#13;
Moored planing mill was entirely destroyed.&#13;
It was occupied by Mr*, llalleck, adreBsmaker.&#13;
On the opposite side of High street the twostory&#13;
frame house Nos. 1S9 and 201, owned by&#13;
C. E. Pierce, was totally destroyed, involving&#13;
a loss of about 12,0()0, on wblch there was&#13;
1700 insurance. The houses were occupied by&#13;
Otto Miller and Sinclair Harkue, some of whose&#13;
furuiiure was saved. Mrs. Miller had ¢300 in&#13;
money In a bureau drawer, wu'ch was burned.&#13;
The next house adjoining was a double brick&#13;
cott'mic. totall&gt;' destroyed; occupied by families&#13;
ruined BidTev'and Alison. The next&#13;
two futtiii'cf, 101 a i d 1K1 liicji street,&#13;
oecupwd by '1 hiuua* . Ticn&amp;liawt printer,&#13;
and Win. Weeks, rooter, were partially destroyed;&#13;
$4'JU insurance- on l&gt;otli. House No.&#13;
KWVV High street had ils roof buried, but the&#13;
iflui'iK ot the tinmen st.veel it ti.uu further&#13;
dmiuiiK . ()H Ttiird street tin: roofs of Nos.&#13;
169 mid ;-H 1 w.eri- utir.' several tiim-c, hut tlit*&#13;
pnhri' t: &lt;•' vtiter mi 1 :em from buckets pro--&#13;
V e t ' •• 'l ii - t i " . C ! t ; ' i . l h : A I ' I l i U i C l i . . : r . l ' L r m i l l&#13;
(Hid \\'i !.&gt;':•'.- in,:'. n ,-wk* t, on Gr.imi Kivcr&#13;
tiVt'i. .-I- '.wis W. U (..r.mil's lainU i' \ J»l'd, which&#13;
W H s « I.O. i s ell h* | . \ l .1&#13;
T ^ o Hiiidmis ocemvid during the lir&#13;
Joseph Knappen's saw mill near Coloma,&#13;
Rer ien county, t u r n e d Saturday morning.&#13;
Loss $9,000; uninsured.&#13;
About SIX) acres In tt." tiorl hwesteru part of&#13;
•Cold water township. Branch county, have oe'en&#13;
destroyed bv forest tires.&#13;
The new barracks of the Michigan Military&#13;
Academy were completed last week. Over 100&#13;
etudeiits I'.re entered at present.&#13;
John Wellington of Kt&lt;&#13;
county, who was shot by his wife some weeks&#13;
ago, d i e d ol his irjtirh s ou the 1 Sth lust.&#13;
J. A. JLuimey &amp; Co., six miles north of&#13;
Evart. lost their mill and about $14,010 worth&#13;
of valuable lumbtr by tire on the 15th hist.'&#13;
Cadillac purple are of the opinion that If a&#13;
few thousand dollars -.vere expended on Idlewild&#13;
it would make a delightful sutum*r resort.&#13;
A Teiy distinct shock of earthquake was felt&#13;
at! o T c r t h e statp on the 19th JUST. -Mo-damage&#13;
was done anywhere, though people were&#13;
badly scared.&#13;
T i n ' c u r t a i n roller l.ictory, warehouses mid&#13;
sheds in Miiske^ou were destroyed bv lin''ii&#13;
L*M.&lt; estimated at|(ij,t!00; • ur&#13;
'A 11 s&#13;
. « I. O. i S d&#13;
^ u HI ( i i i i ni s&#13;
J a n u s .\ii&#13;
u p ; e r stor&#13;
out ot the wiudovr&#13;
i i i c&#13;
e a .vouna int'.u tmployed iu the&#13;
of M o o n ' s p'aulng mill, iuuiC(.d&#13;
ou&#13;
during the" week, and it will then be coutlnuf d&#13;
until it is completed, as a matter of course,&#13;
though it rray interfere with the business of&#13;
the November term in this county; and it must&#13;
be understood by the bar generally, and by&#13;
aaitors, that b u t very little, If any, business&#13;
can be done at the next term of this- c o u r t , '&#13;
Tember. This trial will undoubtedly r u n i n u&#13;
and consume a part of it. What time may be&#13;
left 1 shall have to give mainly to the Ingham&#13;
Circuit, !n order to uiske up for* thetluiu wblch&#13;
may be lo?t in adjourning at an early day there&#13;
" " " ' ' The 'reasons ThaT&#13;
the alarm of Are, and&#13;
broke his Jeg. He was taken away in an ambulance.&#13;
James McEuhill, foreman of Moore's&#13;
shop waB severely burned about the face and&#13;
neck, but his injuries are not supposed to be,&#13;
of a serious n a t u r e . The wind was so hlxh&#13;
and ihe flames spread s.&gt; rapidly t h a t none of&#13;
the workmen saved any of their street clothing.&#13;
NDreliable estimate of the losscan yet be&#13;
-made, hut good judges present thought it&#13;
woulu, r-ach as high as $5^,000 to $75,000.&#13;
Delbrid-e Brooks A Fisher estimate their less&#13;
at $i2,i 00, with $5,000 insurance. JohuEiigles.&#13;
who owned the brick block, corner of Third&#13;
and Grand River, is said to have $3,000 insurance&#13;
on it.&#13;
Th.e R e p u b l i c a n P a r t y C h a l l e n g e d .&#13;
At a recent meeting of the state central&#13;
committee of the P-r-ob4hiUoa-paay-.the. 1 OUOHA&#13;
ing challenge to the Republican party was&#13;
unanimously adopted:&#13;
Whereas, Republican papers and Republican&#13;
speakers are asserting that temperance men&#13;
would mauifest practical wisdom and give substantial&#13;
aid to the temperance cause by supporting&#13;
the Republican party; therefore}-*-&#13;
Resolvedr That the state central committee&#13;
which commences, 1 think, on the 19th of N u - ) £ th« Union party^do c ^ a e n K e the state ctn&#13;
traJ committee of the Republican party to a&#13;
public discussion of the Question tit issue.&#13;
The following is suggested:&#13;
Let the Republican committee select some&#13;
gentleman to reun s e n t . t h e m ; our committee&#13;
Repu bi lean spe a ker&#13;
for some titr.ee!''&#13;
'iiertl's otlh.v tu&#13;
rk in&#13;
t h e&#13;
crops g&#13;
great hardship to impi*e mtu_lo_ attend as&#13;
jurors during that time if it can reasonably&#13;
b i avoided. But if that were&#13;
"the only n a s o u I should not hts;-&#13;
' tate to order a jury to be impaneled or called&#13;
at an earlier time, b*l&lt; it must be borne iu&#13;
raitd that we are In the midst of an exciting&#13;
poiitical campaign, and this will undoubtedly&#13;
have a somewhat disturbing influence upon&#13;
the business ef the court in reference to the&#13;
trial of any case, and would have especially&#13;
for lids, and 1 cannot fckut my eyes to the tact&#13;
that, there is a very dtep interest felt in this&#13;
county and that the case will be more or less&#13;
dltcusfied among the people who will bo gathered&#13;
from time to time lu various localities f&lt;.(r&#13;
politic.!* 1 p u r p o s e , and this case would be during&#13;
this time more or less a subject of discussion&#13;
upon those occasions. One of the g r t a t&#13;
objects td.be obtained In this, as well as m all&#13;
other criminal cases, is to have a fair, cartful,&#13;
honest trial for tno6e who are charged with the&#13;
crime, and especially with a crime of so grave&#13;
a character as in this case. I desire, above all&#13;
things, to have It said that this trial has beerr&#13;
conducted in great fairness to all—both to the&#13;
people, and to the defendants who are charged,&#13;
and that when it is finished there shall be no&#13;
one to saj that there has been any improper influence&#13;
used either the one way or the other to&#13;
bring about or procure the verdict that may&#13;
be rendered. For these reasons, mainly the&#13;
last one, I have thought it right. In fact I&#13;
have been advised by eminent men, not of this,&#13;
but of other counties, that it would not be&#13;
right to take up and try this case during the&#13;
political campaign that is now fully opened,&#13;
and will terminate on ttie first Tuesday after&#13;
the. first Monday in November. Every improper&#13;
influence to cffectri.he result In this case must&#13;
e;ic!ion to support tne Republican ticket,&#13;
state and national. _&#13;
The Uniecnd place shall be. seltcted by the&#13;
speaktrt-, and the oiscussiou shall be conduct'&#13;
ed under the r u k s of ; u b : c d- bate.&#13;
S A MULL DICKIE, Chairman.&#13;
WM. A. TATI.OK, Secretary.&#13;
iTIiciilgiiu l i o l d&#13;
The Marquette Mining Journal says: The&#13;
Mli ing Journal knows ot a number of promising&#13;
go.d and silver properties, at different&#13;
points iu the Upper V'eninsula whose owners&#13;
are waiiiu^ to see how the K-.&gt;pes will show u p&#13;
when operated on a larger scale before deciding&#13;
whether or not they will Immediately uudertaku&#13;
the work of their development. l a&#13;
view of this, more than ordinary interest attaches&#13;
to the work now uuder way at the&#13;
R;pes. If tut: n u l p m e n t of machinery' that&#13;
the miDe will soon be supplied with enables the&#13;
mauagement to treat the ruck at a cost of 15,&#13;
or under, lor mining aud milling, the question&#13;
of our aolU'y : fo produce gold witti protit in&#13;
the Upper Pen insula will be practically settled,&#13;
and thousands of dollars will be spent&#13;
prospectlug 1'or gold aud sliver properties ail&#13;
through the district next year. From all obtalnaole&#13;
information on this point the Mining&#13;
Journal is prepared to expect most flattering&#13;
resul:s from the next run at the Ropes, and to&#13;
witness an attendant "gold.boom" iu this region&#13;
that will lift it into even greater prominence&#13;
as a district richly endowed with mineral&#13;
wealth than it has yet attained, though Its&#13;
production of iron and copper has attracted&#13;
the attention of the world.&#13;
T h e S a u l t C a n a l .&#13;
be kept out of it, aud out of this sacred_ix»U4Ur|-—The"to1rcrwfsg- is t h e -repert-of -t-htvbttsiness-pM^-T-AitiAHUau^-^n- d alT it. havlnp; rup against&#13;
oT~jasttce. The jury, when rnTpafieled^ must j 0 f the Sault canal for A u g u s t :&#13;
Dc kept apart irom "everybody else until the&#13;
conclusion of the trial, and there should be&#13;
nothing in the a'.? lu any way, If possible topreventit,&#13;
that the men may be. selected to settle&#13;
the question of whether these defendants&#13;
are guilty of this terrible crime or not. I have&#13;
come to this conclusion after a good deal of&#13;
hesitation; 1 have realized the leverlsh a. xiety&#13;
of the people to have this case determined,&#13;
and (though I knov/ nothing about it) perhaps&#13;
the iiefendants are equally anxious that it&#13;
should be brought to a speedy dettrminatlon&#13;
before even the Urn- used, hue solemn duty,&#13;
SB-I look at it, ri quires me to pursue the course&#13;
that 1 have announced in regard to this matter.&#13;
The 5th dav of November will be Wednetdsy,&#13;
the next day after the election, Of course&#13;
there will be more or less agitation about the&#13;
riKUlTs", but then the great excitement will be&#13;
passed and we shall have nothing to do at that&#13;
lime except to summon an additional number&#13;
of jurors and get ready as soon as possible for&#13;
this important trial, probably by the beginning&#13;
of the next week thereafter. . It Is unnecessary&#13;
that I should say anything more; the conclusion&#13;
I have come to'alter much reflection on&#13;
the pubject, and with an effort to free myself&#13;
from everything but a desire to do what is exactly&#13;
right as between the people of the state&#13;
and the defendants. And I will say further&#13;
that that day i3 positively tlxed for the trial oi&#13;
this case. There must be no turther delay unless&#13;
very extraordinary or unfor&amp;eeu accidents&#13;
shall iu the meantime occtr, but it is the iot&#13;
peciatlon and the determination of Hie court&#13;
that on that, day the trial will commence in&#13;
No- of ye^ris, through lock&#13;
13S3.&#13;
763&#13;
No. of passengers 9,104&#13;
Registered tonnage 35(5.155&#13;
Freight tonnage.". 4lb,943&#13;
Coal, tons 121,469&#13;
Salt, bbls 40,310&#13;
Grain, bu 311,614&#13;
Iron ore, tens 178,328&#13;
Manufactured iroD, tons 15,809&#13;
Copper, t o r s 4,5^6&#13;
Lumber, M ft 22,0 ^1&#13;
Miscellaneous mdse, t o n s . . 3u,691&#13;
Silver ore and bullion, t o n s . .&#13;
1S84. -&#13;
938&#13;
11,477&#13;
480,314&#13;
496,452&#13;
145,740&#13;
49, »44&#13;
6:2,509&#13;
221.2.¾&#13;
10,(r79&#13;
6,541&#13;
2^-,908&#13;
30,900&#13;
2,926&#13;
few days ag&#13;
tially insured.&#13;
A. Wallace Si'.t rwo.ni&#13;
the Quarter Maslc! &lt;•&#13;
sing, nas lieeir'i'ptio.iiu-d to a position in&#13;
siUUtti sc! Vieil:._.. __._&#13;
Mis. George Dennis of Owosso township&#13;
was bitten by u rattlesnake Sept. 3, and after&#13;
gr*^t BUflei Uig died Sept. 7tb. She leaves four&#13;
young children.&#13;
Jack6en s t r t e t railway Btables were burned&#13;
to the ground ou the 15th. The loss to the&#13;
company is variously estimated at between&#13;
$7,000 and $10,000.&#13;
Morris, the man charged with shooting Mayor&#13;
Kobinsou of-Charlotte, has been taken t'o&#13;
Marshall and jaili'd. Threats of lynching&#13;
were too loud in Charlotte&#13;
The idea of s h u t t i n g down the Michigan saw&#13;
mills on account of oyer productlou, first&#13;
broached at Chicago, does not hit a single responsive&#13;
chord iu this state.&#13;
John Mo*ris of Detroit, is under arrest at&#13;
Charlotte charged with shooting1 at Mayor&#13;
Robinson of that village. -Morris claims to&#13;
haye been d r u n k at the time.&#13;
Wm. H. Roeewarne, apion?er of Southwest-&#13;
-erfi-MtchigatJ,- died a t his residence in Mlitoo,&#13;
Cass county, on thq 16xh inst. He settled in&#13;
Michigan iu 18H4 and has evtr since resided in&#13;
the state.&#13;
6F. M. Carrol of the Michigan State Commission-,&#13;
to t h e S o u t h t r n exposition in/New&#13;
Orleans has asked Gov. Begole to call a meeting&#13;
of the board for an investtgatloif'of allegations&#13;
made against Carro'l. /&#13;
I t is reported by tbe Kalamazoo Telegraph&#13;
that Henry Montague has tendered &gt;is resignation&#13;
as steward for the Asyluja of the Insane,&#13;
to takr1 tW' ct OL't I. Mr. Montague has served&#13;
_the state iu this capacity iuuny years and well.&#13;
' A t Lai^1ng"'-"ras^,-wpck"-mcrrry^vcu degree&#13;
weather melted the comb and honev in a beehive&#13;
belonging'.to Abner Brown. Cold water&#13;
thrown upon the melted mixture showed as&#13;
tvrfect betswax as was ever rendered over the&#13;
flic.&#13;
The i-Ulcers of the Hillsdale county fair are&#13;
making grt at preparations to have their com--&#13;
ing fair the fair ol the state. The fair opens&#13;
Sept. 30, and from prtsciit indications the&#13;
txpectations of the officers will be fully realized.&#13;
Fred Vogle ami Thomas Smith of Jackson&#13;
had an altercation ia-a-*aloou in t h a t city a&#13;
few days ago, when Vog'c hit Smith with a&#13;
m.illeT, i n j u r i n g J i l m ,&#13;
Vogle is under arrest&#13;
s m i t h ' s injuries.&#13;
Hamilton &amp; Mc(Jlurc''&amp; mil!, situated&#13;
about four miles from East Sjgnanw, several&#13;
dwellings, a boarding bouse and&#13;
sbju*. 2,0. 0 cunts of slab?, were destroyed by&#13;
Are Sept. 16. Tlie loss i* about 110,000, partially&#13;
covered by insurance&#13;
The total n u m b e r of entries at the state fair&#13;
amounted to 5,61-$. The exhibit ot cattle, was&#13;
surprislDgly tine, and the horse show could not&#13;
have been surpassed. The exhibit of sheep&#13;
and swine was better than the average, aud In&#13;
all departments a marked Improvement over&#13;
Mrs. Vanderburg, of Stanton charged with&#13;
aidiDg aud abetting the murder of her husband&#13;
on the night of April 20th has been convicted&#13;
cf murder in the second degree in the circuit&#13;
court. Mis. 8cott, mother of Mra. Vander-&#13;
Lurf, arrested for the aame offense, will undoubtedly&#13;
be discharged ou account of lack o&#13;
evidence, ^ _ • f&#13;
Upon the 15th it»t&gt;, the Toledo, Ann Arbor&#13;
£ North Michigan Railway Company, built a&#13;
barbed wire fenco. through 'the premises of&#13;
John C. Shaw, of Ithaca, Gratiot Co. On the&#13;
morning of the I6fh Mr. Shaw found one of&#13;
t h a t committee, lie says that it has blocked&#13;
the whole machinery. A t this time the worfc&#13;
should be in progress, ami no funds for collecting&#13;
purposes can be obtained in the Lower Fcidfisula&#13;
until another meetltigof the commission&#13;
and a partial reorganization. There are specimens&#13;
now ou baud on which storage will have&#13;
to be paid, as there are no available meaus with&#13;
which to pay freight charges. Fosters aud&#13;
advertising iuat'er received by Commissioner&#13;
i-fcapwr | t*aTToli~aTe being distributed t h r o u g h o u t the&#13;
state, so'far as they can be at his own expense.&#13;
L. J. Eckler, who came, to Kalkaska two&#13;
yearn a/^o, and who has since tigured as a&#13;
blacksmith, a farmer, u country grocer, aud&#13;
later, while running through with $1,100 or&#13;
%\:lf 0 of back pension -money, as a Kalkaska&#13;
m e chant, has been detected in a scheme to&#13;
burn hlsowu buildingB to obtain the Insurance.&#13;
The buildings which he had planned to burn&#13;
were a small house lu which he lived and a&#13;
twe—tory structure used as a blacksmith shop&#13;
and a paint shop. The two buildings which&#13;
were worth about $400,1)- had succeedid in&#13;
getting insured in the Insurance Company of&#13;
North Aim rlea for $700. N lb' 1&#13;
sp.ice between the lath and'&#13;
line ol K.e oui'dni&#13;
!l&#13;
vs: !l&#13;
Ihlcii' the&#13;
outer sheathing ol'&#13;
'-':.Y.I.!..N and dry&#13;
ruhbi.' h, which he hud MI1 u:.itc ! v. hh kero-eiie&#13;
oil, aim hud C;:gag* d a p-Mr'.v of the uann: ot&#13;
M \ i r s to lire the buhihn&gt;::&gt; a* soon us he&#13;
I'Kckici] eln uld'luivc town, which he was to&#13;
uu far a few d a j s to avoid oiispieton. 11 u was&#13;
t«t give Myers a watch and some money for his&#13;
part lu the affair. Myers, utter obtaining the&#13;
watch, told the whole mutter to the authorities&#13;
ami E"kler was at once arrested and lodged in&#13;
j til. He was arraigoee' before .Justice Ramsey,&#13;
pleaded guilty and held to bail for appearance&#13;
at the Circuit Court in the sum of $2,000.&#13;
Not being able to procure the required bonds&#13;
[ h e will remain iu Jail until cofirt tits in February.&#13;
N K W S N U T E H&#13;
*N $80,000 V1KE.&#13;
M c G r e g o r * S o n s boiler shops and the E s s e x&#13;
mills lu Windsor, Out., were destroyed by tire&#13;
on the.18th inst., at an estiwatcd loss of $80,-&#13;
000. Neither the mills nor the boiler shops&#13;
have been-lu operation for a month aud the&#13;
fire is bellived to hav^ bt;en the work oi an Incendiary.&#13;
it is thought, fatally,&#13;
to await the lesult of&#13;
" O V E R A N D O V K R A G A I X . "&#13;
R e p e t i t i o n is .soiuotimun tin* o n l y w a y&#13;
t o i m p r e s s :i t r u t h u p o n tliu t n i n d . A c -&#13;
c o r d i n g l y t a k e n o t i c e Unit D r . H o r e o ' s&#13;
"IMoHH'wit T u r g a t i v o 1 ' H I I H U , " ( t h o&#13;
o r i g i n u l L i t t l e L i v e r P i l l s ) c o n t i n u e t o&#13;
bo w o n d e r f u l l y efl'octivo in cas.o of n i c k&#13;
a n d n o r v o u s h u a d a c h o , c o n s t i p a t i o n , i n -&#13;
d i g e s t i o n , r u s h of b l o o d t o t h e h u a d ,&#13;
c o l d e x t r e m i t i e s , a n d a l l a i l m e n t s a r i s -&#13;
i n g frimi o b s t r u c t i o n of t h e b o d i l y f u n c -&#13;
t i o n s . T h e i r u e t i o u is t h o r o u g h y e t&#13;
g e n t l e , a n d t h e i n g r e d i e n t s b e i n g e n -&#13;
t i r e l y v e g e t a b l e , t h e y c a n bo t a k e n&#13;
w i t h i m p u n i t y i n t o t h e m o s t d e l i c a t e&#13;
s t o m a c h . A l l d r u g g i s t s .&#13;
T h e t ' e n t c r v i i l e r e u n i o n wtm a l i n e&#13;
affair, w e l l m a n a g e d a m i w e l l u t l - m d e d .&#13;
OLD INVI:TKKA'I;K&#13;
u r e t hlirraa,, ' s p e r t&#13;
STRICTURES&#13;
01 t u s' nini pelm&#13;
a n e i i l l y ourei1 . by o u r u n p r o v e d m e t h -&#13;
o d s . P a m p h l e t , r e f e r e n c e s iintl t e r m s ,&#13;
t w o t h r e e - c e n t s t a m p s . W o r l d ' s D i s -&#13;
p e n s a r y M e d i c a l A s s o c i a t i o n , GGii M a i n&#13;
s t r e e t , ' B u f f a l o , N . Y&#13;
A C i n c i n n a t i l a w y e r h a s u p t h e s i g n ;&#13;
" N o p o l i t i c s d i s c u s s e d e x c e p t o u b u s i -&#13;
n e s s . "&#13;
W h e n e v e r y t h i n g e l s e f a i l s , L'r. S a g e ' s&#13;
C a t a r r h r e m e d v c u r e s .&#13;
FKOiTl A 1 ' O U E I G N S H O R E .&#13;
- ftKN,-J»OEOON HBAKD-gaOJi. ...&#13;
Sir Evelyn Bariug and Nubar I*asha have receded&#13;
Identical cipher telegrams from Gen.&#13;
Gordon, dated K h a r t o u m , August 26. He is&#13;
awaiting the arrival of British forces in order&#13;
to evacuate wltfrtbe-Evvptlao garrisons.—The&#13;
telegram r e a d s : "Seud me Robehr Pasha.&#13;
Pay "him a yearly salary of i.'S,0*J0. 1 shall surrender&#13;
the Soudau to the Sultan dlrectlv 200,-&#13;
000 troops arrive. It the reheds kill the Egyptians&#13;
you are answerable for the bloodshed. I&#13;
r&lt; quire ,£3J0,000 m pay my soldiers, my daily&#13;
tx,»i uses being £1,500. Within a few days [&#13;
shall take lierber, wuere I have sent Col.&#13;
^J^SifiSLarJU Consul Po.wer^a_ud,t*ke French Cojy -&#13;
sul with troops and Bashi Bazouki', who after&#13;
skipping there for a fortnight, will buru the&#13;
towu aud return to Khartoum. Col. Stewart&#13;
will go to the equator via Dougola to briug the&#13;
garrisons from there. I donor believe ihu report,&#13;
tnar E Mahili is c&lt;ming hither. 1 hope&#13;
the Soudanisc will klllhtetr—ii TurHHh-tftH*psarrive&#13;
they should c o m t by D mgola and Kassahi.&#13;
You should give rheiu i' iO.000.&#13;
Wheat&#13;
Flour&#13;
Wheat, No,-&#13;
Coru&#13;
Oats&#13;
Barley "&#13;
Rye&#13;
Clover Seed,&#13;
e i . i k e i l&#13;
No. l ^ r h l t e . .&#13;
j x i s i v t . : c&#13;
% 77Jy'&#13;
. . . , . . 4 li)&#13;
red'&#13;
C&lt;3&#13;
5 ^ y&lt;i&#13;
, 25&#13;
55&#13;
55&#13;
4 65&#13;
3 75&#13;
1,&#13;
13&#13;
19&#13;
25&#13;
V5&#13;
17&#13;
15&#13;
30&#13;
75&#13;
73&#13;
15&#13;
&lt;-3&#13;
Vi.&#13;
to&#13;
% l&#13;
(it 3&#13;
&lt;&amp;&#13;
\&lt;i&#13;
(d&#13;
*S&gt;&#13;
(&lt;H2&#13;
@ 7&#13;
(&lt;56&#13;
« 1 8&#13;
4 ; . &gt;&#13;
Ul&#13;
b0&#13;
75&#13;
60&#13;
\ 25&#13;
A C o m p a r a t i v e S l a t e i u e n t .&#13;
The following is a comparative statement of&#13;
the receipts of the 6tate fairs held in D e t r o i t&#13;
and Kalamazoo:&#13;
1883, Detroit&#13;
Monday $ 176 25&#13;
Tuesday 1,949 y5&#13;
Wediesday 9,69 0;J&#13;
Thursday 9 4sl 'JO&#13;
Friday a.a'JL 15&#13;
1881, Kalamazoo.&#13;
$ 62 25&#13;
682 75&#13;
5,180 00&#13;
10,126 00&#13;
1,818 05&#13;
Total $24 591&#13;
Decrease in 1 8 5 4 . . . . .&#13;
$17,tot* 05&#13;
,$ 6,;2i&#13;
this c o u r t . "&#13;
The deci.-ion is&#13;
and unfavorably&#13;
r eeiv'd favorably by pome&#13;
b y o i l u r s . Prosecuting AT&#13;
toiney Hewlitt is particularly displeased&#13;
the result. He tried to speak&#13;
court, but the J u d g e shut him ol&#13;
it in&#13;
1&#13;
A S e r i o u s l u g r a t l o u .&#13;
:30i jck on the afternoon of Sep!.-&#13;
out iu Alexander Moore'&amp;&#13;
About 2&#13;
17 a fire&#13;
planlDg^mlll, on the north side of lUiib, hi&#13;
tweeu Third and Fourth streets, in Detroit,&#13;
burning several adjoining dwellings and&#13;
spreading lo Delbringe. Bro».ks &amp; Fisher's&#13;
planing mill on the Grand River front of the&#13;
•tquare. Destroytrtg ihip, it spread each way,&#13;
taking G. C. Carter's«barbtr shop, J o h n Enprel's&#13;
saloon, a grocery store and Mrs .J no. J.&#13;
Cronin's yankee*notion store on the c«Mt, and&#13;
extending to the side wall of Webb's big meat&#13;
market on the west comer of Fourth street.&#13;
The heat was intense and the wind carried&#13;
the fire across *tbe wide Grand R i v r&#13;
avenue to t h e ReerJ block, consisting&#13;
of eight stores, two stories high, the&#13;
uppeffloors beiujfoccupiea"us dwellings: TEe"&#13;
front of this block was eerlously attacked, but&#13;
tbe iff rts of t h e fireman saved it from total&#13;
destruction. In this blocli were Wm Kemter's&#13;
saloon, Mr. Mitchell's tailor shop, P. N. Kneeid's&#13;
hardware fctorc, Aleck Reed's taloon,&#13;
D'. C. Smith's grocery and meat market,&#13;
*s t o r n crop is ruined by&#13;
IN T I 1 K M A T E .&#13;
Prohibitionists claim oOQ-^^otcs in Tuscola&#13;
county.&#13;
Lenawee&#13;
dry wtath'e&#13;
% The^Atteudarice st the f t i t o f a i r o n t h o fourth&#13;
Ojiy^was over 25,00.).&#13;
The First Michigan C wa'ry reunion occurs&#13;
at Gros^e Isle, October 8.&#13;
The in X', reanion of the Army of the Cumberland&#13;
will De held In Grand Rapids.&#13;
Geo Parker, a Battle Creek painter aas"&#13;
killed by the cars at Joliet, III, n c m t l y .&#13;
The Seventh-Day Adventlsts of the state&#13;
a:*; holding a camp-meeting near Jackeou.&#13;
Forest tires ure subsiding. A great deal of&#13;
minor ilamagc was done on the Hurou shore. .&#13;
Wm. C. Maybury *haa been nominated for&#13;
congress in Wayne county, by the democrats.&#13;
John Atkinson Is tbe Republican nominee&#13;
for congress from the first congressional district.&#13;
James W. Suafer postmaster at Alabaster,&#13;
was drowned la the lake near that place on the&#13;
16th lust.&#13;
The Michigan state fair opened at Kalamazoo&#13;
on the 15th i n s t . AH departments were&#13;
*.eil.flllfiiL&#13;
The Kalamazoo'street railway was formally&#13;
opened to the public by an excursion train of 22&#13;
cars Saturday last.&#13;
The Evening J o u r n a l "* t r has been settled&#13;
by the sale of t h e paper to Messrs. Moore &amp;&#13;
Tomllnson of Lapeer.&#13;
the trace d a r i n g the night., cutlini: its t h i o a t&#13;
so badly that It oled to death.&#13;
Udeiphus Brown, a voung unmarried man,&#13;
pleaded guilty In trie Uulted.States-Aktuzt a t&#13;
Grand Kanl'ds, to the charge of counterfeitlnj;&#13;
silver money, and was sentenced to tVelye&#13;
months' imprisonment In the Detroit jail. He&#13;
is a resident of Palo, Ionia county, and when&#13;
arrestt d eighteen bogus silver pieces wet e found&#13;
upon him. He stated t h a t , another fellow&#13;
manufactured the .coins aud that he was present&#13;
at the operation.&#13;
Mrs. Deborah Hamilton of Flint has been&#13;
served with a summons to appear in the&#13;
United Suites circuit court at Detroit the first&#13;
Tuesday in October to show cause why she&#13;
should not pay back a certain sum of money&#13;
claimed to have been received by her from&#13;
W m . Evans, of Lincoln, 111., fot the disc&#13;
rmuance of a case for perjury brougbt&gt;ga1nst&#13;
him by Mrs. Hamilton In the circovrtfeourt of&#13;
Genesee county two years&#13;
The annual statemept^if'the losses and ex&#13;
petist-s of the Farmers' Mutual b ire Insurance&#13;
Company ofE-frTsdale County tor the year ending&#13;
A a p 5 t ^ 5 has just been issued I t shows Lgtfy F a t S t o c k S h o w ,&#13;
thejetrfjltal stock ot the company to be $ 1 , 2 0 0 ^ '&#13;
The losses nf the company d u r i u f f ' t h a&#13;
year have been $S,6.tt 22; the expenses, $#93-&#13;
80, making a Totai of IOJ-BCS and expenses, including&#13;
$4') 23 HS interest paid on money&#13;
loaned, of $5,358 25. Tne assessment this&#13;
year is $1 on each $1,('0) insured.&#13;
A"numbM ~r&gt;? p'U'.e.ia'eri of BoheTfiTaTroalsT&#13;
m r t at Dundee on the 6th inst,, and were add&#13;
r e s i ' d by Jos. Rilling, the head of the co'r.-&#13;
; any that introduced the o n s into this country.&#13;
He pri mised tlu- fultillmei t ol all contracts&#13;
m a i e b &gt; the co;npi&gt;y ami its agents, urging&#13;
the fyirm rs to u[;ilk"Bohemian o u t s a t every&#13;
o p ^ o n u - d t y , " and predi"ted a lar^e business&#13;
for the company for several years to come.&#13;
The average .yiel.i per acre wits about thirty&#13;
bushels; not an extraor linary yield for an extraordinarily&#13;
puffed coreal.&#13;
Ab.iut tifty master hcrr-e-shoersfrom various&#13;
10&#13;
20&#13;
75&#13;
75&#13;
25&#13;
00&#13;
35&#13;
00&#13;
OtK&#13;
40&#13;
75&#13;
50&#13;
00&#13;
1)&#13;
fO&#13;
75&#13;
14&#13;
Oti&#13;
10&#13;
# - b u&#13;
Timothy seed, $} bu&#13;
Dried Apoles, f l l b&#13;
Peaches&#13;
Cherries :&#13;
Apples per bbl&#13;
Peaches, yellow % bushel.&#13;
Butter, ^ lb . . . ' .&#13;
Eggs&#13;
Potatoes&#13;
Onions, $ bbl .&#13;
Honey&#13;
Beans, picked&#13;
B e a r j ; u n p t c k e d r . . ;TT ~ T " ; ;; ~rrw J&#13;
Hay 12 00 ftraw 6 00&#13;
ork, dressui, « 100 6 00&#13;
Pork, mess new 18 00&#13;
Pork, family IS £0&#13;
Hams 18¾&#13;
Shouldere : s # @&#13;
Lard 9 (&lt;$&#13;
Beef extra mess .12 00 («512 50&#13;
Wood, Beech and AL-vnla .. . 5 75 (3 6 00&#13;
Wood, Maple 6 25 (&lt;b 6 P0&#13;
Wood Hlckorv ' 6 25 ( § 6 50&#13;
: a&#13;
"Mr. R.,', said the president of&#13;
"bank to IT's cashier, "1 understanaT you&#13;
have sold yotif trotting horses ?"&#13;
"Yes, sir," replied Mr. 1L, uneasily,&#13;
"I found the luxury too expensive.'T&#13;
"And you declined an invitation to&#13;
attend a champagne party the other&#13;
evening.'1&#13;
"Yes, sir.'" .,.--&#13;
Tho cashier was getting white, now.&#13;
"And I also learn, thatyojitofve taken&#13;
a class in Sunday schoj^P'and havo become&#13;
a member^f^the church choir ?"&#13;
" Oh, sirT&gt;«liciaimed the frightened&#13;
man, jj^rtTamount is lets than §10,000,&#13;
apiHfyou -will- giv« two d^ys' time I&#13;
nil restpre every cent.1'&#13;
But the president was inexorable--&#13;
Exchange. __ ^&#13;
ll8(v&gt;'«-«iH!*&gt;tor-«-»r»MHU|itli&gt;n isjiiLi. ouly pleasant&#13;
»0 tako but it tseuro to euro,&#13;
A J a c k s o n v i l l e , 111., m a n c l a i m s v t o&#13;
w e a r t h e c h a m p i o n s h i p h a t — a n u m b e r&#13;
t e n . I h e s i z e of t h e h e a d is S I i n c h e s .&#13;
When you visit or leave New York City, via&#13;
Central depot"save Baggage ExpresBage and&#13;
$3 Carriage Hire and stop at the Grand Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. 8lx h u n d r e d elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at the cost of one millon&#13;
dollars; $1 and upward pur day. E u r o p e a n&#13;
pfan. Elevator and R e s t a u r a n t supplied with&#13;
the best. Horse Cars, stages and elevated rallroatTto&#13;
all xiepots;- Families can—live better&#13;
for less money at the Graud Union Hotel than&#13;
at any other first-class hotel in the citv.&#13;
T h e F o r t W o i t h G a z e t t e s a y s t h e i n -&#13;
^ r e a s e c r T a x o n c a t t l e f o r 1 8 8 3 o v e r t h a t&#13;
of 1882 w a s $ 3 7 , 5 8 7 , 2 8 5 .&#13;
OILY GAMMON.&#13;
A nick uame give* to a smooth-talking lawyer.&#13;
But i here is no gammon about CarboUne&#13;
the great-Petroleum hair renewer, tt will do&#13;
Its work.&#13;
Gem. L e w W a l l a c e ' s n o w b o o k w i l l&#13;
d e a l w i t h - U i o - M ^ s l e u a c o n q u e s t of C o n -&#13;
s t a n t i n o p l e .&#13;
'•1 hive been dreiulfully troubled with dis&#13;
ease of the Uidne\s and liyer Ourlng t h e past&#13;
H I N T ' S [Khua'y and LiverJ B E M -&#13;
me a new m a n . " Isaac VV. balr-&#13;
R. 1.&#13;
six months&#13;
KIIY has made&#13;
brother, PruVidenc&#13;
JSk__&#13;
Nebraska"turtv.shetl the largest pair&#13;
of cattle on exhibition at the Kansas&#13;
We direct_the attention oi our_n.'a(lers to the'&#13;
fldveftipenient of VVT'W. TTaurian, thcTTivc Real&#13;
Estate ag*»nt of Detroit, who has farms for&#13;
SALE and WANTS vonr FARMS for sale.&#13;
i ' a t t i ' s p r o p e r t y in W a l e s is w o r t h&#13;
$ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 ; h e r d i a m o n d s a b o u t $ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 ,&#13;
A eleaf a u d d u m b c o u p l e n e a r R o c h -&#13;
e s t e r h a v e a b a b y t h a t s q u e a l s . a t t h e&#13;
t o p of a , v e r y v i g o r o u s p a i r of l u n g s *&#13;
b u t as. n e i t h e r o t t h o n i c a n h e a r it, i t&#13;
m a k e s H t t l e d i f f e r e n c e .&#13;
TO THE UNMARRIED.&#13;
An Association for Their Benefit&#13;
and W h a t it is Dolngr for T h e m ,&#13;
There are b u t few of the many unmarried&#13;
persons in Michigan who are aware t h a t an&#13;
institution organized to assist its members&#13;
upon entering the matrimonial state, has-been&#13;
jn existence the past year and a half.&#13;
This association is known as the Mutual&#13;
Marriage Benevolent Association of Marine&#13;
Cltjvba-viwz-bum incorporaUi &gt;1 u*ad^r the-4a^vs -&#13;
ot Mlchigan-in l¥S3; i r i s the o u ^ Institution&#13;
of its kind in the state. The association h a s&#13;
paid In benefits since Augu.-t 2. $6,000, and.is&#13;
paying 6everal-thuusand a mouth to its members.&#13;
The following l e t t c s of acknowledgement&#13;
are a few of the many the association are.receiving.&#13;
,&#13;
M A R I N E CITY, Mich., Aug. 2» 1884.&#13;
M. M. B. Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—Please accept my thanks for the&#13;
very prompt manner in which you have paid&#13;
my benefit, amounting tp one thousand dollars&#13;
($1,C00). This speedy settlement should&#13;
make the; Mutual Marriage.. Benevolent Association&#13;
deserving of confidence and patronage&#13;
of every unmarried person In the state. I&#13;
h a v e derived a larger benefit by being a&#13;
member of the association than I ever anticipated.&#13;
' As an investment I know of no equal,&#13;
and I wbuldjidvdse every unmarried persou to&#13;
join theassoclatibr ; nn ("hoping : h a t success&#13;
m a y c b n t i n u c T o ci. n the Mutual Marriage&#13;
Association, and n&gt; 1-. may be tbe means of&#13;
making happy the h n ,s and homes of thousands&#13;
of y o u n g married people, 1 am&#13;
Yours, thankfully, " "&#13;
G E O . M c H A N E Y .&#13;
p s n s of the state met in Kalatn^aoorecently for&#13;
the purpose ot organizing a star1* association.&#13;
A constitution was adopted similar lo that of the&#13;
Illinois association. The following officers&#13;
were elected: President—Thomas E i g a u , l)etroif;&#13;
First Vice 'Pre6l'reni&gt;=ire^j8raln't)rvlne,&#13;
Grand Rii.los; Second Vice President—M.' P.&#13;
Yne, Kalamazoo; Third Vice President—M.&#13;
Garrow, Kalamazoo;Rjcordlug Secretary—U.&#13;
Sullivan, Battle Creek; C.&gt;rrespond,'ng Seen?&#13;
tary—Walter Beckwith; Treasurer—William&#13;
McCarthy. Detroit.. Standing committees were&#13;
appolutcoVand after the signing of the constitutiou&#13;
the association adjourned subject to the&#13;
call of the president.&#13;
Sec. Carroll of the state commission states that&#13;
there will be no Michigan exbibit. at, the New Orleans&#13;
exhibition, The reason he states is t h a t&#13;
t h e executive oomniittteTs.lef t without a-qucrum&#13;
by the s u d d e n request for the resignation&#13;
of Commissioner C. ii. Smith, a member of&#13;
P&#13;
t n d h e r m o n e y i n v e s t m e n t s a r e v a l u e d&#13;
a t t w i c e t h o s e a m o u n t s .&#13;
iH.ES Ttihinyor Blccdm^, relif-ved mid pormuni'ntly&#13;
cured Iiy rule's Ciirholisalvp. O e t t h e G e n -&#13;
u i n f . "J") &lt;-«&lt;nls (ind 75 cents at ilrmtifisls or liv mnil.&#13;
1 W - C U L K A C Q . . I'ron'M. niark Kivt'f Kiills, Win.&#13;
l i \ :i n e w o i e e i n c h o m i l i g u t f o r l o c o -&#13;
m o t i v e s t h i r t y . - t h r e o t e l e g r a p h p o l e s c a n&#13;
b e c o u n t e d a h e a d of t h e e n g i n e o n a&#13;
d a r k n i o h t . T h i r t y - t h r e e p o l o s c o v e r&#13;
a b o u t o n e m i l o . -».&#13;
Every woman who sutlers from Sick Headache,&#13;
and who dMiken to take^ bitter doses,&#13;
should try Cartel's Little Liver Pills. They&#13;
are the easiest of all medicines to take. A&#13;
positive, cure for the above distressing complaint:&#13;
give prompt relief lu Dyspepsia and&#13;
Indigestion; prevent and cure C o i s t l p a i i j n&#13;
and Piles. As CHsy_. to take; a* sugar. Only&#13;
one pill- a dose. 40 in a vtarr "Price 2S cunts.-&#13;
If \ o u try thcia ycu will not ba without them.&#13;
M A K I N B C I T Y . Sept. a, 18^3.&#13;
To the Officers of the M. M. B. Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—I take this opportunity of&#13;
thanking you for the promptness In which you&#13;
have pald"my benefit, amounting to one thousand&#13;
dollars. I am very much pleaseil with&#13;
the manner in which my claim h a s b°,en settled,&#13;
and wishing the association every success,&#13;
I remain, • Veiy truly yours,&#13;
MRS, ROSE MCDONALD.&#13;
M A R I N E C I T Y , Mich., Sept. 10, '.SS4.&#13;
R. M C N E I L . Bec'-y^M. M. B. Assoc atiou:&#13;
I am in receipt of benefit on i:i&gt; certificates,&#13;
and am much pleased w:ttt. liiy investment.&#13;
This benefit wiil be the m 'ans of j aylng oil t h e&#13;
mortgage on my horn , leaving me out of debt&#13;
aud a balance to put in tne bausi lor a rainy&#13;
day. Thaukb g,the association for wkat it has&#13;
-dom&gt; f or—mtf, 4-r-eti«Hii—&#13;
Very irulv vour-,&#13;
•OliVlLLi-: W. M C D O N A L D .&#13;
A1] unmarri- el persons, of i i .her sex should&#13;
jolu. Write fur circulars e x p a i u i u g the plan.&#13;
'Address the Secretary, ii. M c N E l L ,&#13;
Marine CTty, Mleh.&#13;
• v&#13;
'•tiiVL'dll O.N M'i'il'" cares nurac.rs, eruptions rintev_&#13;
woriu. totter, s.ilt ilnioiu, rru».oirr&gt;i}'t,"eiii[bia'ia8.&#13;
I tori c imruend to those sufl. riug with Hajr^;&#13;
Fever, Eiy's Creatn Balm. I nave tried nearly&#13;
all the remedies aud give this a deejdeu prererence.&#13;
It irave me immediate—Teller.—t). T,&#13;
STBFIIENS, Hardware merchant, Ita'aca, N. Y.&#13;
"BUCHU 1'AtliA.&#13;
iioyliiK money ar (J.u-fc&lt;&lt;, Comp ete; ouroi all&#13;
mrnlary dlseiwese. Si.&#13;
W. hy,-^ uffer long..e r from Ca t a r _, ^ay-Fevefano&gt;&#13;
cold In the headj . A &gt; t r f e c u r e is E l y ' s&#13;
Is easily applied.&#13;
i Fifty corns.&#13;
lquid or snuff, and&#13;
If p.lMlcte-d with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac&#13;
Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell It. 23c&#13;
**ru*&lt;;or&gt;-Liv«KOin made from neiectod livers&#13;
on the inJA-shore, by CASWKKn.liAZAKi) A Co., New&#13;
York. It 1» absolutely pn?e and sweet. Patients&#13;
who have once taken It to all others. Physicians&#13;
bare decided it superior to anr of the other oils in&#13;
market.&#13;
s.' 4&#13;
CHAePffD H A N D S VAGI, P u r p u s aud r&gt;ngn ski&#13;
eared b7 vilnf JantMr Tar Soap, made by GA&#13;
WK1JU HAZARD 4 C«., New Yorfc&#13;
„UOUGli ON COKNs." I6C. Ask for tu Oomplels)&#13;
cure, htrd or sof corns, • a r t s , bunions.&#13;
A C A R D — T o all who are suffering from errors&#13;
of youth, nervous weakness, early deoay. loss&#13;
of mannood. A0.1 I will send yea a receipe that will&#13;
cure you, KKiK OF CllAKOW i his gre** remedy&#13;
was dlscoYeoed ey a4mlsslunnry in Mouth Amerloa.&#13;
Rend self aieressed envelope to KKV. JOsKPII T.&#13;
INMAH.BUUon U, New York.&#13;
"ROttOH ON PAlN^_Oniak eure for eollo,&#13;
marrhoss, Ache*, Pains, Sprains, Ueadaafe*.&#13;
•-ttt&#13;
When vet! :ir" eend Fomn ilf y, my douv,&#13;
Q'lln- dead :nnl urn i-r^iouni!,&#13;
Wii' u yai «'Id "iV' r &lt;-&lt;'-• or hei.r&#13;
A K H l i l I l r t idellt, HI' s o u n d ,&#13;
\\ li i! bled1 t 1 CUM c of you in dentil,&#13;
When nil our POM'S to \ou&#13;
Ari- Kt!i-;.t us 1 In- I1I1M u huso hreiiti'i&#13;
Hat .uii^ * iii' t •.; 1111 tn r tliroU'.-Uf&#13;
I woiii r v. iU you 1 vi r wake,&#13;
A.i^l-ii'llii.l.i•-'&lt;..! • y . . * »"»]}]&#13;
Live for )i,ur&lt; 11 ltt'e'H little std;e&#13;
Ati uiif of j &gt;y or pain.&#13;
Bhai] »«mio stV-rn UfHtiny control&#13;
'1'Lnt perfter, form wherein&#13;
T T^arcely i-eu enoiitdi of soul&#13;
TQ make your life a fin i&#13;
For w« Lave hoard for all things born&#13;
Gue. harvest day prepares&#13;
Its golden carrier for tuecoru,&#13;
ltd tire to burn the tares;&#13;
But who would gather Into ctheavce,&#13;
Or turn ludde. to blame,&#13;
The peppy'a helpless puckered k-avtb,&#13;
Bluwu bells of Kcarlct liauie.&#13;
No bate BO hard, no love CM bold,&#13;
To seek your bliss or wee;&#13;
You are too sweet fur hell to hold&#13;
Auti heaven Wuidd tire you 60.&#13;
A little t line your joy shall bt',&#13;
A.nd when you lo"^ for rest&#13;
The eartli i-hall take yuu utterly&#13;
A15U11 iuto her brevet.&#13;
And we will seek a quiet place&#13;
For \ our sill I sepulchre,&#13;
Ami si rtw ih' lion 1 rt- npou your fae :&#13;
Bweet as _\our klf sirs were,&#13;
And with huhheu Vule.es void of mirth&#13;
Spread'lie liah turf above, '&#13;
fc?cft 8s the blJk \ou loved m earth&#13;
Ah much its jou could love.&#13;
•+ Few tears and once our eyes shall shed,&#13;
Nor will wo Bi^ti at. all,&#13;
But ciime and l&lt;iok upon your b d&#13;
When the wirin niiihiunis fall.&#13;
Upon that t r a y 110 tree of l&gt;uit&#13;
Shall urovv u&lt; r any gralu;&#13;
Only one Kuw-r of tdoUlow root"-&#13;
'lhat wi;l not bloom twain.&#13;
-Arthur K Hopes in "Nuw tor.g* of CambrlOkre&#13;
Lotus Club."&#13;
---M*&#13;
dentlv&#13;
" P i&#13;
till! Al&#13;
them.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
bow »'i&#13;
"Hi&#13;
both.&#13;
She&#13;
ademy,&#13;
Buckle&#13;
/die said,&#13;
biushed&#13;
•Mtid admin d&#13;
Burklo bowed ttgaitt " « w - of impostor. I'm rather good at w.Ver&#13;
preferred bowin" to speaking. | colors/1 know, btrtr4:tn iH4--pi-oiea*Htn-&#13;
0 sure I've, seen your pici un s in a', unless te-ehbig you makes niiiHi,&#13;
1 ' 1 fool like t t l l i n g y o u the t r u t h . "&#13;
"1 had a little fortune when I earn is&#13;
hero and they told me I could Uvbie it,&#13;
I'm MI re I couldn't .say what 1 did,&#13;
with that object, but was told one day&#13;
that I had lost it all.&#13;
" I ' m not a business man, you know;&#13;
d then I thought I'd teach water col-&#13;
AGRICULTURAL.&#13;
I again.&#13;
&gt;w modest!'' thought&#13;
violently and&#13;
Mi.-'.-* Elizainquired&#13;
his terms.&#13;
Si&#13;
were&#13;
UM.&#13;
They&#13;
very imiiiorm .paid il cm Ilia&#13;
spot, received a little list of necessary&#13;
paper, colors, &amp;e., and went away.&#13;
Sunday parsed slowly, despite its&#13;
three episodes of church-going, 8he&#13;
awaited her iirst lesson with such impatience.&#13;
At last tho liouv came. She climbed&#13;
tko stairs again, and entered the door&#13;
of the room on which the name of&#13;
Buckle appeared. A long pine table&#13;
and six cane bottom chairs, an easel,&#13;
and some canvases and portfolios, furnished&#13;
tho room. A South American&#13;
hammock was twisted into a coil and&#13;
hung overs souio pegs. A blanket portiere&#13;
hung on a rod within a door. Hut&#13;
there was no one there but Mr. Buckle.&#13;
" A m I too early?'1 Elizabeth asked,&#13;
glancing at her watch. "1 see I am&#13;
the iirst."&#13;
" O h no, indeed/1 replied Mr. Buckle.&#13;
".It is the other pupils who are too late.&#13;
W e won't wait for •diem.""&#13;
lio began his lesson at once, and&#13;
Miss Elizabeth was absorbed in her&#13;
work. An hour passed—two. ~~&#13;
The lesson was over. No pupils had&#13;
arrived.&#13;
"Ladies are .seldom as prompt as&#13;
you a r e , " said Mr. Buckle. "Any&#13;
time will do to begin; any'time. They&#13;
delay, proerast'nate. It's a pity.&#13;
" I t is surprising: to me that they are&#13;
not more anxious to a\ail themselves&#13;
of such advantages,*' said Miss Etizajjji*&#13;
VVIiy (.rt-ut .Tlllker»»rt) Heavy Fatci'N.&#13;
When wo learn how tho cows are fed&#13;
thai produce sueli enormous quantities&#13;
of milk and butter wo wonder quite a.s&#13;
much at tho capacity for eating and digesting&#13;
as at tiioi/xtraordinary product.&#13;
A few months since AH were told that&#13;
the Jersey cow Princess 2 had made a&#13;
THE ORIJPUPIL.&#13;
Miss Elizabeth Hill was still a pretty&#13;
little woman, with nice hair and a tidy&#13;
little figure, when her father died.&#13;
One after the other her elder sisters&#13;
had mariied and left home; and' Lizzie&#13;
kept house f 1 *r he r w id owed father a nil&#13;
forgot the lapse of time.&#13;
The two old servants considered her&#13;
a mere child, and she was always the&#13;
youngest at tho rare family reunions.&#13;
Her father hud advised, praised and&#13;
scolded her as though she had been&#13;
t&#13;
&lt;&#13;
&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
in&#13;
her teens to the last.&#13;
He was so old when he went quietly&#13;
to sleep for the last time that people&#13;
had thought that Elizabeth would be&#13;
"prepared for her loss;'1 but she was&#13;
not and after the first great grief and&#13;
the .sheck of leaving the old home,&#13;
when the property was divided and tho&#13;
house sold, s n o ' f m m d that another&#13;
change had befallen her.&#13;
She was no longer Miss Lizzie, the&#13;
youngest daughter .^ti'l at home, but a&#13;
middle aged spinster living in a boarding&#13;
house.&#13;
Ofteu when she had hTirried up stairs&#13;
and shut tho door or her room she had&#13;
thought to herself that «ho cou'd not&#13;
endure this condition of things much&#13;
longer, but, after all, she dreaded to&#13;
make a change.&#13;
She was exactly in the condition to&#13;
jump at anvjhing whieh offered occupation&#13;
and interest, when the postman&#13;
ono day brought her a circular, gikedged&#13;
and rose-tinted, bearing these&#13;
words:&#13;
"Mr. Buckle respectfully desires to&#13;
malfirknoWrrio rtnrpnblic ttnrfact trnvt&#13;
he is about to re-open his classes in wa-&#13;
•tercoior painting, English school, noxt&#13;
" Monday^^ Terms m o s t - reasonable.&#13;
T^vrly" applfcaTions desirable,' "ars" tTnr&#13;
numberof pupil* will be limited. Studio,&#13;
No. —, street."&#13;
• It was an attractive looking card and&#13;
as Miss E!iz.ibeth read it an idea came&#13;
into her mind. Why should she not&#13;
take lessons in water color painting?&#13;
She would enjoy tho work. She could&#13;
afford it. It would pass the time. She&#13;
could perhaps sketch from nature next&#13;
summer.&#13;
A little thrill ran through her at this&#13;
thought. She got her botmetand mantiila,'~&#13;
her parasol and gloves, and, takimT&#13;
the card with her, hurried to make&#13;
application f&lt; r a place in the class bofore&#13;
it was too late, for it was now Sat-&#13;
„ urdav afternoon.&#13;
She found the number easily. A&#13;
• large building with many rooms, and&#13;
at The very top of the house four en-&#13;
- o-raver.*, a lady "designer on wood,"&#13;
and Mr. Buckle's name on a neat doorplate.&#13;
^&#13;
Miss Elizabeth, quite breathless bv&#13;
this time, iipplied her knjju&gt;fcles to the&#13;
panels, and after a ^Iktfo delay and&#13;
_ s o m o creaking o£-bcoU on a bare tloor&#13;
tho door opeifed and a middle^»ged&#13;
gentleimCiC with a few gry^iuvirs in&#13;
his-ivhiskers and a bald&gt;pdfoii his head,&#13;
--"lip pea red, with a uftrelte on his thumb&#13;
and a bruslyj^rfis hand, and bowing&#13;
politelvr^t[uested ihe lady to enter.&#13;
"" * B u e k l o ? " Elizabeth asked with&#13;
l;f Interrogativo inflection.&#13;
T h e genileman bowed w&#13;
"1 received yopr card, ' said Miss&#13;
Elizabeth. ^ ^ 1 '&#13;
" I thjiHsri should like to join your&#13;
elajw-Tf it is not full."&#13;
- I t is not full as vot, m a d a m . " replied&#13;
Mr. Buckle, "and 1 should be delighted&#13;
to receive vou as a pupil.11&#13;
e m ^ - ^ - f r o r t k m o W h o spoke&#13;
work," ho said; "perhaps you'i&#13;
beth hardly able to tear herself away i&#13;
from the contemplation of the blue sky,&#13;
with white clouds, that had grown under&#13;
her.brush. " I have"'had a delightful&#13;
lesson."&#13;
Again she wailed with impatiencn.&#13;
Again she elimed v.p the 3oug stairs"&#13;
Again there were no mother pupils present.&#13;
Again none arrived.&#13;
But this '.ime a brown roof grow&#13;
under. heT brush and gray branches lay&#13;
against the sky.&#13;
The trunk of a tree was indicated&#13;
and the- figure of a child was carefully&#13;
stretciied a m o n g ' t h o blossoms, as yet&#13;
only outlined in .the foreground.&#13;
Miss Elizabeth trembled with pride&#13;
anil happiness.&#13;
"You nnist.imd me very stupid," she&#13;
said. ' But don't you think I can learn&#13;
if I apply myself?"&#13;
" I am sure you do well," said Mr.&#13;
Buckle; "more than well. You have&#13;
talent, decided talent for a r t . "&#13;
On ' h e r ' w a y homo Miss Elizabeth&#13;
thought , with rupture that perhaps a&#13;
day might come when she should open&#13;
a catalogue and see " S u n s e t , " - o r Reverie,"&#13;
or "Moonlight h o u r - V or .-oiue&#13;
ors; and—well, you've been «iy onTy&#13;
pupil, you knovy, so I've) got to say&#13;
good-bye; and—there's something else&#13;
I'd like to tell you but you might be&#13;
offended."&#13;
"Oh, n o , " said Miss Elizabetn.&#13;
"You'll forgive me. T h a n k s , " said&#13;
Mr. Buckle. "Well, it i* this—if I&#13;
hadn't been such a poor beggar I'd&#13;
have asked you if you could like me&#13;
enough to marry me. I never met anyone&#13;
so nice—indeed, I never ; did and&#13;
our tastes are alike, and all that.&#13;
" I ' l l try not to think' of it more thttn&#13;
I can help, but I felt that I must tell'&#13;
you before wo parted forever."&#13;
Miss Elizabeth had put her handkerchief&#13;
to her eyes, and now was heard&#13;
to whisper something.&#13;
" B e g pardon," said Mr. Buckle.&#13;
" I — I ' v e got plenty," saidMiss Elizabeth.&#13;
' " P l e n t y ? " repeated Air. Buckle.&#13;
"Money!" gasped Miss Elizabeth.&#13;
Plenty for both."&#13;
"You kind little w o m e n , " said- Mr.&#13;
Buckle, and took her hand.&#13;
The brusheg-4ay neglected, the coior&#13;
dried on-the palette.&#13;
They sat thus for a longwiiile, then.&#13;
"If you really love m e , " said Mi-s&#13;
Elizabeth, "it doesn't matter which&#13;
has tho money."&#13;
" I t ' s awful sweet of you to feel that&#13;
w a v , " said Mr. Buckle." ' O n l y would&#13;
it be right of. me, you know? What&#13;
would your family s a y ? "&#13;
In the niello v twilight that had begun&#13;
to steal over the empty little&#13;
room, Miss Elizabeth's face looked&#13;
wonderfully soft and young as she&#13;
looked up at him; but I think she&#13;
scarcely cotdd have done what ohe did&#13;
but for that fancy picture of himself&#13;
which he had made for his landlord.&#13;
It she were not bravo now she felt he&#13;
might indeed be found pendent from a&#13;
branch somewhere.&#13;
"Heaven knowsl I'm of a g e , " she&#13;
«aid, with a little laugh: "and a family&#13;
t h a t has left mo alone at a boardinghouse&#13;
may say what it pleases; I don't&#13;
c a r e . "&#13;
" I t is the right spirit." said Mr.&#13;
Buckle, " I think it very fine, -a-nd I&#13;
shall be made so unutterly happy by it,&#13;
my dear.&#13;
They kissed each other in the twilight&#13;
and left the little room "together&#13;
arm-in-arm.&#13;
rrxm"ti»f twcuty*scv«u uuuud.rand luii1&#13;
ounces of outier In seven days and that&#13;
she consumed seventy-two pounds of&#13;
grain feed including" bran, thirty-five&#13;
pounds of hay and thirty-five pounds of&#13;
rootH. Surprise was manifested at the&#13;
great consumption of food, but the&#13;
statement was verified by the feeder.&#13;
Another Jersey cow, Mermaid of St.&#13;
Lamberts, owned in Canada, claims a&#13;
record of twenty-rive pounds and thirteen&#13;
and one-half ounces of finished&#13;
product of butter in seven days. This&#13;
cow, from the report of her feeding,&#13;
also shows great consumption of food&#13;
and great digestive capacity. She .began&#13;
the test with four quarts of crushed&#13;
oats, two quarts pea and linseed meal&#13;
and two quarts of bran, four time* daily,&#13;
thirty-two quarts or-4ifty pou-a&lt;lsp which&#13;
was increased to forty quarts or sixty&#13;
pouuds daily; which is four times the&#13;
quantity a good feeder.would expect to&#13;
feed his cows in milk. Aside from the&#13;
question of whether even this&#13;
large product paid for the feed&#13;
it is apparent that a cow of this&#13;
kind would soon need a new stomach&#13;
u,nd digestive organs it she kept up this&#13;
consumption of food/ It is quite evident&#13;
that large yields are quite as dependent&#13;
on digestive capacity asou natural&#13;
dairy qualities, or in other words,&#13;
tliat tho stomach is quite as important&#13;
as the udder in the dairy cow. This is&#13;
a matter not often thought of in this&#13;
connection, but from the lesson of these&#13;
tests is shown to be of great importance.&#13;
No. animal product either of&#13;
milk or flesh can be obtained without&#13;
food, and the single animal tnat digests&#13;
and assimilates a large amount of&#13;
food will, as a rule, give a large return&#13;
for food consumed, more in proportion&#13;
than if the feed were given to two animals,&#13;
because in the latter case a cerrtain&#13;
amount must- g\&gt; to sustain lite,&#13;
and from which no increase can be expected.&#13;
We must therefore look to&#13;
the digestive capacity of the animal as&#13;
well as other points if a large product&#13;
is expected or obtained.&#13;
drivs, and. nothing e]s« but gra«s and&#13;
waier. Throw the calf, .have some one&#13;
lo hold him perfectly quiet, and, opening&#13;
his mouth, break the eggs inside&#13;
and he will swallow them without much&#13;
trouble.&#13;
J. B. Law-t, tho great English farmer,&#13;
says that au acre id* roots judiciously&#13;
used will produce far more milk or&#13;
'neat than an acre of any silage food,&#13;
a r t id TO t h e n h j o i ' t im) o f t h e r&gt;rhf, (A ^ ] ¾ .&#13;
ing roots, ho argues that the necessar/&#13;
working they need makes them the&#13;
land cleaning crop for which virtue&#13;
they should be credited.&#13;
Comb honey that is at all fit for the&#13;
market should not bo allowed to stay&#13;
on-the hives. It soon becomes discolored&#13;
from the bees traveling over i t&#13;
They will also add additional wax to&#13;
the capping, stained more or less with&#13;
propolis.&#13;
Stagnant or foul water is injurious to&#13;
all animals. It causes blood poisoning,&#13;
and this loads to many febrile complaints,&#13;
and is one of the great causes&#13;
of abortion in cows and other animals.&#13;
Its use should be guarded against by&#13;
farmers.&#13;
There are two points well established&#13;
as to clover growing on firms. 1. Tho&#13;
soil is rapidly exhausted if the clover.is&#13;
sold off the farm. 2 Its productiveness&#13;
may be maititaintahtsmd slowly increased&#13;
if clover is grown and fed on" the farm.&#13;
Moses Fowler of Lafayette, the largest&#13;
farmer in Indiana, who owns nearly&#13;
30,000 a c n 3 under cultivation in Ben-'&#13;
ton county will have 400.000 bushels-ofcorn&#13;
J his ycf.r and 5 000 tons of hay.&#13;
Mr. Fowler"mokes a specialty (if blooded&#13;
stock, aad recent!} made a sale of a&#13;
single herd of Herefurds, 1 ielding him&#13;
$48,0uo.&#13;
The preservation of straw for feeding&#13;
purposes is very .important. It is best&#13;
secured at or immediately after threshing&#13;
time. The chaff, especially of wheat&#13;
straw, is most valuable, and should as&#13;
far as possible....he distributed through&#13;
the stack. That which is left in tho&#13;
rear of the straw carrier should be put&#13;
under shelter, as it rots easily,&#13;
Fall Feeding.&#13;
fattening of swine or&#13;
proceed with ail&#13;
po^sib!&#13;
cattle&#13;
0 disearlv&#13;
wing room was doing&#13;
rightly&#13;
the&#13;
such romantic 'itle, among&#13;
pictures, followed by&#13;
i words," "by Miss Elizabeth&#13;
The thought chased&#13;
iW&#13;
*I\o li&gt;t of&#13;
delightful&#13;
Hill,&#13;
away tho scruples&#13;
that troubled her as to the propriety&#13;
of beirg the only scholar of a single&#13;
gentleman; and, then, he was so gentlemanly.&#13;
He, never quite closed the&#13;
door, lie sat at tho opposite side of&#13;
the tabic, lie was decorum itself. And&#13;
such a genius' How foolish of the members&#13;
of that limited class not to' avail&#13;
themselves of such opportunities'. The&#13;
quarter was over and she was beginning&#13;
to wonder whether Mr. Buckle would&#13;
trouble hiai9elf to teach a class of one&#13;
for so sms.ll a sum. When hurrying upstairs&#13;
to her lesson she heard voices&#13;
within the'door atid paused. Two men&#13;
were talking. Jno~was Mr&#13;
" I t was very sly of Elizabeth,&#13;
expected more conlidence." sa'd&#13;
We&#13;
the&#13;
older sister to her friends shortlv a'ter.&#13;
"But slii! has married well&#13;
ed artist, exceedingly rich&#13;
the)- all are. His m i n e is&#13;
i ' 1 , 1 * -&#13;
— a c"r. in&#13;
1 [ H i S",-&#13;
Buekio. '&#13;
•at-&#13;
I'.te&#13;
The&#13;
should patL-h during tinermild weather of&#13;
"mportauce and ar I vantage&#13;
them early K not realiz-'d.&#13;
The opinion frequently prevails that&#13;
corn is not lu to feed to ad van--&#13;
tage till hardened, and thai it will not"&#13;
- • • - that:&#13;
tall, rhe"&#13;
of pushing&#13;
maki If ted h'..fi&#13;
A d v i c e t o Y o u n c W r i t e r s .&#13;
By Hill Nye.&#13;
in re.-ponse to a letter from Mr. K.&#13;
C.&#13;
of&#13;
i'apley (no relation of'MarkTaplev),&#13;
Indiantown, ^.N~. B1 3., MlTTfiTI 3T\e"&#13;
gives the following warning and chunk&#13;
of advice to Young Writers :&#13;
V,MJL NYE'B WlNTIK KSSOUT, I&#13;
P. 0 . Box 40n, H U P S O S , Wis. y&#13;
D I A K S I R - Y o u r favor of the 19th&#13;
inst., with inclosure. was received, and&#13;
the "baled h a y " mailed herewith.&#13;
I do not generally advise young men&#13;
to monkey with literature, but you seem&#13;
B"uckle."&#13;
wait a little," she&#13;
rtrr-ha&#13;
if yon carr-bttt&#13;
heard him say.&#13;
"Well, I have waited, haven't I , " replied&#13;
the other voice. " I know you&#13;
ttoraterh*- suee^stsfnl-sox&#13;
mean well; but studios are in request.&#13;
1 can't let mine for nothing. You have&#13;
not given mo one cent for two months,&#13;
Mr. Buckle."&#13;
"You see I'm jvist establishing :in&gt;&#13;
self," said Mr. Buckle; "pupils come&#13;
slowly. I spent all I had in advertising&#13;
and paying the first month's rent and&#13;
buying such furniture as I've got. I&#13;
sleep in that hammock, and take down-]&#13;
the poHUrc for a blanket; and so far&#13;
I've got only one pupil. It wo-h't do to&#13;
starve. I live on a dollar.a--week. Now,&#13;
where is the uioney.-fdr r e n t ? "&#13;
"Don" 1 seeuo-to 00 a n v , " repllecLtM&#13;
landloriL&gt;'-&gt;fhat''h why I think^inaybe&#13;
youJjd'Uetter move." ^-^&#13;
— " A h well, I snppoj&gt;erT m u s t , " said i&#13;
Mr. Buckle "J^rTjust give this lesson&#13;
and hang inyself, or something—not&#13;
hevrvi^rvvoulcl give the ' place a bad&#13;
u^tme, you know, and you've been most&#13;
kind. Good morning. Ah, no, do not&#13;
apologize: it's all&#13;
again.&#13;
r k „ I&#13;
like to look at it."&#13;
The portfolio.was full of sketches in&#13;
water color, of English scenes, lanes,&#13;
old women gathering f n g S 0 . ^ ladies&#13;
walking in old parks.&#13;
They were hot great, but they were&#13;
very good. Miss Elizabeth was delighted*&#13;
•"How kirrd of you to talco a class,&#13;
she said, beaming". "Such an a'rt:st as&#13;
you lire." ' - •&#13;
* + •&#13;
e.&#13;
in tho way of business,&#13;
' and-fnenZS^Targe man in a light&#13;
overcoat bovrrfced out and nearly overset&#13;
Mifs Elizabeth as be ran down&#13;
stairs.&#13;
She, for her part, went into che&#13;
room all tremulous with surprise a i d&#13;
grief, and could hardly utter nor usual&#13;
greeting.&#13;
She looked at Mr. Buckle as he laid&#13;
out the pattern and tested tho shade of&#13;
tho color in her palette-cup, thinking&#13;
what a tine, kind, pleasant face his was.&#13;
She noticed, too, that tho braid that&#13;
bound his coat was worn out, and that&#13;
his knees were shiny.&#13;
Then ho came around tho table a n d&#13;
for the iirst lime sat down beside her.&#13;
• " I ' m going to give up this studio.&#13;
Miss H i l l , " he said. "This will bo our&#13;
last lesson. I'll give you the address&#13;
of an excellent teacher^, who has vacancies.&#13;
He's a little dearer than 1 am,&#13;
but ever so much bet,ter"&#13;
4 "Oh, that can't be!" cried Miss Eliz-&#13;
^oeifrr iinrzi: *&#13;
"Oh, yes, indeed," said Mr. Buckle,&#13;
"I'm, after all only ah amateur—a sort&#13;
far, and it might be well to give it a&#13;
thorough trial.&#13;
You should use groat care, however,&#13;
in selecting the held of literature which&#13;
you intend to-prespire in.&#13;
Ih net bt a humorid! If you a r e a&#13;
humorist everybody else will have&#13;
'moreTun out of it than you will. You&#13;
w i H make- -som e --rrromry-otttr t&gt;H-t4f-yotiget&#13;
the genuine ntHatus, but you won't&#13;
have any fun. Humorists do notiMtve&#13;
fun. It is a) la m i s t a k e lam-acquaint&#13;
e d w i t h ono. aud he sa&gt;&lt;lie has not&#13;
•«miled *inee he los^Jws twins. Once I&#13;
heard of a huuiofist who had laughed&#13;
twice in omrtiimmer, and I hunted him&#13;
out. ^ ^&#13;
^-Tfe was not a humorist, but had some&#13;
other trouble, the name of which has&#13;
escaped my mind.&#13;
Yours trnry~, -&#13;
BILL ^S\\I..&#13;
So much gam u uni i"..lore&#13;
but this i.-, a deeh'ed mistake. Corn is&#13;
Detier digested when u«-n—t'-uily hardened&#13;
and it at the sam^ t:.n;o cotitaius ad&#13;
of the nutritive 'elements that it ever&#13;
possesses. Begin immedia-ely 10 feed to&#13;
1 he pigs or cattle intended foi Listening&#13;
aud \ou will be certainly p'euscd witn&#13;
the results. The advantage of mild&#13;
weather over that when the t hermometer&#13;
touches zero is too apparent to mention.&#13;
H i s R e q u e s t .&#13;
Youths1 (.oaipanion.&#13;
The h0stess in a weIIdi 1K:d,-4&gt;rightlylighted&#13;
London i"&#13;
tho honors to a man whom she&#13;
regardeif—ns -rtrr-strrr Tif tho occasTon.&#13;
liij-^awo from.i44rr---&lt;jft A-m*rk;RT—wlwrobe&#13;
had won well-em ni d l a r r t d s and he&#13;
was sure to be known to and.welcomed&#13;
oy all to whom his na . e should be&#13;
mi nthmed. The lady took pleasure,&#13;
therefore, in presenting him to ail her&#13;
"•nests who were best worth knowing—&#13;
to this hero of m mv battles; to that&#13;
nit ho/ in a in- .ok.S to the pretty&#13;
- i t&#13;
1:- to&#13;
li,e&#13;
had&#13;
[•'&#13;
1&#13;
• whose first volume, of poems had&#13;
tak-_*n the reading-world captive";&#13;
ptinte&#13;
just 1&#13;
!' e s&#13;
hi&lt;o s.». pieuire the academv&#13;
hough*,&#13;
f 10m his conver&#13;
F a r m and &lt;.urden Note*.&#13;
Two members of the Warsaw (.111.)&#13;
Horticultural Society disapprove of&#13;
hogs in orchards; "they sometimes kill&#13;
trees by rubbing t h e m . "&#13;
Soapsuds is a valuable fertilizer for&#13;
all forms" of vegetation, especially servicable&#13;
for small fruits, and in the fruit&#13;
garden proper will never be wasted.&#13;
H e "Was C a p t u r e d .&#13;
I&amp;i&gt;ependeut.&#13;
A rutddlo aged a a n , with what ap-.&#13;
peared to he a load on his mind, visited&#13;
the arc'ic steamer Thetis yesterday and&#13;
seeuied'greatly interested in what he&#13;
saw.&#13;
" S a v , " ho said to the officer 0:1 deck.&#13;
" I ' d like to go on the next expedition."&#13;
" I t ' s awful cold up t h e r e , " remarked&#13;
the olli.'er discouragingly.&#13;
"1 dou't care for t h a t . "&#13;
"You'd have very little to eat, and&#13;
you might starve to d e a t h . "&#13;
" T h a t won't b^ pleasant." obsarved&#13;
the visitor.&#13;
" I should say n o t , " returned tho&#13;
1 llicer. "And yon might be eaten by&#13;
your comrades."&#13;
" I s that so? That would be tough."&#13;
"—"And then," continued—the oflu-er,&#13;
"yi'm wouldn't see your wife for three&#13;
years or possibly longer. You know&#13;
you cah't take her with y o u . "&#13;
" W e l l . " returned the old gentleaJan&#13;
after a long pause: " I guess you cau&#13;
put my name down on your" books.&#13;
Your last argument captures me.kL&#13;
The North and SouthjCarolma mountains&#13;
are becoming populai summer resorts&#13;
iortlrp southern people.&#13;
Mr. Samuel Miller says in the Rural&#13;
World that during his forty years with,&#13;
strawberries he "never saw an&#13;
to match tho J a m e s Vick for&gt;"f5rodue&#13;
tiveness."&#13;
Mr Charles Lamip^repels birds from&#13;
ripening^g^wejrfjy means of the "scarecrow&#13;
cjitr^inade of cotton flannel—&#13;
ALjitCse.--color"-=stutied" with curled&#13;
ir aud set upon the tiellis iu full&#13;
viewr. :&#13;
Wherever there is a necessity for&#13;
making the land \ieid the highest revenue&#13;
o'f which it is canable, tesort must&#13;
be had to the rearing of live stock aud&#13;
to its. improvement and high development.&#13;
Epsom or Glauber salts are common&#13;
purgatives for cattle and &gt;heep. Dose:&#13;
ox, VI tu 16 ounces, diss lived in a wine&#13;
bottle of hot water. A tabiespooufiil&#13;
of ginger may be added. Sheep, 1 to 6&#13;
ounces.&#13;
Oals fed freely to hutigry chickens'is&#13;
ap;.to kill them. The towels eat too&#13;
large quantises at once, the oats-swell&#13;
iu the crop, and the points,of the oats&#13;
penetrating the crop induce inflammation,&#13;
ending in death.&#13;
A good mixture for&#13;
stock is equal parts of&#13;
sweet spirits of niter,&#13;
part of ehojtfsie ether&#13;
"tie to be kept at hand,&#13;
ox, '2 to 4 tablespoonful&#13;
eolic for live&#13;
laudanum and&#13;
and an eighth&#13;
A half-pint boi-&#13;
Djse: horse or&#13;
poontuls iii three parts&#13;
of a pint of water.&#13;
In answer to a question as to what is&#13;
the best grain food for milch cows, Professor&#13;
Arnold recommends four parts&#13;
of bran, two parts of corn-meal and OT^J&#13;
part of linseed meal a.* having given'&#13;
him the best results in proportion&#13;
cost of any 'drv_ food lie had&gt;^rver&#13;
used. ' ^ y&#13;
In the Western New^YorX Agricultural&#13;
Society it was recently stated that&#13;
the planting of Xew vineyards was never&#13;
so geuerally undertaken as at the&#13;
present time. People'are learning how&#13;
to use grapes a n i tinding o u t / t o o , now&#13;
health-promising is their free use.&#13;
A ^bod remedy for scours in calres&#13;
is said. toJje-raw eggs. -_(iiv_e each-calf&#13;
three eggs twice a day for two or three&#13;
.as! Oi.&#13;
war&#13;
Oliver ;&#13;
she si'.i.&#13;
every 0&#13;
I think&#13;
girns." "Bui.&#13;
to S"i? now."&#13;
trcr smile.&#13;
a*ion with the&#13;
tiu'^e, she saw him coming toe&#13;
r w i i h ' a loo); ou his face like&#13;
asking f )r np »re. "Who is i* ?".&#13;
! smiling. " I want you to see&#13;
no yon would like to meet, but&#13;
Tve shown vou all my great&#13;
is the little guns L want&#13;
le answered, retu _&#13;
••You've been showing me&#13;
the prosperous people whom e v e n body&#13;
is stek: ng,andthey've given meniy share&#13;
if pleasure. "Now if you'll let me, I&#13;
want to give pleasure to somebo.&#13;
Isn't there anyone here who j ^ t f h a v -&#13;
ing a good time?' If there^s anv bn&amp;&#13;
whom nobody seems^b&gt;^vant to talk to,&#13;
1 want to -see thivt^person.'' And'she&#13;
gave him hhj^will.—There are wallrlowers&gt;&#13;
afevory garden and the hostesji^&#13;
rrought them out for him.&#13;
hat elderly woman, a little deaf,&#13;
had her whole evening made pleasant&#13;
by her quarter.of an hour's talk with&#13;
the distinguished looking man who&#13;
talked so distinctly and made himself so&#13;
agreeable. That shy girl who felt herself&#13;
nobody, because, iu tho midst of asociety&#13;
made up of celebrities, sho neither&#13;
painted pictures; nor sung son^s,&#13;
nor wrote poems, went home happy&#13;
through tho kind geniality of this man,,&#13;
who in ado her feel thai she had some&#13;
tiling to say worth his hearing. And&#13;
that old gentleman, with his hobbyhorse,&#13;
how he did enjoy mounting h&#13;
and prancing ,twav before this kind observer,&#13;
from over tho seas! It was a little&#13;
thing, you say, which tlus man did.&#13;
Yes, but it was all the difference between&#13;
sellishness and unselfishness, aud&#13;
since we live with our fello vs; and hot&#13;
in a hermitage, it is in society that »vo&#13;
must show what manner -of spirit we&#13;
are of.&#13;
-/&#13;
Reraoilelilng t h e IField of G e t t y s -&#13;
b u r g ,&#13;
The land on which the battle of Gettysburg&#13;
was fought is to bo purchased&#13;
and a driveway opened aiong the line''&#13;
of battle, from Devil's Den, at thtHfoot&#13;
of Round/Top, through the wheat field&#13;
to the peach orchard, to afford an opportunity&#13;
for monuments to bo erected&#13;
to mark the position of troops. Veterans&#13;
of the various injiifary organizations&#13;
that took pjipHn the battle are 111-&#13;
'vited to asseuLbTe at Gettysburg on the&#13;
e v e n i n g ^ o f o e p t . 80, to aid in laying&#13;
out^fiTavenuo to indicate the positions&#13;
cupied by their respective commards.&#13;
Oct. 1 anil 1 will bo devoted to that&#13;
work, followed by a general review of&#13;
the Held.' The m a t t e r will hn nnrimthe&#13;
direction of Col. Bafchelder, the&#13;
government historian of the battle, and&#13;
superintendent of tablets and legends.&#13;
/&#13;
-S&#13;
The will of trje late Porter Hacklev of&#13;
Muskegon is being contested bv Mrs.&#13;
Harriet P. Hacklny.. Tho.will'givos C.&#13;
H. Hackley control, of the estate and&#13;
wakes no provision for tho contestant.&#13;
AbbuTf430,UU0is involved. '&#13;
,&#13;
iFI&#13;
f1&#13;
It&#13;
«r&#13;
/&#13;
- /&#13;
/&#13;
/ •&#13;
\&#13;
r——&#13;
JlUi-LaVUl J i ! X&#13;
OUK NJKIGUIBOKS.&#13;
HKUiHTOXC&#13;
i t i z e n , e n j o y e d a h u n t w i t h h i s&#13;
H a m b u r g f r i e n d s , o n e d a v l a s t v . n k . LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER.&#13;
for t h e n«'\l tiO d a y s ' J*-&#13;
... :fHO. '&#13;
o op,&#13;
4.0*i.&#13;
:^n&#13;
l:Ki-:Mi 11 J.&lt;'Ai&gt;iNt; c i ' N s ,&#13;
lYtivsvillc was throw n iiu'uii^iiliT-&#13;
^•rom the Argun. ' able excitement last Wedl.esdav, h\&#13;
•' Mr. and Mrs. Purdey, ot (ireen ()a.^. t , l r n u l : n v ; l v ( ) f j . m h , s \\,A\y+ t ' r a m We will sell Lumber al t lu&gt; !'..iIDwmtr price&#13;
h a d t h e n n s t o r t u n e t o l o s e o n e o f t h e u v s t a n i n , from the blacksmith . 1 , , , , ^ . j S M , ; i ,( l l ,: U l l i&#13;
|ittle twins Monday. thev -wept down tin; H u r t like a n r ; 1 , , H l i a s 1 S inHl%minl:]es, o a ihoa-and&#13;
A new school house will he built ''J»»"&gt;' ^ ' H . « "'». j»;t beh,w &gt; r.. s h i l r S ](S i m . n , , H T ,h , , , , , 1 .-J--0'&#13;
this fall in Pleasant Valley, near i'. \ ' ^ H , &gt;io,v i li,y , , ;ln u , , h Mi. No 1 Lath, p c thousand h d ^ ' -&#13;
M o r o n ' s o . o d ^ H r d s e u T u ^ e w l n e h e o n t a n i e d L : l t h , ,,r .l.uw-a.id di I / '' / V f / W /»V^/: M 0 6 \ W GUN&#13;
p n A i i - i 1 '11 HI ,1 ' «-olittU^irN. l h e , a m a . e w a s B m f t ; t ( i „ h ^ , : , , , ^ , M ; Nh,. p per thousand feet,&#13;
Rev. D.A. Richards will till ihe made a wreck, and now the two ^ , ^ . ]W[uU, ..,. , p,,,, ,;ll|ll f-,^&#13;
Wesleyan Methodist pulpit at Ken- , &lt; hildren escaped unhurt was a toys-, J { .| n i ^,,,,,5,,,,^ V- r ihou.^nd feet&#13;
sington and Brighton the eomin.i,'! tl'r&gt;' t o a 1 1 &gt;vll° witnessed it. The &gt;i1MMplu,- n.!!-/,,,-1- thousand ieet,&#13;
. . ; horses were stopped at Mr. Van i p,.,,,.,„&#13;
y e a r ' • . 1 Horn's. !&#13;
Green Oakers •i.L 1. 1 1 r aren ui si•n g w,.o.o, l at,w iin-e.d, ,1., h. o manv friend,s ot Mr. and, .Mr-. with which to bind their corn shocks.! , . . ,. 1 1 , •&gt; ,.&#13;
•' „ . . ., , v -- -^iluiiics Nanlleni 'aiheiixLjil Lcipv.--&#13;
the stalks being unavailable this v«'aiTivlhvMondsiy ni-ht, and tbrininp;' a&#13;
for some reason or other. procession they drove to Mr. Van&#13;
1111 1 1 1 1 i •_:' ,:1::,. ,- ;, '! ti:.- . . a d feet.&#13;
i o a s a n d i-1 '&#13;
..*,-,.) t..u.&lt;u; WD MAGAZINE RIFLES&#13;
. 1") iti* t o IV ' i ° . w .•,•!••.&#13;
1:1.(iu, l " '•'&#13;
Ml (M l o l l " ' 1 . '&#13;
:i...i.:.. ••-•. F I L L E R SKATES,&#13;
: :,11,1 i . J ; ' : i . ' .&#13;
. |,,...| ,.|.;l,l,,, .if S | - O j n ' | N W I'llWi&#13;
1, :11,1.- ,,1 A in i m a a l i u u u u d h [ i o r t i u ^&#13;
:.l;\ .&#13;
POCKET CUTLERY,&#13;
iWftV-rHri^O CREDIT. ; ^ ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
\John Robbins has moved into t l v &gt; Hani's where they idled the house&#13;
house with Prof. Kellogg. , I to the jjarret to celebrate Mr. and&#13;
T^ T - . , i 1*1 *r ,.' Mrs, V.'s china wedding. Tie v&#13;
Dr. Lawson is the new health othcer .- ! were presented with a efuna set purof&#13;
Brighton village. ^ ' i chased by Mr. and Mrs. IVtcr* a;&#13;
^Irs. Richard Paddock, of this place' l dacLsoii;- Mr. and Mrs. -\'aiiH-'rtr&#13;
exhibited some-fine speeinvens of "cot- ; have niajiy warm trieuds in this vieint&#13;
o n i n its natural • state this morn- i !'Y &gt;vhi&gt;.i«»i» witlr us in wishing them&#13;
jng in R. J. Lyon's store, which she&#13;
had just received from Texas.&#13;
Henry Damman, of Genoa, missed] , | : l v e a - l f l l l .^,s e . A worthy pur&#13;
one of his cows last week • Vt eduesday I j , ( W l . wi,i speedily i\w the* miad and&#13;
'^nd gave her up as sdolen. Almost a ! spied of the }nunrj)s and measles, dyrf-&#13;
'week afterwards she was found cover- j i ' l ' l ' ^ «nd languor.- P. 6. Boyd.&#13;
ed upiu-a-S^raw-^tackin a tarnished] In love, the importance lies in the&#13;
' lie-inning. The world knows well&#13;
whoever—takes—enre—step—rrrH—take&#13;
A - L. HOYT, Manager, rt* t-sf*,--&#13;
t k * b ,^!, 4 , r:*;o*-&#13;
manv vears of en ovnient with ti.etr&#13;
china.&#13;
LARGE STOCK. NEW GOODS&#13;
SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
V.'jr5ICAL AND QPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
A :1 1. i ads of repairing neatly and&#13;
;•: ! \ i l r ' i H 1 .&#13;
PJ'srKCTri'LLY,&#13;
condition.&#13;
m o r e , it is i m p o r t a n t t h e n , t o t a k e&#13;
t h e hr.-t - t e p w;e(l.— F o n t e n e l j e&#13;
rrHE OLD RELIABLE IS STILL&#13;
HEADFOR&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
l.ALTnN ^- CAMPLICLL,&#13;
&gt;&gt;i'.s| &gt;L;ii! r^T.'el, rint'kiiej, &gt;lielilyan.&#13;
•.••* a&#13;
;&gt;yj(£ ,,-:.. c; «h&#13;
- - ' " V ,&#13;
i - , l . ' ; &gt; . J « ;&#13;
• •. .1 Mills.&#13;
THE&#13;
_A )\v m a n .;e;iy ilo a r a - u ; d a c t oi' j&#13;
;o. .ii 1,,.1 :;:'.•, n u t a ^-t4it-iiin;it i.»n—t-M-'-f&#13;
- ; ; 1-- a' pa rl ('!' one'-- t ' ' a t - j&#13;
S r - r a e .&#13;
DEXTER.&#13;
From the Leader.&#13;
Thos. Birkett has been down to AYi'i&#13;
^iamsburg, Kv., to visit his son-in- l,V\v {),yl[A ,_;,&#13;
"H. W. Newkirk. He returned hoia,^,,,^.,,^.,^&#13;
Jast Thursday eveuin-. - . ' X\i:..n',1 v&gt; • •,;. •;.-. ,h;rin- o-u- , ^ J&#13;
Pied, in Webster, August -'.'th. 1:-^ 1. Ii:'- \a..'. -&gt;•&lt;• : , : , e..".!&lt;a n:- &lt;[ ie,,^-.^:):-&#13;
of consumption. Mrs. Lucv To.1.1. a ;.•:! '' ; : \ l l l , - i i ^0 iii&gt;.'nvr&gt;&lt;r -M! • :;-&#13;
&lt;00 . 01 1 1" . 1 1 '• '.' c a i l . N . a l laid '.-•j^t-'o: 1 , / . ii '.» L ^ 1 ! '&#13;
38years, bhe leaves a husband and ,, v ^ , : - ,,&#13;
, ^ ni1, w-itu maiiixTin'r tli,n_-: '-• =• 111 • *&#13;
daughter to mourn her loss. , U.:tuiU&gt;H^\fini,' enter&gt; tle-.a.iu.i. thi.t&#13;
J—"Died, in Webster, Sept. 15th. ISNL \&lt;^r^nkinI'Ktoe;etluM&lt;.i&gt;'ihetri'a' 11.in.&#13;
Mr-rs,. TI Un^o^mOaOs pIj„u;i«nnan« , a.,,g-,e^,d1 7toV , .\.a &gt;^a^l-s-. ^i.n d that t.h,e individual can o-' :•\ - I,. *•&#13;
j&lt;--^T .joyous and happy, when lw has Me&#13;
s church 1 omraWfe t0 feej himself in the whoir, -&#13;
(.ioetiie.&#13;
Funeral from St. Jose,&#13;
last Wednesda} m&#13;
|*helpsBr&lt;j§Tr of Webster, shipped The dice of God are\il\vavs h»adi)'i.&#13;
tw&gt;paf loads of Durham cattle (&gt;. ' The world looks like ii &gt;nulti'plic;i tioiu&#13;
iSaston-eiie, a»d-dames Hovden two, f...! Ui^c: m ' ^ . niathen.aii.-M equation.&#13;
-r, _^ ' . , , ri • 1 ' * j which, turn it a» ymi will., balances&#13;
W S t a t e Fair last Friday. itself. Take whaHicraro v„u\wiil. "its&#13;
DRV UOOIIS-AiN I) G K()(rVJU'E^&#13;
. -A^vl) EVEKYTHI-X(J INT1J-E.'&#13;
LlNEOEGEA&gt;:iL\!/&#13;
MERCHANDISE.&#13;
E. A. MANN, East Main St., Finckney.&#13;
BUY THE CELEBRATED B u g ^ S ^ E&#13;
r L g e s&#13;
rtrmifirivfvlcdforBE.vTTTT, SmKyr-.Tn, E u -&#13;
D.W. Miller Carriage Go.&#13;
Gen. Logan and party passed through • &gt; \a.t value, no more nor less, ^jl] n . .&#13;
the town by special' train Mondav : turu&lt; lovm,. Kyery se.-ret is\t,»ld.&#13;
, , . 1 . « 1 ' 1 o\-cr\- crime pun.shed, ''Verv v,!'ti\i' i^&#13;
morning last. About two • huuo, e i . , . | i y . ^ . ^ ^ y y ^ ^ ,,:,,,.,^,,^,.,,&#13;
peop&#13;
liim.&#13;
__r s f ^ i c A f ,; J. -/^- S&#13;
people gathered at the depot to &gt;eo .,;,,;,,,,. i i n i , ,.,.,-taintv. " What we " ,-,¾ j c x ^1' *\ n 1, „ i . / w &lt;l o-An&#13;
T &gt; I P t r n i n le.Ueil n few i n i n n l - &gt; i v t r i b u t inn is t h e u n i v v r s . , ) » &lt; ^ | t v \ » * " ' U t U c l K L 1/ . f ( l ^ U l i ,&#13;
W i t h r.vrv.NT C A P T , n/;, 1 I'w.r,T&gt;. PATT-KT&#13;
SST::I-L, S K r a x ; T i . e y AXT.I:; i'.ei'.r.NT Ov.Mr-&#13;
]X»;i- i&gt;rl'iuu^AvoOvlvv^rlc, aiiexA'ciir-iolbea,.- .11-&#13;
Sle in.s of L\'..\:&#13;
OANCK. EAS I; O F It II &gt;INO A N nltrNMNO, S o u l&#13;
for n»w i l l u s t r a t e d e:tt d o g u e . or call rui'I&#13;
, • £j-'ennrwoi-':at. o u r CifK."AGO K L i \ ) S T -&#13;
Benator Tom Palmer, in a few appr.- '»y wha-n the wdmle ;q.pears wJi&#13;
• A J » » i i .i t- i • ''.vera part appeal's.— Lmrrsi ai.&#13;
pnate words, introduced the Gem-rni., i ii&#13;
who exejised himself from speakir,.: v' ',,v'' ('^ "-'x ] • 'h-' 'i( n ! ^ 1 ^&#13;
on account} of hoarseness, (ten. Al-jaawas&#13;
also presented to the peeple. and&#13;
n&gt;ade a few~renrarks. when the train h.\,M,;'; aw,,:,,,•-:. Air-. ; . ;', \&#13;
-rnoved on. \ ,,;'-&#13;
^ ~ ~ ~^~T7TTn:^rrt—TI&#13;
•a ; ai: , :t&gt; , a ,(&#13;
'i o p ; a ..a a v -&#13;
a ::u \l. : 11 he • ;&#13;
1 ; r • .:.&#13;
a. ii. i&#13;
t e W AV&#13;
M r s , P .&#13;
n l uN s'o.' ai 1) IS }-.ei/.i\o i : , . : ,s;,. in.s oi -i^ ' -p;,,,^ ( f CAKKI USJ-: WOKK. fc 'a t ^ j&#13;
, i'l'Kaaa: I:.c-.; ! , / \ s i' e a,. d into H u b s u ,:h J.ANUAIT a w ^ e i i m p a : . : V l a » ^&#13;
] • • , &gt; j&#13;
l : \ a l A ; : it- M-C -&lt; i c t i i a l o t ' K i t e . , ' w u h v d ; si.i, .&lt; tu.: ia:.^r I.IM: 1 i. . . . • . . . . \ v , , i n ; , iV.-i',- 1 M : :•• •&#13;
, . ] ' .-...1. e&#13;
p ' ' e \ : s&gt; Si &gt; ,]•!:/&gt;ii. &gt;taa-rac, 1 c^t o t ' w o r l a a a n - "\, 1 !&#13;
s . - . i l M l i r V y i / - " . i M i d d i . y O r i l S T H E K l N U r **1&#13;
Ov' Y&gt;'AC 11^/•- ' »SL-IKI for iieW t ' a t a l o g u o .&#13;
. e .,1.::&#13;
&gt;rv".&#13;
' A^LARBOR.&#13;
From the Register.&#13;
i "ail's a le, ,.ri _a:Pa'&#13;
bet ii for P;inl p u r p o s e s . : "~!TT"' 7"&#13;
at-a' etia :,;,•- uiii-fh . 111 &lt; 1 s;:e&gt;,r:si. (,,&#13;
r" 0 . L. Mathews has succeeded in ,.b- ; "''' ^'^y^y- -'.t"ar.&gt; jemi^' :^nfv&#13;
. . . • f u-H» Yu , , to vent its,.,; p^tieuily^ i\.Al, uiu, , T&#13;
taming a pension for W alter Holmes, ! &gt; ( j n .u W tw.u, 1,-,,,,,¾ ,lt,:,-;,ur ,.^ A&#13;
PINCKNErft LL&#13;
We are now prepared ti &gt; H I of Salem Station. ' \ madness: and lau-hte, is u, , ih-.-!„. . _ . M ' . , « , - i r » ' Beiy. F, Arksey.lias sold out h ^ ^ Resa^rVipg, all kinds of [3^1*] &amp;nu fancy&#13;
riage making establishment on Detroit&#13;
street and will move to Dexter.&#13;
to the human sin'cies.- L&lt;uw-ji [\ tl i n .&#13;
?*• T ^&#13;
( ;!i t h e &gt;tao"e W e r e s e v e n o r e'o'ht Braoket-Sa^jng,- Carving and T u r n i n g s&#13;
TlGrTTand HEAVY CARRIAGES. PHAETONS,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, &amp;C,&#13;
A.ftortho rn"«t nrprov,-1 a, :.:;::; r.t Oio.vory lnw^flt&#13;
l&gt;rnx-ri eoMsisti-nt \ r . : h a 1 w o r k m a n s h i p .&#13;
— 5 0 , 0 0 0 v o l i i c l o o —&#13;
nf our iiianufantii-.. ?.r.&gt; r, nv in usa in tl&gt;is nnd&#13;
fireun oiiuiitrii'H :1:,,1 ntte^t ttm cxi-fllt'iico i&gt;f&#13;
cur (,','IHIS l.y the muv.THal sr\tisf.i.-tion which they&#13;
give.- Kvi-ry vthicli is &gt;VAKUAMKD.— Special&#13;
atttntioa ulll l&gt;i' siven to mail orders.&#13;
CATALOeiUES FREE.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
E, Fifth St., Culvert St. and Eggleston Are.,&#13;
CINCINNATI, O,&#13;
THE FREE PRESS&#13;
FOB THE CAMPAIGN.&#13;
We w i U Mind tike W E E K L . T »BKBj&#13;
r U K S S o a U I mXUr «leeUon tor omit 9 4&#13;
CKNT8.&#13;
AUdr«M&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
D e t r o i t , All oil.&#13;
KAFIRS REMEDY 0 0 . , 8 ¾ ^ ¾&#13;
. ra»MM •.••• J ™ ^ ) i T g Cli..ir,l.t. nnd Sulf Pkio't uJ&#13;
lFr«0F.HA;iH!8'PA8TlLL£4lEME0V&#13;
\imntf 'li-,i mi I ,-:(,. rs « ho auflVt&#13;
i o n , :.. r . , i , n r . r . i l h y s i - , 1 I&gt;e&gt;&gt;ii-&#13;
T*J- WTamf3elm#mr and-Altr^&lt;l V-j-^dier,. in.m ilm Li^iji; Maine h'...;. ; ; n Wn&lt;.d: and will soon be\d»!e to do turn in- in iron and p-m.-ral machine&#13;
Bourns have rented the Maclean house; ^-1'-.' !'lV1'- U',,JJ behaved, mtellieeni ( repaiviim. A\'e are also a^eVps tor \Y. S. .lolui-' Asbestos &gt;iatenals, Kipuane,&#13;
on Huron street. The former will o,-' !,"';i;':P v , 'i l \; 'il !., j-s ', , -! '^: ' 'in^heir .,,M- | l'ackii,^ Mill Boards, Felts.Viooiut-r, ' cmeul, inside and outside i^frfiTl&#13;
pupy Dr. Maclean's old otlice. i'a'hmeom, ^'.'re'cai' e- Te p ' the' , jJi'Tu j Vlih]U&gt; 1 ! i U 'n ' H o n t ' ;!1!(1. r'iia-.proof J^Uf^T' ' , '&#13;
Robert Howard, janitor at, the Lai- M" "!' old !d,;id man.&#13;
K . , I T . ILA-&#13;
fl: ri '•••.,•'••lUence., » . . , , , , Jc'" , , L " l V "- ' r v ! • •«Jtv cured.&#13;
il»Vnigtln&gt;r-Tn;,,,tl,o, (»7. s o u l.y mail ia ,.:,,,, w/ii'p.-ers,&#13;
Dlrr- t -Wn» fur I »nn{ RrrDaicniiTonrli H,,v. l';,„,,,1,), t ,1,.^(-,1,&#13;
ti'.e I the&#13;
'e'i n y h i s&#13;
versity, broke Ids wrist Wednesday ' ;;::&gt;'. u&#13;
1&#13;
i&#13;
l&#13;
! l l . h i s , , i i n . \ \ ) i l ' ^'["''^ehed&#13;
while working on the roof of the ran; ie s o l d i e r s . i&gt;id s a i d ill nv;:t,|p t o n e s :&#13;
!l ! "!!o\-s. I l e - a r , \ ' o u h e j o a y t o t h e&#13;
building. He fell tj;om some s(;attbld^Ju^iiUk4f»i4Anu\l have jpsnii in&#13;
ing. : tha/ r 'jinmnt.'' '' .'•&#13;
^pel Mason, aged 18. son of. ^ m . , , ...,,,nn&#13;
Jtfason, of Northfield, was thrown fronp. -o], v,,._&#13;
^ULXCKXEV hLAi-WG MILLNear&#13;
(lran.1 d ia mi;' l)e pot, ' s riNC-KXF.V. M K ' I I . L O A P I&#13;
Y 'iai.\ OW&#13;
.", i \ !y o .&#13;
•''".What's his name.?"&#13;
. ,'e a.! j &gt;; n i i\v a i&#13;
his horse Tuesday morning. The fal&#13;
^roke his neck and killed him alhio&#13;
instantly.' The funeral is held /to-day&#13;
^V" .- -T i&#13;
was ;t sei-ejcunt '.ii o u r c o i i i | . a u v . . W e graitleboro&#13;
.t : ;i!wav&gt; MKed h i u m&#13;
" \ \ !:«•)•(• ; &gt; t { i ' " n o w&#13;
/ ' • ' "He j.^nov,- a Iioiit-eiiaii! in a .-.,], .ri-'I&#13;
Ground was broken for the uhwCath- .n-^nteju. and a prison—e--a+—-t-'-irrrrV*---&#13;
olip school building last week. lend^'foiK&#13;
work is now"".progressing • favorably.', K , ;r a '•^"i-'i-d^ tiie ,,!,! m ; m -.a-iPa: -d&#13;
j , '-•„»''—I—"V ' . r — 7 - T T TfT1^ ^ i — - *,, - V e 1 ! {,» I ' e p l v : J a i , a t h i s t . M I I , O V . i l i d&#13;
Jt jsPerxpected that the foundation will \,,,;;.. ,H, Vrd-&#13;
'^)e finished this fall/and the entire; -1 haired a.s much; I have riot&#13;
building by next September. The estimate&#13;
cost is $10dX)0, of which S4,5UJ&#13;
Jias already been raised,&#13;
ef him for a loner time." iiearo&#13;
They did .not wait for another word,&#13;
hut these soldiers took from their wallets&#13;
a siiui of money amounting to&#13;
1$. R.. Billiiigton was once more ar-J twenty dollars, and otiered it to t\\v.&#13;
old man, saving:&#13;
\J"hc-^ t - o %.-c: 1 S s t c y c r i h o&#13;
w o r d . C r c - H i a -11^::^:0:.0(1. t h e y&#13;
, I&#13;
(.: 1.1 MA 35-&#13;
PLPij roipvccs, &gt;• '•'•' } ' '• '••• ••-'' la tin' purcpt;&#13;
•: ,a,"i w c ii .-:,-,,(..^^, tmryt^s, miTl&#13;
[ ' '''en • ili.'I't.lli-Otlti?, \\n U t l l H&#13;
\' ,' I i;;;mv ut hei- tuivii'i-o.-.&#13;
bOiJil.LAlMV'S KOSK LEAF J I X E&#13;
CrTTOH.UTO&#13;
i:-- iilsn n\!i&lt;1f nf tltn tinvrtt rJtork, and for aromatic.&#13;
. elu-\\ ii;e qaality i,-&gt; SITOIK! to none.&#13;
" If our whole, party were here, we&#13;
)tild ^ive you a/hund&#13;
Thtj'uld man,replied&#13;
"iAoys^yjju must put it in my_ waj.&#13;
et for me, for I am blind."&#13;
GRAND&#13;
I am' pleased to aim n i i i i " " .&#13;
rested Saturday, this time on complaint&#13;
of/E. S. Crawford, chanrod with J , ' ; j u r w n o i v P a " y .Wftr.e here&#13;
*, . . ./ , r i ' i ' would j?ive admndred dollars.'&#13;
pbtaimng money under false pre/bans&#13;
ks. ^Crawford claims that a lar^e poriion&#13;
of the Evening News route pur- 1&#13;
ihasedbvhim of Billingtonis worthless. . l l u t ! n a r k w l ? i l t f o l l ™ed. Another&#13;
Tja «i0;w,e iv,of ™„~ +-4.1 lndiviumu'in the room, who had looked&#13;
^He cjaims that, many ot the names are ^ t , , i s ; i v n i l &gt; a s -r l m ,p w i t i | , . , , , „ , ; ^-1&#13;
fictitious while-others never ordered I ,,,-].le ia our citizen soldiers, innm-dithepaper.&#13;
Billington, having rel'ij/.ed I ately advanced and said:&#13;
to make the amount good, was arrest-'' ';"!;"Y~- , I , : &gt; , s *L hamboinc ildii-r. ;Lnd I -- ^ , r\ n n J _ n«»#»^#v*t!**A D A A 4 A JP OB-,dn.«^ o i , * i •&#13;
ed. Bail was fixed at SUO / M want you to drink wiili ma. l . s i a m n D r V G O C Q S , G r O C B n e S , B O O t S &amp; S S I O G S , Q J ' O t i S 8 il r?.&#13;
; ' * / • i treat ior ihe company. ' ' w&#13;
oaoli EVLj.Tist t i n c A i d , a-&gt; wAloiy&#13;
S a c w r . c-r.clso pc^tilr.v n r o t'lcs i n -&#13;
fitrt: -:-•--.•' -. u^.C. tl. C? l^.jU.'.Cr. ^&#13;
P i v e l e t t e r s :.: v^-.A • .." l a .v/c&#13;
V7Gvd3 a r c rc:i;i::clcr-:. cf or.j^yr-ccut: |&#13;
i n m u l t i i u c l o j c f S i c c u s . U l u s t u i - l O I M I d . A H m S S A V Y C L I P P I N G S&#13;
Ca.taiCijuo i n a i i o d Creo t o r . l i ; eo... ip&gt;t r.-Miii i^ a snliu ^nr^'ulr «inu»kiDft tobaca&#13;
s p l i c a i i t s . ' I ru uii.rpvcr introduced.&#13;
M t K I L L A K D ' S F A M O U S S N U F F S&#13;
loo ' . ii ;;-,(! fi.rnwr 12-t yoarB, and are m&gt;U\ to&#13;
a . .- . • : ..--aaa Oi;ui any other*, ''wsaminui-'&#13;
7EBETASLS PIUS&#13;
S e c u r e H e a l t h y&#13;
action t o t h e L i v a f&#13;
a d r e l i e v e a l l bU&gt;&#13;
OPENING! ous t r o u b l e * ,&#13;
1 !ia\'e ju.-t started a general store at&#13;
J" •'!-'• e - .' ' H.!,'j.,l. s, ;,, ,..,,1 llHr...&gt;.-&gt;,.'r" IMTI&gt;»J|1«&#13;
1..,11,.1,..11--., cr-v-n;!.. .Vfi:ii:uc...'v UuuwtU^H, Sjiiih'lr ftnS&#13;
Jh-rmrliil Mr.-.-H:,,,*.. s-oniair In-ulmoL.t; O...I0 UIMI « »&#13;
'ON.-.lt.-. 1.. I, ; :,,1.-,., l.vn',,1. (Mi) .,r write for lint o f&#13;
M- '••"-'"I'enii.w-rni! !)..-( 1I,H&lt;M1. Hiring in utuif nt tiyrtaBi.&#13;
- " 1--01.- snfT.-rfnirft-itiT. Hnpturo xhnuM si-nrl Iht-lr »&lt;l&lt;i"r&#13;
My liuc consists of a large and varied assortment of&#13;
NORTH HA MMU(i. •&#13;
w a i l e d w i t h i n t e r e s t for 1 h e r e p l v ,&#13;
! i 1 c a m e : -&#13;
iuml U.irn ^.ont-flilni; 1.. l"h«'lr"n&lt;1 i«ri'r*i^7 "i't^not"* t r u « i j&#13;
AJ,l,t,k l.r, C J,. U « A « ( i v . C„.,'| Rn^ rhyMrl.n la &lt; h M *&#13;
(cnlnil Mwl. * Sawn. In.lllntf. »»0 hornet « t , Ht. L « i l t , f e t&#13;
Surc^x,rU) Dr. ihitu' lJinwu^rv. K*tablUbc4 t o XwSZ&#13;
X E C A . I = l J S r B S 3 - l " ~*&#13;
I •.-• :i"\V,...i i,,..,.v,i tt lar.'K-r mid liettor sttKk (A&#13;
o o , -, u;,ii i..\,-r lirfor.p K^rtticr with a-graaiv&#13;
jfrom our Correspondent. / "No. sii'. wo ! hank you k i l: • 1: \-: we I Fverybody ciild tniH evnmino Miir.s|ock ef^,,,,da. -1 li^h,;r [ prier\p:iid ibr' H A . K X . E S S G O O D S '&#13;
J . A. VanFleet,/rof the Chieao, appreciat..' yi).ur orlbr-" hut u , . ' n, Vl.r : .UUT'TKU ANT) iUU.irt, Kverytluiijr sold at rock bottom prices. \ : \'i-„ ^i.ipsai.ii u«»uw. A« p&gt;»&lt;i HH the h*y&gt;t 'am&#13;
^ P. CUNNINGHAM, GregeryUKIich, _. _ , . i was noWe, was Onerous; the 4,.st was&#13;
^ E l l e n \ v o o d , of the Brighton grand.—The Veteran. FAV1';TTR"KKAS()-N.&#13;
t STOCW&gt;h»G£-MlCKIGAH&#13;
/ • "&#13;
U^*^-*--&#13;
AN IKNiH SHKKH.SHKAK1NU. XJ. ^3*, BBEBB,&#13;
•UNDRUTAKKR,&#13;
f j&#13;
Mi OK \!,KK I&#13;
? ii L' ! J?- E.&#13;
i'i&#13;
u i - r M . M • i ' i ; l .&#13;
ill'.: L'j\&gt;_.\_ i MICHIGAN.&#13;
( ' i i i l l S T l A X HUOWK,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
Al) kinds of custom work, and genera!&#13;
repairing, including&#13;
HORSESHOEING.&#13;
The Family Fall to Work with Whiskey&#13;
and Pious Objurgations.&#13;
Tim Watson i.s a j/reat clianirti-t.&#13;
though a very small fanner. Ho idevoted&#13;
to fishing, or at any rati- in&#13;
talking about it. Tin* linitly s k i r&#13;
liis farm, and it is impossible t'ur ;&gt; &gt;&gt;&#13;
i.HK angler to escape his ea^le c,&#13;
"Whatover work he may be tniplu. i|&#13;
in it is instantly illumining ;it i n -&#13;
flight of u rod waving n w r !!;»• Im ];•• .&#13;
\ a n d if you can shake (his &lt;,MITI; !• -n&#13;
and sporting agriculturist nil' .-J;M, t ..r&#13;
a n hour you may coiisi'lrr VDUI-III i,,itUnate.&#13;
This year I liad alwa y • ]&gt;.;-•••[&#13;
his house. I had tished en to i le&gt; nj^-,.&#13;
•Jf his farm—slowly, too, tor tJirii'oti:&#13;
Were taking very fast without ^,.&lt;&gt;,]),,&#13;
ft sign of my friend. J 4'm&gt;u&lt;.ht h.*,&#13;
must be dead,but he was nothing &lt;&gt;t'!&#13;
t h e sort, tor on coming &gt;lmvly round;&#13;
the corner, and while im&gt;c]f in t h e '&#13;
bed of t h e stream-and- ^^^^4^*1 from&#13;
sight by overhanging bo\\sv_L e&gt;pied&#13;
the* redoubtable Tim lum-cU' ^1 iiii'liniron&#13;
the further hank. Mp[in:-.ue him stood&#13;
a man who I thiu'k was hi- brother-inlaw,-&#13;
and-between them wa- his "wife.&#13;
Jt was evidently sheep-washing they&#13;
were intent on, for all three stood contemplating&#13;
some half dozen sheep in a&#13;
pen a t the edge of the stream. v&#13;
''They're gieat sheep, Mike," said&#13;
Tim after a long pause.&#13;
"They are that," said Mike, and Ihe&#13;
silent admiration of the remarkable.&#13;
animals on the part of all three was&#13;
again resumed. Suddenly Tim r o u -&#13;
es himself with a shake.&#13;
"Have ye the whi-iov I»tddv'.'" -avs&#13;
he. \ .t •&#13;
"Siire, an'.'o'-eourse 1 have," &gt;;iys the&#13;
__wite, producing a -big black l.ot.t !»• i'romi, ().u r&#13;
c -(iuhle to Obta4iiin&lt;r P a t e n t "&#13;
Under her cloak a n d handing it toV . . ° '&#13;
' £ j m &lt; j i- sent free everywhere.&#13;
The latter pull* the cork, and applying&#13;
it to his mouth at an angle vvhmli&#13;
_ p r o e l a i m s that this i/5 not th-1 lir-t at-; r r \ i T-TCI i j « n n p n p r i A&#13;
tack upon it, t a k e / a long and ^ e a d y T 1 3 ^ ' i ; ^ i ^ ^ M l ! &amp; L ^ U ^&#13;
drink. T h e fiery • beverage i- then&#13;
banded to Mike, who emulates his&#13;
brother-in-law's example; and lastly.&#13;
the woman takes a more modest instalment,&#13;
corking u p the bottle again and&#13;
, . laying it on t h e gross. Once more&#13;
ihere is a long pause of admiration,&#13;
and once again the dictum' goes forth&#13;
from Tim, and meets with no opposition&#13;
t h a t "that they are great animals."&#13;
— 8ays Tim a t last, "Nowy Mike, are&#13;
ye ready?" •&#13;
"Bedad, I am that," says Mike.&#13;
"In the name1 o' Sud, thin, -conn'&#13;
QJTT says the proprietor.&#13;
*'Come on, thin, in the raiim &lt;&lt;'&#13;
irod,''say&gt; the i-e.lative.-;a.nO thus torched&#13;
with whiskey and pious oojh::1'.!-&#13;
tions, the two men ;:ud {'.&lt;•' ui.nnin&#13;
fall to work upon tie- -i \ -::"&lt;'p,&#13;
Shop back of Mann's Block, PINCKXK?&#13;
ESTABLISHED 18G4.&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
()btain&#13;
lii'UllIi Is.&#13;
o r M e e l i a n i e i l l D o v i c e s , (,'1)111-&#13;
Designs and L:;oel.-,&#13;
All 'piviiniiiitu'y examination* as&#13;
to pati litabriity of invuith ms, i'ree^&#13;
Adddd ressi&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
i»i3src:K3srETr&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN A N D&#13;
ItKAl'Y FC)f{ M ' S I N K S S !&#13;
Hread and Huns Fresh F.vrr.v Day.&#13;
\ V ; i i ! i i ! i i i&#13;
; i n &lt; : ; n I &lt;'.'•&#13;
- ami K&#13;
. i . ' i ' - i ' i&#13;
I I s - ! ; • ; ' -&#13;
i \ &gt;' '. i I !. i'&#13;
l " : i t r o l l ,&#13;
] i ; i i i l t ' i ' l&#13;
v. ill tfiw&#13;
A BACK YAKI) IJAKHliK.&#13;
Two Colored Men, One Hair&#13;
&gt;tother Customer, Former&#13;
Koth kick.&#13;
that a&#13;
('utter,&#13;
' v i c ; ^ ,&#13;
b:'. ;'b, r&#13;
i n n bit t •&#13;
W. II. L.WVi.'liM&#13;
I^lIMHtl AM'.&#13;
•. • • : i-il .&gt;r ;&gt;\o i' Nru S&#13;
K , ; • : • • - . ( . / • . e e l ' ;i-vL;i_..• !&#13;
i : : ( . 1 : , ; • • . ! ! ! • . - ! . - I . n | , : . . . ~ i ;&#13;
I'm.L'&#13;
\ t'H,\ s i n&#13;
, . ' II 111 I ^ I l ' j l&#13;
( ' !'ui:il i V i i -&#13;
"Say, captain, isn't&#13;
shop?1' asked a good looking&#13;
of patrolman Hehemanskv the other&#13;
day art he ])ointe&lt;l to a pb.nv on Bnisi)&#13;
street ornamented witji with toiisiu'ial&#13;
stripes.&#13;
"ves,'' answered ** tne juitrolmnn;&#13;
^'ihat's a barber shop."&#13;
' ' A public barber shop?"&#13;
" Y e s . "&#13;
" C a n I_get shaved there?'&#13;
I''(•_•;in! I'IMI:H- iio'ni 'i|&gt; nt ii cust iif one- mil&#13;
l i . ' l i 11^11:11:^..-.....1.:11^.-- i t " S I m i l l I l i e v f U ' l i r ' J » T (IrtV.&#13;
M:i"i""i:i |iinti. }-.11• \;irT»r. KeHtaimtnt (*H^}4it'd&#13;
\\ mi tin1 Hint llni'.-.' CHTK, stamen and rleviited&#13;
ruilruails to nil ilrpotn. b'nniilit'8 can li&gt;e butter&#13;
for U'ss meiii'v Ht flif Grand I'niuu Hotel than&#13;
any i'itlu'1- riist'»las8 hott«l in theclty.&#13;
"Of course."&#13;
__i'All right," and the mulatto started&#13;
for t h e shop with -determination&#13;
jn every movement.&#13;
" H o l d on a minute!" called Selternansky.&#13;
''There seems to be ^something&#13;
t h e matter. What is i t ? "&#13;
" W e l l , it's jest this way," an&gt;w«-,,V'1&#13;
thcTmilatto. " I went in there to.uel&#13;
my hair cut. The barber said: • Yes.&#13;
M ' l l cut it; come this way.' I i'olb.wed&#13;
him a n d he took me out to tin&#13;
back yard, where he handed ine an&#13;
old rickety chair. I asked him wlwt&#13;
was u p a n d he informed me that he&#13;
. wouldn't cut a colored man's hair ir.&#13;
his shop. Now, he's a darned si-ht&#13;
more colored than l a m , and I ain't&#13;
going to stand this thini;.&#13;
The speaker started o'tl'and.entered&#13;
the barber shop. .The j.rnprietor it'&#13;
of t h e concern had soon'' him talking&#13;
M With t h e polieenuuw and,.,lbarful of&#13;
getting into t r o u b l ^ V t n i t ^ f u s t o i u e r ' s&#13;
hair witlwut the i^rnMrity-od' t a k i n g&#13;
him into the back yard.&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion*&#13;
Premature Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An S0-paL'i' ( loth-bound Rook of Advice t o&#13;
Yomijjur Middle-need Men.with prescriptions&#13;
f.T Self-trentment by a, Regular Physician. SCa Mn TI Pr On rCp do "B tnrmepcse ipt Aoddf rft»wso thre«-oeal&#13;
1 . WIU.&gt;AM3'&amp; C O . . MILWAUKEE. Wl&amp;&#13;
Michigan Buggy Co.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
Wholesale Mannfactnrrra of all. kinds of Open tnd&#13;
Top BtTiGIES and ROAD CARTS. Agents w»nted&#13;
ereryTrherc. Writo for catslogUQ Wid plica liiti&#13;
FINE WOliK A SrECULTY.&#13;
An eastern paner says that a do/en&#13;
flirls from New Haven a r e taking a&#13;
t r a m p throuRh the Adirondack mountains.&#13;
T h e tramp'must he having a&#13;
good time.&#13;
Somebody has said that the IIIIM direct&#13;
way to a man's pocket, i.-. tiiMe^-h&#13;
his stomach. Any direi; \va\ t • a&#13;
woman's stomach has never iv, n u n -&#13;
covered.-&#13;
"I don't think 1 shall oo rowing&#13;
with you a«?aiu soon."&#13;
" W h y not, p r a y ? "&#13;
"Because you only hu:,r_red ; Inshore!"&#13;
u Ma," said a tliou^htfunMiy. "I dni't&#13;
think t h a t Solomon was s o - r i e h a s ,&#13;
they say he was." Why, m y d e a r ? "&#13;
''Because 'the Bible says he slept wit h •&#13;
•.- "Jlfe'fathers; and, if he had been so rich,&#13;
he would have had a W&gt;d ot his own." '&#13;
Wo also manufacture l full line of CCTTKI8,&#13;
including Swell Body, TortUnd, Sqiure B o *&#13;
two scat Tortland and Poney Sleighs.&#13;
Seod for cuts and prices beforo purchasing.&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,.&#13;
KALAXAZOO, Mich.&#13;
i Nl&gt;i:i; \i:w .M.WAUKMKNT:&#13;
REiiB.TKt DETROIT POST&#13;
The l!e&gt;J N; u ^itajier in .Uieh.ivran.&#13;
CALL AND GET&#13;
Dtily&#13;
-^&#13;
per "S ,";i t-: ( » ( ' f n r s JHT Month. Weekly&#13;
o n e lViHuf per Year,&#13;
DSON, MOORE &amp; CO.&#13;
\V)IOI;ESALE DEALERS IN&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
_ ^ _ .&#13;
c: -...&#13;
BEFORE BUYING&#13;
ELSEWHERE.&#13;
MANN BROS.&#13;
SEPTEMBER "23, 1884.&#13;
HAVING DECIDED TO QUIT T H E&#13;
GROCERY BUSINESS,&#13;
WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK&#13;
CALL AND GET PRICES.&#13;
BUTTER AND EGGS WANTED.&#13;
WE HAVE A LARGETTNE OF&#13;
B O O T S AND S H O E S ,&#13;
GLOVES AND MITTENS,&#13;
WHICH WE OFFER CHEAP.&#13;
GET OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYINGH&#13;
O F P &lt;SC H O P P .&#13;
YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND&#13;
A FULL STOCK OF&#13;
PURE DRUGS AND MEDICINES&#13;
AT LOWEST PRICES,&#13;
- A T -&#13;
WINCHEXI7SDRUG STORE.&#13;
This Horse 19 TOLLING&#13;
THIS MAN' ThatifbedontsellLiaHeavy Draft, Horae killing&#13;
biattw, and buy aa&#13;
EASY RUNNING&#13;
DEERING TWINE BINDEH&#13;
a t once, erery hor»» oti th» farai mill OOOD ba d—il -&#13;
WILUAH DEERIN6 &amp; CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
B I H D E B 8 . REAPERS AND MOWEBS&#13;
T M t MOR8E8' | ; p i E N D 8 .&#13;
V O B S A U B *&#13;
S. ANDREWS. Howell, Mich.&#13;
SLAP! BANG!&#13;
MERE WE ARE AGAIN! VOKL E Ayaln to tin* fr&gt; »nt. in hi.-i n-nv «»tore, where, for&#13;
th«* n»'xt sixty t\ny? fnuu t(iir» r.lat^, "for caah. I&#13;
j&gt;rumi*».» to L'i'o't&lt;&gt;* nil my p.itnuis more quantity&#13;
anrt better &lt;|uality for Ifss money, any of the following&#13;
Hrtich.i,'than any other dealer In the&#13;
eountv, viz : PAINTS! W [n any quantity, Be-t Linsped Oil—raw or boile&lt;t '&#13;
•DItrtyffeurms, tuKiHn«, jttHeru'=bi VPaurtntyis, heasm, i FPloawinitnegr s" VSaurnatloshtteeas&#13;
of'all kinds. Any nhade of color desired nnKed&#13;
and ready for apjilyiii!.'. ten per cent. nhea]&gt;ef tftaa&#13;
any uth^r house in town. Paoer han:.'ini», frvscn.&#13;
in^, L'la^s staining and crainin j specialties. Glre&#13;
ns~acall and aaxisfy ytHirse)vt~*-ihat-iVT*-tttrir-eay—&#13;
what we mean, and'mean all that we saw&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8^ 1884. r-^&#13;
Timbered Land for Sale o r Exchauge.&#13;
I have eighty acres of timber land in the township&#13;
of White'oak, Iniiham &lt;'o., which 1 will sell&#13;
for cash or trade for other lands or property in&#13;
southern Livingston county. Address, •&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
UETKOIT o LLEVE'.AWO.&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
„Ci*ty °f Detroit—Northvyest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Le&amp;va from foot&#13;
of Third St. Detroit at 10 p. W. - Leave&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland it 8.30 p. m.&#13;
H E $ 2 . 2 5 R O U T k&#13;
Week days-Standard Time).&#13;
T H E 5 3.0C R u U T L City of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne St Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
-For Marine City St. Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena HarriavtU*&#13;
Cheboygan St. Ignace and^&#13;
. K r i i r F S f l U J . " M A r n i N A C&#13;
*o4ders free—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
illustrated book of 120 pages,&#13;
A LAKE TOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKINAC&#13;
historicaland descriptive of thi*&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
C Ss. Whrtccrnfe, OSRM Pass. A s e n t .&#13;
NRorA lPOWI Day n«*t.T. DRetAroNit,aStlo' hX.&#13;
THE ONLY TRUE&#13;
HERE IS A GOOD CHANCE&#13;
FOR YOU TO MTY A I5IUD CAGK. LOOK AT OUR OFFER&#13;
IRON&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS Rf CAWIIfi&#13;
Br. Barto'i In Took&#13;
It will purify aud enrich tiie BLQOO* rattalal*&#13;
b« L I V 1 N and KIONKYS. and T t a n T O i l THB&#13;
H B A X T S a n d VZQOB of YOUTH! In all M O M&#13;
d i M w e i requiring a certain and efficient TOXIC,&#13;
especially Dyspepsia, Wantof AppeUte.lndlffettlon,&#13;
La*X of Slren«ttii, etd., its u«e Is marke*&#13;
with Immediate and wonderful results. Bon#a&gt;&#13;
mascles and nerves receive new force. S a l l v e M&#13;
tb« miad and supplies Brain Power.&#13;
• a M l B O sufferiiij' irotn nil coniplaTnav&#13;
L A U I B O peculiartothelrsex will And in&#13;
D &amp; . K A B T I B ' S IBON TONIC a -are »nd ^predy&#13;
core.&#13;
/A&#13;
THIS COUPON&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 5 CENTS,&#13;
ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
AT F. L. BROWN'S.&#13;
It irWea A clear and healtnv cotuplealon&#13;
itronKest testimony to the T»|I ' ,&gt;_&#13;
tR's iKOVToNto Is'that fre.[iient&#13;
at counterfeiting have only added to tli&#13;
oT-the orlk(ln»!. If vou "earntstlvdes&#13;
not experiment—gettbe ORIGINAL J&#13;
rSead roar addms to The TV Eartar jfedTo, (St. Louis. Mo., for oar "X&gt;E£AX BOOK."&#13;
Fall of straage and useful Information. fr»*.i&#13;
OR. HARTER'3 IRON TONIO IS FOR 4 A L I BY AUDRUOCHSTS&#13;
AND DIALERS- EVCRYWHKRR.&#13;
t /&#13;
&lt;c T THIS CARD 0UT&gt;&#13;
And wo will allow you 25 cents for it on t h e purchase of any Bird Cage a t&#13;
our storo. Wo will also give a Bird Cage F R E E t o the one who will&#13;
out out a n d b r i n g to ua t h e greatest n u m b e r of these cards.&#13;
To be b r o u g h t to us&gt; September 20th. T h i s will h e l p y o u t o g e t a / C a g e&#13;
cheap, a n d some one to get a Cage for nothing. W h o will b e t h e lucky&#13;
one. F. L.&#13;
PUKCHaflCST&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBR&#13;
Books loanedXi 5 cents per volume,&#13;
for 7 doj/s.&#13;
6 Tickets Ur . . . . . 25ctfe&#13;
13 « / " . . . . . 50 "&#13;
Njefa books are being added every&#13;
\week, and the proceeds will be devoted&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
the library&#13;
F o r books or further information&#13;
apply a t&#13;
WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE,.&#13;
«»&#13;
^-&#13;
\&#13;
MJ&#13;
r&#13;
M&#13;
[•i f&#13;
F&lt; I&#13;
.1 \&#13;
i*.&#13;
LLri«* i 11&#13;
/&#13;
f&#13;
N&#13;
JEROME WINCHKLL. K m r o n .&#13;
BnMred at tfce rontoftica a*. 2d eHa*» D U U W ,&#13;
CURREM TOPCS.&#13;
I T is reported that Gen. Logan's&#13;
throat is so seriously affected as to&#13;
reader it very probable that he will be&#13;
compelled to abandon further campaign&#13;
work.&#13;
goos to tho First ward, about threequarters&#13;
ot a mile away, complaining&#13;
ofth'.s, nays: \$± tlltf Ull.o ft^lf £«*•»..&#13;
out th'.Tt&gt; lio111 forget whitt ho \/ going&#13;
f or. /&#13;
H O S T I L I T I E S between France and China&#13;
have broken oui; afresh. There is&#13;
altogether too much sparring over&#13;
there. It is about time they came to&#13;
hard knocks and settled the dispute one&#13;
way or another.&#13;
A G E O R G I A man. acting under what&#13;
he thought to be a divine inspiration,&#13;
has been burning several buildings in&#13;
his yicinity. After the neighbors had&#13;
filled his carcass full of No. 2 shot the&#13;
man began to doubt the divinity of his&#13;
mission.&#13;
S E V E R A L of YVolseley's sailors have&#13;
already been drowned, aud the ascent&#13;
of the Nile has beern scarcely begun.&#13;
They have yet to encounter the overpowering&#13;
heat, the burning sands and&#13;
the deadly diseases of tho_ desert country.&#13;
T H E H F is no protit in horse stealing&#13;
in Delaware? as is plainly shewn by the&#13;
following: A Delaware horse thief is&#13;
sentenced to pay costs, $100 institution,&#13;
$200 fine, one1 hour in the pillory, twenty&#13;
lashes, and eighteen months' impris"&#13;
onment.&#13;
R O B E E T _ J I O E , who died in Tarrytown&#13;
a short time ago, was a benefactor&#13;
to mankind. His inventions in&#13;
rapid printing presses made it possible&#13;
for newspapers to reach millions of&#13;
readers whtf could never have been&#13;
supplied under the old process of print-'&#13;
ing.&#13;
T H E Russian government has sought.&#13;
thus far in vain, to bring about the general&#13;
uso of coal in that country instead&#13;
of wood, in "order to save the forests.&#13;
As though no such thing-ns a good&#13;
stove or heater wasjarown, a prize lias&#13;
been qftVredior'thG best apparatus for&#13;
utilizUigr'cor-1 in government cflices.&#13;
A Y O I N U lady in Ohio who recently&#13;
inherited a large .estate is rcfcrrcd&#13;
to by a cotemperary as •' poor&#13;
but rcspceUble.1 ' This is a very offensive&#13;
but common combination of&#13;
words, bearing the intinflation that&#13;
p jvcrty accompanied by respectability&#13;
is so rare as to justify special mention.&#13;
We do not speak of a man as " rich but&#13;
respectable,'1 yet how many rich men&#13;
are really not worthy of respect. Poverty&#13;
is conceded t j be exceedingly inconvenient,&#13;
but it certainly is not disreputable.&#13;
.—, ,—.«• —&#13;
C h a r l e s R e a d e ' s O p i n i o n s of t h e&#13;
G r e a t M e n of H i s T i m e .&#13;
Temple Bar.&#13;
Of all his contemporaries Charles&#13;
Roado yielded the palm alone to Dickens.&#13;
Him ho always'acknowledged as&#13;
his master. N exi, for variety antt"scope&#13;
he thought came Bulwer.&#13;
.Carlylu, he said, was " a Johnsonian&#13;
pedant, bearish, boorish and buuiptious,&#13;
egotistical and atrabilious. His&#13;
Teutonic English was barbarous and&#13;
cacophonous; yet, no-withstanding&#13;
every line he wrote was permeated with&#13;
vigor and sincerity, and bis "Crotnweir'&#13;
is a memoriaLto two great men,&#13;
the hero an.il the author."&#13;
Maeauly always posed himself:&#13;
':Ae win) should soy, 'I am Sir Oracle,&#13;
Ami when I ope tuy lips let no dog bark !''&#13;
but with this intellectual arrogance he&#13;
combined a grand rhythmical style, a&#13;
• uaarvolouo—lettming and A miraculous&#13;
W H E N Caot. Webb was drowned in&#13;
his attempt to swim the cataract at Niagara&#13;
there still remained one aquatic&#13;
idiot. A man named WormaTd" pro*&#13;
poses to shoot Niagara Falls in a large&#13;
rubber ball formouey. If any c m / h a s&#13;
any cash to spare here is a s&gt;ife investment,&#13;
for the fool-hardy swimmer&#13;
will never I've to claim the nioney.&#13;
W I L L I A M DKAK.S is aN'ew'York printer&#13;
past his three score/years and ten.&#13;
Last week his mother/died aged nearly&#13;
one hundred, and as soon as William&#13;
learned that he was a poor little orphan&#13;
he immeiiately/ purchased two ounces&#13;
of laudauuiu/and sought to shuttle off&#13;
the coil bTpibrtality 7~The prospect of a&#13;
long and,motherless life unmanned&#13;
T u ^ C h i n e s e c i t y of Fpo-Cnow, made&#13;
nterestiug by Yc&amp;stih capture, is surrounded&#13;
by^arwall thirtyMeet high and&#13;
Xwel3?e^ide at tho top. The streets are&#13;
arrow and filthy, but from a distance,&#13;
in consequence of trees and hills, tho&#13;
( place is prcluresque. The inhabitants&#13;
excel in the manufacture of ornaments&#13;
from native soaostone.&#13;
J&#13;
hot and enervating.&#13;
Tho climate is&#13;
THV. old question of a speedier means&#13;
of official killing than the blade or the&#13;
noose is again being discussed in England.&#13;
The Lancet not only thinks that&#13;
decapitation does not causo instant&#13;
death, and that hanging is torturingly&#13;
slow, but that neither prussic acid nor&#13;
electricity would be quick enough in&#13;
fatal effect. Whv not emDlov a fonian&#13;
«/ a&#13;
and a can of dynamite ?&#13;
A N over-zealous Englishman in 1880&#13;
not only wore yellow ribbons to manifest&#13;
his devotion to conservative principles&#13;
but painted his dog yellow. Tho&#13;
animal sickened and died^ A humane&#13;
society prosecuted the offending owner&#13;
and he was sentenced to six weeks' imprisonment.&#13;
He lied to Bouhrgne, whero&#13;
he remained until he supposed his escape&#13;
was forgotten. Returning recently&#13;
he was re-arrested and made to servo&#13;
his sentence.&#13;
CORPORAL punishment is oddly applied&#13;
in Nevada.,s Says the Virginia&#13;
Enterprise: It appears that, according&#13;
to new arrangements in the public&#13;
schools, boys who deserve punishment&#13;
a r e to be sent to the Fourth ward echool&#13;
o reooive their strapping* A boy who&#13;
memory.&#13;
Disraeli was "the most airy and vivacious&#13;
of literary coxcombs, the most&#13;
dextrous and dazzling of political hariequins,'&#13;
the most audacious of adventurers,&#13;
the most lovable of men (when&#13;
you get on his weal' t«ide), anil altogether&#13;
the most unique and remarkable&#13;
personage of the a g e " ,&#13;
" E s m o n d / 1 he added, "is worthy of&#13;
Addison at his best, but some of 'The&#13;
Yellow Plush Papers' would be a disgrace&#13;
to Grub street, ana the miserable&#13;
personal attacks on Dulwor, who&#13;
has written the best play, tho best comedy&#13;
and the best novel of the age, are&#13;
unworthy of a gentleman anil a man of&#13;
otters!""&#13;
" T vol lope wrote a good deal that&#13;
was interesting and a good deal that&#13;
was—not interesting."&#13;
"For literarv ingenuity in building&#13;
up a \&gt;iot, and investing it with a mystery,&#13;
give "uiu dear ol.i Wilkie Collins&#13;
against the world."&#13;
••George Elliot's metier appears to&#13;
tno to con:«i-t principally in describing&#13;
with marvelous accuracy the habits,&#13;
manners and outturns of animalcula* as&#13;
thev exist, under the iiticroseope."&#13;
••Ouida bus emerged into dignity,&#13;
and there is nothing in literature nture&#13;
touching and beautiful than the talu of&#13;
•Two Little Wooden Shoes.' "&#13;
"Victor Hugo is tho one greut ireniu.s&#13;
of this century; unfortunately he occasionally&#13;
has the nightmare."&#13;
"George Sand should have been a&#13;
man, for she was a most manly woman."&#13;
"Glorious old Alexandre Dumas has&#13;
never been properly appreciated—he is&#13;
the prince of dramatists.&#13;
'•Walter Scott was one of tho-world's&#13;
benefactors."&#13;
• Reade execrate^uV-^poetasters but&#13;
adored poels^-aifhough he maintained&#13;
that there^was no nobler vohiclo to&#13;
giyo-e^pression to thought than nervs,&#13;
simple prose.&#13;
Tennyson, ho alleged, "is more pretty&#13;
than potent." When The Cup was&#13;
produced at tho Lyceum he said: " I t&#13;
might have proved an interesting spectacle&#13;
if'the words bail been left o u t . "&#13;
"Bmwning is a man of genius, but&#13;
he gives mo too mirih trouble to understand&#13;
"&#13;
"Buchanan is a poc!. but 1 like his&#13;
prose best; it is most poetic prose. '&#13;
" E l w i n .Arnold has sparks of the&#13;
divine a'trHttis, and holds his own among&#13;
tho best."&#13;
. "Swinbnrn has a heart of gold^ a&#13;
muse of tire—a little too iiery perhaps;&#13;
but I was young once, myself, and I,&#13;
too, loved the great god Pan!'1&#13;
n H e always barked back to Byron,&#13;
Shelley and Scott—the latter, however,&#13;
was hrs greatest favorite, and ho would&#13;
recite bv heart, with ferv.&gt;r, cantos of&#13;
"Marraion" and "The Lady of the&#13;
Lake.V.&#13;
He sometimes complained bitterly of&#13;
what he called ''The Siiaksporian&#13;
cruzo," stoutly maintaining that the&#13;
oeople who talked most of the bard&#13;
knew least about him. In a more genial&#13;
m nod he f/ankly admitted the supremacy&#13;
of the "celestial thief" to all&#13;
men ^ h o came before or after hjju. It'&#13;
1 could only -set him going about&#13;
"Oihello" the one peifect play&#13;
through all the ages—he would discourse&#13;
"thunder and HghtrringT*J"&#13;
Music was his special delight, but his&#13;
taste was as exacting as it WAS cultivated.&#13;
Italian opera, he always maintained,&#13;
was both in form a c i method&#13;
an emasculated and degraded school of&#13;
art. Wagner was a giant a hundred&#13;
years ia advance of his age, and his&#13;
theory-wassublime; but, alas! he lacked&#13;
melody..&#13;
»&#13;
A wealthy? company of English&#13;
are buying up farms in the hoark-ef"the&#13;
Perche district in France^^dth a view&#13;
-of breeding PercherfmJKtrses on a grand&#13;
sealo. The estaJjWjdTment of the Porcheron&#13;
stud bpefcjn Franco has given a&#13;
decidjicMmpetus uMJie demand for this&#13;
nctivo breed of horses&#13;
A p p o l u i n i r m * JJiule by lliejlrlielitKau&#13;
• • n. Kt ^ O H l f W U t ' * . '&#13;
The following In si '1st t&gt;Tap;&gt;nit;tmcntP made&#13;
by tbe Michigan M. K. cmtferi tin; in stBblou&#13;
at L;eicU ^ :&#13;
Al.WlOA' DISTK1CT— A A. ENAl'I'KN, 1" «.&#13;
A.ltuoi;—Joltti tiinham.&#13;
Battle Cre. k - O . S*. li eke&gt;.&#13;
Belhvu(—(i. A. C«ilium,&#13;
Coucor.i—K 1). brti-nn.&#13;
Hanover aiiii MDPCO*—J. Webster. -&#13;
Homer^-P- J- Mavi'cty.&#13;
Jackaoo, Coopir Btreet—!. J.- Hftrtley.&#13;
Jackson, First chureh—W. Gardner.&#13;
J»CVMIU, Haven cburcL—U. ». i i a u t ' e .&#13;
L e r o y - J. Hoyt&#13;
Lltcbaeld —H. T. HeudtTbon.&#13;
Liberty—Win. Conlli).&#13;
Mttrenpo— Win. Prouty.&#13;
Mardbal!—E. Coolrv.&#13;
Mofebt-rvillf—M. F : * L w r u I i ~&#13;
Naahvllkh-The*. Cox.&#13;
Olivet—*N. Bauuders.&#13;
Parma—W. M. Colt.y.&#13;
P a r t e l l o - J . h i l ' s .&#13;
Peufleld—W U Mushor.&#13;
South Albion—To bu rupplleil.&#13;
8prltintitldr-W. J. Su-ffe.&#13;
Tekousha—E. U. YOULJJ.&#13;
Thouipkms—E. H. Klnz.&#13;
COL1JWATKU U18TK1CT - DAVID IttiOl.i;, I*. I&#13;
Alleu—O. S. Paddock.&#13;
Bronsonaud Cil.oad—•). Kloee.&#13;
BurlliiKt^ii—J. \V. While.&#13;
Burr Oak—F. A. VanJuwalner.&#13;
Butler—J. K. S k u m e r ;&#13;
Catubrla^-A. W. Burua&#13;
(Jamdt'U — Supplied by T. Nicbolsori.&#13;
Ccutt rville—J. Clublue.&#13;
(Joldwater—D F. Bftfties. i&#13;
Culou a t d Leouidae—(J. W. Jouet.&#13;
CoLstautlut—1. B. Talluiai].&#13;
Glrard—S. C. tftrleklaud.&#13;
Hllladak—J. G. t r o s l e r .&#13;
•lortsvillt —Wm. Ok'umau.&#13;
K l n d e r b o o k — N . J . Brownell.&#13;
K o n b Adams—E. L. Kellogg.&#13;
Ojseo—W. S. F i l t e r&#13;
Quiaey—bou;a Groseubach.&#13;
haiisoui—W. H. fartoua.&#13;
Readipg—Win. Paddock.&#13;
SliL-rwood and Atbeut—S. George.&#13;
Stur^lf—.H. L Brav -.&#13;
UntOLi CltT—M, U.'C.'rrel.&#13;
WUitfc P^'.'cu—L. M Edmunds.&#13;
South Glk-»d—To be tupphed.&#13;
KALAMAIOO DI8T1UCT—W. J. ALDRICH, I'. U.&#13;
AilCKan-*-R ibert t^hurts.&#13;
AugU6ta—N. Al. Steele.&#13;
Bautied—U. H. Perry.&#13;
Bloomlij^dait—E. V. Armstrong.&#13;
Climax—E. A. T a u t e r .&#13;
Couietoek—Paul Deejardlnes.&#13;
Cooler—\S. A . Ba-s.&#13;
- DeUk;iasr—A. M. £ t d r e d .&#13;
Feuuvillt—L&gt;. W. Fow. *&#13;
Gales burg—E. S. McChesney.&#13;
Irviugton—-J. H. Tboaiiis.&#13;
Kalamazoo—A-.--M-. Gould.&#13;
_; feuJu)ls—J. Wilks.&#13;
Martii;—L. W . CalklcB.&#13;
Me idou—L. D t L i t u n r t e r .&#13;
O^hleniii—Wright Barrett.&#13;
Oitego— A. T. Fergugor.&#13;
Plaluwell—D. (J. Ball.&#13;
Parkville—H. D. Hunt.&#13;
Phiirieviik—S. D. MeKce.&#13;
Rtehlami—W. P. F r n i e b .&#13;
^(Uiooleraf?—U. W P.trsoLe.&#13;
South H*veu—G. B. Kulj&gt;.&#13;
Three Rif-eff—t). a. F&gt;»x.&#13;
Vicktburg—J. J. McAllister.&#13;
WauUesbui:uiid Notlawa—8, KitzmtJler.&#13;
K1I.ES 1U9T1UCT—ISAAC TATLOR P. X.&#13;
—liaimui -rt:d Bret il^vifli— G. A. Buell.&#13;
Benum Warboi—L ^ Kir'.&#13;
Berrien oprii.gr—J. Wmto..&#13;
BtiOgeuian auu a;eveiit-vilie —B. 8. Hosklne.&#13;
Buclinuai.—(' li. T.ioiiius.&#13;
La-M poiif—J 11. l a i ' i u r .&#13;
Lul.niui a. li WV.tervu it—K. 8. Williamson.&#13;
D.I.VIOL—Supplied by W. L. .lackwuyn.&#13;
Di-e.ii ur—sS. J. • L.I h.iway.&#13;
Di.v.auaA— \ , 1) Is'ewToti.&#13;
E l,*an..st.iii g—U. C. K iiott,.&#13;
Hartiord—L. S Mhtlnvv.^.&#13;
K&gt; I'ler ai.n Stiver (Jri. k— W.&#13;
Li GraiikCe—J. W. lUiel.&#13;
Uiwtoi.—'J. i). Watklu:!.&#13;
••Martrnliu—c. H. Fislier.&#13;
.'^-ttuiwaii—W. W.'Latiij&#13;
New Buililo and TiiK'e&#13;
liiit^.&#13;
Xlli-i—I. l ^ i r T Wlgbtman.&#13;
P . o v p w — Vv. I),,uat.&#13;
P^ow—H. 11. Parker.&#13;
PoK.ii;i&gt;C— 1. Wilt-on.&#13;
tiu Jotepb—G L. Cole.&#13;
Vamiaila and William.-,villi— E. 13. Patterson.&#13;
GKAXO UAT'IDS UISTUICT—II. M. JOT, F. B.&#13;
Alaska ar.d A'la—To be supplhd.&#13;
Ashland—W. A Frye.&#13;
Berllu and Lainout—J W. Homer.&#13;
Byron Center and Dorr Center—A. J.&#13;
Wheeler.&#13;
Oledonta—N. D. Marsh.&#13;
Caunoii6burg—A. M. Griffith.&#13;
CaBUovia—A. J. Van \V5ck.&#13;
Cedar Springs—E Wygle.&#13;
Coopersville —II. 1) J u n i o r .&#13;
Graud IlaVeL—W. W. Koik.&#13;
Gram! Rapids—A-DOB Church, H. C . Crawford.&#13;
Grand R j p l d s - D l v W o n street—J. E. Gilbert.&#13;
y&#13;
Grand. Rapids, East street—.J. W. l i . Carlisle.&#13;
(&#13;
G r a u l Rapies, l'lftinville avtnnc—L. Oodds.&#13;
Grand K i p u h , tttc-md s t r e e t ^ I . W. Miller,&#13;
Grundvdlt— Supplied by F. L. rhoinpson.&#13;
Hasth;gt —W. A. Hunsderger.&#13;
liobauu Hijil V.ntura—T.'_T. George.&#13;
Irving—Supphed-&#13;
Mldu'ieviili—J. E •Vti'.ie&#13;
Mi.nteri-j — R. Shier.&#13;
Mu&gt;Ke...ot—J. I. one!!.&#13;
Nuwajgt — vV. G . a ' J b e r .&#13;
Raveuii..—'J. Sofiuema.&#13;
R-Jcklor—G.-W. Tuthill.&#13;
apariii—A. Hunsberi.x-r.&#13;
Spiiug L.tt%e—S ipplied by J. F. Kawllneon.&#13;
Waylund »ud Br;idie\—ludian inissloi;—R.&#13;
Pbillipps.&#13;
iiasiings c mr: — &gt;ur&gt;[&gt;'ied by A. K. Stewart.&#13;
I05IA DISTUICT-C h. lUKXUUiDT, !•: E&#13;
beiding—Sappln-d' by C. Seyuiour.&#13;
Booiu—). A. Weyaii't. • "&#13;
Carson City—F.'l. lieiV&#13;
Coral—Wm. PirrcH&#13;
Djnby—F. N. J.inea,&#13;
EdUiOrt—D. C. Rn.-hl.&#13;
Kiru H a l — I . VV. Peiklna.&#13;
, Freeport—D, IJ. Thomas.&#13;
Greenvlll*-—G. 1&gt;. Lee.&#13;
(ineuville Ctrcult- L. M. Garlic!;.&#13;
Huhiiar-tstou—D. C. v'tioiiard.&#13;
I'&gt;niii—L. Masters.&#13;
.Lakevicw—D. S. Havihind.&#13;
Langston—A. J. Camden.&#13;
Lowell—J. W. Davids.&#13;
Lyon* ai.u Muir—J. Gulick.&#13;
Orange—J. F. Urwlek.&#13;
Orleai.s—S. U. Woodard.&#13;
Pal.—T. li. Jaeokcs.&#13;
Saranac—-W. Jurid.&#13;
MherfUan—J. R. Bowen.&#13;
Srantoii—11. S. B a r g d &gt;&#13;
T-Tgcnnes and K^trC—J. Marsolf.&#13;
WoodUnd—CvfTWJgbi mun.&#13;
Almii—-.]&gt;-WT SuHon.&#13;
fatlO niSTKICT—JAMI'.S HAMILTON, P. E,&#13;
Bath—G. L. Mount.&#13;
Breckenrldge—Supplied by E. A. Boynton.&#13;
Charlotte—J. W. Held,&#13;
D e W l t t - T h o m ^ a R i ^ e y .&#13;
Eaton RapldR—W. 1 1'^gsball.&#13;
FowUr—Supplied by F. F . BHMr &gt;&#13;
Ithica—8. NelfiOD.&#13;
Grand Ledg»—J. B. Knott.&#13;
Grwham—A. Potter.&#13;
Ltnalng, Central church—W. H. Thcuipeoa.&#13;
Mason.&#13;
Oaks—G. W. ^ o s -&#13;
Lrttwiiig, Fm*t church—J. S. Valentine.&#13;
Lls'iM — C . A . JnCOkl'H.&#13;
M.ipk- R i p i d s - E 11. Dest'tle.&#13;
Maatui—F L. M.Coy.&#13;
(Mtrtn. *— G, -E f oliister.&#13;
Ovid—G C. I)-.iper.&#13;
nutersvlHi —N. L. Mrockwav.&#13;
St. Johns— R. H. BreMily.&#13;
St. L..uls-Vl. W. F Smith.&#13;
Vennoinville—B E. Paddock.&#13;
Victor—A M F ICII.&#13;
K»gh' l i r e m t - V. P. Welch.&#13;
Elsie—Gu&gt;. Varloti.&#13;
Portland—M. VI. C.illen.&#13;
Winnfleld— Wui. Tayior.&#13;
BIO KAP1BS DISTK1CT—J. A. bPKAWUH, r. I .&#13;
B k R ^ l x — J . VV Halleubtck.&#13;
Clare—W. M. Younglove.&#13;
Calkfiiuvilk—J. K. Richardf.&#13;
('base—To be suoplle&lt;i.&#13;
Evarl—George 1) maldson.&#13;
FreRiout—S G. Blatiehaid.&#13;
Fre* Soil - E ; V Newell.&#13;
G l a d w i n - A . ^. Jeuklus.&#13;
Hart—Wm. Puffer.&#13;
Harrison—Suppiiud bv J. Robinson.&#13;
Hersey—Suuplibd by Geo. Killeau.&#13;
Hespe'ria—J. C. Beach.&#13;
Howard Ciiy — H. R Uawl*y.&#13;
Ludlogton—J , K. Stark.&#13;
Luther—Geo Lookhart.&#13;
Manistee—J. C Floyd.&#13;
Alillb-ook—C E Mitchell.&#13;
Montague—M. W. Kuapp.&#13;
Morley— C. W. Smith.&#13;
Mt. P l e a s a n t - G . L. Halght.&#13;
North Muskegon—J. N. Dayton.&#13;
Pentwater—A. H. Gamble.&#13;
Pieraon—fi. T Lumbar.&#13;
Rte.i City— G. Daniels.&#13;
SHeUiy--ti. P. Blake.&#13;
Salt R i v e r - S u p p l i e d by A. A. Dirllng.&#13;
Summit—Thomas Young.&#13;
Stan wood—-To-be supplied.&#13;
Whitehall—Wm. Handsorue.&#13;
Whlt..&gt; Cloud—C. U. Theobold.&#13;
Big Rapids—Third avenue—J. VV. Warren."&#13;
Ashtou—To bo supplied.&#13;
Coleman—L. B Bacon,&#13;
Isabella—II S. T a r t :&#13;
HoJ 10li — To by supplied. .. *•&#13;
OKAND THAVEKIE 1MSTKICT— IV. K. STINCHCi)&#13;
MU, V. B,&#13;
Alralra—L. Rlnaev.&#13;
Bear Lake—C. C. Dawkin.&#13;
Belluire and Spercer reek&#13;
ton.&#13;
Benzonla— Supplied by S. Gloyti&#13;
Boone—A L Thurston.&#13;
Cadillac—0~"B. Whit more.&#13;
Cadillac Circuit—D. A. Green.&#13;
Charlevoix—J. T. Iddlngs.&#13;
(•rotg VIHat.— E Eagle.&#13;
EikRapidg— O J. Golden.&#13;
Fife L a k e - S . P. Hewitt.&#13;
Frankfort—E. G. stevenp&#13;
Harbor_Springe—-T. J. Freeman.&#13;
Lake City—J. W. Smith.&#13;
Leroy—J. F. McKeuley.&#13;
M-tuceiona—J-. C Andrews.&#13;
Manton—G. S. ilicks.&#13;
Monroe Center—A. R. Keeler.&#13;
Northport—A. VV. Buskee.&#13;
Norwood—G..W. Howe.&#13;
Petoskey—G.'VV. Sherman.&#13;
Petoskey circuits—J R. Robinson,&#13;
Shi rtnan—A. J. Eidred.&#13;
S u t h Arm—To be supplied .&#13;
.Traverse City—E. H. Day.&#13;
"Traverse City circuit—O. &lt;T.&#13;
Glen Haven—R. W. rindaJL&#13;
Williamsburg— W Heath.&#13;
At the closing sesnfoi. of the conference the&#13;
temperance queat.iovi c tiled forth, bitter discussion,&#13;
at the eloee f which the iollo"Wdug clause&#13;
was ml '(ted :&#13;
Jt+ok/e&lt;t, That tetnperai.ee has a rightful&#13;
place in the polities of the state, anil, wliile we&#13;
by no n:esoi- ricijiij'ze it as the only nn'sisure&#13;
of public conei rn in current politics, we do&#13;
cousliier it of M.eh imr;i;n,,unt import^1 ee tJ+rt^&#13;
we will t Xfi t our 11 iluence through j^-rfCvMIS&#13;
and police '1 eh m i u l s hi favor ot^tt^tul a-^t -&#13;
^ en::e 011 the p:iri, (.f iudivlouarls and of sta;utcry&#13;
and coii-iirutl &gt;n ilpr-oliibii ion on the p«rL&#13;
of the s l a t e . " Thi&gt;-f- not at a l hatij*f tetnry&#13;
PENSIONS T O ' A L L SOLDI KI.'S A SA1LOUS.&#13;
..„tt'ill.i._liitIlLdiiiIlLli.'ilhy w.Munbs *li^i':i**«-, H.-ei.lau*&#13;
or otherwise, the loss of a li&gt;.\ piles, vm ifose' veH)4,&#13;
i-iirniiie diarrlueii, rujitin'e, loss of si^nt or (parlUH.&#13;
v soi; loss of h.'iu'in^, fulling hiu-k nf m**at&gt;J««,&#13;
rhnu'iiHitisin, any disuhillly, no mtitlcr lior« ^liifht,&#13;
qives von ii pension. .Vne &lt;tnd Itt.nombt* JMsehurgtm&#13;
Uhtamtd \\ "uU&gt;\\ s, eliilriien, niothurv,&#13;
iui.1 futliers of i»ul&lt;li«i-s living in tho service., ot&#13;
urflwnvurcls, fioin .liseuse c'oiitiuenil or wuuiuli* n»-&#13;
c*»iveil while in dm s.M'vice, ale entitleil to yenf&gt;&#13;
ioii. Kfjecte&lt;] and :iM;iiiit.nif-vl elaiins a sprri&amp;ttf.&#13;
BCIUNTY, BACK PAY, AND H O R S E CLAIMS C o t&#13;
INCHKASK V O l ' i : i'KNSION.&#13;
A pensiou can bu. increased ut any time wliea&#13;
Mve aiiobility warrants it. AM y.ni ^fow oldsr ttw&#13;
wound has yruriually uaideriTiined tlmconsMtmtioij^&#13;
tttt* dib«a*eT)as made, ymi more tielplsss. fu tomb&#13;
maunor tbw di-"J'iLity lias tih rentierl; so opply for&#13;
an rncrease at once. ,' *&#13;
LAND AND PATENT Ctttms SOLICITED&#13;
My eiperlence, and being bero at h«ndquartea»&#13;
bDAOla me to attend promptly to ull elaiws »x*taft&#13;
»t«UoTernnient. Circulars free. Addrens, wfth&#13;
ntamw:&#13;
M. V. TIF-HNEY,&#13;
Box 4 8 5 . W A S H I N G T O N , D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHroRMEN&#13;
-R. M. Middle-&#13;
Whltma^.-&#13;
P R O F .&#13;
HARRIS'&#13;
A Eadical Cvro&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
-A.2T3D&#13;
1MP0TENCY.&#13;
CcS"Teeted for over 5&#13;
yoara 17 uso la thousands&#13;
of c a s e s .&#13;
T. ieee TRIAL&#13;
PACKACE.&#13;
ICERYOCSDKBIUri •»&#13;
orgtaiu wtyAncuwid at&#13;
CI/, Alii BUBMTDUI 0 »&#13;
toara dlw«*M, b*ffli«|&#13;
ikilinu phjkicikni, nmM&#13;
from juuiirul iadUaM&gt;&#13;
tloni, too free ladalfttMb&#13;
ftnl over bralu worl. DA&#13;
not tempo:lie whU« tnm&#13;
eoemlei lurk lu fov V »&#13;
. Arold bving InpoMH&#13;
ca tj frclcQtluus clalmi m&#13;
c her rusicJIcs for Uittf&#13;
troublei. Oct our free elr««-&#13;
Itf uud trful packajfl u j&#13;
1 :-\ra imporUnt fauM a«fo#&#13;
tnkln? tr.nriuen* eliowbMV&#13;
T^lie a rrrunJ j lh»t baa euroft&#13;
thousiiila o:)1 dooi col llttc.-&#13;
fero with »uculion to buJBccs&#13;
« or cau'« pain or UI&gt;&gt;OB&gt;&#13;
venlcnce. • Kouadud on 101»&#13;
rntitts medicil prliwiplML&#13;
Crowlni? lu fa* or and r«put*&gt;&#13;
tlnn. Direct »[&gt;p!icallon lo tto&#13;
fc*t of -livaso n.akM 1U ip«-&#13;
riP.o lntlurocc ffclt withorit&#13;
tela)-. Thor»lural fua«.&#13;
tion* of Ubc hamui crM»&gt;&#13;
lim cro restored. Tb*&#13;
anlmk'in; el«m«nM C&#13;
life" \vliloU bare t*cp&#13;
waitod urn given b»o|.&#13;
The r»lienl b«ooa»*&#13;
h e e r f u l wid gals*&#13;
SENO ADDRESS - ^ ^ ^ iinjib...&#13;
HARRIS REWIE37rCO.,MTgChamtitt.&#13;
806¾ North 10th S t . t S t . Louis, Mo.&#13;
Qu UOKTH'S TREATMENT. $312 MONTHS,$5 J 3 MONTHS, (I,&#13;
-f&#13;
ItrpmhtbiTunri&#13;
dorsemeii "&#13;
wlui iletiiami an . ipl'iV. in&#13;
LOW t o G e t Gr.Ay H a i r s A m o n g&#13;
A u b u r n Lrocka.&#13;
Cliie.iKO Herald.&#13;
'•J)id -you ever get scared half to&#13;
death tor nothingr"1 asked a clerk in a&#13;
down-town s t o r o w h o had just returned&#13;
from his vacntiou. "Well, I did, aiul&#13;
I'll tell you about it. Out, whero my&#13;
folks live there i.s a railroad bridge of&#13;
the old trestle style. Itis about 40 feet&#13;
hijjk and crosses a valley only, there&#13;
beinij no water under it. When I was&#13;
a boy I used to walk that britlgo day or&#13;
night, *ind the other evening 1 wanted&#13;
to go across and started out just as I '&#13;
used to do. When I got about halfway&#13;
over I heard a train coming, and&#13;
seeing that I could not roach tho other&#13;
end I let myself down under the stringers&#13;
and hun«r by my hands as 1 have done&#13;
a hundreds times when a boy. Somehow,&#13;
my arms are not as strong as they&#13;
used to bo and the} Bched long before&#13;
tho tmin came. In my haste I had got&#13;
into an uncomfortable position before&#13;
it was«n&gt; cussary. Finally tho locomotive&#13;
struck the bridge and at last went&#13;
thundering over my head. My hold&#13;
was tveakening every minute, and I soon&#13;
'realized that 1 could not hang oh much&#13;
longer. I believe that train was a mile&#13;
long. The prespiration fairly streamed&#13;
from me as I thought of "the awful&#13;
plunge I must soon make. Then my&#13;
Lead.reoled a n l my nerveless fingers&#13;
slipped from thu stringers and down I&#13;
went— about six inches. They had been&#13;
iillm&lt;r in the old trestle with earth, iqten&lt;&#13;
ling to make an embankment there,&#13;
and 1 had not noticed it in t h o - d a r k -&#13;
no.*s. If j o u fellows see any gray hairs&#13;
in tlies* auburn locks of mine you will&#13;
know how they got there.1 '&#13;
.—,—•&#13;
E n g l i s h S h i r e H o r s e s S o l d t o&#13;
A m e r i c a n s .&#13;
London Times.&#13;
T h ; r e was a great saleo&gt;5fh'ire horses&#13;
at Singleton Park, nejHrt*reston, recently,&#13;
when a large^btJay of breeders from&#13;
all parts of^-trheTkingdom and of America&#13;
wej?«r present. There were fortv one&#13;
als sold.&#13;
The chief buyers were Mr. McDonald&#13;
and Mr. Thompson of America and the&#13;
Countess of Camperdowa. Th« .-.took&#13;
was chiefly by Honest Tom, how 20&#13;
years old. Of brood marcs on'e fetched&#13;
126 and another 110 guineas. T h e&#13;
average aras 80 guineas. Of three-year&#13;
-old fillies three fetched over 100 guineas&#13;
each, and of two-year-olds two were&#13;
bought for the United States at over 100&#13;
guineas each. There were some splendid&#13;
.stallions sold. The Countess of&#13;
Gamrrerdown bought one at 200 guineas&#13;
Mr. Pole Gell one for lj&gt;5, and Mr. Mc- j&#13;
llonakl one for tKe~T7nited States for •&#13;
110 guinea*.&#13;
L&#13;
T H I S MAGNJ^PtC BELT IS&#13;
WAflRAtjJEB1KURE|Mrffift&#13;
TrlM.iuitjWlilcmni-I'iilt! 1 it t h e b a c h , lilp», hos»&lt;l&gt; or'&#13;
liinjMfiicrv.nn (k'liillty,Iiiiiil»uco, gi'ncrul del.'lity,&#13;
vire»imiUl«m, i:;iruly»l», iii'iirul^-in, r»rlulicn, dlnen»-&#13;
oi oi [|i«51, i^liu'-. »,«i&gt;liiul tltieiitiva, torj&gt;!&lt;l l i v e r , gout-,&#13;
i;,mlnitl &lt;-mi«»lc.ii». Impotoncj-, uothmu, hivirt. dl»-&#13;
&lt;-in&lt;\ &lt;ly»l»('I&gt;*':', »'niiftl(&gt;iit'»ii, ri-yxlrvliiSt linll(»o»-&#13;
i'.&gt;r, Ii.rnlu o r rtiplure, cuLirrii, yli'-M, Ciiilv^tyt&#13;
v. 1,. n ,.!iy &lt;:&lt;•&gt;.i.uycf t h o O F y r - ; : A T T v r . « » u o . &gt; N - ;&#13;
n- ••.,' ••, lui&gt;t vitality • luck of uc-rMt I.&gt;vru uml &gt;li;or,&#13;
&lt;.-. u ..IIIII \veul.iieK«H'M,iind all lLo*o &lt;lj»t'!tnp« o f n jicrhiuiul&#13;
uut.it-v. froiiMthatovor en\:sc, t i n oomuinou*&#13;
Mivum "{ Mai^nciisin pi rmri.liai; ihroutli 11&gt;" p.irfx&#13;
rn ii nt rontoro thorn to ft h r n l t h y uetlou. TUoi t 1-i no&#13;
LAD|E5AGNETIC&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER.&#13;
TO THE LADIESs —""*•"«a-asit1 I U J i l l . U n U I U W I N c u r . i B i o , tierroui&#13;
ErlinT»tloo,nTtpep«)»,orT7lth l&gt;l»e«»etof tb« I4r*&#13;
«r. Kidney*. JUcmUcho or Cold Feet, -"iwolUn or&#13;
Weak Ankle*, or Swollen Feet, an Abdominal Belt&#13;
and a pair of MasneUa Foot Batteries haro no auperlor&#13;
In tha re'lef anrl cure of all these complaints, Th»y&#13;
carry a powerful magnetic fores to tlio seat of taa&#13;
For Lame Back, Weakneiaof ttio Cnlne, Fall-&#13;
' • 4 of th« womb, Leacorrhosa, Chronic lnllumnta.&#13;
tloa and UleerutJon of the Womb, lnefdontal H m &gt;&#13;
orrhave ar Flooding, Painful, Supprcued and ia.&#13;
recular Mcnatraatloat Barrennew, and chance mt&#13;
life, thla UtUo Ueat AppLUneo and Curative Acaat&#13;
For all forms nf Female DMBcnlttni It is urnnrpawed&#13;
by any thin ft betore Indented, buth aa a cwattTa&#13;
ajfer.t and aa a Hoviroe of power and Tltaiixatlon.&#13;
Prloe of ottlicr Dolt with Hagru-t ic Foot Batteries. tlCL&#13;
Bent by express C.O. D ,and cxnmlimtlon allowed, or or&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In ordering. *«nd meaatira ot&#13;
waiatandslzoof ahoo Reir,l:t-J!cs&amp;wi betuadeiuenxreimy,&#13;
iwnt lJilettiTat OV.Tritic.&#13;
The Magneton Ganr.cnt -i are adaptH to all ages, aro&#13;
worn OTor tho underclothinK, (not next to tbo&#13;
body like tho many Galvanic and KloatrtoIIom*&#13;
bug* adverlUcd an f&gt;xtcn»lvt 1v) ar:d should bo&#13;
taken off at niprht. Thoy hold th.-lrjx&gt;tvtrfortver,taA&#13;
are worn at all sea?nn-i r&gt;f t!v v^rvr.&#13;
8*nd stamp for ti:o-Sr-w D..nn; tnre inycdloat Trea*.&#13;
Bient Without ilciilcinc," with lauu--ar.0iioC teeUrqo*&#13;
T H E M A G N E T O N A P P L I A N C E C O M&#13;
¾18 Stc\tu wu, i h l c i i s o , E L&#13;
The Magnetie applianoe-s may hv seen&#13;
at Winehell's Drug Store, Piyknev^&#13;
Mich.&#13;
MERMOTT'S&#13;
r&gt;_&#13;
C9&#13;
" ^&#13;
r^&#13;
MANDRAK&#13;
PILLS, CURESick'Headcche, Dyspepsia, Liter&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
r S O X l C I ' : . — Without u jurtirle of doubt, TCer.&#13;
I'liiii'is i'lllsaro thrmoat pnpular of anyon thuinur-&#13;
!.-• t. Having bepn Itcloivihe public for aquartrrol'&#13;
aciMitHry.and haviuj; always pur formed niorelhaa,&#13;
H is promised for thtm, 'hoy merit the auocenatb&amp;t&#13;
'i-oy hafnattainod. l » r l c e , a j C . p e r b O X o&#13;
For sale by all Unionists,&#13;
Kert»otts Pilla always in stock at&#13;
W i n c h c r s Drug JStuje, r i n c k n e y , Mi.-lN&#13;
T H 4 Y S T K A W S .&#13;
Aeslfttant Sfcntary Ccen has r&gt;«en delegated&#13;
to act as Mrrt'tary ol the treasury for 10 days&#13;
froni Se^t. \I&gt;.&#13;
The Canadian voyagers f&lt;&gt;r the Gordon re&#13;
Hef expedition BaihriMftwu Quebec on the lftta&#13;
lust.&#13;
For tlic week eudlnjj Sepr, 13, 403,9^0 silver&#13;
dollars were itsued from the U/cJ. tnlnta.&#13;
The Uarth'M coiumitteo of the state of New&#13;
York ^appointed *" i ^ *JY Uov Cornell, have&#13;
reporftd ta (iov. Cleveland that the total&#13;
amount collected tu tu« various counties of the&#13;
btate !B f9,&amp;i9.V3, wlik-li amoiint will be forwarded&#13;
tu thy National Committee.&#13;
The Meaiurr Great Eastern will brln« over&#13;
the Kuropi'ini yovorm-'ntai cxiiiblta in October&#13;
to the New OrlraiJK cxpotdtlou.&#13;
Doukrln*!*. t)i«' dominion canal cowraiRsioner,&#13;
urges the dt;..-! vtAr.i: ul tbecauals tu 14 feet as&#13;
Decenary 10 ictaiu the traffic.&#13;
'Off the Newfoundland coast 319 Icebergs are&#13;
drilling M.u'h.&#13;
The. cotton liii'&lt;!iic8B in Georgia 1H very dull,&#13;
nearlv u.l I he mills running on nduci'd time.&#13;
The Em« ip-in-mills, of Augusta, Ga., have&#13;
abut down OTI Kc.'uuut of the depression.&#13;
The treasury department, has notified Collector&#13;
Kohirtw'ii of New York to prohibit the&#13;
landing of immigrants until they are examined&#13;
by tbe eoujudBsto:&gt;er&gt;. of immigration.&#13;
The treasury of the Egyptian rebels contains&#13;
only 15^,0W. Th&lt; y are also nparted short of&#13;
immuuUiuu.&#13;
The-civil service reform association are taking&#13;
vigorous action agaiust the levyicg of political&#13;
assessments.&#13;
Fred. Douglas ic confldtut, that Republican&#13;
victory is alrtady aesured.&#13;
The remains of J. A. Mactiaban, tbe newspaper&#13;
correspondent WUJMKJ fame is worldwide,&#13;
have been laid in their last resting place at&#13;
New LexlDKtor, O.&#13;
, Beveral inch's of sno^ fi-11 in Cumberland&#13;
oouufy, near Halifax, N. S., 8eDt. 16.&#13;
Justice Bradley cf tbe United States supreme&#13;
eourt denies the rumoT that he is about to&#13;
resign.&#13;
JohD G. VVirlttier declined the nomination&#13;
/or piesldential elector.&#13;
The United States circuit court of Pennsylvania,&#13;
engaged in disbursing the estatet&gt;f Jay&#13;
Cooke, awarded-U* the Garfield Vicmorialhos&#13;
pita) 111,5' 0, that amoiiut having been deposited&#13;
with Jay Cooke &amp; Co.&#13;
Mis; Koma Sickles the beautiful daughter&#13;
""Of a N«w YorK1 imlttOTiaire,-elupei with and&#13;
was married to the family butcher a few days&#13;
since,&#13;
Bandits makv afuiilp attempt to burn Matatizas,&#13;
Cuba. Twenty-five of tue bandits were&#13;
arrthted.&#13;
A largf cattle bsislmssU springing up between&#13;
Ontario and builalo. Shipments from&#13;
Ontario to tji&lt;- latter Huee-aro sold at: a 'jjood&#13;
.profit to f.hipp( r*. PhiLidelpldar^caUle dealers&#13;
art- iii (\ironio buying e'hliielor export unl for&#13;
briidiig v^'l-oprr^—Thty hope to raise for&#13;
-ex'.ort-u-itf rit^th'ut w i i coiiimwl as yood&#13;
pvicis iu thtrtirUish murk; t as'the Canadians&#13;
do. ...---^&#13;
^"-frvfideut CJov scabs' recent menage to the&#13;
Mi-X'cstn COULD s*, tieciares th'i president's ' Xpectatioii&#13;
of a speedy eoi sti't m tion ( f ihe reciprocity&#13;
treily M ' h the Unit' d State*; ree-&#13;
. oiniu-uds l he iTitUMni of the tirrv ot th"&#13;
treaty ptrmitti-*; t.ioops in pursuit of savages&#13;
tocruFsihc l&gt;ouu Ur) ; r» cinmneiuls subsidies&#13;
to stciui]:-hip Hut &gt;; and i!iacu ses t-ic developincut&#13;
of raU-vjijs iiMi i olographs, colonl/. itlon,&#13;
aLd harbor Improvciiouts. A commission will&#13;
be ten*, to Utiluti and Japan to looii alter Mtx&gt;.-&#13;
cau commercial iutenei.t!.&#13;
The p-opleof !'*!»• '&gt;ropo-e to present King&#13;
Humbert will; .i r..ayniticent i/oid medal 1n&#13;
recognition ol hi-" 'personal eff irt.a for thy&#13;
amelioration iif ;U" oufL rings of the cholera&#13;
aiH ctcd peoi'L' Tue ute ial will betr an Inscription&#13;
mating that it is given for ''civil&#13;
valor. "&#13;
Women sre coming more and more to the&#13;
front in tne matter "of iducation. Mme.&#13;
Kuowabloskl has recently been appointed professor&#13;
of mathematics at the university of&#13;
Stockholm, and Miss Clara Dawes has taken&#13;
her degree of A. M. at London university, being&#13;
the tlret woman in England who has attained&#13;
that honor.&#13;
The resumption of negotiations with China&#13;
is opposed by Prime Minister Ferry.&#13;
Gen. Sheridan was re elected president of&#13;
the Army of the Cumberland at the recent reunion&#13;
in Rochester.&#13;
Capt. Dudley and Mate Stephenson of the&#13;
lost yacht M'gnonette have been eomraltted for&#13;
trial In London on a Charge of murder. While&#13;
drifting about iu a small boat without water&#13;
or food they killed tbe cabin hoy, drank his&#13;
blood and ate his body-tkadfcth*ir~ewB-llvt;3 aud-j&#13;
the lives uf a seamtm named Brooks miirht be&#13;
preserved. The seaman was released from arrest.&#13;
Investigation by health officers shows that&#13;
the Potomac river, the sole source of Washing&#13;
Ion's water Bupply, is being used as a receptacle&#13;
for hogs dyiug from cholera in Virginia&#13;
and Mar) land' Dr. Townsend says that .".arv&#13;
ciiSM's of hogs in various stages of decomposlti'tt.&#13;
il &gt;ated in the river and canal, or .were&#13;
loi.ed among the rocks along the banks, and&#13;
tin canal boatmen from farther up the river&#13;
reported tbe stench from putrifying carcasses&#13;
in the upper river and canai territle.&#13;
The managers of the New Jersey state fair&#13;
have notiued Gen. Butler that they have&#13;
changid their minds about haying him speaT&#13;
At the fair and have formally resclndea the invitation.&#13;
Bostonwaa 245 years olil Sept. IT.&#13;
Massachusetts," Is only 80, but is already the&#13;
author of several historical works, a candidate&#13;
for congress, and chairman of the Btate republican&#13;
committee.&#13;
King Kalakua's son died of cholera in Naples&#13;
Sept 18.&#13;
There were 1^,000,000 yards less woolen c?oth&#13;
produced in the United States last year than&#13;
the year before.&#13;
• monument is to be erected in one of the Subllc tquares of Baltimore to Frances&#13;
arton Keys, another of the "Star Spangled&#13;
Banner."&#13;
Reported that President Arthur wants to&#13;
enter the Senate a t the close of his presidential&#13;
term.- *&#13;
E. C. Lamed, a Chicago lawyer, and United&#13;
States District Attorney prior to tbe civil war,&#13;
is dead.&#13;
Wm, HarrlBon, a thief, while bein^ taken,&#13;
(hand-cuffed) from Baltimore to Bowie Station,&#13;
Md.. jumped from the irafti wheu it. was&#13;
moving 4U mlleo an hour and made, ins etcape.&#13;
An earthquake shock on th&lt;- l'dth tr&gt;t. made&#13;
the inhabitants of Ohio and Indiana think the&#13;
judgment day had come.&#13;
Gen. Wolseley will start on the Nile expedition&#13;
en the 15th of October.&#13;
While Gen. Alfred M. rtcalet*, Democratic&#13;
candidate for governor of North Carolina, was&#13;
canvassing Western North Carolina, his horse&#13;
ran away in crossing the Dowee Mountains,&#13;
Jackson county. Tue horse fell down i* precipice&#13;
100 feet, was killed and the hUL'gy smashed&#13;
to atoms. Scales was caught ia a" tree aud&#13;
barely escaped with his life.&#13;
Mollle Magulres are reorganizing ia Pennsylvania.&#13;
The prohibition movement throughout the&#13;
country ia assuming remarkable proportions.&#13;
Anti-Butler papers are making capital out&#13;
of the fact that Butler ia not connected with&#13;
the G. A. R.&#13;
Foreet fires have done greatdamare on LohjE&#13;
W i n d .&#13;
Hog cholera is prevalent in Pennsylvania.&#13;
In some cases the disease does not appear to be&#13;
true bog cholera, bat is of the nature ot pleu-&#13;
. fo-pneumontd in cattle, the lungs of the animal&#13;
being affected.&#13;
Two thousand French troops landed on the&#13;
ISth at the Kinpai pass on the Min river below&#13;
Foo Chow a u i attacked the Chinese. The&#13;
latter were defeated with heavy loss.&#13;
Russian newspapers hail the appointment of&#13;
"Burl Duller in as V eeroy to India as an augury&#13;
of ttie eontiuuaicc of the entente cordlale b "&#13;
• tween Eug'.Hiid and Russia and as a guarantee&#13;
of a satislax'tory dclimination of the Af&#13;
frontl«r.&#13;
^ I t e v .Mother Superior Mary Francis i a v i e r&#13;
•WzW*', founder of' the order of Sisters of&#13;
Mercy iu Au,i rlcp, diet! at St. Mary's Convent&#13;
M»Lcnet&gt;Ur, N. 11,, a few da*s ago.&#13;
Two daughti rs of the late Capt. Nutt o*&#13;
Uulontowu, Pa.., died a few tjays ago, in great&#13;
agony. It is believedihat the well from which&#13;
the family obtained water had been poisoned.&#13;
Owing to a lack of work the government&#13;
printing office has been temporarily clostd.&#13;
A son of Lieut. K'slingburg of the Greeley&#13;
party has b* en appointed as cadet-at-large to&#13;
tbe naval academy at Annapoll?.&#13;
*i Mrs. Ahem, a drunken woman of Albany,&#13;
N. Y,, threw City Marshall Clark, who had&#13;
gone to her house to serve a writ of ejectment,&#13;
over the ralliug, breaking his neck.&#13;
The annual report of |thc superlntenden t of&#13;
construction ot the new dapartmetrtal build-&#13;
Inge a t Washington shows that $1,9(0,000 has&#13;
been spent on the state, war and navy depart*&#13;
ment building, of which tbe north wing has&#13;
been completed. About luOO,COO will be required&#13;
for next year's work.&#13;
A decision made at St. Lou hi, Mo., in a »uit&#13;
to compel cattle men to pay a penalty for attempting&#13;
to lease grazing, virtually decides&#13;
t t a t Indians have a right to lease their lands&#13;
lor grating purposes. ,&#13;
Henry Capot Ledge, 4,the coming man o t&#13;
S u r p r i s i n g f o r t h e D o c t o r s .&#13;
New York Tribune.&#13;
The recovery* of Louisa H u l t z m a n ,&#13;
w h o waa d i s c h a r g e d y e s t e r d a y from t h e&#13;
N i n e t y - n i n t h s t r e e t hospital, is o n e of&#13;
t h o s e m a r v e l o u s cases iu w h i c h n a t u r e ,&#13;
u n a s s i s t e d by t h e s u r g e o n ' s a r t , saves&#13;
the life of t h e p a t i e n t after a l l ho"pe h a d&#13;
lied. I t will be r e m e m b e r e d t h a t &gt; b e&#13;
w a s t u r n e d o u t of h o m e by h e r l a t h e r&#13;
on thq^ eveniDg of A u g , " 6 l a s f a n d&#13;
w a n d e r e d a b o u t t h e s t r e e t s of H a r l e m&#13;
all n i g h t . A t d a y b r e a k s h e s t a g g e r e d&#13;
upon i h o v e r a n d a in front of J o b n W.&#13;
F u n k ' s h o u s e , a n d h e seeing t h e s h a d o w&#13;
of lier h e a d u p o n t h o w i n d o w p a n e ,&#13;
mistook h e r t o r a b u r g l a r a n d tired&#13;
tw*o shots i i o n i a tfririy-two c a l i b e r revolver,&#13;
both of w h i c h took efleet in h e r&#13;
head. £ h e w a s p i c k e d u p by a n officer,&#13;
who found h e r l y i n g in t h e s t r e e t quite&#13;
a distance from M r . F u n k ' s house, a n d&#13;
convoyed h e r t o t h e N i n e t y - n i n t h struct&#13;
h o s p i t a l . A n e x a m i n a t i o n r e v e a l e d t w o&#13;
gbastly w o u n d s . T h e d i a g o n a l course&#13;
followed b y e a c h of t h e batls m u s t huve&#13;
caused t h e m t o i n t e r s e c t n e a r t h e int&#13;
e r n a l ' brain c e n t e r , a n d o w i n g t o t h e&#13;
larjje c a l i b e r a n d force with w h i c h t h e&#13;
balls s t r u c k t h e s k u l l a t short r a n g e a&#13;
l a r g e p o r t i o n of t h e brain m u s t h a v e&#13;
been t e r r i b l y l a c e r a t e d , a n d t h e&#13;
w o n d e r is t h a t i n s t a n t a n e o u s&#13;
d e a t h w a s n o t c a u s e d by t h e shock.&#13;
It w a s t h e j u d g m e n t of t h o hospital&#13;
staff t h a t nothing—eould be d o n e t o&#13;
save h e r life, a n d opiates w e r e g i v e n t o&#13;
ease h e r sufferings until death", which&#13;
w a s m o m e n t a r i l y e x p e c t e d , . g a v e hef&#13;
final relief. S h e l i n g e r e d in a c o m a t o s e&#13;
s t a t e for t w o d a y s . S e v e r a l t i m e s h e r&#13;
b r e a t h a n d h e a r t - b e a t s s t o p p e c for so&#13;
long a p e r i o d t h a t s h e w a s t h o u g h t t o&#13;
be dead, a n d t h e n they w o u l d g o on&#13;
a g a i n r e g u l a r l y b u t faintly.&#13;
On t h e t h i r d d a y , t o t h o s u r p r i s e of&#13;
her a t t e n d a n t s , s h e opened h e r eyes a n d&#13;
a g l e a m of intelligence w a s . noticed.&#13;
After t h i s u n a c c o u n t a b l e r e t u r n t o&#13;
c o n s c i o u s n e s s , a furthe r e x a m i n a t i o n&#13;
was m a d e . H e r r i g h t side w a s found&#13;
t o bo e n t i r e l y p a r a l y z e d a n d h e r n g h f&#13;
cheek huDg s o l o w t h a t it rested o n&#13;
her neck. T h e m u s c l e s of t h e n e c k&#13;
w j i r e . s o c o m p l e t e l y r e l a x e d t h a t s h e&#13;
.could n o t s w a l l o w a n d h a d lost t h e p o w ^&#13;
er of ppe^ch*^ S h e c o n t i n u e d t o im*&#13;
p r o v e . csLrquiil n o u r i s h m e n t w a s i n -&#13;
jected i n t o n b i ^ s l o m a c h , b u t s h e regained&#13;
little foikK At tho e n d of t e n / d a y s&#13;
her c o n d i t i o n r a p i d l y improved^ H e r&#13;
paralysis d i s a p p e a r e d a b o u t y S e p t . 1»&#13;
H e r p o w e r of s p e e c h b e g a n / t o r e t u r n&#13;
a b o u t fifteen d a y s after h e r / i n j u r y , u n -&#13;
til a t "present t h e r e is o n l y / a s l i g h t i m -&#13;
p e d i m e n t i n h e r speech. / T h e e x t e r n a l&#13;
wound,s w e r e e n t i r e l y / h e a l e d . T h e r e&#13;
h a s been, since h e r c o n v a l e s c e n c e , n o&#13;
d i a t u r b a n o o of m o n t d l functions, a s is&#13;
c h a r a c t e r s h e a t once a s s u m e d a n d&#13;
t a u g h t h e r followers t h a t s h e w a s ind&#13;
e e a t h e H o l y Ghost, s e n t o n e a r t h in&#13;
h u m a n f o r m t o c a r r y o u t a m i s s i o n similar&#13;
t o t h e S a v i o r ' s .&#13;
A T o w n W h e r e N e i t h e r C o a l n o r&#13;
W o o d i s W a n t e d . '&#13;
N e t a p o u n d of wood o r c o a l is cons&#13;
u m e d a t C r e i g h t o n , t w e n t y miles f r o m&#13;
P i t t s b u r g h , w h e r e t h e P i t t s b u r g h H a t e&#13;
Glass C o m p a n y h a v e t h e i r p l a n t . Glass&#13;
factory a n d r e s i d e n c e s a r e h e a t e d a n d&#13;
lighted by n a t u r a l g a s . G a s w a s s t r u c k&#13;
a t 1,200 feet in a five inch b o r e . A torlent,&#13;
of w n a t t h e o w n e r s d e s c r i b e a s&#13;
" p u r o n i t r o g e n g a s " bursts o u t with a&#13;
force of 2'"&gt;U p o u n d s t o t h e s q u a r e inch,&#13;
a n d after t h r e e y e a r s is Ho w i n g with a s&#13;
m u c h e n e r g y aa ever. T h o visitor t e e s&#13;
no coal, n o wood, n o c i n d e r s , n o ashes,&#13;
n o s m o k e . I n t h e f u r n a c e s is a l u r ' d ,&#13;
stead y h e a t r e g u l a t e d by c l o c k - w o r k .&#13;
N o g r i m y s t o k e r s w e a t s hi.s life a w a y&#13;
a t t h e f u r n a c e d o o r s , b u t i n s t e a d a cjtlm&#13;
person with a stained glass sbiold, i n -&#13;
vites y o u t o l o o k - a t t h e glass t h r o u g h&#13;
tho o p e n f u r n a c e d o o r s , w h e r e g l a r e s a&#13;
h e a t sufficient t o d e t e r a m o d e r n S h a d -&#13;
r a c h , M e s h a c h a n d A b e d n e g o . Overh&#13;
e a d g a s - b u r n e r s a r e ablaza i n broad&#13;
d a y , because i t is Hot w o r t h while t o&#13;
t a k e t i m e t o t u r n t h e / t r u r n e r s off a n d&#13;
on, a s t h e i e is p l e n t y of g a s t o s p a r e .&#13;
I n t h e residences a t h u m b - s c r e w&#13;
r e g u l a t e s t h e t e m p e r a t u r e t o a b s o l u t e&#13;
perfection^ —&#13;
T H E Y T R O U B L E Y O U ? H A V E T H E M&#13;
E X A M I N E D W I T H O U R N E W T E S T L E N S E S&#13;
BY W H I C H W E O F T E N S U C C E E D W H E N&#13;
O T H E R S K A I L ,&#13;
R O E H M &amp; W R I G H T .&#13;
I M P O R T E R S J E W E L E R S , A N D O I T I C I A N S ,&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D A V E . . D E T R O I T M I C H .&#13;
u s u a l in c a s e s w h a r e r e c o v e r y h a s followed&#13;
b r a i n i n j u r / If a n y t h i n g i s n o -&#13;
4iceable-it is that^her i n t e l l e c t is b r i g h t -&#13;
er a n d disposition b e t t e r n o w t h a n it&#13;
w a s before s h e w a s injured.&#13;
T h e B o y S h o w e d H i m t h e V e t e r a n .&#13;
Paris Beaeon.&#13;
" O h , p a ! look a t t h e s o l d i e r s ! " said&#13;
a little buy t o h i s f a t h e r W e d n e s d a y a s&#13;
he s a w t h e l i g h t i n f a n t r y s t a r t for&#13;
Springfield.&#13;
" P o o h ! " e x c l a i m e d t h e f a t h e r , " t h e y&#13;
a r e n o t soldiers; they w e r e n e v e r a t t h e&#13;
front; t h o y n e v e r s m e l l e d p o w d e r raj&#13;
s o n . "&#13;
" Y e s , t h e y did, p a , I s a w o n e of t h e m&#13;
in a s k i r m i s h , a n d h e s m e l l e d p o w d e r ,&#13;
t o o . "&#13;
• " I t m u s t be a m i s t a k e , m y son. W h e n&#13;
did y o u s e e a l l t h a t ? S h o w m e t h e&#13;
v e t e r a n ! "&#13;
" I t ' s tliat feller in t h o m i d d l e . . H e&#13;
.smelled p o w d e r . He h a d a s k i r m i s h&#13;
with K a t e , last n i g h t , a n d ho tried t o&#13;
kiss h e r . S h e h a d j u s t p o w d e r e d , a n d&#13;
he g o t s o m e o n h i s nose. Y o u 'jet h e&#13;
s m e l l e d it, ' c a u s e I p u t coal oil on i t ! "&#13;
Three Peculiarities The .superior ijiulltius of Ho o d s S. •anlla arc S-J&#13;
( t i i ' t d b y \)irei: pi-i uliarilits, \ i/.:&#13;
Ilrt/.—Tlu1 I'omluimUon ot r- mci" i il ;;^LV!S n-cJ.&#13;
Second. -The propnr'iou in w h i c h they :ire ini\et!.&#13;
T.'/irti.—The pr-ircss l&gt;v w ' m h the a, live nitilic;;!&#13;
properties ure j-eeurck!.&#13;
The result is ,i m .-di, in.- of unns.i il .Viretv'.h, w h i e h&#13;
ctlect.; cures hj ;!u n o unknown. T h e - e p e i u l i . i n t i e - are&#13;
e x c l u s i v e l y peculiar' to H o l d ' s Sarmparilhi, anil are&#13;
U N K N O W N TO O T H E R S&#13;
'Tn !ov:r w e e k s H&lt;«il'.s Sarviparilla made me .1 n e w&#13;
man. My head ceased toache. and my w h o l e *yM«m is&#13;
built u p a n e w , enjoying perfect health. It is the best&#13;
-fvuidkliii}-! c \ e r u.-ed,and alter tryiny other?, I iiiul it&#13;
h . i s n o equal," I. I U K K I N I . I N N , l j o Mank s t r e e t . N e w&#13;
York City.&#13;
"I..have* been ti t n i l i l e d w ith general deluLlv a nil mv&#13;
|~"blpod w a s all out ot'ordcr. I took l l o c d ' s S a r s a p a n l l a&#13;
and am feeling pcrfei tly well, il h*s been a yreat benefit&#13;
to nft\" - F I N U Y .V Vi.v., L i m a , Ohio.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
Sold hy alUfruptfists. § i ; six for $5. M a d e only by&#13;
C. I, H O O D * CO., Apothecaries, L o w e l l , Mass.&#13;
——40(XOoseaOnei&gt;oiIaj^—&#13;
ELY'S C A T A R R H&#13;
Cream Balm.&#13;
C a u s o s n o P a i n .&#13;
Gives rolief a t&#13;
once. . T h o r o u g h&#13;
T r e a t m e n t will&#13;
Cure. N o t a Liquid&#13;
or Snuff. A p -&#13;
p l y with F i n g e r .&#13;
Give it a T r i a l .&#13;
50 c e n t s a t D r u g -&#13;
gists; 60 c e n t s by&#13;
mW Sivm R0g;&#13;
'foS rHAYFEVER!&#13;
cotf&#13;
!?&amp;WAG RES&#13;
wfc * &amp; 4¾&#13;
U.SJt.&#13;
mail registered.&#13;
10 cents.&#13;
A S t r a n g e S t o r y o f P h i l a d e l p h i a ,&#13;
A l a w i u i t h a s been s t a r t e d i n t h e&#13;
C j u r t y o f P h i l a d e l p h i a w h i c h discloses&#13;
the e x i s t e n c e of a sect t h a t w o r s h i p p e d&#13;
a yeoman, u n d e r t h e belief t h a t s h e w a s&#13;
e " D a u g h t e r of G o d s " T h e r e w e r e&#13;
wenty-rivo m e m b e r s of t h e c o n g r e g a -&#13;
tion, and they b o u g h t a house on S o u t h&#13;
Eleventh s t r e e t for t h e p u r p o s e of w o r -&#13;
shiping h e r . T h e deatti of t h e w o m a n ,&#13;
whose n a m e w a s A u n i e Meister. b r o u g h t&#13;
a b o u t a -uit, b e t w e e n h e r heirs a n d h e r&#13;
followers r e g a r d i n g t h e o w n e r s h i p of&#13;
the p r o p e r t y , a n d thff m a t t e r h a s drifted&#13;
into c o u r t . I n t b e house of1 w o r s h i p&#13;
t h e r e is a n oil p a i n t i n g r e p r e s e n t i n g&#13;
the Holy T r i n i t y , with Miss Meister as&#13;
one of t h e tigurp*. S h e is s h o w n a s a&#13;
y o u n g g i r l w i t h g o l d e n c u r l s falling i n&#13;
graceful folds o v e r well-rounded s h o u l d -&#13;
ers. S h e is c l a d in such g a r m e n t s a s&#13;
angels a r e s u p p o s e d t o w e a r , a n d t h e&#13;
likeness of h e r face is a s close a s t h a t&#13;
of a y o u n g w o m a n c a n b e t o t h a t of o n e&#13;
w h o h a s * I'.vcd 68 y e a r s . T h e heirs&#13;
c h a r g e t h a t this w o r s h i p w a s idolatry.&#13;
In t h e i r -pTayers tire d e v o t e e s a d d r e s s e d&#13;
t h e T r i n i t y a s " G o d t h o F a t h e r , J e s u s&#13;
Christ t h e S o n , a n d Miss M i r a M i t t a&#13;
t h e H o l y G h o s t , " M i r a M i t t a b e i n g&#13;
t h e n a m e t h e w o m a n a s s u m e d o n e d a y&#13;
because, d u r i n g service a t t h e jhouso,&#13;
t h e r e a p p e a r e d t h e worda t h i s ' p h r a s e ,&#13;
" J Y E M m a r M i r a M i t t a , " w h i c h s h e&#13;
t r a n s l a t e d t o m e a n , " H o l y Spirit, t h e&#13;
t h i r d p e r i o d ttf t h e T r i n i t y . 1 ' T n i i&#13;
AY-FEVER&#13;
S a m p l e bottle by mail&#13;
E L Y B R O S . , D r u g g i s t s ,&#13;
O W E H O , X . Y.&#13;
ROCKFORaWATCHES&#13;
Are unequalled in I?XACT+yG SEX VICl?.&#13;
I ' s - H b y t h o C h i e *&#13;
?'*-&lt;--7) M e e l i R n i c i m i «&gt;f t h e&#13;
^ » i r r n l'« Si. C o n s t M i i v i ' y ;&#13;
&gt; " I i i . b y t h e A d m i 1 a t&#13;
*••'» &lt;-&lt;&gt;mirmruli 11 LT i n t h o&#13;
I . &gt; . N a v a l O l » e r v -&#13;
. a t o r y , f «&gt;r ~ A s t r o -&#13;
• • * n o ! t i J c a l w o r k ; a n d&#13;
»• u m i ) t i v 0&#13;
c o r 0, C o n -&#13;
- . f t - ( . . „ . . , . r » a n d K a i l *&#13;
V ^ » w a y m * &gt; n . T h e y a r o&#13;
ft*-.?*' r o c o g t i U &lt;• it a 8&#13;
LI un.*s i n w h i c h c l o s o&#13;
•c* al&#13;
ClwdlncJewelcn,) wiio ^ivo - I'lill W a t r a u t y&#13;
CHENEY'S&#13;
Stomach I Liver&#13;
1REGULATOR!&#13;
^ S v ^ i - l n u i - i K&#13;
' / \ » ^ d i . c t o r A&#13;
.,,„.-...... ^-^ ro cost.. _ . - - E_ , _ t n r e l l uru's i n w i n c h o l o s&#13;
( i T t i n i B a n d d u v i V b i U i y a r o r«&#13;
.¾ J « i t i « &gt; s a i m t o w n s b y t h o ( l&gt;&gt;1&#13;
V * H A N Y ' S c x c 1 u » I v *• Ait^»r1&#13;
H E A D Q U A R T E R S&#13;
(FOR) — Campaign Flags &amp; Baoners,&#13;
DEAN. GODFREY &amp; Co.*&#13;
11 •r .iri'i A&lt;'&lt;J (Jribwolii st. U&amp;TltOIl, JIKJlf.&#13;
•J orrfs^omJesiix- s'/licitci!.&#13;
Farms ^or Sale.&#13;
The Finest List of Farms for Sale&#13;
E v e r issued i n Michigan. C o n t a i n s over&#13;
150 d e s c r i p t i o n s with m a r g i n a l red line&#13;
notes, g i v i n g n u m b e r of a c r e s a n d price&#13;
to e a c h d e s c r i p t i o n , m a k i n g r e a d y refere&#13;
n c e i n d e x . T h e l a s t p a g e cofltains d e -&#13;
s c r i p t i o n s of D e t r o i t City P r o p e r t y for&#13;
sale.&#13;
F o r free d i s t r i b u t i o n b y&#13;
George W. Snover,&#13;
1 0 3 G R 1 S W O L D S T . ,&#13;
DETROIT - MICH.&#13;
LOSS AND GAIN.&#13;
CHAPTBB I .&#13;
" I was takes 6lck aye»r igo&#13;
With billoue fever"&#13;
•'My doctor pronounced me cured, but I got&#13;
i Bids' amain, with terrible pains in my back and&#13;
6ld(6, and I sot so bad J&#13;
Could not move!&#13;
I shrunk!&#13;
From 228 lbs. to 130! I bad been dortorimg&#13;
for my live",but it did me no good. I &lt;yd not expect&#13;
to live more than three months. I began t o&#13;
use Hop Bitters.^Directly my appetite returned,&#13;
my pains left me, my entire tjettro renewed '&#13;
as if by n&gt;a«ic, and after using t,evsral bottles,&#13;
T " ~ ' " a s a t-overtign, but&#13;
To Foj) Bittert&#13;
T h e r e p u t a t i o n o f&#13;
H o s t e t t e r ' s 8 t o m «&#13;
a c b B i t t e r s a s a prev&#13;
e n t i v e o t e p i d e m *&#13;
les, a s t o m a c a i c&#13;
an Invixora nt.H g e n -&#13;
eral r e s t o r a t t v e . a n d&#13;
a s p e c t a c f o r f e v e r&#13;
and atme. indi e s -&#13;
t t o n bt liwus affeottons.&#13;
r h e u m a t i s m ,&#13;
n e r r a* d e b i l i t y .&#13;
c o n B t i t u t l o n * ! w e a k&#13;
n e s s , is e s i a b l l e h e d&#13;
u p e n t b e M iund basis&#13;
o f m o r e i b a n&#13;
t w e n t y y e a r s e x -&#13;
p e r i e n c e , a n d canr&#13;
o m o r e be t&gt;baken&#13;
by trie claptra n o s -&#13;
t r u m * or u n s c i e n -&#13;
titic ^retenners.thA&#13;
the e v e r l a s t i n g tulis&#13;
by t h e wind thut&#13;
r u s t l e t h m u k i i their&#13;
defiles. F&gt; &gt;r s a l e by&#13;
all dru-'Ki^tn a n d&#13;
dea'erh K«-ne ally.&#13;
I am dot only as souhd&#13;
wt\fih more than I did before.&#13;
I owi- ray life." K. FiTZPA'rwc.i..&#13;
Dubii/i, June. '&gt;5l.&#13;
C'HAPTKU II.&#13;
"Maldtn, Mats., Frb. 1 1JW. Gentlemen—&#13;
I plJrt'&gt;•r^d with attacks of Kck hta'iache."&#13;
Niuralyia, female trouble, fc.r years in the&#13;
mot-t tcrrlttle and t-xcruciatiii^ fuauner.&#13;
No ni'dielnc or dix'tor criuM yive mc reliei&#13;
or cuif, until I used Hop Bitters.&#13;
' T h e lir&amp;t bottle&#13;
S'-arly cured m e ; "&#13;
The second made me as well -ud strong ae&#13;
wlieji a child,&#13;
''And I have b°en BO U&gt; thit da&gt;."&#13;
My husband waa an invalid lt&gt;f twenty year*&#13;
wiib a serious&#13;
. "Kidney, liver and urinary -complaint,&#13;
'Prunouccedby Boston'* bt«t pbyslcianr&#13;
"ludurablu!"&#13;
Seven bottles of ycut Bitters cu.-ed him am-&#13;
I know of the&#13;
"Lives of eight persons"&#13;
In my neighborhood tb.at.have be*u 6aved by&#13;
your bitters, J^&#13;
And many more,are using them with great&#13;
benefit.&#13;
"They almost&#13;
Do miracles?" — Mm. B.D. Slack.&#13;
How TO GBT SICK.—Expose yeureelf day&#13;
and night; eat too much without exercise;&#13;
work too bard without rest; doctor all the&#13;
time; take all the vile nostrums advised, and&#13;
then you wllLwant to know hot) togeitotil,&#13;
which i« answered in three - words—Take Hop&#13;
Bitters 1&#13;
ftavid Presion k %,&#13;
BAXKJSItS.&#13;
u l C T K O I T , - M I C H I G A N .&#13;
ESTAltl ISHEIi 1S.V*.&#13;
W e t r a n s a c t a p e r o r a l tisnking bu&lt;&gt;'inefs,&#13;
P r o m p t u r d d i r e f u l a t t e n t i o n t o C o l l e c t i o n s o n&#13;
an j- jjnrt c f t t e Klube.&#13;
W e b u r rind sell all c l a s s e s ot r e l i a b l e securities—&#13;
I'nited S t a t e s , S t a t e , County, T o w n , a n d S c h o o l&#13;
D i s t r i c t B o n d s . Good&#13;
H E A L E S T A T E . M O R T G A G E S&#13;
L a n d W a r r a n t s s n d r b o l c e c o m m e r c i a l r e p e r I n -&#13;
t e r e s t a l l o w e d o n t i m e deposits. C a r e f u l a t t e n t i o n&#13;
a l v e n t o t b e aecount,8_Cf o u t o f t o w n&#13;
None genuine without a bunch of green&#13;
Hope on tbe wfcite label. Shun all the vile&#13;
poifonous stuff witb "Hop'1 or "Hops" in their&#13;
n a m ? .&#13;
MiTit THE WORLD!&#13;
THE BATTLE CREEK&#13;
eiiBIIL FE ED&#13;
&lt;?&#13;
WOOD-SAWING MACHINE&#13;
5.1U&lt;!(.'!M '.,'/&gt;&gt; klro.i, and nolii \vlt!&lt; OP w i t h o u t p o w e * .&#13;
A L 9 0 CIRCULAR W O O D - S A W S .&#13;
CATTLE fREFK M-CH1NERY Cn., Battl-Creek, Mich.&#13;
•*;eii«l l o r Circular and l'l-icc-List^&#13;
MARSH'S CYLINDER BED FOOT LATHE!&#13;
i n k e r s .&#13;
. B a n k s a u d&#13;
D A V I O I'KESTO.N \ C o .&#13;
Farms j o r Sale.&#13;
A large list of Farms in Michigan&#13;
F O K S A L E O K E X C H A N G E .&#13;
WA.NTKD—A de»triDtion of every Farm or&#13;
;*\&gt; en of property for pale or exchange in&#13;
__MkhJ£illL. .1—&#13;
Money it) Lean on Farms in&#13;
Eastern MUhiyan.&#13;
AlHlJtESS,&#13;
XV. A V&#13;
S;&lt; Muni Block.&#13;
1 I A N N A N .&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
x T h e Brvi:ns: Cvn.?. 1.-3 i^ued Sept.&#13;
y a n d Marcli. en'.'h ve:ir: L'» 1 p^ges, 8 ^ x 1 1 *&#13;
inches, with over ;5,JiOO illustrations—&#13;
a whole rupture tnliory. ^; ives wholesalo&#13;
prices direct to coruumcrs on all goods for&#13;
Dersonal cr ^ ^ S B f e v family use.&#13;
Tello h o r to / S ^ ^ ^ L OT&amp;0T- a n i l&#13;
cive3 exact tiff ^ ^ f t cost of erery&#13;
thing you B ^ ^B use, drink,&#13;
ciit, wear, or ^ ^ n ^ ^ F h a v e tun&#13;
with.'The^c ^ H ^ ^ invaluable&#13;
hooRi: contain information plcaned from&#13;
the markets of tho world. "We will mail&#13;
,.a copy F r o e to ;m; address upon receipt&#13;
of t h e postage—S cents. L e t us he&amp;r&#13;
from yon. Kespeafullv,&#13;
M.ONTOQMERY WARD &amp; CO.&#13;
? This is a n o w L a t h e , and&#13;
S on a n e w i&gt;l:in, Laving a&#13;
S ( y l i n d e r l i e d . wLlch iw&#13;
'i uiucti i:ioru H i i n p l e and&#13;
&gt;^ c o n v r n i i ' i i t th;&gt;ii the old&#13;
;• style. It h a s i i t t n r l i m e n l n&#13;
." 1&lt; r t i r c u ] &lt;r and S c r o l l&#13;
? S a w i n j f . and f r H r i i c k -&#13;
2. e t . X o u l d i i i K - N e w ,&#13;
a n o v e l , m i d T I I F B K S T&#13;
S. i n v e n t t tl. tr^~M:inufac-&#13;
2 turcd and soul 1&gt;&gt;; tlio&#13;
BATTLE CREEK MACHINERY CO,, Ba tie Creek, Mic!u&#13;
YO UNG M EJS&#13;
CAN SAVE MONET 111 ATTENDING THB&#13;
and Ttlegraph College at Kalamazoo, Mich.&#13;
Send for Journal.&#13;
U. F. FARSO.SS, Pre**'.&#13;
WilSt « 8 8 W o h u « h A v e c v e . L h l e 11L&#13;
W A N T R H t o s e l H h e o n l y a u t h e n -&#13;
tic H'e of (Jen J d h n A . (iopan1. i t 1*&#13;
an ad mlrHbiy w r i t t e n , c l ' t h b o u n d&#13;
bn.uk i&gt;f hearl? 600patte», o n h o a v y&#13;
C o n t a i n s life- k o s t t e l portrait o f&#13;
Liitan." r'nver boars* r e p r o d u c t i o n , tn 0 ijrtnal col* L-tffetJc,&#13;
- - - * " * * — - - - " •* - - " • ' - • • • ' . - - - - ^ ! i i u p t&#13;
tinted paper.&#13;
CURES CONSTIPATION J&#13;
Torpid Liver, Indigestion, Heartburn, Malaria&#13;
Rheu.matisra, Palpitation of the Heart wnen&#13;
ariaingfrom indigestion or deranged condition&#13;
of tho stomach, Sic* Headache or Mig'ain,&#13;
Piles and Female complaints. The only xneoicinein&#13;
the world that&#13;
' Posttivolf Cares Co»«tlp«»*i»».&#13;
P r i c e , %l . 0 0 per bottle; 0 bottles, t f i .&#13;
»•»£&gt; FOB-CIECU J-ABS, P B U .&#13;
F. J . CHENEY A CO., Prop'r*,&#13;
ors, o f l l f i o ^ n t b corps b » n n e r i H i d («trit&lt;in»c i l u c t p ^ i&#13;
tioii o f Loirun a t H e hdttle b e f o r e .-\4+«ntn.^tvrnb'lyscd&#13;
in Koli' a n d b ack/ Thiiusanris vehjMfZ L^rgc*&#13;
profits i&lt;i utfonts. S v,r to a n y a d d r e s s p j » t - p a l d&#13;
n o o n r e c e i p t o f o n e d o ! n r . Ad&lt;ir&gt;sr!C&#13;
M e n t i o n p a p e r i n - T h e N A J ? K &gt; A I . T K t B l ' N K .&#13;
w h i c h y o u *i.*w this. &gt; ^ ^ W a - h i i . c t o n . ' O . C.&#13;
LYOIA C. PtNKHAM'3.»&#13;
VEGETABLE C0MP0U:'0&#13;
• . • is A rosrnvE, CURE FOR • ,j&#13;
All those paitii'ul Comjilaints&#13;
* anil »c»k 11'SMS KO coiuniuii *&#13;
* * * * * * to our bc»t * * « * # *&#13;
,, *FKSA1E POPLtATlON. »• •&#13;
Prlf* $1 ID liquid, pill or &gt;*MDg« farm.&#13;
• Tts purpose U tolely A • tH« IcsitiMati /tenliny of&#13;
( i ^ w and the relief of pain, a.'d that it d o « ail&#13;
it claims todo,t\ent*mdsofladie$ean-3ladl9 tMti/y. •&#13;
• It »111 c u r * entirely ull Ovarian trouble*. InDaiujii/&#13;
tion and Uleoration, Falling and lusplapemcnts, aui.&#13;
consequent Spinal Weaknesa, a a d ia particulirly&#13;
adapted t o i h o coanpe of life. • « • • • « • » • • * • *&#13;
• itroinovex V'ainttiivw, Flatulency, destroys all crarln?&#13;
for s t i m u l a n t s and relieves W\«iinos»i of t h e Stoma' h&#13;
It cures lUoatingtlleAdaehec, Nervous Pro strati on,&#13;
0«neral Pohility, sfttTilessness, Ptiprvs&amp;ion and lndigewtion.&#13;
That fMlmk! of ixvirinjr down, eaiisinf pain,&#13;
and backac!n\ i s always permanently cured hy its use.&#13;
• Send stamp to Lvnn, M M S . , for pamphlft. U'tw-rs of&#13;
InquiryoonfldentUUysiiN-wtrwl. &gt;'&gt;&lt;rsnUatdr^^aU.&#13;
U.S.STANOARD.&#13;
JONES&#13;
O F&#13;
BKGHAMT01&#13;
5 T O K&#13;
WAGON SCALtS&#13;
'1 .irt H««m *aM Beam B*x, $ 6 0 and J0NKS h« pays I «fr»ifht—for irt*&#13;
Pric« U i t inenll .0 kh&gt;« A*p»r »B&lt;1&#13;
* i d r c n*l&lt;i fit BINflHAMTON.&#13;
B i a « k a a i « * » . M. * «&#13;
viPISOS CU CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAI__.&#13;
B e s t C o u n h S y r u p . T a » t « « o o d .&#13;
Use in t i m e . Sold b y druggists.&#13;
^CONSUMPTION:&#13;
3 S A L E S M E W a n t e d . A w e e k l v salary a n d c o m m ' s s j o n ^ p a l d to&#13;
t h e rif Ut parties, (jood r e f e r e n c e s awt-iTirit s e c u r -&#13;
ity r e q u i r e d . i»n'y rlrs'-ela** »u^-iTript:on h o o k s&#13;
h a n d l e d . A d d r e s s . S T A N " O &gt; K I &gt; i'Vii. HOPHK.&#13;
Ann &gt;&gt;rb&gt;r Mi&lt;*hifau.&#13;
B r S I X E S A C O L T E 6 E ,&#13;
[Kstabllahi d 1ST61 JTfiPlum s t ,&#13;
Detroit. M l c h n i s t h e p l a c e t o&#13;
A, s e c u r ^ a t h o r o u g h b u s i n e s s e d -&#13;
uoa;t-»n. B o o k * e e p i n g , l r i t h -&#13;
gr^rnmar, b u s t n c s s a n d o r n a m e n t a l p e n m a o *&#13;
l l i r e o moo.Ui«, »1A, UX* Bcholarahip, %ib.&#13;
F A R M F O R S A L ' E , A B A R G A I N&#13;
110 a r e s . i2 n-lles from Itetroit, 40 a c r e s cleared*&#13;
ba an e i n g o o d timber wi 1 »vil t h e . . p rur c a s h , o r&#13;
exc ai « e t o r o t h e r property. r. VV. CJray, TO&#13;
M a . o r u b a v e n u e . 1'etroit, .Micm a n .&#13;
MLDiEKii U WWOOO-O'QD, EensioH&#13;
-. , . - - . 1 . 1 • '• • • » 1 1 v; u -&#13;
rs . ' . . i w r i ; w ..L&gt; t&gt; e n l i d c d&#13;
&lt; ocn-ior bounty, A c . Z«. C«&#13;
Atty,, »';i.»hiiigtoa, D . C&#13;
PljAr'P to senirf«*» thoo'Ch m&#13;
. t /u«efn! P'^ic-ii'' n,is -t 'he(;u si&gt; v / X Ky.fit-' &lt;vii,h.&gt; HI- txrss i)i.-&#13;
r„&gt;\J,j) LKQt. Wr;to ror College Journal,&#13;
Address"" C. U SWKNS-UU;, LL^RM TELEGRAPHY, cr PKORT-HAND and&#13;
&amp; ft nil XYP.:- WAITING here. Situations furnished.&#13;
Adilre*s ValoiiUtie itn.'s.. Jiuie*ville. Wis.&#13;
V n i l l l P MCII ^ ^ THutraphy or Shnrt-lland&#13;
l U U H U I f l t l l It's a paying business. Situations&#13;
furbished. Com. &lt;fc R.R. T*l College. Ann Arbor, Mich.&#13;
"~~ ' W . N . I ! . D — S - - 3 9 r&#13;
OPIUM .Hurpuim I'lAoitCaved i a H&#13;
Us, J. dTKPKK.NH, U&gt;b»non. UhlC^&#13;
T O L B D O , • • PARSONS' 1 PURGATIVE&#13;
f * ' J 1 £?&amp;t*i&#13;
|BMXViO« OBSO eroo.«jtaOl. lL ffta-.y pjr***H&#13;
•ICX-HBACACBB. BiU«n»nt—&#13;
!rLf aad Skin r I nad tatm&#13;
I «•• so ot&#13;
R&#13;
:&#13;
i.&#13;
i&#13;
/&#13;
^&#13;
OIK NEi UIBOUS&#13;
• r \AOILM.&#13;
;'iniii uur LoiTt'^pomU'iit.&#13;
Dr. Kiiinoy &lt;s here i'.^iuu.&#13;
Baniuui and Weston attended iix&#13;
rouvention at Howell. Monday.&#13;
Mr.s. John iVarraek, of WilHamstwii^&#13;
'with her two children;!;; "visiting IVfi&#13;
parents, Mr. and Nl'&amp;&gt; ^- I'ickell.&#13;
Flo. Watson has gone to .Maimi&#13;
Rapids to attend the wedding of iin&#13;
cousin Flora Howell.&#13;
' Wi)l Watson, wife and little hoy, k&#13;
Bancroft, are visiting relatives iusv&#13;
this week.&#13;
Nellie HacKUs exrurts to start t..r&#13;
Florida very soon to remain until lit')'&#13;
health is improved.&#13;
The si k are all h.-ttiT i l k wi . -,.&#13;
thanks to' Dr. Ik kiis. he h.is w&#13;
nounced I'lrs. Dr. Dyp1'!'oiif .1' 'A;::-&#13;
#er.&#13;
Pv.inpkin pie i&lt; in order jn-t i;.--.&#13;
_ and it'you oe'. \our shun* yon i...-&#13;
#ot to be smarter than someone « .- .&#13;
OhThow we did tremhle last - ^ o '...&#13;
when our windows bewail to raiUe ;i...i&#13;
doors beoan to shake ;vnd soinebui-iy&#13;
said "it must be an earthquake."&#13;
Mr. and Mr*. Zone ' Havtsivff attiMidthe&#13;
State Fair at Kahuna/oo. last&#13;
week, and lirou^hthonieaiicut twenty&#13;
dollars premium raoinv&#13;
Charles'Howe, of West -Tnadiihi. ,&#13;
ivhd"Kate Daniels, of -iynt^nt-weiv^;&#13;
married last Sunday at the home of;&#13;
the bride's father/ John Ik Daniek j&#13;
Rev. 15. F. Fritchard "tied the knot; n&#13;
mm&#13;
•**fm&#13;
&gt;&#13;
J - t , k k ^ &gt;&#13;
WE ARE NOW OPENING&#13;
P L A I X F I E L D .&#13;
1 n&gt;m our t'orrt'^poiident.&#13;
Abram (-lawsoti, who has been &gt;kk&#13;
the past two weeks, is up again,&#13;
John Flora has rented the old sior,&#13;
building of M. To; pinn A: Son' \&#13;
fitted.it and put in a billiard and p. 1&#13;
table, = '-'"• '&#13;
Kev Thos. Riley, .oriiuriy y&gt;^&gt;:&#13;
oi1 ihe .M. .P. ihurch, of this plae&#13;
joiiH-d tl XI. K Conference at Lau-&#13;
Mii'^g, .. id received charge id' th&#13;
I^ewitt Circuit, where he moved k -&#13;
iaiuily la,-: Satuid".y. Mr. k : ; .•• •&#13;
,'tamiiv hv.'c r. k -t of warm frit ik*&#13;
/ i n this vicinity who were sorry *•&#13;
' them go, and v,*h() kit him si.icoo.-&#13;
in his new tield of !;.&#13;
k ¥ E N S E LINE&#13;
O F -&#13;
*&#13;
Lulie Dicker:&#13;
i . r .&#13;
oil&#13;
In a recent number of Bradstreet's&#13;
a correspondent tells an anecdote of&#13;
Honqua, a merchant of Canton, which&#13;
may well cause the "outer barbarian"&#13;
to pause before lje rejeets the appellation&#13;
in toto, A Chinese firm foiled&#13;
with a large indebtedness to fqreign&#13;
merchants under somewhat suspicious&#13;
circumstances, and Honqua headed a&#13;
subscription for paying off the indebtedness&#13;
with $1,000,000 in order that&#13;
Chine &gt; gredit should remain uninir&#13;
paireu. Hy interesting himself and&#13;
niaki:\; application to other promi«&#13;
nent m /chants he was successful in&#13;
Ids efforts. It is no unusual thing for&#13;
rich men to bestow large gifts on&#13;
charities, schools and churches, but for&#13;
one.merchant to make such a princely&#13;
contribution ^o preserve the commercial&#13;
honor of .oh countrymen untPi*&#13;
nished is a spectacle as u n u s u a ^ s it is&#13;
admirable. Is there any remote connection&#13;
between such delicate sense of&#13;
honor a*id the fact that there is not in&#13;
the city of Canton a single newspaper&#13;
published, to familiarize the minds of&#13;
its citizens with the dishonor and cor*&#13;
ruption which doubtless exist to some&#13;
extent in Canton and would certainly&#13;
be reported as news from all other&#13;
parts of the world by a journal of any&#13;
enterprise. This same Honqua contributed&#13;
§1,1000.000 of the $6,000,000&#13;
demanded by the British -when they&#13;
threatened to bon l ba i&lt;d Cant on. HOL&#13;
sneeified" tliat-§800,000 was a thank&#13;
offering for the prosperity which • has&#13;
invariably attended his commercial&#13;
enterprise. The influence of one such&#13;
uran in his native city is worth more&#13;
in its moral and religion* aspect than&#13;
that of all the well intended foreign missionaries&#13;
ever shipped to the flowery&#13;
kingdom, and a relitfion which foste-ts&#13;
such n growth is good eniiugdr'for all&#13;
practical purposes. .--""' -&#13;
mm&#13;
The i'lain :ku k n e w n!;;v&#13;
Mi!lr'-ht&lt; at. 'in. IIK-Y Itr.vt&#13;
.lay. ' • ~ :&#13;
Mrs. Join. Van^yei' i-&#13;
(ieor F'ineoiU's little k&gt;\ . •;&#13;
ytur i4tl ts verylowv-.iiht-bo- tvr&#13;
i'an'iin, k s tv.c i\-t\'v i-; j o n k k 1&#13;
Mi V. T V&gt;\\A\ lm&lt; lii-.ro--...&#13;
I'cpaire.i and lmprovod his cider ;.k&#13;
and apple drier by layinir new lk r-&#13;
Sabba^lrTs the green oasis, the little&#13;
giu**sy meadow in the wilderness,&#13;
where, nfter the week-days' journey,&#13;
the ]&lt;ilgi-;u&lt; hn-k^-for refreshment and&#13;
repose.- -Rev. Dr. h'eade.&#13;
HOLLAND BULBS.&#13;
Our Autumn Catalogue&#13;
of Bulbs and Seeds will&#13;
be mailed FREE to all applicants.&#13;
Address,&#13;
D . M . T S E R Y &amp; C O . ,&#13;
DETROIT, M I C H .&#13;
improving vent I bit; n • ^ i iuatin.;&#13;
apparatus and gi b . '... . Vding ;.&#13;
good painting. D &gt; :,.-. ' drying&#13;
apples last - •. : . • . UK,\ -&#13;
from 1") to '20 ha:. . ;uid .,a. .. rapacity&#13;
for drying b bushels perday.-&#13;
It is said he has on.- of the best ilryers&#13;
in the state Air. IVash deserve^&#13;
credit for the spirit of enterprise he&#13;
has manifested, w b . h has. brougk&#13;
inany peo]de to our itt'e village, luwill&#13;
start his, cider n :!1 in a few days'&#13;
and run day and,nig: i, making ci eland&#13;
jellies-&#13;
A Parisian doctor prescribed b r .a&#13;
young lady who had objections aguk-t.&#13;
growing stout: "Take exercise, in-.-&#13;
dear girl. Consider the tret?? of&#13;
@jBilE2 XJ&amp;m&#13;
/ '• 3PECTFUT LY,&#13;
&gt; ^&#13;
K IN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
: * - ' • r . : ••;?•?•;. . V i • x w&#13;
. . . J k ^ ± . . . : - j E k . . ^ - '.&amp;&amp;m.-.': E L .&#13;
ins-, ^asfijsiaiij.&#13;
field; they never take exercise, and :aa&#13;
consequence they go on growing&#13;
bigger and-bigger every year."&#13;
Ever,y age -ha^ its different inc k.;i •&#13;
tions, but man is always the same.&#13;
At ten he is lead by sweet-meats, at&#13;
twenty bv a .mistress, at thirty by&#13;
pleasure, at forty by ambition, at til'ty&#13;
byavarii-\—Kousseau.&#13;
Two down-easters were traveling together,&#13;
and at noon one asked the oker&#13;
what he had brought along for : ;-&#13;
freshment. Answer: kA bottle TT&#13;
whiskey; and what have you got?"&#13;
Answer: *A dried tongue." "Well&#13;
we can divide. Divide it was. .The&#13;
second took a good pull at the whiskey&#13;
bottle. "Now, where's the. dried&#13;
tongue?" -'How?" "Where's . the&#13;
next?" "It ain't dry now."&#13;
In Wiiitlev County, Inok^rfends of&#13;
St. John and Daniel deettjedto raise a&#13;
campaign pole in^irtmor of their chosen&#13;
eanm^ates^^hfaigging the hole a&#13;
soringjo^cTear. cold water was _ str.uciL&#13;
rushed up nearly to the surface&#13;
the ground. The pole-raisers bored&#13;
ortt their flagstaff for about ten feet&#13;
from the but, and by fitting to it a&#13;
. handle, piston, valves, etc., transform-&#13;
- ed it into a perfect pump. The. pole&#13;
was then duly raised, and standing beneath&#13;
the banner of the cold water&#13;
• firjostles, the traveler slakes his thirst&#13;
with pure water, the great glory of&#13;
"the c a u s e d The ''miracle," as the&#13;
jgr^dulqu,s ones call it, is widely talked&#13;
of throughout " H&amp;osierdom, and 'is&#13;
claimed by the prohibitionists as an&#13;
pmen of .snecess. ~*&#13;
8, I T /f~*K&#13;
KJ I ^ 'XV&#13;
L: t Fair, r .ip&#13;
\, * - W ^ ! k&#13;
9&#13;
)[ W± PATRONIZE THEIR FAIR.&#13;
TAKE WHAT YOU CAN FOR EXHIBITION.&#13;
\ W K u i « ^ i u r h i ' . i . • * II n i . i i. ik.« ttii . M I UK Jii s KUL'1T«1&#13;
MwJiifAct'.irprs uf 11,-v.., ,.:.,&gt; s,'.»K'&lt;i tiooUn,&#13;
l'ic!&lt;lop, PreiH-nv-i, &gt;&lt;U\,&#13;
H 55 »txl 57 JeffiTM.n, Ave., DKTUOIT, MICH.&#13;
THK DETROIT TIMES 1* « bright ami&#13;
newaey paper.:. Us telesrapUic newa come* hv&#13;
Bltwlal wire from i\U&lt; news centers of the country&#13;
to its editorial roorrtB. Like most people this&#13;
fall TIIK TIMKH la liulependent In politics, although&#13;
it is by no means neutral. Every jnat&#13;
cause receives fair anil adequate treatment from IS.THE PAPER THB-TISIM.. While the&#13;
TiMKfl nivea more attention to busiuesa than to&#13;
in urdere, it never ne^'lecta murders or any real&#13;
news, and it isn't scared hy being called sens*-&#13;
ti&lt;inal. The ]&gt;eoi&gt;le like THE TIXKK localise it Is&#13;
published solely in the interest of its readers&#13;
von can have the Daily TIMES 9ent to vour ad' FOR THE PEOPLE. &lt;tiew ^^ ™onth fn;&#13;
-M) cents-: or you can have the Dally and Sunday,&#13;
sev^n papers a week, sent y«u for 50 cents a&#13;
mouth. This Is t Ire best invent went- offered this&#13;
fall. Address&#13;
TIMES PUBLISHING CORPAftr,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
&lt;U&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located, X of a wife west&#13;
Stockbridge. Apple, cherry peaofe &amp;»d paar orchards,&#13;
nice house, «.*ooU well snrt cistern, out&#13;
buildinps, well fenced, j,'uod awtl. Apply on&#13;
I&gt;remlses. LORErVCE RICE.&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Table,&#13;
MICH. Ain LINK DIVISION.&#13;
STATI0K8. WF.ST nOl'N'l&gt; TKAINS.&#13;
~1 ITION OPEN TO A&#13;
A full Prciniinn --in :i!i k jfiii'inu'iits. Tr:it;k in exi'tkknt iroiulition. Price of admission the most liberal.&#13;
Family Ticket, SI-GO, good for the Fair, allows you tO drive on&#13;
the grounds.&#13;
SINGLE ^OiVliSJON, 25 Cents, CHILDREN, 15 Cents,&#13;
&gt; I I ^ L F OR DOUBLE TEAMS, 25 Cents.&#13;
FOR PREM1L M i/ST, AITLY TO&#13;
LOUIS MEYER, Secretary,&#13;
V Brighton, Mich.&#13;
RlDGEWA* » : « • •&#13;
Ar&#13;
No. 8. So'. 4. No. s. 2.&#13;
Mixed. Pass. Pas&#13;
5 : » a . st. T:45a. XV,&#13;
rmada, ..10:10 «;13» 8:00&#13;
Itomeo ,...10:a&gt; H:3!S 8;S0&#13;
Rochester, ..11 :&amp;J 7:10 8:S8&#13;
Pontlac i »r...18:45 p,m, 7:314 »:15&#13;
Wlxom, a:ao 8rJ8 J0:10&#13;
South Lvon J ?r- S:lX) s u W-W&#13;
8011111 ^ ° 0 ) dp. 8:30 8 &gt; a * U;flO .&#13;
Hamhtirj; 4:06 11:12&#13;
PlNCKNEV. 4:40 11:»&#13;
Mount Kerrier,... S:15» ^ ., H;6o&#13;
«tockhrldge 6:85 ISsWJp.m.&#13;
Henrietta, «:0&amp; , 14^0&#13;
jACKSON-»-......rk4&amp;^ro. .„••..•••-.. M^Qp. m.&#13;
STATIONS. , | EAST BOUND TRAINS,&#13;
N o . \&#13;
Mixed,&#13;
No. 5.&#13;
Paae.&#13;
JACKSON T:oo».K. 4:2up.m.&#13;
ttenrtetta,......... ?:*v 4:43&#13;
NOKV&#13;
Past.&#13;
" M V . " ' , ! I &lt;•&#13;
Stoikbridge..... 8:1&amp;&#13;
Mount Ferrler,. 8::¾&#13;
PlNCKNEY »tlQ&#13;
.Hamburg, »:40&#13;
South Lyon ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
Wlxom 11:80&#13;
5:05&#13;
6:15&#13;
5:45&#13;
«:08&#13;
6:80&#13;
6;&amp;0&#13;
7 : «&#13;
Rochester, 1:40 «;06&#13;
Romeo, ^..^:¾ . »;(»&#13;
Armada, :. 8:05 10:20&#13;
BfOOCWAV.......,. 8:¾) 10£50_&#13;
-AJltraJns rnn by *"«ientrarstaridaTH" time,&#13;
All trains run dally, Sundays excepted.&#13;
W.J. 8PICKK, JOSEPH H1CKSON,&#13;
Superintendent. (J-neral Manager,&#13;
5:00 a.n*&#13;
55 ft:&#13;
6:10&#13;
6:85&#13;
7:08&#13;
7:t»&#13;
7:85&#13;
\&#13;
: T -&#13;
J^--</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 Dispatch September 25, 1884</text>
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                <text>September 25, 1884 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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      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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              <text>PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
VOL. IT PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, ,OCT. 2, 1884.&#13;
. • • • . . i _ * •&#13;
NO. 38&#13;
•ae&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
JfcROME WINCHEL.L, PUBLISHKR.&#13;
^ubunrlption Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
A D V E R T I S I N G K A T E S .&#13;
' r r a n s i e n t advertisements, sift c?Qtn per inch for&#13;
first i n s e r t i o n ami ten cent* per h u h lor each - t i b ^&#13;
tjueut insertion. Loral notices, •&gt; cents i&#13;
« a c h insertion. Special rate* for r&#13;
t n e n t s b y the year or quarter,&#13;
(•&gt;• litu- lor&#13;
111:111 a d w r t i s e -&#13;
Fioiii.Elk Mills, Mliuourl.&#13;
Dit. C. D. W A I I K E K : Dear Sir—&#13;
'l'iiis is to certify that 1 liave used nearly&#13;
a bottle of your White, Wine of Tar&#13;
Syrup, and 1 can safely and conscientiously&#13;
recommended it to any person&#13;
as tin; best medicine 1 .have ever used&#13;
for throat ;ind lung diseases, and if it&#13;
cost five dollars a bottle 1 would keep&#13;
it on hand'if I...was able.&#13;
Thankfully, yours truly,&#13;
Elder T. Stephens.&#13;
For side at (' K. llolli.-t.-rV, s i l l e r liro'ti, and&#13;
Wiueh !)ii!_ St.&gt;n&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
T \ M. G R E t i N K , M . . _ L ,&#13;
'PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, -&#13;
PLAINF1ELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office a t residence. Special a t t e n t i o n ._ivcn to&#13;
« n r g e r y and diseases of t h e - t h r o a t and l u u t ^ .&#13;
T A M E S MAKKLEY,&#13;
•NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
A n d I n s u r a n c e Agent. Legal p a p a / a m a d e on&#13;
a b o r t notice and reasonable t e r m a . - Oilice on&#13;
a i a l n Stv, near Foetufflce. Pinckney, M i d i .&#13;
A L I C E L A W R E N C E ,&#13;
yABUIONAJlI.K&#13;
—OTESS"AND CLOAK MAKER—-&#13;
P l a i n and f a n c y - s e w i n g of all k i n d s : c u t t i n g and&#13;
iittlny a specialty. Prices reasonable, and satisfaction&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d . N o r t h e a s t cor. Main Street&#13;
And Howell iioad, P i n c k n e y , M i c h .&#13;
GK I M E S &amp; J O H N S O N ,&#13;
,. P r o p r i e t o r s of&#13;
JPINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
D e a l e r s in F l o u r and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
k i n d s of g r a i n . Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
T A M E S T. E A M A N ,&#13;
A T T O R N E Y &amp; COUNSELOR AT L A W&#13;
a n d J u s t i c e of the Peace,&#13;
ITEMS OF INTEREST.&#13;
Office in t h e Br ck Jiktck, P J N C K N K Y&#13;
rrr p. VAN W I N K L E ,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
a n d S O L I C I T O R in C H A N C E R Y -&#13;
Offlce o v e r Sigler'a D r u g Store. P I N C K N E Y&#13;
HA L S T E A D G R E G O R Y ,&#13;
DKAl.Kll IN&#13;
G R A I N , L U M B E R , LIME, SALT, Ar.&#13;
H i g h e s t m a r k e t price paid for wheat. A j;ood&#13;
s t o c k of L u m b e r always on hand. D o o r s , s.:i_h&#13;
a n d all b u i l d i n g materials furnished on s h o r t notic*.&#13;
— G R E G O R Y , M I C H .&#13;
__V. -\KTTN&amp;GrJi.tt,&#13;
E T K K I N A B Y S T R G E O N , Howell, Mich.&#13;
Mr* W l n e g a r will attend to calls p r o m p t l y&#13;
n i g h t or day. Milk fever :iml otlier disi-a^es in X lay. .&gt;IIIK lev.&#13;
cattle and h o r s e s a specialty. T e r m s reason;.ble.&#13;
Residence on Hyron R o a d . ' Telephonic cornier&#13;
tlon with c e n t r a l oHlce at Howell.&#13;
: . CHARLES MACLEAN, I). 1&gt;. S.&#13;
'• " | " \ K N T I S T , t i r a d u a t e of tiie Dental Depart&#13;
• A J i n e u t of the I ' n i v . r . i t y of Michigan. IMlice in&#13;
Greenawav Hlock, over Post oilice. Unwell. '&#13;
£_»/*'Parti&lt;\ilar a t t e n t i o n paid to the p n ^ e n i i t i o i ;&#13;
^/.lJl«._i*l_r__ teeth, +-&#13;
W ill be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on -July 17th.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
4&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^BANKER,!&amp; v&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Sofas.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
\-S COLLECTIONS A S P E C I A L T Y .&#13;
PINCKNEY PRODUCE MARKETr&#13;
Oct.&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
2,1884/ TOMPKINS &amp; ISMON.&#13;
W h e a t , N o . 1 white,&#13;
" No.,2 w h i t e ,&#13;
«' N o . a red,&#13;
" N o . 3 red,&#13;
Oats,&#13;
C o r n&#13;
Barley,&#13;
B e a n s , . ; :....&#13;
D r i e d A p p l e s&#13;
P o t a t o e s , -...'. ta t t e r , .^.:&#13;
ggs, „w.-&#13;
'wssed ItogH, per,, 100 lbs...&#13;
.fi&#13;
igR&#13;
fcl&#13;
;o.&#13;
- " . 8 0 .&#13;
l.h\7t l ,vi.&#13;
.'.'in 1 i HI.&#13;
,lXiia ;..' . t i ; ,&#13;
..'Id.&#13;
*?&#13;
1 . 1 . r 7¾vx.oti.&#13;
&lt;i&#13;
t-'uKsii M E A T S .&#13;
1 will be in i'incfcncy on •Tuesday,&#13;
Thursday ;md Saturday mornings of&#13;
earh week, and will supply nice fresh&#13;
meats at'reasonable prices.&#13;
1- ioyd Reason.&#13;
Call on Teeple &lt;k Cadwell.for coal for&#13;
threshkig engines.&#13;
BEANS W A N T E D !&#13;
We have an order for 1.000 bushels&#13;
of beans, and tor the Lost quality we&#13;
will pay the highest market price.&#13;
Be sure and give us a chance and we&#13;
-w*H make v o u money ' !&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cadwell'.&#13;
Fou S A L E — A full, set of Butchering&#13;
Tools, at Teeple k Cad well's&#13;
Fine1, flavoring Extracts, always&#13;
fresh and reliable, at&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
Western Timothy Seed, at&#13;
Teeple __ Cadwell's.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn ar..l&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terras inquire of T.&#13;
Crimes or on the premises of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Large cake fine Toilet Soap for 5c,&#13;
at Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
Rush's Be-e-hives and Section Boxes,,&#13;
at B i i s T T P l a n i n g MLiTPlaintield.-&#13;
Athlophuro. • great Rheumatic Cure&#13;
at Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
T o THE F l ' H L l C .&#13;
1 would say that I continue in business&#13;
at my old stand over Sigler Bro's.&#13;
Drug Store, and shall sell Millinery&#13;
Goods below city prices d u r i n g&#13;
season.&#13;
Mrs. C. R. Wagner.&#13;
— The celebfcUiuII^Eatr-ia Cigar, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug i&amp;tore.&#13;
The Township Board of the township&#13;
of Biit nam will meet at the&#13;
clerk's oilice in the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 11th. 1884. for the&#13;
puapose of auditing accounts and tran-&#13;
-aeiing such other business as may.&#13;
Any book published in the United&#13;
States will be furnished at publisher's&#13;
price postage free, on application, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug-Store.&#13;
BUGGIES AND CUTTERS.&#13;
H a v i n g the agency for the Kalamazoo&#13;
Buggies and CuStirs those wishing&#13;
to buy a good buggv-^heap^would do&#13;
well to call on me. ?' ' . &gt; ^&#13;
] £ d m q t t a u r p h y ,&#13;
at P i n c i n e y Liyery Bam*T&#13;
• CmVi thtfc cold. All i\0 leading&#13;
Cough Remedies, at&#13;
WincheH's Drug Store.&#13;
OATS W A N T E D ! "&#13;
I want to buy 500 bushels of oats,&#13;
for "which I will pay Detroit quotations&#13;
for "mixed oats"1 the day they are&#13;
bought or delivered.&#13;
T. Birjiett,&#13;
Dover MiU% Oct. 1st, 1884.&#13;
Chinese Polishing sticks, make y o u r&#13;
ironing easy, at ~&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
TEAM FOR S A L E !&#13;
I offer for sale at a bargain my span&#13;
of Roan Mares, 8 years old, sound,&#13;
well matched, and excellent workers.&#13;
Anv one desiring such a te'am will do&#13;
well to look at them.&#13;
James T. Eaman.&#13;
W a s h i n g made easy by using Babbit's&#13;
"1776" P e a r l i n e . Call and get a&#13;
package, at&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Store'.&#13;
t S T h o s e receiving their p a p e r s with a r e d&#13;
X over t h i s p a r a g r a p h , will pleaae notice that t h e i r&#13;
subscription expiree with next number. A blue X&#13;
eixnines t h a t the time has expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the p a p e r will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed. ;&#13;
the&#13;
4&#13;
come before the board.&#13;
Fleetrie Bitters, at WinchelFs&#13;
^top&#13;
D r u g&#13;
S P E C I A L N O T I C E .&#13;
Farties having Organs that need repairing&#13;
can have them put in first&#13;
class order by calling &lt;»n&#13;
C. L. (.'oiliei, Fhicku&#13;
A&#13;
sale.&#13;
bunch of desirable&#13;
F.&#13;
.•y. Mich,&#13;
lambs for&#13;
A. BARTON, Unadilla.&#13;
It is well knowTn that the Kidneys&#13;
are the h u m a n sewers. w;hich wash&#13;
away the impurities and debris*&#13;
When they become clogged or inactive,&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil will remove&#13;
the cause and create a healthy&#13;
action, and effect a permanent cure.&#13;
Smoke Capadura, best five cent Cigar .&#13;
in the market,- air~&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
OCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
Chas. L. Collier will move into Miss&#13;
Coe's house, near the MTEVCEurch.&#13;
Richards &amp; Co have laid a new sidewalk&#13;
in front of their store.&#13;
A small excursion from Jackson&#13;
visited Whitmore. Lake Saturday last.&#13;
Detroit has another newspaper, the&#13;
Sunday Express.&#13;
The ground is being graded for the&#13;
new station at Bullock's Corners.&#13;
' Mrs. Wheeler is seriously ill. Her&#13;
daughter, M r s . J. D. Sigler, of Leslie,&#13;
was sent for yesterday.&#13;
Jonas Young, who recently sold his&#13;
farm to Mr. Auld, will remove • to&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
Mrs. J o h n Roach will make Pincknev&#13;
b cr h.QineT having dQGJd^d-^MBe-yeinto&#13;
the village soon.&#13;
Dr. Rainey, dentist, formerly ot this&#13;
village, has removed from Pontiac1 to&#13;
Portland. •&#13;
J o h n Decker went to Ann Arbor*,&#13;
Tuesday, to enter the medical department&#13;
of the State University.&#13;
Mrs. L . A. Mann is visiting her&#13;
brother. S, W hittlesy, Esq., in Toledo^&#13;
STOCKDKIDGE F A I R !&#13;
During the^tookbridgo fair-next week,&#13;
Horatio-Seymour, second house west&#13;
of The fair grounds will furbish warm&#13;
meals at reasonable rates.&#13;
for a few weeks.&#13;
Five cars of local freight were pulled&#13;
out from Pinckney station by Monday&#13;
morning's east-bound train.&#13;
A n u m b e r of Pinckney people attended&#13;
the opening of the Brighton&#13;
roller skating rink Monday night.&#13;
Mrs. Jacob Sigler is about to move&#13;
into the village, and wil} occupy the&#13;
old Duer homestead on Main street.&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cadwell are p u t t i n g u p a&#13;
Dreaeed Chlckena&#13;
d o v e r Seed \M(«, 1..-0.&#13;
Special Notices.&#13;
To a n y onybody who has disease of&#13;
t h r o a t or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
-., t h a t Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
cured t h e same complaints in other&#13;
'cases. Address.&#13;
1 a.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
your&#13;
:it any one who&#13;
Hoarseness or&#13;
.. ; E. T. HAZELTINKV W a r r e n ,&#13;
I HAV*; TttU.1* IX.&#13;
D E A R DOCTOU:—I have tried&#13;
medicine, and believe. Hi&#13;
is troubled with Cought&#13;
Lameness about the (best or lungs can&#13;
not well afford to be without ihe White&#13;
W i n e of Tar Syrup.&#13;
Your thankful friend&#13;
Lev. 0 . W. Fattison,&#13;
Pastor St. Charles M. l i . Church.&#13;
St. Charles. Iowa.&#13;
Physicians ^Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepared fronftlict very best materials,&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
M&#13;
twelve foot addition to the back end&#13;
of their store. It will be used as a&#13;
tin shop. ^,&#13;
J. A. Donaldson is building a new&#13;
residence on the farnt recently pur-&#13;
.1. Read T r i f r - c ^ e T r ^ - f t m ^ ^ -Mrs. Thompsonstock&#13;
of Millinery, Saturday next, Oct. Grimes.&#13;
•1th, u_tii.l_c_liuLncs.s_A'.: __JA_nioy.'s __i_&gt;rc_&#13;
Everything new and of the very latest&#13;
patterns. Ladies piea&gt;e call and'see&#13;
the many beautiful^, sivies. Trices&#13;
very low.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil, a g u a r a n -&#13;
teed remedy for Rheumatism,. Kidney&#13;
complaints, etc., 5.1.00, 50c, and "Joe.&#13;
b o t t l e V a t W i n c h e l l ' s D r n g S t . n i v . |&#13;
. .'Haying rehtedThe Pettysville Cider&#13;
Mitt am eady to receive apples for&#13;
cider a r d jellv.&#13;
S. M. Cook.&#13;
44a W-44-^-_^H_,e- - Potas-h or—Lye--a.-&#13;
ways in stock, at J&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Store.&#13;
Having bought Mrs. Lewis' stock of&#13;
Hair Goods I can-give vou good bargains&#13;
in ilie same. Call and be made&#13;
beaut i i ul. Mrs. Wagner.&#13;
Miss Coe has gone for a few weeks'&#13;
visit with friends at Farmington, Oakland&#13;
county.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. P . VanWinkle ret&#13;
u r n e d yesterday afternoon from their&#13;
wedding tour, and are receiving the&#13;
congratulations of their many friends.&#13;
Some Washtenaw County farmers&#13;
bought Kansas corn for seed last&#13;
spring, and now they are praying that&#13;
the frost mav hold off till Christmas&#13;
w&#13;
for that corn to ripen.&#13;
Rev. F . E, Pearcenand family started&#13;
this morning for their new home at&#13;
New Boston, W a y n e county.&#13;
The Pinckney Base Ball nine played&#13;
at the County Fair last week, taking&#13;
second prize. They could not "get&#13;
away w i t h " the Howell boys, and the&#13;
game with the Plainfield and Unadilla&#13;
nine was a close one.&#13;
The date of the Republican meeting&#13;
announced in last week's DISPATCH has&#13;
been changed from afternoon to evening,&#13;
and it is expected t h a t Gen'l&#13;
Spaulding and Dr. J a s . C. Willson&#13;
will speak at the Monitor House hall&#13;
this evening.&#13;
T h e Pinckney Steam F r u i t Evaporator&#13;
started up yesterday, and will&#13;
r u n night and day as soon as their machinery&#13;
is all ready for operation.&#13;
This is an important industry as it&#13;
will utilize that large portion of th«&#13;
apple crop not fit for barreling.&#13;
Mr. Eaman is buying some very fine&#13;
fall truit for shipment. As the barrels&#13;
all bear the Pinckney brand it&#13;
will undoubtedly give this locality a&#13;
good reputation as an apple growing&#13;
country.&#13;
In writing a notice of Mr. Cartledge's&#13;
appointments last week our informant&#13;
was slightly in error. Mr. Cartledge&#13;
will preach at the Lakin school house&#13;
Sunday next, Oct 5th. The notice last&#13;
week should have been for H a m b u r g&#13;
church.&#13;
Business men, don't be afraid to see&#13;
your name in print, especially when&#13;
appended to a wideawake advertisement.&#13;
We never knew a man—who&#13;
advertised judiciously and said it&#13;
didn't pay. It is better to occupy the&#13;
columns of vour loe*l—paper tfean to&#13;
The residence of W m . McGee, i s&#13;
East Undialla, was destroyed by fir*.&#13;
yesterday pfternoon, with nearly all its&#13;
contents.&#13;
J a m e s Culhane and Brother h a r e&#13;
opened a cooper shop in the old foundry&#13;
building east of the school-houie.&#13;
One more new industry for Pinckney.&#13;
Fred. A. Daniels, of Unadilla township,&#13;
and H. D. Rose, of 8tockbridge,&#13;
will open a hardware store and tinshop&#13;
at Gregory. They will occupy&#13;
the postottice building we understand.&#13;
There was a social dance "at J o h n&#13;
Monks', Tuesday evening. Cobb18&#13;
band furnished the music. I t was a&#13;
surprise, gotten up by some of the&#13;
" y o u n g folks."&#13;
A company of about t w e n t y ladies&#13;
visited the residence of Mrs. Knight,&#13;
Monday evening, as a sort of surprise&#13;
party; and a very happy surprise it&#13;
"must have been, too, lor they took with&#13;
them large quantities of clothing and&#13;
provisions to make the little family&#13;
more comfortable.&#13;
Homer Galloway moved his family&#13;
and household goods to the county&#13;
house this weejfe Homer has not become&#13;
a pauper as the above m i g h t lead&#13;
the uninformed to suspect, but is to be&#13;
superintendent of the county house&#13;
and farm, as successor to M r . Counsell,&#13;
who recently resigned t h a t position.&#13;
« '&#13;
Roger Sherman and wife, of Conway,&#13;
are visiting relatives and friends&#13;
in the vicinity of Pinckney this week.&#13;
Mr. Sherman is the Republican candidate&#13;
for Register of Deeds, and the&#13;
other party will have to h u n t around&#13;
a good while to find a more popular&#13;
or better qualified man for&gt;the place.&#13;
55»&#13;
MARRIED.&#13;
allow merchants of competing towns&#13;
to occupy them.&#13;
The editor's family have recently resumed&#13;
"house-keeping,"' and have occasion&#13;
to tender their thanks to manv&#13;
friends for remembrances—among&#13;
them: Mrs. Sam'l Roberts—nice&#13;
spring chicken; Mrs. and Mr.. Geo. R.&#13;
Ismon—a couple of fine black "bass;&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hotf and C. N . ^ u l l i s — l i b -&#13;
Hoff—a&#13;
—handeral&#13;
supply of apples; Jas.&#13;
50lb p u m p k i n ; Mrs. S. Sykes&#13;
some boquets of flowers.&#13;
The premises around the Grand&#13;
T r u n k depot present q u i t e a business&#13;
like appearance now-a-days. With&#13;
the lumber-yard, planing-mill, fruit&#13;
evaporator, wheat b u y i n g and apple&#13;
buying and packing,—and the general&#13;
business of the road, stock shipping,&#13;
etc., it is begining to loom u p as a&#13;
business point.&#13;
H. T i r H a r r r n g t o i T shlppedTtwo" car&#13;
loads of sheep, Monday last, for Lockport,&#13;
N . Y. He purchased 500 in&#13;
in four days last week. Mr. Harrington's&#13;
enterprise is quite a benefit&#13;
to the farmers in this locality as there&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Greene will ret&#13;
u r n to Ann Arbor in a few days, to&#13;
enable Mr. G. to continue his course&#13;
in the University Medical school.&#13;
Joseph Monks, having purchased&#13;
two lots on the southwest corner of&#13;
Pearl and Unadilla streets, is now&#13;
building a residence thereon.&#13;
€ h a s . tShaefrer, of Adrian,"""formerly'&#13;
of this town, came the other day to&#13;
take his parents home with him, but w e l l known in thi* city, the bride havt&#13;
h e o l d gentleman is at present too ilrto- t n g rTITed a'posTtion as finisher at Mr.&#13;
permit removal.&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon took in 1,600&#13;
irastiek_£if_w__:efc^^ MOO.&#13;
Wednesday. They are shipping t w o&#13;
to. four car loads dailv now.&#13;
are a good many surplus sheep in the&#13;
country. He will pay out many&#13;
thousands of dollars in clean cash for&#13;
stock before the season closes.&#13;
M J \ I. F . Kennedy, photographer of&#13;
this place, was married ^."Lincoln,&#13;
last Monday, to Miss Ella Bing, coming&#13;
u p on the t r a i n in the evening.&#13;
Mr. D. G. Clark and wife, brother-inlaw&#13;
and sister of Mr. Kennedy, went&#13;
down to Lincoln to witness the ceremony.&#13;
The newly married couple are&#13;
At the residence o l the bride's parents, l a&#13;
Pinckney, T h u r s d a y , Sept. s.5th, IBM. by Bar. It&#13;
E. P e a r c e . M r . W. P. V a n W i n k l e , and I U M Hattie&#13;
Placeway, both of t h i s village.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. VanWinkle took the&#13;
evening train east for a week's tour to&#13;
Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Erie and other&#13;
points in Western New York. The&#13;
editor's family were remembered with&#13;
a liberal portion of the handsome&#13;
cakes and fruits which graced the tablefor&#13;
th'e wedding repast.&#13;
Heal Estate Trans ers.&#13;
The following transfers are reported&#13;
for the^PiycKNEY DISPATCH by Register&#13;
Dudley, for two weeks ending&#13;
Sept. 27th, 1884.&#13;
W m . S, Coffrey to Harrison Fowler.&#13;
3 0 acres in Handy, $350.&#13;
N. B. Green to J o h n EUiott, lot in&#13;
Handy, $135.&#13;
Ralph Fowler to Geo. W. Barron,&#13;
lot in Handy, $125.&#13;
J o n a t h a n Fox to Lorenzo H . SullivattrT^&#13;
acres in Handy, $1,700.&#13;
Eunice A. Shane to Isaac Page, lot&#13;
in Handy for $1,000.&#13;
Isaac P a g e to Emily T. Metcalf, lot&#13;
in H a n d y . ^ 0 0 0 .&#13;
Samuel Gillam to Ralph Fowler, lot&#13;
in Handy, $200.&#13;
J o h n B. Fowler to Ralph Fowler,&#13;
lot in Handy,'$100.&#13;
J o h n D. Appleton to Lorenzo H .&#13;
Sullivan, lot in Howell, $1,000.&#13;
Wm. McPherson, J r . to James Edmunds,&#13;
lot in Howell, $500.&#13;
Wm. R. Griswold to Winnie Gris»&#13;
wold, lot in Hartland, $500.&#13;
Esbon A. Ross to Rosannah Reed, 40&#13;
acres in Hartland, $600.&#13;
Mathew Turner to Michael T u r n e r ,&#13;
80 acres in Tyrone, $1,000.&#13;
R. Howard Lawson to J o h n Truscott,&#13;
lot in Brighton, $_00.&#13;
Michael Dolan to Joseph Monks,&#13;
let in Putnam, $250.&#13;
Julia A. Skinner to Francis W,,&#13;
Ramer, 20 acres in Conway, $750.&#13;
Milton L. Wasson to E d w i n 2). W a s&#13;
son, land in Unadiljs, $2,500.&#13;
Marquis Burkhart to Blanch Collin*,&#13;
1 acre in Cohoctah, $300.&#13;
Lewis S. Hadley to Alice J , Stowe,&#13;
land in Iosco, $1,450.&#13;
Clark's gallery for some time past,&#13;
and will receive-a hearty congratulation&#13;
from a host of wasm friends;&#13;
eluding the Democrat—York* (Neb.)&#13;
Democrat.&#13;
M r . Edison makes t h e following predictions:&#13;
"As to the change* which&#13;
will be effected by electricity within&#13;
t i n y years i n tlie city of New Y o r k , ! .&#13;
would say t h a t I believe that electricity&#13;
will propel the cars of ihestnm,&#13;
and elevated railroads^Ti^fit the city&#13;
within and without the buildings, furnish&#13;
p o w e r ^ f d r all purposes, work&#13;
telephones and burglar alarms, deliver&#13;
he opera, convey parcels, detect a n d&#13;
i g n a i firesro^fate ^ - e n g i n e s , and&#13;
and possibly displace animal locomo*&#13;
tion for vehicles." ! . *•&#13;
ft&#13;
tv&#13;
4:&#13;
__ t&#13;
ispnkfi.&#13;
J E R O M E W1NCHELL, E D I T O R .&#13;
•tared a* the Pfe*tome*&#13;
CURRENT TOPICS.&#13;
B B L V A L O C K W O O D says if she is elected&#13;
presUten-fc, Ben. Butler can have his&#13;
choice of cabinet positions. The -'Wily&#13;
W i d o w " gazes longingly at the prospective..&#13;
TESTIMONY in a Tennessee lawsuit&#13;
disclosed the fact that the aident letters&#13;
sent by a girl to her lover had been&#13;
composed for another beau, but that&#13;
when she transferred her aftections she&#13;
erased the original name and inserted a&#13;
new one.&#13;
A l'UACTiOAL cotton picker, it is&#13;
cl aimed, has" at last been invented. The&#13;
ate crop cost $50,000,000 picked by&#13;
hand. The machine referred to is claimed&#13;
to pick cotton in the field for oneseventh&#13;
of the cost of human labor in&#13;
t h a t direction.&#13;
m -&#13;
The city of Now Orleans was afflicted&#13;
with a plague pi bugs quite recently,&#13;
arge and small. They fell in showers&#13;
upon the desks of counting rooiss and&#13;
newspaper offices, rnndprinft it almost&#13;
impossible to write. "The electric lights&#13;
upon various thoroughfares^ Avere enveloped&#13;
by dense clouds of insects.&#13;
A T the funeral of a wealthy Chinam&#13;
a n m Carson City the other day the&#13;
chief mourners threw small parcels,&#13;
done up in rice paper, from the wagons&#13;
as they passed along the streets. Each&#13;
parcel contained tiom 10 to 20 cents in&#13;
silver coin, and were greedily gathered&#13;
by the street Arabs who followed in the&#13;
wake of the procession.&#13;
A B A C H E L O R millionaire who died in&#13;
New York last week, aged 82 years,&#13;
had lived for 30 year3 in the same hotel&#13;
and had kept two marble-fronted fivestory&#13;
buildings which ho owned on&#13;
Broadway vacant for 25 years. The&#13;
reason given for keeping the stores untenanted&#13;
was that soon after tho buildings&#13;
were erected some of tenants confessed&#13;
that they boirewed money to pay&#13;
the rent. He then resolved to close&#13;
the stores rather than be the means of&#13;
impoverishing tenants.&#13;
J O H N J O H N S O N of Gainesville, Ga., a&#13;
youth of 19, is said to have invented a&#13;
money drawer so ingeniously arranged&#13;
that by the simple pulling of a_string&#13;
any piece of money, from a nickle to a&#13;
dollar, can be secured at once and also&#13;
any amount of change one might wish&#13;
A4 Aaairacljtn nut fthftn cm f o r a n ^ - h i l L i l l&#13;
any possiole way, embracing any number&#13;
of coins of different denominations,&#13;
it can be obtained in a second ot time,&#13;
and there is not a need of glancing at it&#13;
to see if correct, for it can't be wrong.&#13;
Mr. Johnson has already refused $12,000&#13;
for the invention.&#13;
T H E American J o u r n a l 6T~MedicaI&#13;
Sciences will in its next issue publish a&#13;
report on Emerson McColm, of Muncie,&#13;
Ind., who on April 19, by the explosion&#13;
of*his gun, had the breech pin, an inch&#13;
and a half long and weighing 617 grains,&#13;
sunk two inches into his brain and was&#13;
on . May 4 pronounced cured. He is&#13;
said to bo to-day as good as new. Mc-&#13;
Colm is 18 years old, and the wound&#13;
is over an inch and a half long and&#13;
shows the pulse beats, not only containing&#13;
the heavy iron for 21 hours bofore&#13;
it was removed, but several pieces&#13;
of bone and a piece of hia felt hat, all of&#13;
which were removed.&#13;
E G Y P T is the most perfect example of&#13;
the moekery of greatness among the&#13;
nations of the earth. Its people are&#13;
the wisest of whom history gives any&#13;
accurate knowledge and the nigh intelligence&#13;
of its early inhabitants is ineffacably&#13;
written upon its monuments,&#13;
the-Uke of which modern-architects a n d&#13;
mechanics are unable to duplicate. It&#13;
has outlived the Chaldeans, Assyrians&#13;
arjd_Medes, who were born, as it were,&#13;
after Europe had reachedrmaai&#13;
time after time had been conquered by&#13;
the younger-races. • B m Egypt, too,&#13;
seems doomed to inevitable ydecay&#13;
-wjttrfn^-feir-^ecadgi, and' already tftej'rhe*&#13;
nations of Europe are getting into position&#13;
to pick tfce flesh from her bones,&#13;
like jackals sitting around a dying stag,&#13;
and ready to pounce upon it the moment&#13;
the breath leaves its body. The&#13;
last tuler of all tho great ancient raoaarohies&#13;
has "been a^ weakling like inncom6&#13;
a great nation again, but the history&#13;
of the great empires of tho east&#13;
rather,.indicate that her great cities&#13;
are destined to.be shorn of their beauty&#13;
and strength, like Nineveh and Babylon,&#13;
which are now little more than&#13;
sand dunes.—Exchange.&#13;
S T H A T S T R A W S .&#13;
Total loss by the last incendiary fire in Cleve&#13;
land Is $50,000&#13;
" 8t. Paul, Mtun., had a $75,000 incendiary lire&#13;
the other night.&#13;
Li Hung Chang, the famous Chinese leader,&#13;
is reinstated lu oiflce.&#13;
The branch soldier*' home will be located at&#13;
Leavenworth, Kansas. ,&#13;
Capt. Wm. P. Clark, of Lieut. General&#13;
Sheridan's staff is dead.&#13;
S Incendiary nren in Cleveland, OMo, are of&#13;
almost dally occurrence.&#13;
The Rockingham- Home at Portsmouth, N.&#13;
H., was burne'i Sept. &amp;&gt;. Loss 1100,000.&#13;
The British goverment has asked Turkey to&#13;
support its financial plans in Egypt.&#13;
Gov. Cleveland has granted 61 pardons since&#13;
he occupied the gubernatorial chair.&#13;
A. number of Bt-lgin capitalists are in this&#13;
country lor fbe purpose of inspecting our&#13;
manufactories.&#13;
Greshain doesn't like his appointment txrthc-&#13;
Bccretarvship of the treasury. He want* that&#13;
vacant judgeship.&#13;
The failure of Fawcett, the London, Ontario,&#13;
banker, has had a depressing effect on business&#13;
in that port of Canadi.&#13;
The Panama canal company has contracted&#13;
with the dredging; company for the completion&#13;
of the dredging by 1887.&#13;
Gen. Grant's residence on Chestnut street,&#13;
Philadelphia is to be sold to help pay debt*.&#13;
The value placed on it is $30,000.&#13;
• Mine C. I. Welton, a wealthy young lady o[&#13;
New York, was frozen to death in the mountains&#13;
of Colorado on the 23d of September.&#13;
It is authoritatively ststed that Gen. Gresham&#13;
will remain in the cabinet but a short time.&#13;
He still has an eye on the vacant judgeship. ~_&#13;
Advices from Burmah state that a sauguinarv&#13;
outbreak had occurred in the jail at Mandalay.&#13;
Several hundred convicts were killed.&#13;
In anticipation ot a Chinese war with France,&#13;
large shipments of provisions from the flowery&#13;
kingdom have been made from San Francisco.&#13;
Importation of Italian and Hungarian laborers&#13;
to werk in sewers Is agitating laboring people&#13;
in Washington and serioue trouble isfeared.&#13;
Some one cut the guy ropes supporting the&#13;
framework of a balcon at Erie. Pa., and It&#13;
fell, killing one person and Bcrtously injuring&#13;
others.&#13;
The supreme court of Dakota has declared&#13;
in favor of the capital commission act, in the&#13;
case involving the removal of the capital from&#13;
Yankton to Blsmark.&#13;
The news of the two recent victories of Gen.&#13;
Gordon has caused Gen. Lord Wolseley to tele-&#13;
Kraph the war office in London to stop forwarding&#13;
troops to Eszypt for the present.&#13;
Lieut. Greely has completed the report of&#13;
his first year's txploration In the arctic r3-&#13;
glons. The remainder of the report will be&#13;
incorporatedjn Gen. Hazen'sannual report.&#13;
A grandson of Henry Clay, the statesman,&#13;
was shot in Louisville, Ky., a few days ago,&#13;
in a quarrel with u councilman of tliat city.&#13;
Wm. Harrison, a thief, while bein^ taken,&#13;
(hand-cuffed) frotn Baltimore to Bjwie^ta-&#13;
-tion, Md., jumped from the train when it was&#13;
moving 49 milu3 an hour and made his escape.&#13;
Chlels of the South Picgan Indians are extorting&#13;
money from Canadian ranchmen who&#13;
drive herds throueh the reservation from&#13;
Montana to Mauitobi. Scarcity of food compels&#13;
this course.&#13;
Dr. Salmon, chief of the buivau of animal&#13;
Industry, 6till Insists that there is pleuro-pneumonla&#13;
"lu Illinois and refu-jca to accept, the&#13;
proposition of tne Chicago live stock exchange&#13;
to test the matter further.&#13;
New York labor unions decided to bycott&#13;
Chicago dressed beef and every man who sold&#13;
it. Meanwhile the trade in the "beef Is spreading&#13;
and new stawls for its exclusive sale are&#13;
opening all over New York city.&#13;
Judge Field of San Prancleco in the Chinese&#13;
habe£6 corpus ca^e, on argument before him,&#13;
-expressedtfc^Tevbalf==©&gt;tfs4ea' fch&amp;v-the-i&amp;tfcittlon&#13;
of congress in passing the Chinese amended&#13;
act of 1884 was to shut out all Chinese who&#13;
left the United States previous to the passage&#13;
of the act of 18*2, Judges sawyer, Hoffman&#13;
and Sabln had previously ruled otherwise.&#13;
A H e r o l o D o ? .&#13;
p m e n t khadive, dettitnte of aggressive)&#13;
or defensive spirit. Egypt may bo-&#13;
On a recent night the porter of the St.&#13;
Elmo hotel in Eldred, Pa., was very&#13;
drunk. Sometime in the night he was&#13;
awakened by the loud barking of&#13;
-"lie^kY" the big Newfoundland dog^Jf&#13;
the hotel. The dog seized him by the&#13;
coat and dragged him out of the room&#13;
and half way to the outer door of the&#13;
office when the man succeeded in getting&#13;
to his feet and staggered'^lntb the&#13;
street. Fire was nipialy "spreading&#13;
over the building, and the hotel was&#13;
filled with sleeping guests. The dog&#13;
ran barking loudly up stairs. He first&#13;
stopped at the door of his" master's&#13;
Yoem, where ho howled and scratched&#13;
until the inmato was roused. The dog&#13;
gave the alarm at every door, and in&#13;
some instances conducted tho guests&#13;
d o w n stairs. In and out of the burni&#13;
n g building he kept .continually dashing,&#13;
piloting some half-dressed man or&#13;
woman down stairs only to at once return&#13;
in search oi others.&#13;
A lady with a child in her arms&#13;
tripped on the stairs while hurrying out&#13;
and fell to the bottom. The clild was&#13;
thrown on the floor of the hall some&#13;
distance away. The woman regained&#13;
her feet and staggered In a dazed way&#13;
out of the door, leaving the child in the&#13;
midst of the smoke. The brave dog&#13;
saw tho mishap, and seizing tho child&#13;
by its tiight-clothescarriedrrt^tfely o u t r&#13;
"Heck." "had already brought' the* little&#13;
one out, but it had not been, restored to&#13;
its mother. The dog saw tho frantic&#13;
rush of the mother towards tho burn-&#13;
Tng buildfng and sprang forward aDd,&#13;
as a dozen hands seized the woman and&#13;
held h9r back from her insane atteiript&#13;
to enter the house, disappeared with a&#13;
bound over the burning thresh hold,&#13;
faithful brate never appeared&#13;
a;gain. His remains were found in tho&#13;
ruins. But for the intelligence and activity&#13;
of Heck the tire in the hotel&#13;
would not have been discovered in time&#13;
for a single inmate to have escaped.&#13;
SouMUiflr Mitit.'t»lla.ny.&#13;
Prominent American scientists aro&#13;
urging the formation of an international&#13;
scientific association, which shall&#13;
meet at intervals to discuss the world s&#13;
problems.&#13;
From the character of the cuormous&#13;
icebergs of the Southern Hemisphere—&#13;
some of which have been described as&#13;
being hundreds ot feet high and miles&#13;
in extent—Mr. li. A. Proctor concludes&#13;
that no Antarctic continent can exist.&#13;
as the most favorable place for the development&#13;
of such icebergs would be a&#13;
sea dotted with islands.&#13;
To give us a better knowledge of tho&#13;
phenomena of atmospheric electricity,&#13;
Mr. John Trowbridge recommends&#13;
thut tho Government, in connection&#13;
with the signal-service, establish a&#13;
number of electrical stations throughout&#13;
the South and West where thunderstorms&#13;
and tornadoes are so frequent.&#13;
In cert;;in regions tho tendency of&#13;
thunder-storms begin to follow delinite&#13;
paths, daily thunder-storm maps might&#13;
be issued, showing tho probable path&#13;
of approaching electrical disturbances.&#13;
Of a supposed risk attending tho&#13;
Txsts—of—mackerel, Professor Huxley&#13;
says: "It is perfectly true that mackerel,&#13;
like ali other lish, ivrc more or&#13;
less infected by parasites, ouo of&#13;
which, a small thread-worm, is often&#13;
so abundant'as to be conspicuous when&#13;
tho-fish is opened. But it' is not true&#13;
that there is any reason to believe that&#13;
this thread-worm would be injurious to&#13;
a man even if ho ^wallowed it uncooked&#13;
and alive, and to speak oTTt as a&#13;
possible cause of cholera is sheer nonsense."&#13;
In a communication to a physiological&#13;
Society of Berlin, Dr. Falk stated,&#13;
as a result of his researches on drowning,&#13;
that when rabbits are suddenly&#13;
plunged into water having^a temperature&#13;
of 40 or 45 degrees Fahrenheit,&#13;
cramp of tho expiratory muscles occurs,&#13;
and respiration ceases. The&#13;
methods- of restoring the apparently&#13;
dead having no relations to tho effect&#13;
of cutaneous stimulation upon respiration;&#13;
cold water dashed upon the&#13;
chest acts upon the heart alone.; on the&#13;
napo of tho nock it acts upon thu~low=~&#13;
or brain.&#13;
Most satisfactory results aro claimed&#13;
by Dr. Eomiugos Freire, of Rio do J a -&#13;
neiro, for .his experiments in inoculating&#13;
persons with yellow fever virus in&#13;
an attenuated form. Up to a recent&#13;
date he had applied his system of inoculation&#13;
to 450 persons, -among whom&#13;
six deaths occurred during a subsequent&#13;
quite severe yellow fever epidemic.&#13;
Tho mortality among persons&#13;
who had not been treated with protective&#13;
inoculation was, according to his&#13;
account, about fifteen times-as great.&#13;
A curious botanical specimen is~&#13;
growing in a park at Soudcrshausen,&#13;
Germany, in the shape of a fir -tree&#13;
which bears on one of its main branches&#13;
what appears to be a second tree^—&#13;
eono-siiaped, and not less than twentylive&#13;
feet in height, and about three&#13;
feet in diameter. Tho main tree is&#13;
over 100 feet high, with a trunk some&#13;
ten feet in circumference. It is supposed&#13;
that a wound made in the bfauch&#13;
by the squirrel or an inset:: has caused&#13;
a mid to develop which lias produced&#13;
the secondary tree.&#13;
Hydrophobia Must Go—Unbroken&#13;
success is reported sliil as the result of&#13;
Pasteur's experiments with the. virus of&#13;
hytiro pn o nia. Tmi s far 1 i it y-s even&#13;
.dogs have been the .subject'"of investigations.&#13;
Nineteen of them were rabid,&#13;
and by ihe-e thirty-eLm heakhv animals&#13;
were i'Kttcn under uniform conditions.'&#13;
One-haif of the thirtv-i •i.rht&#13;
had beeu nreviouslv • inoculated or&#13;
, x .,. f *, ^&#13;
"Vaccinated with attenuate,I v.MIS;&#13;
the other naif i:,ad not. .Wi; limit a&#13;
single exception, the latfer died wTth&#13;
unmistakable sie;ns of iivdroohooia.&#13;
-T4W&#13;
eyes upon him, when suddenly he disappeared&#13;
behind his barricade, causing&#13;
the necks of his congregation to be&#13;
stretched -in pursuit of him. lie soon&#13;
came in sight again, ami explained his&#13;
absence by saving: "1- just dropped&#13;
my false teeth, and was looking for&#13;
them. Thank Gjd, when wo got to&#13;
Heaven wo will not need false tooth."—&#13;
"The Drttwcr" in Jl&lt;irpcr'ls Maijuziiir.&#13;
FlnsfM'-Xailw »u»l Character*.&#13;
P ENSIONS TO&#13;
• V P M -&#13;
ALL&#13;
Since tho new MNeuee of reading&#13;
character by the handwriting has come&#13;
it is even said that the caro taken of&#13;
the Lails affect the handwriting. Tho&#13;
long, almond-shaped nail is a great&#13;
support to the middle linger, which&#13;
guides tho pen. One can hardly imagine&#13;
a person with short stubby fingernails,&#13;
which are covered with skin,&#13;
writing tho long, graceful Knglisn hand&#13;
which so dCiigiits tho recipient of tho&#13;
note from a grand dame. It is said&#13;
that poets and people with imagination&#13;
ate apt to have long taper lingers and&#13;
beautiful finger-nails. They have a&#13;
handwriting in which the long upstrokes&#13;
and down-strokes cut into the&#13;
lines above and bvuealh them. The&#13;
heads-of -their capital letters are largo.&#13;
The handwriting shows ardor, and im-&#13;
-jH±l^e:—When itiuH a mnrli.udiy--4ownward&#13;
movement this handwriting&#13;
shows a tendency to melancholy. An&#13;
aptitude lor criticism is shown among&#13;
people who bite their nails. They are&#13;
cynical and severe, uncharitable and&#13;
bitter.—Thcv—write a .-011 ad'&#13;
and illegible hand. However, there&#13;
may bo good-natured critics, men with&#13;
versatility of comprehension. They&#13;
would have ' s:nall, but wcU-shaped&#13;
nails, and their handwriting would bo&#13;
soawwhat-»«g-H-iur, showing penetration&#13;
and finesse. The nails of a&#13;
musician are, of course, to be observed,&#13;
although the piano sometimes injures&#13;
.them. The great musicians have a&#13;
sloping handwriting. There is, however,&#13;
an eccentricity peculiar to life&#13;
kundwriting of exci;utivo musicians.-:vawitnessed&#13;
in that of. Beethoven. Tlu?&#13;
finger-nails of mathematicians are apt&#13;
to be square, not beautiful. Tno&#13;
ii and writing of such persons shows a&#13;
quiet movement of the pen. The lines&#13;
aro straight with the paper, the upstrokes&#13;
and tiie down-strokes are short,&#13;
w'iiiio the capitals are small and an-;&#13;
gular. Diplomacy has a long, supple&#13;
hand, and a long, beautifully 'kept,&#13;
slender finger-nail. But the handwriting&#13;
of a diplomatist is not apt&#13;
to be clear; it always look like a&#13;
snake gliding irwrvy. There are no&#13;
clear, gigantic capitals, like John&#13;
Hancock's, none of tho line curves&#13;
suggestive of generosity and expansion;&#13;
SOLDIEiifi A ftAILQIIB.&#13;
vrbo weni disabled bv mjaads, «ltaeai*\ Mt&#13;
or oUtrwi«6,tbe iom of a toe, piitft, TWIOOM &lt;&#13;
cfcronic diurrhata, r t f turo, IOM of night or (pwtUliy&#13;
to), toea of b « u i n f . filling t i c k of » • • • • • ,&#13;
r i w m i M i n , any disability, no matter k o w M k £ £&#13;
f d i t a y o v a pfiugioa. Jt—v and flmvroMi JH»-&#13;
( M r f H O M 0 * » « l . Vfidowi, eoiklrtD,&#13;
•ad faftaara of toliiara dying; In U«t *arv*aa,&#13;
aftarwarda. from diueaue aoncraeted or woandaMtairvd&#13;
wafla in tiia serriaa, are entitled to pasaion.&#13;
KadaaMd and abandoned daima a aperlaf^r.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS Col&#13;
LECTED.&#13;
INCREASE YOUH PENSION.&#13;
A paoaion aan be Increased at any time \W»*a&#13;
the diaafatli^r warranto it. As yon grow alda^fca&#13;
w o « a 4 baa partially nndarmlned tr*&gt; l o m t m m o i ^&#13;
Ifce (Hinan aaa made yon more aerplees. l a *oflf»&#13;
maunar Ike dfaabfiity has Increased; eo apply for&#13;
an rnoreaso at once.&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED '&#13;
My eaperienaa, and baing h«rn at k»adq*ar*»f»&#13;
anaftfe ma to attend promptly to all claims »g***£&#13;
HaaeaYernment, CvrcBtare free. Address, W T O&#13;
M. V&#13;
Box 486,&#13;
TIFRNEY,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHFORMEN&#13;
S&gt;BLOZ3'.&#13;
HARRIS&#13;
A BaolcM. Crxo&#13;
r o n&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
A . 2 T I &gt;&#13;
IMPOTENCY.&#13;
B8noa*.e&amp; for o r o r O&#13;
yoa?a 0 7 uaa In thouoanda&#13;
of coaea.&#13;
KSRV0C8DI&#13;
org into vMkntta and &lt;&#13;
osy, aaa&#13;
Mmr* dlMMM,&#13;
tkiUfol phittelaai,&#13;
from youwral&#13;
tiooi, too fr«« tail&#13;
«ad-»*&#13;
T. T R I A L&#13;
PACKAGE.&#13;
SEND ADDRESS __&#13;
HARRIS REM ED&#13;
8 0 6 ½ North 10th f &amp; , • £&#13;
act temporli« vbJU i&#13;
•nomlwlork lnf"~~&#13;
tern. Avoid b*ini&#13;
en if s/«&lt;eatlaiu en&#13;
c**r MfMdtet tat&#13;
tronbls*. G*t our &amp;*•!&#13;
Hi sod trfkl ptekaa*&#13;
Ukra ImpwUat fiMti "&#13;
UUkf WMMlt «1M*&#13;
•Jakt a rerudy ibM km i&#13;
thotuandi, u l doss not »&#13;
Inter* «ift sttealkB U bas&gt;&#13;
seu or C«M« p^iu at tooo»&#13;
T*O1*DC«. r««ad«d oa ssfr&#13;
eeUfls wiiui pi&lt;s»U*».&#13;
CroiriBf In fcrot tad •«•*••&#13;
don. Dir«tappHo*tioaa&gt;ma&#13;
•eat of OUMM auhei Ms q*»&#13;
eSOt toflu«ao« tin wtthaafc&#13;
tti»f. The naiDMl foas&gt;&#13;
UOM o/ Cte twmaa oi^&#13;
bv&gt; *J* rutored.&#13;
anlBBtlar etsaes&#13;
Hft wfclob b»t» bta&gt;&#13;
wMUd •*• itrta ossL&#13;
The peti«ot t ' &lt; g&#13;
cheerful u«t «•*•&#13;
i ft&#13;
enjUi r*pl&lt;ttf.&#13;
CO., M!f| CKerrJiH.&#13;
ala, Bo.&#13;
Qjtf JsOsTH'8 TBf nUFWT, $ 3 ; 2 M0 3MCiOVJ.tf.&#13;
o'Jic 1^4-:144^---^^^- -:t-t 1W-,—H4H! a ]+]&gt;HJ.V&#13;
onlly a.s wcli as ever, nui \y.id"'bo&#13;
watolied loi- :i vear by veicrinafv sui'-&#13;
gcons, i&lt;; &lt;j!.'&lt;j wheilio;; tlio iiinunlatio'n.&#13;
prevents ine (luvoiopnuMii vi iiydl'ophobia&#13;
jjermanentlv or oiuv UMnnorariiy.&#13;
"The Drawer."&#13;
An old farmer in Connecticut e a r e d&#13;
up 15,000 pennies and had his entire&#13;
hoard stolen. The tliiuf purchased a&#13;
trorse~wlth tho money and was so detected.&#13;
» __ "&#13;
Go from homo to get information. A&#13;
St. Louis gentleman of Kentucky birth&#13;
and education was recently in Montreal.&#13;
Wanting a cigar, he went to the stand&#13;
in the hotel and made known his desire.&#13;
The dealer, a portly/ side-whiskered&#13;
person after the London pattern, asked&#13;
him if he would "like to ' a v e a 'Enry&#13;
Clay/1 at the same time taking down&#13;
a box of that well-known brand. While&#13;
ma king "1us"selection the Kentuckian&#13;
said: "Henry Clay—Clay—seems to&#13;
me Tve hoard that name. . Pray, sir,&#13;
who was Henry Clay?'1 "Enry Clay/&#13;
sir?" replied the suave d e a l c n ^ %&#13;
w:is a celebrated tobacco mamrfnctin'OT&#13;
hover'hin the States." Vil^rlui ileXd?"&#13;
"Hi think 'c his, sir^-bnt 'is hcstatlishment&#13;
his k c y f l m p by i s / s o n s . "&#13;
The KerUnctty St. Louisian siniled to&#13;
hiirnrctfr t i r his • dgsiv, and / w e n t out&#13;
musing upon the vanity /of" human&#13;
greatness. /&#13;
A genii&lt;'rnan, conductor on one of&#13;
tho main lines runningJ&amp;cLwcen two of&#13;
our prominent cities, svas one Sunday&#13;
persuaded to attend/ church by his&#13;
cousin, who whs then Visiting at his&#13;
house. The day w4s unusually warm,&#13;
and lie being ver/tired% having been in&#13;
two railroad disasters througli the&#13;
Week, he fell/iisleep. The minister,&#13;
waxing warm with iiis subject, began&#13;
to shout, and as ho finished his sentence&#13;
with a shout and stamp, -tne conductor&#13;
roso at once and shouted. "Put on the&#13;
brakes, John, quick! we're off the&#13;
track."&#13;
An eccentric minister of tho Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church in Ohio was onco&#13;
preaching" in a very high pulpit. Ho&#13;
was sailing .along in his discburse, all&#13;
all is compressed and impenetrable.&#13;
Certain inllexiblo natures express themselves&#13;
biyrtrbv tinier-nails and bv the&#13;
handwriting-—Uotti ;tfo-UlunTand dj^-_&#13;
tcrmined. Tlur Chinese -have sueu&#13;
long lingeivnails that ono might aluios:&#13;
write with the ends of them. TIKI&#13;
tenacity of tho Chinese nail, which&#13;
does not'break, shows that, they hayi-.&#13;
more lime in their bones than w e y i a&#13;
different race, At. one time, /\vhcn&#13;
good Queen Anne bit her linger-nails,&#13;
it was"fhe"fashion for altTfie English"&#13;
aristocracy to bite theirs; liud. in those&#13;
davs the English lingua-hail was not&#13;
what it is .now.. Fashiun exerts a&#13;
])o\verful inJr'uenco'ou man, savage or&#13;
civilizeji. Tlie lir)teeu&gt;ies ot Brazil and&#13;
the Ifydalls of' Queen Charlotte's Island&#13;
insert ,a woodeu or ivory p l u g&#13;
a hideous deformity a h at resembles . Hx _. i n t L n u i a . « i H^rtl&#13;
shelf overhanging the chin. ^xlie&#13;
fashionable women of to-day wcitr a&#13;
bustle, which is almost as deforming.—&#13;
Harper Uaz ir. /&#13;
- — * — . . - ^ - '~~~&#13;
— A ISkr-teh F r o p » - 4 ^ a - t - fc.yfe&#13;
WITHOUTMEDICIME.&#13;
C 3&#13;
1¾¾ l&gt;H%AGNt.l&gt;C M'ilY- r ,&#13;
hmi* "Ml T H I S MAGNETIC BELT IS&#13;
WARRANTED TaCURE«rsj£&#13;
f-utinPdltMno:—l»n|&lt;n In thebacU. blpe,he«d( or&#13;
)^, nrrvoufi «l(-blll)lij,lumbago, BongrgrdeMlHyiia&gt;&#13;
a1l»m, puralyele, neuraltfla. sciatica, dlsaaaihokldiK'Te.&#13;
npluul dlitcMsoc,torpid liver,aroalt&#13;
tnal emUsfoiie/ Impotonoy, aethno, he^rt die-&#13;
, dyepcpila, eonmlpatlon. errsipclas, In dire*.&#13;
irio^utinPdUMno:—thebacU, hips, lieea, It in l&gt; e,' n cr v o un d «blll/y,lumbago, aontrut debility^&#13;
rheumatism, purulyele, dleeaaesot&#13;
iho kldnc^i.iipjjiul dIftCdaoe, lljer, ««•&lt;•&#13;
temlc * " " "&#13;
rfteo, _ . _ , . , . . r- - . . _&#13;
1',&gt;n, hornlA or Tuyturw, catarrh, pUvs, opllepey,&#13;
U'w !,otu;Tiyeriob'nty of the GENEIlATIVKORG\XS&#13;
r,-'!'.!s. lout vitality, l a e k o f n e r v o 1'orce and vino*,&#13;
\r:i^:ln(r vecQkneaaos, and all thoso diseases of a per-&#13;
Honul nature, from whatever cause, tho continuous&#13;
stream of M&amp;jrnetism ponneatlag through'tho parts&#13;
mn«trc«tor» tJifm to a faealttay ocilioa. There In no&#13;
mistake ut^Out this appliance.&#13;
LAC'^AGNETriC&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER, m&#13;
They tpldhim a man in Philadelphia&#13;
had..bccn living forty-live d/ys on nothing&#13;
hut milk., /&#13;
•••Pooh! that's no Wmt at all!" said&#13;
Joe Harrison. "Look at mc, livin' six&#13;
months an' workin' everyday an' feedir.'&#13;
on none of ycr solids, but jist pure,&#13;
clear milk." f&#13;
With a look of disdain Joe fastened&#13;
a grub on his hoolc and swung Ins line&#13;
far out of the boat after another striped&#13;
bass. The' boat rested upon tho&#13;
placid surface of Lake Waui'amaug,&#13;
Connecticut, and tho other occupants&#13;
Avcro two New York City gentlemen,&#13;
out for a 7days' fishing. Joe Harrison&#13;
fs a char/tctcr, and is well known hy&#13;
tho hun/treds of guests who Mock to&#13;
the summer hotels upon the shorc&gt;-ef&#13;
that lake. Joe knows where^atl the&#13;
good fishing i's to be foftn*h^and is in&#13;
great demand by tlu&gt;^cuy folks, many&#13;
o / whom Joe^-stipplies with lishing&#13;
/tackle, baitr^nd wiso saws. Joe is alwavs-&#13;
vtsihle to the naked eye by his&#13;
lght bit of color, which harmonizes&#13;
with tho "toot ono somblo11 of the waterscape7and&#13;
is known in J o e ' s - ^ a r -&#13;
lanco as "this here red flannel shirt."&#13;
"Yes," says Joo Harrison, " I hev&#13;
not teched rt mossel of nothing since&#13;
the fust of last Jenur}*. --1 live by ono&#13;
cow's milk alone, cz I don't believe in&#13;
mixin' drinks. Do I smoke or chew?&#13;
Well, I oucss not. I hev not even caten&#13;
a berry this summer. I sleep eight&#13;
hours, am out in all sorts of weather,&#13;
dig worms for bait, row boats, fish, do&#13;
odd jobs, and work harder than lots of&#13;
shaps up around here. When 1 feel&#13;
hungry I drink a quart or two of milk,&#13;
hut that's alt, I-focl first r a t a „ a i \ d a t a&#13;
so used to milkJthat I never think of&#13;
eating anything. There aro plenty of&#13;
them city feliows as has tried to get&#13;
mo 1,o tak a little sumfin in my milk—&#13;
lust a little nutmeg and bug'juice, you&#13;
know—hut they can't come it. T am&#13;
going to slick to milk."— Bridgeport&#13;
Cor. New York World.&#13;
There are *JU0 rooms in th.tr.* Grand&#13;
Union Hotel, Saratoga, and 6Q0 servants.&#13;
aa•a•*o ro r&#13;
a ara aBlata*&#13;
Rfc****ttSiA,&#13;
Nanralcta, Marraas&#13;
wlta niaaaaaaaf tka tiw&#13;
i r C e U F M t , SwaUaa «r&#13;
Xxkaestl»p,D/si&#13;
M&gt; Ktdaers, 1&#13;
Weak Aaklaa, ar Swollen W—U an ADaommai turn&#13;
anda pair of HatmsUo Foot Batterlsi hats no ropartar&#13;
laths relief and ours of all thasa complaints. TMr&#13;
©arry a powerful uagaetlo force to tba aaat ox I M&#13;
dtstsin&#13;
- f a r b m ^ a « k , Weakaeaaof t h e Sal««, F a l l ,&#13;
fata, o f tke wesBk, Maeorrhsta, Ckroals laflanaui*&#13;
UaVaadPlosraUaa osTUa W M B V . X a a U a a t a n | a m .&#13;
or Ylooeiact Pajhiftel* Bappfsaasl a a i fit.&#13;
Maastraatlaa, Barraaaass, aasteasus«a at&#13;
« a w m .&#13;
tla la the Beat AppUaaae and CaraUys Agaat&#13;
forms of Female DtfleaTUea I* fs uns«r&gt;&#13;
paaaed by anything berora lareated, both as a earastra&#13;
ajreatand aaaiouroeof power and TltallieHon, _.&#13;
Prlos of either Belt with Hague tie Foot Batteries, tUX&#13;
Bent by express CO. D,' and examination allowed.orojr&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In orderinjr, » « d tBsaamre ox&#13;
walatandslaeof shoe. Bamlttanoeoaa bemadelAomxreixsy,&#13;
tent In letter at our risk.&#13;
woTrhne Moavgenr etothne Qaurnmdeenr-tcel oatrhei nagd,a p(tendo tt o aalet oaUget*e, tahrw* hrir Uhe the yanT O~ al"T aale and- —El ae-t Hue-H^M, S.&#13;
ba«a aelTertised so- eztenelvely) and snoaid ba&#13;
taken off at night Thiny lh old theirpoweir^brepsr.aad&#13;
are worn at all seasons of thoyoar.&#13;
Send rtamp for the "Kew Departure in Meaieel Tinar&#13;
ment Without Medlelne," with thoosands of testtmo.&#13;
T H E M A G N E T O N A P P I J A N C E tuw^.&#13;
» 1 8 S t a t e St., ChlctftoTtiL&#13;
The Magnetic appliarKiermay bja'saen&#13;
at Winchell's l)rju&gt;^Store, Pickney&#13;
Mich. ;-"' " A&#13;
CO&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liver&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
N O T I C E . — W i t h o u t a particle ofdouht.Ke*.&#13;
tiv&gt;u'» Pills are themost popularofanjonChetiiar-&#13;
K&gt; t. liaving been beforethe public for a qnarteaof&#13;
;v r.:nt«r7, and having always performed mote than&#13;
\v.\i\ promised for them, i hey merit the tuooaaa tifcet&#13;
• liey hareaUainod. P r i c e , 9 5 C . p e r 1X»9C*&#13;
For galo by all druggists.&#13;
Kerniott8 Tills always in atock&#13;
Winohe.l's D r u ^ S t o r e , PiockneVj&#13;
&gt; -&#13;
L-s&#13;
9^&#13;
vl&#13;
^ . a i a a a f c&#13;
s r «.&#13;
_ .&#13;
A D Interview w i t h Chinaee Gordon.&#13;
By James 1). A n . c l t , LL. D-, Presideut of the&#13;
Untvtrsity of Michigan.&#13;
Early in A.u*&gt;usr., 1860, 1 arrived at&#13;
Tientsin, China", in the United States&#13;
steamer "Ashuelot," on niy way to&#13;
Pekin un public bu.siueas. Soon after&#13;
I made an official cull on Li Hung Chang,&#13;
the distinguished Viceroy of the Province&#13;
of (Jhilhi. This is the custom of all&#13;
the representatives of foreign governments&#13;
oassing through Tientsin on their&#13;
way to"the capital. On the day after&#13;
my visit the Viceroy came to tbo ship,&#13;
with a large suite, to return my call.&#13;
Greatly to my gratification he brought&#13;
with him his tirm frieud, who is known&#13;
totheworldasChineaeGordon- Tnough&#13;
the details of the life of this British officer&#13;
w ere thdn less familiar to the public&#13;
than they are now, I was, of course,&#13;
acquainted with the part he had played&#13;
in aiding the Imperial government.years&#13;
before, in suppressing the Taiping rebellion&#13;
From the general reports of&#13;
the dashing career of knight errantry,&#13;
I had, in imagination, pictured him to&#13;
myself as a gigantic, red-faced, loudvoiced&#13;
Englishman, a sort of generous&#13;
swash-buckler and -adventurer, tfho&#13;
loved lighting,-as a profession. Judge&#13;
of my surpnso when there was intvoriii&lt;&gt;&#13;
H.ri tirnm, ;v.x General Gordon, a man&#13;
rather siniill in stature, with a&#13;
sweet and gentle face, u&#13;
voice low. and tender, almost tSemin-&#13;
,atc, nnd a bearing most modest, simple,&#13;
and unassuming. His appearance at&#13;
once gave me a deep impression of sincerity&#13;
and earnestness of character.&#13;
He hadTiurried to China at this time&#13;
to try to avert war between China and&#13;
Russia, which then seemed imminent,&#13;
*&amp;nd to give China good military advice&#13;
in case „w&amp;r.&#13;
He -had-alr«a4y'--been w» Pekin to con&#13;
•fer with tho high officers of state, somewhat&#13;
to the embarrassment of the British&#13;
Minister, who saw that Russia might&#13;
imagine that the General had ^quasi-&#13;
"official gowers, and that so the British&#13;
•Government was improperly meddling&#13;
in the controversy between herself and&#13;
China. He eame to see me in tho train&#13;
of the Viceroy, as he said, to set forth&#13;
his ideas of the true policy for China to&#13;
pursue in this exigency, and to ask me,&#13;
if4 approved of them, to impress them&#13;
upon the Chinese so far as official propriety&#13;
would allow mo.&#13;
He knew the. Chinese so well, and&#13;
understood so thoroughly their militarV^&#13;
resources and the topography&#13;
of the country, that his advice to&#13;
them deeply " interested me. His&#13;
keep out of war and out of debt, if&#13;
possible. He showed them that they&#13;
would speedily spend more in preparation&#13;
for war than all the KuMja territory&#13;
in dispute was worth to them. Ho&#13;
endeavored to convince them that they&#13;
were altogether unprepared for war&#13;
with a great European power. He assured&#13;
them that they were (mite unabltj.&#13;
to prevent the speedy capture of E e M&#13;
by .a column of troops mo^kfg from&#13;
SibHrJa'or from tho seasjtwfe! How well&#13;
he judged Of theif&gt;-hiabil\ty to appreciate&#13;
the ilan^eTU) which their capital&#13;
was ejpo§edV in case of war with&#13;
RuaaiaT was soon made manifest by the&#13;
'SPORTSMEN all through this section&#13;
of country, say the Parker repeating&#13;
breech-loading shot gun is the best ana&#13;
should; provo inevitable. | truest they oyer handled. See advertisement&#13;
in another column.-*-Peck's&#13;
Sun. —&#13;
ludicrous fact that they decided, when&#13;
they thought there was need of strengthening&#13;
the defences of Pekin, to accomplish&#13;
the end by adding ten thousand&#13;
men, armed with bows and arrows,&#13;
to the garrison.&#13;
He warned the Chinese to beware of&#13;
the foreign agents who wished-to- southern&#13;
an indefinite number of riiles and&#13;
iron-clad ships, and to spare no pains&#13;
to see that they_#ore' not cheated by&#13;
Surchasing articles of inferior value.&#13;
Lis opinion was that, with their shallow&#13;
harbors, they needed only a few&#13;
iron-clad gunTboats of l'ight^draft, and&#13;
a few fast cruisers, and&gt;mft they could&#13;
trust to these anrlrpytorpqdoes for their&#13;
coast defense^Ih military operations&#13;
on land Jie lit!vised them to avoid pitcheiibattles;&#13;
but to tiro out, wear out tho&#13;
tuc by rapid ruovomenis, atid by harassing&#13;
him night and day. The Chinese&#13;
Mniriipr nnptl* _nn hnggage, can&#13;
move more quickly, can live on the&#13;
simplest faro, is very hardy, and so has&#13;
some manifest advantages in the kind&#13;
of warfare recommended. He affirmed&#13;
that if they could be well led, they&#13;
would fight well.&#13;
i ^ e a l s o strongly urged the Chinese&#13;
Governmont to transfer its capital from&#13;
Pekin," which is so easily reached either&#13;
from the Russian territory on the north,&#13;
or from tho sea-coast, to somo city in&#13;
the central part of the Empire, say to&#13;
Nanking, whicLfwas for along time'the&#13;
•capital. He said that among Oriental&#13;
people the loss of a capital produced a&#13;
far more depressing effect than among&#13;
Europeans. How much influence his&#13;
visit had in averting war, I canuot^say;&#13;
but war was averted and a satisfactory&#13;
treaty was made betwoen Russia and&#13;
^phina.&#13;
He could not have talked with more&#13;
•feeling and interest if he had been giving&#13;
counsel for securing the welfare of&#13;
his own nation. His earnestness was&#13;
almost pathetic. It_ was understood&#13;
that the Viceroy was deeply impressed&#13;
by his advice. "The General was quartered&#13;
in a temple in the city. It was&#13;
currently reported that he preferred&#13;
not to be called on for business before&#13;
ten o'clock in the morning, as he gav&#13;
the early hours of the day to pn»jjy£scffd&#13;
^meditation* Iijn&amp;*^.-tb&amp;*m.tba!i*ihours&#13;
of communion wjthr-^rod, he believed&#13;
he receiTed^-eiear illumination&#13;
upon the grave-questions of public concern&#13;
whi^h-were engaging his attention&#13;
fcity, the unselflshHesa.&#13;
nesa of the man impressed me not loss&#13;
than his knowledge of Chinese affairs.&#13;
I have always thought of him since that&#13;
interview as a singular combination of&#13;
the best type o! medieval monk, tho&#13;
born lender of Oriental peoples, and&#13;
tho accomplished modern engineer and&#13;
soldier.&#13;
— . .**» —&#13;
A western paper rocently mado excuses&#13;
for the shortcomings of a particular&#13;
issue by claiming that a part of its&#13;
"editorial corpse1' was necessarily ab&#13;
sent The mistake was pointed out by&#13;
a friosd and the next week the following&#13;
appeared:«'The error was simply a typographical&#13;
one. Of course anyone with&#13;
a spoonful of brain* would know that&#13;
we meant "editorial core.1'&#13;
The early German: Settlers on the&#13;
Schuylkill were mainly members of the&#13;
Society of Friends. It is claimed for&#13;
them by Mr. Buck in his address at&#13;
Norristown during the recent centennial&#13;
exercises, that tho earliest protest&#13;
against negro slavery in the English&#13;
colonies, was prepared by these .German&#13;
settlers, at'Germantown, Februarv&#13;
18, 1688.&#13;
Owl, with sauerkraut stalling, is esteemed&#13;
a great luxtrv by the Indians of&#13;
Nevada.&#13;
+•&#13;
Beware of the Incipient stages of consumption&#13;
Tuke Hiso'B cure la time.&#13;
Mr. Gladstone, who was said to bo&#13;
looking very pale, exhausted and feveristny&#13;
excited immediately after bis&#13;
campaign, and who got a Lecture from&#13;
his physician," has just climbed the secondhighest&#13;
mountain in.Scotland.&#13;
jl'ar n i « r » a n d S t o c k m e n *&#13;
'i'rn: r.nly remedy that really cure* Gaits, Cuts ana&#13;
Wumi'is on horse* and cattle, and always brings&#13;
tliolin'r n m the original color, is Veterinary Carboll^&#13;
iv- In 50c and f l cans, at Druggists or by mail.&#13;
J . W. 01,H &amp; Co,. Prop.,BlackJiiver Falls.Wls.&#13;
STINGING Irritation, Inflammation, all Kidney and&#13;
Urinary Complaints, cured by "Buchu I'alba." ¢1.&#13;
l o u n g ITIen, Kead Tiiis.&#13;
THB VOLTAIC BELT CO., of Marshall, Mich.,&#13;
offer to send ihelr ELECTRO VOLTAIC BELT&#13;
and other ELECTRIC APPLIANCES on trial for&#13;
30 days to men (young or old) afflicted with&#13;
nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood&#13;
and all kindred troubles. Also fo'- rheumatism,&#13;
neuralgia, paralysis, and many disease?..&#13;
Complete restoration io health, vigor and&#13;
manhood guaranteed. No risk is incurred as&#13;
30 days's trial is allowed. Write them at once&#13;
for JlJustruted'psmphiettrec; ~&#13;
BKD-IiUGa. files, rnacnes, ants, mice, cleared out&#13;
by "K0UG1I ON K A T S . "&#13;
MENRMAtf'8 PEPTONIZED BBKF TONIC, t h e o n l y&#13;
preparation of beef contain in* its entire nutritious^&#13;
properties, It contains blooa-making, force-generating&#13;
and life-sustaining properties; Invaluable for&#13;
INDIGESTION, D T B P E P S W aervous prostration, and ft" farm* it general dgbUiijf^lB^LftU-ftnfeebied&#13;
conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous&#13;
prostration, overwork or acute disease, partly&#13;
nlarly If resulting from pulmonary com) '.alnts,&#13;
WELL, H A Z A R D &amp; Co., Propria&#13;
by Druggists&#13;
i CO., Proprietors, "Now V&#13;
"ROUGH ON HATS'&#13;
roaches, bedbugs, ants,&#13;
deaf fut&#13;
llu,&#13;
rats, mice, flies&#13;
chipmunks, lao.&#13;
rors of&#13;
of ma;&#13;
CA1 all who are Buffering from ernervous&#13;
weakness, early decay, loss&#13;
bd. &amp;c.Y Iw'.U".8!*0! L e u a . rec'elpe that will&#13;
Send self-aMressed'envelope to KBV&#13;
1NMAN, Station D. New York.&#13;
fl-jou, rliEB OF CHAUOJ&#13;
dlscovepedby a^nlsslynarj&#13;
This great remedy&#13;
In South America.&#13;
JOsBPH T.&#13;
NERVOUS Weakness, Dyspepsia, Sexual&#13;
oured by Well's Health. Kenewer.&#13;
Debility&#13;
[Endorsed&#13;
1 by&#13;
Physlclans.&#13;
OH! THE MISERY&#13;
Of the poor dyspeptic. Tho disturbed condition of&#13;
the stomach, tbe nausea, headaches, heartburn and&#13;
•ffenslre belching*, the lack of appetite, the Irrl*&#13;
table temper, the worn out feeling,tbe hatred ot the&#13;
world ifenerally-these symptoms can better bo&#13;
imagined than described; and yet, If you suffer from&#13;
all, Hood's Sarsaparllla will give you speedy, sure&#13;
and permanent relief. Tako it once and end jour&#13;
sufferings.&#13;
1 have been much troubled with dyspepsia the&#13;
past year or two; after trying many medicines I&#13;
began Uking Hood's Harsaparllla, and am now almost&#13;
entirely well. Mrs. Chas. Keetor, Cincinnati,&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
Mrs. Mary C. Kml'.h, Cambridgeport, Mass., was a&#13;
sufferer from dyspepsia and sick headache since she&#13;
was nine years old. She commenced to take Hood's&#13;
BarsauarUia,and writes, In delight, thai she found&#13;
It tne best remedy she ever used, and recommends&#13;
Its use to others. t*.&#13;
HOOD'S SABSAPAEILLA&#13;
Sold by all druggists, t l ; six for *5. Prepared only&#13;
by (J. !• Houd &amp; Co., Lowell, Maas.&#13;
100 Dooes One Dollar + CHENEY'S&#13;
Stomach I Liver&#13;
IREGULATOR |&#13;
Torpid Liver, Indigestion, Heartburn, Malaria,&#13;
Rheumatism. Palpitation of the Heart when&#13;
arising from indigestion or deranged condition&#13;
of the stomach, 81CK Headache or Mlgrain,&#13;
Piles and Female complaints. Tho only ruedicinein&#13;
the world that&#13;
P o s i t i v e l y C u r e s C o n s t i p a t i o n *&#13;
P r i c e , fcl.OO per bottle; 6 bottles, «5.00«&#13;
B I N D FOB-CIKCULARS, FREE*&#13;
F. J . C H E N E Y &amp; C O . , P r o p ' r ,&#13;
Kamfactarlag Chemlat*,&#13;
T O L E D O , O . P OTA TOE&#13;
W A N F F D ! s Consignments solicited from Storekeepers and Farmers&#13;
ot POTATOES, BLTTKK, EGGS, POILTKY, FRU'its&#13;
and GKNEKAI. PKOncctf. Wrile to us; it will pay&#13;
you. Address&#13;
E. JB. Gawley &amp; Co&#13;
C O M M I S S I O N M E R C H A N T S , yd WYAVoodbridg-e 81-,&#13;
D E T K O I T , M I C H .&#13;
C S ^ U e f e r e m - e s '— A . IVKS «• S O N S , Hunkers, or a n y&#13;
w h o l e s a l e house in Detroit.&#13;
ar,il T i l e t r a p h College at Kalamazoo, Mich&#13;
S'-ixl / o r Jourui.!.&#13;
U. h\ rARSO&gt;S,Prcs&gt;r.&#13;
TOa rU ia curing? Bri«ht'o&#13;
Kidney &amp; Liver Troubles, ffi9| TJloe^so, Paiua in tho&#13;
Bladder, Urinary and JjfefcBack, Loins or Bides,&#13;
Liver Diseases, Dropsy, ^Retention or Non-Bctcu-&#13;
Gravel and Diabetes. tion. of Uriao.&#13;
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED,&#13;
It cur OB Biliousness, Headaoho, Jaundice, SourStom.&#13;
ach., Dyspepaifi, Const: pation tuidPiieu.&#13;
IT WORKS PROMPTLY&#13;
and curee Intemperance, Nervono Diseases, C-oacral&#13;
Debility, JlxCtsaaea and Peaialo •Wcaknoad.&#13;
USE IT AT ONCE.&#13;
It restores the KIDNEYS, LIVES and BOW2CLS, to \&#13;
a healthy action and CtTK£3 when all other medio;.''.es -&#13;
f&gt;il. Hundreds havobcen&amp;aved who have beea given&#13;
up to die by friends and "p nysicTafis.&#13;
Price $1..23. Bend for Illustrated TamrMct to&#13;
HUNT'S EEMEWT CO., Providence, V.. I.'&#13;
SOLD BY ALL DETjaGISTa. J&#13;
HAYFEVER&#13;
I was aftlictedfor&#13;
twenty j cirsdurine&#13;
the months of August&#13;
and September,&#13;
auti tried various&#13;
remedies without&#13;
relief. I wa$ induced&#13;
io use Ely's&#13;
Cream Balm; have&#13;
used it with favorable&#13;
results, and can&#13;
confidently recommend&#13;
it- to all.&#13;
ROBT. W. TOWNLBT&#13;
(ex-Mayor), Elizabtth,&#13;
N\ J.&#13;
C r e a m - H o l m is a remedy found ed|on a correctdiajjnoisof&#13;
Ihis disease aud ran be depended upon,&#13;
Soc at druceiots; 6oc by mail, sample bottle by mail&#13;
10c, E L Y nROS,)E&gt;r\iffsist8 Owe^o, N , Y,&#13;
* « LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S . •&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
* » * IS A POSITIVE CURE FOU » . /&#13;
All those painful Complaints&#13;
* And Wesknt-Nses so commoii *&#13;
* * • * * * to our best * * * * * *&#13;
», * FEMALE POPULATION. * *&#13;
Vtlet $1 ID liquid, pill or lotcage form.&#13;
-»-fr» purpow to $olely for the legitimate healing of&#13;
disease and the relief of pain, andthatitdot» all&#13;
it claim* to do, thouaandaof laditscaA gladlt tettify. •&#13;
* It will euro entirely all Ovarian troubles, Inflarnm»&#13;
tion and Ulceration, Falling and bisplacements, an&amp;&#13;
consequent Spiuai Weakness, and la particularly&#13;
adapted to the. change of life. • « • # • « • » • # • # *&#13;
* It removes raininess. Flatulency, ck'stroys all craving&#13;
for stlartUant.i, and relieves Weakness of the btomacb.&#13;
It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration,&#13;
General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion.&#13;
That feeling of bearing down, causing parn,&#13;
and backaebc. Is always permanently oured by its use.&#13;
* Scud stamp t*&gt; Lyaa, Maoon for painphlnt.—Letters of&#13;
Inquiry confidentially answered. &gt;'or sale at dr^;yista.&#13;
* * * # * » « * * * # * » * * » * • « . • • * *&#13;
DISEASE BANISHED&#13;
Health Gained,&#13;
Long Life Secured,&#13;
BY U S I N G&#13;
it&#13;
Et Purifies t h e Blood,&#13;
It C l e a n s e s t h e Liver,&#13;
S t r e n g t h e n s t h e Kidneys,&#13;
It R e g u l a t e s t h e Bowels.&#13;
TRUTHFUL TESTIMONY.&#13;
HAY-FEVER&#13;
Protective, ho&#13;
euch p r o t e c t i v e&#13;
against chills and&#13;
fever and other diseases&#13;
of a maVarla!&#13;
typeexlstb as Hostettor's&#13;
s t o m a c h&#13;
Bitters. It relieves&#13;
constipation, liver&#13;
disorders, rheumatism,&#13;
kidney and&#13;
blsdder ailments&#13;
with "certainty a,&#13;
p r o m p l t u p V e r A&#13;
change HifffStlfylng&#13;
as it^-re complete&#13;
place In tho&#13;
ppearance, as well&#13;
as tr,e sensation of&#13;
the wan and haggard&#13;
Invalid who&#13;
tttw "ttrt* *tsmJanl&#13;
promoter of health&#13;
and strength. For&#13;
aaleby aliDruggliu&#13;
and Dealers generally&#13;
H U ^ f j U M A T M ^ '&#13;
BITTE:«S&#13;
ere enj^&#13;
To introduce "Ha ppy Days," our DAW 16 page l l l i s -&#13;
trated Magailmt, we wl'l aead t o s n v l a d r a e n d l n g *&#13;
oU In stamp* for S month* subscription, two Ladlea'&#13;
full atst Wa-Urpfoof OoMamer Q a m t n t a with cat-&#13;
. alogn* «f other rabMr foods. *fovtded they will&#13;
r r t o w them to their frlendi and ladno* other ealea,&#13;
Addrees, P a k a M a p p r D a y s , i f a r t f o r t l t C t *&#13;
1&#13;
K I D N E Y D I S E A S E S .&#13;
I "Taitffere(l&lt;lnyandnigHt vith Kidney trouble*, ml/&#13;
ira ter was chalky and bloody, I could get no relief from&#13;
doctors. Kidney-Wart cured me, lam as teell as ever.&#13;
FRAXK WILSOX, Peabody, X**o.&#13;
L I V E R C O M P L A I N T .&#13;
Iirould not luaeithout Kidney-Wort (fit cost $10. Jti&#13;
laired my Liecr and Kidney troubles after Ihc.dlosil&#13;
fall licra. SAJ/'Z, UODQES, Williamstoicn. h', Va.\&#13;
P I L E S ! P I L E S ! !&#13;
TrrJ". —?d for 12 years from Piles,as none butthosri&#13;
'tKtit .'uv.-e IK&lt;:U cjVcttd ca;i realize. kidne-j-lVortf&#13;
luickly cured me.. Ii\lf-LV T, AJJELL, Georyi'u, Vt.&#13;
CONSTIPATION.&#13;
Iicnsa great sufferer from, diseased Kidnfys^andl&#13;
waa terribly constipated for years. I arnpetfat s«*n-l&#13;
ty as tc.U ns ever I was ii% rr\y\if**hnd it is duel&#13;
'alone to K.idney-1Yor,t. C. P.BJifrfk, Wcsiport, X Y.\&#13;
R H E U M A T I S M .&#13;
'ftrrsvffering^f&amp;fthirty years from Rheumatism&#13;
\and kidney tptrrfble, Kidney-Wort has entirely cured&#13;
me." ^^ELBRIDGS XALCOLX, West Bath, Xe.&#13;
F E M A L E C O M P L A I N T S .&#13;
"RWncj-Wort has cured my wife aftci- ttco years&#13;
suffrrin!} and wnkness, brought on b;/ use of a Hew-&#13;
\ing Machine." !&gt;:&gt;'. C. JT. SVXXEliUS, Sun Uill, Co.&#13;
FOR T H E B L O O D .&#13;
"The pc.st yrtr / ' n ; v rsed Kidney-Wort more than&#13;
lever, ami ieitA the tn:&lt;i ?vs«.'/.«. Taks it all i;i nil, it U&#13;
\tka most furri'sat'id rrvil-.li/ I hnre ercrused.''&#13;
PHILLIP C. liALU'V, II. D„ Zonkton, rt.&#13;
M A L A R I A . ,:Chror.is "xlnritfor years, with livrr disease macle&#13;
me wish for i.V.i.'.'s. A European trip, doctors anrfj&#13;
medicine &lt;{«?&gt;io good, until I used Kidney-Wort—that&#13;
CURED v. i-." IIEXR Y WA K T&gt;,&#13;
Late Col, Ol ,'i r.C7„X. 0.8. X Y., Jersey City, X J.&#13;
K. K. n. RADWAYS&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF,&#13;
DO THEY TUOUBLK YOU? H A V E THEM&#13;
EXAMINED W I T H OUR N E W TEST LENSES&#13;
BY WHICH W E OFTEN SUCCEED W H E N&#13;
OTHERS KAIL,&#13;
ROEHM &amp; WRIGHT.&#13;
IMPOKTEKS, J E W E L E R S , A N D O P T I C I A N S ,&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D A V E . , DETROIT MICH.&#13;
H E A D Q U A R T E R S&#13;
(FOR)—&#13;
Campaign Flags &amp; Banners,&#13;
DEAN GODFREY &amp; Co..&#13;
167 :md id) Griswold st. DETROIT, JUIOU.&#13;
jC'orrespondeiKc solicited.&#13;
David Preston &amp; Co.,&#13;
BANKERSU&#13;
E T K O I T , - M I C H I G A N .&#13;
ESTA111.ISHKD ISJ'J.&#13;
In from ewe to twenty mtnutee, never faili to £ »&#13;
Ueve PAIN with one thorough application. T*9&#13;
matter how violent or exerucdatliig the pein* toe)&#13;
nhoumatlc, Bedridden, loflrm, Crippled, NervOtli,&#13;
Neuralgic, or proetrated with dlee—e auw n f f c r .&#13;
BADWAY*8 BEADY R E L I E F will afford laetant&#13;
BOWEL COMPLAINTS.&#13;
D Y S E N T E R Y , DIARRHOEA, C H O L -&#13;
ERA M O R B U S .&#13;
I t will, in s Tew mlnutee, when taken&#13;
to directions, core Cramps, Bpasme, Soar Stonuwb.&#13;
Heartburn, Sick Headache, SUMMER COMPLAINT,&#13;
DUrrhcM, Dyientery, Colic, Wind In the B©weJ»»&#13;
end til interoa) palna.&#13;
Travelers ahould always carry a bottle of RAJ&gt;&#13;
WAY'S READY RELIEF with them. A few drops&#13;
In water will prevent sickness, or pain from chance S' water. It is better than French brandy ox B i t&#13;
re as a stimulant.&#13;
We transact a gereral banking business.&#13;
Prompt and careful attention to Collections ou&#13;
any part of the globe.&#13;
K « " * N D S .&#13;
We touj and«ell all classes of reliable securities-&#13;
United estate*, State, County, Town, and ticbool&#13;
DiBtrlctBonds. Good&#13;
H E A L E S T A T E M O R T G A G E S&#13;
Land Warrants and choice commercial p«per. Interest&#13;
allowed on time deposits. Careful attention&#13;
¾iven to the accounts cf out of town Banks and&#13;
lankers. D A V I O PRESTON &amp; Co.&#13;
THE TRUE RELIEF.&#13;
KADWAY'S BEADY BELIEF la the only remedial&#13;
agent in vogue that will Instantly stop paiu. It&#13;
Instantly relieves and soon cures headache, whether&#13;
sick or nervous, toothache, neuralgia, nervousness, .sad Bleepleaeneee, rhenjsaUajn. lumbago, pains ind&#13;
weakness in the back, spine, or kidneys, pains around&#13;
the liver, pleuriey, swelling of the joints, sprains,&#13;
bruises, bites of insects, and pains of all kinds, Badway's&#13;
Ready Relief will afford immediate ease, ana Its&#13;
continued use for a few days effect a permanent core.&#13;
M A L A R I A I N I T S V A R I O U S F O R M S .&#13;
FEVER A N D A G U E .&#13;
There Is not a remedial agent in the world that wla&#13;
core Fever aud Ague, and ail other Malarious, Bullous,&#13;
Scarlet, and other fo*ers, (aided b-j Radway'i&#13;
Pills) so quick as Iladway'B Ready Relief. Price fifti&#13;
cents. Sold by druggieta.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A large list of Farms in Michigan I&#13;
F O K S A L E O R E X C H A N G E .&#13;
WANTED—A description 61 every Farm or&#13;
piece of property lor , Bale or t-xchacgt In&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Money to Lotin on Farms in&#13;
Eastern Michigan,&#13;
A D D R E S S ,&#13;
53 Buhl Block. j DJ&amp;THOIT,MICU.&#13;
CURE!&#13;
\ n r n o v ST.&#13;
TPHItANTI, MICH.&#13;
Sciatica. Rheumatism, Catarrh. Cancer, Nervoas&#13;
Debility, Femaie Diseases. Liver, Kidriay and Skin&#13;
I)i*eae«.',,8ucce8sfully TREATED and ct'itBj). Hundreds&#13;
01 testimenials furcished on application,&#13;
For Board, Treatment or other information.&#13;
Address, UK. W. H. HAI.L. 1'raprietor.&#13;
is short Vou will save&#13;
,11171« and money by obtaining&#13;
a thorough* aud&#13;
practical Hiisin'.'sa Etlu&#13;
national the (joldsmith&#13;
Pryunt and Strutton Busincsi&#13;
L'nivvrjitv, Dvtror..&#13;
lis practical courses ot study and Coun'incr House&#13;
Actual Business is unequaled, A*-k nvir jrraduites , . . , . . ^ .&#13;
and business men, Shorihand .and Typewntino; Call formation worth thonsands will be sent to you.&#13;
or E&lt;;nd for circulars. Griswold street, opposite^Caty-! ~ ^ _ ^ _&#13;
Hall. \V, F J E W E I X , r&gt;rihcipnl,&#13;
DR. R*AD&lt;WrAIT'S&#13;
SASSAPARTLLiAN RESOLTENT&#13;
T h e Great Blood Purifier.&#13;
For core of all chronic diseases. Scrofula, Cor&gt;&#13;
stnnption, Glandular Disease, Ulcers, Chronic Rheumatism,&#13;
Erysipelas, Kidney, Bladder and Liver c o o&#13;
plitnts, Dyspepeia, Affections of the Lungs and&#13;
Throat, purines the Blood, restoring health and vifcS&#13;
m' THE SKIN,&#13;
After a few days' use of the Ssrsepsrillisn becomes&#13;
dear end beautiful. Pimples, blotches, black spots,&#13;
end skin eruptions are removed; sores and ulcers&#13;
soon cured. Persons Buffering from scrofula, eruptive&#13;
diseases of the oyo*. mouth, ears, legs, throat&#13;
andjlsncis, that have accumulated and spread, either&#13;
im uncured diseases or murcury, may rely upon a&#13;
cure if tbe Harsaparillian is continued a sufficient&#13;
time to make its impression on the system. Sold by&#13;
druggists. Price $1 per bottle.&#13;
RADWAY'S REGULATING PILLS.&#13;
T h e Greet Liver a n a S t o m a o h&#13;
R e m e d y ,&#13;
Perfec;iy tasteless, elegantly coated with sweeC g u a ;&#13;
purge, regulate, purify, cleuise, and strengthen.&#13;
RADWAY'S*PILL3 for the cure of all disorders,&#13;
of the Stomach, Uver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Pain In the back, LOBS of Appetite, Languor, Nervous&#13;
Diseases, Headache, Constipatlorj. Costiveneee,&#13;
Indigestion, Dyspepeia, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation&#13;
of the Bowels, Piles, end all derangements 0*&#13;
the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing&#13;
no mercury, mineral's or deleterious drugs.&#13;
A few doses of RADWAY'S PILLS will free, torn&#13;
system of all the above named disorders.&#13;
PRICE 26 CENTS PEE BOX. Sold by all druggjst*.&#13;
Read " F A L S E A N D T R U E / * -&#13;
Sends letter stamp to B A D W A Y&#13;
r¥«&gt; »8 W a r r e n St.. S e w Y o r k . CO,&#13;
la,&#13;
Ll\&#13;
WANTKOto sell the only authentic&#13;
lire ofOen John A. Logan. It is&#13;
anadjptrably written, cloth bound&#13;
boolc of nearly 500 pages, on heavy&#13;
tinted p a p c . .Contains life-itke steel portrait of&#13;
Louftn. i over boars reproduction, in orufinal col«&#13;
ori«, of-fl"fieetith corps banner aud strikinK Illustration&#13;
of LoKJin at the battle before Atlanta. Em-&#13;
T O T H E P U B L I C .&#13;
Be sure and ssk for Rsdway's and see&#13;
of "Bftdwaj" is on wa»**ou buy. ttwt&#13;
R»&#13;
&gt;5P j S O g &lt; S l r r &lt; E PORr6&#13;
boesed in jjold and black. Thonsands selling. liarste&#13;
profits lo aaents. 8&gt;-nt to any address post-paid&#13;
upon receipt ot one dollar. Acfdress,&#13;
Mention paper tu&gt; The NATIONAL TRIBUNE,&#13;
which you **w this. &gt;' Washington, D. C&#13;
C»ES WHERE ALL ELSI fAiL UJsees tiCno tuiimtheJ.&#13;
BestCouI'nhyruj). Taitexgood.&#13;
~ — • - - • - - 'Bofd by druggists.&#13;
ASTHMA CUREDI G e r m a n A s t h m a C o r e never/atZ*togive im-|&#13;
mediate relief m the worst casea4nsure8 comfortable&#13;
sleep; effects c o r e s where all others faiL A&#13;
trial convinces thsmoit skeptical, price d O c . a n d .&#13;
~ 1 . 0 0 , o f Dnuprist*orbv mall. Sample F R E E I&#13;
DBTK. 8CHIFEMAN. St. Paul, Itflnn.f&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
SOLO Br ALL DEALERSTHROUOKTUTTHE W O R L D&#13;
GOLD MEDAL PARIS E X P 0 S I T I O N - 1 8 7 S .&#13;
^ C O N S U M P T I O N . ^ , .&#13;
3 S A L E S M E Wanted. A weeklv salary and commission paid to&#13;
the rlgiit parties. CJood references and light security&#13;
required. Only first-class suofcrtption books&#13;
bandied. Address, STANDARD PUB. HOUStf,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Michigan.&#13;
Lady Agents n e n t employment&#13;
a n i t u o d Saliry selling QueuU C.tJ&#13;
S k l r t a a J S t o o k l n c S n p p o r t e n s e t c&#13;
-Saninie-ouifit-l^egf. AJ&gt;irt-^ Q o e e n&#13;
• C l t r SaBpeJulgi* C o . , Ciacuuuti.Q. ASTHMA I Relieved immediately and cured by&#13;
isinsr CONX ASTH4IA CONQCKUOIL&#13;
Price fo per bottle or :i bottles fo&#13;
|8 delivered. Address DR. C. MAKKT, Manager&#13;
liamlltOR, Ohio.&#13;
THE T I F F I N Well Boring ft&#13;
Rock Drilling&#13;
MACHINERY!&#13;
For Horse or Steam Power&#13;
Hundreds of the best men in 30 States&#13;
and Territories usu it &amp;iid will have no&#13;
other!&#13;
RELIABLE! DURABLE! SIMPLE!&#13;
Established over i i year?,we have ampfe&#13;
facilities to fill orders p r o m p t l y , and&#13;
to satisfaction erf our customers. Cata- J&#13;
locne yn&gt;:K. Addrr&lt;s *&#13;
LOO.UIS ^ M 5 I A N , Tiffin, O h i o .&#13;
r/&#13;
Addreas M PLACE to secure a tho-0"ch ~ n &lt;&#13;
efui education,is a t t h e o i n . v n&#13;
RAPlP^.f.Mlch.)JBrsiyFS8 • 01.&#13;
LEO«. Write for College Jouma&#13;
C. G, SWENSBLUU.&#13;
Don't send us! •nno»; but name and receive our&#13;
, U l i e y N e w Sample t o o k FK1CK.&#13;
iCapltol Uard Co.Hartford,Ct&#13;
Learn Tel»s;r»phy or Short-Hand&#13;
; It's a paying business. Situations&#13;
;"R.R. Tel. College, Ann Arbor, Mich.&#13;
W . N . U . D - - 2 - - 4 0&#13;
OPIUM M o r p h i n e navblt Cstfwd l a U&#13;
to^OdAyr*. X r v p d J t i U C o r e d .&#13;
D&amp;. J. STKPiu&amp;Kd, l » b a n o n . OhiOt&#13;
LOOK SPORTSMEN M23"»t"I3»s ™«SPECIAL OFFER&#13;
it oota"nt trw •ame^TrtltJ otTTfrro I t t O ' f |&#13;
NEY8, LIVER and BOWELS ctlmulatlngg&#13;
•them to healthy action and keeping them&#13;
in p«rfoct order. w*byaui&gt;rm«»wt,rrt*$too&#13;
LinuidorDry. The-latter can bo sent by mail.&#13;
WELLS,rRlCHARDSON &amp; CO.,&#13;
BURLINGTON, VIRMONT, U. 8 . A.&#13;
M»«tr«»l. P. C , u d L^odon, £n{lu&lt;S.&#13;
S Parker Repeating BreechloaLlmg Shot Gun.&#13;
Equal In 8C Rapoaucnidtys two i4th D oonueb Lleo aBjcat+rtreigt.^ d3 S Phaotte nCtusn. s. Shoots&#13;
Tboqae&gt;ti&gt;-&gt;Q h u long been a*'*»d, Whycur£otk JU pt-yi rig S-iJ G*n. tem»deon»iiinil*r&#13;
pri&amp;eipu u ih» Winchester »nd "th«j frflpimiinir Rittr* I A:ur v«*/&gt; of cip«nm«ntin^ we I&#13;
UTt iolT«d th • difficult prcbl«3X"»ad we Dow offer, u » re»ah cf \hit great ichisreaent,&#13;
tJn r*rk*r R*p—ti%g&amp;8tc* DnteJUoadiwf &amp;kei Gun, pronounced by all iporumfn&#13;
whobara i«teJit tolHLpef tictUenc* th« attaint ditecurf j»t made in firearaia,^ H&#13;
will mperaede allQ*h»r ahot (rant, and Ueren now caaaina a ifacnpedV anfoag Rt&gt;nn«rV&#13;
who purcbaajJe-tT»if[bt. Ditcriptiom; The Majr«ireai3&lt;ii 8 RtmniU; can b« loaded&#13;
in 3&lt;i#*5(uie{|7and the » Round! »redrim*fe.*»»'r#/r«» 1^ *enmdt. It is Brt«niMtiing&#13;
r\i)i*Ait&lt;malie S/itll Sfector, which throw*oat vbo firvJ (hell usirtload* U*t'.f i t tho&#13;
u» time by theiimple Lett iij*rmt%t. It »!»&gt; h u the l'»tent .Magaaioe Cut Of, tad&#13;
I can be isatasUv conrerted Into a SiioV« loader if dcaired. The Lxkt, Hj%»s%agt,%ad&#13;
\ttttl Pletur* madeof the very beet Snel. and ('*»« Z/jri»W, Tha £arr«;&gt; are 01 ami-&#13;
I form leaftfa, and made of the Final Bl**d St*tl and fuaranv**J U, S. Gonrnmt%t&#13;
Protf. Stock Is of aelected Walnut, oil*d and polUhed. The ammaniiion can be&#13;
! procured from dealer*. It* pam ate ao xubeUntiaXly eoanecfd it will never get&#13;
oat of order. The ac lien b *o tlmple even a boy can comprehend andhandleit with&#13;
\ptrf'H»afHy. We caution gun norm apunat Irreapoaafble firme who deceptively&#13;
1 njverliae and offer bocoi, altered, and toy (rona,dear ataty price, aad uuaiato ehoot.&#13;
\V« x n d with each gnu onr war-ant—, aa fol.owa: *&#13;
K e a d O a r W a r r a n t e e . Tkt Parkrr ltej*xi%4 Repteiinj i s&gt;i&lt;* TtrucXlMdiiZg&#13;
ShotGan, a» offered by ne, we warrant to be a* rrpreerntcd in Cut and K+tuin?,&#13;
and alfo to be madeo/ thestwat material*, and ionrf »m&lt;i«. If fjund ,otberwU». w e /&#13;
will retnad money or aaiiatactorlly exchange for ether pnoi. Signed, Parker A Co.&#13;
We will offer a limited number of the— excellent runa at $iJ.i-0 each it&amp;s firat&#13;
cotO, aa per ipeclal and limited xoopoa offer. Our reatone t-&gt;r doing to are&#13;
manifold; we want t* quickly and Immediately place and dim bow thi* *e.\»on a .&#13;
ecrwin number over the United States, Our experience U.one aio^la pin, when ihown &lt;&#13;
aroaod and handled by » (portamaa, will Mil doaen* in hi* Ticinliy. Thi* i* oor&#13;
main reaaonla niaklnirthU big redueticn, u wo well know dnplieato order* at oar,&#13;
Ittfujar Rattt yrl\\ follow tbojkleol em m* told tin «*?. ThU 1* where « mait&#13;
our proiWe, a* no iportamen willheeitate lo i^vct i."S.'Hi for lhl*#»rwS«f of ail aho$&gt;&#13;
gun* when ho too* It. It tell* itaelf, andahowsdoobla the valne,&#13;
r% I B . iV ACCURATE REPRESCNTATtOr&#13;
^ - fE CNAILENCE C ^ , - .&#13;
)R PIS'EQUALS RAPIDITY OF^TJOH.BRaUAreT EXlXimoN,&#13;
a/00 Y/WtgL&#13;
\FAILEI&gt;&#13;
k JSK&#13;
«v'ji,&#13;
WEIGHT&#13;
" ^ .&#13;
?,5tfi^, ¾¾^^ unr sneciai ana Liuutea uner. Upon receipt o i&#13;
this coupon sucl&#13;
$13.00 before NOT. 25,13M, wea*rroo to secure!y pack&#13;
ami box frt« of all charges and ship tn any one aa*&#13;
Orts* In t h e Unitfkl States Ons Parker Maocurime « • -&#13;
veatina 6 Shot BrateWoadiiw Shot Gun. « u h one&#13;
hoten Loaded Sh*Us free. But after ^ 1 ^ ^ ¾ 8 4 ,&#13;
and up to J a n . 1,18». the nrlee will be $18.50. After&#13;
Jan. 1. 188&amp;,tbe stftMterd price will be W.0g.&#13;
Onlr o n e m m will be sent to any one person a t l i m ,&#13;
Onr object Is distribution, t»nd to pet the run at this&#13;
price y o u must cut 9 « this coupon and return It&#13;
to us with your order.&#13;
W* wtn 1 IC. O, D. with ptirllags to •»&amp;»•• bat «1&#13;
soesant of too»0&gt;U etahrpeisf,trtidat, and delay*of C.O. pn&#13;
waeasrss |1.M ettf ts Omlem Of*. Not a aiajrl* sma baa&#13;
beM retmtneAt\\ej tire aaeh rood aatiaAcOon. TUefeet em*&#13;
UUekf—im. TtetlmmieU eve eewUf mm%»fee*nl. uTb«&#13;
tastor&amp;s poddiacU la ta«^atiaf.&gt;r W« WlU fanbh tb*&#13;
aarna* of bsBsddrNceswssSi*i' pwebaMrawbMo wiUlll tillaaddrry a1a&#13;
iaqatrw ftbomt tba «Mrifk of thia tseetm._ We epemIiM aWa Mh tvattaayt*&#13;
on to aporatMB to call and axasaia* Ibis. Ik* Oat*** Beet Oem.&#13;
MosMywa &gt;• tami ky KatwOwd iMtot. Matwy Qsdst. Jtowsa,&#13;
•rk7CUaa*wl&gt;rmV7o^saall«*d«nio P A B K U t et&gt;&#13;
9m* C w a g e w , 8 8 Cauusb-rs M. (swsw Brw«Wiwi*7&gt;&gt;&#13;
Tbta I wOlasi&#13;
go M t o f i r e o«r%ntlre attention to the «*!• of fell B - p e » t l n i Snot Oi»n, %n'»»" elos* out oor stools&#13;
7^- ~/_r&#13;
«*.&#13;
' ? . " ' *'•*&#13;
I;.1',:/'&#13;
^ # • .» •^f^Bk—&#13;
ft-!&#13;
L^v.', T,&#13;
&amp; v:&lt;,&#13;
i t * -&#13;
»1*1.;.&#13;
l*.y&gt;l. I til '•&#13;
f fcio&#13;
W?? ' •'&#13;
IP'4&#13;
^ &gt;).•&gt;.&#13;
\&#13;
^&#13;
if&#13;
jV&#13;
&amp;&#13;
IT&#13;
. *&#13;
* • •&#13;
•*^&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
d&#13;
' it •" '&#13;
W-vv&#13;
fe$&#13;
O l •&#13;
V&#13;
r « . V '&#13;
tv ry' &lt; K -&#13;
V&#13;
,*** NtonBORH ' q ^ : S : , S B : L U M B E R ! LUMBER! LUMBER. , ,&#13;
faniilv. Tue-dav e w u i n g , a great ,-ur&#13;
rtOlTTtt LYON.&#13;
From the Jacket.&#13;
1 . T h e roller process mill is runnitif&#13;
• • ' • • : • • * • - » * -&#13;
tl,se awahedbhom.in the shaju, of a Wo, w.i! &lt;,!! Lumber at 'the hdiowinP -priee- h-r Ihe-n^t W d a w . ! , - X - &gt;&#13;
l | ] &gt; r i n i ' i n i ' i n n • " , ' " . . . . . j&#13;
e w y d a j now and behind ii* "OI-^*M&gt;. ] ^ r a m i - p u m a l i n g . ' Knends t«&gt; t h e ' \ \ \ \s ;t „.|, Shingles, J - T t h o n ^ . n d , . . . • &lt;":;!|11&#13;
M i s s p e a k s well for so new a mill. : ^,,,,,1),.,.,,&lt;• To eauu in I\KI it • u i K ' v . r r - ^ .'i,.:lv !'}lii;&gt; ;S ' ' ' " ' -' •• ' " '•'&#13;
f ! -; .{ r e v i v e d u tine lint.' o f&#13;
, nfoi'Sh:.,;.;,-, \n-v iho.ismd •••"• ^ - . ^ , ^ . . . , , | j U A D l N r ( i WiV**,&#13;
Q, M. l i a g a d o m received a. t e h v r a e a j , -: n \. and iiu min-nall, n!.\o-am i i m ' - l ' i i l l Hiuigie-, l* m-di, per ihoii.-aiel, " " ,sn n o&#13;
l ^ a j e ^ m n . - t u . n y l h a U . v n n ^ , , ^ ^ , . ! . &gt; ; ™ &lt; ^ MPER RIFLE MD SHOT GUN&#13;
Bachman, formerly of this place. \\a- ( Witli a speerh b\ Mr. I H ' I V O I U I M U U ! I I;JH s i u d inrhidiu" I'M! No.&#13;
dead at Denver, Col. 1,. l u b l d e n Opnle liv.-iv t o :i l.r.'g. '';'•• . K o t l 1 - |;( ( ., ,:,|s. j . e ! f i e u i s a n d fe;d&#13;
• ill Sunt, inriii.in.i I'M! No. 1, per thousand i'cn •_ ''-I M I&#13;
N.'UMd 11. V' WD MAGAZINE RIFLES.&#13;
% ft. T . fl'readv takes the lt-1. adioiniiiKi')" ( ^ ^ . i ; l i , v ' w h i ' h W i , v •1,,''-"1-ll( l u •' Hani l.umWr. i.or I1I.HI-:L]M1 fort ;. .KvMHIn i, .»&lt; . ( \y.; .;..•:•.•. IU, ;,';;;,', f.V'V;,1;,,;;,,,],,,,,, „„(i 3,,orUuk'&#13;
t h A p o s t o f f i c e a n d t b e iwn ,vill .,oi, | and ^ , , . • ^ 7 ^ , 1 ^ ^ • ^ ^ " : • 7 . ; ; ti,nii:.;;,.V V,:.;.'."//.-.'.".-.".".".'.".".'.'.'.'.'.".".'.'.'.-.^,).) , c :-MH..; R O L L E R S K A T E S ,&#13;
walls and p u t u p a suM.antml ],M .j j s ^ l i y ,,^,. J ; , , , ; ^ , , , , ! ! , ) - to j n , , ( 1 . ; p Q Q ^ £ J C U T L E R Y ,&#13;
^ w ^ w ^ , , , ^ , , , . ! , . ,r',''KBV,u-Kr." : , 1US1T1VKLY NO (MiKl)lT. .| CLOCKS, WATCHES,&#13;
with dizziness, while at his usual -U:- j TliH.Vv. -I.^c Kiijiaf • 10k HM uru-.l . . u p y T a 5 a n a n P ( r D i n p l ^ f l V PJJlP.h ! J t W t L n i , A H U&#13;
ties on the street la«t Thursday a u j from ( \ m t e r o a , , uu Momiay. X W a i v . M * L . H U T I f m d S l d j j t l J ,&#13;
had-to be-carried homf. He has sin.v j -'lad to Irani that hv is K-aiod at . _&#13;
been confluod to his Led and much o t | l^owk-rvillo auo'hev uv.r&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
the time unable to turn Jum^lf. At r Dr. .1. A. Urown i v o r ed a 1e!rir« •;!•., I | l I I l _ in \ I I j l j&#13;
from tlio Jti'trir'tof.&#13;
D. E. Wirier Ha&gt;"sTdil lii&gt; &lt;]I];H'I: OH&#13;
the corner Of Fourf.h and Paekani&#13;
streets to D r . S. A. J oars.&#13;
.Joseph AuAette Las-hc-vn aw;• i r d c '&#13;
this writing we niulootaiul ho i- t'nuii Florida. \\'odii('.&gt;day niixht an&#13;
much better. j nonr&lt;au- ttial ..W--- \*\\h--.T wa&lt; iyin«.v&#13;
— H o ! xhere \ on Ureen Oak ftmn r^; I i.'^l^lii:''^, s l V o n T :11U)l'!l ^ - ^Ll}}l2^L&#13;
see w h a t one*of your u e ^ l i h o r s ,|i^. | r ^ . t l t - f ^ n - 1 . The doctor vn!l !,avr&#13;
Two w'eelffi ago last Wrdnustla.x y,i. L. i ^11^ [i^' *&gt;Att- - -&#13;
H, Cogswell comnienml puliiug oeai.-.j F. K. Ii .winan. who ha&gt; iii'en Mirtvrpulled&#13;
100 acres, threshed tfu-ni. s&lt;*rti i in.4'. foi- -otne time lr*aii a piero ol&#13;
them to market, cultivated the ground 1 &gt;t».'ol in his eye. wenl to .l&gt;«'UMit last&#13;
and-'sowed it 1o wheat; all in two i nook and had hi- ey&gt;.- taken out. t h a t :&#13;
weeks. No hi/y-nairs in that in;nv's ! Lein'^ the only way of obtaining relief. ,&#13;
head. ! riris. S. Stnner ha- sold hi- I'a.rui to •&#13;
j a Mr. Fred Wainri^ht, of lA'ttawee&#13;
A N X . A K J ^ ' U . |;-.'uniy. .'Mr. Stonea-ha-also pure-has-:&#13;
eu a tiiriti ue;'r ('imiwii and will -ell&#13;
Id- pci'-ov.al prnpei-ty »Uld sciiiv: heu-eh&#13;
dd 141N.dr- at - ain.'-ttoii en Sa C ui'd.ay.&#13;
I IrOlbiM' Itii.&#13;
Mott. a. (iilkoa and \ii--. Franl.ie&#13;
the contract for furnishing the. Imvl^' S |l ( M ..n .u , w ,,-v il!;MTn.:i :1, 1.1,,- c ^\.&#13;
for the new C a t l u ^ ^ ^ d ^ ^ - h : ^ ! ^ ^ ^ ! ! - ! ^ , , , . ^ ( ,r t l u . ,,.,„,,Mv s i &gt; t ( , , v M r . , ir,.,:.&#13;
is estimated that 815 tln-u.-and will ;!•••., ]j,;,..]:.ni UTl Thur-d.u- e y e n m g at . ^ , . :-&#13;
needed for the builcline. ' ,,,',!,„•]-.&#13;
Over 600 miles of l).ed«-v t e n r - , , n , h : i»n Mnuday n i - h t of la&lt;; work ;.-,&#13;
as the Dayton Hedge Fern-- -Cnoipiuu | l,lir.,a:M-;itienna.ed to make a. raid ;&gt;t&#13;
-supply huve been eon tract ed tor in tl.o| , ] u | 1.1^:(]r,u.,1 o l ^^ [ ) a n x ^ v m i , ,&gt;&#13;
counties of Calhoun, HillsihiW\ j,en- [ ,^,,,,,^. ! l v ;r i L r &lt; o w l f l W(.s1. .,_,,•,],;, j.i,,,.,..&#13;
awee and Branch. The work »d'sup- | y{i. I l l u j ^ , . . . \ v w m &lt; l u ^-,.,^ •!„.,,],'&#13;
piyintr the farmers in these eountie.j . , u a k ( . u l(N L!le btirglar enteri/1 : r .he&#13;
has begun and aheady large o n l e r - , . . i _[ 1 ..»|(i* j , , 1 J L ! n i i l l ( , | i ; l h , i v • ^ , , 1 ^&#13;
have been given. Tliey are porf.;et.iy i 0 , l t o f (,.,,,- ^1,,.,-,.,,^:,:, th«- l)iir-:fa:-''&#13;
rehabloafe fences, beautifie and i'1-: t,„,k t&gt;. hi&gt; In el- and tied, with Daii.&#13;
raarkablyuheap. j rlose nurstiir. Tin- l.ei-iar h;ol ' |„&#13;
La^t week two horse- were -felon in ';&#13;
Sharon township, iun&#13;
Haselschwardt and the ctiier t'rcni 1 rnriiiif._UiL!i±. poidsi-t bmdc&#13;
Louis Polkner on the {TuaTi &lt;Tt .leit,-^ir+ici': in hi- ''i';1 :! thvi'Mv.'h »;,,.• I.iac!&#13;
Lemn. I r a f iale, a suspieiiui- Vj&gt;^r r vl ird l;e Veil O.'-M: -u'ae oh:-i ne.'i'.oi&#13;
lanti character, who registei-iMr" at th&gt; '. n; i : ^ h u n *- d •&#13;
Franklin House in JLh-rS'rity th&lt; ii.-\t wh.-vt' "an.iti'and&#13;
day after ihujivrfu i- tiie -n-nve«^l ;&#13;
partyjind'ire\v.ards are 0tiered for his; I N \ D [ | ) A&#13;
c a p t u r e . . Neither man ner l)nr-e-; | i.-,.,,,,, ,,.,„ cr.nv-n.Mui.'ui&#13;
have been seen s i n e , although it &gt;&lt; reported&#13;
that Gale ha- iveenti' •&#13;
iie» W GOODS.&#13;
SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
MUSICAL AND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
Ml t, ino.s of repairing neatly and&#13;
ie -a: 1. a ie ,| , n e . 4&#13;
KF-.spKrnTLFY,&#13;
- : 1,.\ I n o N , t &lt; A M P H K h b r&#13;
T H E .()1 J)' UKIilAIVIiE 1 8 ^ F J L L ;«-- ^,,^,1..-1,,,1,,.,.^1,^,,.&#13;
H E AD - QU A RTERS&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
DKY (lOlJns.AN^HJRO^UKS;&#13;
AND F\'KUYTin]S(MNTIlE&#13;
JdNKOF(JKNi:i{AL&#13;
; MKiteiiA..Ni&gt;i.st:. -&#13;
if ' • ' • ' j ^ ^ ' ' ' - ; ^&#13;
L-4 b U u u LF-C'JRE fcmt**fc A ,'.:•., re', v ro. r .-i pt! on of OTIC •'f Jfr&#13;
it!,1 , !•«*,.ri .•.,;,; ••!,, &gt; - • • , : i^.^.-iall.sfB i u tl.UJsL&#13;
I (.:i.,v •,•, . ir.-'i v,. ,-n&gt; ,-&gt; -.vu, 'f-'t't'-rvntlivbtUtlft&#13;
, /•?.-. ." &gt;*rii". • •'^ '.4.s (^K.f i)er«j/.Sent&#13;
«;\;'Uii: •••;...-. '. • . ./V - c r , i;,i.vis!sirunfllilfc&#13;
, Ai,l;v,i ;.:&lt; .- «^L&gt; * CO. Louisiana. M«.&#13;
. — - ! T«nn s—— 0 M, illerCarriap Oo.&#13;
t *-*•. -n -(, ' .1 yf -•••'i*'' - r - •••:: •;... _&#13;
E. A. ¥\M41i East Main St., Pincktmy.&#13;
m i v T u - r n r o T J A T r n T H E S T U D E B A K E R&#13;
BUY THt tEUBRATED B u g g i e s a n d Carriages&#13;
n r o r n i r i v a l ^ d f^r B r \ r r v , F!ftTr;&gt;?'nfiT, TJ&#13;
n&#13;
a!! i&gt;vrr 1 iie liiai-". • • n t e r m . ' t!i&#13;
ir&lt;.'i!i .Jii'-.d, i pL.uni la&gt;-:. a n a ha-1 - a r e c ' i U ' i l \\l . • ' j .&#13;
('-»lit:;-,:i 1 a;-&#13;
t n&#13;
.rCv ..J&#13;
Stt t dehjikvv Wago 11 , | - . - U ^ ^ ]&#13;
fekhaisjeii-^Wo" ' V,',:V,. ^ ^ ^ - V / &lt; \ . ' ^ \ T V . / V : - - &gt; " \ ^&#13;
J'aM.-i n ' t n o - 1 ••OMUM:!''],-..;.;!; r y c i - ' . ^ ' a v i : __.**''- -x-.^xm". -. - * .s^.^&amp;&gt;;''.&#13;
jnc, .sr,M;i I. rv'j-'U','•.-,, &lt; ir.; : - 1 0 1 - f b :-,:,.,,^ , f (-,Ai:l:lAO;'A\'er,K fv-.-.' tl- MM&gt;'T&#13;
c,-', , ,.ii.;,&gt;:' , , \ , M ' . H \ ^ . : " H " iinli.5v • !• v\ ii e.:'a.••.,..;. t , iiir 1,a.arr. .-.;' ia ' a v, !&gt;• •&#13;
n,TOTiiirivr.in(i i^r n r \T.I"&gt; 1 f 1 I*;-.JI'* j-ii, i.,.,- fit:&gt;•;&lt;*.u!u&gt;-c ii lan'c variety 'c f . . » » • « « •&#13;
r,\ve-'EN^o-]LnuvGANPi;v^NT&gt;-o.Hrn.l 'LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
" ^ CAHtS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, &amp;C,&#13;
After Oo "Hv-.t'r.vT"'"""""^ ''^^ia'ffl afth«vpry!&lt;1W»»t&#13;
\;n:'.;x • •nsiHt. IM will' pxul workmnnshUt.&#13;
- — 3 0 , 0 0 0 - c o l a J . o l o « i —&#13;
r.f o u r •Tirinu^tctnro i\r&lt;&gt; re w In HRO In tills a n d&#13;
t.v.'. &gt;r c.i.r'tri.^ r.ii.l r.'t 4 tliP excellfUt-M o f&#13;
«.nr P.-.:LU by tlivj im!vi'r«:il ^,1! &gt;.Hfn,'tlon w h i c h t h o y&#13;
\ n-vo..'. rv.-ry Tt-lilrh- \« W VKUtMKD.—Special&#13;
litiv;Uii&gt;u will i»v fsiv'fi to mailorder** ^ c.MALonurs i'KEK.&#13;
" &gt;; .&lt;,'! 111 n . k j iie, si .'• 1; 1 1' \ v i • 'U '1 '•&lt;',; « i r&#13;
Se'i 1 i .1 ;: ' ho-:; I .\,-- e u'i&#13;
: V r , l s r a.\i:l:lAO;'AVer,fi-.-.' , \ M V . ' , ( c;..'.,..;. t , iiu i,ao;T, ,-.;' in &lt;y \ , a&#13;
0.( Ki.ii: L I N E oi-ALbta.A.-»*a eh-di-i.-.:.0&#13;
D, W. WilierCarriage Co.,&#13;
i;. Fifth S i . , fulvorl St. and KirglCBtOn 1 T « . ,&#13;
CINCINNATI, O,&#13;
. S , . o i r . &gt; i n ^ . L i ' i . o , - r i . ; l ; s M - , a i r , : ; ' ! ^ ; / . , ) . ^ . ^ , . u o O , , , . - e i, | 11 T f 11^11 I II L t l U&#13;
f V i p ' l i r . n - . d . o r ' , eiiiVii^*". H M J!''-Al.N\.r . tTL'ar.'^Kitl.l l'l'.cn. KFr- r r , , I I I U • 11 laa ! • I I l k W&#13;
OY \V.UrO&gt;. •:.'' ;S&lt;i!(i i'orn -./C;;'.,U-if^io,&#13;
n r S u p r r v i , - e r . i \ u i a d j - a 4 l-O!. ha&#13;
i b e e n (|iiit.' - i e a the1 p a * t 'A e e k .&#13;
rested in Orand Kaidd- on .u-aSer , r 4 . ,, .. , . . . , , . ,&#13;
ahsa rge. ' i \l:Lt.Lli-. 111 ivj.il 1 &lt; 11 ._LIJ hI I:U.L1;.1 ir u i UH_L K;i.._&#13;
UltlGHTtiN,&#13;
.'rom the Citi/.on.&#13;
laM'ii spending a t'^w days with A n n a ' .&#13;
Stov.e.&#13;
"PiNGK 1M14G-... M .III.&#13;
FOR THE CAMPAIGN.&#13;
We^vrilT urn.l tJie M K K K L V F R B K&#13;
TftKSS u n t i l ftficr e l o r t t o n for only Ml&#13;
t !•• N T S .&#13;
Adurees&#13;
THE FREE PRES«eq&#13;
_ __ l &gt; o * r o l t . M l o l u&#13;
Cora! l»&lt;.n"r Jell -,\-er&#13;
^\'e --11-0 now nreiaired i-i do • • , f'^&lt;;^uV,iiS ('f.JlesStia^ J C*&gt;ti ^ Mi»s8orBx&#13;
— : : : ( r ^ y y ^ - m y ^ ^ M : . . -¾ * T t - ( h r . M . - K ^ M M O y ^ r &gt; f », inTnii "?&amp;&lt;;»wsnn ^&gt;^ klvi^ ^ n b i - l a"fj fr.n^1 «^S' % S S S S&#13;
** . "* . tain •- W'y- ''• -';'•/'• -'• -O"' »tJ8'' ''.,-imn.ro E\lnu»'lou »»rf&#13;
D&gt;v.o«4*l*.t.-£- C f t i n ' . n f i (:C.-»s--v..::»o^ « M r i Tfi.S^ttifEil! • ^k:}M^^-^MMli::j-vrF}"T^^r^m^&#13;
M.-.o !;r aid" '-: d •: t loaiii'. j 1::, e o n a.M v,eOerai r;:&#13;
;(.' ;, ;; • : ' i &gt; ! , - d " l ' ^ V . w . O : ! , ! ! A •'"(' ''&lt; •»"' A i a t c r i a i , i .&#13;
,:&gt;i ' a . ' 1 i-!i-, i(r,iii:;-i.:-, ' e ' . a a ; , i:. n o :&#13;
( f'i r e - i ' r o e l ' [ ' r a r e .&#13;
.-aHfadc . 1 /&#13;
1 &gt; I A1 i ' •,' "*•' ' ' \ ' ? • J • % ' 1 \ r i ^ 1 ' 1 I&#13;
.nelle (ulehri- lia- &lt;r^v.r tn^uiie a.:_, *a.-t v\e'&lt;.'k i'.ie. "i-..a;- her v&gt; , •••• • •Port Austin, where sheh,-a po-itiinv-ii-ahier. Brackef-Sawliig, Curving dM Turning&#13;
in a bark. ,' • Tlii.r.-jvas .; --111110 ^riri" . eann- to.,&#13;
Georgo Mali!,,y ha-' a llirle -hyan ; (yan I fentuii'-: 1MS1_ Kri lay. and i t.hink'1 ' ! l v \"l ;l ': : : 1 ; , :&#13;
" storv al 0! his'nwiL asui ne.t a verv ; t.l.c;- \'. ill call h--r .Jopnie. . : ' ' ' " • ' • l ! , L ! ^, •&#13;
, ," • 1 PaeKin-, .n;i;&#13;
- oad o n e , itho-r--.- k ^ K u ^ d «.i»S bean- . • T h e -!,..•{•••• has hi- hands lull ii; rati. ; )&gt;MinT-. H a m . IVMI ;&#13;
from a s.ngle bean of the tree \ a r i e t y . i th" -iek list in t'liadilla. is the i,.r&lt;j-e-i&#13;
•Rev. Mr. Dean Will preside nver tin'J a*'pre-ent lhat it iia - heen ia a l n a g : ' -&#13;
ivl. E. church another year. .IJirfie.&#13;
*v 1 »• j / 1 i v ' I 1 JTe d- i and• , LTo ui•s L-re e have entered, th1e ;I aMoi ir^.r ^-- rl arsl,u ili o:--tt^.[ her eon-iii.; s ,-ar ' o';i:ai iia::i,; l&gt;epn&#13;
"LTniversity a t Ann Arbor, ; Kiln. iJru-kus. near W'i-iliauisiy.u. .la-i; '"" sr\' '•&#13;
' O h a s . Brooks threshed 1.1 bushels of! ^ 1 ^ ^ ^^ ^ : n d a y . Seu.ebo.iy ^ ^ : . ¾ ^ ^ ^ ¾&#13;
•lover seen, of the Afsike vnrierv. trn-n ! v * e F f ^ ^ ^ too. I slum'?., loll .wla,. E s f ^ y O r O a H , ( ¾ &lt; U&#13;
. ne acre of g r o ^ n U wni.-h might b e , ^ ^ ' 1 - . ' ,: \ B y &amp; t t ' B b o r O V?" ^ (&#13;
-.billed an m u t u a l l y large y e Id. ^-1 rjinttie t.ivenaore reeeiveii rh^ bjrd \[^^P5^^i^ ^&#13;
'' Gould Kro's will open the sknrini; t' 'l~'' { , t ['• [" 'h'^wn's tor the largest a&#13;
• i n k n ^ x t Monday, the 29th. att.ernoon : nil»i1,&lt;,»" o f 'Coupons taken irom tin- ^ ^ ^&#13;
n ^ e v e n i n g , and will open it to the ! 1 , I S , J V ! r n - i ) n i 1 , A ^hes to , thank.. t h o - . M P * ? . J&#13;
Public each Tuesday, Tlmr-dav a n i j j whokimlly i^ave bur the eard- ^r&#13;
(,,1,,11^ '••'•, &gt;-ii'.,rf .,.,.,. nr,.! ntnor.t -A&#13;
-^-1:¾ .,,•;&gt; M - 1 - . . 1 . :.,'r..,ur ar.d kT»Kiinl D«bH.&#13;
+;--. .-,..^.,,.... ./'W/ ^ J j t . ' ' • l'..-'TiM.tiri, E \ l n u » ' l o u » « 1&#13;
" • • K- • '!.)' •" ;•',' l , r ' " •-&gt;•&lt;&lt;•*- N". l''i;.«:(t,j; » jKijuth). 1 ¾ .&#13;
?,(••.:• - . • &lt; : , • , " ' . i w . i r : iti.i, .'-i i n s n o r e rivsi.-o f ' l N i ) . »&#13;
a.-~: "."'•'•" •• . •'••• i f~ s , ;,t I,,v i., ill i n p l a i n &gt;suipjwrir. '&#13;
ll&gt;r&lt;.*-tl, , :,&gt;r I .i.iu- . - ' M I ,(in.-,» &lt; - v h D o i . f a m p h l w f ' d o j c rW&#13;
t ' A S till* Ojsnkarf :..,,1 m.&gt;.i,j \&gt;( »:ivio a^ui J.idieti o n »j)p!ic»U«&amp;&#13;
'fL% f% \i* A&#13;
'; S KNOW iii.'/r&#13;
riNcicNKY. MUTi.i LL-iSi,.....''. i\I) o ' L L I M A A&#13;
:_. i IMA: U T O B A C C S&#13;
•T'."7i'.in l.ao w c r l Zr.tc;- c-: t'.ip&#13;
v.-o.-i. C-JG-'-^ i s 3.-;--atoned, t h e y&#13;
'»Nca-ih. c^Trrti-Jt tl-.o c.;:::,r4c.-. ~ '&lt;.--&gt;-/&#13;
k n o w n a n d CD p o p u l a r {ire t h e i n -&#13;
~rr,- .-. ; 'a-".- iV1:'. '•• Fs tlu' juirfct:&#13;
,: • _.i:'&lt;-&lt;&gt;:-", i)!ir\ tos, mor&#13;
-i, ii- i f i ^ i - f a i i ' i i i p , a * \A t h e&#13;
1,..,(, I'.I-J.&#13;
\'t ; • i j&#13;
_^turday afternoon and eeon'mg tiiere-&#13;
.: e.lter, from the hours of -J to 0 and 7&#13;
1 -.o 10.&#13;
thoi r iianers.&#13;
At a. reeent ^•.•ientitie ni"i:tinir in , c&#13;
ljondoii 'n \MIS slated lhat ar.-am.ie, i n ; V&#13;
^--.&#13;
•Jij V m v r o i u . 5 M c r c j n i r . d e r a of enjaymcti'.&#13;
h i m u l ' d t u d s s of ho-r-aa. IlluBtrs."&#13;
N r,rplic»i3.ts&#13;
l^)JHb'-AK:&gt;S ilifSY L K \ F&#13;
'To^^^n&#13;
ilTTOllMVO&#13;
i- fe-&gt;&lt; :-i,i.(r eftip i,i..,..i .-iOrk, tir.d for aromatin&#13;
"i V|T;\, I v 'r;lnilifv' 4» SCiulid t o lion*'.&#13;
10'im,V.\{51i's' NAVY CLIPPIEtiS&#13;
teel C c t a l o g i i o ia.aiiotl ^ree to a i l f i k v i a a L, r . ,..• -i-v.e.i a'.iciitle smoking tobne-&#13;
- ^ ' ' , .\ l , ' , | &gt; .\".' I ' l l i , ' l t l H ' l &gt; f l .&#13;
J.uiljl.l-.i.Ui)^ FAMOUS SXUFFS&#13;
i :: ii-.•.. iVi'oa-:' LO yc:irs, c.nd'are aolil t&lt;»&#13;
••\f.,-i0 Oi.iu ;, , e o t h e r s&#13;
. . - , . , • ' , LonitMii o \uis slate*.I Unit ar.Mnne,. i&gt;-&#13;
Itis-said t h a t a httlr- d a n g l e r oi q i u n i t i , ; , . . irn-,,(, onvi^\, t U { ) 0 i . l ) U&#13;
Ir. Crandall, of Highland, w h o had. | beasts. !ia-. iieen kii'e.en to frnd its wa\&#13;
a e o f her hands injured d u r i n g the \^ir'^'^]i ^- ground into a wvll tittV i _ _ ^ _ ^ - ^ - n - - « ^ . - r - v - m • ^ - ^ * 0&#13;
.cdone of three y e a r , ago so that she i * « * ««"™- H T ? A " M H H P R W l N f l&#13;
,st it, tell and h u r t her other hand j Photography } i a - been turned i j \Jf X V X " V I N J L / &gt; • V - / 1 J L - ^ 1 1 1 1 1 \*f •&#13;
n e a t l y so that she will be obliged to \ «ew «SP« in Pans, m eases of a l l i e d |&#13;
. ' adulteration ol jiennen'. lamia a n d ! ,&#13;
.ave it amputated. - j 0tfiev artieles of eOianierce. Hither'o ! ' i , m |»l«ised to announce that L h a v e just started a general sroro av&#13;
' the evidence oi' -.-Xpert* who have " \ - '&#13;
Secure Besltbaf&#13;
action to the Ziiy«t&#13;
'and relieve aJLlbil'&#13;
u„L .^ -.¾ I "^. IOPS troubles,&#13;
:.-&gt;*'&#13;
DKXTKK&#13;
: om the Leader.&#13;
amined such coniuntdit ios wit., ...&#13;
! microscope^lias uren aeeeutod as (;,&gt;n&#13;
• H « * « * W * V W H P * W *^^P*H h &gt; ^v • *^rm — ~-~ ~ " ^-- ^ -^ - ^ - ' - ^ ™— '&#13;
Iwa'^ V«giublc; He Qn;tag. Price i5o. i l l finoilll,&#13;
In dis.-tiM••! ntJ-hf- Uloort. HiTn mad D o m r -&#13;
ne "SB&#13;
' " " ) " &lt; i i j c a u d . -: . . . , , . , , M ^ v y « - i i , i . - i w^.k-ll LI, i . U l l i y i l a - I. I M l -&#13;
j _ _ R e v . A. B. Wood is to be t h e pastor j clnsivfCTnit the new system jutroilnced&#13;
• ffvear ~?*~ |orai:orrba.s cnan^ed the nieflied et'i&#13;
t*&#13;
j lmp«rti'ii»rr'«,r..,!iKjl" Wiikrw., &lt;loaorrha.», fijithtfkl* aixi&#13;
I fl.:i»«irliti .\ff&lt;-&lt;ti„n». S, i.'iiiifl,. treatment; u r e tud iruro&#13;
L.^fjmc.li s. ix-fnnoiij.-ri TTonM-d. Call m wriu- fbr n«t oir&#13;
,.--1 ,|&lt;i,'.ticiiMfob''in,«(••&gt;.,-.•,! II/I:MI«- rtwtlriiifftrwrftm'ntby—*&#13;
M x l i n e c.M^'-f- ol' a a'.gy and "VMJ'ied asy.oi'hiient II|'&#13;
4- ••&#13;
••.u-,1.;&#13;
'I^y, ^ ^ t ' j i u ^ ^ ^ i i J ^ T f mi,,r^,:^0 ^ w ! Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
. ,ithercjd*t th&gt;^residenco of J. j j ^ n o d i t i e s under a strong iiglit. whh A\ ' +&#13;
i a e s f o n 3 a i l W a y ™ ^ ^ ' •&#13;
•• &gt; 2 r „ ^ -• • X !^-^l&gt;e- I h e p h o t o g r a p n . t h u s talvon-is L , , . . *, • •» ' • i ,• " , „ • , , , . , . , ,&#13;
i t e v . W. H . Benton goes t X S a t t n e . [sufficiently j a r ^ e to be easily inspected [-h'^'i'vlunly c«U and y\aiiiii n r sinek &lt;&gt;! go.uU J ugnest pria- &lt;(iud 1*.T&#13;
IS residence among n s / l n ^ marked • 'H' the court, and thus the judtro* are j 1 U J T I K J I A.ND W4(.;S. Kv^rvtjimg .«o!d at ra.-k bottmn prices.&#13;
: m a s a - c h r i s t i a n a i i d ^ a g o n t l e m u i i j altl« to vcriiV thn hivest&gt;atioM!s, a c . d J . . : 4 ) o n ' t ibTget, .&#13;
;iose who have forme JUL^P rngrnt Urs rflmnv;i,&#13;
i a • gent r^uian. •• . . t «i/ -T •*; , ' . ^ ^ - - . -&#13;
,-. . . also give to the -prisoner the benefit of1 •'&#13;
&gt;u his acquaint- ^ - y m i s t a k o which may be m s e o ^ e u f ",&#13;
uil—Hj.s jmljdL '» NIP.Expert .lu^timorry-, !&#13;
•».'. i-&#13;
I-Ix^BlSTESS 1&#13;
1 li;(,.-::.iw o n l i . e i d n UiV!'r slid l i d t o r st&lt;M-)t (*t&#13;
iliii'i:":-- lh-uf,'\'i i hWfor-• t&lt;v;,&gt;llu»r w i t h H k,T«D(l&#13;
IIAKXESS GOODS!&#13;
M: i) \M;i|&gt;n mil', l.a-In"*. -AH uooii an the h«*tit « a i&#13;
i-ln .-i|. _,.- iiu: ylieTSi"',-it,. i ;i|in iai/,! lrJmmk»ig Mkd .,&#13;
r&lt; I'iii-, i'r...; ,.'•:'!. :ei&lt;l J.I -uiijitly dotifl. Ji(*H for&#13;
v-ninviJlf. . ' - * • • :&#13;
-*r&#13;
J». CUNNIMGHAM, Gregory, Mich. I'WYETTK I.KASOX:&#13;
STOCKurnDGE M I C H I Q A H kl&#13;
-.-X.4&#13;
y- ^&#13;
^. f_&#13;
5(1,^^-3&#13;
THK VlUOrO^KI) AMEN1WIKSTS. !L, H,.BE£BE5&#13;
Aside from the privilege of -votiuv I ^ T V T . . . ^ . . r | 1 . TT"!,^ ! &gt;&#13;
for national,, suite and locu! ohnvrs [ I \ | ) j ^ [ | [ ^ \ I V I M V,&#13;
this fall, t h e eiti/cns of Michigan arc ,&#13;
FU Rfi ITUfi E.&#13;
CALL AND&#13;
\v K.-'l J M O \ n T l t h K I ' ,&#13;
called upon to adopt or reject t\v&lt;&#13;
ameudnionts to the constitution ..j' the&#13;
state, as follow',-:&#13;
Au amendment W'K'ciioii 0, article&#13;
&lt;&gt;, relative to circuit courts, provided&#13;
for by joint, resolution No., 1 •&gt;, Jaw-&#13;
( , f l ^ : ' ; - ' i i . i r ,&#13;
Section*). T h e state nhall lie do &lt;&#13;
vided into judicial c i r c u i t s ^ n eaeh oi' PINQKNEY&#13;
which t h e electors thereof shall »'hri •necir.-uitju.ip-. wi...«i.:iii»....!.» i»&gt;: (;j | M ' s T l A N 11110WN,&#13;
Office for the term oi six yeurs.^ ami ;&#13;
till his suec-or is elected and ipinli:k-.d. j&#13;
MICHIGAN. |&#13;
TheleKiHlature limy p r o v i d e ' f o r the j B L A C K S M I T H&#13;
election &gt;i" more than one eireuu j ^&#13;
j u d g e in the judicial" circuit in which i&#13;
BEFORE BUYING if his Horse&#13;
All kinds of custom work, and genera]&#13;
repairing, inrhiiliiif,'&#13;
HORSE SHOEING.&#13;
the city' of Detroit is or may "he situ&#13;
ated, a n d t h e circuit judge or judges,&#13;
of said circuit, in addition t,o the sala&#13;
r y provided by this constitution,&#13;
shall receive from said county of&#13;
W a y n e such .additional salary as may j L&#13;
from time to time, be fixed and d e - Shop lack .of Matin's lilock, PixcKrov&#13;
tvrniittcd by t h e beam I of .supervisors , _ / • ^ r '&#13;
ofsaid eouuty ; a n d the board .of s"p- ' h &gt; L \ h L l ^ . l I K 1) 1 S ( ) 4 .&#13;
wvisors of each county "in t h e up|&gt;&#13;
ELSEWHERE.&#13;
IS TEJLUXCk&#13;
THIS M A N * -&#13;
That i f he dont B©11 Lid Ho&amp;vy Lraft, H o m e trilling&#13;
Kinder, ar.d bay an&#13;
|=ASY RUNNING&#13;
V&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
peninsula i.« hereby authorized a n d ;&#13;
empowered to e,ive and pay the eir- |&#13;
-cuit j u d g e *f the judical circuit to j&#13;
which such county »* attaehed such j&#13;
uiWitioiijil -tilnry or ia,nij)eusation ;a-.|&#13;
rtuiy i'rnin Uim 10 time b&lt;-vti-Vi'd and j o b t a i n I-.;- Mi 'fb-nisi'-iil Devices. Conr-i&#13;
d e t e r m i n e d b y such b o n n C o ! ' *ifjvr-: . - , n , K D , . ; , ; . .,i i ( | ],;(V1&gt;.&#13;
-visbi's. - .&#13;
An amendment,to secti-m 1:"&gt;, ai't'i- ; •• Ail prelindnary e\-aininMti''iis as&#13;
cle 4. relative to t h e compensation o l - t ( | , , . , ^ . , , , . ^ 1 : ^ . &lt;,\- inventions, free.!&#13;
.nicmiicrs of t h e h ^ i - h d u r e . an.; r-e •' , , ^ ,&#13;
prohibit Hie; u T . T T T 7 ^ 7 ^ n ; r r : ' t r i r : Tmr^~^J H h 1 : i m m £ ^ t « i t ,&#13;
tickets oiv railroad-, provided joe by ;, ..,,.,. | \ , ,. ( verywliere,&#13;
joint resolution No. :.'•'-&gt;. lev.r-ot 1 s&gt;::. ^ • •&#13;
Section 15. Tie,' -compensation" - ! :&#13;
•the mombcv; of the legislature &gt;h;.il! '&lt;.- . T / y r , w , 1&gt; 4 ; m P I ) 1? nr\&#13;
a salary of seven hundred dollars' ;.-r . [•[ ) I | ^ | &gt; A ' «&lt; 1 VJ{C CC L U , ,&#13;
each fi'srnlar,.session, and a', • ic it )^i:j-- ia,-%-0..-5- „K, ^,-::.- »,-,. SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
SUchsSlTbjc' IS .IS, a v s u h m . t i . e d t o 1 ;e-a:&#13;
"1J&gt;r ^pCC 1 a i )nessaLre™ot"" 111 e «&lt;&gt;v. • 1 • \:'' f.&#13;
MANN BROS.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 42:i, 1884._&#13;
HAVING DECIDED TO QUIT T M&#13;
GROCERY BUSINESS,&#13;
WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE^TOCie&#13;
aKei: the expiration of I"ho ."&gt;'! oa\&#13;
f.hc .session lii'iiilcd for the iiRvoii n&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C.&#13;
tion-ot lulls; wlien couvmed in y\tr:i j ' D P I 3 S T O l E 5 1 ! N r ! E j T ? "&#13;
session their corrrprrra! ion .&gt;hall !•.' ':i'' — . n __ ,&#13;
salarv otdme hnndred dollar,. a,.d t h . y : g a | &lt; e r y ^ R e S t a U r a n t&#13;
shall legislate on no piher su.tji-eS: _ ..*•-"'&#13;
than those e\pres&gt;l;y d^ted i n t i i i l NOW OPEN AND&#13;
governor's pnv lamaiioii. ( i ^ i b i n i t i e r j : ;:"K \ I&gt;V fill; i i l ' S l X K S S '&#13;
to , them by sp'-itd iic ,&gt;;\u'e, 1 fey :&#13;
-shall he entitled to 1*'»' i-eni.^ and no! {jyi-ad and 1&gt;i'iis Kr.esh Frery D«v.&#13;
CALL AND GET FK1CLS.&#13;
BUTTER AND EGGS WANTED.&#13;
WE HAVR A LARCELINE OF&#13;
B O O T S AND S H O E S ,&#13;
GLOVES AND MITTENS.&#13;
DEERING TWINE BINDO&#13;
at once, every horoe on tbo farm w i l l s o o n be dead&#13;
WlLUAM DEEftlNG &amp; CO., Chicago, IB.&#13;
B I S D E K S , H E A P E R S AND MOWEBfl&#13;
TK6 HORSES* FR1END8.&#13;
5«k 4 M) K KM S. Howell, Mich.&#13;
SLAPT~BANGI&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN!&#13;
\ I N K L E Au'&amp;in to rh.&gt; f:-«.int, ia liis n e w store, where, for&#13;
fh'i- !'i &gt;.t sixi&gt; .!;}.- frrjii- aiiis date, fur caab, I&#13;
j)r..!i.i.-t- t-. tri' •- '•• "'Ae i.iy pfitruns IUO re quantity&#13;
am! h'-ri-T.. H;II;!\ [u\- \&lt;-ri urtjney, any of the follnM'ia„'&#13;
:u*i&gt;•:• --. 'ti.iin :iny other dealer in the&#13;
coiujtv. ^\y.. ^ IIIRX: OR&#13;
I MIXED.&#13;
I In H,Qy«&gt;i:tntify, lir-.t I.ins^d oil—raw or b«)il&lt;kl&#13;
j Turp^utiii". Itiiii YaiT!i-iiijs, Flowing Varniaherf&#13;
; lJrs&gt;"rs. Ki.',:'.- r'rt I'.ittv. ano I'jiiuters' .Supplies&#13;
1 nf 'siJi kiui'.-. Any rvi,-i&lt;l-» uf cuU.r desired mixed&#13;
I iimt ;•!-lisiy !'!)• aiijayiu.,', ten [&gt;t-r cent, cheaper than&#13;
. any urhi-r leatx- ix&lt; te-.vti. C;iper h&amp;niririff, freflCO-&#13;
' iti::, ^'JH-;.- -Trtiat:.^ :tii(i,^rai.)ii),L' spscialtleB. Gl?»&#13;
.' us i e - i ! ! rtrnl s;jtisfv ymr-"^vfi' that, w e only My&#13;
j. w lint A.- 'in-in. iiii'l ni»-:ir» «li that we sayL_&#13;
I STOCKBRJDGE. MAY 8^ 1884.&#13;
.; Timbered F,uinl tor Sale 01 Exehau^e.&#13;
; : 1 li'a\.- - - • ir * 't t v K. .-!•.•.•- nf Tii:it&gt;.-i- liind i n the tbwa-&#13;
. t ihifi i-I Wi.it.- 1 t.-.'k. Iri-i;jeu ( &gt;&gt;..- « liich 1 will sell&#13;
j fjv c;i-u or :: ;•.-.- f..r -t:-.-; Ifiuds or property in&#13;
• onO.-ru I.'--iii_cHt'jD ruuj-ty. Aildrerts,&#13;
! NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
1'inckney, Mich.&#13;
D £ r t t Q : l T 8. C L E V t L A N O&#13;
Steam Navifrati'on Company's Steamers WHICH WE OZFER CHEAP.i 0¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾&#13;
'_ j h o r e lor evevy j.ulie aein-.iliy H';i^ eieo&#13;
in jo-ointr to ami retuni:n~!' tr.nn &gt;hr •^-&#13;
1&#13;
w., I l l l ! '. i . M ' 1 ! 1! I l l l l M - S , ( ) ' - t . . | - J&#13;
place of meet in ir on&#13;
j'oule. Kuch no'iehe&#13;
ic usiei i t!';'. veii'd&#13;
i v - • -, - I ' l l . \ \ ' i - h i 1 - 1 ' ;i i i i i i - '&#13;
'.!! i . f t r a ;';:nn j (4ET-01: R V\\ IC lis liEF01i4i-DU YINGto&#13;
-one &lt;-npY.ut tin- la\ys. jonrn 11-. ; \-&gt;i. -.- ;-..-.&lt;&gt;..-M.-:- i',.ii-,..0.--&#13;
amMoeune-n!^ of the l^i-latiiP. o i | ' . \ V . U. 1 .,\ WK l'N('.!:. I'uom:.&#13;
•~Avhirh he was a^meail.. :'. !a;t se.iii e '' _ .&#13;
r t t ' C i e C a t t h e ( ' T f ^ + t - e o l t ' i e &gt;! . ' '. :&#13;
Looks. new.sp.,i'.er-. or other- p e r - , . - - , !&gt;il'OI{'l WW&#13;
ities of ofn&lt;. v,\t'V any ot-lajr pc4oHwi ..u! 7uai^x...^x-i:-.^-^t .^_^.-...- \ - A O-I-I, I Uv -,-c-.&gt;&#13;
eomjwnsafion not exore-siy auim'i'i/ •! ; ''.^ ;'&#13;
b y t h i s c o n s t i t - i i l i o n : -I'et n o :;e.".):'••; i' : o-,i o&#13;
Of t h e lee-'ish'tiiV" .-It;! I! n e c e p t eL ;; &gt;&#13;
a.ny free riel&lt;et'..n an; I'ailru.ei .iiirie..&#13;
lus term of othcM.&#13;
I^OrDP 3c HOFF.&#13;
•-, p, • ,i i i . ; l i l l ' : ' , , i . •- H i r - :-.11(. .-! n , .&#13;
i d , i, i i . . ! , - i . . i - : . . - . i ' - , i : : ' , l ! . ( 1 C , . : i -&#13;
of Third St Detroit aT10 p. m.&gt;L«avo&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at 8.30 p. m.&#13;
T r f E 5 2 . 2 5 R O U T E&#13;
Week days^Standard Timau&#13;
T H E ' 5 3.0C RUU I'L&#13;
City of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne S t Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. I k&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P.H.&#13;
For Marfne City' S t Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena HarritriUe&#13;
Cheboygans,St Ignace and&#13;
PICTURFSOLM: M A C K I N A C&#13;
, '.- LM(l I • . . i n III • 1' ! ' .'•: 1 ' ! | l III 't .-. &lt;&gt;; .in&gt;' mil&#13;
: .:,•?! i a : - . i','i[-:i-&lt; ,1 ' i . - . 1 i i i . : | H I i u :ir.!-&lt; p . . j - ,\:y&#13;
.,.;,.-:, , , : - e i . i ' . ! •• , r - T . l . ' . ' - ' - i . - i ; n , ' ^ , i i &lt; i &gt; l i . - i l |&#13;
il- , ' U : . . . . - , ' ! . i . , : .!•• | - ' „ - . , : i K i • r o i l M M - '!&gt;-.•! t i ' l&#13;
!•• • l . | . . ; • • ; ; r ' ' : . - I , " : ; u I ) . | - . | i : i . ' t . - i t l l J U l&#13;
l i .' ! i - ' , j I - ; . I ; , - •• !,. -f i - I i r. I i . , - ' • ' ! V&#13;
3?e*wvous Exhaustion,&#13;
Less of Manhood,&#13;
A .merchcni, oi A ;n. Arln-.r reirro'd&#13;
" to ns :i tiav.-tlnys -in-".' SLOW 1-- . . ^ 1 ^ 1&#13;
t&lt;f in-H-t—-HiUH-Uii^.iiei* -oi'. .w.:;.L-aL- of a.,.&#13;
'fn"ri 11 c]; [if" sTT. 0 0 yn i• 1111 s 11 • • i j.i'•. &gt; V1. t&lt; i {"~&#13;
that he would puv Iti'n ih.'.-ahie p*'i. •(••!&#13;
f o r t r o o i i s U- Sifcv &gt;V. i ^ W - n i l w h e i - t - ^ - - An 'U-t -;v.e e; ,:'.. UcwA )• ok ef Advice to&#13;
", **,&lt; , , ,., (., ,- ,,. v.,:[P&gt;erM;(!C.;---;":r.i &gt;n-ti,vitfi jire:;cni.tif.ii&amp;&#13;
AvlK-.it h r o n i i i M !li;tl ^ . : i - . I sn' L t l i e - ' , ,,,, srli-ire-;i::,. -•• !.\ ;• !;• ' -!r.c l't.ysiriitn .&#13;
l k „ | 1..,,.( .. 1 .,,1 , o ' . » l i : : _ e . . , , w . ^i•T'ftl";•• ST K • &lt;i' C "^ "''- ipt of two thmccunt&#13;
actions for mane year-. ;meopjoi! tiie " "" "&#13;
proposition. i liey th. n to.u^ ';,e&#13;
hook and h&gt;ohed up iirir,-,- !e;[. \-'&#13;
.when t h e f'ai'nier .-\;iii;ini -.1 i: he »' .und&#13;
t h a t while wh^at hrou-'ht h.s-i one&#13;
fourth of whiit it then did. id!,&#13;
classes ol'irood- j!mt lie h:ul !o ouy ;&#13;
wti^ only—uhout—WM-—iixt-li—to urmi&#13;
ninth t h e prh-e he then paid. Sli.-et-l&#13;
incf thai lie now r\-ts ;..r tune e e n K j&#13;
i&#13;
V. WiLLiAMld A C O . , fJil'LVihUKEa, W»&#13;
MiohiganBuggyGo.&#13;
KALAMAZOO. Mich.&#13;
V.t'M" W i l d . AI.AVASS KIND&#13;
• *.\ idd.i, STCTK or&#13;
VVV. V. \)i{Viirs ANl&gt;-MKBle'! N FIAT&#13;
l . n W K S T PKIt'i'&gt;.&#13;
AT-&#13;
\\ IXi'M [:!&gt;!.&gt;' l)\i\'',\ Sl'i &gt;}&lt;!•;.&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cent* for&#13;
illustrated book of' 120 p&#13;
fi LAKZTOUR TO PICTURESQUE&#13;
historic;-.! and descriptive of thia&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
tk. ft., Wh.tcomh, CenM Past. A«ent^&#13;
Hrv IO W a y n e S t . - Q a t r o r t , W c l W&#13;
; RA P l.O. TRANSIT&#13;
":--ft ONLY TRUE&#13;
lie then .pai«i V"&lt; i'«»r. (.';dieo 'that iie&#13;
gets I'or tivc e&lt;'nts iie pe.id -h&gt; ' to di i&#13;
cents for. and other tldnu-&gt; ii. like&#13;
p r o p o r t i o n . Oi' course he did not&#13;
C a r r y o u t h i - a ^ l e L a t e n t . b u t V a i d h e Whotcsfttr. Jtftnnfartnrorfl of fcllSinlsofOponand&#13;
h a d never though,: of it in that li -hi ' T»P B O G I E S andiwun CAKTS. A^t«w.i,t«d&#13;
, ' , A ) i i , - , , , - , - A i l v ' „, evory«hL-re. Write for catalogue W&lt;J price list,&#13;
b e f o r e . H e e o u i d J J c n . e . a d l U s e e r I N J ; v , 0 r , i : A s ? L ; c I A L T y .&#13;
t h a t -with a l&lt;wl ot-&gt;v.!ieiit ;n &lt;t»erMihe&#13;
could eai'ry heioc twice as m a n y '&#13;
pureha&gt;es as "lie e.ail-'i at •&lt;•&gt;.dd per&#13;
bushel. - - - F A .&#13;
.hi medme,vul-fc+mci. a .lq&gt; in i.h, - J U ^ - .&#13;
REMEMBER THAT&#13;
• &gt; «&#13;
was t h o u g h t ;t punishment .for cr:ine.&#13;
The legend inis it thai a , his to h e -&#13;
f CUTTERS,&#13;
' time, v a s visited with the peindiv ^ \ lnrll-ii!llT swrll' Hwly, Portland, Sqo»rt&gt; Bo*&#13;
being dipped into the ^c,i. einorgei-l j w 0 j&lt;ont, Portland n»d Poncj Sleigha;&#13;
from it so mueh the hotter phys;e;i!;y ; ^ud .-or ,: 1 U J a i i arricti beforeputchasing.&#13;
as to shake belief in it&gt; dete.rgcni vir- MiruicAM Rl-lfifiY r n&#13;
tue. Honsard. tin, Freneh poet and , MICHIGAN BUG6TCU.,&#13;
scholar, s.'inj? the praises of the oe.sin - KALAMAZOO, Mtei.&#13;
and its health-g'd'inii' water-, hut the-:&#13;
V a s o n l y i i h u n t dm d lav-o!l n n t u i p a - : h N 1 »)• d NKW MAX AliKM K?vT!&#13;
tion of its worship. II vni&lt; i,n Kng- ;&#13;
land and towards the inhldle of tae 3 r R r » 7 u c . n ? T ^ n i T ^ C T&#13;
last century that tin- sea wa- lirst n - .Ri'.R?J J fit J t | tlj}\ \ tUb I&#13;
oogutzed as the 'aiehty sanitary The Hest \ ' e s p i n i e r in M!e!ii^*;H&gt;. ,&#13;
"lTg«nt"tnPA^o-rid nc-w ntrA"ttr»w-tT-d^T*s- U - --4&#13;
^O \&gt;Q. n-;il; s: i&gt;,-r \..,-11-: -iO'i-e'^ |&gt;.r Mrmtb. W'..(.k"iy&#13;
• « • • * « • • tf 0;u- DnUill- j..'!" V&gt;M.',&#13;
DSGN. MOORE &amp; CO.;&#13;
A li-iJl r&lt;\T&gt;,K ni'lAliERrv I N '&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
D E T R O I T .&#13;
"V^TXXJXJ S E L L&#13;
IRON&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS RECMWK&#13;
Tt ^---. r T i f v and enrich the BLOO0«refra!ate&#13;
tin- L t V E R u»J K I D N E Y S , »nd HZSTORK THK&#13;
I H E A L T H and VIGOR of Y O U T H ! In »11 tlwto&#13;
I &lt;lis..'a-.ts rt-iiuirlnf? acertalnand efficJentTt^NIC, 1 e'uu.'.-iallv l)v'spepsi:i.Wantot A p p e U t e . l n d l w * .&#13;
&gt; ti »i) Ua.-tc o"i Stn-nKtli, e t c . , l u use Is inarkeiA&#13;
' woli 1neneiU:ite and wonderfnl resolts. HOM*«&#13;
i nmsolos .uu! uervua reot-ive u e w forc«. £altVciw&#13;
! Die l u l u ! and snppllcs Brain Power.&#13;
I A r t l C C suffering from all coroptatnta&#13;
L A U I C O peculiar to their sexwlllflnd 1»&#13;
DR. B A R T E R ' S IRON TONIC a safe and apeed?&#13;
cure. U gives .i Hear and healthy complexion.&#13;
• T!u- srr&gt;!iL'(&gt;&lt;t ti-stlmont t o the ynloe of DR.&#13;
hAKTSK'-i Iitiv.v TONMC Is that frcqnjfentattsntpta&#13;
nt coimri.-rtVUliijrhavt' onlv ad&lt; led fb the popular*&#13;
lt\o!'th.' orltrltuil. If you "eariiHStlvdealre health&#13;
do not c^pcrim.'iit—jn.-t-tlie OKIOIN ALAND BK8T.&#13;
gst.r.niaw. Ma.'for our "DRKAK BOOK.H §i&#13;
LPER TH/&#13;
Asbestos is heeotning a vta-y us^fe.l ,&#13;
and valuable mineral. It i s c h e a p a n d&#13;
pertootly hre-pvoot. so tiuif.it. is rapidly&#13;
coming into use in the manufacture ,&#13;
of a.largo yariety . ut! iire-})roof and&#13;
wateivproof articles. Two countie^.&#13;
tieac_Qiit'bec now furnish the' largest&#13;
and besd supply fov-the I'nited States-,&#13;
and E n g l a n d , ( '&#13;
OTH&#13;
O R . HASTf R'S IRON TONIC 13 FOR 8 A L E a r * u&#13;
ORUAG S T S . A N D DEALERS EVCRVWHCRI.&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
'Books loaned at 5 cents per voir&#13;
ume. fo&gt;- 7 da vs.&#13;
H TIHirts for "-• . - - - 25cts.&#13;
1« •* •• - - - - - 50L **&#13;
j '"WffSi Mteimpmg" added mry&#13;
\week, aniJj^J^$edspi/tm6e4Bm&#13;
-^--,&#13;
4&#13;
voted' tolnefiSmg and imping&#13;
. For Wkt^iorther iuform.tti6^^s:^Aj^;&#13;
' ' ^ ' I r p p l y a t - ••*•••"';•' • W&#13;
" WIKiJUEUA^ nnuG STQRK, &amp;"•&#13;
• • * - , . " . • ' • ; • ' • ' '&#13;
- * — PtJtl vVM Y, MlCHIftAjR&#13;
y&#13;
• • • ^ ^ • • r w w ^ mmm *sF!-smmm&#13;
« = * T&#13;
W&#13;
TO CORRESPONDENTS.&#13;
All communications for thla paper tdiould bn KC&#13;
companion by t h e namo of tbe a a t h o r ; not noce»-&#13;
•arjr for publication, but as itu evidence or vuoa&#13;
faith on the p«ut of t h e writer. Write on y on one&#13;
Bide of the paper. He particularly careful in jflvlun&#13;
namea and dates, to h a v e the letters mid tj.ui I&#13;
plain and distinct. Proper names are often dimcu&#13;
to decipher, becauae of the careless m a n n e r «a&#13;
whloh they a r e w r i t t e n .&#13;
T&#13;
u MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN/&#13;
T b e New W h e a t I n a e c t s .&#13;
1 have recently received specimens of an lnaect—&#13;
larva of a moth—from 8aginaw, Huron&#13;
and Wexford eounth b, with tbe report that it&#13;
Is doing no little damage to the wheat. It is&#13;
said to "hollow out" the berry, by eating the&#13;
flour. I should like to know how very general&#13;
this insect is. how much damage it is doing,&#13;
when and how it works, and to receive sped'&#13;
mens from every place where it has been observed.&#13;
The caterpillar is light colored, with&#13;
faint stripes and brown head, and about onehalf&#13;
inch long. _ .&#13;
I have received from the eastern part of the&#13;
state some larval insects—bymenopterout—&#13;
which work above the joints ia the wheat&#13;
straw. Jn each straw I rind from six to twelve&#13;
of the larva1. Tbty tsre from one-half Inch, to&#13;
two inches above the joint, and the straw where&#13;
they are found, for a distance v&amp;ryiDg from*&#13;
one-half inch to more than an inch, is solid in-&#13;
—stead of hollo*. The larva; arc imbedded in&#13;
small oval cells in this solid mass. These cells&#13;
are a little more than one-eighth of an inch&#13;
lone. The larva, which is yillowish-whitet ia&#13;
a little less than one-eighth of an inch. It has&#13;
a few short Lairs and tbirteeu joints besides tbe&#13;
bead. It has very small dark j iws The pupa&#13;
'is a little longer than the larva. The legs and&#13;
nine-jointed antenne show plainly, color same&#13;
as larva, antenuse darker. The pupfc-'may all&#13;
turn dark soon. Tbe puja&gt; have hrfst appeared.&#13;
I have none of the flies yet. 1 wish to urge the&#13;
same in regard to this insect as to the other.&#13;
Let all send information and specimens. By&#13;
copying this our .st-ate papers can help a good&#13;
cause. These insects are new, and in attacking&#13;
o t e of our most important crops may do&#13;
great harm. The fullest and most speedy investigation&#13;
is very desirable.&#13;
A.- J. COOK.&#13;
Agricultural College, September 18, 1SS4.&#13;
B r o n ^ o n ' s B l a z e .&#13;
^A flre visited Bronson, Branch county on&#13;
the night of the 21st Inst., inflicting a terrible&#13;
blow to the place. It originated in Dr. Willis'&#13;
grocery.store and spread rapidly. But a very&#13;
small amount of rain had fallen in nearly two&#13;
months and everything was as dry andinflammable&#13;
as powder; beside the water supply&#13;
was of a most limited nature. It swept the&#13;
whole length of the block on Chicago 6treet,&#13;
destroying the following property: W. Bar-&#13;
- num's confectionery store, Mrs. Ager's millinery&#13;
store, 8. D. Watson's jewelry store, Kean&#13;
APos^buiter and eggs; Burt Fellows, jewelry&#13;
and millinerv; Rockwell &amp; Crawford, drugs&#13;
and groceries; "R. Kelfer, clotblngj D. Willis,&#13;
grocery; Knapp &lt;fe SOD, boots and 6hoes;&#13;
Sanborn &amp; Drlggs, saloon; C. J. Keyes, gen-&#13;
—era! merchandise.' Then turning the corner&#13;
on to Matteson street it destroyed&#13;
Bennett &amp; Son, meat market;&#13;
F. Earl, confectionery; the. poetcttice building,&#13;
F. D. Jones, hardware store; Dr. Nottingham's&#13;
dwelling and barn;large frame owned by H. C.&#13;
Bowker and occupied as a cigar shop, billiard&#13;
hall and engine house. The fire communicated&#13;
to the dwelling adjacent but it was placed&#13;
under control at this point. The property destroyed&#13;
included nearly all the frame business&#13;
buildings in the town and over half of the business&#13;
property and the, loss Will "fall heavily on&#13;
many of the owners. Cold water and Sturgis&#13;
both sent engines,to the rescue but tbe water!&#13;
supply was deficient The town had hardly&#13;
recovered from the effects of a disastrous conflagration&#13;
of a year ago which destroyed much&#13;
valuable property without any insurance. The&#13;
bulk of the stock iu most of the stores was also&#13;
destroyed. The total loss is $38,000, with an&#13;
innurancc of $16,000. -The buildings burned&#13;
were nearly alt frame,which will be at once rebuilt&#13;
with bfick ones.&#13;
A p p r o v e * C o n s t i t u t i o n a l P r o h i b i t i o n .&#13;
The following resolutions were adopted by&#13;
the Detroit M. E. Conference at its recent 6eselo.&#13;
i in East Saginaw :&#13;
Resolved, That the traffic in intoxicating&#13;
liquors as a beverage is a public disgrace,&#13;
the greatest foe of civilization, education and&#13;
religion, and that as Christians we will not by'&#13;
our influence or vote sustain any measure&#13;
other than tbat of absolute or statutory prohibl'rfdil.&#13;
Resolved, Tbat we approve the outspoken&#13;
r.traightforwurd and manly course of the&#13;
Norhwestern Christian Advocate and the&#13;
Michigan Advccate upon the question of constitutional&#13;
prohibition, and believe that in&#13;
this rcgani ihey voice the true sentiments of&#13;
th*1 church.&#13;
Resolved, That v. e will socord most heartilv&#13;
the efforts of the proper cflicers of the state&#13;
and school districts in the rigid enforcement&#13;
of the new school law referred to above, and&#13;
earnestly hope that it may be faithfully executed&#13;
throughout the entire 6tate.&#13;
Resolved, That we rccegnize with Measure&#13;
the dorp intenst lyaoifested by the'Sunday&#13;
School Socity of the Simpson Methodist Episcopal&#13;
chureb, ot Detroit, in a memorial referred&#13;
to us concrrniug a conscientious use of the&#13;
ballot and in compliance therewTTtrwouldTfcornmeni&#13;
all our churches to observe Thursday&#13;
before ekction as a day cf fasting and pravt-r&#13;
for the triumph ot- th.' principles we adyo-&#13;
•catf.&#13;
&gt;1&#13;
IN T U B S T A T E .&#13;
"Hog distemper" is raging in Midland&#13;
county.&#13;
Asa Day of Adrian, aged 91, a veteran of the *&#13;
war of 1812, is dead.&#13;
Reported tbat Gen. Grant will "do"Michigan&#13;
with Blaine next month.&#13;
Frank R. Payne has-been appointed receiver&#13;
of the Adrian savings bank.&#13;
The next session of the Detroit M.E. conference&#13;
will be held in Pontlac.&#13;
B . B . Mudgett, a prominent lumberman of&#13;
Harrisvllle, has made an asignment.&#13;
Kalamazoo is making an effort to secure the&#13;
bonus necessary fgr the Hastings road.&#13;
The question as to where the Crouch trial&#13;
is to be held-i* Agitating the minds of Jackson&#13;
county oJlcials.&#13;
The first annual reunion of tbe northwestern&#13;
association of tbe G. A. R. will be beld at St. i&#13;
Johns Oct. 16.&#13;
The sum of $900,000, is asked for tbe Im&#13;
^rovement. of the Michigan rivers and harbors&#13;
the next fiscal year.&#13;
D. B. Harringtan, an Ingham county farmer&#13;
Is the man who ahowei 000 varitiea/ of potatoes&#13;
41|the late state fair.&#13;
Eugene Battersham of Tompkins, near Jackson,&#13;
is under arrest, charged with an outrage&#13;
upon hi) step-daughter.&#13;
Farmers about Otisville are putting in light&#13;
cropa of wheat andgare giving greater attention&#13;
to cattle raising than ever before.&#13;
V. R. Canfleld of Lansing has received the&#13;
hontract for furnishing 1,300 tons of coal for&#13;
c\u capital building at |5.84 per ton.&#13;
Steps are being taken at Battle Creek for tbe&#13;
formation of a company to manufacture tbe&#13;
recently patented Coz printing presc.&#13;
A Battle Creek Adventlst has had printed,&#13;
at bis own expense, 40,009 tracts, in which he&#13;
predicts tbe end of the world next mouthy&#13;
A precocious youth In Clayton named Bovee&#13;
set flre to a horuet's nest under the eaves of his&#13;
futhi'r's l:ou*i'. Tlie iu'Use wits uninsured.&#13;
J A. Lumirv &lt;X Co., six niilea north 'if&#13;
Ev:'rt, Jost tin if mill and about 114,0(0 worth&#13;
of valuable lumber by tire on the 15th Inst.&#13;
•\lany of the Swedish settlors (about East&#13;
ToVas are returning to the old country. They&#13;
find the prospects for work next winter very&#13;
unfavorable.&#13;
On the farm of Andrew Taylor, section S, in&#13;
the town of Rome, Lenawee county, the-e is a&#13;
stone on which three distinct human footprints&#13;
are found.&#13;
Hugh O. Hamlin of Wales township, St.&#13;
Clair county, was crushed to death by tbe&#13;
falling of a huge stump which be had just&#13;
pulled from the ground.&#13;
C. D. Hale A Co's mill and salt block at&#13;
East Tawas was destroyed by fire Sept. 33.&#13;
Loss $50,000; partially insured. Eighty men&#13;
are thrown out of employment.&#13;
Thanks to "President Philo Parsons and&#13;
the officers of the slate fair, no liquors&#13;
were sold upon \ki grounds during tbe fair,&#13;
nor wastry gambling tolerated.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Goctz. a two weeks' bride ot&#13;
Adrian, attempted siX'Ide tfce ottn-r day. Doctor*&#13;
and a {stomach puuip restored tier to the&#13;
aru:s of hi r des;^tr(ug husband.&#13;
Mit-s Jtutie Ntilson a graduate of the Miles&#13;
high school goes to 8iaru as u missionary, under&#13;
the uuspk't'6 of the woman's bourd ot mlsstous&#13;
of :he Presbyterian church.&#13;
The r illwav station at St. Clair Is to be officially&#13;
d u b b e d - a s - ^ . Olair Springs." Bet&#13;
w e e n t h i s and ' T b e Oakland" old St. Clair&#13;
will soon be blotted out, perhaps.&#13;
One of .the defendants In \ liquor case at&#13;
A'lc^a'i secured the papers in the ease by a&#13;
triek from the justice'iind has run away with&#13;
them. This will compel hiru to stay away.&#13;
W. II. Ames aud Harriet Case, both of&#13;
Tecumt-ch have bi?en arrested at Jackson on a&#13;
chari?« of adulterv. The woman pleaded guilty&#13;
and both ^( re placed in jail in default of $500&#13;
bail.&#13;
Mrs. Vanderburg, who was recently convicted&#13;
of aiding and abetting the murder of her&#13;
husband near Stanton in April last, has been&#13;
sent to 30 years in the Detroit honse of correction.&#13;
A Calhoun county farmer found some persons&#13;
in his mellon patch one evening this week,&#13;
and discouraged future cooning expeditions&#13;
by collecting $20 from them at the point oi a&#13;
shotgun.&#13;
The body of Edward Raymond, one of- the&#13;
Victims of th6 Huron dam disaster of January&#13;
1. wad found on tbe lake shore one mile west of&#13;
Hancock the other morning. It was identified&#13;
by the clothes.&#13;
At the Lenawee county fair the winner of&#13;
the tobacco cbewla g match disposed of two&#13;
pounds of tobacco in two days of seven hours&#13;
each. He claims to average a pound a day&#13;
the year round.&#13;
Blaine and "The Pathfinder" John C. Fremont,&#13;
will be in Michigan October 14,15 and 16.&#13;
The opening address of Blaine will be made iu&#13;
Detroit. Local politicians are making preparations&#13;
for a great demonstratien.&#13;
Solomon S. Fisher, a well-to-do farmer of&#13;
Hillsdale county, was found dead in the woods&#13;
near his home. The body bore evidences of&#13;
poisoning and there are other circumstances&#13;
that lead to the belief that he committed suicide.&#13;
Wm. Phillips, engineer of the 6team barge&#13;
Oswegatchle, came ashore at Bay City the other&#13;
night and was drugged and robbed of $290.&#13;
He was then taken to the woods near Kawkawlln,&#13;
where he regained consciousness next&#13;
morning.&#13;
Blaine, Butler, and St. John will make a raid&#13;
on Michigan du :lng October. Blaine will invade&#13;
the state about the 13th,Butler about the&#13;
4th, and St. John makes his opening speech in&#13;
Whitney's Opera-house, Detroit, on the night&#13;
of October 6th.&#13;
A Lansing real estate owner offers lots for&#13;
sale on the following terms: The property to&#13;
Devalued at current rates, the purchaser to&#13;
pay 50 percent, in addition it Blaine Is elected,&#13;
or to receiver the-property free in ease of&#13;
that candidate's defeat.&#13;
The seventh annual convention of the North&#13;
em Michigan beekeepers' association will be&#13;
held in Shearer's hall, in Greenville, Oct. 6 and&#13;
7, commencing at 10 o'clock a, m. The Greenville&#13;
fair occurs at the^ame time, and a good&#13;
attendance is expected.&#13;
Nothing but James G. Blaine's hret night la&#13;
Michigan has been decided on. If he can be&#13;
prevailed on. to stay in the state three days instead&#13;
of two, a* now contemplated, it will&#13;
make the route much different from any of the&#13;
guesses heretofore pabilshei.&#13;
George Bullock was arrested at Elk Rapids&#13;
Friday ""on a cuarge^of stcalh^ clothes from a&#13;
corpse. He volunteered to watch the ooJy&#13;
during the night and the next day 60ineof&#13;
the garments that were upon the dead nun&#13;
were found in Bullock's trurk.&#13;
Case, the Injured husband from Tccuruseh,&#13;
whose wife was arrested ic Jackson for adultery&#13;
decided not to bring his wife and her paramour,&#13;
Ames, to a trial for adultery, and as they were&#13;
from another county, the caurt officials ure&#13;
happy. A'.ne6 has piid the cost?', and Case has&#13;
taken his wife to Ttcumseh.&#13;
. Chas. R. Ford, a Wyandotte lawyer, was reported&#13;
3ome months ago to have been drowned&#13;
near Monroe*. His reported death was all a&#13;
hoax, the man having been discovered in Indianapolis,&#13;
wfcere he is known as Cbarles Raymond,&#13;
Bis reported death—WTR merely a&#13;
6hame to capture his life insurance mone}.&#13;
Fred. Ackerman, a convict senj from Kent&#13;
county on a seven years' sentence for assault&#13;
with intent to kill, was discharged the other&#13;
morning, his time having expired. He refused&#13;
to leave the prison, stating that he had another&#13;
year to serve, and ha did not propose to be imposed&#13;
upon by the prison officials. He is undobtedly&#13;
Insane.&#13;
C. W. Bowen, an insurance broker of Kalaamazoo,&#13;
is supposed to have been drowned in&#13;
Long Lake. He went out in a boat the other&#13;
afternoon to bathe, since which time he has&#13;
not been seen. The boat containing bis&#13;
clothts has been found. Suspicion of bis suicide&#13;
is common oh account of bis supposed&#13;
financial straits.&#13;
G. S. Barker's hardware store at Sand Lake,&#13;
Kent county, was struck by lightning on the&#13;
22d inst. The building was set on flre at once,&#13;
the flames breaking out in a dozen different&#13;
places simultaneously.' The building was entort'iy&#13;
destroyed, and the flames spread to adjoining&#13;
buildings. Before the flames were&#13;
subdued, property valued at $30,000 was in&#13;
ashes.&#13;
George Fautb, owner of the Exchange hotel&#13;
of Owosso, is alleged to have violated the Sunday&#13;
hquor law. Mayor D. M. Estcy caused&#13;
his arrest. Justice Holman, of Corauna, fined&#13;
him $50 and costs, and sentenced him to 10&#13;
day's imprisonment in the county refrigerator.&#13;
Notwithstanding,that Fauth pleaded guilty,&#13;
be appeals bifr-eaee to-tbe eireult courtr not&#13;
llkinis tbe ssuce 'Squire Holman served him&#13;
with.&#13;
Tbe remains of a man were found about one&#13;
mile above Midland, near the river, the other&#13;
afternoon. From all appearances the body has&#13;
Jain exposed for m a n y weeks, m theiwirts&#13;
nearly all off bis head. The body had an overcoat&#13;
on and a knife was found near him, but&#13;
there were no marks of violence to be seen. It&#13;
is supposed tbat his name is Webster, but tbe&#13;
.cause of his death and the circumstances attending&#13;
it areui-koown.&#13;
Benj amlp F"rmanL16 years old, of Bay City,&#13;
went gunning Sunday, Sept 81, in tbe vicinity&#13;
of Kawkawlln, and accidentally shot himself,&#13;
causing his death almost instantaneously. He&#13;
wag In company with another boy, &gt;Pd having&#13;
started a flock of partridges raised tbe hammer&#13;
of his gun preparatory to shooting. He mounted&#13;
a log with hi« gun still nt full cock to look&#13;
ing, and after a brief conference with Acting&#13;
.. „ Secretary Coou entered upon the discharge of&#13;
for the birds, but he dipped, the hammer' his duties. Helug in bavi health, however, he&#13;
struck the loir, the gun was discharged and&#13;
the entire load of shot penetrated his face,&#13;
passing out at the\top of his head, aud he felt&#13;
dead by the side of his companion. He was&#13;
terribly disfigured and presented a horrible&#13;
sight. This is the third s-ou Mr. Furman has&#13;
lost within a year and a half.&#13;
Sec. Carroll of the state com mission states that&#13;
there will be no Michigan exhibit at the New Orleans&#13;
exhibition. The r&lt;a&gt;ou he states Is that&#13;
the executive committee is left without a quorum&#13;
by the sudden request for the resignation&#13;
of Commissioner C. B. Smith, a member of&#13;
that committee; He says tbat it has blocked&#13;
the whole machinery. At this time the work&#13;
Bhould be in progress, and no funds for collecting&#13;
purposes can be obtained in the Lower Peninsula&#13;
until another meeting of the commission&#13;
and a partial reorganization. There are specimens&#13;
now on band on which storage will have&#13;
to be paid, as there are no. available means with&#13;
which to pay freight charges. Posters and&#13;
advertising matter received by Commis'ioner&#13;
Carroll arc be-lug distributed throughout the&#13;
state, so far as they can be at his own expense.&#13;
The report of Capt. Lockwood, of the corps&#13;
of engineers, on the iruproveuunt of Michigan&#13;
harbors contains the followlug statement of the&#13;
work contemplated, with the money available&#13;
in each case followed by tbe amount asked for:&#13;
Charlevoix harbor, extending south pier, $11,-&#13;
031, $50,000; Frankfort harbor, pier extension,&#13;
and draining $13,083, $150,000: Manistee harbor,&#13;
pier extension, $13,668, 160,000; Ludlnglon&#13;
harbor, pier extension, $11,593, $50,000;&#13;
Pentwater harbor, extending south pier, $17,-&#13;
833, $40,000; White River harbor, pier extension,&#13;
$13,703, $50.0t0; Muekegon harbor, pier&#13;
extension, $33,758, $11)0,000; Grand Ha\en&#13;
harbor, pier extension aud improvements, $51,-&#13;
338, $150,000; Grand River harbor, dredging,&#13;
$35/386; Black Laks harbor, placing cribs at&#13;
pier ends, $15,943, $30,000; Saugatuck harbor,&#13;
maintain present improvements, $5,739, $8,000;&#13;
8outh Haven harbor, pier extension, $1U,341,&#13;
$40,000; St. Joseph harbor, extending north&#13;
pier, $31,335, $51,015. Total amount available,&#13;
1341,336; total asked for, $891,015.&#13;
Silas Bacon, of the township of Lebanon,&#13;
Clinton county, a mi idle-aged married man and&#13;
father of several 'children, was arrested recently&#13;
by Officer L. Z. Munger on a warrant sworn out&#13;
on the complaint of Mrs. Elizabeth Cook, of&#13;
Es6ex, a very respectable and highly esteemed&#13;
widow lady, charging the aforesaid Bacon of&#13;
an assault with tbe Intent to commit tbe crime&#13;
of rape. Mrs. Cook is a mother of three small&#13;
children, living near the -town line, between&#13;
Lebanon and Essex, and about half a mile&#13;
from tbe home of Sling Bacon. About 3 o'clock&#13;
tbe other morning, she was aroused by the presence&#13;
of some one in her room. She made an&#13;
outcry that awakened her little hoy, who slept&#13;
with her, and also the little children, tbat slept&#13;
in tbe adjoining room. Immediately a man&#13;
seized her by the wrists and told her to keep&#13;
quiet, and attempted to assault her. The little&#13;
boy, wakened by his mother's cries, ran out of&#13;
the house and across the road to one of the&#13;
neighbor's, who came, to her relief. But in the&#13;
meantime her assailant, having failed of his&#13;
purpose, ripped out oaths and Indulged in very&#13;
abusive language, and the tones of his voice,&#13;
in connection with other circumstances, helped,&#13;
it is claimed, to identify Bacon as the guilty&#13;
party. Officer Munger arrived at St. dohus&#13;
with him and lodgedhim in jail. ,&#13;
D l t T K O l T .HAICHI^TN.&#13;
Wheat—No. 1,white $ M % (¾&#13;
Flour . 4 to @&#13;
Wheat, No. 3, red • • • • . . . . . . . . 80^(¾&#13;
Corn . . . . . . 52&#13;
Oats&#13;
Barley&#13;
Rye&#13;
Clover Seed, # bu...&#13;
Timothy seed, V bu&#13;
Dried Apoles, V lb&#13;
Peaches . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Cherries. .1&#13;
Apples per bbl 1&#13;
Peaches, yellow lb bushel 3&#13;
butter, if lh&#13;
Eggs&#13;
Potatoes&#13;
Onions, V bbl 1&#13;
Honey 1&#13;
Beans, picked. . . 1&#13;
Bearu«, unpicked 1 50&#13;
Hay . 1 3 00&#13;
Straw 6 00&#13;
Pork, dressed, * 190 6 00&#13;
PorK, mess new 13 00&#13;
Pork, family 13 50&#13;
HauiA 13¾&#13;
Shoulders s&gt;4'&#13;
Lard 9 (4&#13;
Beef extra mess 13 00 ($13 50/_&#13;
Wood, Beech and Algols .. „ 5 J S ~ ® - t n ^&#13;
Wood, Maple. «-rr-r.., 8 2.1) (¾ 6 SO&#13;
Wood iftekorvT. 6 35 S 6 50&#13;
(leteru.iued to leave the city as early as possible,&#13;
and joiu the President at Secretary Krelinghusen's&#13;
residence at Ruritau, N. J. With this&#13;
oljfct In view he called the secretaries into&#13;
consultation and designated Mr. Coou to act&#13;
as secretary during his absent—The. President's&#13;
approval of this designation wis obtatued&#13;
by telegraph. The heads of bureaus of the&#13;
treasury were formally presented to the new&#13;
secretary this morning. It is predicted with&#13;
the greatest positlveness that Mr. Greebam&#13;
will remain in the cabinet but a very short time&#13;
before accepting the judgeship vacated by&#13;
Judire Drnmmond, and that bis appointment&#13;
as Secretary of the Treasury is merely a&#13;
temporary one to relieve the Prtsldent of his&#13;
embarrasment.&#13;
DEATIi OF JOSN W. (JARRJtTT.&#13;
Jotn W. Garrett, President of the Baltimore&#13;
&amp; Ohio railroad company, died at Deer Park.&#13;
Md., the other morning, after a protracted illness,&#13;
in the 65th year ot his age, Garrett was&#13;
a native of Battimore. He completed his education&#13;
at Lufayette College, Pennsylvania,&#13;
when 19 years of age. He then returned to&#13;
Baltimore, entering the counting house of his&#13;
bin father, where be remained until he was&#13;
elcted'Dlrectorof the Baltimore &lt;te Ohio Railroad&#13;
Company in 1857. During the year following&#13;
he was elected its President, and from&#13;
that time the success of the road seemed assured.&#13;
Torouga his management all connections&#13;
of the road west of the Ohio river were&#13;
made. His labors were continuous. Though&#13;
he possessed a robust constitution, two years&#13;
ago his health failed, but he did not withdraw&#13;
from active participation in the management&#13;
of the road until a year ago. . About that time&#13;
Mrs. Garrett lost her life by au accident. That&#13;
caused a shock to. hla nervous system, from&#13;
which he never recovered.&#13;
HATTON'SHl'LING.&#13;
Actincj Postmaster-General llatton has issued&#13;
au order ttiat on and after October 1 all&#13;
postoltices of the first class and their stations&#13;
or branch offices shall be kept open to the&#13;
public for the issue and the payment of money&#13;
orders, and for the receipt of matter intended&#13;
for registration, and the delivery of registered&#13;
matter until 6 o'clock p. m. every day except&#13;
Sundays and legal holidays.&#13;
PK8rsiuxe PAYNE . '&#13;
In consequence of information received at&#13;
the war department that Oklahoma Payne,&#13;
recently released by the United States courtA^'&#13;
Fort Smith, Ark., is prepairing for another&#13;
A H A K U A I N IN C O K N E R L O T S&#13;
Is what most m e n &lt;lo.siro, hut to k e e p&#13;
from lilliug ;l tfravo iu. si c e m e t e r y lot&#13;
uro half y o u r d a y s are n u m b e r e d , always&#13;
keep a s u p p l y of D r . T i e r c e ' s&#13;
" G o l d e n M y d i c a l D i s c o v e r y " by y o u .&#13;
W h e n t h e first s y m p t o m s of c o n s u m p -&#13;
tion a p p e a r lose n o time in p u t t i n g&#13;
yourself u n d e r t h e t r e a t m e n t of tbis inv&#13;
a l u a b l e m e d i c i n e . It c u r e s w h e n&#13;
n o t h i n g else will. Possessing, a s it&#13;
does, ten t i m e s the v i r t u e of t h e b e s t&#13;
cod liver oil, it is n o t o n l y t h e c h e a p -&#13;
e s t b u t far t h e p l o a s a n t e s t to t a k e . I t purities&#13;
a n d e n r i c h e s t h e blood, s t r e n g t h -&#13;
e n s the s y s t e m , c u r e s blotches, p i m -&#13;
ples, e r u p t i o n s a n d o t h e r h u m o r s . B y&#13;
d r u g g i s t s .&#13;
Tho F o r t W o i t h Gazotte s a y s t h e iacreased&#13;
t a x on c a t t l e for 1888 over t h a t&#13;
of 1882 w a s $37,587.285.&#13;
Y o u o g a n d m i d d l e - a g e d m e n sufferi&#13;
n g from n e r v o u s debility, p r e m a t u r e&#13;
o l d age, loss of m e m o r y , a n d k i n d r e d&#13;
s y m p t o m p s , s h o u l d send t h r e e l e t t e r&#13;
s t a m p s for l a r g e illustrated t r e a t i s e&#13;
s u g g e s t i n g s u r e m e a n s of c u r e . W o r l d ' s&#13;
D i s p e n s a r y M e d i c a l Aasociation, Buffalo,&#13;
N . Y.&#13;
T h e old g a m e of .shuttlecock a n d battledore&#13;
has.been revived in E n g l a n d , a n d&#13;
is now played i n d o o r s by ladies.&#13;
" W O R K , W O R K , W O R K ! "&#13;
H o w m a n y w o m e n t h e r e a r e w o r k -&#13;
i n g t o - d a y in v a r i o u s b r a n c h e s of ind&#13;
u s t r y — t o s a y n o t h i n g of the t h o u s -&#13;
a n d s of p a t i e n t h o u s e w i v e s whose IiTes&#13;
a r e an u n c e a s i n g r o u n d of t o i l — w h o&#13;
a r e m a r t y r s to those c o m p l a i n t s to&#13;
which t h e w e a k e r sex is liable. T h e i r&#13;
t a s k s a r e r e n d e r e d d o u b l y b a r d a n d irks&#13;
o m e a n d t h e i r lives s h o r t e n e d , y e t&#13;
h a r d n e c e s s i t y c o m p e l s t h e m j t o k e e p&#13;
j^&gt;n. T o such D r . P i e r c e ' s " F a v o r i t e&#13;
P r e s c r i p t i o n offers a s u r e m e a n s of r e -&#13;
c e r t a i n c u r e . A l l d r u g g i s t s .&#13;
T h e H o r s e s h o e fall a t N i a g a r a h a s&#13;
w o r n a w a y t h e r o c k a n d receded a dist&#13;
a n c e of 100 feet in t h e last U y e a r s .&#13;
C A R O L I N E S . "&#13;
On every banner blazon bright,&#13;
The motto strong for which we fight,&#13;
of all the oils tbat e're were seen&#13;
There's none that beats our Carbollne.&#13;
A J a c k s o n v i l l e , 111., m a n c l a i m s to&#13;
w e a r the c h a m p i o n s h i p h a t — a n u m b e r&#13;
ten. The size of the h e a d is 31 i n c h e s .&#13;
To KEEP THE CELESTIALS OUT.&#13;
Justice Field of San Francisco, hearing the&#13;
Chinese habeas corpus cases, ruled that a wife&#13;
could not enter on a husband's certificate.&#13;
8be must have one of her own, issued, by the&#13;
Chlnesegover-nment. .A new and extraordinary&#13;
feature relating to Chinese, of the exempt class,&#13;
under the amended Chinese 'Kestrlction act,&#13;
has been developed. Collector of the Port&#13;
tiears hcld^-and his interpretation is confirmed&#13;
by Deputy Collector Jerome Thatch—that Chinese&#13;
merchants resident in tbe United States,&#13;
who purpose visitirjg any foreign country,'&#13;
must first go to China and procure a certificate&#13;
from the Chinese government or he will not be&#13;
permitted to re-enter the United States. Under&#13;
the old act the Chinese Consul Issued these&#13;
certificates of identification by authority of the&#13;
Chinese Government. Under the amended&#13;
act as interpreted by the Collector of the Port&#13;
of San Francisco a Chinese merchant who&#13;
wanted to go to British Columbia to 6ee about&#13;
tbe business of his branch house waahtlrrst&#13;
have to go to China and procure a certificate&#13;
from the Chinese Government before he would&#13;
be permitted to come back home to San Francisco,&#13;
and as the certificate would be taken up&#13;
on landing be would have to repeat biS'trlp to&#13;
China every time he had occasion to visit any&#13;
point on tbe coast outside of the Cr-fted States.&#13;
BLASTED HOPBS.&#13;
Theo. Rouleau, aged 18, and Hortenz Pazo,&#13;
aged 16, both French Canadians of Rochester,&#13;
N. H., who were soon to be married, went to&#13;
ball a few nights ago. About midnight arm&#13;
in arm they left the dance ball for home&#13;
while a heavy thunder storm prevailed. Thev&#13;
had not gone far when Rouleau was struck by&#13;
lightning and fell dead. The girl had her hair&#13;
aud one arm and band badly "burned. She is&#13;
alive but much shocked.'&#13;
LITTlyfi FIBJJDS.&#13;
A story comes from Ottawa, Ks., that&#13;
Carrie and Bessie Waterman, aged 13 and 14&#13;
years, daughters of James Waterman, farmer,&#13;
tied a rode around the neck of their half brother,&#13;
six years old, and dragged bim about and&#13;
beat him with sticks till he was dead. Tbe&#13;
head of the child was nearly severed by the&#13;
euttrng"orThe"Tope.~Tbe'«rt»''6'tated at the&#13;
coroner's inquest that they bated the child and&#13;
wanted him dead. They were held for murder&#13;
A MIDNIGHT OATUV&#13;
8bortly before 12 o'clockon tfie night of Sept.&#13;
24, Judge Adce, third assistant Secretary of&#13;
State, drove to the residence of Postmaster-&#13;
General Gresham in Washington and notified&#13;
bim that be had his commission as Secretary&#13;
of tbe Treasury and It was important for him&#13;
to qualify before midnight. General Gresham&#13;
bad retired, but arose and accompanied Judge&#13;
Adee and Secretary Chandler to Jndge Wylle's&#13;
residence, where tbe oath WM administered.&#13;
Announcements of1 the appointment&#13;
«« I»UIUC I .. , _,&#13;
raid into Indian territory, Gen 8heftdan bas f « e f . F o r all f e m a l e w e a k n e s s e s it is a&#13;
directed Gen. Hatch, who Is in command, to&#13;
j prevent Payne from entering tbe territory, but&#13;
if be cannot do tbat to follow him in and bring&#13;
bim out. The general says the soldiers will&#13;
probably have to take Payne across the country&#13;
300 miles to Fort Smith again, and keep up the&#13;
farce of arresting him as long as the courts&#13;
allow him to go at large. Gen. Sheridan has&#13;
ordered Gen. Hatch to establish two winter&#13;
cantonments in the Indian territory, one near&#13;
the place where Payne is so anxious to locate&#13;
and another near the boundary line, so as to&#13;
intercept invaders.&#13;
A SERIOUS MISTAKE.&#13;
Maurice Merthelmer, ot New York, has&#13;
brought a suit in the United States circuit&#13;
court for (100,000 damages against the Cunard&#13;
Steamship Company, cUlminf that the steward&#13;
of the steamer Serviagave hitn a glass of chlorate&#13;
of zinc in mistake "for mineral water, while&#13;
on the passage from Liverpool to Ne# York,&#13;
which caused trouble with internal organs.&#13;
The doctor tells him that he will be disabled&#13;
for life iu consequence of the doBe.&#13;
THRICE IIANGED.&#13;
A band of ^5 men near Moaroe, Ohio, ju-t&#13;
over the Indiana state line, at a late hout-_tlie&#13;
Other night, compelled DateLamanaiid George&#13;
Richards to leave their 6eds and go with them&#13;
into the woods, where they showed them rope.*&#13;
and threatened them with death by hanging if&#13;
they refused to tell all they knew about the&#13;
murder of Amos Bockesto by Fred Richards in&#13;
April last- Richards is now iu jail in Fort&#13;
Wayne, under death sentence for the murder.&#13;
George is his brother. Both men were badly&#13;
frightened, but denied any knowledge or complicity&#13;
in the murder. They were at t&gt;ace&#13;
strung-up and-badly choked, but on being let&#13;
down they still declared their Innoceuce, and&#13;
were pulled up again aud let down. Thry still&#13;
answered th&amp;Vthey had nothing to confer. A&#13;
third time they were strung up, and were almost&#13;
lifeless, but still pleading for thcir-Jivis&#13;
and asserting their iuuocence they were al-&#13;
'lowed to depart. Tbe mob was coinoosed of&#13;
Beckesto's neighbors, who aie bound to avenge&#13;
his death. There is a probability uf lilchards&#13;
getting a new-trialr '&#13;
—:— ~~ CUSSED CEI.BSTIALS.&#13;
Advices received from lititi;-li Columbia&#13;
state that urrfess ynrrrrrrmru'Hlluta «tep is taken&#13;
to prevent the &gt;ruuidling uf Chinamen in the&#13;
United Stuns from tha,t prou-iec before spring&#13;
nearly the whole Cbiuese pjpulatiou of British&#13;
Columbia will be transferred over to Oregon&#13;
and Washington territory. Fourteen fishing&#13;
smacks have been discovered engaged in the&#13;
trade, realizing handsome profits for their&#13;
oivners. As hl^h as #50 per head for women&#13;
anJ $30 for Cuiu^se men are now paid to captains&#13;
of boats for running them across the&#13;
•boundary line. It Is stated that, within the&#13;
last eight weeks over i,000 Chinamen have&#13;
crossed, over. Naturally British Columbians,&#13;
who are protesting against Chinese immigration,&#13;
are Jaeilltatjng their g c ting out of the&#13;
country into the United States as far as&#13;
possible.&#13;
were™w&#13;
celvedattbeTreaauryDepartment and Executive&#13;
Mansion, respectively, by mail from&#13;
Br^fcwYj»*r " . . . . '&#13;
mant shortly before lb o'clock tbe next morn&#13;
good common senses-then try. Carter's Little&#13;
Liver Pills and learn bow easy it is to be free&#13;
from Biliousness, Headache, Constipation ana&#13;
all Liver troubles. These little pills are smaller,&#13;
easier to take and give quicaer relief than&#13;
any other pill in use. Forty In a vial. One a&#13;
dose. Price 26 cents.&#13;
Judge Fields of San Francisco has decided&#13;
tbat a Chinese boy born In the Unitel Btatea-&#13;
^e^^reslmtffTeKmid^thffdepaf t-1 U~i^ccltttefilminnWWftirTnot anemibleToTthe&#13;
Chinese restriction a c t&#13;
When you visit or leave Jf«w York City, via&#13;
Central depot save Baggage JExpressage and&#13;
f3 Carriage Hire and stop at the Grand Union.&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. Six hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at the cost of one mlllon&#13;
dollars; $1 and upward per day, European&#13;
plan. Elevator and Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the best. Hor^e cars, stages and elevated railroad&#13;
to all depots. Families can live better&#13;
for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than&#13;
at any other flrst-class hotel In the citv.&#13;
T h e N o r t h a n d S o u t h C a r o l i n a m o u n -&#13;
tains.aro b e c o m i n g popular s u m m e r ^ i o -&#13;
sorts for t h e s o u t h e r n people.&#13;
TO THE UNMARRIED.&#13;
A n A s s o c i a t i o n f o r T h e i r B e n e f i t&#13;
a n d W h a t i t l&amp;[Doing f o r T h e m . _ _ .&#13;
There arc but tew of the many unmarried&#13;
persons In Michigan who are aware that an&#13;
institution organized to assist its members&#13;
upon entering the matrimonial state, has been&#13;
in existence-tbe past year and a half.-&#13;
This association is- known as the Mutual&#13;
Marriage BenevoKat Association of Marine&#13;
City, having been fn corpora ted under tbe laws&#13;
ot Michigan in 1S83, if, is the only institution&#13;
of its kind in the state. The association has&#13;
paid In benefits since August 2, f r!,000, and is&#13;
paying several thousand a" month to its members.&#13;
The following letters of acknowledgement&#13;
are a few of the many the association are receiving.&#13;
MAUINE CITY, Mich., Aug. 2, 1S84.'-&#13;
M. M. BV Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—Please accept my thanks for the&#13;
very prompt manner iu which you have paid&#13;
my benefit, amouuting to one thousand dollars&#13;
($l,Ubd). Th'f.fneedy settlement should&#13;
make the Mutua, \1 mi "re Benevolent Association&#13;
deserving ' ,-.o .fiden«e and patronage&#13;
of every unm, ; '• d person in the slate. I&#13;
have derived a lartor benefit by being a&#13;
member of the association than I ever anticipated.&#13;
As an investment I know of no equal,&#13;
and I would advise every unmarried person to&#13;
join the association; an.i hoping that success&#13;
may continue to crown the Mutual Marriage&#13;
Association, and that it may be the meaus~of&#13;
making happy the hearts and homes of thousands&#13;
of young married people, I am&#13;
Yours, thankfully,&#13;
GEO. McHANEY.&#13;
MARINE CITY. Sept. 3, 1S88^ \4&#13;
To the Officers of the M. M. B. Association&#13;
Gentlemen—I take this opportunity of&#13;
thanking you for the promptness in which you&#13;
have paid my benefit, amounting to one thousand&#13;
dollars. 1 am very much pleased with&#13;
the manner in which my claim has been settled,&#13;
and wishing the association every success,&#13;
I remain, Very truly yours,&#13;
MRS. ROSE AIcDONALD.&#13;
MARINE CITY, Mich., Sept. 10, 1884.&#13;
R. MCNEIL. Sec'y M. M. B. Association:&#13;
I am in receipt of benefit ou my certificates,&#13;
and am much pleased with my investment.&#13;
This benefit will be the means of paying off tbe&#13;
mortgage on my home, leaving me out of debt&#13;
and a balance to put in tbe bank for a rainy (&#13;
day. TbanklLg tbe association for what it hs»&#13;
done for me, ( remain&#13;
Verv truly vour.&gt;,&#13;
ORVILLE W. MCLONALD.&#13;
All unmarried persons, of either sex should&#13;
join. Write for circulars explaining the plan.&#13;
Address the Secretary, R, McNElL,&#13;
Marine City, Mich.&#13;
HAY FBVER. I have been a great sufferer&#13;
from Hay Fever for 15 years and have tried&#13;
various things without doing any good. I&#13;
-read of t b r many wondrous cures of Ely's&#13;
Cream Balm, and I thought I would trv once&#13;
I n 15 oainuto* after one application&#13;
FKOTI A FOREIGN S H O R E .&#13;
DISASTER AT SEA.&#13;
The British gunboat Wasp struck a rock and&#13;
was wrecked, recently, on l o r y island, oft the&#13;
west coast of Ireland, county Donegal. Only&#13;
four lives were saved. The Wasp's crew numbered&#13;
6eveuty-three persons. There was not a&#13;
moment's warning or the impending disaster.&#13;
The^-flshery commissioners, who nad been&#13;
aboard, had gone ashore before tbe disaster&#13;
occurred.&#13;
THE CAPTAIN TJ BLAMB.&#13;
' Additional details ot the wrecking of the&#13;
British gunboat Wasp on Tory island., Ireland,&#13;
state that tbe Wasp a*, the time of the disaster&#13;
was hugging the shore closely under sail; that&#13;
the captain" had set the course and declined&#13;
altering it. A.fter striking the rock he tried to&#13;
get up" steam, but was unsuccepsful, as the&#13;
vessel rapidly filled with water, putting out the&#13;
fires. The sea boats were then launched, b u t&#13;
the sea was so rough that they were smashed&#13;
against the bridge,'the officer's being washed&#13;
away.&#13;
GORDON DBSPAIRIN0.&#13;
The London Times publishes telegrams via&#13;
Kassal and Massowab, giving (xtracts from&#13;
the diary of its Khartoum correspondent, Mr.&#13;
Powers, describing the slegeof the latter place.&#13;
From April 28 to July 31 there was daily lighting&#13;
which frequently was terrific. Gen, Gordon's&#13;
total loss during that time was 700 killed.&#13;
The general despaired of receiving adequate&#13;
relief. The Negroes were the only troops who&#13;
Could be relied upon. On April 27 the enemy_&#13;
captured oneofGoToWs armed steamers;&#13;
•&#13;
If yoirare ttred taking t h e iarge, oldfash- f ^f16- ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ * / t e r , , 1 &gt; n e application I&#13;
ioned griping pills,, and are satisfied thatpucg- w ± L w i ! ^ * r f u l l y h ^ P e d ; Two weeks ago I&#13;
ing youwell till you are weak and sick is not connnenced using It and now I feel entirety&#13;
cured&#13;
Mass.&#13;
It Is thegreateat discoveryjever known&#13;
Vrl&#13;
ii istnegreates&#13;
or heard of.—DUHAMEL CLARK, 'Farmer, Lee,&#13;
Price sacemis.&#13;
Where other remedies have failed Athlophoros&#13;
has been/found to work like a charm.&#13;
Jones &amp; Bryan of Lancaster. Wis., sold a bottle&#13;
to an/old and respected citizen of that&#13;
Town who having vainly tried all other remedies,&#13;
was cured of rheumatism by a single bot-&#13;
JltLofJhe_nfigLsneclflc. Price t l par bottle. If&#13;
T ^ r a r f i g | B t -fiiim^rit send to Athiophoroa&#13;
/Co,,112 W a l l s t « &lt; N . Y . « « i w w g . .&#13;
.,.--r&#13;
-1&#13;
•&#13;
m&#13;
D R E A M I N G .&#13;
[ dreamed r?e two were friends again&#13;
Aa In the days of yore,&#13;
And all life held of bliss of pain&#13;
Came back to me once more;&#13;
four laughter ringing clear and sweet,&#13;
Your dark ejes' tender beam,&#13;
The echo of your footfalls fleet,&#13;
Were in that happy dream.&#13;
The'e wa« a summer In love's land,&#13;
The skies were skies of June,&#13;
While roses blushed on either hand,&#13;
Beneath a golden moon;&#13;
And all the sadness of the rears,&#13;
The Irowns no smiles could blot,&#13;
The Utter doubts, the cruel fears,&#13;
Were in that dream forgot&#13;
I dreamed we two were friends again,&#13;
And set my dream to sonar,&#13;
Soyou may listen to the strain&#13;
That sought you 'mid the thfoBg;&#13;
That vou mfcht list, perchance might sigh,&#13;
Whifet idle tears would stort,&#13;
To feel i^Jpftft the last good-bye&#13;
Qf tcppopr Xaitfcful heart.&#13;
I dreamed we two were friends again—&#13;
Alael 'twas but a dream,&#13;
That fled when o'er my window-pane&#13;
Awoke the first red beam.&#13;
Oh 1 as It brightened on my sight,&#13;
And trembled o'er the floor;&#13;
I whispered: "Vanish, happy llsht,&#13;
For I would dream once more."&#13;
F. 8. Miller in the Courier-Journal.&#13;
Chased by Wild Horses-&#13;
BY AFACHK GEORGE.&#13;
"You may talk about dea' but adventures,"&#13;
said "Mustang Joe," tilling his&#13;
pipe and throwing a handful of buffalo&#13;
chips on the fire, "but once \v the lower&#13;
country I hed to ride for my life from&#13;
a drove of bronch mustangs, an' I'm&#13;
jest conceited enough to think that no&#13;
mortal man ever hed a wilder ride or a&#13;
closer shave with death."&#13;
"Tell us the story, Joe!1' we cried in&#13;
chorus, and drew closer around the fire.&#13;
We wore out on a scout after Apaches,,&#13;
and had been two days and nights on&#13;
the Great Staked Plain.&#13;
. To-night, we had made a "dry camp,"&#13;
but hoped to reach World's Wells the&#13;
•&gt; next morning, and therefore bore our&#13;
deprivation good-naturedly.&#13;
Supper was over, and the men off&#13;
duty were gathered around the campfire&#13;
spinning yarns. Several had been&#13;
told, when Mustang Joe, one of the&#13;
oldest rangers in the service, and a&#13;
well-known frontiersman, whetted our&#13;
appetite for a fresh story by the obser-&#13;
• / " vation above quoted.•&#13;
"Joe had been a "mustanger," or&#13;
hunter of wild ponies, years before, and&#13;
it was while thus -engaged in this occupation&#13;
that he met with the following&#13;
adventure:&#13;
He was somewhere near the junction&#13;
of the Rio Frio with the Nueces river,&#13;
in camp with his partners.&#13;
They had had a very successful hunt,&#13;
and the men were hard at'work roughbreaking&#13;
the captured ponies, pr paring&#13;
for the drive* to the San Antonio&#13;
market.&#13;
On this particular morning, Joe left&#13;
camp on a short hunting trip, for&#13;
the fresh meat supply had nearly run&#13;
out.&#13;
There were Indians in that country&#13;
then—Comanches, Llpans and Teukaw&#13;
a a - a n d he was well armed with a&#13;
rifle and a pair ot then rare and costly&#13;
Colt six-shot revolving pistols,&#13;
His mount was a young American&#13;
filly, strong of limb, fleet of foot, and&#13;
with splendid staying qualities.&#13;
It was a beautiful SjM"&gt;ing» aQa" *&amp;&#13;
the Mustanger rode%Jj|Kw§ the rolling&#13;
prairie, dotted with llfrght hued flowers,&#13;
which sent forth their delicate perfume&#13;
on everv zephyr that swept over them,&#13;
his whole physical system being tiagleg&#13;
with thftt. wild exhilaration *which only&#13;
a plainsman can feel.&#13;
Hundreds 01 Antelope were feeding&#13;
arnnnri him, but J06 Was looking for&#13;
nobler game, and passed by the timid&#13;
little animals without tiring a shot.&#13;
As he ascended a heavy roll in the&#13;
prairie, another horseman rode slowly&#13;
up the opposite side, and the two men&#13;
' met on the summit.&#13;
The newcomer was a fellow mustanger,&#13;
and they exchanged greetings.&#13;
"Where bound, Nueces Nick?'' was&#13;
Joe's query.&#13;
"Looking around for a shot at a&#13;
deer," answeredjNick. "We're out of rb meet at my camp, and I left to&#13;
1» supply this morning. Haven't!]&#13;
seen ifliything but antelope however."&#13;
"Jilt my arrant an' jist my luck,"&#13;
said Jo*1. "If you hev no objections,&#13;
we'll hunt in partnership.&#13;
threw up her head and uttered a greeting&#13;
neigh.&#13;
Instantly the bronchos ceased feeding&#13;
and clustered around their leader&#13;
the big bay stallion.&#13;
He pawed the ground proudlyj arched&#13;
his neck, and answered Joe's horse.&#13;
The filly neighed a second time, ar.d&#13;
pulled sharply on the bit, as though&#13;
anxious to join her wild friends.&#13;
The herd seemed greatly excited and&#13;
moved toward the two men, uttering&#13;
short neighs of welcome; which were&#13;
responded to by Joe's animal, who&#13;
quivered with excitement.&#13;
There were fully five hundred of the&#13;
mustangs, and the herd presented a&#13;
splendid appearance a3 it .swung forward&#13;
in the form of a crescent led by&#13;
the bay.'&#13;
"Bless mo Joe!" cried Nueces Nick,&#13;
lifting his rifle from its scabbard,&#13;
"they're cojiin' this way. If that bay&#13;
gets within gunshot, I'll crease him."&#13;
"Don't!'1 cried Joe, and he clutched&#13;
his companions arm, while his bronzed&#13;
face paled. "Kin that pony of your3&#13;
travel?"&#13;
''Ye3," began Nick, and then noticing&#13;
his companion's agitation, cried:&#13;
"But what's* the matter with you Mustang&#13;
JoeP" „&#13;
"Nick," was the mustanger's answer,&#13;
and he lifted the reins from his horse's&#13;
neck, "we must run! The big bay an'&#13;
hisscreamin' mates arecomin' this way,&#13;
an' they're arter us."&#13;
"Carajo!" was Nick's ejaculation&#13;
"You're right, Joe; we must run for&#13;
it!"&#13;
The two men wheeled their horses&#13;
and dashed down the opposite slope of&#13;
the divide.&#13;
"Don't spare the spurs, Nick," cried&#13;
Joe, "and on the cuarte!"&#13;
And he brought the lash of his heavy&#13;
riding whip down on the filly's quarters&#13;
with a stinging slash, which caused her&#13;
t o bound forward like an arrow.&#13;
The two men turned in their saddles&#13;
and looked back toward the on-coming&#13;
bronchos.&#13;
They were just sweeping over the&#13;
brow of the roll, screaming and snorts&#13;
ing like demons.&#13;
'On sped the two mustangers, and&#13;
close behind them came their pursuers&#13;
the clatter of their hoofs ringing out&#13;
sharply on the clear air.&#13;
Mile after mile was thus traversed,&#13;
and the wild horses were., slowly but&#13;
surely gaining on the mustangers.&#13;
Nick's pony was beginning to show&#13;
signs of weakness and, several times&#13;
wmild have fallen but for the rider's&#13;
presence of mind.&#13;
"My pony is giving out, J o e , " he&#13;
cried, finally. "Ride on and leave&#13;
me." '* ,&#13;
Too late!&#13;
The advance line wavered for a moment&#13;
on the chasm's brink, several&#13;
essayed the leap^and missed, those in&#13;
trie rear pressed rorfyard, and the entire&#13;
herd was precipitated into the crevasse,&#13;
dragging their stunned leader and&#13;
Nick's pony with them*.&#13;
"Thank G««d, Nueces Nick, we're&#13;
saved !" cried Joe, and the two men&#13;
clasped hands. '&#13;
CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT.&#13;
A L I T T L K Q U E 8 T I O N E B .&#13;
'Never,1' was Joe's answer.&#13;
Dismount&#13;
•'Ellen&#13;
an' git&#13;
X ,&#13;
"I've none, J o e , " was the answer,&#13;
"Injun signs is tolerable thick up on&#13;
the Rio Frio, and a man feels safer&#13;
when he has a good partner."&#13;
Accordingly the two rode along the&#13;
back of the ridge together, scanning&#13;
the country through which they passed&#13;
for suspicious and auspicious sign.&#13;
They rode in silence, but a sudden&#13;
%ipcolamation from Nueces Nick caused&#13;
Joe to cast his eyes across that portion&#13;
of the plain which Nick was scanning. 4 'That1 s a line herd of bronchos,&#13;
Joe!" said the former, pointing to a&#13;
large drove of wild ponies which were&#13;
feeding on the plain about a'mile distent.&#13;
"It's the same bunch we run down&#13;
last week," answered Joe, surveying&#13;
the feeding herd with a critical eye.&#13;
"They're beauties aDd no mistake, led&#13;
by a big bay stallion, that hea moroor&#13;
less American, blood in his veins,&#13;
§ot away from us arter we'd tied him&#13;
own. StrongP Ho's ez strong ez a&#13;
grizzly, and if 1 hed, him in San Antonio&#13;
he would bring me fifty dollars&#13;
easy. n&#13;
The mustangers halted and gazed at&#13;
the unauspicoup/'ponies for several&#13;
minute* in' silence.&#13;
—Xfce. -Miimla thpy bestrode picked up&#13;
their ears and sniffed the air.,&#13;
Suddenly; the filly ridden by Joe&#13;
will carry double&#13;
up behind.&#13;
Checking his pony, Nick hastily dismounted&#13;
and seizing his rifle scrambled&#13;
up behind his companion.&#13;
"You do'the epurrin', Nick, an' I'll&#13;
do the whippin'!" said Joe.&#13;
'And he brought down the lash on the&#13;
filly's hhouldefsT~&#13;
The noble little animal dashed on,&#13;
and Nick's pony, unemcumbored was&#13;
r*ble to keep up.&#13;
They had lost time in making the&#13;
transfer, howevor, and the bronchos&#13;
were now within a hundred yards of&#13;
them.&#13;
"We can't keep ahead, partnerP"&#13;
was Nick's desparing cry. "I'll drop&#13;
off!"&#13;
"No, no!" answered Joe. "-Cling&#13;
faat! Thar's salvation ahead!"&#13;
And he pointed, with bis whip, to a&#13;
black line on the prairie ahead.-.&#13;
"A crevasse?"&#13;
"Yes* and Ellen will make the leap."&#13;
"The bronchos will follow."&#13;
"No," was Joe's assuring rejoiner.&#13;
"I'll s t o p ' e m . "&#13;
He drew one of his Colt six-shooters&#13;
from its holster, and examined it carefully.&#13;
"I'll crease the big bay, Nick ef I&#13;
can."&#13;
"Ef you miss—"&#13;
"We'll die together*"&#13;
They were now within fifty yards of&#13;
the crevasse, which split the prairie in&#13;
iwain, and could be traced along its&#13;
sinuous course for miles above and below&#13;
them.&#13;
Nueces Nick leaned forward and&#13;
measured_the chasm's width with his&#13;
eye.&#13;
BY GEORGE COOPSB.&#13;
What do the birdies dream about'&#13;
Who paints the roses red i&#13;
Why do the pretty stars peep out ?&#13;
When do the; go to bed (&#13;
The moon looks I'.ke a silver ball. -&#13;
Who tossed it up the sky?&#13;
Why don't the clouds upon us fall?&#13;
When it rains do they cry "i&#13;
Why do the broeks ran fast away ?&#13;
Dohshesever talk?&#13;
Can little frogs their lessons-BAjXWhy&#13;
don't grasshoppers walk?&#13;
Do baby crickets sit up late?&#13;
Who teaches them to sing?&#13;
Why do the flowers for Summer wait?&#13;
Where does snow bidejn Spring?&#13;
What do the cows say waen they "moo"?&#13;
Where do the wee lambs sleep i&#13;
What will the bees in Winter do*&#13;
Why is the sea so deep?&#13;
Some parrots are —talk so,4- mean;&#13;
Mamma says it's absurd;&#13;
That little children should be seen&#13;
And very seldom heard.&#13;
*»Tending Baby."&#13;
By L. 8. Merrill.&#13;
"The fact is," said Teddy Nichols,&#13;
"we h t v e n ' t g o t near enough money."&#13;
"How much have you got?" asked&#13;
Lucilla, as she pinned her work down&#13;
to her knee.&#13;
"The two little Nicholses," as the.&#13;
neighbors called them, opened, each, a&#13;
grimy little paw, and disclosed a few&#13;
coppers, hot and moist from their warm&#13;
hands. Lucilla turned them over and&#13;
counted them.&#13;
"Teddy has ten and Lyddy eight—&#13;
eighteen cents in all. And how much&#13;
have you got to have?"&#13;
Lyddy looked sorrowfully at the little&#13;
pile of pennies in Lucilla's hand and&#13;
answered:&#13;
"The tickets to the 'scursion's twonty-&#13;
five cents apiece, unless you go to&#13;
Flora Wright's Sabbath-school, Then&#13;
they are only t e n / ' ^ _ ^&#13;
"And the dinner and tffemerjishun's&#13;
twenty-five cents for two." put in&#13;
Teddy. .&#13;
"Then you want seventy-five cents?"&#13;
Teddy npdded; but Lyddy, swinging&#13;
her blue check- sunbonnet and looking&#13;
anxiously at Toddy, said: "We could&#13;
take our dinner."".&#13;
';Ye-es." And Teddy bit off the&#13;
white end of a piece of "grass. "But&#13;
then, Lyddy, there's the merjishnn; and&#13;
he swallows fire, Lucilla. Ho really,&#13;
truly does!"&#13;
Lucilla trailed at the boy's eager face,&#13;
and said, slowly: "You've got eighteen,&#13;
and yuu want soventy-tive. Then vou&#13;
Luoilly Nichols! Come In and set&#13;
down. Here, Yfilly, push that , soft&#13;
chair this way. Set down Luciliy. It&#13;
is a long time sance you've-beea here."&#13;
Lucilla dropped into the chair, and&#13;
the children all ran to her side. "Mrs.&#13;
Byres," she began, in a great fear lest&#13;
her courage should desert her before&#13;
she got her errand out, ''1 came on an&#13;
errand, and I don't know what you'll&#13;
think of me either for it is a queer errand.&#13;
1 heard you and Mrs. Dakin,&#13;
the other day, at church saying it took&#13;
so much of your time to keep your eyes&#13;
on the children. Now, my little brother&#13;
and sister want to earn money enough&#13;
to go to the Sunday-school excursion;&#13;
but they have to tend baby, and so have&#13;
to be at home. I did not_kjioJi_&#13;
but you would be willing to let&#13;
us take the children in the morning and&#13;
give us a cent a day apiece. Teddy and&#13;
Lyddy would play with and amuse them;&#13;
and they could be out in your yard in&#13;
the warm times, and come into the outroom&#13;
when it rains; and I would be&#13;
there with them, and we would ask&#13;
mother anything we needed to."&#13;
Lucilla had hurried it all through in&#13;
one breath, and now was almost&#13;
alarmed at her own temerity.&#13;
Mrs. Bryes laughed. " I declare for't,&#13;
Luciliy, you are the beatinest child I&#13;
kno~v. I don't believo any one but vou&#13;
would have thouglit of kfagfe-^Two^kH fluid with happy tears, and sheTqueezod&#13;
"Let's what?"&#13;
"Let's carrv our dinner and take Luciliy."&#13;
"OhrbotheTt- Now, see here, Liddy.&#13;
That merjishun, he swallows fire! I&#13;
want to see him."&#13;
"So do I , " Lyddy admitted. " B a t&#13;
if Luciliy had not helped us we would&#13;
not have had the money; and she does&#13;
look awfully pale."&#13;
Teofdy interrupted: ""But she cannot&#13;
walk two miles into town."&#13;
Lyddy nodded. "I know it; but I am&#13;
sure father would take us in if she was&#13;
going!"&#13;
Teddy tried to whistle, but it was not&#13;
a success.&#13;
"And you know it was only twentyfive&#13;
cent* for two, a shilling apiece; so&#13;
you could see the merjishun anyway."&#13;
"But you want to just as bad as I&#13;
do."&#13;
"No, I don't. I don t think I do;&#13;
and Lucilla is so good."&#13;
Teddy gulped a little. "All right.&#13;
You tell mother now, so's she can get&#13;
her ready."&#13;
" Y e s / ' And Lyddy stole in and told&#13;
her mother.&#13;
Who can pisture Lucilla's delight&#13;
when she found that she, too, was to&#13;
go? When her father lifted her into&#13;
the wagon, and tumbled the&#13;
children in after her. her eyes&#13;
must earn fifty-soven in these next- two&#13;
weeks."&#13;
"Tho two little Nicholses" looked at&#13;
each other in some dismsly; for it&#13;
sounded like a yery large sum, and&#13;
Teddy said, a little crossly:&#13;
"Tnen we just cau't go. That's all."&#13;
Lyddy's eyes fillod with-tears, and&#13;
she looked anxiously into " Luciliy's"&#13;
face. The latter leaned over and kissed&#13;
her.&#13;
* v W e ' l i t r y , ^yddy, and we may&#13;
think of something yet." But Teddy&#13;
scowled and tried to uproot an unoffending&#13;
dandelion with his bare foot, saying-&#13;
"Fruit ain't in, an' cress 19 out.&#13;
decided anho&#13;
rose in&#13;
We can't make it, Joe," he said.&#13;
"No horse livin' can leap that black gulf&#13;
carryin' double."&#13;
"Ellen can!" was Joe's&#13;
swer. "Cling fast!" and&#13;
the stirrups.&#13;
The filly saw the chasm, and prepared&#13;
for the fearful leap.&#13;
Just on its brink she gathered herself&#13;
togother and rose in the air.&#13;
For a second she seemed to- hover&#13;
over tho yawning crevace, and then&#13;
dropped to her feet so close to the&#13;
other edgo that the rotten stono crumbled&#13;
beneath her hinder hoofs; and&#13;
great pieces fell backinto the nideou*&#13;
gulf with a dull reverberant boom.&#13;
Joe's grio tiglrteneiT'bn the reins,&#13;
and the filly came&#13;
suddenly that she&#13;
haunches.&#13;
onto&#13;
a . standstill so&#13;
fell back on her&#13;
There ain't nbthin'to peddle, anyway."&#13;
Just at that moment a voice from&#13;
the house called: "Teddy, Lyddy,&#13;
baby's awake." The boy shook himself&#13;
angrily.&#13;
"We could not get anything, anyway,&#13;
for tendin* baby takes niost-bl&#13;
the time. I only wished we got paid&#13;
for that." But he followed Lyddy into&#13;
the house and helped her bring the&#13;
b&amp;bf out.&#13;
Lucilla sat still in her seat under the&#13;
tree, and made her thin fingers fly fast&#13;
as she worked at the long seam,* while&#13;
she thought over Teddy's puzzle.&#13;
It was the first time the children had&#13;
ever heard of a Sunday-school excursion,&#13;
and they were very anxious to go.&#13;
If she could arrange it for them, she&#13;
mean t that they should; and she watched&#13;
them rolling on the grass, with the&#13;
sturdy, chubby baby between them.&#13;
When tho long seam was done she&#13;
folded her work, and reaching around&#13;
the end of the seat, took up a crutch&#13;
which leaned against the tree and&#13;
limped slowly into the house. In the&#13;
kitchen she found her mother working&#13;
at the week's ironing.&#13;
"Mother, tho childien want to go to&#13;
the Baptist Sunday-school excursion."&#13;
"I know they do, Luciliy; but 1 cannot&#13;
afford to send 'em. The interest on&#13;
the mortgage is due the first ofuext&#13;
month, and your father is rakin' and&#13;
scr&amp;pln' every cent he can g e t r T h&#13;
the best children in""the world." And&#13;
"be a comfortfor to have them taken out&#13;
of the house, and I don't mind if 1 do&#13;
try it. I want too make soap, anyway,&#13;
next week; and if Tilly and Willy and&#13;
the baby are out of the way. Maria and&#13;
Ellen can helpline, and we won't be always&#13;
bothered for fear some of the&#13;
voting cnes are gettin' into the fire or&#13;
the lye. And you^are about as trusting a&#13;
child as I ever saw. There's Mis' Dakin&#13;
and Mis' Morley now. "I'll call 'em."&#13;
And the kind-hearted woman rushed to&#13;
the door and hailed the passing wagon&#13;
in a voice a town crier might have&#13;
envied. Almost before Lucilla could&#13;
limp to the roadside, Mrs. Byres had&#13;
told the whole plan and had induced&#13;
Mrs. Dakin to send Rosy and. Flora,&#13;
and Mrs. Morley had promised her&#13;
Marty.&#13;
When they had driven on Lucilla&#13;
turned to Mrs. Byres, and hold out her&#13;
hand. "Good-bye, Mrs. Byres. You&#13;
are very kind." "&#13;
"Nonsense, child!" And she* leaned&#13;
over and kissed the little girl on the&#13;
forehead rather shyly. "Good-bye, ef&#13;
you mus' be goin'."&#13;
She leaned over the gato a minute&#13;
and watched her, saying to herself:&#13;
"To think my Mary would have been&#13;
as old as she! They war born the same&#13;
day.'' And she went back to her work,&#13;
thinking of the little b£by that had died&#13;
thirteen long years ago.&#13;
Meanwhile Lucilla went home, and.&#13;
calling the children to her, unfolded&#13;
her plan to them. Lyddy was delighted;&#13;
but Teddy looked doubtful, then,&#13;
laughiug, said: "1 know Willy and&#13;
Tilly Byres will Ugh;. They are always&#13;
making - faces at each other."&#13;
And off he ran to the house, calling to&#13;
Lyddy to follow him:&#13;
In a few minutes he returned, sucking&#13;
a stump of a lead-pencil, and called&#13;
out: "We've got 'em all down.&#13;
"What do you mean?" asked Lucilla.&#13;
"Got all their names down, like the&#13;
school-teacher's book. See!" And he&#13;
laid a half page of paper on Lucilla's&#13;
kneo, on which he had made a full list&#13;
of their prospective charges, as follows:&#13;
NROSA* DAYKIN.&#13;
WILSONBYUHS.&#13;
TILINGAS BIUR3.&#13;
MARTIN LUFER MAWLY.&#13;
FLORA DAYKIN.&#13;
BABY BIURS.&#13;
JAMES ANDRTT NICHOLS.&#13;
'Oh! Teddy, you are&#13;
about it.&#13;
"There, now. We can ]ust make a&#13;
mark for'em every day. Then we'll&#13;
know how much they owe us; and if&#13;
any of 'em are gone we can look on the&#13;
list and find out which one." And Teddy&#13;
regarded his work with great pride.&#13;
Wfran thft morning namfl and break*&#13;
Teddy's hand,&#13;
so good."&#13;
"Pooh! Much you know&#13;
Let me drive, father,"&#13;
And the mother wathed them drive&#13;
away, waving their hands to her.&#13;
When they came back at night, tired&#13;
and tappy, it seemed to her that Lucilla's&#13;
eyes were brighter and more&#13;
happy than she had ever seen -them,&#13;
and she ^old her she must have had a&#13;
nice time.&#13;
"OhTyes. Everybody was so nice,&#13;
and they got me a seat way up under&#13;
the awning, on tho boat, and a real nice&#13;
lady sat down and talked to me, and I&#13;
told her how the children had earned&#13;
the money, and how they had brought&#13;
me instead of going in to see the&#13;
magician, and she took us all in to see&#13;
him. And the river u so lovely, mother;&#13;
and the lady bad such a pretty baby,&#13;
and she let mo hold it a little while,&#13;
and if you'll believe my Teddy would&#13;
not even touch it!"&#13;
Mr. Nichols laughed. "Had enough&#13;
of tending baby, Master Fred?"&#13;
"Yes; tendin'one baby's too hard&#13;
work; tendin' six is easy enough." And&#13;
he yawned frightfully." Anyway it was&#13;
worth the work, to see the "man swallow&#13;
fire, and pick silver dollars out of&#13;
the boys' ears!"&#13;
&lt;? •&#13;
The American of the F u t u r e ,&#13;
Li ?.n important paper ipfthe September&#13;
Century, entitled The Foreign Element&#13;
in Our Population, a writer shows&#13;
the tendoney of emigrants of the same&#13;
race to mass in particular states, giving&#13;
to tho«e section-* a real foreign&#13;
character. Butin conclusion he says:&#13;
"Supposing the entire mass be fused,&#13;
the Celtic and Teutonic blood, the Latin&#13;
and the Norman would be mingled&#13;
in much the same proportions as they&#13;
were in the veins of the original English&#13;
settlers. The American of the&#13;
future, supposing present forces to continue,&#13;
would be almost Bs much an&#13;
Anglo-Saxon as the American ot 1820.&#13;
We have seen, however, that the races&#13;
are not distributed evenly, and that&#13;
certain types are likely to be locally&#13;
predominant The Wisconsin man of&#13;
the near future, for instance, is likely&#13;
to be almoct a German, while the New&#13;
Englander ( still supposing all elements&#13;
tn combine) will be at least half an&#13;
nstantly Ire slipped from the saddle,&#13;
and wheeled, pistol in hand, to face the&#13;
pursuing bronchos.&#13;
v-Tho big bay led the herd by a scove-l&#13;
He t o * yards, his head aloft and neck&#13;
p r o u d l y arched.&#13;
Tho mustanger raised his weapon,&#13;
and ran his eye along tho bright barrel.&#13;
Now, when the wild horse paused for&#13;
a second before taking the leap, ms&#13;
linger pressod the trigger, and with a&#13;
scream of pain, the leader reared and&#13;
fell back motionless on the plain.&#13;
His followers tried in vain to check&#13;
their wild course, frightened and dismayed&#13;
by the fall of their leader.&#13;
the tired mother wiped her heated face.&#13;
"And I'd be glad enoueh to give them&#13;
a little treat if I could, Vtti sure."&#13;
. "Then, mother, you won't mind if I&#13;
have a plan to have them earn money?"&#13;
- " W h y , 410,-Lucilly, of course not; but&#13;
I must have baby tended."&#13;
"Yes, of course." And Lucilla went&#13;
te her own room, put away her work,&#13;
got her hat, and started slowly down&#13;
tho road. Seven or eight farmers^&#13;
houses were clusteredone"together;&#13;
and Lucilla went in at the gate of tho&#13;
side door. It was opened by a tall, bony&#13;
woman, with a little girl in h e r arms.&#13;
When she saw themtle" lame girl she&#13;
smiled pleasantly, saying, in a harsh,&#13;
but not unkind Voice: "Why, if'taint&#13;
fast was cleared away, Teddy took his&#13;
little express wagon to bring the Byre9&#13;
and Morley babies home; and he and&#13;
Liddy started out to collect their "children-.^^-&#13;
whHe-Lueilly sat in her seat under&#13;
the big apple tree with her sewing.&#13;
When she saw the little crowd come in&#13;
at the gate she was a little nervous;&#13;
there seemed to ba so many of them;&#13;
but after they had really, got to playing&#13;
and rolling on the grass she became&#13;
less nervous. On the whole, the children&#13;
were very good, though Willy and&#13;
Tilly, from making faces came to blows,&#13;
and had to be separated by Teddy, who&#13;
was very calm and judicial with" them.&#13;
How ',hey rolled on the gra&amp;s, how they&#13;
pelted each other with dandelions, how&#13;
they played stillpond, hide and seek,&#13;
hen and chickens, and how Lyddy instructed&#13;
the older children in the« mysteries&#13;
of jackstones, would take too long&#13;
to tell; but the two weeks passed almost&#13;
before "the two little Nicholses" knew&#13;
it, and their treasury was enriched by&#13;
the sum of seventy-two cents They&#13;
brought it-all taiueillw, who"counted:&#13;
it, and, adding what they had before,&#13;
said to the breathless children: ^Ninety&#13;
cents."&#13;
'Hooray!" And Teddy's cap hit the&#13;
ceiling, and the two children primced&#13;
around the kitchen till their mother&#13;
drove them out. Just outside tho&#13;
you look so pale."&#13;
Lyddy looked quickly at Teddy, who&#13;
hastened to speak. '.Come on; let's&#13;
go see the chickens."&#13;
Sbe followed him to the coop, and ho&#13;
talked rapidly about the beauty of this&#13;
one andJhat one; but he soon -found&#13;
that she was^otlistoningT At-4eagth&#13;
she put her hand on his aim.' "Let's&#13;
Teddy. n —&#13;
Iiishman. But in the meantime all&#13;
come to speak a single dialect; all wear&#13;
the same costume; all come under the&#13;
assimilating influence of an intensely&#13;
active internal commerce; and all con*&#13;
tinue to accustom themselves to diversity&#13;
of views and organizations in religloTTwitJfcit&#13;
strife growing out of such&#13;
diversity or thought of social separation&#13;
on its account. May we not assume&#13;
that such a state of affairs'will tend to&#13;
make the people a single and homogeneous&#13;
nation, spite of local diversity or&#13;
origin?&#13;
1 believe that no one now accuses&#13;
any large or influential portion of tho&#13;
foreign element of a set purpose tospread&#13;
ideas subversive of our political&#13;
institutions. It can hardly bo denied&#13;
that such tendencies and ideas as are&#13;
most deprecated in the foreigners in the&#13;
United States relate to manners, to&#13;
mere habits of life and social practices.&#13;
In these things we have undergone&#13;
great changes, and would have undergone&#13;
them in a degree, independent of&#13;
foreign influence.&#13;
"So long as all elements biend, and&#13;
the people" remain free to seek their&#13;
own happiness in their own way, it&#13;
would seem to make little difference&#13;
w:th coming generations whether their&#13;
family tree shall have its roots in'Plymouth&#13;
or in Boston ox in New Amster-:&#13;
dam, or in Castle Garden. So long as&#13;
this froedoni-to seek a common happiness&#13;
remains, it is of little cou'sequencewhether&#13;
the inhabitants are lost in the&#13;
old or the old in the new. The greatest&#13;
danger would seem to be that the&#13;
mingling of all elements, with a resulting&#13;
evolution of a single nationality,&#13;
door they paused long enough to hear will not proceed without interruption.&#13;
their mother say; " I am glad the childgoing&#13;
voo, i^uciuy. 1 aon 1 use to see o r m o r f i fiajrtlu, w •&gt;, OMitA &gt;,„*-^a a „ A&#13;
No~greater danger can threaten than&#13;
that the populati©* will spHt into&#13;
or more castes, with caste hatreds and&#13;
conflipts. Whenever in any place a tendency&#13;
to such a condition seems to be&#13;
-arising, all-th^ proper influence of—tho—&#13;
state and of society should be brought&#13;
to bear against it.&#13;
: _P_hiladolphian5 have acquired a craze&#13;
for-small- feet and some of them are&#13;
having their big toes amputated, to al&#13;
^ . Jew the wearing of a narrower shoe.&#13;
y — -&#13;
1&#13;
&lt;£T .&#13;
^&#13;
4ife&#13;
&lt;' : -&#13;
4*--.&#13;
* V JrsaMfU-j ^ « * - . - « r - i . wmmmm&#13;
t&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
From our Correspondent.&#13;
The County Fair was a HTJUUI sm&#13;
cess in every particular, the races an&#13;
hall gimre proving oupociully -uttHt&#13;
tive. I t is pronouiiijed the Lest lair&#13;
ever held here.&#13;
Prank Abours, of Brighton, was arraigned&#13;
betore Justice Riddle on Monday,&#13;
charged with larceny of a double&#13;
harness.&#13;
A boy named Loree, from Handy, is&#13;
under arrest for maliciously killing a&#13;
dog.&#13;
Dr. J. C. Willson and Ex-Congressjnan&#13;
Gen. 0. L. Spaulding will address&#13;
the citizens at the Opera House,&#13;
en Friday next, Oct. 3d.&#13;
JProgranime of the Brighton Market&#13;
Fair,&#13;
To he held Oct. 7, 8, 9, and 10-.&#13;
TUESDAY, THE FIKST DAY,&#13;
will be devoted to making entries and&#13;
arranging things generally. Although&#13;
the books for entries will he&#13;
kept open until the evening of the&#13;
second, it is desirable that all entries..&#13;
l&gt;e made as soon as possible, and&#13;
everything on the grounds early for&#13;
proper arrangement; Late entries&#13;
must take some chances for accommod&#13;
a t i o n s , T h e Secretary Vill he on&#13;
'the grounds Monday, October 6th, to&#13;
raake entries, but entries can be made&#13;
any time before, by mail. Kntrie*&#13;
'for the several races close&gt;at noon of&#13;
the day on which they are called.&#13;
W E D N E S D A Y , T H E SECOND D A Y .&#13;
The first gameof ball of the Tournament&#13;
will be called at 10 a, m#&#13;
A t 2 p. m., No. 1 Trotting Race&#13;
will be called. Purse $30. Best 3&#13;
Id 5.&#13;
• A t 2;30 p. m., No 2 Trotting Race&#13;
will be called. Purse S43. "Best -&gt;&#13;
In 5.&#13;
Heats will be trotted alternately in&#13;
these raee.s.&#13;
THURSDAY, THE THIKD DAY.&#13;
At 9:30 a. in., Class XI—Farm&#13;
Horses will be called.&#13;
At 10:30 a. m., Class XIV—Roadsters&#13;
will be called,&#13;
At 9:30 a. m^all the scholars of the&#13;
Brighton School, accompanied by their&#13;
teachers, marching in line and escorted&#13;
by the band, will be admitted to the&#13;
grounds free of charge. They will&#13;
march to the norLh wing of the Floral&#13;
Hall, where they will draw up in line&#13;
and then break ranks, on the order—ofthe&#13;
Principal, Prof. Kellogg.&#13;
• A t I p. m., grand cavalcade of all&#13;
horses and cattle entered for premiums.&#13;
New Goods!&#13;
Everything&#13;
WE ARE NOW OPENING&#13;
AN IMMENSE LINE&#13;
OF&#13;
-15 —' - W&#13;
The Superintendents of thebe depart&#13;
"ments will arrange the order in which&#13;
they will go. They will march once&#13;
around the track, led by the band.&#13;
i At 1:30 p. m., Race No. 3 will be&#13;
called. Purse $45. Best 3 in 5.&#13;
* At 2:30 matched game of base ball.&#13;
FRIDAY, THE FOURTH DAY.&#13;
At 9:30 a. m., Class - XII—Draft&#13;
Horses will be called.&#13;
&lt; At 10:30 a. m., Clas* X H I - C a m a g e&#13;
Horses will be called.&#13;
- At 1 p. m., there will be &amp; grand&#13;
parade of all the premium horses and&#13;
cattle. This will be under the direction&#13;
of the superintendent's of these&#13;
departments. The band will be in attendance.&#13;
., "&#13;
At 1:30 p. m., Races No. 4 will be&#13;
called. Purse §175. Best 3 in 5.&#13;
• Judges and Exhibitors will be governed&#13;
by the time set in this programme,&#13;
to avoid delay and confusion.&#13;
r —JOHN CARTER, President.&#13;
Louis MEYKR&gt;/Secretary.&#13;
The ship railway across the Tehuantepec&#13;
Isthmus, for which Captain&#13;
Eads has now obtained funds, will cost&#13;
$75,000,000, less than one-half the estimated&#13;
cost of • the Panama canal,&#13;
and will be completed in four years&#13;
instead of ten years required for completing&#13;
the Panama work.&#13;
1 Mons. Hallez, a naval lieutenant&#13;
stationed at Madagascar, states that&#13;
the soil of'that island -contains much&#13;
iron, and that in approaching it the&#13;
compass undergoes considerable and&#13;
totally abnormal variations. It is&#13;
therefore suggested that Madagascar&#13;
may be an enormous magnet. /&#13;
The Ichthyophagous society'at their&#13;
annual dinner at the Murray Hill hotel,&#13;
New 'York, October 10, are to partake&#13;
of shark, which fish has made its&#13;
appearanee in large numbers on the&#13;
Atlantic coast this season. As the&#13;
Chinese are notoriously fond of sharks'&#13;
fins, which are rich in the gelatinous&#13;
J;JW;j#? »&#13;
&gt;Mmm*&gt;Mm*'&#13;
'. -*V» BRIGHTON L /?;?v--:----&#13;
.. £\1&#13;
; &lt; - &lt; ^&#13;
The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN, bearing date&#13;
Sept, 23, 1884, reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., Mechanical&#13;
Experts and Solicitors of Pat^&#13;
ents, Washington, I). C.&#13;
Bidwell, Uenson, Hig Rapids, Electrical&#13;
railway, 305,730.&#13;
Chi.'nev, J. W , Detroit, Fence-post,&#13;
3()5.671. *&#13;
Funk E. H. Sturgis, Rotary churn,&#13;
•3t1ftr&#13;
Hudson, E. 11., Pottersville, Cuttersupport&#13;
for hollow mandrel lathes,&#13;
305,519. . •&#13;
Kruger, A. ()., Ttnd (1 Trfm, Houghton,&#13;
Sleigh, :505^322. •„&#13;
lveiiu'ick, T. K. (irand Rapids,'HeaU&#13;
iny i'unnn e. ^05,477.&#13;
Temple. Henry. (Jrand Rapids, Thill&#13;
roppii'i^. :}U5,(V12.&#13;
\ " o t i&#13;
brace for reed urs/ans.&#13;
S., Detroit, Key frame&#13;
#• -&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more per"-&#13;
manent cures and given better satisfaction&#13;
on Kidnoy Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any known remedy.&#13;
Its continued series ot wonderful cures&#13;
in all climates has made it known as&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to employ&#13;
against all -aches and pain*, which* are&#13;
the forerunners of more serious dis'&#13;
orders, ft acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving__Iijj\ The pr 'icrtinn it affords&#13;
by it- tiui 'iy u.-i1 on rheumatism, kidney&#13;
aii'tctum. an&gt;l .all aches and pains,&#13;
woiuuls,(cram ping pains, cholera morbus,&#13;
dian-iioea, coughs, colds, catarrh,&#13;
ami disorder.-, uiuoiiu" children, makes&#13;
it an iiivuliKibh' remedy to be kept always&#13;
on hand in every home, No&#13;
person can nilofd to be without it, and&#13;
thuM' who have oiiee used it never will.&#13;
ll i&gt; ahsolut-'ly certain in its remedial&#13;
etl'cct-. and will, always cure when&#13;
CUITS are iio--.sil)]e.&#13;
Call at *\\'iNriir-:Li/s Dure, STORK and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving more&#13;
lull detail-of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
HOLLAND BULBS.&#13;
Oar Autumn Catalogue&#13;
of Bulbs and Seeds will&#13;
be mailed VKBK to all applicants.&#13;
Address,&#13;
D. M. FERRY &amp; CO.,&#13;
D E T R O I T , M I C H .&#13;
CAJL.3L. AJNT&gt; SESEi XJ^.&#13;
YOURS RESPECTFULLY,&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
Market Fiar,&#13;
EVERYBODY SHOULD PATRONIZE THEIR FAIR.&#13;
, . . TAKE WHAT YOU CAN FfflTEXHIBITinN&#13;
.r-J&#13;
matter that gives body to their favor&#13;
ite soup, it is thought there may be&#13;
some chance of turning the . present&#13;
superfluity of sharks to account.&#13;
_._! How do young ladies show their dislike&#13;
to moustaches? By setting their&#13;
1&#13;
D H TITI0N OPEN J O A&#13;
«'1W ell&#13;
ever COD&#13;
. wife, yoti can't say that&#13;
itractea45ad habits." "No, 8&#13;
you generally e^and_thenf.&#13;
tto, sir,&#13;
A full Premium Li^t iff fill&lt;teparlments.Track in excellent condition. Price,, of admission the most liberal.&#13;
~FamtlyTicReT$T007good for the Fair, allows you to drive on&#13;
the grounds.&#13;
SINGLE ADMISSION, 25 CeTits; "THIUDREN, l l Cents,&#13;
SINGLE OR DOUBLE TEAMS, 25 Cents.&#13;
FOR PftEMl UM LIST,-AlTLY TO " - - 1 - - •&#13;
-r— — — - — LOUIS MEYER, Secretary,&#13;
v • ! " - i . . ; • O - ' . ' . i .•• , n • &gt; i . , . , i » ., • m i i - J d t . s K „ t I T 9&#13;
""" .V ,i. •';,!' ; i:i i i&gt; ui ; I.•::.!"! i&lt;';iiiy Sen lei I (ioodf,&#13;
t I, , :M , IV. : i ' i ' \ ^ , I'IC,,&#13;
:, "• in ; :.: :. ;' . DKTKOIT, MICH.&#13;
;r • r ;&gt;:: i i;oi r i t.&gt;i i:s i*»br^iu an&lt;i&#13;
li- A •• \ ,.ii|ii : r ^ ' r ,• ;:-,ij, r • iu'ws coilK'S by&#13;
i*p«M-ifil wire lii. '• J .j,-!,r\,.. c,.nti'i&gt; nf tlic connt.&#13;
rv in ir*i»(liti)i'inl i-uuiii.-.' l i , . - most prowl,&lt; this&#13;
fHil '1'HK TlMKS iA iiul('|&gt;i"!uu'ilt ill ]llilillC8, altlioiiL'li&#13;
it in li.\^ itrt-nii'.'in^ iieiifF*!^—Kvory Jnst&#13;
ciiiiHi' ifct'ivos fair find lulcquati' trcHtmt'nt from&#13;
I S T H K P A P K l l TIIK TtMK*. While t b e&#13;
TIMKM L'ivus morv attention to biisinesa than t o&#13;
iniirdnrs, It never iu'^lt'c-te murders or any real&#13;
b*&lt;vv8, and itlnn't n^ared hv heini; called aensatioiiifk^&#13;
Th,' powplc liky TH*B TIMKS bfcauae it ia&#13;
}&gt;ublishi?d-solely in the interest of ite readers&#13;
YOU ran havMJjp Dailv TIMKS sent to vour ad'&#13;
F O R T H E P E O P E . &lt;1IMB o n e month f 0 ;&#13;
-Hlccnta; or you can"rravp the Daily and Sunday,&#13;
Nfvi'n puot'i-a a week, B^n^yon for .¾ cents a&#13;
mottthr 'iHtin is tht&gt; rrnst-im^wtment offered t l l a&#13;
fall. Addrr8a —• ^v^"&#13;
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,&#13;
DETROIT, M I C H . -&#13;
I li!ivi&gt; now on hand a larger and better stock «t&#13;
llnriii'r.^ ihan. rviT before together with a grand&#13;
^HAK-XESS GOODS I&#13;
Al^o whips and r,ashos. Aa cood as the b e t t l t t l&#13;
clieaji us th«' chewpest. Carriai,'p t r i m H f t u L m d&#13;
repairing neatly and promptly done. ^ M &amp;&#13;
yourself. ^ \&#13;
FAYETTE REASON,&#13;
- . STOCKBRIDGE MICHIQAH&#13;
firaiTiTTrlink Railway Time Table.&#13;
Mill!. AIR L1XE DIVISION-.&#13;
STATIONS, VEST BOUND TRAINS.&#13;
No. fi. No. 4. No. a. 2.&#13;
Mixed. Pass. Paa&#13;
RlDGEWAY !i:."&gt;3a.m. 5 : 5 5 a . m . 7:45a m&#13;
Armada 10:10 «:15 • 8:00 ' ''&#13;
Komeo 10;«) 6:35 8'80 r /&#13;
Kochwster, 11:53 7:10 8-fiS&#13;
Pontiar \ " . . . 1 2 : 4 5 p. m. 7:35- 9:15&#13;
* 0 B M a c ' 1 dep. 1:15 7:45 9:35&#13;
Wlxoni, 2:ao 8 ^ 8 10:10&#13;
South I von * a r ' ^'-M si.KK 10:40&#13;
B o u u i L &gt; o n - j d p 3 ; 8 ( ) 8.55 j « : g&#13;
Hamburg 4:05 11:1¾ B'I NCKNEY-..—T&#13;
^ount K'e rrler,.&#13;
Stockbrld^o,&#13;
iiwnrk'ttn,...,&#13;
J A C K S O N&#13;
S T A T I O N S .&#13;
-4:40&#13;
5:15&#13;
.'&gt; :S5&#13;
-ti :05-- . _&#13;
«i :-45 p. ni.&#13;
. . . 1 1 : 8 0&#13;
. . . ll:5q&#13;
... 12:08 p . m .&#13;
.-,, Jp:30 -&#13;
... U8:50p. m.&#13;
EAST HOUND TRAI&#13;
) Bii^htonV Mich.&#13;
No. 5.&#13;
Mixed.&#13;
JACKSON &lt; :ixin. m&#13;
tlPniii'TTa, 7:1T&gt;&#13;
'^lni'UhrHl!.''!' X:'l.' "&#13;
Moni.t Kci riei',. S;:!'j&#13;
PlNCKNLY-•:..'.... !»:10&#13;
llatnlitii'L:, !•: to&#13;
Sunt I, I.um-1i ;d'pr , 'M' : iiM- !, )&#13;
'Wi-.oni li :W&#13;
I'onlur,' •i' d'"e"p•.• V1 ':I;H^) 1 '&#13;
lioehe^tev, 1 :•((&gt;&#13;
ni,&#13;
No. 3.&#13;
1'asB.&#13;
4':20 i). m,&#13;
4:45&#13;
5:15&#13;
5:45&#13;
e&gt;:08 ,&#13;
(i :«&gt;&#13;
15:50&#13;
7:«)&#13;
«:15&#13;
1W.&#13;
No. 1 / —&#13;
Pass".&#13;
l i o i n e o ,&#13;
Ai'iiiada&#13;
RlDGEWAY-.&#13;
. ^.:1.-,&#13;
:l :05&#13;
3::10&#13;
8:25&#13;
i»;05&#13;
V:.V&gt;&#13;
10:20&#13;
10:50&#13;
All trains run by '"nmtral standard"""ttm^&#13;
5:00 a.m&#13;
5:22&#13;
6:00&#13;
6:10&#13;
«:85&#13;
7:08&#13;
7:20&#13;
1:83- .&#13;
All trulriH run (taiTy; STrn&lt;Tay9 excepted.&#13;
\v: .1. Kl'M'KH, -H&gt;1SWVH^irc:KS()N.&#13;
NiperiiKendont, Wi'Heral Manafref/&#13;
^&#13;
, X</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 Dispatch October 02, 1884</text>
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                <text>October 02, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1884-10-02</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</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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      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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              <text>PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
s&#13;
y*&#13;
\ ,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
[\&#13;
VOL. IT PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCT. 9, 1884. C NO. 39&#13;
-PINCKNEYDTSPATCH From Elk Hills, Missouri.&#13;
Dear Sir-&#13;
JfcROME W1NCHELL, PUBLISHfcR.&#13;
ISSUED TIU;HHJ)AYM.&#13;
Subscription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING KATES .&#13;
Transient advertisements, 25 cants per in&lt;'h for&#13;
ifltstinycrjiyn and ten centa jx.'Hincli for eacli HUUH*-&#13;
•qtwnt ir/eertyon. Local notuve, 5 centH JUT line for&#13;
-each insertion. Special ruten for regular advertisedmentu&#13;
by the year or quarter,&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
D. M- GREENE, M-.I).,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Special attention given&#13;
or the throat and hin^s.&#13;
Oftlce at residence. to&#13;
surgery and diseases&#13;
IAMES ilAKKEY,&#13;
NOTARY&gt;tfI}fcfe&#13;
And Insurance A^ent. LcL'al papers made on&#13;
.short notice and reasonable term*. Office oh&#13;
Alain St., near l'oatortlce Pinckney, Mich,,&#13;
~ D K . C. D. WAKNKK&#13;
This i.s to certify that I have used nearly&#13;
a bottle of your White Wine of Tar&#13;
Syrup, and I can safely and conscientiously&#13;
recommended it to any person&#13;
as the best medicine I have ever used&#13;
for throat and lung diseases, and if it&#13;
cost five dollars a bottle I would keep&#13;
it on hand if I was able.&#13;
Thankfully, yours truly,&#13;
Elder T. Stephen's.&#13;
For sale at L\ E. IIolliMef'H, Siller Bro'a, and&#13;
Wincliell'e Druu Store.&#13;
THE HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE.&#13;
We will send FREE for ONE ENTIRE&#13;
YEAR, to every lady who sends ns AX&#13;
ONCE the names of ten married ladies,&#13;
fat same address, and -twelve two-et.&#13;
stamps for postage, our handsome, entertaining&#13;
and instructive Journal, devoted&#13;
to Fashions, Fancy Work, Decorating,&#13;
Cooking and Household matters.&#13;
Regular price, $1.00. SEND_TO_:&#13;
DAY, and secure next number. Ad-&#13;
GRIMES &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
I'rourietor* of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers In Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
Stiflds-uf-Kttiitt.—i?inckuay_, Michigan.&#13;
TAMES T. EAMAN,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Office in the Brick BloekL PINCKNEY&#13;
-flT P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CIIANCERYOfflce&#13;
over SIgler'sDrug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
ALSTEAD GREGORY,&#13;
H DKALEK IN&#13;
GKAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, &amp;c.&#13;
Highest market priw paid for wheat. A good&#13;
stock ttf Lunvher- always on hand, Doors, sash&#13;
and all building materials furnished on short notice.&#13;
G R E G O R Y , MICH.&#13;
VETERINABY Sl'RGKON, Howell, Mich.&#13;
Mr. Winegar will attend to calls promptly&#13;
night or day. Milk fever and other diseases in&#13;
cattle and horses a specialty. Terms reasonable.&#13;
Residence on Byron Road." Telephonic connection&#13;
with central ottke at Howell. _ J L&#13;
CHARLES MACLEAN, 1). D. S.&#13;
DENTIST, Graduate of the Dental Department&#13;
of the University of Michigan, Oilice in&#13;
;Glt&gt;eQA way Bloc k4 pver_ Post J.) fll cejJLLy v ell,&#13;
{^^"Particular attention paid to the preservation&#13;
of the natural teeth.&#13;
Will be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on. July 17th.&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
dress, DOM!siTC~JO0RNAL, Nunda,&#13;
N.Y.&#13;
LADIES' M~Erw;Ai, ADVISER—&#13;
A complete Medical Work for Women,&#13;
handsomely bound in cloth and&#13;
illustrated. Tells how to prevent ana1&#13;
cure all diseases of the sex, by a treatment&#13;
AT HOME:—Worth its 'weight in&#13;
Gold to eyery iady suffering from any&#13;
of the diseases. Over 10,000 sold already.&#13;
POSTPAID ONLY 50 Cents.&#13;
Postal Note or two-ct. stimps. Ad*&#13;
dress NUNDA PUBLISHING CO.,&#13;
Nunda, x. Y.&#13;
ITE.US OF INT.&#13;
HavVng rent&#13;
Mill arnVea&#13;
cider ancrVpglly.&#13;
iT.&#13;
Pettysville Cider&#13;
receive apples ior&#13;
S. M. Cook.&#13;
Babbit's Pura Potasjt—or Lye always&#13;
in stock&#13;
WirWflYDru&#13;
1 &lt; ' * w -r-&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located, 5¾ of a mile west&#13;
Stockbridge. Apple,'cherry peach and paar orchards,&#13;
nice house, good well and cistern, out&#13;
buildings, well fenced, g«od soil. Apolv on&#13;
p r e m i s e . L O R &amp; N C E RICE.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G, W. TEEPLE,&#13;
Does a General Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes*&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
&gt;^X)LLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
PINCKNEY PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORRECTED W E E K L Y B Y&#13;
Oct. 9,1884. T O M P K I N S &amp; I S M O N .&#13;
g Store.&#13;
Having bought Mrs. Lewis' stock ,of&#13;
Hair Goods I can give you good bargains&#13;
"in" the sameTXalTaifd bolnade&#13;
beautiful. Mrs. Wagner.J_J&#13;
Call on Teeple &amp; Cadwell for coal for&#13;
threshing engines.&#13;
FOR SALE—A full set of Butchering&#13;
Tools, at Teeple &amp; Cadwell's&#13;
Fine .flavoring Extracts, always&#13;
fresh and reliable, at&#13;
NVinchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Western Tiruotny Sepdfat&#13;
M A - Cadwell's.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn and&#13;
.two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
OATS WANTED!&#13;
I want to buy 500 bushels of oats,&#13;
for which I will pay Detroit quotations&#13;
for "mixed oats" the day they are&#13;
bought or delivered.&#13;
T. Birkett&#13;
Dover Mills, Oct. 1st, 1884.&#13;
Washing made easy by using Babbit's&#13;
"1776" Pearline. Call and get a&#13;
package, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
Mrs. M. J. Read has opened a beautiful&#13;
line of Millinery goods on one side&#13;
of McGuiness &amp;, Tourney's store. Ladies&#13;
please call and see what elegant&#13;
new styles-she has.—&#13;
I will Jtake orders for a limited&#13;
amount oi seasoned, cord wood.&#13;
J as. T. Eaman.&#13;
F Q R S A L E .&#13;
A span of colts,Vyj&lt;Crs old past.&#13;
"" R. MeVcer, Pettysville.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Grimes &amp; Johnson having added&#13;
considerable new machinery—and-repaired&#13;
quite extensively their custom&#13;
and flouring mill, would announce to&#13;
the public generally that it is running,&#13;
again.Being well pleased with the lib&#13;
l _. _ i. i » • i •% • *ral patronage-m the past- would: in-4Ccrarrty- Convention which met~&#13;
vite their many patrons to call a —&#13;
and satisfaction will be guaranteed.&#13;
Wit Pinckney, Oct. .6th, 1884.&#13;
fc^-Those receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with next number. A blue X&#13;
signifies that the time has expired, and that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
LOCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
The Fruit Evaporator-4s-&amp;ow being&#13;
run day and night.&#13;
Miss Harrington's school in the&#13;
Eaman Dist. will close to-morrow&#13;
(Friday).&#13;
Wm. Hoff is visiting friends in Ypsilanti&#13;
and Superior, Washtenaw Co.,&#13;
Mr. D. F. Ewen is building an 18-&#13;
x24 feet addition to his residence on&#13;
Unadilla street.&#13;
Rev. Geo. Stowe and family, of Unadilla,&#13;
started yesterday for their new&#13;
home in Florida.&#13;
Mr. Birkett is repairing and remodeling&#13;
the Dover Mills, for the better&#13;
accommodation of custom work.&#13;
Many of our citizens are attending&#13;
the Stock bridge and Brighton Fairs&#13;
to-day.&#13;
The American Express Company&#13;
will establish offices along the Air&#13;
Line during the coming week. E.&#13;
McGarigle is to be agent for the company&#13;
at this place with office at the&#13;
depot. *&#13;
Mrs. Robert Tiplady is visiting relativesand&#13;
friends in Toledo, Ohio, for a&#13;
few days.&#13;
The Pinckney Flouring Mills are&#13;
iy^for business; -and the recent&#13;
improvements have added considerably&#13;
t© the capacity for work.&#13;
The Democratic a\d Greenback&#13;
Wheat, No-. 1 white, $ .72' u No. 2 white, 68'&#13;
"—No. ared,.....^. ....; .75'&#13;
" No. 3 red, 70'&#13;
Oat§, 25'&#13;
Corn . . . . . . . .30'&#13;
Barley, 1 (XX&amp;l 50'&#13;
Beans, ; 7^1.00'&#13;
- Dried Apples 06&gt;/,&lt;&amp; .07.&#13;
Potatoes, 80.&#13;
w B«tter, „ 20.&#13;
^ I g g s , 15.&#13;
* 75&lt;&amp;S.o«&gt;.&#13;
4.50.&#13;
.Dreaeed Hogs, per lOOtbs&#13;
Dreased Chickens&#13;
Clover Seed 4 00 ¢0&#13;
Special Notices.&#13;
To any onybody who has disease of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
cured the same complaints in other&#13;
cases. Address,&#13;
E. T. HAZELTINE, Warren, Pa.&#13;
I HAVE TRIED HV&#13;
DEAR DOCTOR:—I have tried your&#13;
medicine, and believe that any one who&#13;
78 troubled with Cough, Hoarseness or&#13;
.Lameness about the chest or lungs can&#13;
not well afford to be without the White&#13;
Wine of Tar Syrup,&#13;
Your thankful friend&#13;
Rev. G. W. Pattison,&#13;
P a s % St. Charles-ltfrErtnmrch.&#13;
tit. Charles, Iowa.&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of TGrimes&#13;
or on-kbe- premises of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at BUSILS—PLaning-Mitl-, Plainfield.&#13;
The Township Board of^irC township&#13;
of Putn\m willvffieet atr the&#13;
•clerk's office in the vtffage of Pinckney,&#13;
Saturday, ©ct/llth, 1884, for the&#13;
puapose of audiiiifg accounts &lt;md transacting&#13;
such other business as may&#13;
come before the board.&#13;
Electric Bitters, at Winchell's Drug&#13;
S t o r e ; — '-•••&#13;
SPECIAL NOTICE.&#13;
Parties having Organs that need repairing&#13;
can have them put in first&#13;
class order by calling on -&#13;
- C. L. Oolliei, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A bunch of desirable lambs—f-ersale.&#13;
". — —&#13;
F. A. BARTON, Unadilla.&#13;
It is well known that the Kidneys&#13;
are the human sWers, which" wash&#13;
away the impurities and debris&#13;
for a week or two.&#13;
Fred Bagley, 6f Ypsilanti, has been&#13;
the guest of Pinckney friends the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Lizzie Courtney, of Detroit,&#13;
was visiting Pinckney relatives and&#13;
friends Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Will Crowfoot, of Fowl*rviile, was&#13;
shaking hands with Pinckney friends&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Sanford Jenkins and family, of Maat&#13;
,-Thursday last, placed in nomination&#13;
the following ticket:&#13;
For Representative—G. W. Coleman, d. Marion.&#13;
Probate Judge—A. E. Cole, g. Conway.&#13;
Sheriff—L. V. D. Cook. p. Cohoctah.&#13;
ICegi&amp;ter of Deeds—II. N. Beach, d. Howell.&#13;
Clerk—-Joka. Ryan, Jr., d. Hamburg, ff&#13;
Prosecuting Attorney—r*. H. Warren, d. Handy.&#13;
Surveyor—Isaac Teller, d. Cohoctah.&#13;
Circuit CourtJ Commissioner—W. P. VanWinkle,&#13;
d. Putnam, and Joseph Loree, d. Iosco.&#13;
Coroners—H. II. Clark, g. Howell, and Joseph&#13;
Brown, d. Marion.&#13;
Both the Republican and Democratic&#13;
parties have put excellent tickets&#13;
in the field for coiintv officers this&#13;
year. In some instances it will puzzle&#13;
the independent voter to make a&#13;
choice between the opposing candidates.&#13;
But, by the way, we had forgotten&#13;
that the Union party has also&#13;
a ticket in the field, and although we&#13;
are not personally acquainted with&#13;
any of their candidates, we take it for&#13;
granted that they are good men and&#13;
true also?&#13;
The Monitor House hall was Hell&#13;
son, are visiting Pinckney relatives&#13;
this week.&#13;
— On account of the Stockbridge Fair&#13;
the Pinckney school took a "vacation"&#13;
yesterday—but it wasn't a very fair&#13;
day after all.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Campbell, of&#13;
Chili, N. Y., are the- guests of Mi,&#13;
Brokaw's family, and other Pinckney&#13;
friends this week.&#13;
A card of delicious honey was added&#13;
4icacies of ye&#13;
this week, the generous donor being&#13;
Mrs. S. Sykes.&#13;
Apples are coming in almost too&#13;
numerously, but Mr. Eaman hopes he&#13;
may be able to take care of them.&#13;
Shipping _has already begun. The&#13;
V 4 When they become clogged or inactive,&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil will remove&#13;
the cause and create a healthy&#13;
action, and effect a permanent cure.&#13;
Smoke Capadur best^rtfecent Cigar&#13;
in the market, at&#13;
Winche)Ts Drug Store.&#13;
BUGGIES AND CUTTERS.&#13;
Having the agency for the Kalamazoo&#13;
Buggies and Cutters those wishing&#13;
to buy a gmni bug^ry chcrp wouU do&#13;
well to call on ine.&#13;
Emmett Murphy,&#13;
at Pinckney Livery Barn.&#13;
Physicians Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepared from the very best materials,&#13;
at Wmchell's Drug Store.&#13;
TEAM FOR ^AXK*&#13;
. Loffer for sale at a bargain my span&#13;
of Roan Mares, 8 years old, sound,&#13;
well matched, and excellent workers.&#13;
Any onr desiring such a team will do&#13;
well to look at them.&#13;
James T. Eaman.&#13;
Cure that cold. All the leading&#13;
Cough Remedies, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
fruit is fine.&#13;
Alfred Taylor, of Unadilla township,&#13;
returned last week, from a brief visit&#13;
to Texas. He is more than ever convinced&#13;
that Michigan is the "boss&#13;
state" yet.&#13;
R. G. Elliott, of Iosco, Republican&#13;
candidate for County Clerk, was extending&#13;
his acquaintance among&#13;
Pinckney people Tuesday. R. G. is a&#13;
very popular member of the County&#13;
Board of Supervisors.&#13;
James G. Blaine will be at Howell&#13;
for a few minutes, on Wednesday next,&#13;
on .his way from Detroit to Lansing.&#13;
A reception will be tendered him at&#13;
the railroad station.&#13;
A Democratic mass meeting will be&#13;
tetd a t the skatingT H a i r tomorrow&#13;
(Friday) evening. The speakers will&#13;
be Hon. H. P. Henderson, of Mason,&#13;
and Dennis Shields, Esq., of Howell.&#13;
We don't need to call attention to&#13;
the large advertisement of F. L. Brown&#13;
which appears on another page this&#13;
week. , I t speaks~foir_ltself—Tiut you&#13;
do well to look and see what it says.&#13;
filled Thursday evening last by a very&#13;
attentive audience who listened to the&#13;
speeches of Dr. Willson and General&#13;
Spaulding, with evident interest and&#13;
appreciation. Dr. Willson is not an&#13;
orator by any means, "but" personally&#13;
he made a verj favorable impression&#13;
in this vicinity, as an intelligent and&#13;
business like man. Of course he is a&#13;
strong protectionist, and "protection"&#13;
was the chief theme of both speakers.&#13;
Considerable fault is found with the&#13;
Grand Trunk R'y employees for obstructmg&#13;
PearFStreet'with the evening&#13;
freight train. People sometimes&#13;
have to wait over halt an hour before&#13;
they can cross the track which is&#13;
tsbTrj-btocfced by the train. The village&#13;
council will probably pass an ordinance&#13;
at its next meeting prohibiting&#13;
such obstructions—then the railroad&#13;
men would best be a little more accommodating&#13;
or they may have some&#13;
heavy fines to pay. i&#13;
D. D. Bennett, the "boss hoss trader,"&#13;
for whom we used to do some advertising&#13;
occasionally when locals were&#13;
scarce, hasn't done any trading lately,&#13;
and is a good deal out of health in&#13;
consequence. In fact he is quite a&#13;
bit "off," and the other day walked into&#13;
an up town store for a quart of molasses.&#13;
Proprietor being busy David&#13;
volunteers t6 help himself—don't see&#13;
molasses measure but kerosene measure&#13;
is right at hand, and of course&#13;
will do just as well. Tableau down&#13;
home about an hour after, when molasses&#13;
is sampled. David swears he&#13;
will go to trading'horses again or com.&#13;
mit suicide. If there is another 45-&#13;
ye ar-old broncho pony in the vicinity&#13;
won't the owner please take pity and&#13;
stump1X~D.for~a—trade. We don't&#13;
think he'll hold out for more than two&#13;
weeks longer.&#13;
*&#13;
Some evil designed person has been&#13;
taking feed from barns on East Main&#13;
street In*fact the pilfering party is&#13;
known and hereby given fair warning&#13;
that anjrfurther depredationsVill be&#13;
met by the severest penalty of the law.&#13;
P. P . Jackson, wife and daughter&#13;
of East Shelby, J{. Y., are visiting&#13;
Mr. Dan. Jackson for a few days.&#13;
A Putnam farmer harvested 16 good&#13;
ears of cern from the growth of one&#13;
kernel of seed. He says he .found&#13;
numerous instances where only one&#13;
kernel grew in the hill but produced&#13;
several shoots and almost invariably a&#13;
better yield than in hills springing&#13;
from several kernels of seed. He&#13;
thinks farmers generally put too much&#13;
seed in each hill.&#13;
John Lennon's team ran away Tuesday&#13;
afternoon, while at work near the&#13;
Grand Trunk depot They followed&#13;
the track for some distance west of the&#13;
station, then climbing the bank they&#13;
struck a telegraph pole, which brought&#13;
them to a very sudden h a l t The telegraph&#13;
pole was broken about 4 feet&#13;
from the ground and the harness somewhat&#13;
damaged otherwise little harm&#13;
done.&#13;
Common Council P r o c e e d i n g&#13;
PiNCKygy, MICH., OCT. 6th, 1884.&#13;
Council convened and was called to&#13;
order by President Grimes. Present:&#13;
Trustees Haze, Mann, McGuiness and&#13;
Sykes.&#13;
On motion resignation of Trustee&#13;
Rose was accepted.&#13;
Motion to appoint Addison Wheeler&#13;
to act as trustee for balance of year.&#13;
Motion carried.&#13;
On motion Council adjourned for&#13;
one week.&#13;
W. B. HOFF, Clerk.&#13;
Real Estate Transfers*&#13;
' The following transfers are reported&#13;
for the PiNCKNBr DISPATCH by Register&#13;
Dudley, for two weeks ending&#13;
Oct. 4th, 1884. w&#13;
Eliza A. Barnard to James E. Barnard&#13;
etal., lot in Howell, |1,000.&#13;
Evelina Smith to Louis Neuendorf,&#13;
lot in Brighton, $406.&#13;
Frederick W. Bitten to Lewis Mackenroth,&#13;
2 acres in Brighton, $45.&#13;
" K i c u a r d rJritton to Elijah Mr-Haw*&#13;
ley, 160 acres in Genoa, $3,850. '&#13;
Henry Barnes to Jonn Trollman,&#13;
40 acres in Tyrone, $1,500.&#13;
Richard R. Gannon to Richard £ .&#13;
Parshall, 40 acres in Oceola, $2,000.&#13;
—Eli*a-4k-Bttsk to Melissa F. Aldrich,&#13;
80 acres in Handy, $1.&#13;
Millie E. Henry (by guardian) to&#13;
Frank Jordan, land in Howell, $270.&#13;
Ezra Sanford to Ezra D. Sanford, 86&#13;
acres,in Cohoctah, $4,000.&#13;
Martin L. Davis to School district&#13;
No. 6, Cohoctah, lot in Cohoctah $30.&#13;
Albert Westfall et al. to Milton L.&#13;
Wasson, land in Unadilla, $5,500.&#13;
Arthur R. Noyes to 4as. A. Fa ul k,&#13;
36J acres in Conway,$860.&#13;
The following Patents were granted&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN, bearing date&#13;
Sept. 30, 1884, reported expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., Mechanical&#13;
Experts and Solicitors of Patents,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
Baurrigardner, W. G., Piles City,&#13;
Circular saw iifter, 305,883.&#13;
DreWj Wf J., Grand Rapids, Carpet&#13;
sweeper, 306,008.&#13;
Hudson, E. H., Pottersville, Wood&#13;
turning lathe, 306,016.&#13;
Markle. R., Detroit, Mechanism for&#13;
driving dvnamo-electric machines,&#13;
305,943.&#13;
McArthur, F. A., Detroit, Engineer's&#13;
brake-valve, 305,831.&#13;
Nunn, Emma G., Vassar, Heat in*&#13;
dicator for ovens, 306,030.&#13;
Palmer, M. W., Holland, Washing&#13;
machine, 302,841.&#13;
Starr, Isaac, Richland, Threshing&#13;
machine straw carrier, 306,979.&#13;
Ward, A. F., Detroit, Machine for&#13;
pointing and lapping hoops^ 305,868.&#13;
West W. J., Jackson, Dumping car.&#13;
305,811. * * '&#13;
MARRIED.&#13;
byA Rt eUv.n atideioll.a , STtuoewsed,a yM mr. orMni.n gC, . OBcettt l7ntghe,r a1n89d4 . Mim Nellie Backus.&#13;
FlMorri.d aan, dw Mherrse. tBheetyt ianrgee rt oa traerstiedde .i mmediately for&#13;
DuAhti gC, hMelrs.e Ja,o hSnu nJdeafyfr, eOy*ct .a n5tdh M, 1i8eMi ,f cbllyx aR Semv.i tFh,T . both of Pinckney. ^&#13;
DIED.&#13;
•8d^, A188^&amp;*, ^M0™r. D9 m*yi°d MD.a rDioicnk, erF»roidna,«yl a thre ft'^ of hie age year&#13;
.-£' ¥* D O B e ta Putnam, Sunday night Oct. 5th.&#13;
18M,AbaerChaiker,lntae SOthye^rfhto age.&#13;
£*»&#13;
U&#13;
'tV'&#13;
*&#13;
T O C O B B E S P O &gt; D K N T S .&#13;
All comma ntoatloni for this paper should b» ac&#13;
flnmnanlMl \&gt;r th« oaoie of tue a ithor; not noce»-&#13;
ffi%riwSn«tt»», but as an evWeno* of tfood&#13;
ftfthoafheTrtofthe writer. W/lte on jr ottone&#13;
SdVortM paper. Be particularly careful In giving&#13;
Sime. and Sates, to hare ttae l i t e r s aud ft.ui i&#13;
SlkHTand dUtHct. Proper n*ui«* are often dlffton&#13;
Erdeolpher, because of tht oarelew manner *a&#13;
whlbb tney are written.&#13;
"MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN.'&#13;
D R I V E N OU I B Y F 1 H E .&#13;
M e c o k t a ' * County »• P o o r H o u s e a n d&#13;
A s y l u m B u r n e d .&#13;
The Mecosta county poor house and asylum,&#13;
a building temporarily leased by the county&#13;
for the purpose Indicated by its name, burned&#13;
to the ground Jast night. The fire was first&#13;
discovered by Mr. East, the keeper, about&#13;
midnight, the flames burxtirjg Irom thereof,&#13;
near the chimney. Mr. East gave the alarm,&#13;
and while an assistant atteuded to the removal&#13;
Of the paupers, East attempted the rescue of&#13;
three insane persons who were locked in their&#13;
cells. He got two of them out without much&#13;
difficulty aud returned for the third. By&#13;
this tinwtfieare had progressed so far that the&#13;
smoke and heat were Stirling, and the keeper&#13;
aud the Insane patieat were both nearly suffocated,&#13;
but finally succeeded in escaping. All&#13;
the inmates were eventually removed Irom tbe&#13;
bttraing structure without* loss of life or strl-&#13;
Ous Injury and were taken to neighborly&#13;
houses for shelter. Temporary arrangements&#13;
WITTT&gt;e made for the care tf. the untortuuate&#13;
charges at the city hospital until tue ne * poor&#13;
house, now lu course of construction, will be&#13;
ready fe*- occupancy-&#13;
There was 60tnc Insurance on the property,&#13;
but not a vestige of clothing, bedding or fur&#13;
niture was saved.&#13;
this is the second time within about a year&#13;
that the county poor have been turned out by&#13;
fire, the pjoi house at Stanwood having burned&#13;
a few mouths ago.&#13;
IN T U B S T A T E .&#13;
HatUe Crittenden of Adrian, goes to Japan&#13;
aA a missionary.&#13;
Kalamazoo glories in the fact that she is entirely&#13;
out of debt. * / •&#13;
By a vote of 6 to 2, the Adrian city council&#13;
voted to abandon standard-time.&#13;
Battle Creek billiard saloons are not allowed&#13;
&gt;to be kepr open later than/0 p. m.&#13;
The Oakland House has a private postoffice&#13;
of Its own, 8(. Clair Springs by name.&#13;
The will of the latcOr. Rynd of Adrian bequeathes&#13;
all of his property to his family.&#13;
Charles Bennett, who fell from a scaffold at&#13;
' Houghton on Sunday, is dead from his Injuries.&#13;
A farmer named Abrams,Hv4ag-two^&#13;
from Brighton, committed suicide by taklog&#13;
morphine.&#13;
A. C. Wilbur, of Alma, Van Buren county,&#13;
had an arm so badly lacerated by a buzz saw&#13;
that he died.&#13;
The question as to where the Crouch trial&#13;
is to be held is agitating the minds of Jackson&#13;
county oiflclals.&#13;
Ellas Chanteller was killed by a falling tree&#13;
near Farwell. He was a Canadian and had on^_&#13;
' ly been over two weeks.&#13;
The celery shipments from Kilama^oo-sre&#13;
enormous. For two or three days ]*etrweek 4'J&#13;
tons a day were shipped,&#13;
Four Michigan lron^f-ufnaces are included In&#13;
the list of tfiosej^etlged to shut down on account&#13;
of overproduction.&#13;
John Benedict, a farmer of Elmwood township,&#13;
ended his life by banging himself with a&#13;
log chain a few days ago.&#13;
Mrs. J. M. Hough, a resident of Plymouth&#13;
and vlclulty for over 35 years, died at her&#13;
borne in that place on the 3d Inst.&#13;
All of the lake shore—west Michigan towns&#13;
—had remarkably fine exhibits of fruits and&#13;
vegetables-thin year, except peaches.&#13;
The murderers of Wm. McClintock at Eaet&#13;
Saginaw were too drunk to escape and were&#13;
—louged in jatJ within fifteen minutes.&#13;
The new Episcopal church at Kalamazoo, now&#13;
In process of. erection, is pronounced one of the&#13;
most beautifurand unique in Michigan.&#13;
You can snoot turkeys, pastridges, snipe,&#13;
woodcoctTand wild ducks, That is if you can&#13;
And tbe game and know enough to shoot.&#13;
J. A. Lunney &lt;fe Co., six miles nortF^oT&#13;
Evan, lout their mill and about ¢14,010 worth&#13;
at TamatiiriumbfcT 07 are on the lfah insE&#13;
The home for oil people—aTniosTworthy&#13;
charity at Adrian - i s 10 nave new aud more&#13;
commodious quarters If the sisters can do it.&#13;
A 10-year-old 8on--of George E — C u r r y o f&#13;
Hastings was smothered by being drawn Into a&#13;
wheat bin. When taken out lite was extinct&#13;
Jacob Jacobson of Deerfield township was&#13;
killed by the passenger train a few miles soutb&#13;
of Big Rapids the other tday. He wes intoxicated.&#13;
E. N. Wagerman, a butcher, drove too near&#13;
the St. Clair Kiver at Fort Gratiot, hie horses&#13;
became frightened and jumped In and he was&#13;
drowned.&#13;
For simply poundlDg his wife until her face&#13;
looked like raw beef Geo. Johnson of Kalama-&#13;
Koowlil spend 90da^s In the Ionia house ol&#13;
correction.&#13;
; o . K. Crandall, of St. Helena, has invented a&#13;
perpetual motion machine that is said to be a&#13;
very useful &amp;a wel' as a very nandsome piece of&#13;
mechanism.&#13;
It Is alleged in Chippewa county that in proportion&#13;
to its population that county suppone&#13;
more paupers than any other two counties&#13;
in the state. ~&#13;
-Charles Mason has been arrested at Bay City&#13;
for stealing* f 100 cow. He painted the animal&#13;
alter appropriating it, but the natural color&#13;
shone through.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Max ted, a resident of Greenville&#13;
for 35 years, and an old pioneer, is dead. She&#13;
leaves a husband and a son and daughter to&#13;
mourn her loss.&#13;
Mrs. Angus McLellau, of East Tawas, has&#13;
been jiilea on account of disobeying the liquor&#13;
laws. The officers are also looking for Mr.&#13;
Au&amp;us McLellan.&#13;
Henry Hoffman of Monroe, the man who&#13;
shot young BerdUe whom ho caught stealing&#13;
grapes,has been arrested on a charge of assault&#13;
.with Intent to kill.&#13;
The lighthouse board has Issued instructions&#13;
for the erections of a light-house and&#13;
keeper's dwelling at Grand Marais, northern&#13;
hhore of Lake Superior.&#13;
Andrew Sundln, who murdered Wm. Berg at&#13;
Ontanagon on the night of Sept. 29, was caught&#13;
in a swamp near that place October 2. He has&#13;
been committed for trial*&#13;
E. T. Pearl, of 8umpter township, Wayne&#13;
county, the first of October picked A second&#13;
crop of raepbenles, both black and red, from&#13;
buefi.es growing on his farm.&#13;
The First National bank of Menominee-rnas&#13;
been organized with a cash capital£f-^$50,000,&#13;
and will soon be in operation, with Mr. G. A&#13;
Bleach, of Green Bay, as cashier..&#13;
The sheriff of Kalamazoo county offers $50&#13;
reward for tbe body of Chas. W. Bowen, of&#13;
Kalamazoo, whose friends think he was&#13;
drowned ffi Long lake a few days agoy&#13;
Charles Reeves of Lansing, a colored mac,&#13;
has been appointed commissioner from Micbian&#13;
to the New Orleans Ex position. He will&#13;
00k after the colored people's exhibits.&#13;
Tbe wife of Frank Parker of Royal Oak received&#13;
her iiiiru stroke of paralysis the other&#13;
IS&#13;
evening and did not survive. She was among the&#13;
early settlers, although but 5J yea™ old.&#13;
"There waB a sertoriB disturbance at the Ioula&#13;
Salvation Army barracks the other night aid&#13;
one of the Salvationists was chased several&#13;
Weeks bv a mob ol twelve or more roughs.&#13;
The body of a man was washed ashore at&#13;
Point Ircquoia, above Waiski bay, Lake Superior,&#13;
and it is supposed it is that of one of&#13;
the victims of the Oaborn Alberta disaatex&#13;
Ceph Wright, a carpenter employed on the&#13;
new skating rink In Cassopolls, while raielcg&#13;
an adze slipped and the tool completely severed&#13;
the tendon Achilles or heel cord of the left leg.&#13;
Alonzo Thompson, who escaped from the&#13;
court room some, weeks ago while being tried&#13;
for theft, has bei'ti recaptured. He was formerly&#13;
prominent tu social circles in Cold water.&#13;
J. B. Wood, a Bi'tle Creek baker was out&#13;
hunting the other day. In taking his gun from&#13;
the wagon It was accidentally Uncharged, Inflicting&#13;
wounds from which he died in n few&#13;
hours.&#13;
C. L. Flagg fell fifty feet from the. smokestack&#13;
of B-ickus «fe Bender's will, which he was&#13;
paint Inn in Saginaw, mid broke his collar bone&#13;
and f. ur nb.\ ui sides receiving internal mjurles.&#13;
The next Michli:au s;ate gazetteer, to L&gt;e issued&#13;
by K. L. Pulls &amp;Co., of Detroit, will contain&#13;
many »t-.-w feature*, among them being&#13;
full'lists' of the horse, ho/, cattle aud sheep&#13;
breeders of the state.&#13;
The Seventh-Day Adventiste, while holding&#13;
their annual state camp meeting at Jackson,&#13;
ralsed.tlO 000 lu subscriptions. This money will&#13;
bo used lu defraying the expenses of the college,&#13;
aud home and foreign missions.&#13;
Thomas Flanulgau, who mysteriously disappeared&#13;
from Carroltou last August and was&#13;
thought to have been murdered for moDey he&#13;
had received from the Bale sale of a house,&#13;
has been heard from in California.&#13;
A young man named Burt Torker living in&#13;
Detroit, was thrown from a train on which he&#13;
was stealing a ride and cut into just above the,&#13;
hips, part of the body being .carried some distance&#13;
from the scene ol the accident.&#13;
John McCullough,the tragedian, who was&#13;
taken 111 in Chlcigo, made a aesperate attempt&#13;
to get to Detroit to fill his engagement In that&#13;
city but was prevented by his manager. AU&#13;
of bis engagements have been cancelled.&#13;
The poultry exhibitions at the recent Michigan&#13;
fairs this year, show that the farmers of&#13;
tola state think less of fancy breeds of chick,&#13;
ens than they did a few years ago, and that'&#13;
hens are now chiefly appreciated for what they&#13;
can do in the egg line.&#13;
The Charlotte Blaine and Logan quartette&#13;
club has been engaged by tbe state central&#13;
commute to accompany the Blaine party on&#13;
its tour through Michigan. The club consists&#13;
of Thomas Cary, James Bailey, Charles Mc-&#13;
Klnney and Charles Stubbs.&#13;
The standard roller mills in Holland had a&#13;
narrow escape from complete destruction the&#13;
other day. The buildings- and contents were&#13;
damaged to the extent of $15,000. Only the&#13;
successful working of the water works saved&#13;
the entire property from destruction.&#13;
Ozlas Osborne, an Inmate for ten years of&#13;
the Van Buren county poor house, and for&#13;
eight yeais perfectly helpless from rheumatism,&#13;
has just received a» back pension for&#13;
$9 555, being $72 a month. Osborne was a&#13;
private in Company C, Third Michigan Cavalry.&#13;
J. S. McDohnald, an old man 70 years of age,&#13;
10 resided at Marshall, Mich., died at the&#13;
B rrldge house In Sturgls the other afternoon,&#13;
Irom an overdose of morphine which was taken&#13;
with suicidal,intent, tue jury said. His remains&#13;
were taken to Buchanan, where he&#13;
had formerly lived.&#13;
R«Y. Thomas|Stalker, one of the most prominent,&#13;
widely known and talented Methodist&#13;
ministers in this state, whose recent charges&#13;
have been Detroit, Pontiac, Port Huron, etc.,&#13;
has been appointed to one of the mo6t important&#13;
church positions in New Orleans, and will&#13;
soon leave for that city.&#13;
Fifteen dvnamite cartridges erploded over&#13;
the spot in Ljn? Lake where C. ft . BiweD.&#13;
the Kalamazoo insurance agent, Is supposed&#13;
to have drowned, failed to brlug his body to&#13;
the surface. Many ure sure now that he&#13;
skipped, though how he got away without&#13;
any clothing is another&#13;
A. P. Martin, an Allegan county farmer, attended&#13;
the Plalnwell Fair, and, getting drunk,&#13;
exhibited a large roll of bills. He was induced&#13;
to put .up at the Cartright House and put to&#13;
bed, when he was robbed during the night.&#13;
He claims he had $140. Pat Kelley, of Otsego,&#13;
was ai rested and jailed for the crime.&#13;
Rev. Eaaery Curtis, a well known Baptist&#13;
minister, died at Burns, Montcalm county, recently.&#13;
He was the husband of the Mrs. Curtis&#13;
wliose death at Lapeer some three years&#13;
ago caused a great sensation, and for whose&#13;
murder a Mrs. Barnard, who was infatuated&#13;
with the reverend gentleman, WM tried. jr.&#13;
A 8pringQeld, III,, dispatch says : "A license&#13;
to incorporate the Phillips gitld miniug&#13;
company of Chicago, which proposes to oper&#13;
ate in Michigan ias issued "by. the secretary&#13;
of state yesten* The capital stock named&#13;
is $1,000,100 and the incorporators are John&#13;
Phillips, H. R. Durkee and Andrew J. Coaper."&#13;
Tjlshop Ames, a liudson fruit grower, has a&#13;
model fruit house for the storage of apples&#13;
during the winter. Ventilating flues above&#13;
let off the gases and dampness and cold air&#13;
flues between the floors keep the rooms at an&#13;
even temperature of about 33 degrees until'&#13;
spring, wheh the fruit comes out dry and&#13;
t r s p .&#13;
Fred. Ackerman, a convict sent from Kent&#13;
county on a seven years'1 sentence for assault&#13;
with intent to kill, was discharged the other&#13;
morning, his time having expired. tie ref ased&#13;
to leave the prison, stating that he had another&#13;
year to serve^and he did not propose to be imposed&#13;
upoc by the prison officials. He lsundobtedly&#13;
Insane.&#13;
Andreas Sundln shot and killed W 11am&#13;
Berg In a Swede boarding house in Ontonagon&#13;
a few nights ago^. The ball severed tbe main&#13;
artery of the heart, killing him instantly. The&#13;
murderer is a young man about 22 years old&#13;
and a Swede. He took to tbe woods and has&#13;
not yet been captufedTbrit CM "hardly" escape,&#13;
as a large force are hunting him.&#13;
Kalamazoo Telegraph- A frlenl in California&#13;
writes to Fred Britton of this city that&#13;
George L. Gale, the noted founder of Galesburg,&#13;
died in that state and that his grave Is&#13;
known to the writer. It will be remembered&#13;
that the last that was heard of him was many&#13;
years ago when a Paw Paw man who was well&#13;
acquainted wtth-G ale, met htm-on tbe-plalns, ^&#13;
in the time of the gold excitement.&#13;
A man and a woman, the former aged about&#13;
60 and thelatU»r perhaps IS, famps, camped In&#13;
the woods on Horace Holdrldge'a farm In »,&#13;
Palmyra, Lenawee county, the other,nlgh^aadTp&#13;
the next morning the man was fouDO^dead. j&#13;
The couple had a marriage certificate nated&#13;
April 22, issued by Con OiNell, a justice In&#13;
Muskingum wuntVjjOr; which gave their&#13;
names as M. H^^Ksbtrry'Hooper and Cu^a&#13;
Belle HlUludr^Suppobed cause ol death, heart&#13;
d" _ ' '&#13;
u8heTBy--naiB&lt;ery"—caused by tindlng&#13;
certalfairttman remaImHa~£he ruins of a house&#13;
in that place which was burned last winter, is&#13;
still unsolved. After along and patient investigation&#13;
a coroner's jury finds aa follows:&#13;
"We find the body to be that of a female person&#13;
about 30 years of age, who is unknown to&#13;
us, and that the Bald female was murdered on&#13;
or about March 20, 1879, by some person df&#13;
persoos unknown to us, caused by a gunshot&#13;
wound in the head."&#13;
Developments in the examination of the business&#13;
affairs of Charles W. Bowen of Kalamazoo,&#13;
tbe insurance agentsupposcd to have been&#13;
diow ned In Long Lake a few ni» bts ago, throws&#13;
doubts upon hi* being dead. The state agents&#13;
of the Hanover and Gtrmanla Insurance coinpales,&#13;
whohe agent he wan, bare been examlu-&#13;
.intjhifl-iicccuut^, »nd find blin short a large&#13;
amount! Tiny refuhu to state how^mucu. No&#13;
other compaules have yet st-ut their agents to&#13;
examine tue accouuts. Bowen had $8,000 In-&#13;
Burance on his life.&#13;
Tbe law of the land as found on pase 461 of&#13;
the Howells annotated statutes of Michigan&#13;
prescribes limits for the rate of "toll" to be exaefced&#13;
far grinding grain. -&amp;**ada a* follows^-&#13;
'The*toll lor grinding uud bolting any wheat,&#13;
rye or other grain, Bbill not exceed oue-tenth&#13;
part theriof. For griuding aud not boltijg&#13;
any wheat, rye or other grain except Indian&#13;
com, the toll shall not exceed one-twelfth&#13;
part thereof; and for grinding and not bolting&#13;
Indian corn the toll shall not exceed one-tenth&#13;
part thereof.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Second Michigan&#13;
Infantry, of which Sumner Howard is president&#13;
and Joel Cowglll secretary, will be held&#13;
at FISnt, October 10. O. F. Lochead, viceuretident,&#13;
Flint, or Joel Cowgil), secretary,&#13;
Cassopolls, *viii answer all questions. Arrangements&#13;
have, been made with the Flint &amp;&#13;
r"ero Marquette and Chicago &amp; Grand Trunk&#13;
railroads for reduced rates of fare for comrades&#13;
and 1 heir w lyes attending the reunion,&#13;
namely, oue third fare returning from the re-&#13;
ULIOU, on presenting the certificate of the&#13;
bteretar).&#13;
While the work of drilling a well was In&#13;
progress on the farm of Edgar White, about&#13;
one-half mile west of Port Huron, having&#13;
reached a depth of 197 feet, a large vein of gas&#13;
was tapped aud the volume of gas that is said&#13;
to escape is powerful euough to run a ten or&#13;
twenty horiM-power engine. The well Is located&#13;
about 150 feet from the boiler and engine&#13;
used for diary purpose?, und ou TueBday last&#13;
a pipe was laid to the boiler and the gas igniteu.&#13;
It bui-iied brilliantly aud furnished enough&#13;
heat to raise steam Tbe driller believes that&#13;
the oil vein would be found at a depth of 500 or&#13;
50U feet.&#13;
Henry Hoffman, a wealthy and austere&#13;
farmer Jlviag four miles weM of Monroe found&#13;
a man stealing grapes on hi* premises. Hoffman&#13;
was armed and demanded of the man in&#13;
the vineyard that he should give his-name,&#13;
say ID g that unless he did so he -would be fired&#13;
upon. Ihe grape "seeker undertook to take leg&#13;
ball, and Hoffman fired upon him. The charge&#13;
took effect In the back of the fleeing Individual,&#13;
and thjr doc tors who have examined him think&#13;
the wound will prove fatal. He proves to be&#13;
Pepfy Bordeau, a neighbor of Hoffman's, and&#13;
alleged that his adventure in Hoffman's&#13;
Vines was not his first depredation.&#13;
A most distressing accident occurred in Lansing&#13;
on the 1st inst. Minnie Leach, a young&#13;
lady, step-daughter pt Robert Lapworth, who&#13;
lives at Flushing; visited the fair grounds in&#13;
company with a cousin and an aunt, Mrs,&#13;
Thomas Cade, at wuose husband's home Miss&#13;
Leach had been visiting. While passing a&#13;
piece of machinery her skirts caught in a revolving&#13;
shaft and she was violently thrown&#13;
down and whirled around several times before&#13;
the machinery could be stopped. When reached&#13;
it was found that Miss Leach's neck was broken,&#13;
her skull fractured, and her limbs and body&#13;
terribly bruised and mangled. Baker Cabe,&#13;
her cousin, who Witnessed the awful accident,&#13;
was so affected that it is feared his mind is unbalanced.&#13;
Wnat women can do Is very plainly shown in&#13;
the following item from the Owosao Press:&#13;
The various farm exhibits by Mr*. Johu Stewart&#13;
at che fair attracted great attention both&#13;
from the fact that they were excellent and&#13;
from hi iug the products of womeu's farming.&#13;
Last spring she purchased the "Bockee farm,"&#13;
which lies within the city*limlta, which she,&#13;
and her daughters haye managed. They have&#13;
raised over 1,000 bushels of oats; over 12 acres&#13;
of corn, producing 12 varieties, of which 9 were&#13;
on exhibition; 5 acres of potatoes; 6 acres »of&#13;
rutabagas; aud over an acre of beans.- They&#13;
have loaded and unloaded 69 loads of hay,&#13;
mostly„with their own hands; they have gone&#13;
into the field dailyro work and ssythey enjoy&#13;
it. They had trreat pride in their tine exhibits&#13;
of sheep, swine, etc.&#13;
Nellie Day,of Ogden, Lena wee county, aged 17&#13;
years,waslound uead in straw stack afew mornings&#13;
ago. She was married December 25, 1882,&#13;
to a young man, with who she lived but&#13;
months, when he deserted her. Since then she&#13;
lived at home, and it has been remarked of&#13;
late that 6he Was at least imprudent In her&#13;
associations, and her parents have felt called&#13;
upon tockide her for her waywardness. She&#13;
became Intimate with one Charles Worden,&#13;
and a few nights since she was out all night&#13;
to a bowery dance, aud her mother on Sunday&#13;
severely censured her conducti sayinx B_he&#13;
would rather see her in her grave than to follow&#13;
a questionable life. The girl said, "You&#13;
can dig my urave as soon as you choose." Sunday&#13;
uigut she went uut and did ' not return,&#13;
but in the morning wao found lying on her&#13;
face on the straw stack. She had vomited,and&#13;
evidently had buffertd severely. The phytician&#13;
present said she dieo from the effect ol tansy,&#13;
and it was also fouud on post mortem that she&#13;
was enceinte, thus conormln^ her mother's&#13;
worst fears. Woraen ia a married man, and&#13;
of course 'severely censured. The girl was&#13;
kno*n to be poor, but was till lately regarded&#13;
as very upright in every regard.&#13;
l » M K O J T ^ U t t K K i V&#13;
Wheat—No. 1,white $ 77½ t$nft%-&#13;
Flom -.— 4 50 (&lt;$&#13;
Wheat, No. 2, red1 • • • 80&gt;£@&#13;
Corn ... .. 5a (^&#13;
Oats 25 &lt;&lt;aj&#13;
B a r l e y . . : : " " : , . . / . . . . . ; 7 7 . . . 55 (¾&#13;
Kyc — ' . . ; . . L . . 55 (uj&#13;
Clover Seed, $ bu 4 65 iff!&#13;
Timothy seed, $ bu'. 3 75&#13;
Dried Apbles, V lb&#13;
Peaches . •.&#13;
Cherries&#13;
Apples per bll 1&#13;
Peaches, yellow ft bushel. . . . . 3&#13;
5&#13;
13&#13;
10&#13;
25&#13;
Butter, |t »&gt; 17 r&#13;
Eggs 15 (&#13;
Potatoes „ . . 30 (&#13;
Onions, J! bbl, ,.^,. \. . . 1 75 (i&#13;
Honey 1 75 (j&#13;
Beans,picked... 1 15 y&#13;
Beaw, unpicked 1 50 (&#13;
Hay i 12 00 (i&#13;
S t r a w . . ; . . . 6 00 (&#13;
Pork, dressed, %} 1»0 6 00 (&#13;
Pork, mess new 18 00 (&#13;
Pdrfc/family 18 60 (&#13;
Hams 13%(j&#13;
Shoulders e ^&#13;
Lard M Q&#13;
Beef extra mess 12 00 C&#13;
Wood, Beech and il^nla . . . 5 75 (i&#13;
Wood, Maple ....- 8 25&#13;
Wofcd Hlckorv 6&#13;
*ROTI A F O B l l O JUr»$*&#13;
UBsPA.IBJNG.&#13;
The LonddnTlmeB publishes telegrams via&#13;
K&amp;££*r"and Massowah, giving (xtracts from&#13;
he diary of its Khartoum correspondent, Mrv&#13;
Powers, describing the f iegeof the latter olacc.&#13;
From April 28 to July 31 there was dally fighting&#13;
which friquently was terrific. Gen Gordon's&#13;
total loss during that time was 700 killed.&#13;
The general d&lt; spaired of receiving adequate&#13;
relief. The Negroes were the only troops who&#13;
could be relied upon. On April 27 the enemy&#13;
captured one of Gordon's armed steamers.&#13;
VICTORIOUS FRBNCH.&#13;
An official dlsp itch received irom Bacnlnh&#13;
states that three French gunboats while cruising&#13;
north of the Bacnioh river discovered a&#13;
camp of 3,000 Chinese regulars and Immediately&#13;
opened fire upon them. The Chinese were&#13;
totally unprepared to defend tbelr position&#13;
agaluBt an attack by heavy guns. They had&#13;
but slight brush works thrown up, which were&#13;
easily raised, leaving them fully -exposed to a&#13;
racking fire of grape and shrapnel from the&#13;
gunboats, which mowed down a large number&#13;
aud created a-panic in their ranks, causing&#13;
them to flee In all directions The French loss&#13;
is stated at 1 killed aud SI wounded, while the&#13;
Chinese loss is great.&#13;
ST, JOHN ACCEPTS!&#13;
His Letter to the Prohibition Nationa&#13;
Committee/&#13;
H i s Policy O u t l i n e d .&#13;
OLATUB, KS., September 26, 18S4.&#13;
Hou Samuel Dickie, Chairman of the Commit-1&#13;
tee, etc :&#13;
MY DBAU SIK—In formally accepting the&#13;
nomination for president, tendered to me by&#13;
the National Prohibition Convention at Pittsburg,&#13;
Pa., July 23, 1884, i take the oupurtunlty&#13;
to state that while the honor was neither sought&#13;
nor desired by me, yet It 1B greatly appreciated,&#13;
bestowed as It was, by a conveutiou composed&#13;
of delegates who, lu point of moral worth and&#13;
mental ability, were fully equal 11 not superior&#13;
to any political convention that ever assembled&#13;
lu this country. The war for the union Is over.&#13;
The rebellion has been crushed a:id African&#13;
shivery alwlished. Old issues have passed&#13;
away, and with them 6hould go old prejudice&#13;
aud M'ctional strife. To-uay produeteof iSorth&#13;
and South float In friendly relations in the&#13;
same channels, under the same flag, every secitouof&#13;
our country acknowledging alliance to&#13;
the same government. There never was a&#13;
time when our people could better afford to&#13;
and when it was more important that they&#13;
should stop and think than now. With manufactories&#13;
shutting down, banks breaking, merchants&#13;
falling in business, securities unsettled,&#13;
Western wheat selling at the home market for&#13;
forty cents per bushel, aud hundreds of thousands&#13;
of industrious mechanics and laboring&#13;
men, who are wllltug to work, but cau get&#13;
nothing to do, It seems to me that the time&#13;
has come for the people, who are the sourceof&#13;
all political power, to call a halt and stop&#13;
and thluk, for there must be a reason for this&#13;
condition of things. The little time aud space&#13;
the old parties cau spare after dealing out the&#13;
lull measuee of personal abuse and vilification&#13;
that_each thinks the other merits Is mainly devoted&#13;
to the discussion of the taria question.&#13;
Ignoring all matters that relate to tue moral&#13;
elevatioa- of the people. I am of the opinion&#13;
that the manufacturer who, by reason of the&#13;
depressed condition of business, has been comp-&#13;
Ued to make an assignment for the benefit&#13;
of hls.credltors, will not find relief in the agitation&#13;
of that subject now. Nor will the average&#13;
farmer become very enthusiastic over its&#13;
discussion, with his wheat not worth as much&#13;
In the bin as it cost him to produce It. The&#13;
amount recelved4&gt;y—tbe government for duties&#13;
on imports is less than $200,000,000 annually.&#13;
There are about 175,000 retail dealers of intoxicating&#13;
liquors In the United States each of&#13;
whom pays to our government $25, in consideration&#13;
of which sum they are permitted to&#13;
carry on their business lor a term of twelve&#13;
months. When we add to this the amount&#13;
paid by distillers, brewers and wholesale dealers&#13;
we find that the Interest of the government&#13;
in the manufacture and sale of intoxicating&#13;
liquors Is about $40,000,000 annually. This&#13;
traffic, sanctioned as it is by the laws of our&#13;
country," coits the pebple, at the lowest estimate,&#13;
$l,0ii0,0l0,000 a ye.»r, not to speak of the&#13;
destroyed homes, debauched manhood,poverty,&#13;
heartache, crime and corruption it produces.&#13;
This disgraceful business should be suppressed,&#13;
and the enormous sum of money that&#13;
under the present system is worse than thrown&#13;
away saved to the people, and thus an appropriation&#13;
would be given to the Industries of&#13;
this country that would enable us successfully&#13;
to throw our doors open wide to the competition&#13;
of the world.&#13;
The Republican and Democratic parties favor&#13;
the continuance of the manufacture and sale&#13;
of intoxicating liquors as beverages, while the&#13;
— a m a m r n m w ^ — — ^ ^ ^&#13;
supposed to have been committed by a farm&#13;
hand and his) partner, both of whom are missing.&#13;
SHIJTKMHKH STATBMKNT.&#13;
WASHINGTON, October 1.—The following ia&#13;
a statement of the public debt.&#13;
Four and one-half&#13;
per cents #250,000,000&#13;
Four ier cents 737,684,500&#13;
Three per cents.... 2114,521,250&#13;
Refunding certificates&#13;
270,750&#13;
Navy pension fund 14,000.W0&#13;
Total interest bearing debt.. .$1,206,476,500 00&#13;
Debt bearing no Interest—&#13;
Matured debt..$ 18,616 815 00&#13;
Legal tenders.. 346,7c&gt;9,356 00&#13;
Certltlcatcs of&#13;
deposit 15,915,000 00&#13;
Gold and silver&#13;
certificates.... 244,197,841 00&#13;
Fractional currency...&#13;
6,^77,261 00&#13;
Total without Interest 613 858,957 00&#13;
Total debt (principal) #1,838 9'2,272 00&#13;
Total interest $ 11,546,104 00&#13;
Total cabh in treasury 425,&lt;i3L3Jl 00&#13;
Debt less cash in treasury 1,425,467,1 )55 00&#13;
Decrease during September... 12,i 47,039 00&#13;
Decrease since June 30, 1S?4.. 24,583,180 00&#13;
Current Ha bill l i e s -&#13;
Interest due and unpaid $ 763,508 00&#13;
Debt on which interest has&#13;
ceastd 18,616,815 00&#13;
Interest therion 333,H 6 CO&#13;
Gold and silver certificates... 214,197,341.00&#13;
Uuited States notes held for&#13;
redemption certificates 15,94"», 000 00&#13;
Cash balance available ..'. 144,174,949 00&#13;
Total... .7. $ 4^5,03t,3;!l-O0&#13;
Available assets—&#13;
Cash in treasury $ 425,031,321 00&#13;
Bonds Issued to Pa2itlc railroads,&#13;
Iuterest payable hy&#13;
Uuited States, principal outstanding&#13;
64,023,512 00&#13;
Interest accrued, and not yet&#13;
paid 969.352 00&#13;
Interest paid by United States 63,099,504 00&#13;
Iuterest repaid by companies—&#13;
By- trausportation service,.... 18,S58,C«S 00&#13;
By cash payments—five par&#13;
- cenVnet earnlngg7 665,198 00&#13;
Balance of interest paid by&#13;
the United States 43,586,210 00&#13;
PRIVATE HIKRT'S XBfUXSI.&#13;
The will of the late Private Charles B. Henry,&#13;
of the Greelyexpedltloo.who was shot for stealing&#13;
provisions, was filed for probate in Cttcigr&gt;-&#13;
on the 3d Inst. It by written in' pencil on a&#13;
•crap of paper about the size of a postal card,&#13;
torn (rem a blank used in the navy. It la dated&#13;
at Camp Clay, Eilesmeras L u d , May 9,1S81,&#13;
and is as follows:&#13;
I, Ctarlea^-Henry, being of sound mind&#13;
and health, do hereby declare this to be my&#13;
last will and testament. All my property, pay&#13;
due and that may become d u e , ! btqueath to&#13;
my parents, brother and sisters now alive, to&#13;
be equally divided arnona them. Wm. Helms,&#13;
of No. 20 Sjuthwater street, Chicago, I appoint&#13;
as my executor.&#13;
CHAS. B. HENRT,&#13;
Private Fifth Cavalry, U. S. Army.&#13;
The will is wltuepsrj by LteutfF. H. Ktslingbury&#13;
and Private Joel Bender. A postal card&#13;
to Mr. Helms tells of the condition of the command,&#13;
saying seVen had already died and the&#13;
rest expected dtath.&#13;
Prohibition party demands that the same thall&#13;
be forever suppressed. Thus an issue is presented&#13;
to the people in which Is Involved the&#13;
protection of every home In the land. It is not.&#13;
merely a local issue, but'it is a"national as w&lt;dl&#13;
as a practical question, upon which a large and&#13;
respectable body of citizens, against whose&#13;
convictions party discipline, is powerless, have&#13;
eclded to vote, aud they will not be found&#13;
halting between two opinions touching this&#13;
matterptrut will work and pray anu vote&#13;
against this great eWuritlITt ~is~tirTvlm from&#13;
our land never to return.&#13;
The government Is 6imply a reflex of the individuals&#13;
composing it. If we want an honest,&#13;
sober government, we must have an honest,&#13;
sober people. But we cau never have an honest,&#13;
sober people so long as the government sacc-&#13;
{loiis that which makes its citizens dishonest,&#13;
drunken and corrupt.&#13;
' The declaration of principles, which 1 heartily&#13;
Indorse, aa net forth in the platform of the&#13;
-P-«&gt;hibUlon party is entitled to the thoughtful&#13;
consideration and earnest support of all good&#13;
citizens withuut regard to locality or former&#13;
political alllatlou. Our country ueeds an administration&#13;
that will rise above mere partisan&#13;
considerations, and lu the selection ot public&#13;
officials make uonosiy, sobriety and efficiency,&#13;
and not service to party, the test. It hhoulu&#13;
be conuueted, not lu the Interest of any par&#13;
tleular-seetlof^ party, race or color, but in the&#13;
Interest of the whole people. To accomplish&#13;
this all good citizens should promptly step to&#13;
-the front and be counted for the right, it ia&#13;
no time fcf" dodging. Moral cowardice will&#13;
never win, and surely never deserves a victory.&#13;
Then let us look to God for His guidance, and&#13;
fearlessly aud faithfully do our whole duty,&#13;
never doubting that He will take care of the&#13;
results.&#13;
Very truly your friend,&#13;
JOHN P. ST. JOUN.&#13;
...__ . • — :&#13;
SOUTHERN BARBARITY.&#13;
Trustworthy information has been received&#13;
from West Carroll parish, La., that a Negro&#13;
named Bob Henderson was arrested last week&#13;
Charirtd with horse-stealing. He was overtaken&#13;
by a party of whites and hanged by the way-&#13;
Bide, but was cut down before life was extinct,&#13;
and was then cut with asharp instrument from&#13;
his heels to the back of his head on both sides.&#13;
The sheriff corroborates the statement AS&#13;
the cutting, or attempted skinning, aa^fiome&#13;
people term it, he having examlnejl^che Negro.&#13;
Warrants have been lssued^jter^the arrest of&#13;
persons charged as pjaj$ieS""tb tbeTcrlrhe. The&#13;
horse which was allegeq to have been stolen&#13;
had never beea-dtsturbed, having heeaJJound&#13;
In its owacrs pasture. The sheriff has been&#13;
ver^-dfligent In bringing the perpetrators to&#13;
ustice. The victim is now at Floyd, and the&#13;
tears on his person corroborate the statement.&#13;
BBLTA'S BILLING.&#13;
Mrs. Belva Lockwood candidate for presinlenrorj^&#13;
nie^.om^n+8Tutrrage"ttclcet, has sen?.&#13;
.0 Gov. Cleveland a letter deploring the use&#13;
of scandal as a political weapon and suggesting&#13;
the propriety of a convocation of the several&#13;
presidential candidates at Wheeling, W._ Va.,&#13;
to adopt an armistice that "will strip the present&#13;
canvass of a recurrence of such undignified&#13;
proceedings and publications as would disgrace&#13;
a heathen nation. She refers to the good results&#13;
of convocations of European sovereigns,&#13;
and thinks such a one as she proposes would&#13;
tend to purify American politics and "afford&#13;
us all and opportunity to become- personally&#13;
acquainted.". Mrs. Marietta L. Stow, of California,&#13;
has written Mrs Lockwood, announcing&#13;
herself as the candidate of the woman tnff&#13;
rage party for vice president.&#13;
A FAMILY BUTOHEKD.&#13;
A special to tbe Omaha Republican tells of&#13;
the murder of Henry Percival, wife, Infant&#13;
child and a young man living ou a neighboring&#13;
farm about ten miles west of Fullertou, Vance&#13;
Co., Neb. The mother and child were shot In&#13;
bed. The father was found beside a haystack&#13;
with two bullets in bis body, and the body&#13;
partially consumed by hogs. The young man&#13;
waj shot in bed. Perclvlai's house was robbed&#13;
and everything of value in money and jewelry,&#13;
excepuhe wife's watch, taken. Th* dead is&#13;
- W H A T - ^ M I S S I S S I P P I P I L O T S A Y S .&#13;
Capt. D. M. Ri#gs, w h o is well k n o w n&#13;
a t N e w Orleans a u d a l o n g t h e Mississippi&#13;
river, says, " 1 h a v e been suffering&#13;
from dyspepsia for t h e last live y e a r s ,&#13;
a n d from b r o k e n rest, by severe "pains&#13;
in the bowels a n d kidnoys. I tried&#13;
every medicine r e c o m m e n d e d for theee&#13;
diseases, w i t h o u t success. At last I&#13;
used a bottle of B r o w n ' s I r o n Bitters,&#13;
which p r o v e d a perfect success in m y&#13;
c a s e . " It cures all liver, k i d n e y and&#13;
m a l a r i a l diseases.&#13;
_T0 THE UNMATCKTE;&#13;
An Association for Their Benefit&#13;
and What It Is Doinff for Them.&#13;
There are but few of the many unmarried&#13;
persona in Michigan who are aware that an&#13;
institution organized to assist Its members&#13;
upon entering the matrimonial state, has been&#13;
in existence the past year and a half.&#13;
This association 'is known as the Mutual&#13;
Marriage Benevolent Association of Marine&#13;
City, having been incorporated under the laws&#13;
of Michigan In 1883, it is the only Institution of&#13;
Its kind In the state. The association has paid in&#13;
benefits since August 2, $6,000, and Is "paying&#13;
severatthousand dn!'a. - \ mouth to its members.&#13;
The following 1.:----.- • L acknowledgement&#13;
are a few of the m_..j tue association are receiving.&#13;
M. M. B. Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—Please accept ray thanks for the&#13;
very prompt manner In which you have paid&#13;
my benefit, amounting to one thousand dollars&#13;
(11,000). This speedy settlement should&#13;
make the Mutual MaiTiai^e Bencvoleut Association&#13;
deserving of confi ience and patronage&#13;
of every unmarried person in the state ""&#13;
have derived a larger benefit bv being^member&#13;
of the association than I eve^alittcipated.&#13;
As an investment I hnowjjf^no tqual, and I&#13;
would advise every unararried person to joi§&#13;
the associatlonj^jawi hoping that success may'&#13;
continue tocKfwn the Mutual Marriage Asso*&#13;
ciatlon^alid that it may be the means of mak-&#13;
^ngiSAppy the hearts and homes of thousands&#13;
ot young married people, I am&#13;
Yours, thankfully,&#13;
GEO. MoHANIT.&#13;
MABINB CITY, Sept. 3,1883.&#13;
To the officers of the M. M. B. Association:&#13;
—Gentlemen—I take this opportunity of thanking&#13;
you for the promptness in which you have&#13;
paid ray benefit amounting to one thousand&#13;
dollars. I am very much pleased with the&#13;
manner in which my claim h^s been settled,&#13;
and wishing the association every success, 1&#13;
remain Very truly yours,&#13;
MRS. ROSE MCDONALD.&#13;
MARINE CITT, Mlcb., Sept. 10,1884.&#13;
1 am in receipt of benefit on my certificates*&#13;
and am much pleased with__my investment.&#13;
rThTB "benefit will be the means" of paying off&#13;
the mortgage on my home, leaving me out of&#13;
debt and a balance to put In the bank for a&#13;
rainy day. Thanking the association fof what&#13;
It has done for me, I remain&#13;
Very truly vours,&#13;
ORVILLE w. MCDONALD.&#13;
All unmarried persons, of either sex should.&#13;
Join. Write for circulars explaining the plan.&#13;
Address the Secretary, R. McNEIL,&#13;
Marine City, Mich.&#13;
• • j&#13;
'- Admiral Courbet is claimed as an&#13;
Irishman, hi? father being a Cork man,&#13;
who, on emigrating, changed his name&#13;
from the Irish, ($orbet to the more Gallic&#13;
Courbet.&#13;
i B a r b e d ' W i r e .&#13;
If »6u hare terbed wire tenoe*, kern Veterinary&#13;
r&gt;rl&gt;o]h»lYeinTour»tabls«. ltiatheb«strcn&#13;
wounds of al I kinds. fOo and 11.00 oans at At&#13;
or br mail. J, W, U OXiB 4 OOH Blikok Bir«r f&#13;
&gt;b«st remedy for&#13;
S&#13;
V*&#13;
&gt; ^&#13;
*S&#13;
/ S /&#13;
\&#13;
HEinOItlES O' T H E r A S T .&#13;
I eanna think o* itber days,&#13;
Or Mr&gt;g tbe tonus o'yladness:&#13;
Na merrie tbocht can drive awa'&#13;
Tbe phatatly shades o' sadrjeee.&#13;
Ilk bird upon the leafy tr&lt; e,&#13;
Ilk memt-nt fleeting fart,&#13;
CVK to aiy mind «nd jeers me wl'&#13;
Tbe nuih'rks o' the past.&#13;
Na rrux'kluE bird, like that I bear,&#13;
Soft warbliug on yon tree,&#13;
In bonnle 8cottle siLge, and yet&#13;
It sadly brings to tne&#13;
The bitter thocbts o' ither sears,&#13;
Whtn lu that auld lame byne,&#13;
She sant; to me tbe songs BO deal,&#13;
Her little hand In mine.&#13;
I ken the flowers *re bloomln' now,&#13;
That bloomed so sweetly tben ;&#13;
I ken tbe pebbly brooklets flow&#13;
Still thro' the silent glen;&#13;
1 ken the birds arc building nesta&#13;
Amid the yellow whin;&#13;
It gaes mti tufn an cauld as death,&#13;
That all Is not as thin.&#13;
Tbe blushing daisy blooms the sauK'&#13;
The mosey &gt;&gt;raes adornln';&#13;
The golden 6un, still frae the East,&#13;
Proclaims the eomln' mornln';&#13;
But she, who in those happy day?,&#13;
Made life so sweet and fair,&#13;
Now sleep* b.-neath tbe mossy braes,&#13;
An' left me lone and sair. "&#13;
The mockla' bird's sweet son? to day,&#13;
Brocbt tear-drops to my '«e,&#13;
With thocbts o' ither, brighter days,&#13;
For iver gone frae me.&#13;
We sware our love should last thro' life,""&#13;
By ilka burn and tree;&#13;
And 'ere I wad lorget my troth,&#13;
I'd lay me down and dee.&#13;
-- [i£. A, Cutler, in the Chicago Inter-Ocean.&#13;
MARRIED FOR FUN.&#13;
BY ALFUEI) CRAVON.&#13;
"What has been planned for to-morrow&#13;
evening?" cried a chorus of voices,&#13;
as a small company of young people,&#13;
camping out among the New Hampshire&#13;
mountains, were about to separate for&#13;
- t h e n i g h L&#13;
The question brought two or three&#13;
early birdsrwho^were hastening t o their&#13;
tents, back among the re«t of the company&#13;
to discuss some new pleasure or&#13;
sport for the next evening's entertainm&#13;
e n t , Severat~plan3~were suggested;&#13;
but none of them met with the approval&#13;
of the. whole party.&#13;
"Mr. Carlson you have as yet suggested&#13;
nothing. What do you think it&#13;
would bo pleasant to do to-morrow&#13;
night?" asked one of the young ladies.&#13;
" I , Miss Mary P" answered the young&#13;
man addressed, who until this moment&#13;
had been leaning indifferently against&#13;
a tree. "1 am going to the village tomorrow,&#13;
and probably will not return&#13;
until tbe following day.&#13;
The faces of the whole party fell,&#13;
while it was evident from their tones of&#13;
regret that Mr. Carlson was a great&#13;
favorite in camp.&#13;
"Mr. Carlson must have found some&#13;
modem Maud Muller, who offers attractions&#13;
much superior to ours, els*)&#13;
he would not make such frequent journevs&#13;
to the large metropolis of Medville."&#13;
This remark was mauV~in a&#13;
very sarcastic tone by a 3 oung lady who&#13;
was stirring the dying embers of tbe&#13;
camp tire, thereby causing a shower of&#13;
sparks to fly arronnd her.&#13;
' T h e blood mounted high into the&#13;
reaching out hi3 hand to brush off a&#13;
spark which had fallen on the young&#13;
ladie's dress, Mr. CaWson said in a low&#13;
tone: "Miss Thurston, what3 matters it&#13;
to you if 1 go or s t a y ? "&#13;
But before his question could be answered,&#13;
Carlson's sister cried petulantly:&#13;
"Oh, friends let him go- He told m e&#13;
he had a business appointment, and Ar- [~&amp;ni\ Yhen'^e"the ''other "but all to no&#13;
avail.-""At this moment the minister&#13;
whom Mr. Carlson had secured, came&#13;
out of his tent, and the young couple&#13;
took the places which had been pre&#13;
pointe. They had -t&#13;
since babyhood, and although, up to&#13;
this time, each had guarded the secret&#13;
jealously from the other, yet it was&#13;
evident to most of their friends that the&#13;
two were dearer to each other in their&#13;
quarrels than many other people in&#13;
their friendships.&#13;
The party now separated for the&#13;
night, elated at the prospect of the&#13;
next evening's entertainment, but that&#13;
the jest would become reality nover entered&#13;
their thoughts.&#13;
When the party breakfasted the next&#13;
morning Mr. Carlson was already on&#13;
his way to the village. It was- agreed&#13;
that part of the day should be spent in&#13;
preparing a place for the moc&lt;k ceremony.&#13;
Miss Thurston was the gayest&#13;
of the gay, and peals of morry laughter&#13;
awoke answering echoes from rock and&#13;
cliff. Only once or twice, when alone&#13;
in her tent, her cheeks paled as she&#13;
wondered what Arthur Carlson would&#13;
do, for he had looked determined the&#13;
night before.&#13;
" W e l l , " said Miss Thurston to herself,&#13;
"your word is given now, Margaret&#13;
Louise Thurston, and a Thurston&#13;
was never known to break their&#13;
word."&#13;
In the late afternoon her friends came&#13;
to dress her for the wedding. They&#13;
draped her in some fluffy, -white dress,&#13;
which filled out tho girlish white form&#13;
to the best, coiled tne luxuriant brown&#13;
hair around her head, and placed a&#13;
bunch of simple mountain flowers at&#13;
her belt. Nover before had she looked&#13;
so beautiful nor ao defiant. A commotion&#13;
outside the tent announced Carlson's&#13;
return, and Miss Thurston, surrounded&#13;
by laughing friends, went out&#13;
to meet him.&#13;
"Maggie," said her cousin J o h n ,&#13;
striking up to her angrily, "this farce&#13;
has gone tar enough. Carlson is certainly&#13;
demented. Ho has brought a&#13;
full-fledged parson witu. him without&#13;
even mentioning that this is all jost.&#13;
You must put a stop to it at once, for it&#13;
is a downright shame to trifle with such&#13;
serious things to this extent."&#13;
At these, words Miss Thurston grew&#13;
very pate, but her friends laughed and&#13;
"said": "Uf course he is not a real minister,&#13;
J o h n Shepherd. This is only p a r t&#13;
of the joke."&#13;
"Yes, he is a real minister," was the&#13;
reply, "for I heard him preach in the&#13;
village only last Sunday."&#13;
At this moment Mr. Carlson came&#13;
up. He, too. was pale, but. his eyes&#13;
burned with an intense tire.&#13;
"Miss T h u r s t o n . " he said, " I was in&#13;
terrible earnest when'I said what I did&#13;
last evening. In proof pf which 1 have&#13;
procured license and minister; Will&#13;
you be my wife?"&#13;
Those who had been most forward in&#13;
urging on the joke were now most&#13;
oarneat in , dissuading their friends&#13;
against such a highly improper proceeding,&#13;
but Carlson's intense eyes&#13;
wore upon Margaret's face, and his&#13;
voice said : "You and I have lived for&#13;
fun all our lives ; let us now bejuarried&#13;
for fun." ' ~&#13;
The very demon of recklessness took&#13;
possession of Miss Thurston's, spirit,&#13;
if Carlson had asked her thore, before&#13;
them all, to' m a r r y him for love, she&#13;
would have turned oway, shocked and&#13;
gr4«ved—but for fun; yes, she would&#13;
Hare as much as he, and she immediately&#13;
stepped to Carlson's side, remarking&#13;
in-a laughing tone, "Yes, Mr.&#13;
Carlson, I will marry you for fun,"&#13;
"Margie, this cannot go o n - ^ W D a t&#13;
will your father say and^feeTT" and&#13;
her cousin stormed upland down before&#13;
the tents, ^appealing first to one&#13;
own hair falling&#13;
about her shoulders in great profusion.&#13;
He had not seen her HO before, and&#13;
some groat mental emotion kept him&#13;
from noticing the look of glad surprise&#13;
which passed into his wife's face as she&#13;
perceived who her visitor was. Mr.&#13;
Carlson checked the impetuous words&#13;
which rose to his lips, and spoke in a&#13;
voice of strained coldness. "Margare&#13;
t , " he said, advancing to her side, " I&#13;
desire a few moments conversation if&#13;
it will not inconvenience you."&#13;
The light died out out of the bright&#13;
eyes at these seemingly cold words.&#13;
"You have occupied my time so little&#13;
of late that I can give you a few&#13;
moments without great inconvenience,"&#13;
she replied, without rising. "You and&#13;
1 made a great mistake, Margie," her&#13;
husband continued, sadly. " I take my&#13;
due share of the blame; but even I&#13;
would never dared to do this if 1 had&#13;
not thought—but no matter what I&#13;
thought. We were married for fun, of&#13;
course, and now we do not find so much&#13;
fun as we anticipated. I have been&#13;
speaking with your father. He -vill&#13;
not hear to a divorce, nor is there sufficient&#13;
grounds for one if we desired it.&#13;
But ho agrees with me that you and I&#13;
cannot live in this mutual state of unhappiness.&#13;
I would give anything if I&#13;
oould undo the past, but that is impossible.&#13;
It is necessary that one member&#13;
of our film live abroad. I consider the&#13;
necessity very opportune, and shall&#13;
have all my arrangements completed&#13;
by next week to sail for Europe. This&#13;
is not so hard for me, for I am a man, but&#13;
for you - G o d forgive me for what&gt;—''&#13;
"You mistake, Mr. Carlson," interrupted&#13;
his wife, icily. " I t is tho easiest&#13;
and most appropriate thing that could&#13;
be done."&#13;
Arthur looked down at the figure before&#13;
him. T h e darkness and the wavy&#13;
masses of hair hid her face, else he&#13;
surely would haye seen the white lips&#13;
and burning, tearless eyes.&#13;
" I do not blame you Margie,'^ he&#13;
said, gently, but sadly. " I only wonder&#13;
that you can bear me here at all. I&#13;
crave" your forgiveness and I pray God&#13;
that I may not utterly blight your happy&#13;
l i f e "&#13;
Arthur waited a moment as if to hear&#13;
one word of farewell, but the figure before&#13;
him never moved orspoko. Then,&#13;
gazing intently at his wife, to imprint&#13;
upon his mind a picture that he never&#13;
forgot, he turned and left the room.&#13;
All night long Margaret sat in the&#13;
little, low chair whero Arthur had left&#13;
her. Only once she stooped to pick up&#13;
^a crushed flower, with which ho had&#13;
been playing, and pressed it passionately&#13;
to her lips.&#13;
* * * * * ••* *&#13;
Two years now passed away, and the&#13;
following winter found J u d g e Thurston&#13;
and his daughter under the gentle&#13;
skies of Florence. The J u d g e was&#13;
suffering in health, which some said&#13;
was due to Margaret's unlucky marriage.&#13;
However that was, the two were&#13;
Jvery_dear_tp. each o^her and were ramly.&#13;
man lying there, sick unto death, was&#13;
her husband. At last the proud spirit&#13;
was humbled, and she confessed w h a t&#13;
she had kept so jealously guarded in&#13;
her own breast so long. "Oh A r t h u r , "&#13;
hhe cried in her agony, " O my husband,&#13;
only forget the past and try to live for&#13;
the future. God helping me, I will&#13;
yet win your love."&#13;
The white face on the pillow lit u p&#13;
like the countenance of the dying who&#13;
see heavenly visions. Tbe excitement&#13;
of the moment gave Arthur back bis&#13;
strength. Raising himself up on his&#13;
elbow, he lifted the bright head beside&#13;
him until he could look into the lovelit&#13;
eyes. In one moment they read the&#13;
mistake of those years in each other's&#13;
face. Each had loved, each had misunderstood.&#13;
"Great God! is it possible " b a t&#13;
the momentary strength forsook the&#13;
frame of the sick man, and he fell back&#13;
0fc his pillow like one dead.&#13;
The doctor, still much confused, had&#13;
waited in the hall, from which he was&#13;
ily summoned to the sick room,&#13;
or many days the flickering flame&#13;
of life burned low, but it was fed from&#13;
the fountain of love in the breast&#13;
which now so often pillowed the weary&#13;
head. The kind old doctor worked and&#13;
watched as he had never done before,&#13;
and he and ^he landlady held many a&#13;
whispered consultation in the hall about&#13;
the turn which affairs had taken.&#13;
At last death was conquered. But it&#13;
was not for many weeks—not until Arthur&#13;
was strong enough to ride out by&#13;
the sparkling blue sea—did they two&#13;
speak of the pa,9t. Then -when they&#13;
had put it away* forever Arthur drew&#13;
his wife very tendei ly to him and said:&#13;
"Our love was born so long ago that&#13;
it almost had no beginning; and now,&#13;
thank God,-it will never know an endin%-&#13;
j /&#13;
S o m e A n e c d o t e s a b o u t O a t s , /&#13;
Coutler-Journdl. /&#13;
Gilbert White, in his "History/ of&#13;
Selborno," gives an instance of a/ cat&#13;
whose kittens had been recently destroyed,&#13;
carrying of a little helpless leveret&#13;
that had been brought to the hc;use,and&#13;
nurturing and bringing it up. / And he&#13;
remarks on the singularity oj so fero*=&#13;
cious a genus as the "lion of/the micb,"&#13;
as Linnaeous calls it, showing tenderness&#13;
toward an animal wtnch might be&#13;
looked upon as its natural f o o d . T h e .&#13;
fable of Romulous ana: Remus being&#13;
suckled by a she wolf is not more marvelous&#13;
than a tiny suckling leveret being&#13;
nurished and c'aerished by a cat.&#13;
Hero is another anecdote of White's,&#13;
from his "Observations." He says:&#13;
" A boy had takenabxLe-yaiingsquirrels&#13;
from their n e s t / a n d these small creatures&#13;
he put in/the care of a cat which&#13;
LIPID'S P H I L O S O P H Y .&#13;
W. H. BICKBXS.&#13;
Hetk npt for glory, sigh not for wealth,&#13;
When the true bliss of life Is found only In&#13;
health&#13;
And that wise disposition to taste and enjoy&#13;
Every heavec-&lt;.ffered blessing, misgivings destroy.&#13;
If the cup is not full, never stop to lament&#13;
What it lacks—SI! it up with the wine of&#13;
content.&#13;
Oar happiness turns on tbe use that we make&#13;
Of life's opportunities. Every mistake&#13;
Is a step on the stairway that Jeada to success,&#13;
If instant Improvement the past shall redress.&#13;
Oft, to those who have striven, the effect of defeat&#13;
Is the logical cauce of a triumph complete;&#13;
Since the noble, from failure, the secret may win&#13;
Of solving the problem of what might have been.&#13;
There are pleasures enough on each pathway&#13;
we tread&#13;
To dilute evtry bitter mlbfortune we dread.&#13;
Were half of the nurture and care, to be brief,&#13;
Bestowed upon them we bestow upon grief.&#13;
gloom, though tbe&#13;
a million&#13;
What is midnight's deep&#13;
sunlight it bars,&#13;
When the heavens grow bright with&#13;
of stars? /&#13;
The weariness day brines to toll, in its close(&#13;
la the nectar of nature that sweetens repose.\K&#13;
The dark vapor of battles—see It sullenl y rise&#13;
A dot on the radiant blu n of the skies;&#13;
Though~born of tbe cannon and bearing the cry&#13;
O; stricken humanity, where Death hurries by-&#13;
It meets the pure suillght, remorsefully blends&#13;
With Its beams, as it melts into tears and descends&#13;
To cool the brows burning, to refresh the&#13;
""•" ' parched""earth;"&#13;
That were 6corched with the breath of despair&#13;
at its birth.&#13;
There's a life-work record for all to perform,&#13;
Some labor in sunshine, some toll in the storm-&#13;
But 'tis better to st ek honest worth to acquire^&#13;
With a.plan to pursue ard a hops to inspire,&#13;
Thau to drift on tho wave,, without hand at an&#13;
/ oar— -&#13;
/As a boar, broken lf/ose, slowly floats from the&#13;
store.&#13;
And we'll find, if we bravely stem the swlftniBhingtlde,&#13;
When we catch tbe first glimpse of the fair&#13;
other side,&#13;
The storms once encountered, the perils passed&#13;
through,&#13;
Will but add to the rapture of the prospect in&#13;
view!&#13;
BURDETFE'S BUDGET.&#13;
C o l l e c t i o n of S h o r t R o m a n c e s&#13;
f r o m E v e r y w h e r e .&#13;
seen apart.&#13;
Several days after their arrival in&#13;
Florence Margaret met her landlady in&#13;
the hall, who, with a tray in her h^adT^&#13;
was just coming out of t h e ' l o o m&#13;
opposite. Stopping to inquire if&#13;
any ono were ilL the kind but g o s /&#13;
sipy little landlady began to tell&#13;
brokenLtatian of the young foreigner&#13;
-rrad como to her a few weeks/be-&#13;
/,&#13;
wh&#13;
thur will never break an appointment,&#13;
no matter how trivial, useless,&#13;
perhaps, for a wedding or funeral.1 ^ - - -&#13;
"Well, a funeral wo will not have,&#13;
even to kefp your charmiageompany,&#13;
A r t , " cried a boyish voice. " W e might&#13;
have a weddingr" the owner of the&#13;
voi^p conliatfed; " I wouldn't mind being^&#13;
pafty to that, myself," and the&#13;
&gt;eaker looked mischievously a t o n e of&#13;
the ladies, who colored deeply and&#13;
_walked away in seeming anger. '&#13;
"Here! here!" cried all the gentlemen&#13;
laughingly, "who will volunteer&#13;
to have a wedding on Carson's account.&#13;
The boyish voice spoke again:&#13;
"No one loves you enough, ArL, to&#13;
bef Carried for you but me, and I suppose&#13;
I can't be a wedding all by myself.&#13;
" I will help you out of that, (fothttft-&#13;
J o h n , " gaily cried Miss Thurston: " I&#13;
have been 'meditating marriage for&#13;
some time, and this is the first opportunity—&#13;
Well," she said, rather hesitatingly,&#13;
"This is the first opportunity&#13;
which I have cared to e m b r a c e . "&#13;
"But, Margie," replied her Cousin&#13;
J o h n , as if greatly perplexed, "you see,&#13;
not anticipating this event, and never&#13;
having been eaeouraged by you to consider&#13;
myself a candidate for such honor,&#13;
I^iave spoken to another girl upon the&#13;
some subject." -&#13;
Every ono joined in tho laugh at Miss&#13;
Thurston's expense but Arthur&#13;
Carlaon. -"Miss -T4iuwton^"-Jio--saidr&#13;
when the laugh had subsided, "you&#13;
have been jilted; allow mo to offer you&#13;
reparation. If it is only tho opportunity&#13;
you care to embrace, a change of&#13;
groom can mako but little difference.&#13;
If you will be first party to the contract&#13;
X will agree to be second, and will re-/&#13;
turn to-morrow evening, with all necessary&#13;
preliminaries, in time for 6ur wedding&#13;
" /&#13;
••You are certainly veiy kind, Mr.&#13;
Carlson," replied MissThurstoh, naughtily.&#13;
. "People who are so generous seldom'&#13;
expect their generosity to be accepted,"&#13;
but I shall surprise you by&#13;
agreeing to your proposition."&#13;
"1 was in "earnest when 1 made the&#13;
proposition, Miss T h u r s t o n . "&#13;
"And I'm earnest when I accosted it,&#13;
Mr. Carlson,"&#13;
These two were ever at, sword's&#13;
pared for them wtien a mock ceremony&#13;
had been in view.&#13;
A silence fell over the little group&#13;
as the solemn words of the beautiful&#13;
Episcopal service fell upon their ears,&#13;
Then rang out the responses: From the&#13;
bride, low and defiant; from the groom,&#13;
clear and determined.&#13;
"That ye may so live together in this&#13;
life that in the world to come ye may&#13;
have life everlasting.&#13;
Margaret never forgot t&#13;
In coming days she repeated them over&#13;
and over to herself until she alaiost&#13;
prayed ito tfave thorn blotted out from&#13;
her memory.&#13;
y the Time the ceremony was&#13;
ished'the audience had concludedthat&#13;
the affair had been planned beforehand&#13;
in secret, and that they were the dupes&#13;
of the joke. Accordingly, nerer was&#13;
company gayer than theirs t#at night,&#13;
and the merrymaking was continued&#13;
into tho morning hours&#13;
The camp broke up yi a day or two,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Carlson/parted from their&#13;
friends in apparently/high spirits. Arrived&#13;
at their home, where the news&#13;
had preceded them, the culprits were&#13;
received with real forgiveness, for, undoubtedly,&#13;
the match was a splendid&#13;
one. Judge Thurston's family had&#13;
been i n r o y r r and-honored in the com&#13;
munity/for years; while Mr? Carlson&#13;
was the junior member of a large and&#13;
weaithv firm dealing in rme imported&#13;
weeks passed after their return&#13;
in which Arthur saw but little of his&#13;
wife. J u d g e Thurston's summer residence&#13;
was a number of miles from tho&#13;
city, and the gentlemen could only run&#13;
down for over Sunday. On those days&#13;
the two woro as ttncomfortable as possible&#13;
in each other's presence, and&#13;
avoided being left alone together.&#13;
One quiet Sabbath evening Arthur&#13;
came out of tho judge's libraryLmth:_a&#13;
ore, and who shortly after had /been&#13;
taken ill with a fever, and cow was&#13;
very ill , indeed. She said t h e / y o u n g&#13;
man had no friends, and that / h e good&#13;
doctor often came away locking very&#13;
grave indeed. After that / l n y many a&#13;
dainty boquetor basket of/luseious fruit&#13;
found its way to the sick/man, while the&#13;
landlady often told th^r young gentlem&#13;
auTdfthe taIT7sad-TT — -&#13;
story, as follows: "A-cat had kittens&#13;
\A which were destroyed, and at the same&#13;
lime a. hon that had only hate nod one&#13;
young duck, and this was brought into&#13;
the kitchen and placed in a basket before&#13;
the tire. Soon " afterward it&#13;
was&#13;
missed, and after a long search&#13;
was&#13;
sent the gifts.&#13;
;ed~Tady wt&#13;
One/day, as this&#13;
b~h~ad&#13;
same&#13;
her room prepared&#13;
the doctor returnto&#13;
his patient. The&#13;
toward her hesitatand&#13;
knocked at the door,&#13;
said a;low voice. . Enterlady&#13;
stepped but&#13;
for a drive, she&#13;
ing from a visit&#13;
doctor advanced&#13;
ingly.&#13;
"You are7 an American, Miss?" he&#13;
said at la&#13;
"YeSySir.&#13;
M a r g a r e t answered so pleasantly that&#13;
the debtor continued with more assurnrajf-&#13;
at the same time waving with his&#13;
hand to the room he bad just left:&#13;
There is a young gentleman in there,&#13;
iss, who is not long for this world.&#13;
He is an American, also. It is very&#13;
hard to die so. Miss—so great a distance&#13;
from one's people, and with no kind&#13;
friends."&#13;
"You are r i g h t , " Margaret answered&#13;
gravely. " I t is iodced hard. My&#13;
father spoke yesterday of going in t o&#13;
see the gentleman. Ho is out just at&#13;
present, but if I may I will go in&#13;
n o w . "&#13;
After a moment's absence the doctor&#13;
returnee and conducted Margaret into&#13;
the room. The curtains were closely&#13;
drawn, and coming from the light&#13;
into tho darkness she was blinded for a&#13;
moment. Not so with the sick man.&#13;
Lookiug up to greet his visitor he uttered&#13;
a sharp cry f.nd the one word&#13;
"Margie!".&#13;
Margaret stood a s if stunned, and&#13;
had lately lost her kittehs, and found&#13;
that she n u r ^ ' d and tended their, with&#13;
the same assiduity as if they had been&#13;
her own f&gt;ft:ipriug. So many people&#13;
went t o / e e the little squirrels suckled&#13;
by a c a t / t h a t she became alarmed for&#13;
their safety, and therefore hid them over&#13;
the (/eiling, where one died." Both&#13;
these stories are very remarkable, but&#13;
some yeas ago in Eogland a still more&#13;
startling instance of assumed maternity&#13;
as witnessed by a writer who gives the&#13;
tire. found in a cupboard with the cat curled&#13;
around it, uttering the peculiar note&#13;
of complacency in which cats talk to&#13;
their young. She continued to pay it&#13;
the greatest attention, occasionally&#13;
holding it between her paws and wash-&#13;
Tng it, and th^n~Thelin^iOus^rstermbther'j&#13;
trouble began when it took to going&#13;
out of doors; that was mure than&#13;
her anxiety could bear. . The duck&#13;
would watch its opportunity to get out&#13;
of the door, but no sooner did she become&#13;
aware of its absence than she&#13;
would run out, catch it in her mouth&#13;
and bring it in again, tho duck pretesting&#13;
with wings and legs and voice against&#13;
this unnecessary anxiety on tho part of&#13;
its strange parent. This maternal solicitude&#13;
was at last the cause of the&#13;
An able and conscientious" editor out&#13;
West calls his reporters " F i g u r e s , "&#13;
because they won't lie.&#13;
What will the candid"ale3 do when&#13;
the state and county fair season is over?&#13;
The next president can't always h i 7 e&#13;
the big pumpkins to draw-Sudiences&#13;
for him.&#13;
The grate question; Who shall build&#13;
thw fitv?;.A1sn: Who aKall ho pripilogoH&#13;
to,ptrke it, being kindled?&#13;
When a poulfd~masreF~divercharges iT&#13;
dollar for shutting a hog up in a pound&#13;
is that ani-m-al fees-ance in office?&#13;
Brethren, we should say so.&#13;
Some of tho re'ligLtrs" papers in Massachusetts&#13;
are discussing the .question:&#13;
"Should a minister wear mustaches?"&#13;
We think it is his duty to society to&#13;
wear so much as that, at least, a n d in&#13;
the great cities where society is more&#13;
coldly artificial and formally exacting&#13;
he might, with commendable worldly&#13;
wisdom, add a vest and a p a i r o f trousers,&#13;
especially as the season advances.&#13;
"I will stay," he sane, "and sing fctylav,&#13;
While slumber seals your eye*;&#13;
And the deep still night will ehaae the day&#13;
Away from star-lit skies.&#13;
I will wase and sing till the morning star&#13;
Shall glow in the eastern sky—"&#13;
Bnt be didn't the dog woke up just then&#13;
And s i.ote him hip and th|gh.&#13;
"Alpheus" wants to know if we don't&#13;
think whisky helps the digestion" Certainly&#13;
it does, Alpheus, certainly it&#13;
doee. ,You drink lots of whisky and&#13;
it will improve your digestion wonderfully.&#13;
But most men find they can digest&#13;
as well without it. So, if you don't&#13;
wan't to die just yet, Alpheus, you leave&#13;
whisky alone.&#13;
Mr; Bergh defends the intelligence of&#13;
the domestie-eatv and says it can—be—&#13;
trained to "fetch and carry" just like a&#13;
dog. Mr. Bergh is correct. The cat&#13;
will carry off the canary without any&#13;
A . &lt; 1 .u * •• ' 1 .v . J training, and if there is anything t h a t&#13;
d u c k s death, font_ was supposed that, 1 w i u fetch a coop of young chickens&#13;
then, advancing rapidly to the bed sh£i essayed her dangerous task, but, over&#13;
kneeled down beside it and buried h e ^ o n i e «ther_by heat or smoke, she nov&#13;
faeo in tho pillows. The poor doctor&#13;
with a confused looked turned and^&#13;
hastily left tho room. Thero was a&#13;
moment's si illness, broken only by&#13;
Margaret's.low sobbing. The form be&#13;
fore her seemed to bo the wreck of a&#13;
onco strong and beautiful niahftood&#13;
The sick m%n was Arthur Carlson. He&#13;
raised hi» thin, wasted hand and tender&#13;
ly stroked the bright locks on the pil&#13;
low beside him. " P o o r little Margie."&#13;
pale face-and Mt l i p V A s ^ o n ^ r r g ^ ^ e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ - " ^ ^ will soon be lree&#13;
stairs wiih faltering steps ho sought his a ° w .&#13;
wife's room&#13;
"Come in,"&#13;
Then, Margaret never know how, she&#13;
J forgot everything connected with the&#13;
ing_he saw Margaret sitting.in a low past, she only remembered t h a t the&#13;
worried by its continually running out&#13;
of doors, she determined to place it&#13;
where it could not get out. She therefore&#13;
carried it to a bedroom and buried&#13;
it beneath some clothes, where the poor&#13;
little thing, unable to extricate itself,&#13;
was smothered."&#13;
Only a fewr days since a London paper&#13;
told a story which is. but another&#13;
illustratiou of the affection of the cat&#13;
for her helpless kittens. * At tho burning&#13;
of a music hall at tho east end of&#13;
London, a favorite cat belonging to the&#13;
proprietor was seen soon after the outbreak&#13;
rushing through the smoke towards&#13;
the stage. She was soon back&#13;
with a kitten in her mouth, which she&#13;
laid at tho feet of her master. Again&#13;
and again she ventured into the blinding&#13;
smoke and hissing steam, and each&#13;
time she was successful in rescuing one&#13;
of her little ones A fourth time 'she&#13;
e^ returned, and subsequently her&#13;
charred remains were found by the tircmenNamong&#13;
the ruins. Yet her memory&#13;
will )rye in story as an instance of the&#13;
devoted attachment of the mothers of&#13;
her race.&#13;
been&#13;
ring&#13;
A single sunflower stalk has&#13;
found in Georgia upon which&#13;
growhig 118 distinct flowers, and&#13;
tucky is credited with a staT&#13;
105 flowers.&#13;
It is noticeable th*trfhe girls who run&#13;
off with coachjwftH are pretty well along&#13;
in yearjs^^There may be a method in&#13;
thinrtwness-. Chicago Herald -&#13;
quicker than a lean one-eyed cat, it&#13;
hasn't yet been discovered.&#13;
"And what of this present t i m e ? "&#13;
cried tho parson, earnestly, smiting the&#13;
pulpit. " W h a t of this time in which&#13;
we live? What about the Now?" " N o w , "&#13;
said t h e ^ o o d ecitor, suddenly aroused&#13;
from his comfortable slumber, " n o w is&#13;
the time to make up clubs." And then&#13;
the deacons clubbed together and set&#13;
him out&#13;
ROBF.KT J. Bl-RDETTK.&#13;
A HUM ORE, P A . , Sept. ^3.&#13;
A m p h i b i o u s I n d i a n s .&#13;
N\ Y, Commercial Advertiser.&#13;
According to the report «f the Washington&#13;
Antropological Society, th*&#13;
habits of the Innuits, an Alaska tribe of&#13;
Indians, are as nearly amphibious as&#13;
they can be. Their usual home is the&#13;
" k y a c k , " a boat made of skins, in t h e&#13;
management of which young children&#13;
are proficient. This peripatetic di&#13;
ing is always run ashore w h e n a ^ i o l e n t&#13;
storm comes u p ; and by tuj»trigitupori&#13;
its side, tbe heads, a M e a s t , of all the&#13;
family are shelt^peC As to the other&#13;
p a r t of t h e i w d f , it seems to be of little&#13;
accoun&gt;trj the Innuits, as far as its exto&#13;
a pelting, rain is concerned.&#13;
i * »&#13;
It has been figured that in St. Louis&#13;
there is one copy of a daily paper printed&#13;
to every fpur people; In N e w York,&#13;
one. paper to a little less than two'persons;&#13;
in Ghu/ago. one paper for e w r v&#13;
t w o inhabitants. '&#13;
1&#13;
/&#13;
. • • • ^&#13;
/- s&gt;v&#13;
«pe&#13;
J&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
A m A K B O R .&#13;
(From the HegiAter,v&#13;
W i n a n s &amp; Stafford h a v e b o u g h t a&#13;
s w a w p f a r m J u Pittsfield, u p o n w h i c h&#13;
: t h e y e x p e c t t o r a i s e n o ejid of celery&#13;
p e x t y e a r .&#13;
T h e c o n c e r t b y tjie G e r c u a n m i l i t a r y&#13;
b a n d M o n d a y n i g h t &gt;yas t h o r o u g h l y&#13;
flnjoy&amp;bje, T h e feop a t t h e r o o m s of&#13;
t h e 3#Bfcboyen Geiiajiffverein afterwar&lt;&#13;
jU was a fcUfbtfo} feature.&#13;
R e v . T h o a . S t a l k e r , a weU k n o w n&#13;
M e t h o d i s t m i n i s t e r w h o h a s m a d e his&#13;
Jiome i n t h i s city d u r i n g a season of&#13;
p o o r h e a l t h , h a s n o w e n t i r e l y recovere&#13;
d . H e h a s a call to fill t h j p u l p i t of&#13;
,tbe A m e s M. E . c h u r c h , in N e w Or*&#13;
^ e a n s r - t f r e l e a d i n g M e t h o d i s t c h u r c h of&#13;
fthe c i t y . I t js u n d e r s t o o d t h a t he will&#13;
acceBC&#13;
H e n r y Winsjiow, of t h e .second wai d,&#13;
h a d a v a l u a b l e chest of tools stolen&#13;
f r o m J o j j n T a y l o r ' s h o u s e on S o u t h&#13;
D i v i s w n s t r e e t T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g ,&#13;
, T h e chest w a s found i n t h e Pres-by-&#13;
-jterian c h u r c h sheds S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g , '&#13;
Jt&gt;roken open a n d a b o u t t h i r t y dollars&#13;
j v o r t h of tools gone,&#13;
J u d g e T h o s . M, Coojey, of t h i s city,&#13;
h a s b e e n a p p o i n t e d by R a i l r o a d Comm&#13;
i s s i o n e r F m k , o f ^ J e w i Y o x k Cily^ t o&#13;
fill t h e v a c a n c y in t h e b o a r d of arbit&#13;
r a t i o n o n r e l a t i v e r a t e s o n dressed&#13;
b e e f a n d live c a t t l e t o t h e s e a b o a r d occasioned&#13;
by t h n r e s i g n a t i o n of Charles&#13;
t h i s c o u n t y 42 y e a r s , a b o u t 20 y e a r s&#13;
b a v i u g been spent in this t o w n s h i p .&#13;
Xke w a s a w o m a n w h o c o m m a n d e d the&#13;
r e s p e c t a n d esteem of ail who k n e w&#13;
h e r .&#13;
LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER.&#13;
We will sell L u m b e r at t h e following price- if the next tiO d a y s .&#13;
Hill S t a l l , i n c l u d i n g i s ft No. 1, per&#13;
Hoof Hoards, per t h o u s a n d feet,.&#13;
H a n i L u m b e r , per t h o u s a n d feet.&#13;
S h i p p i n g f u l l s , per t h o u s a n d tee?,.&#13;
F e n c i n g per t h o u s a n d teft&#13;
Sidin&#13;
A .&#13;
l u n g 1 ,n m b e r p e l t.hoiisaii&#13;
•j- n e t i hiiii^and feet&#13;
1 f . - t .&#13;
1*()STTIVKLY»N0 CllKDIT.&#13;
L. HOYT, Manager, Pinckney,&#13;
X X X IN inch S h i n g l e s , per t l e a r a n d&#13;
D K X T K R . , C l e a r Hulls j s inch S h i n g l e s , per t h o u s a n d , . .&#13;
From the Lt'mkr. . ' C'ull S h i n g l e * !S ineh, p e r tIn.u-and,&#13;
T h e .Jesse Scott farm, in t h e lnwii , ^ , , \ L a t h , per t b o u - g n d tee!&#13;
ship of Dexter, has been sold to . 1 . .ltd- i \ 0 2 Latli, per th mi s i ml feet,&#13;
ele, J r . , for $H,0U0. Mr. Scott will&#13;
s p e n d t h e w i n t e r in Iowa.&#13;
H o m e t a l e n t , u n d e r t h e auspices a n d&#13;
for t h e benefit of t h e Ladies' L i b r a r y&#13;
A s s o c i a t i o n , will soon p u t a d r a m a on&#13;
t h e stag«*.&#13;
At t h e s k a t i n g contest a t t h e rink&#13;
last T h u r s d a y ' e v e n i n g t h e r e were seve&#13;
r a l ^contestants a n d some tine s k a t i n g&#13;
d o n e . T h e p r i / . e a urlass toilet set&#13;
was .awarded to A l i c t'uiiuilo.&#13;
Mr, K d w a r d M/unvu, of N o r t h Lake,&#13;
b r o u g h t to t h e Leader olh'cea curio&gt;-'&#13;
ily, on M o n d a y last, the like of . which&#13;
we n e v e r saw a n d never heard ol before.&#13;
I t w a s a perfectly formed pig,&#13;
with t w o exceptions - w h e r e t h e apert&#13;
u r e s should he e x t e n d i n g from the&#13;
o u t e r surface ot t h e nose u p into the&#13;
t h o r a x , no a p e r t u r e s a p p e a r e d ; a n d&#13;
g r o w i n g o u t of t h e forehead t h e r e prot&#13;
r u d e d as perfect a n e l e p h a n t ' s t r u n k&#13;
a* e v e r \v;is. •iaunT ev-en to t h e auxstril in.&#13;
t h e end, reaching- d o w n to t h e pig's&#13;
nose. T l n T p i g was dead w h e n tound&#13;
by Mr. U r o w n . i t should be t u r n e d&#13;
over to t h e U n i v e i a i t y Museuni..* -&#13;
;i.iM&#13;
t h o u s a n d feet,&#13;
1.2D.&#13;
o.SO.&#13;
4.1)0.&#13;
14.DII.&#13;
, ..s.r.o to n.oo&#13;
,. 1 o.OO t t ) l 7.r.t).&#13;
LLUD.&#13;
Itl.lMl to 1 (.(.«).&#13;
.2().00 to oO.OO.&#13;
11.00 to 20.DO.&#13;
.Just received a fine line of&#13;
H K L K C U L O A D I N C i ( U &lt; N S ,&#13;
-TMK&#13;
Mich.&#13;
LARGE STOCK. NE&#13;
THKOW'3 RELIABLE IS STILL&#13;
PIEPER RIFLE AND SHOT GUN&#13;
AND MAGAZINE RIFLES,&#13;
H V c i m the hi'Ht jjnttW of SCOUTING POW,&#13;
DKu'unil uit kiuiiai of Amiuunltlon ami *)H&gt;rtlpg&#13;
&gt;'ood* ^i'Hi'1 ull} •&#13;
ROLLER SKATES,&#13;
POCKET CUTLERY,&#13;
CLOCKS, WATCHES,&#13;
JEWELRY, AND&#13;
SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
'MUSICAL AND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
Ail kinds of r e p a i r i n g n e a t l y arifl&#13;
p r o m p t l v done.&#13;
R L S t ' K C T r T L L Y ,&#13;
B A R T O N ^. &lt; ; A M P I S K I ; L ,&#13;
West Main S t r e e t , l M m k n o ) , M i c h i g a n .&#13;
^- fr%££E1&#13;
l ^ l i i L E SELF-CURE,&#13;
' F r a n c i s A d a m s , J r . , ot Boston.&#13;
3 R I G H T O N .&#13;
' M a r r i e d a t St. P a t r i c k ' s c h u r c h .&#13;
/ T u e s d a y , Sept. 20th, \884, b y R e v . F r .&#13;
D o h e r t y , M r . J o h n M e h a n a n d Miss&#13;
M a r y M c L a u g h l i n , b o t h of P l e a s a n t&#13;
^Vattey. ; : ~~ — ' :&#13;
Sheriff A x t e l l c a m e _ d o w n from&#13;
H o w e l l M o n d a y n i g h t a n d took F r a n k&#13;
A o r a m s , t h e a l l e g e d r i n g - l e a d e r 0 f t h e&#13;
y o u t h f u l bapd of m a r a u d e r s , i n t o cus-&#13;
"tody," u p f a r a c o m p l a i n t of S a m S t a r k s ,&#13;
p h a r g i n g A b r a m s w i t h s t e a l i n g a harness&#13;
f r a m his b a r n some t w o o r t h r e e&#13;
y e a r s a g o . J l i s g r a n d f a t h e r , M. L .&#13;
H o o k e r , took t h e first t r a i n for H o w -&#13;
ell t h e n e x t m o r n i n g a n d bailed him&#13;
O^t of j a i l .&#13;
P . M o u n t a i n A b r a m s d i e d a s u d d e n&#13;
a n d s o m e w h a t m y s t e r i o u s d e a t h Sund&#13;
a y . I t is n o t k n o w n t o be a fact, b u t&#13;
'every c i r c u m s t a n c e l e a d s t o t h e s u p -&#13;
p o s i t i o n t h a t he c o m m i t t e d suicide, by&#13;
f a k i n g m o r p h i n e . H e h a d on several&#13;
pecasions m a d e r e m a r k s w h i c h m i g h t&#13;
Jiave been i n t e r p r e t e d a s s h o w i n g a n&#13;
j n t e n t o n h i s p a r t t o kill himself, b u t&#13;
b i s family t h o u g h t n o t h i n g of it. He&#13;
b o u g h t a q u a n t i t y of m o r p h i n e in this&#13;
village F r i d a y p r e v i o u s , H i s a g e was&#13;
&amp;7 y e a r s .&#13;
T h e s k a t i n g r i n k w a s o p e n e d to t h e&#13;
p u b l i c M o n d a y for t h e first t i m e . In&#13;
(lie e v e n i n g t h e r e w e r e over t h r e e&#13;
h u n d r e d people p r e s e n t , a n d t o say&#13;
t h a t B r i g h t o n people lack a n y of the&#13;
e n t h u s i a s m of sister t o w n s on t h e&#13;
s k a t i n g q u e s t i o n w o u l d be a libel on&#13;
t h e good n a m e of h e r c i t i z e n s . E v e r y&#13;
S O U T H L Y O N .&#13;
From the Excelsior,&#13;
T h e new hotel will', open u p&#13;
for business next week.&#13;
J o h n J a c o b u s _jjs-^jiiildiii^ a&#13;
on West L&amp;trfty street. H e is tollowi&#13;
n g ^ o i t f t h e good advice to "secure-the&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
X I S T - *&#13;
at-iUr A&#13;
...^Ji*.*.1*1 'I ."'1&#13;
(n"&gt;w rvP.i ri&#13;
Lour M,nii&#13;
!';.viir'r. j-;rt-.Tir!;itl!)ti of one of th&#13;
•A;\ 'v.'-*-I'll! «V I C U lists !M tlHlUJL&#13;
i".. i- :' . ..,v ni' X;&lt;i-r"uslJfbiUtfft&#13;
it i . IIAJJ • .s\* &lt;i ml Dccaif.&amp;etil&#13;
Ittl'ittlusculf' ,.!:v-•'.nuefr '''.l&gt;riim,'|st_s uttufllllti...&#13;
Adfirfisr r;&gt;. WARO &amp; CO. Loutsiant. Mo.&#13;
-iTBR&#13;
\(^\\&lt;\'&#13;
cage before v'ou catch t h e bird."&#13;
T h e g r o u n d is b e i n g b r o k e n for&#13;
u H o b " K n a p t o n ' s n e w two-story hr.ck&#13;
b u i l d i n g , a n d t h e w o r k will he rapidly&#13;
p u s h e d u n t i l completed. Still thegood&#13;
work goes on. W h o will be the&#13;
n e x t ?&#13;
T o m G ' e n n e n b e c a m e " 2 1 " on Mond&#13;
a y , a n d t h i r t e e n # i r l s laid a surorise&#13;
on h i m , and each,, one l o i k c d m.itrim&#13;
o n y with both eyes. Tern 1M- a&#13;
good c o n s t i t u t i o n a n d will proctitis;&#13;
pull thrnnjth .&#13;
DRY GOWS AND GROCEHIES,&#13;
&gt;-&amp;£!) E\1^RYTHTNa~LN THE&#13;
LINE OF GENERAL&#13;
~"TTERCHATf&#13;
D.Wr41rCafflagiCD.&#13;
E. A. MANN. East Main St., Pinckney.&#13;
BUY THE CELEBRATED T H E S T t J D E B A E E B Buggies and Carriages&#13;
ore unrivaled fot JtaATn^JSiREyaTH, E L E -&#13;
OAKCE.EASEOFIIIDINO ANDRUNNINO. Send&#13;
for new illuBtrated cntiUoRUO, or call and&#13;
poo our \rork at o u r CHICAGO KEPOSIT011Y,&#13;
233 STATB STBKET. WO make all&#13;
Studebakcr Wagon,&#13;
With PATENT CAHT, a n d SAXDAOE PATENT&#13;
Charley Daly fell from t h e T . ,v A.&#13;
A. h a n d car while in motion S a t u r d a y ,&#13;
STKKL, 8 K U S ; Tucss AXLK; PATENT OV.VLKI)(&#13;
U:I&gt;TIUE ; woodwork, afteryears of seasoning,&#13;
KOAKID IN JU-.II.INO OH, ;_ Skeins of LAKK vln^H af CARRIAGE WOKK._from Jlhe_FISERT&#13;
Manufacture a Iarg* variety &lt;f&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, *C.,&#13;
After the most approved rtesiftns i t t h e v e r y l o w w t&#13;
prices couBlgtunt with good •workmanship.&#13;
— - 5 0 , 0 0 0 v o h . l o l « « — •&#13;
of our manufivoturo »ro now in use In t M « » n d&#13;
fnroi«n countries and Bttoat the excelletiori of&#13;
our goods by the universal Ri»tl«fartion which they&#13;
give.-Every Tehirle Is WABHAMED.—SpecUi&#13;
sttentloa if HI be giren to mtll orders.&#13;
CATALOGUES FREE.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
E. Fifth St^ CnWert St. and EgflMtoa Art.,&#13;
CINCINNATI, 0 .&#13;
p a i r of skates a v a i l a b l e w e r e i n use,&#13;
a n d h a d t h e r e been a s m a n y more&#13;
I h e y w o u l d h a v e found o w n e r s in less&#13;
f.han n o t i m e . - T h e r e w e r e m a n y fine&#13;
s k a t e r a p r e s e n t from D e x t e r , P i n c k n e y&#13;
a n d o t h e r n e i g h b o r i p g t o w n s ^ ^ w h o&#13;
s h o w e d o u r h o m e t a l e n t y t h f t t ^ a n be&#13;
4 o n e b y a little prji£t*ce,&#13;
rrom&#13;
FOWLERVILLE,&#13;
i the Review,&#13;
" M o r t . L o w r y w a s a r r e s t e d on&#13;
W e d n e s d a y for s h o o t i n g a p e t dog&#13;
o w n e d *' b y 0 . D . G h a p m a a , —&#13;
one wheel passing over his hack beari&#13;
n g a p r o p o r t i o n a t e ".weight yyS. a huntone&#13;
t o n . Charley is on t h e ' s t i v e t s&#13;
a g a i n w a l k i n g as s t r a i g h t as a l a m p&#13;
post.&#13;
E r v i n g Field c a m e o u t from Dakota&#13;
last week T u e s d a y , only to claim as- his&#13;
o w n Miss A d d i e P i n c k n e y . They&#13;
were m a r r i e d a t A n n A r b o r Tuesday&#13;
a f t e r n o o n by Rev. I'epe.- T h i s was a&#13;
real s u r p r i s e on E r v i n g ' s associates,&#13;
b u t all will u n i t e with t h e Excelsior in&#13;
"wisTnntr t h e h a p p y , a m p l e a blissful&#13;
life t o g e t h e r . T h e bride a n d ^romu&#13;
will r e t u r n to D a k o t a in a. short time&#13;
w h e r e t h e l a t t e r has m a d e a comfortable&#13;
home,&#13;
A reception was t e n d e r e d to ex-Gov.&#13;
A l p h e u s Fidch o'n iSaturday alterumm&#13;
from t h r e e u n t i l six, by tlie citizens of&#13;
A n n A i ' b u r ' o n T h e dec,; si on n t ' h i s ~s ih&#13;
b i r t h d a y . Hetweeu 2UU a n d -Itn; p i l o t s&#13;
called d u r i n g the e v e n i n g to pay their&#13;
respects to the- v e n e r a b l e old gentlemail,&#13;
w h o ' h a s t h e r e v e r e n c e a n 4 love&#13;
ot-a-H^'ho k n o w - h i m . H e is still hale&#13;
'and h e a r t y , with a k i n d smile for a l l .&#13;
brov, Feleh h a s filjled t h e h i g h e s t offices&#13;
in t h e state, h a v i n g Ijeeu elected gove&#13;
r n o r in l»4b, which position he&#13;
r e s i g n e d iu 1M47 to accept t h e United&#13;
S t a t e s s e n a t o r s h i p . An e l e g a n t luncl:&#13;
was served to t h e callers.&#13;
OF *\YAGt»:;K. ' iS^ud for huw Cutaloguo 8outh Gaud. Indi&amp;&amp;k.&#13;
PINCKNEY PLANING MILL&#13;
W e a r e now pr cpa r e i 1 tOo &lt;(I!O&#13;
Planing, Resawing, al! kinds of plain and fancy&#13;
Bracket-Sawing, Carving and Turning&#13;
In wood ; a n d will soi&#13;
r e p a i r i n g . W e a r e al&#13;
F a c k i n - , Mill l i . m r d .&#13;
F a i n t M. \{&gt;&#13;
n he able io do t u r n&#13;
•o a g e n t s tor W . S.&#13;
FeltS, Jloofilig&#13;
in iron a n d g e n e r a l m a c h i n e&#13;
n-.' Asbestos M a t e r i a l s , K n g i n e&#13;
t iiiiiit, inside• -initl o u t s i d e L i q u i d&#13;
t! O&#13;
i;ii'!i, lioof ;md F i i \ - p r o o f F a i n t s .&#13;
rLNCKXEV PLANlXfi MILL&#13;
N e a r Cirand T r u n k d ) o p o t , ' F i N C K N F V , M I C H .&#13;
Estey Oraan Co.&#13;
BraJtlEboroYt&#13;
#&#13;
M r s . E s t e r M a r r , of H o w e l l , died on&#13;
S a t u r d a y , a g e d 8 0 y e a r s , o f c a n c e r&#13;
—£&amp;e is a n old a n d respected, r e s i d e n t of&#13;
t h i s p o u n t y .&#13;
D r . J , A . B r o w n , wife a n d " t h e i r t w o&#13;
sons, E a r n e s t a n d T e m p l e , expect t o&#13;
t a k e t h e i r d e p a r t u r e o n M o n d a y for&#13;
F l o r i d a , w h e r e t h e y w i l l r e m a i n d u r -&#13;
i n g t h e w i n t e r . •&#13;
' Tjje f o w l e r v i l l e r o l l e r s k a t i n g r i n k&#13;
will tfe c o m p l e t e d t h e first of n e x t&#13;
w e e k . ' T h e b u i l d i n g is p r o b a b l y o n e&#13;
of t h e finest ripk-s i p t h e s t a t e a n d t h e&#13;
p r o p r i e t o r , J l r . J3. A* Sheldon, h a s&#13;
s p a r e d 9 0 e x p e n s e i n t h e e v e r y detail.&#13;
flhe b u i l j l i n g is 4 0 feet w i d e b y 120&#13;
feet in. l e n g t h a n d is w e l l a n d s u b s t a n -&#13;
t i a l l y b u i l t ,&#13;
K M r s . F a n n i e h w o r t h i n g t o n , wife&#13;
pf fl. 8 . W o r t h i n g t o n , died o n S a t u r -&#13;
j l a y V a g e d 70 y e a r s . S h e is o n e of t h e&#13;
t h e pld pioneers, h a y i n g resided in&#13;
i . . . • . . . .&#13;
• F L A L N F I E L D .&#13;
From our foTft'^pipriili'rit.&#13;
— M r . a n d Mrs. Erhrr'ftrnley " r e t u r n e&#13;
from t h e i r bridal t r i p last* S a t u r d a y .&#13;
T h e y visited Mr. l i r a l e y ' s relatives&#13;
in D e t r o i t .&#13;
Chas. C h i p m a n a n d wife c o n t e m -&#13;
p l a t e r e m o v i n g to Illinois.&#13;
• E. S. W a s s o n h a s gon« to O t t a w a ,&#13;
K a n s a s , w h e r e he i n t e n d s g o i n g into&#13;
b u s i n e s s — a n d will move his lamily&#13;
soon if all is favorable.&#13;
Miss N e t t i e Cornell, w h o has been&#13;
v i s i t i n g friends in Flaintield, r e t u r n s&#13;
to h e r h o m e in Y p s i l a n t i this week.&#13;
T h e D e m o c r a t s a n d G r e e n b a c k e r s&#13;
b a d a pole r a i s i n g F r i d a y Afternoon&#13;
last. A l t h o u g h the G r e e n b a c k p a r t&#13;
of t h e pole w a s inclined to kick&#13;
aga-inst fusion ( b r e a k orr) it was finally&#13;
g o t i n t o position all right!" T h e&#13;
chjpf s p e a k e r was M r . H e n d e r s o n , of&#13;
M a s p n , w h o s e e l o q u e n c e pleased all&#13;
his h e a r e r s ; w h e t h e r he convinced a n y&#13;
ot t h e " e r r o r of t h e i r w a y s , " r e m a i n -&#13;
eth for election*day to tell. H o w a ^ '&#13;
f-.bly followed by F . H . W a r n m ^ o f&#13;
F o w l e r v i l l e a n d Uennis:...-HtTelds, of&#13;
H o w e l l . -v&#13;
— v m e a tlio vrczl E s t e y o r t h e&#13;
wortl Crcrsoi ia risntlencd, tlxcy&#13;
each cu-~cci tl;o c.licr, L&gt;O y'.^-Siy&#13;
lmov/:\ c~-Z a rcjiulcir oro t"io in*&#13;
Pivolot.crn i_+ c^wl;-- l-io lv/-&#13;
•words are reminders of enjcyme~t&#13;
in miUtitudc3 of hemes. lUuctrated&#13;
Catalogruo mailed £reo t o a l l&#13;
applicants. .&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOR THE CAMPAIGN.&#13;
W« wUl tend the WEEKLY FREH&#13;
PHE8S until RfUr •lection for only W&#13;
CENTS.&#13;
* fid raw&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
X &gt; e t r o l t « M l o l x .&#13;
HARRIS REMEDY CO.,8I«iL^ai&#13;
• ^ ^ ^ ^ " " ™ I MTg ChtmUUMifHola Prop*! ol&#13;
|PR0F.HAaRl8' PASTILLE REMEDY&#13;
\ou»» I n »nd olbcri.wbo taVtt&#13;
from Korvoua aid Pbjil'al Dtblli(&#13;
7, Pr&lt;-m»iure Kxbiui'lon tod&#13;
their mtflj gloomy coimequeDOMt&#13;
_. „ . , »f« quickly and radically cortd.&#13;
The Remedy li pot np In boici. *o. 1 (laiilng a month), M.&#13;
Ho. 2 {enough to efle« a cure, unless itneTereca«e»,&gt; l&amp;i HoTt&#13;
(lasting three months), ¢7. Sent by mall In plain Hrappera.&#13;
Dlrrrtlnni fur Ling arrnmpany each Box. Pamphlet Seicrfc&#13;
MBl ULU fllfiM ana modu alaun WU|, ttajecl on ipsIleaUai&gt;&#13;
DO YOU KNOW THAT&#13;
L O R I L L A R D S CLIMAX&#13;
F I ! I E&#13;
GRAND OPENING!&#13;
I a m pleased t o a n n o n n e e t h a t I h a v e j u s t s t a r t e d a g e n e r a l store a t&#13;
With HiMlTin TIIL.', !•&lt;- tm' b.«sty I* tlie p o r c t t ;&#13;
is ni'vtT iuluiti-Viiii'il wiili ^liK'nst', harytee-, moliifrJi'.-&#13;
i, or ;itiy (1 'l.'trriou^ inuTcilionts, v A t h e ,&#13;
cn^i' with many other tobiuvoH. v-*&#13;
LOltlMi.Ul'll'N KOSK LKAP&#13;
CUT T O B A C r o&#13;
iri tilt*o iniulc' of t!u&gt; -tlin'st wtock. mid for artvmatic&#13;
clicwiti^ tjiiality in nri'oiui to none,&#13;
L O K I L L A K D ' s ' NAVY ( L I P P I N O S&#13;
take llrst riink u^ H solid (luvai)U' smoking tobacco&#13;
\vliriw*&gt;r intiodiK'i'd.&#13;
L O R I L L A K D ' S FAMOUS S N U F F S&#13;
havt' bei-n us.yl foroviT \-Z\ years, itnd are sold t o&#13;
ntanrerextent thim any otliejs.&#13;
LIVER&#13;
M v line consists of a larire a n d v a r i e d a s s o r t m e n t of&#13;
Dry Goods. Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
E v e r y b o d y call ajul e x a m i n e o n r stock of ^ o o d s . I T i ^ h e ^ t ))rice paid for&#13;
¥&gt;\sf?\\\i A N D K G C r S . K v e r y t l i i n g .sold a t ro^k I x . t t o m p r i c e s .&#13;
D o n ' t f o r g e t ; - '&#13;
- P. CUNNINGHAM. Gregory. Mich. ,&#13;
TpjUffJI&#13;
Seeoxe Hattltky&#13;
action t o the L l r a r&#13;
and relieve all bll«&#13;
~~,/mm troubles.&#13;
fnxi^TigiUUe; t7s9iipla2&gt; ?ric«26oS^yi9ncgllU.&#13;
A |Or. £&lt;aBurge.&#13;
^/tn:(XJK8w&gt;K TO&#13;
Indlwmti ofthe Bloc — _ ^ ^ , - „ „ . - » . — ^ , ,&#13;
loipct«eT. Ofgaato WMkraa «N«rrkM, SnUlkltTlSd&#13;
&gt;«marial AffeetloM, gclnntlfte treatment; t t h i a d i i m&#13;
wmeclici. Dcformltle* Trv*t^. G«ll or writ* for Hit erf&#13;
que«tton§ to bo antwered by tho#o dealriug trettmeot by mail, (Pervrat larerfat rVoa Raptnv ahnald •*»« tkotr U*nm,\&#13;
»ad Itara MaHlilac to tlH&gt;lr adranUc*. ItbMta tarwaj&#13;
iMrrva Dr. C. h. LaftARdK, Pm't aid PayaMaa ra Chart*&#13;
C«alral Ipd. A Hnr*. laNtrtufe, 090 Lonal at., 81. LoaU, • • .&#13;
%iscca»or to Or. Butts' nUpwuanr. lUUbUahad to xi&#13;
t n A.i^isrEss i&#13;
T have now on hand a larger nnd hwtter st*&gt;ck e»f&#13;
Hurni'Hrt Hjitn cvev hefon; together with a yrantl&#13;
""lIAKJIESS GOODS !&#13;
AIHO wiii.krt ami linnlu-^.—la p&gt;od an the host and&#13;
eliea)) aw tlie ehvupcxt. Carriage trinimlnij; and&#13;
repairing neutlylpid promptly done. hue for&#13;
ytMiraelf, ^&#13;
FAYK'ITI-: 1 J K A S 0 N ,&#13;
- ^ STocKUtnoGE MICHIGAN&#13;
^ p "&#13;
"?*?..&#13;
, f&#13;
llAKTii:^r\KK TIIKCKIES&#13;
S o m t » luti-nvdinyr Ideas lioni a Ureal&#13;
' (^'olo^'ist (»11 Kai'tlupuiki's.&#13;
-rjpy--- o n L l s t ,s ,,f the recent earthquake?"&#13;
said 1'roi". Alexander YVinlieli&#13;
in answer to an iii'jairy of u&#13;
lieeister reporter; "w*4lr it wmilil—IAU&#13;
nretty diiliewlt to define the eaust-s.&#13;
'Tucv were in general the same as tin&#13;
.utilise* of other earthquake*, and&#13;
.those are not very well uiuierstood&#13;
ky scientitic men. As everyone&#13;
k'lows, there have been various theo-&#13;
'ries on the subject from the tune ui&#13;
the ancients to'the days of Sir Humphrey&#13;
Davy who .supposed that various&#13;
gaseous substances exerted an&#13;
.enormous pres.sun; on the interior&#13;
walls of the earth."&#13;
" i n recent times the more piausable&#13;
theory lias been propounded&#13;
that earthquakes arc caused by move&#13;
, ments of the molter interior oi Uii&#13;
earth. In the process ol cool iug iroin&#13;
•a molten state, an earth eru.t would&#13;
first be formed. As the process continued&#13;
the time would come when the&#13;
interior would lose its heutn more&#13;
rapidlvthan the exterior and would&#13;
therefore contract more rapidly. As&#13;
' t h e nucleus within tended to shrink&#13;
away from the crust, the latter&#13;
would tend to collapse upon the nucleus&#13;
to prevent the formation ui a&#13;
vaeum. The movements oi the crust,&#13;
thus caused would be earthquakes.&#13;
These mh'bt result in fractures oi the&#13;
.. ^artivcriwt through which water&#13;
would find its way to highly heated&#13;
je.do.us, and, heeoming converted in&#13;
^*r&#13;
WE CAN OFFER YOU ^g&#13;
I2ST SUMS! THAN WERE EVER GIVEN IN PINCKNEY.&#13;
W E HAVE THE LARGEST STOCK,&#13;
WE HAVE THE BEST ASSORTMENT,&#13;
WE HAVE THE LATEST DESIGNS.&#13;
Royal T H F R F W E R E M O R E O F T H E S E STOVES SOLI) LAST , ¾ ^ 0 ^&#13;
T H A X A ( ) T H E R M A K E O F R O U N D S T O V E S . A N D 1 H K \&#13;
G I V E T H E V E R Y B E S T O F S A T I S F A C T I O N .&#13;
Oak&#13;
to steam, would exert an enormous&#13;
pressure tending to cause still other&#13;
movements.-'&#13;
i lMv own theorv? i e s , l nave a&#13;
theory which I have put forth in my&#13;
'World-Life,' and . I have been collectin&lt;&#13;
r wltat-dttta I-httve been abjejo&#13;
I 2 S T C O A T , S T O V E S " W E M A T T E T H E&#13;
/&#13;
l t C t l n j ^ m u t t v...,.,— _ __ .&#13;
about the earthquake of September ID&#13;
to see/how they tit my theory. Observers&#13;
have made, up catalogues of&#13;
many thousands of earthquakes and&#13;
it has been found that they occur&#13;
most frequently when the •moon is&#13;
nearest the earth; also more frequently&#13;
when the «un and moon are in conjunction&#13;
or pulling together than&#13;
when they are at quadratures or pullu&#13;
anule.-t—Jaif—WilliiM))&#13;
OR MADEBYSHERMAN. S. JEWETT &amp; CO.,&#13;
-A.isri&gt; THEWHIGHARE&#13;
GOOD HEATERS,&#13;
ling at njl,- - €J&#13;
Thompson has shown that the attraction&#13;
of the moon is so enormous&#13;
that a tidal elevation would be produced&#13;
even if the earth were at solid&#13;
globe of steel. Much more, then,&#13;
would the moon produce a tidal elevation&#13;
if the earth is a ma:* of softened&#13;
or molten matter. The effect oi&#13;
the attraction would be to draw the&#13;
earth out into a prolate spheroid, the&#13;
end" of which would be coi^taotly&#13;
changing as the earth revolved.&#13;
This would necessarily produce a&#13;
great deal of disturbance of the&#13;
earth's interior, and the -movements&#13;
.resulting from these changes m the.&#13;
relative'positions.of the masses would&#13;
-«m*iux* eiirlbqAiakes, The_ motion&#13;
iuight be a gradual elevation and&#13;
subsidence like that of the lDth, or it&#13;
might be by hitches on account of the&#13;
rigidity of -the -ear-a^mst."&#13;
"These earthquakes would he ;U'-&#13;
compavied by rubbing and friction&#13;
which would devclope enough heat to&#13;
fuse rocks and form lava. Perhaps a&#13;
large part of the internal heat may be&#13;
thus i n d i r e c t ^ . - ^ w w i t e d - h y lunar&#13;
attraction."&#13;
"My theory has not been before the&#13;
scientitic world long enough to be&#13;
criticised and I don t know how it&#13;
will be received I t seems, to me,&#13;
however, to be based on&#13;
iug. The other theory rests on the&#13;
antecedent theory thai the earth •••ha*&#13;
*'molten interior, while mine needs&#13;
no such hyp •thesis." ,. , 1 A ~&#13;
"Yes, the earthquake ol Sept. lWth&#13;
. haa strengthened my theory. Tt occurred&#13;
at the time of new moon,&#13;
when the sun and moon were on the&#13;
same side of the earth. That of Aug.&#13;
10th in New York was also close on&#13;
the time of new moon." _&#13;
'•Was there a rumbling noise?&#13;
•Well, testimony (litters. There would&#13;
nuturally have been some, and I eertainlv&#13;
heard a rattling noise myseli;&#13;
^ t might however, have been caused&#13;
by a rattling in the house but 1 think&#13;
And the most ECONOMICAL Stoves in use.&#13;
us and get .the benefit of low prices.&#13;
Our expenses are light and we can sell goods cheap. Trade with&#13;
BROWN PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
Wlu'h von visit or leave New YiSrk Citv Hiive&#13;
Hiiir^airt'iOxnri's^ji^i'and ('urriaizt' Hire and sdnn&#13;
at tin* Oram! Union Hotel opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one mil&#13;
lion dollar*, reduced to $1 and upwards per day,&#13;
Kuropean plan. Klevntor. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the best. Horse cars, stairs and 'elevated&#13;
railroads to all depots. Families can Use better&#13;
for less money at the (irand Union Hotel than&#13;
any other lirst class hotel in thecitv.&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion,&#13;
Premature Decayf&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An PO-paire cloth-lxvind liook of Advice t o ,&#13;
Younnor Middle-iiued Men,with prescriptions&#13;
for Self-treatmmt bv a Regular I'hvMclan.&#13;
' i i — — — . , • k—«j&#13;
CALL AND GET&#13;
l o r n r i i - i r « " i i i i i i ' - i i i " » &lt;• " ' S " " " . . , . , . . . - . . . . . . S p WLM T C O C g uii CW I r W\ B&gt; m gtiim pTsC I ciApfded orefs stw o ihrao oca&gt;&#13;
T. W I L L I A M S &amp; C O . . MILWAUKEE, Wi* Michigan Buggy Co.&#13;
BEFORE BUYING This Horse - * ^ - * " ^ •*• ^ ^ IS TEIXIS3&#13;
KALAMAZOO,Mich. ELSEWHERE.&#13;
BROS.&#13;
Wholesale Manufacturers of all kinds of Open and&#13;
Top BUGGIES and ROAD CARTS. Agents wanted&#13;
everywhere. Write for catalogue »ad pricoliat.&#13;
FINS WOBK A SPECIALTY.&#13;
A lovely picture is on exhibition in&#13;
Ne»v York, entitled "The Rising of&#13;
the Tide." It is an ocean view, not a&#13;
picture of a sleepy husband Kettinjjr'up&#13;
at dawn to light the kitchen fire.--&#13;
Pittsburg Hulietin.&#13;
"Jones is a miserly man. but is very&#13;
pleasant," said Hrown. ."Yes," replied&#13;
•Smith, "but it is niiscrliness that nukes&#13;
him pleasant.'1 "How's that V"&#13;
"Why^don'tyou see, he hates to lose&#13;
anything, and±karefoIL«-Lky_t;_p_s _hi_s_te 1 n- I&#13;
per.11 ~ i&#13;
In a tete-a-tete a woman speaks in a&#13;
loud tone to the man she is inditVerent r&#13;
to, in a low tone to tlie one s44^-bo&gt;fi4i.s-i&#13;
to love, and keeps silent with the one j&#13;
she loves.—Electric Light. The rule '&#13;
unfortunately docs not ..hold good after&#13;
marriage.&#13;
M AN N&#13;
SEPTEMBER 23, 1884. _ _ • •&#13;
HAYING DECIDED TO QUIT THE&#13;
GROCERY BUSINESS,&#13;
WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK&#13;
IS TELLIS3&#13;
T H I S MAJV^-—&#13;
-~&gt;riftfhe dont **\l La^ Heavy L'ruit, Horse-killing&#13;
) :.der, and luiy :ui&#13;
LIASY RUNNING&#13;
DSERING TWIME BINDER&#13;
at once, every horse,ein tho farm will soon be dead&#13;
WILLIAM DEERJNG &amp; CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
BINDERS, REAPER8 AXD MOWEBS&#13;
THfe H O R S E 3 ' P R 1 E N D 8 .&#13;
JOB SALS BY&#13;
S. AM)1JK&gt;VS. H«)well, Mich.&#13;
Timbered i.and i'or S;ile or Kxchaugr.&#13;
l-have ^--i_r':ty ai r.^s ,»f tiniiier land in tho town-&#13;
-'iy- &lt;•: \\*. .ite D a k . I:u!ialil I'M , \» hk'li 1 w i l l s e l l&#13;
•;•&gt;'-.• --:i o: tr.i.le f.ir.otner lands or property ia&#13;
,.&gt;:;!;.ein l.i'. m^ston comity. Address,&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
Piiukney, Mich.&#13;
:H:CNLYTRUE f&#13;
We also mannfactura a full lino of CUTTERS, ]&#13;
Including Swell Body, Portland, Square Bo* ,&#13;
two seat Portland and Ponejr Sleighs. I&#13;
Sand for cuts and prices beforo purchasing. j&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
, KALAMAZOO, Kick.&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT!&#13;
READ THE DETROIT POST&#13;
The Host Newspuper in Michigan.&#13;
lViily- $7-}&gt;er Year: M Cents per Month.&#13;
. v One DolUr per Year,&#13;
Weeklv&#13;
DStTN; WOORE 4 CO.&#13;
WHOLESALE DEALERS IX&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
CALL AND GET PRICES.&#13;
BUTTER AND EGGS WANTED.&#13;
WE HAVE A LARGE LB'E OF&#13;
B O O T S AND S H O E S ,&#13;
GLOVES UNO MITTENS,&#13;
WHICH WE OFFER CHEAP.&#13;
GET OTJTTTRICKS BEFORE BUYING.&#13;
KCrFF &amp; H O F P .&#13;
IRON&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS RECAROIKQ&#13;
-^*. I^BartsrVIroftTonift&#13;
It will pdrify and enrich tlie BLOOD, retmlat*&#13;
the LIVJR and K t D N I V S . and R M T O U X TKS&#13;
— * X I I H and VIGOR of TOTJXH! In all tho**&#13;
d efflcientTONIC,&#13;
"" Indlfret-&#13;
•aarked&#13;
muscles and nerves receive new fgrce. Xallvta*&#13;
the mind »nd supplies Uraln l'ower. •&#13;
I A f a i f f o sufferlnjf from an complanrfc&#13;
L A U I C O peculiar to theirsex will find hi&#13;
S B . H A S T S R ' 8 IRON TONIC a safe and speedy&#13;
core. It gives i clear and heattliy complexion.&#13;
The Wrongest testimony to the value of DR.&#13;
I U R T K K ' S IKON TONIC Is that frei|iientatteiiipU&#13;
at counterfeiting Have onlv added to-the popular.&#13;
fty of the original. If yon earnestly desire health&#13;
donot experiment—genhe OKIOINAL ANDBKBT.&#13;
Baad your uddrew'*+•?*+**•• H*rt«r M*d.Co.\ .&#13;
IkLools. Mo., for our "DIUtAJf BOOK."^-&#13;
••Ifrf ttrragrr f"* ..^fm infnwwviiwi t* — ^ W » • • ! ! • • • ! W^^f^^^m • in • • i • •••&#13;
OR. HARTtR's IRON TONIC IS FOR SALE BY AU.&#13;
ORUQQISTS AND DEALERS EVERYWHERE.&#13;
I&#13;
kpnttlf.&#13;
JKROME WINCHELL, Eurrou.&#13;
BBtered at the Poetofflee ea Sd daas matter.&#13;
CURREUT TOPICS.&#13;
THK Louisiana state weather service&#13;
bureau will hereafter co-operate with&#13;
the United States signal service to transmit&#13;
weather reports throughout the&#13;
state, particularly the sugar districts.&#13;
Timely notice of the approach of cold&#13;
waves will be of the greatest value to&#13;
the planters.&#13;
A F E W days ago a special train on&#13;
the New York, Pennsylvania &amp; Ohio&#13;
road, carrying a theatrical troop from&#13;
Dayton to Youngstown in two Pullman&#13;
sleepers and a baggage car, ran 101$&#13;
miles'in 117 minutes," including four&#13;
stops. From Dayton to Urbaaa it ran&#13;
38 miles in 37 minutes.&#13;
T H E views of public buildings in&#13;
Washington, taken by order of the government&#13;
for exhibition at the New Orleans&#13;
exposition, aro the largest photographs&#13;
in the world. They aro tive&#13;
feet wide b y seven feet lot'g" and have&#13;
been framed by, finely finished a-sh&#13;
frames with a gold lining.&#13;
A BOY in Schenectady, N. Y., swung&#13;
himself lightly upon a freight train a&#13;
few days ago, rode kalf a mile or so&#13;
and jumped off. One of the flagmen&#13;
shouted after him: "My boy, you'll do&#13;
that once too often and got hurt.1 ' The&#13;
lad replied with a laugh that ho was&#13;
ablo to take oare of himself. The next&#13;
morning the same boy lay crushed&#13;
and dyius; on the railroad track on the&#13;
same spot where, the day before, he&#13;
had shouted track-his -careless answer.&#13;
He had fallen from the train and had&#13;
been run over by 14 cars.&#13;
J U D G E H A T E S , in hU charge to the&#13;
grand jury at Muscatine, la., recently&#13;
said that the buyer of intoxicating&#13;
liquors was as much amenable to the&#13;
fowa law as the vender; hence persons&#13;
who purchased intoxicants could uot be&#13;
compelled to give information against&#13;
liquor-dealers, as that would criminate&#13;
themselves. He also advised that as&#13;
sociations which sent person* to purchase&#13;
liquor for the purpose- of socuring&#13;
evidence for a prosecution may be indicted&#13;
for ponspiracy. If Judge-Hayes'&#13;
vi$jjj|g are upheld it will bo impossible&#13;
to enforce the prohibitory law in Iowa,&#13;
His charge to the Muscatine gi'and jury&#13;
has caused a sensation.&#13;
T H E New Orleans managers of the&#13;
World's Cotton Exposition are sending&#13;
' out lithographs and illustrations showing&#13;
the character and extent oi: the&#13;
buildings constructed with the one million&#13;
dollars appropriated by Congress.&#13;
The main building has thirty - three&#13;
towers and turrets, each with a flagstaff&#13;
and flag. The managers say it is the&#13;
largest ever erected. The roof ia of&#13;
glass,, and the "Music Hall" part has&#13;
"11,000 chairs in it. The state exhibit&#13;
building has twelve towers and eighteen&#13;
turrets, with the customary flagstaff's,&#13;
and it is over a sixcb of a mile long.&#13;
The architect has given Horticultural&#13;
Hall but one tower m the center and&#13;
Jive flagstafis, but has shaped it of glass,&#13;
COO feet long, and says it is the largest&#13;
conservatory An the world. The art&#13;
--gallery is large and well arranged,&#13;
and there is a big building of iron to&#13;
exhibit cotton machinery, cotton mills,&#13;
etc., in full operation&#13;
Brighton stands an old-fashioned building.&#13;
formerly a hotel, now devoted to the&#13;
Master's work ajmoug his little ones. A&#13;
circle of willow trees lends it shade and&#13;
screens it somewhat from the intrusive&#13;
gaze of the vuhrcr crowd. As I made&#13;
my way to its door I met two young&#13;
mothers with babes in their arms, and,&#13;
to my inquiries wheter visitors were&#13;
welcome und if Mrs. 1) juglas could be&#13;
seen, they answered with ready and&#13;
beaming courtesy.&#13;
That dear Mrs.Douglas! she oanio to&#13;
welcome her visitor with ft smile in her&#13;
eyes—those rare blue eyes which are&#13;
seldom seen except in the faces of the&#13;
very young, A woman most motherly&#13;
in appearance, fastidious and dainty in&#13;
the freshness of her clean print dress,&#13;
her abundant pale brown hair plainly&#13;
fastened in a thick coil. She was a very&#13;
pleasmg picture, and 1 shall always remember&#13;
how she looked on my first&#13;
meeting her, with both hands full--a&#13;
bowl of cracked ice in one hand and a&#13;
pitcher of milk in tho other.&#13;
Two very sick babies demanded her&#13;
instant care and I went with her to see&#13;
them. By-the-by, let me tell you that&#13;
this place is a summer home for mothers&#13;
a,nd infancs to which the respectable&#13;
poor are admitted on application to 61&#13;
Poplar street, Brooklyn. From--tbat&#13;
point free transportation is given all&#13;
guests of the home; and they are returned&#13;
to their own homes without charge&#13;
at tho expiration of a week, during&#13;
which they aro treated with tho utmost&#13;
kindness and courtesies. The season&#13;
this year began on J u n e 12, which was&#13;
opening dav, and closed Sept. 18. This&#13;
is the eighth year of this bonericent&#13;
work; and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas, to&#13;
whom it would be impossible to accord&#13;
too much praise, have superintended it&#13;
with great ability and self-denial from&#13;
the beginniff^ until now.&#13;
The week of my visit the whole number&#13;
of guests was 320 of whom 78 were&#13;
mothers with infants in their arms. In&#13;
many instances a mother having n» one&#13;
with whom to leave her older chtftfrefe&#13;
at home,- had brought them all with&#13;
her; and there were several cases of&#13;
crippled little ones, whose mothers are&#13;
enjo}in&lt;^ a rest, while tho salt air, sea&#13;
battling, and change were doing their&#13;
suffering children good.&#13;
To feed'this great number it required&#13;
150 quarts of milk daily and 120 loaves&#13;
dj_80_@ounds of mutton had made&#13;
a stew for. ihfr midday meal the d a y of&#13;
my visit, and 140 pounds of beef had&#13;
been roasted the day before. Threequarters&#13;
of a barrel uf potatoes were&#13;
cooked each day for dinner, and coffee&#13;
and tea. rice, oatmeal or hominy, and&#13;
fruit—either ripe or stewed- with bread,&#13;
composed tho bill of fare for tho daily&#13;
breakfast and tea.&#13;
Gruel, iu huge bowls, was dispenseil&#13;
n v ^ r y t w p n i m r ait e j f l h t t o t h e n u n u n g&#13;
A Romtvnce of A n t i - S l a v e r y D a y s .&#13;
A correspondent of tho Cincinnati&#13;
Commercial has boen delving in tho&#13;
records ot the undergrouud railroad in&#13;
the early abolition days, and an interesting&#13;
story is the result Captain&#13;
Fairbanks is its hero, and the heroine is&#13;
his wife, a Massachusetts woman, who&#13;
for 15 weary years proved loyal to her&#13;
betrothal while he served out a states&#13;
prison sentence for helping slaves to&#13;
escape. Fairbauk's first offance was in&#13;
1844 when he successfully helped off a&#13;
family of Lexington Negroes, butfailod&#13;
to escape hiniieif. He was sentenced&#13;
to 15 years' imprisonment for this. &lt;but&#13;
after four years the great efforts in hit&#13;
behalf by his parents and friends secured&#13;
his release. In 1851 business&#13;
drew young Fairbanks from his New&#13;
York home to the Kentucky border&#13;
once more, and his anti-slavery sympathies&#13;
again getting the better of him,&#13;
he ran off to Canada and freed a young&#13;
slavo woman, and then by perversity of&#13;
luck ho wa*« again arrested and the old&#13;
sentence of 15 yoars in the Frankfort&#13;
prison re-aflirmed. This was a severe&#13;
blow, for the young abolitionist was on&#13;
the point of marrying Miss Tileston of&#13;
Williamsburg, Mass , who had already&#13;
been truo to him through the period of&#13;
mothers, and a lunch was ready between&#13;
breakfiii^and dinner for all who&#13;
applied. foi' it, and also between dinner&#13;
and tea if any felt faint or hungry.&#13;
Ot tho babies, there the youngest was&#13;
only two weeks old, an 1 forty-live were&#13;
under ihe uge of one year. Thirty-two&#13;
babies were less than two years old&#13;
Mrs. Douglas said that it&#13;
-seetn^d almost miraculous to observe&#13;
tho rapid improvement of little babes&#13;
brought to her, drooping and almost&#13;
dying. An hour or two on one of tho&#13;
wide verandas, with the life-breath of&#13;
old ocean [sweeping in, and the languid&#13;
little form revived, tho babe took a turn&#13;
for toe better, and the mother's sad&#13;
anxiety was relieved.&#13;
To the poor toiliDg women themsoive3,&#13;
living' and keeping house instilling tenomenta,&#13;
the week's reat—at—Coney 4s-&#13;
T H E K E is a forcible lesson against&#13;
early and thoughtless marriages in the&#13;
sad fate of Mr*. Lilian, Day, who resided&#13;
near Ogden Center, Michigan.&#13;
- Two years ago she contracted a premature&#13;
marriage, being then but 15&#13;
years of age, and a fow days ago was&#13;
*;found dead in a straw stack near her&#13;
'mother's residence. Tho marriage had&#13;
not been a happy ore. resulting in separation&#13;
shortly afterward. From tbis&#13;
point the young wife wandered from&#13;
paths of rectitude, and is supposed to&#13;
have taken her own life in consequence&#13;
of expostulation on tho part of her relatives.&#13;
There ean be little doubt that&#13;
the entire train of uHfortunate circumstances&#13;
is traceable to the disastrous&#13;
results of a marriage entered into without&#13;
proper consideration. The sooner&#13;
young girls are impressed with the fact&#13;
that human weal .or woe is determined&#13;
at the marriage 'altar, the better will it&#13;
l)e for their happiness and tha&#13;
public morality.&#13;
feel liko&#13;
to the&#13;
One W o m a n ' s Suj&#13;
Christian Intdlezj&#13;
KathorjifrtCrt from tho&#13;
collaflgous throng which&#13;
fer W o r k&#13;
gay and -mis-&#13;
Mads amuseland&#13;
is an inexpressible boon. Then,&#13;
too, the influence of Mrs. Douglas is&#13;
exerted in such"a way as to have excellent&#13;
re&amp;uits. Especiallv in their treatment&#13;
of the older children, with many&#13;
of these poor mothers, it is a word and&#13;
a blow; often it.is tho blow before the&#13;
'word"." -~Wittr glsfetle-Tinniiess tnis sweet&#13;
lady represses invective, arrests—the&#13;
raised hand, and shows the poor wornan—&#13;
whoja not unloving, but only untaught&#13;
and weary—that there is a different&#13;
and more succsssful method of&#13;
winning obedience&#13;
Every evening there is a season of&#13;
prayer and song, which none are compelled,&#13;
though ail who can are invited&#13;
to attend. J was glad to learn that&#13;
most of the inmates avail themselves&#13;
of this precious opportunity. As neither&#13;
race, color, nor creed is considered iu&#13;
t h e matter of-admission—poverty and&#13;
want oeing tho sole requisites—this is&#13;
very encouraging.&#13;
Mrs. Douglass showed me her own&#13;
chamber, the one spot to which she&#13;
may retire for privacy. Half of its&#13;
space at least is filled with conveniences&#13;
to aid her "friends." as she called her&#13;
wards, in times of sudden need. At&#13;
any moment, night or day, she is at the&#13;
call of any one who may require her&#13;
advise.&#13;
A physician resides in the Home and&#13;
may be consulted whenever his counsel&#13;
is necessary.&#13;
Certain very; simple printed rules are&#13;
hung up conspisuously here and there.&#13;
Amomjthem was this: "Children are&#13;
requested to .be very kind u&gt; 'he animals&#13;
which belong to this Home. Do&#13;
not h a r t any of them. Even the toads&#13;
aro very valuable to us, and mujt^5e&#13;
gently treated.&#13;
Assistance .in momjy-^or clothing&#13;
which tno, onariWrttly disposed&#13;
Ma-former lm prison muni.&#13;
It also came like a blignt upon his&#13;
sweetheart's hopes and dreams of happiness,&#13;
but her affection only increased&#13;
with the new demand made upon it.&#13;
The prospect of such a long and dreary&#13;
separation would have chilled tho ardor&#13;
of any but the purest and most unselfish&#13;
love. There was little hope for pardon&#13;
as this way the second offense, there&#13;
was nothing to do but to await the expiration&#13;
of the 15 years. With many&#13;
this would have amounted to a relinquishment&#13;
of the marriage engagement—&#13;
perhaps, for time, to the forming&#13;
of new "ties by tho lady. But Miss&#13;
Tileston never entertained such a&#13;
thought; she fulfilled the highest ideal&#13;
of womanly constancy, w i t n t h a t uns&#13;
» ofdotng^a^yttmig praiseworthy&#13;
which always accompanies&#13;
noble actions.&#13;
She left her homo and friends in&#13;
Massachusetts for the purpose of being&#13;
near her betrothed, and devoting herself&#13;
to him. She came to Ohio,&#13;
established herself at Hamilton,&#13;
and began to teach school&#13;
It was n o slight thing to leave the&#13;
shelter and support of a home and&#13;
earn her bread among strangers, but&#13;
thoughts^ofiieirkrrer and how she could&#13;
sustain and cheer him were uppermost&#13;
in her mind. She planned constantly&#13;
how she could alleviate' his hardships&#13;
and comfort and sustain him in his distress.&#13;
He bad need of her utmost&#13;
sympathy and affection. His life at&#13;
bWt—was—dreary,"" brutal, nioDotonous,&#13;
and at times his sufferings were&#13;
among comparative strangers, and&#13;
did it all because it soemod tho right&#13;
thing to do, unconscious that thero war*&#13;
any heroism in it. Her lover seemed to&#13;
have had tho grace to appreciate all her&#13;
self sacrifice and devotion. Now and&#13;
then,in referring to her ho calls her4,ujy&#13;
precious wife," a d d i n g , " ! write wife because,&#13;
though only affianced, we are&#13;
morally husband and wife." Tiiis is&#13;
not tho gush^of young lovers who say,&#13;
" W o are married in the sight of heave&#13;
n , " befoie trials and separations have&#13;
tested the endurance bt Itheir affection&#13;
The long years dragged by. Thirteen&#13;
years had elapsed since these lovers&#13;
became engaged, and now tbey were&#13;
advancing toward middle ag«, but their&#13;
hearts, because they had been constant&#13;
and true, retained something of springtime&#13;
freshness still. The looked forward&#13;
hopefully to a happy reunion,and&#13;
the time came sooner even than they&#13;
were expecting. Calvin Fairbanks did&#13;
not have to serve out all his sentence&#13;
In April, 1864, the governor of Kentucky,&#13;
who, like his immodiato preddeoessors,&#13;
had been deaf to petitions&#13;
for F a i r b a n k s pardon, w a s summoned&#13;
before President Lincoln to answer&#13;
some grave charges that were preferred&#13;
against him, and during his absence&#13;
the lientenarit-govemor &lt;u&gt;t*i] m&#13;
P ENSIONS TO ALL&#13;
_ SOI,PUCKS A SA1LOH*.&#13;
wtiu wens &lt;tlnfit&gt;3fl(l hv wound*, iliBonae, uceiitw*&#13;
or otliorwU*,tlielo«H of a too, \riW&gt;&lt;, vairkonoreini,&#13;
chronic diaxrUu'ii, rnptnro, Ions of aigUt or (j&gt;e#-&#13;
tialWeo). IOHB of liourliiL', fulling hack of m e u l M ,&#13;
rbWuiatlttm, any disability, no nmttur huwHUatos&#13;
tfiv«»8 yon u pension. .&gt;'«*&lt;• and HonorableOiaeha*&#13;
v»a Obtained. Widows, children, motbUf,&#13;
and fnthKfB of Kuldiers dyinu in the service, or&#13;
afterwards, from disease contracted or wounds received&#13;
whilt) in the nenrico, are untitled to p w -&#13;
•ion. Kt'j^ctcd and uuundonud claims a specialty.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS Cot:&#13;
INCREASE YOU It PENSION.&#13;
A pension can be increased at any time whea&#13;
tho disability warrants it. AH yi»u yrow older tlw&#13;
wound has cradually undermined thu constitution,&#13;
the disease Tias made yon more belph'jw. Iu soma&#13;
uiftuaat.the disability husincrcusfd; HO apply If&gt;r&#13;
ua increase at once. ,&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITEO \,&#13;
My experience, and being here at headquartou&#13;
cmahle me to attend promptly to all claims a«aiart&#13;
the Government. OircuLurs fre«. Address, wftfl&#13;
ntamp :&#13;
M. V. T1FKNEY,&#13;
Box 485, WASHINGTON, r&gt;. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHFORMEN&#13;
HARRIS'&#13;
great His keepers disliked him on account&#13;
of his anti-slavery principles,&#13;
and were especially Severn on him bocause&#13;
this was his second otibnse. lie&#13;
Was kept at work in the hemp factory,.&#13;
while the air was tilled with dust and&#13;
floating brown lint, and this so aggravated&#13;
the lung disease with which he at&#13;
.t his., healths and&#13;
strength fai-knl and ho could not always&#13;
filial! his daily tusk. When ho failed&#13;
ho was bound over a chair a n i whipped&#13;
on his bare back with strips of raw hid©&#13;
until ho fainted. lie say-: " 1 have&#13;
counted tho blows up to 60; 1 could&#13;
count no more. After tho whipping&#13;
little particles of flesh would be found&#13;
on tho walls several feet away."&#13;
But this part of his sufferings he kept&#13;
from his "dear one watehipg over tho&#13;
border/' as ho called hor.—He desired&#13;
ry apposed may&#13;
is always* welcome&#13;
WfBt&#13;
yn Ctiildroji's Aid&lt;#ociety.&#13;
* like this cannot bo carried&#13;
on without money. Many little contributions&#13;
make a large total, and those&#13;
who read this may, perhaps, when next&#13;
summer shatt~CTmkT; decide to help by&#13;
their gift* this blessed work. Gifts may&#13;
be sent for this purpose to No. 61 Poplar&#13;
street, Brooklyn, to the treasurer of&#13;
the C a l d r o n ' s Aid Societv.&#13;
to spare her fond and faithful heart ail&#13;
the pangs he could. Oftec, he says,&#13;
when-the.years between him and freedom&#13;
rose before him like a n iron wall&#13;
which no human energy could surmount&#13;
and tho cruelty and horror and dreary&#13;
monotony of his lot carue keenly to his&#13;
mind, and he—realized—afresh that ho&#13;
was shut from all improving intluencos,&#13;
tho faces of friends, tho delight* of&#13;
social life, the common joys of existence,&#13;
—the dark thought of suicide presented&#13;
itself to him, but he thrust it aside for&#13;
his loved one's sake, and summoned&#13;
again all his courage and endurance.&#13;
Thus each lived for the other, andfound&#13;
a higher joy in loving than iu being&#13;
loved. Tho faithful, ioviug woman&#13;
spent her daily life and fultilled her&#13;
daily duties at Hamittoj, bat her heart&#13;
was at Frankfort.&#13;
She-vas watchful of every Leed and&#13;
of every opportunity to relievo or cheer&#13;
the prisoner. She seut him warm,&#13;
comfortable bedding and underclothing,&#13;
bo'xes of supplies, canned fruits,&#13;
preserved meats and other delicacies,&#13;
which "were in pleasant contrast to the&#13;
coarse prison fare. She sent him books&#13;
and papers, and money with which to&#13;
purchase little comforts ar.d luxuries.&#13;
She wrote to him often, long, loving'&#13;
letters, which assured him of her unwavering&#13;
affection, and cheered and&#13;
tilled him with hope. She enoouraj&#13;
and sustained him, and enab!od&gt;JaiTu to&#13;
endure his hard and dre^fy^lot.' She&#13;
visited him as often^as^the prison authorities&#13;
wouhL-^Tlow, aud her visits&#13;
broughtsiiasluno whose radiance lasted&#13;
forrWj*t1ts. She petitioned the governor&#13;
his pardon, and Eho aopoaled to&#13;
influential men in .Frankfort and Lexington&#13;
in his behalf. Her efforts in this&#13;
direction, however, amounted to nothlug.&#13;
Ho had Violated the lawa of the&#13;
stato a second time, and though efforts&#13;
were made at various times by his&#13;
friends to obtain his release, it availed&#13;
nothing. And more than all else this&#13;
brave and loving woman did, she learned&#13;
the " l o n g / dull anguish of patience,&#13;
" whichjs infinitely lrarder than&#13;
to do or daroT- Miss Tileston endured&#13;
for her lover's sake tho slow years of&#13;
waiting,the long separation from home&#13;
and friends, the round of daily toil&#13;
governor. This gentleman was friendly&#13;
toward Fairbanks, had sowetimos&#13;
visited him in prison, end had assured&#13;
him that if he ever became governor&#13;
he would pardon him. This&#13;
promise was fulfilled, and&#13;
on April 15, 1864, Fairbanks left&#13;
prison a free man. He proceeded at&#13;
once to Ciacinnati and went to tho&#13;
house of Levi- Collin. This veteran&#13;
abolitionist had been his firm friend,&#13;
and had often sent him boxes of supplies&#13;
while he was in piis&lt;&gt;n. Here he&#13;
rested for a day or two, while interested&#13;
friends ministered to his needs;&#13;
then well clothed and supplied with&#13;
money, and feeling once more like a&#13;
man among men, he made Ms way lb&#13;
Oxford, Ohio, where Miss Tileston was!&#13;
then teaching;. He intended to give&#13;
her a happy surprise, 'Jut sho had a"&#13;
ready received an intimation of his re&#13;
lease. Her last letter had been returned&#13;
from the Frankfort prison, with&#13;
few WordsoHTit, written byT^urward&lt;jn.&#13;
The angels who are supposed to Wmch&#13;
over the fortunes of lovers certainly&#13;
never looko4~down upon -a-happier&#13;
meeting. The4ropes and longings of&#13;
years woro realized Calvin Fuiruanks&#13;
and Miss Tileston were married at Oxford&#13;
in J u n e and went on an extended&#13;
wedding tour, proceeding by way of tho&#13;
lakes to their homos in New York and&#13;
Massachusetts, and continuing on to&#13;
Washington auchBaitimore.—A woman&#13;
so fond and faithful could not but till&#13;
every rela* ionship of lifu with tidelity,&#13;
and those who knew her personally&#13;
TO£S2&amp;&amp;&#13;
FOB&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
IMPOTENCY.&#13;
Tested tor over B&#13;
yoara t&gt;7 uao In thou«&#13;
OAiida o f c&amp;aeo.&#13;
T R I A L&#13;
PACKACE.&#13;
NKRVOCSDEBIUTt&#13;
orguiio wMkneti mad 4+&#13;
cty, *ad luamtii o6-&#13;
•air* dtmws, tuMHii&#13;
•kiUfol phjkloUai, m d i&#13;
from jtutlifal IndlMf*-&#13;
tioDi,too fr«« Inda^MM.&#13;
• adottrbrftln wwk. Do&#13;
"SoT Tt inpSflfrtTinnw&#13;
caeaileilurk tnjo«r«Jttetn.&#13;
Avoid bclof InpMtA&#13;
oa by pretention* cUtBM «1&#13;
«&amp;*r wnaliM for the*&#13;
tronblet. Uet oar trot olr»«-&#13;
lir tad trill pacU«« u d&#13;
\cknx Important teU bftafr&#13;
Uilof UcittneuJ tlMwhcrfc&#13;
T u t a rcmedj lh»t bu ennfl&#13;
IhoUMJllll, «&gt;a do*t ooi lap&#13;
ictttn with mention Co ban*&#13;
Bin or cause pain M 1MM&lt;&#13;
TenleBce. Vcu&amp;ded on MlcntlBo&#13;
medleat prfnoipla*. •&#13;
Growing in favor and rapntetioa.&#13;
Direct «ppllcUk&gt;B to th»&#13;
Mat or lixjue luakM it* ip»&gt;&#13;
el flu lofl u ctico Hit withool&#13;
&lt;iel»j. Tho Daural fow-&#13;
UODI of tho h&amp;maa orcu*&#13;
Um aro restored. Taj&#13;
animating element* of&#13;
lire which fraxo bees&#13;
waitod am a*»to baels.&#13;
.Too patient becorats&#13;
xhaerful and falsa&#13;
SENDADDRES- , ttrenf-t h rap- ldlj-r.&#13;
HARRIS REMEDY CO.t M'PgjChefnliti.&#13;
^» North 10th St»I Sw*~IiOnlfti) Hjiw—&#13;
0*£ M0NTH&gt;TREATMENT, $ 3 ; 2 M0NTHS.&amp;5 ; 8 M0NTH8, | 7 .&#13;
spoak of her as a most excellent wito&#13;
and mother. She died in September,&#13;
1870, and her husband was beref.ved,&#13;
indeed, for she had been everything to&#13;
him. , I&#13;
The D e s 6 e n t for t h e P e a o l i .&#13;
In San Jose, Cal., not many days&#13;
ago, one Mrs. William Kennedy was&#13;
making anxious search for her little&#13;
four-yuar old, curly-headed SOD, who&#13;
had disappeared for the moment from&#13;
the family door yard. Hurrying&#13;
through the streets, looking and onquiriug&#13;
for the little runaway, her attention&#13;
was directod to a crowd of people, who&#13;
were gazing, white anil silent with awe,&#13;
at a huge windmill tacik, against which&#13;
a long ladder was leaning. The eyes&#13;
of the woman followed tho gazo of the&#13;
crowds and this is what she saw: Eighty&#13;
T H I S MAGNETIC BELT IS&#13;
WARRANTED TO CUREj&amp;5r&amp;ft&#13;
•without iap(llcino:--I*iTt?T"tTrthBl&#13;
feet from the ground, holding on by&#13;
hia chubby legs and one arm, could be&#13;
seen the little fellow, extending his free&#13;
hand towards some pigeons that were&#13;
perched-almost within his reach. His&#13;
awful peril had stunned and stilled the&#13;
helpless ^group beneath, which now&#13;
parted a3 the mother came swiftly toward&#13;
the seeno. Then her firm, &lt;juietr&#13;
voice was heard raised that the child&#13;
might hear: "Come down, Carl, and&#13;
m a m m a will give you a p e a c h . " The&#13;
child heard and, looking over his shoulder,&#13;
perceived hie mother. Instantly&#13;
he began todesceqd, carefully clinging,&#13;
round by round, and as he-nearod thelast&#13;
he smiled at the upturned face of&#13;
his mother and said, " I ' m comiRg,&#13;
mother," and in another moment was&#13;
in her arms. And then that crowd separated&#13;
into small parties^of one each&#13;
melted, into the distance, leaving pehind&#13;
only_an„ indistinct raem_ory of_&#13;
moistened eyes ami fluttering pocket&#13;
handkerchiefs.&#13;
T h e L a y i n g o n of H a n d s .&#13;
This is an age of healing rniracJesT'but&#13;
a Georgia Negro can h o l d &gt; ^ o w n with&#13;
the smartest of the^cafing fraternity.&#13;
The Warrentpa^t5lipper makes this&#13;
s t a t e m e n t i ^ T n e r e is an old Negro in&#13;
thisjgoallty, it is said, whose touch will&#13;
e away warts, heal cancers and&#13;
instantaneously tho wor«t cases of&#13;
rheumatism. Reliable people inform&#13;
us that several severe cases of disease&#13;
have been cured by the simple laying&#13;
on of his hand on the affected parts.&#13;
One old gentlemen, wh'o, by the way,&#13;
is ono of our best citizens, is troubled&#13;
with tho periodical appearance of a cancer&#13;
on his face, and for years has been&#13;
under tho treatment of this colored&#13;
prodigy. On theso occasions, when the&#13;
cancer becomes inflamed, our friend&#13;
goes immediately to the Negro and has&#13;
him to rub it, and soon after it disappears,&#13;
leaving no trace of its former existence.,&#13;
1&#13;
^&#13;
The Panama canal company has sign&#13;
ed a contract with a New York dredging&#13;
company for the cutting of the lant&#13;
section of the canal. This contract provides&#13;
that the work shall bo ftnishecLin&#13;
1887&#13;
•Imbis iui-vuUHd&lt;!&gt;llHy,miuUago, goncrnldcbllltj,&#13;
rheumatism, purulynle, neuralgia, sciatica, dlaemecjol&#13;
the 1. ldiiL'VB,»r&gt;InaI d Ineaaeer,torpid liver, gout,&#13;
grmtnal rmlm»lon«, lianotincy, o*thina. heirt dla&gt;&#13;
&lt; nuc, dyapcpila, conr.tlputUui, oryalpelas, 1n«11ce*&gt;&#13;
1'jn, hornlii or ruplu/t, cmtarrU, pilee, cpllepaj,&#13;
dumb ajzuc oto.&#13;
WU'nuny debility of theGE&gt;XKATTVEOIiOAN'S&#13;
re •us, loat vitality, liK-k of nervo ljrvo ond -vigor,&#13;
\\ u«f liiar weuUncaaca, end oil Uio«c dlncnaea of n pergonal&#13;
nuturu, from vhataver cau?f, tho continuous&#13;
ptroam. of Masrnetism permeating through &lt;ho pnrtm&#13;
mu«tre»tore them to s healthy action. TUeie Id uo&#13;
mistake uUout this appllaucQ.&#13;
U O l ^ G N f T l C&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER.&#13;
Exfc«T«Uon,Drsp«vatKnnrtrtth l&gt;la««weaof the U r&#13;
«r. Kidney a, ile»d»oh» or Cold Feet, flwcllen mr&#13;
Weak'Anklea, or Swollen Feet, an Abdominal Ben&#13;
and a pair of Magnetio Koot Batteries hare no ruparlor&#13;
In th&gt; relief aiM cure of all the'ie complaints. Tb*jr&#13;
oarij ik powerful imiueUu tore* to tfaeaeat of toe&#13;
(llninin&#13;
For Lame Baek, W e a k a e e s o f lb© Spine, Fall,&#13;
tafe e f the womb, I«eaooiThota* Cbronlelnflaunnta.&#13;
tlea u d Uleeratlo* of the W o a b , Incidental Hemorrhage&#13;
or Flooding, Painful, Bnppreaaed and 1»-&#13;
recalar Menatraatioa, Harreaaena, and change af&#13;
Life* this la the 11 eat Appliance and Curative Ageat&#13;
Known.&#13;
For alt forms of Female Dtaenltlra It la nnrar-&#13;
Paasedby anythingbelorelnTented, both asacuratl**&#13;
aga&amp;t and as a source of power and yitailcatlon.&#13;
Prtoe of either Belt with Magnetic Foot Batterlea, I1Q,&#13;
Bent by express CO. D ,and examination allowed, or br.&#13;
-mail en receipt of price. In orderlng,«end meaaore.oC&#13;
waist and ulaeufsboB, ReTnUtimceuaa be made In car.&#13;
renoy, sent In letter at our risk.&#13;
The Magneton G&amp;nnents are adapted to all a g « , are&#13;
worn orer the underclothing, (not next to tho&#13;
body like the many Galvanic and F.Iootrie I l a a u&#13;
huge advertised so eztenalvvlr) and should bo&#13;
taken off at night. They hold thuirpowtrjbrtver^aad&#13;
are worn at all seonona of the year.&#13;
Bend ntamp for thn "New Denaxtuxaln Medleat Treat&#13;
ttent Without Medicine," with thousand*of tOftlnjo.&#13;
T H E M A G N E T O N A P P L I A N C E C O «&#13;
2 1 8 s t a t « St., C h i c a g o , III.&#13;
The Magnetic appliances may be se/)n&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store, Piclpgy&#13;
Mich.&#13;
lint. s&#13;
eo&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia,&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
N O T I C K , - W i t h o u t a particle of doubt.TCeri.&#13;
i"i t.'a Tills aro themoAt popular of any en the tnar-&#13;
Kvt.. Having been belorethH public fur a quartcrof&#13;
x i -'ntury. and having always performed more than&#13;
•v is promised for them, ihey merit thn tuocess that MH'V havo Attained, p r i c e , 25c. p e r b o x *&#13;
For »Tfle by all dnigsists, . .&#13;
•Kermotts Pills sihvays in stock at&#13;
Winchc l\s Drug Store, V-incknev, Mtab&#13;
- = ¾ : —&#13;
4' /- .&#13;
N N&#13;
»'*.&#13;
. \&#13;
H 3 3&#13;
^&#13;
/&#13;
— - &gt; • • •&#13;
S T K U S T U A W H .&#13;
Gordon ban bombarded and captured Berber.&#13;
PtttHburK i&lt;»d a l l ' 0,000 tire tLeotner night.&#13;
'.President D:fK of Mex CJ .was inaugurated&#13;
on the UJ irut.&#13;
Bancroft, t,li»' historian, celebrated bis fc'i'Ju&#13;
birthday ou tue3i lust.&#13;
Teu llf c8 were lufet durlDX tbe burning of&#13;
th« Danish ruyal palace.&#13;
A strong KoirlUb force Id to be sent to South&#13;
.Africa to crush the Doors.&#13;
Tbe estimated reduction of the public debt&#13;
during Sepn mber lb #13,000,000.&#13;
Gen. Grant refused to be a Republican&#13;
elector, »aylux \u- wan out of politics.&#13;
Several suspected parties have been arrested&#13;
At Ckvdand ou a cuar^e of Incendiarism.&#13;
WbMt the Freud i occupy Kelunjf the war&#13;
-b«t»/«an Frauu. and China"will be declared off.&#13;
j U a g | U d tUut President Arthur will soon&#13;
a S r j j f c ' d a u ^ h u r of decretary Frellnghuysen.&#13;
Frank Chaufrau, the nottd actor died in&#13;
Now York a lew days ago, from a paralytic&#13;
stroke.&#13;
Coinage at the various mints during September,&#13;
$4,M3,a&amp;3, of which $3,350,000 was standard&#13;
dollars.&#13;
Nearly 33,000 fquare miles of United States&#13;
territory are now owned by foreign syndicates&#13;
and capita.ists.&#13;
Frarce emphatically det&gt;les that the United&#13;
States has been asked to mediate in the Fruncot&amp;&#13;
Aumt* wouble.&#13;
Tha United States offers its services at the&#13;
.request of France as mediator la the Franco-&#13;
Ohuwae trouble.&#13;
A collision.occurred ou the Baltimore AOhia&#13;
road near&#13;
ployes of the roud.&#13;
Tbe famous hotel, the Gleu House, on !j4t.&#13;
Washington was turned Oct. 1st. The woods&#13;
adjoining are on tire.&#13;
Wah Lee Yow, a Chlaaman, has been grant&#13;
ed cilize&gt;ebip papers la Cleveland. He had&#13;
married awhile wife.&#13;
_ Owing to the prohibition of the Importation&#13;
of foreign rags, tbe price of paper in this&#13;
-country is to be advanced.&#13;
The Panama canal company has contracted&#13;
wltn the dredging company for the completion&#13;
of the dredging by 1887.&#13;
T i e reports of Virginia tobacco Inspectors&#13;
show that the present crop has been much Injured&#13;
ky the yreteut drouth.&#13;
Gen. Grant's residence on Chestnut street,&#13;
Philadelphia Is to be sold to help pay debts.&#13;
The value placed on It Is $3J,Q0U. &gt; .&#13;
John McCullbugb, the erjdihent tragedian^&#13;
has become so broken down, physically,that he&#13;
has been obliged to cancel «1J engagements.&#13;
A grandson of Henry Clay, the statesman,&#13;
was shot In Louisville, Ky., a few days ago,&#13;
In a.quarrel with a couuciimao-of- that city.&#13;
Kentucky cattle breeders have asked the&#13;
..governor to call &amp; special session of the legislature&#13;
to take action on sWSpin'g out the cattle&#13;
disease.&#13;
The Massachusetts humane society has voted&#13;
Commodore tfcoiey a gold medal, and Lieut.&#13;
JEmory a 'silver"one for bravery on t h e i i retley&#13;
relief expedition.&#13;
" Chief Inspector Sharpe of the postofflca de-&#13;
-partmeot-4iaa—Isaued an order directing tnat&#13;
when a dertcency exists in a^y post oflke the&#13;
postmaster tie arretted and tried.&#13;
Dr. Ward, stale veterinarian of Maryland,&#13;
reports tbitt dlteast-d hogs ar^ being killed ln^&#13;
that state and suited down for luture cou&#13;
sumption. The utteate is fcaid to be of adipL&#13;
theretlc nature.&#13;
PrinceJLLbiirt Victoi Christian Edward, eldest&#13;
A SUffht M l B t a k e .&#13;
Hawkeye.&#13;
A y o u n g m a n w e a r i n g b l a c k - b o w e d&#13;
glasses, a m i with t h e u n u i i a t a k a b l e&#13;
squint of s h o r t - s i g h t e d n e s s in his eyes,&#13;
w a s observed t h e o t h e r e v e n i n g w a l k&#13;
i n g to a n d fro before a h o u s e o n 1'oarl&#13;
s t r e e t in B u r l i n g t o n ; a n d every time&#13;
h e pasjed he would bqueeze u p his eyes,&#13;
a n d , g l a n c i n g t o w a r d a second-story&#13;
w i n d o w with an e c s t a t i c expression,&#13;
w a v e his d a i n t y c a m b r i c handkerchief,&#13;
a n d s i m p e r sweetly e n o u g h to m a k e a&#13;
c a t sea-sick. ^Suddenly h e d r e w bajok&#13;
in horror, A b o y ' s h e a d p o p p e d o u t of&#13;
a seCond s t o r y w i n d o w , a n d a boy's&#13;
voico r a n g o u t in c l e a r , p e n e t r a t i n g accents:&#13;
" H e l l o , t h e r e , c u l l y ! C a n ' t a&#13;
fellow s w i n g his s h i r t o u t of t h e wind&#13;
o w to g e t d r y w i t h o u t you w a v i n '&#13;
y o u r h a n ' k e r c h i e f to it all the tioae?'-&#13;
'«1—1—b—beg y o u r p a r d o n ! " s t a m -&#13;
m e r e d t h e y o u n g m u n , r e t r e a t i n g&#13;
a r o u n d t h e c o r n e r : " I tu. - t h o u g h t it&#13;
w a s your sister—by c a d , I did.&#13;
-•&gt; —&#13;
It Is positively stated at Uorlln that the&#13;
great power* arn dlecussinx the question of tbe&#13;
renewal of the Lf&gt;mioii coi'fercuce 1L ord^r to&#13;
finally pettle the Egyptian tiiiaiiclal question.&#13;
It Is elated, HISO, tbat Germany IA willing to&#13;
Join In a conference if there should be a reason&#13;
able prospect of brluKiDg the muter u&gt; a s u&#13;
^Lsaful Issue.&#13;
A section ganp, comprised ol Pat Dcnan,&#13;
i'inej;an.&amp;nii. two jithe rs&#13;
wbik on a hand-car, were run int.) near Wheeling,&#13;
W. Va., the other morning by a *;;ectal&#13;
train bearing a party of plumed knight 3 from&#13;
the Blaine meeting- at Columbus, O Those&#13;
named were instantly killed. Th»: other two&#13;
managed to jump from the car ami escape&#13;
with serious Injuries&#13;
Mrs. Polly Sherwood, 72 jears old, left her&#13;
home at Pond Rldge, near Stanford, Ct. about&#13;
four weeks ago, to visit her brother scrips the&#13;
fields in the same village, but never reached&#13;
her destination. Friday ntr body was found&#13;
in a dense swamp near the village. The flesh&#13;
and limbs were torn from the body. It is&#13;
thought to have been done by dogs. It is&#13;
thought that she became deranged in the&#13;
swamp.&#13;
Inquiry at the. state department discloses&#13;
the fact that no* c2« r of American mediation&#13;
with China asserted by the London Times, bad&#13;
.interview with Li Hung Chang. Prior to this&#13;
Young4iad several conferences with that gov&#13;
ernor, in which he tried to &gt; ascertain whether&#13;
China was deposedjo_make any overtures for.&#13;
peace with France. TTJ -jdl this he seemed to&#13;
haye~acted~oirinVt&gt;wn responsibilityarm&#13;
of the Prince ot Wales, will be of age next&#13;
Louise do la R a m e e is i n d e b t e d to a&#13;
little b r o t h e r for her non de p l u m e . H e&#13;
s t a m m e r e d a n d a l w a y s p r o n o u n c e d&#13;
Louisa " O u i d a . 1 1&#13;
-January, and parliament will be asked to grant&#13;
him t5u,00U a year to maintain hia rank. The&#13;
radicals will oppose vigorously.&#13;
borne one tired a ehot into the car in which&#13;
Gov. St. John was traveling, between Ttrre&#13;
Kaute and Carlisle, Ind., the other night. I c e&#13;
bullet lodged In a seat, just beside ttie governor.&#13;
He took the attempted assisslnatlon&#13;
coolly.&#13;
Capt. Burton, the arctic traveler, writes the&#13;
Loudon Academy, excusing the alleged cannibalism&#13;
of the Greely party. He says that }n&#13;
El It-lam, u the religion of common sense," the&#13;
action would not be blamable under the circumstances.&#13;
John McCullough has recovered his reason&#13;
enough to see that he cannot continue his&#13;
work, and has accepted the decision of bis&#13;
friends to have him take a long rest. He will&#13;
probably.be placed In a private asylum, or will&#13;
stay with his sister, In Pennsylvania for some&#13;
time.&#13;
•Henry M. Stanley Fays the trade of the Congo&#13;
country will be of great benefit to Great&#13;
Brttlan, and that the way to secure thl3 advantage&#13;
is to uri?e upon the British Government tne&#13;
necessity of sending two cruisers to the mouth&#13;
of the Congo River, pending a dtcUlon by&#13;
European powers of the Coago question.&#13;
Within a few months a number of Chinese&#13;
laborers on the railroad In British Columbia _. . ., ,,, ^&#13;
h*ve wyftteriously diBflppoared. N*ar - H o p e ^ f - ^ , m e * n d JMgjy w 111 te saved&#13;
U. C , a few days ago th»i mutilated body ot a&#13;
Ci'lr:iman was found, and it Is supposedr that&#13;
,n&gt;, murder was committed by white nav^l.&#13;
who are determined to drive Cninese laborout&#13;
of the province&#13;
habit&#13;
Y o u n g o r middle-ag^cl m e n sutYering&#13;
f r o m n e r v o u s d e W l i t y , loss of m e m o r y ,&#13;
premfcturoHrtd a g e , a s t h e r e s u l t of bad&#13;
m o u l d send t h r e e l o t t e r s t a m p s&#13;
' i l l u s t r a t e d book offering s u r e m e a n s ,&#13;
of e i m . A d d r e s s W o r l d ' s D i s p e n s a r y&#13;
M e d i a l Association, Buflalo, N . Y.&#13;
* — . — _&#13;
Tbfe flbt of m o d e r n books w h i c h r a r e&#13;
Headache is ImmedlatelT relieved by the a#eolL^&#13;
P189*B KBnredr for CatarrV&#13;
T h e Garfield m e m o r i a l w i n d o w at&#13;
Williams College h a s been finished at a&#13;
cost of $ 3 , 6 4 5 . 1 ;J&#13;
MAID OF ATHENS.&#13;
What Is the difference between this noted&#13;
Lady and Carboiini', t»'e great TmTr producer i&#13;
Ansu&gt;er:—&lt;JM is^Maid of AtKcn$u th'1 other&#13;
Is r/wde of Pt.'troleum, both came from Create.&#13;
A l a b a m a s p e n d s for e d u c a t i o n only&#13;
a b o u t half as m u c h as h e r neighbor,&#13;
Mississippi.&#13;
"This Is an old&#13;
The best&#13;
rTTuTbeBtTs:tTie elieap^sTT^&#13;
adage and the essence of wisdom&#13;
medicine andtheonlv xure cure for diseases of&#13;
theli'er. kidney* and Madder t s t h e old and&#13;
reliable HUNT'S [Kidney and Liver) RBMSDY.&#13;
Physlcans endorse It highly and prescribe it in&#13;
thair practice.&#13;
Tired all Over This is the way many people express that lerriljlc&#13;
fcLlinK of languor, debility, ;ind htssilude which is&#13;
often the fort-runner ol serious disease. It should he&#13;
overi-ome :it all ha/utrd, and Hood's Sarsip;irill:i is&#13;
the In st medicine for the purpose. It throws oft the&#13;
tired feelinj; and give* new life and vijjor lo ihe&#13;
whole body.&#13;
'•T became more and more impressed with the effectual&#13;
qualities ot Hood's Sarsaparilla. I use it&#13;
constantly in my family, and believe ttuit the health&#13;
we constantly enjoy i l d u e to ita use. It is pleasant&#13;
to take, and makes one feel like a new man."—K. E.&#13;
DROM, Editor WeMviHe {Ind.l Indicator.&#13;
"I derived so much benefit from Hootl's Sarsaparilia&#13;
tint I think it has no erjua!."--Mrs. M. A.&#13;
K.NICiHTS, Clwrleston, Mass.&#13;
Hood's Sarsapanlla&#13;
Sold by all dru^Lrists. $ i ; six lor g j . Ma&lt;U- only&#13;
by C. I. HOOD A Co., Lowell, Mass,&#13;
loo Doses One Dollar.&#13;
BRM'i&#13;
F&lt;\~&amp;: EYES&#13;
DO THEY TttOliBLK YOU? H A V K ! THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D WITH OUK N E W TEST LENSES&#13;
BY WHICH W E OKTKN SUCCEED W H E N&#13;
OTHEIW FAIL.&#13;
RO£HM &amp; WRIGHT,&#13;
I M g O R T E « 8 . JE-WEfcEtta^ANP OPTICIAKft,-&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D AVE , DETKOIT MICH. P O T A T O E&#13;
W A N T E D ! s C&lt;jnaitrntnerit« solicited from Storekeepers and Farmtrs&#13;
ot POTATOES, liLTTIH. K«OS, Poi'LTRT, FHL'ITS&#13;
andOENKKAiPKOut'tK. Wriie to us; it will pay yau.&#13;
Addrtss,&#13;
JE. B, Gawley Sc Co.,&#13;
COMMISSION MLRrnx.viy 76 Wett Wood bridge Si.,&#13;
DhTKoiT, MICH.&#13;
|a8f~Ke(erences:~A. IVES i- SONS, lUnkers, or an»&#13;
wholesjile house in Detroit.&#13;
*m&#13;
WOMAN'S SUf FERING AND RBLIEf.&#13;
Those languid, ttred sensations, caualne you&#13;
to fetl tc^rcely able to be on your feet; that&#13;
conntant dralu that is taking from your system&#13;
all its former elasticity; driving tbe bloom&#13;
from jour cheeks; that continual strain upon&#13;
your vital lorceB, rendering you irritable and&#13;
fretful, can easily be removed by the uue of&#13;
that marvelous remedy, Hop Bltrers. IrreKUiarltles&#13;
and oiiier obstructions of your »yatem, &amp;™ relieved at once while the special causa of E^rlodlcaL palu are permanently remoted.&#13;
Qnfijrt^t-lve ao much benetit, « 4 wme are s o&#13;
. A S K I V O R&#13;
TRADE MARK&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
This medicine, combining Irori with pure&#13;
vegetable tonics,—quickly and completely&#13;
(urea Dyspepaia, Indigestion, WeaUneas*&#13;
Impure Blood, iUularia.ChllU and Fevers,&#13;
and Ncuralaia. ,&#13;
It is an unfailing remedy for Dlseascsof the-&#13;
Kl&lt;lQ«ya and Iilver.&#13;
It Is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
Women, and all who lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—ether Iron medicines do.&#13;
' It enriches and purifies thejbjood, stimulates&#13;
• the appotiter alda- th e- assimT1 a t irmnf food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, ana-strength-&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, &amp;c, it has no equal.&#13;
99* The genuine has above trade mark and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
BITTERS&#13;
THE C-mi BLOOS MFIS&amp;&#13;
Bade out? b ; BROW N t H K J I I W L CO., BALTIMORE, MD.&#13;
Liver and Sidr-jj Eemedy,&#13;
Compounded from the vrell known]&#13;
Curatives Hops. Mcit, Buchu, Mandrake,&#13;
Dandelion, Sarsaparilla. Capcars&#13;
Sagrada, etc.. combined with an&#13;
agreeable Aro-natie Elixir.&#13;
MET -CUBE- MSPEP8R &amp; HDIGESTIOS,&#13;
l e t »?o« th« Liter and Klintrs,&#13;
B E Q T J L A T B ~ T S " E Q W . E I J S ,&#13;
They cure Rheumatism, and all Urinary&#13;
troubles. They invigorate,&#13;
nourish, strengthen and quiet&#13;
the Nerrooa System.&#13;
As a Tonlo they hav» no Equal.&#13;
Talr none but Hopx u d kAlt Bitters.&#13;
— FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS.—&#13;
^If arlllcted with sore eyes, use Dr. I-aac&#13;
Tbotopao.n's Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25i&#13;
Baker—'-"iTes,&gt;mum; I DOVV p u t m y&#13;
n a m e o n ray breact~~ta..^revent m y r i -&#13;
vals from i m i t a t i n g m y l o a v e s and gett&#13;
i n g m y c u s t o m , " H o u s e k e e p u f - ^ ' i A&#13;
wise p r e c a u t i o n . B u t w a s tbe- breacT&#13;
you left here y e s t e r d a y g e n u i n e ? " " O h ,&#13;
yes, m u m . " " Theu I would suggest&#13;
t h a t y o u need s o m e t h i n g besides y o u r&#13;
n a m e o n t h e loaves&#13;
m u m . if you say so&#13;
d a t o . "&#13;
" C e r t a i n l y ,&#13;
W h a t is i t ? " " T h e&#13;
It is not ofien t h a t inscriptions on_&#13;
When you visit or leave New York City, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Kxpressajje and&#13;
$3 C a r r i e Hire, and stop at the Grand Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depot. Six. hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted.up at_a coat..of. one million&#13;
dollars; $1 and upwards per day. European&#13;
plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated railroad&#13;
to all depots. FamAltea can live better&#13;
for less money at the Gmi,d Union Hotel than&#13;
at aav other first-class hotel in the city.&#13;
Texas- "boasts of a potato© s h a d e d&#13;
exactly like a h u m a n foot, jjvon to t h e&#13;
five toes.&#13;
fa TOoney&#13;
bv keeping KIJ-&#13;
- n o t t o be a l l o w e d in t h e p u b l i c libraries&#13;
o r R u s s i a i n c l u d e s t r a n s l a t i o n s of w o r k s&#13;
by Agassiz, B a g e h o t , H u x l e y , Zola,&#13;
L a s s a l l e , L u b b o c k , L e c k y , L o u i s B l a s e ,&#13;
L e w i s , L y a l l . M a r x , Mill, Keclus, A d a m&#13;
S m i t h ' s " W e a l t h of N a t i o n s 1 ' a n d&#13;
" T h e o r y of M o r a l S e n t i m e n t s , " a n d&#13;
. H e r o e r t S p e n c e r ' s w o r k s&#13;
- T H E S L O U G H O F D E S P O N D E N C Y "&#13;
in w h i e h you a r e w a l l o w i n g . o n a c c o u n t&#13;
o l t h o s e diseases p e c u l i a r to y o u ,&#13;
m u d a j b e , , a n d w h i c h h a v e r o b b e d y o u&#13;
-of t h e r o s y hue of h e a l t h , a n d mad© lift&#13;
A b u r d e n t o y o u . you c a n easily get o u t&#13;
of. D r . P i e r c e ' s " F a v o r i t e Ptescj "&#13;
t i o n s " will free y o u from all s u c J K r o u b -&#13;
lea-, a n d s o o n r e c a l l the-^fose-tint of&#13;
h e a l t h t o y o u r c h e e k v « n a t h e elasticity&#13;
t o y o u r s t e p , i t - i s a m o s t perfect specific&#13;
for aii-tfee w e a k n e s s e s a n d irrc£ularities^&#13;
peculiar to y o u r sex. I t c u r e s&#13;
deration, d i s p l a c e m e n t s , " i n t e r n a l&#13;
f e v e r , " b e a r i n g d o w n sensations, r e -&#13;
m o v e i r t l i e t e n d e n c y t o c a n c e r o u s affect&#13;
i o n s , a n d c o r r e c t s a l l u n n a t u r a l disc&#13;
h a r g e s . By d r u g g i s t s .&#13;
T h e b u r r a s h u t a , a c a r n i v o r o u s dy confined&#13;
t o S o u t h A m e r i c a , h a s m a d e his&#13;
a p p e n r a n o e in F l o r i d a . I t s bite, t h o u g h&#13;
n o t poisonous, is painful, a n d t h e loss&#13;
of bl*od c o m p a r a t i v e l y g r e a t .&#13;
D r . S a g e ' s C a t a r r h R e m e d y o u r e s&#13;
w h e n e v e r y o t h e r s o c a l l e d r e m e d y&#13;
fails.&#13;
ncy-W^rt.-fn tbe boukG It is an invaluable remedv&#13;
fpr-*Tl disorders of tbe Kidneys, Liver ;ind Bowels&#13;
and for all diseases arisiDR frum obstructions of&#13;
ihaie organs. It has cured many obstinate cases&#13;
after huBdr ds of dollars h;id been paid to physicians&#13;
i^thuut obtainlDK relief. It cures Constipation,&#13;
Piles, Bilionsnesis and all kindred disorders.&#13;
Keep it &amp;V yOu. ~&#13;
C ? f " r h e V o i c e o f t h e P e o p l e . No family&#13;
D&gt;os were ever s • popular -a* tne Diamond I'ycs.&#13;
'J hoy never fail. Tne block is tar superior to totfwo_&#13;
d The otber c o l o n are brilliant. Wells,&#13;
Klchardaon &amp; Co., Burlington, Vt,&#13;
HAT If EVER. I have boen .a trreat sufferer&#13;
from Hay iTever for 15 years and have tried&#13;
various thiugs without doing any tmod. I-read'&#13;
of the many wondroue cureB ofTSly'aCream&#13;
Balm, and thought I would try once more. In&#13;
15 minutes after one application I was wonderfully&#13;
helped. Two weeks ttgn~i commenced~&#13;
uaintf it and now [ feel entirely cured. It Is&#13;
the greatest discovery ever known or beard of.&#13;
— DUHAMEL CLAKK, Farmer, Lee, Mass. Price,&#13;
50 cents.&#13;
t o m b s t o n e s are w o r t h y of m u c h notice&#13;
But h e r e is one which—like " t h e divisions&#13;
of lieu b e n " — m i g h t cause g r e a t&#13;
"seurehinjis of h e a r t . ? ' I t is over t h e&#13;
g r a v e of a M a s s a c h u s e t t s Mother in&#13;
I s r a e l :&#13;
" A Sarah co her husband&#13;
A Eunice to her children,&#13;
A L &gt;ls ti&gt;,her c;raTidchildren,&#13;
A Lydla to.Gixj'? minister's,&#13;
A Martha to her gue6tf,&#13;
A DorcH? ro the poor, and&#13;
An Anna 10 her (iod,"&#13;
If Your lurjjj^ arc weak, if a cold causes&#13;
quick distress, you will breathe tasiji*^"you&#13;
will ctfUfrjh less, you will strt*ngtnjBtrTho pulmonary&#13;
organ*, you will feet-&amp;?tter everyway&#13;
If jou will bcca6ii&gt;nally ujs«rDr. Wistar's Balsam&#13;
of Wild Cherry^Ahk yoar druggist for it.&#13;
A l w a y s L a t e .&#13;
f the beauty in doinjr a n y t h i n g to&#13;
'be d o n e consists in doin.£ it proniDtly.&#13;
A n d yet a l a r g e class of persons aro&#13;
a l w a y s m o r o or less u n p u n c t u a l a n d&#13;
late. T h e i r w o r k is a l w a y s in a d v a n c e&#13;
of t h e m , a n d so it is w i t h t h e i r a p p o i n t -&#13;
uitnits »ud e n g a g e m e n t s .&#13;
— Tfaey-aro late, v e r y H k e ^ H n r i s i r r f f rrr&#13;
t h e m o r n i n g , a a d also in g&lt;"&gt;ing to bed&#13;
a t n i g h t ; late at t h e i r m e a l s ; late a t t h e&#13;
c o u n t i n g - h o u s e or office;lat« at t h e i r app&#13;
o i n t m e n t s ^ i t h o t h e r s . :&#13;
T h e i r letters a r e s e n t to the p o s t office&#13;
j u s t as the m a i l is closed. T h e y a r -&#13;
rive a t t h e wharf | u s T a s _ t h e s t e a m b o a t&#13;
is l e a v i n g it. T h e y c o m e into the s t a -&#13;
tion j u s t as t h e t r a i n is g o i n g out.&#13;
Nervoup, «• dyspeptic lndlvldules, wbose distress&#13;
of mind and body make life mteerablo, if&#13;
your bufferings have been prolonged and increased&#13;
by the uee of bitters and pretended&#13;
cures of kidney and liver cjlueates, throw all&#13;
n d - W I * r f t B i t t e r s G O T&#13;
r&gt;ETR\yrr, MICM.&#13;
ELY'S C A T&#13;
Cream Balm.&#13;
^ Causes no Pain.&#13;
G i v o s ^ r s l j e f at&#13;
oncje. Thofottgh&#13;
T r e a t m e n t will&#13;
C a r e . N o t .a-Liquid&#13;
o r Snuff. A p -&#13;
ply with F i n g e r .&#13;
Give it a T r i a l .&#13;
50 cents at D r u g -&#13;
gists; 60 cents by H A ^ E ^ V E R&#13;
mail r e g i s t e r e d . S a m p l e bottle by mi&#13;
10 c e n t s . E L Y B R O S . . D r u g ^ f k C&#13;
O &gt; r t o o ^ N . Y.&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
A aign Flag 15 Feet Lon? l&gt;y M A U for $ 2 . 0 0 .&#13;
POSTAUB PAID ON RECKIPT OP PKICE. ALL&#13;
SIZES OK HAM) FOR ALL PAUTIE3; SEND FOtt&#13;
PRICE LIST TO NATIONAL BANNEK Co.,&#13;
-¾.^ Woodward ave., DETROIT.&#13;
W A N T E D H E L P , K K . H A L K S !&#13;
Wn«ted—Lsil'.es nnd genilenicii to tuiie nico.ll^ht,&#13;
p'fnBant work atiheir uwn homes idistance no obj&#13;
erMioni; wurk seni by ninit; JU to ••"&gt; a day tin be&#13;
qnlPtly ninde; '•&lt;&gt; CHnva«Bli g. l'ie(\se address at unce&#13;
KKLiABLtJ M'l-GlO., Phlladei^tuu. 1'»., b.xlSiK.&#13;
"ROUGH O N TOOTHACHE." Ask for&#13;
relief, quick cure 15c, Druggists.&#13;
Instant&#13;
Every woman who sugdffTfrom Sick Head&#13;
ache, and who ulsllkeg to take bitter doses,&#13;
should try Career's'Little Liver Pll]s. They&#13;
are the eaaiesT of ail medicines to take. A&#13;
positiyu^cute for the ibove distressing corngive&#13;
prompt relief in Dyspepsia and Inifijt'stiou;&#13;
prevent and cure Constipation and&#13;
Pil-8. As eaty totake a&amp;-frtt£»ri&#13;
a dose, 40 in a via!. 1'rice X5 ci-nts." If&#13;
fcuch nostrums aside and ffhd^fieakii; etrereth&#13;
and vlgcr in that simple rernedy^kiiown us Dr.&#13;
Guysoti's Yellow Dockland Sa'-saparllla. It&#13;
_purittesj^e_bJood,^tretigthens the urinary and&#13;
digestive orgap&gt;f^and infuses new life Into all&#13;
parts of tbj6%ody Ho ether remedy etiunle it.&#13;
Bave^yUur druggists get It for you.&#13;
T h e O l d R a b b i ' s A d m o n i t i o n s .&#13;
T h e T a l m u d says t h a t p.n old R a b b i&#13;
w a s a w a k e n e d by one of his twelve sons,&#13;
w h o s a i d ; — ' ' B e h o l d ! mv eleven b r o t h e r s&#13;
M " MLEB&amp;ATED^M^&#13;
BlrfERS&#13;
Protective No&#13;
fucri u r o t e c t l r e&#13;
w a i m t chilis a d&#13;
lever and orherdise&#13;
»-es of d niaUrial&#13;
typt1 exists a» Hostett&#13;
«r * s i o m i c n&#13;
B i t f r s . It relieves wins ip«non, river&#13;
disorders rheumatism,&#13;
k dney and&#13;
bladder aliments&#13;
*lth certainty «-aDd&#13;
prom »t i t u d c. A&#13;
chaneeasgratirTlnK&#13;
• s It is commete.&#13;
takes plaCyvTi the&#13;
»Pt&gt;earanco as well&#13;
88 the sensation, ot&#13;
the wan and hn&lt;rjntrd&#13;
nvalia » h n&#13;
uses this Bt'ndard&#13;
pwaioter of health&#13;
and strength, t'or&#13;
aate-byali [&gt;ruff(risu&#13;
and Dealers general&#13;
y.&#13;
CHENEY'S&#13;
Ouiy one plU&#13;
try them you will not ae without them. "" you&#13;
SKINNY MEN* "Wells Health Henewer." rwtorea&#13;
Health and vigor; cures Dyspepsia, Impotence. ¢1&#13;
ItTRK Con-liiviK OIL made from seiectod livers&#13;
on the sea-shore, Dy C A S W I L L , HAZAHI&gt; 4 CO., New&#13;
Vc-k. It is absolutely pu.-e and sweet- Patients&#13;
who have onoe taaen It to all others. Physioians&#13;
have decided it superior to anv of the other oils ID&#13;
market.&#13;
CHA*»Pin IlA!&lt;m9 KACI, P I M P L S S aud r&gt;uah ski&#13;
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by &lt;}A&#13;
WBJJi .HAzXKi i*C5. .NewYor P£&#13;
"ROUGH O N DEXTIST"~Troth Powder, Fine&#13;
Smooth.Clcansinir, Refresh! 1^, Terservalivu 15c.&#13;
A C A R D — T o all wno are suffering from&#13;
error* and Indiscretions of youth, nerveus&#13;
weakness, early «eoay, loss of manhood. Ao , l will&#13;
•end a recipe that will cure you, FKHB OF&#13;
CHAKGB. This great remedy was dtsoovered bv a&#13;
missionary In Mouth America. Send self-addressed&#13;
envelope .to B I T . JOBBPH T. iMMan. SUtloa u, M, Y.&#13;
••ROUGH O N P A I N " Porous Piaster for Backxcht&#13;
Paine in the chest, Rheumatism; 35c:&#13;
lie s l e e p i n g ; I a m t h e only one w h o&#13;
- a w a k e n s to p r a y in t h e still w a t c h e s of&#13;
t h e n i g h t . ' '&#13;
" S o n , " .said the wise father, " y o u&#13;
h a d b e t t e r sleep also, t h a n w a k o to cens&#13;
u r e y o u r b r o t h e r s , "&#13;
T a k e t h e lesson. (), m a n a n d a p p l y it.&#13;
A'-duty is'but ill d o n e , t h a t is o n l y&#13;
d o n e so,as to c o n t r a s t with t h e neglect&#13;
of othersN N&#13;
M o r e beautiful is it t h a t o n o ' s lips&#13;
s h o u l d excusOxa fault, t h a n t h a t t h e y&#13;
s h o u l d c e n s u r e lk&#13;
It makes every humanitarian sad to sec Invalids&#13;
seek such relief as i* niven them by the&#13;
use of bitters, kidney n u d i t i e s and other nostrums.&#13;
The first few doses may make them&#13;
feel better on account of Its stupefying in^rre.&#13;
dlenta, mmMnc.1 with fome strong cathatttC&#13;
IREGUUTOR&#13;
CURES COMSTIPaVTKK ,&#13;
¾ 1 J f i H ^ e r , ^ ^ ' ^ s t i o n , Heartbnrn, Malaria,&#13;
fri^f11^' 3.^l'l t rt u , n o f t"o Heart when&#13;
*£?i?g.f.roin htditrettion ordcran.iredbondltion&#13;
&lt;Jh£ &lt;&#13;
a n i*«n ialP complaiuu. Tho only Sedl I d n e l n U i e vorld that&#13;
P o e i t l v c l y Cjares C o n s t i p a t i o n .&#13;
****** • ' , 0 f * I'"r b o K l« : 6 bottlea, 9 6 . 0 0&#13;
S E N D W l i C I K r r i . A K S , n t K E .&#13;
L*.si. C H E M - Y &amp; CO., Prop'rs,&#13;
..-.. i.'+ciurlaj t.i«miiti,&#13;
ROCKFOROWATCHES&#13;
and diuretic that are used in Its composition,&#13;
but they eventually urow worse. The only&#13;
cure for weakness, nervousness, debility, aches,&#13;
pains, rheumatism, sores,! urinary and digestive&#13;
troubles, is to make the blord rich, red&#13;
and tore, by u*ing Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock&#13;
and Sarsaparllla, a remedy widely Indorsed by&#13;
physician* whr&gt; have examined &lt;nto ita compo-&#13;
&amp; ^ i&#13;
A.re unequalled in EXACTjStt SER VICE.&#13;
n _ l*»e«l b y t h o C h i e f&#13;
bk^O Mech.auICIHH o l ' t h o&#13;
5¾^¾. V. S. C o a s t s u r v e y :&#13;
b y t h e A d u i l i a l&#13;
t o m m a n d i n u i n t h o&#13;
I*. &gt;. N a v a l O b s e r v -&#13;
a t o r y , l o r A s t r o -&#13;
n n m l c a l w o r k ; u n a&#13;
•ltion and effect.&#13;
b y L o s o t u o t l v e&#13;
K n g i n e o r * . Coriduot&lt;&#13;
tr* un&lt;l Kailway&#13;
men. T h e y a r *&#13;
r e c o g n i x ^ d a s&#13;
&gt;...&gt;• »*njas»for »11 U9 2H In which d o s e&#13;
II IHI iL UULLaUl II PSAt fNt iYS'nS a tvozwelnusa lbvya ?heAnCgUeMn[U*&#13;
Ctoa&lt;Ua« jewslm.) who g i v e a VuU Warranty*&#13;
profoundly grateful, and show such an lotereat&#13;
In recommeudlDg Hop Bitters as women.&#13;
I was affected with kidney and urinary&#13;
Trouble—&#13;
"For twelve yenrs!"&#13;
After trying all the do:tora and patent medicines&#13;
I could hear of, I used two bottle? of&#13;
Hop&#13;
"Bitters;"&#13;
And I am perfectly cured. I keep it&#13;
"AHthe time!" Respectfully B. F. Bjoth&#13;
Salisbury, Tenn.—May 4, 1S63. " '&#13;
BBADKOKD, Fa , May 8, 1875.&#13;
It has cured me of several diseases, tuch as&#13;
nervousLtee, sickness at the stomach, monthly&#13;
trouble*, etc. I have not seen a sick day la A&#13;
year, since I took Hop Bit'ers. All my neighoors&#13;
uae them. - MKS. FANXJB GREEN.&#13;
13,100 LOST.&#13;
"A tour to Europe that cost me #3.01)0, done&#13;
me less good than one bottle of Hoy Bitters:&#13;
they also cured my wife of fifteen years* nervous&#13;
weakness, slteplefcf-ness and dj?pepala." fi(^M;,i..A.u.huru, fax&#13;
So. liLOOMINGVILLE, 0 . , May 1, T9.&#13;
^ Sias— l have bten suffering ten \eara, and&#13;
x tried ycur Hop Bitters, and it dune we more&#13;
good than nil the doctors.&#13;
Miss 8. 8. KOONR&#13;
BABY SAVED. "&#13;
We are so thankful to say that our nurilng&#13;
baby was permanently cured of a dangerous&#13;
and protracted constipation and irregularity&#13;
of tbe bowels by the uee of Hop Bitters by ita&#13;
mother, which at the same time reBtorea her&#13;
to perfect health and strength.&#13;
The Parents, Rochester, N. Y.&#13;
None genuine without a bunch of green&#13;
Hope on the white label. Shun all the vile&#13;
poisonous stufit with " H o p " or "Hops" In&#13;
their name.&#13;
David Frestoa &amp; Co.,&#13;
BANKER^&#13;
DETROIT, - MICHIGAN.&#13;
raaxr*&#13;
We transact a general Bar&gt;»Inn Buataeav&#13;
Prompt and careful aiteatlon to Coll actions an&#13;
any part of the globe.&#13;
We buy and sell-all classes of reliable securities—&#13;
United Stated/State. County*••-Town acd 8ohool&#13;
District Bond*. Good. .&#13;
REAL IISTATF: MORTGAGES&#13;
IABA warrants and choice commercial paper. Interest&#13;
artlowed ou time depositt«. Careful attentlorj&#13;
glven&lt;tb the accounts i f uut of t wn H*n«s and&#13;
Backers. D A VIO PRBdTON * CO.&#13;
71 " " :&#13;
-• • • * • • * • « « * • » • • • • • • • • • • • » ;&#13;
*&#13;
«&#13;
• • U Y D I A E . PJNKHAM'&#13;
VEQETABLE COrVPC'JND&#13;
• . • is A rosrny»i5cBE FOR • . *&#13;
AU tkost^fiainful Complaints&#13;
." anrUffeakntsH^s so COOIIUOH »&#13;
5^*-* * * to our best * * * * * *&#13;
* * PKMXtiLPOPlLATIOX. ' ,&#13;
Price SI lu liquid, pl!l«r l°*"r&gt; ttrr:.&#13;
..» purpot U tolely fov the legiUmati-MaUng of&#13;
diaent and the relit/ of pni*, and that it dotr-aU&#13;
it claim* to do, thousand* of ladies co*flJadJif te*tify.~*&#13;
• It wlU cure entirely a^ Ovarian troables, Inflammation&#13;
and Cl'jeratlon, Failing and Displacement*, and&#13;
consequent Uplnal Weakness, and la paitlcularlr&#13;
adapted to the change of life. • « . • « • • • « • • • # •&#13;
• Itrcmovos Faintneaii, Flatulency, dortroy»allera»Ui|r&#13;
for stimulants, and raliovos Weakness of ih« Stomach.&#13;
It cures UloatiiiK, Headaches, Nerrous Prostration,&#13;
&gt;*neral Debility, Steeplettanew, Depreastoa and Indijwiiloo.&#13;
That feeliti^ of bearinc down, caaatog p&#13;
and backache. Is always permanently cared by Its use.&#13;
• Send stamp to Lynn, Mas*, for pamphlet. Letters of&#13;
Inquiry confidentially answered. £or.taU9itdntftrtata,&#13;
The B U Y E R S ' G U I D E is issued S e p t&#13;
and March .each year: 221 pages, 8} x l l f&#13;
inches, with over 3 , 3 0 0 illustrations—&#13;
_a wiiolfi p i f t n r o prill pry, &lt;iivp^ wholfts^lr&#13;
pnees direct to consumers on all goods fo;&#13;
personal or ^j/BBSS^. iamily use.&#13;
Tells how to / £ 9 ^ ^ &amp; L order, and&#13;
gives exact |fly ^ ¾ cost of ev&#13;
erything you ^ &amp; ^B use, drink,&#13;
eat, wear, or ^ B b t a t d B ^ h a v e fun&#13;
with. These ^ ¾ ¾ ^ invaluable&#13;
hookc contain information r:leaned from&#13;
the n w k e t s of the world. W'c will mail&#13;
a copy f r e e to iii\j address 'ipon receipt&#13;
of the postage— 8 cents. Lut us heai&#13;
from yon. "j-Jespe^tfullv,&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.&#13;
CHAMPION * BALING PRESSES. A bale In 2 tDinat«s&#13;
Too »D bour. Loewa&#13;
10 lo 15 tons in car.&#13;
Send forj&#13;
Address F a m o u t M a n u f a c t ' e C o . , Qulncy, I1L&#13;
&gt;PLSO S C U K E FOR&#13;
H COIEI WHERE ALL ELSt FAILS.&#13;
Best Coui;ti Syrup. Ta"tenjrood.&#13;
Use In ume. Wold by druggists.&#13;
^ C O N S U M P T J O K . ^&#13;
B r s n r s M COLLEGE,&#13;
IBstabllahed 1S76] lTBPlum su.&#13;
f / Detroit, Mich.,is the place to&#13;
'I d- securoa,thorough basinesse*.&#13;
ucatloa. BooKkeeptnf, u i t h -&#13;
m«lc,prnmmar, bnstneasand ornamentai perunaabh:&#13;
p. Tbree months, fib, Iifescholarabip,|4ft,&#13;
^ ^ 2&#13;
gf^Jf^tfH'&#13;
3 S A L E S M E Wanted. A weekly salary and commission pai4&gt;&#13;
te tbe right parties. U&gt;od references and ricne«&gt;&#13;
cu-lty required. Usly rirst-clags subscription books&#13;
bandied. Address STANDAKO PUB. HOUsB •&#13;
Ann Arbor. Mlchlsac&#13;
rs s»nd stamp forcirci&gt;«&#13;
.,1., .tioimis who is entitled&#13;
m-n " to noriMOD-bounty, dfcc X« V*&#13;
W WOOD, 2'eniion Atty,, V'ashington, D . ¢ .&#13;
SOLDIERS&#13;
vd dress&#13;
f'LAi'K to secure a triO'O'-rn -n&#13;
_»eful Prtucattun.is atthe J K « K D&#13;
ltAPTI'« fMlch.) RV-TN'IM •"OLL£&#13;
u t. Write tor College Journal.&#13;
C. O. SWKNSBURU.&#13;
5, ,0 C t"O* $* f2c ^Hn^»l'&gt;"»sSr. rThte ;S ecNro et^ "re0vHeanl«e.d aNnod 1*sampAled*d wre srst,n r|if./oko. F8oLrA lYOTeO. Nf,N Maoanettoh iliseprTVYwt. )&#13;
/&#13;
/ /&#13;
uraJibftL-Com H I Tel&#13;
Televraahy or Shert-BaaJ&#13;
• VJtnsc busla«M. 8ituatiooa&#13;
&gt;ll—*. Ann Arbor, Mica.&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
-L&#13;
/&#13;
LEARN ^ ^ ° 5 A , P , 5 X i w SHORT-HAND and&#13;
uiiiin T Y p B WRITIrJo h^re, Situations furnisied.&#13;
Address &gt;aleutln« lirus.. Janestille, Wia.&#13;
W . N . U . 1&gt; 3 - 4 1&#13;
OPIUMS?^ - .^- . MapsxyltUC&#13;
ftamw, liehanon.&#13;
ss&#13;
r&#13;
s , &lt; • * z.&#13;
s J ^ ~ -&#13;
»). •'&#13;
%&#13;
I&#13;
-1&#13;
I&#13;
From our i'nrn&gt;s!])i)rwU&gt;nt.&#13;
I'&gt; i U i . i i « l o&#13;
Mis,&gt; •Nmih Kutiisoy; U ally Barnard to&#13;
Miss Etta Bennett and Harry S.&#13;
Knapp to Miss Anna Waddell.&#13;
Several disgraceful rows upon our&#13;
streets Tuesday evening—no ofticcrs&#13;
in sight for an hour after/ the trouble.&#13;
Thos. McKeever takes a prominent&#13;
part in these attractions.&#13;
The Henry Minstrels at the Opera&#13;
House on Saturday evening, Oct. 11.&#13;
This is a good company.&#13;
Hon. E. S. Lace/ addressed the citizens&#13;
here on Wednesday evening, Oct.&#13;
8th, in the interest of the Republican&#13;
party and oi&gt; Triday^^ JTXlSI^uTToligF&#13;
will speak for the Democrats.&#13;
Repairs and an addition have been&#13;
commenced upon the Presbyterian&#13;
church.&#13;
The Chinese have met with another&#13;
defeat at the hands of the French.&#13;
The Heathen Chinese is evidently&#13;
bound to pay |the French indemnity&#13;
with blood—hut unfortunately the&#13;
blood spilled will only increase the&#13;
money indemnity France will demand.&#13;
"The Modern Bartender's Guide"&#13;
has just been issued by a New York&#13;
publisher. T h e medern bartender&#13;
doesn'tneell a j,'uide so badly as the&#13;
modern young man who patronizes the&#13;
t a r . A police oticer too often acts in&#13;
that capacity.—Norristown Herald.&#13;
Bill Nye tells a story of a lecturer&#13;
who in discoursing on the subject of&#13;
."Health"' inquired "What user can a&#13;
man make of his time while waiting&#13;
for a doctor?"' Betore he could be&#13;
New Goods!&#13;
Everything&#13;
C^^dtfi^L* ^&#13;
" * "&#13;
gin his answer to his own inquiry,&#13;
some one in the audience, called out,&#13;
"He can make his will."'&#13;
An Irishman who was sleeping all&#13;
night with a negro had his face blackened&#13;
by a practical joker. Starting off&#13;
in a hurry in the morning, he caught&#13;
sight of himself in a window—mirrerr&#13;
Puzzled, he stopped and gazed, and&#13;
linally exclaimed, ;'Begorra, they've&#13;
awoke the wrong man."&#13;
"De pusson Pwhat neber hated gno.&#13;
body," says Opie lleade, "ain't apt ter&#13;
lub nobody. Warm water ain't good&#13;
to scald wid-nor ter quench thirst?'&#13;
_ "No, my daughter," said a millionaire&#13;
manufacturer, "I'll never consent&#13;
to your marrying a bank cashier.&#13;
Your lungs are too delicate to stand&#13;
the rigors of a Canadian winter."&#13;
General-Sherman is said to dislike.&#13;
kissing Boston girls. It is a shock to&#13;
pucker up your lips for honey and run&#13;
afoul of a Greek verb,&#13;
A Louisville man has turned out&#13;
some sort of an electrical invention by&#13;
which a man can lie. in bed and fish.&#13;
There is no demand for such a contraption,&#13;
for anybody knows that a&#13;
man who will fish can lie anywhere.&#13;
WE ARE NOW OPENING&#13;
AN IMMENSE LINE&#13;
O F&#13;
The Greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as well as externally by' the tenderestlnfant.&#13;
It cures almost instant-&#13;
]y, ispleasahVaeting directly upon the&#13;
nervous system, ^eausing a sudden&#13;
buoyancy of the mind.'&lt;&amp;u short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be-explained m writ^&#13;
ten language. A single dose inhaled&#13;
and taken according to directions will&#13;
t onvince anyone that it is all that is&#13;
claimed for it. - Warranted to cure the&#13;
following diseases: Rheumatism or&#13;
Kidney Disease in any form, Headache.&#13;
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises. Flesh Wounds, Bunions,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramping Pains, Cholera Morbus,&#13;
Flux, Diarrhoea, Coughs, Colds,&#13;
Bronchial Affection, Catarrh, and all&#13;
aches and pains, external or internal.&#13;
Full directions with each bottle.&#13;
For Sale at WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
YOURS RESPECTFULLY,&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
L , JET, B E E B E ,&#13;
UNDERTAKER,&#13;
AND DEALKU IN&#13;
FURNITURE.&#13;
Pk'tiir*&gt; Framing, Kepairlng, Etc.&#13;
WEST MAIN ST1USBT,&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIQAN.&#13;
Cheap! STERS&#13;
FRUiri .--"•-Jlsar&#13;
Wllol.'Hllh' Ui'llU'l'BiU uYaTEKHHUdKOKKIWN FltUlTfl&#13;
Manufacturers of HermeUcully Sealed Goods.&#13;
l'iekles, Preserves, etc.,&#13;
Ki, Ki and 57 Jefferson, Ave* DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
THE DETROIT TIMES l 8 a brl^ht a n d&#13;
m&gt;u&gt;rv (JUi)tT. its tch'i,'i'a|»itic news . comes hy&#13;
special \v'm&gt; fi'niti tlit&gt; ui'Wrt i'i&gt;utiTt« of the coiiutrv&#13;
tn its I'llitmiiil riiumd. l.ike"most people this*&#13;
fall I'IIK'TI.MKS in independent in politics, _ although&#13;
iris hv no lueatiH neutral. Every just&#13;
lauseiTi'eiM'Kfair and adequate treatment from&#13;
IS THFrFAFER T l l K TIMKB. While the&#13;
TIMKB Ljiven mure attention to business than to&#13;
murder^it.iuivt&gt;r lieulects murders or any real&#13;
news, and it isn't seared by beinn called sensational.&#13;
The people like TIIK TiMKBbevause It is&#13;
published solelviii the interest of its readers&#13;
ym, ,-=(11 i i m . . t y Daily TIMKK s e n t t o your atl.&#13;
F O R - T H E P K O l * E . diens one month l o r M&gt;i'enti&lt;; or you can have the Dally and Sunday,&#13;
sevt&gt;n paper's a week, sent voil for r&gt;0 cents *&#13;
month. This is i lie beat investment offered this&#13;
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
•DETKOIT'*-. CLEVELAND-.&#13;
Steam Navigation Company'* Steamers&#13;
Cfty of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
•of Third St, Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leave&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at8.30p."m.&#13;
X H E 5 2 ; 2 5 R O U T E .&#13;
Week days-Standard Time.»&#13;
THE-'S«OG'RO-UTL&#13;
City of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leav^ from foot of Wayne St Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. M,&#13;
For Marine City St. Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisvilla&#13;
Cheboygan St. Ignace and&#13;
&gt;p I (: TU f?£ s o u&lt;; MACKINAC&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
illustrated book of 120pcges,&#13;
A LAXF.TOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKINAC&#13;
historical and descriptive of this&#13;
— Great Historic Summer Kesort&#13;
ar.d Lanilfi'iuiTi.&#13;
C ft. \Vr&gt;rti&gt;o/«h, CenM P n r * . Agent*&#13;
lio 10i 'W ayne St.. Octroi*, Mich,&#13;
BiP'JDy.TR.A'NSIT&#13;
piaccgztRY&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned at 5 cents per volume,&#13;
fw- 7 days.&#13;
« Tickets for 25cts.&#13;
1« a a 50 "&#13;
J&#13;
HOLLAND BULBS.&#13;
Our Autumn Catalogue&#13;
of Bulbs and Seeds will&#13;
be mailed HBX to all applicants.&#13;
Address,&#13;
D . K . F E B B Y A; CO.,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
SLAP! BANG!&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN! V INKLE A(?aln to the front, in hU now store, where, for&#13;
the next sixty days from this data, for cash. I&#13;
promise to give tu«U my patrons more quantityi&#13;
nd better quality for less money, any of the-fol-&#13;
J w i n g articles, than any other deale^-ih the&#13;
county, viz: ,---''&#13;
Y OR&#13;
7 _. I MIXED.&#13;
la any quantify, Best Linseed Oil—raw or boiled&#13;
urpejwfne, Rub Varnishes, Flowing Varnishes&#13;
J njZn, Knotter's Putty, ana Painters' Supplies&#13;
..--I'rall kinds. Aay shade of color desired mixed&#13;
uad ready for Applying, ten per cent, cheaper than&#13;
ju:iy other bouse In town. Paper hanging, frescoing,&#13;
glass staining and graining specialties. Oive&#13;
' n a call and satisfy yourselves that we only say&#13;
\. Hat we mean, and mean all that we say.&#13;
-Si VINKLE,&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1864.&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS^&#13;
Obtain for Mechanical Devices, Compounds,&#13;
Designs and Labels.,&#13;
All preliminary examinations as&#13;
topatentability ot inventions,. free.&#13;
Our "Guide to Obtaining Patent,"&#13;
is.sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS BAGGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATMTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
•r&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROW!?,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All JtliHlg-ef &lt;w*4t*m ^opk, a«4 gWH^flf&#13;
repairing', including'&#13;
HORSE SHOEING. -&#13;
Shop back of Mann's Block, PIFCKNUY ,&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds wilt be devoted&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
the library&#13;
For books or further information&#13;
apply at ^ :&#13;
W I N C H E L L ' S DRUG STORE,&#13;
PINCKNKY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Graiiul Trunk Railway Time Table.&#13;
MICH. AIR LINE DIVISION.&#13;
^ K T U WILL ALWAYS. FIND.&#13;
' - A FULL STOCK OF&#13;
PURE DRUGS AND MEDICINES&#13;
AT LOWEST PRICES,&#13;
- A T —&#13;
WINCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
STQCKBRID.QE, MAY 8« 1884.&#13;
:plisr GTS.-mTErx'&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
READY FOR BUSINESS! ,&#13;
Brcftd and Buns Fresh Every Day.&#13;
Warm meals and lnn^hes at all hnufs. Oysters&#13;
and all delicacies in their season. We have a line&#13;
of fresh.groceries, a geod assortment of tealrom&#13;
a&gt;to75 cents a ponnd, \Hlghest price paid for&#13;
Butter and Begs. Come atd aee us. We will give&#13;
you good goods and fair prises.&#13;
W. H. L A W R E N C E , PROPR.&#13;
Job Printing, less th^oTcity priGes, at the&#13;
Dispatch Office. ^mmmm^:~ ~^~ ••;-&#13;
RocheHter, 1:4()&#13;
Homeo, ,;i:!»&#13;
Armada, ^ . U:0.r&gt;&#13;
RiDGEWAY »:;«_&#13;
All trains run hy "'wntfal standard*' timeT&#13;
All trains run (laU^-KHndays-excepted.&#13;
Buperlniemienl. General Managej&#13;
.V&#13;
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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 Dispatch October 09, 1884</text>
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                <text>October 09, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1884-10-09</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>PINCKNEYDISFATCH&#13;
JtBOME WWCHEUL, PUBLISHtR.&#13;
imV&amp;l&gt; THUHSDAYH.&#13;
UnbNMlpttoB Price, $1.00 per I ear.&#13;
ADVERTISING HATKS.&#13;
l'ranslent advertisements, 25 c?nte j « r inch for&#13;
/VrBt Insertion ami ten cents j&gt;er inch for^ach subsequent&#13;
insertion. Localnotices, Struts |***r linn for&#13;
«acli insertion. Special rates fur regular advertisement*&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
D. M. U H E E S E , M. 1).,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention ii\en to&#13;
eurgery and diseases of the throat and lun^s.&#13;
I AMES MAKK.EY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
.And Insurance Ajjent. Legal papers made on&#13;
£hort notice and reasonable term*. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Poatottice Wnckuey, Mich.&#13;
Ill MEM &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of yrain. Pinckney, Mieuigan.&#13;
AMES T. EAMAN, 4 ATTOKKEY &amp; COUNSELORXFLAW&#13;
and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Office in the B r c k Block, PINCKNEY&#13;
« T P. VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY^ COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCEKYOfflce&#13;
over Sigler'sDrujj Store PINCKNEY&#13;
ALSTEAD GREGORY,&#13;
H DEALER IN&#13;
GRAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, &amp;c.&#13;
Highest market price paid for wheat. A good&#13;
etock of Lumber alwavs on bund. Doors, ^ush&#13;
A Conscientious Minister.&#13;
DKAK Silt:—Having tried your&#13;
White Wine of Tar Syrup, I believe it&#13;
to be an excellent medicine, ur.d c..n&#13;
conscienciously recuinmend it &gt;» o.'iers.&#13;
Respectfully yours,&#13;
Kingsville, Mo. Rev. Win. Stevenson.&#13;
I Never Saw Its Equal.&#13;
D B . C. D. WAKNKII-—KiuJSir—I received&#13;
the bottle of White Wine of&#13;
Tar Svrup you sent me, and have used&#13;
it, and will say 1 think it cannot be&#13;
excelled as a throat remedy. At least&#13;
I have never tried anything that&#13;
seemed to relieve and benefit me as&#13;
that did. " Yours fraternally,&#13;
REV. R. F. HEAVENS,&#13;
Perche. Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.&#13;
For Bale at C. E. llolliater's, Siller Bro's, and&#13;
Wiucheli'e DniLt Store.&#13;
T L - . I . O . .: ./.^FAVORITE.'&#13;
We will .jcriu . for O&gt;E ENTILE&#13;
YEAR, to every lady who sends us AT&#13;
ONCE the"names ol ten married ladies,&#13;
at same address, and twelve two-ct.&#13;
stamps for postage, our handsome, entertaining&#13;
and instructive Journal, devoted&#13;
to Fashions, Fancy Work D. -&#13;
orating, Cooking and Household matters.&#13;
Regular price, $1.00. SEND TODAY,&#13;
and secure next number. Ad-1&#13;
dress, DOMESTIC JOURNAL, Nunda,&#13;
N. Y.&#13;
LADIES' MEDICAL ADVISER.&#13;
A complete Medical Work for Women,&#13;
handsomely bound in cloth and&#13;
illustrated. Tells'how to prevent and&#13;
HAireall diseases-ofthe sex, hy-a-treatment&#13;
AT HOME. Worth itj weight in&#13;
Gold to eyery lady suffering'from any&#13;
of the diseases. Over 10,000 so'd already.&#13;
POSTPAID ONLY 50 Cents.&#13;
Postal Note or two-ct. stamps. Address&#13;
NUNDA PUBLISHING CO.,&#13;
^unda, N. Y.&#13;
ITEMJS OF INTEREST.&#13;
OATS WANTED!&#13;
1 want to buy 500 bushels of oats,&#13;
for which I will pay Detroit quotations&#13;
for "mixed oats" the day they are&#13;
I.'OV.ML or delivered.&#13;
T. Bivkeit,&#13;
Dover Mills, Oct. 1st, 1884.&#13;
Washing made easy by using Babbit's&#13;
"1770" Pearline. Call and get a&#13;
package, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
A fine full blood Jersey Bull for&#13;
sale cheap. Inquire of&#13;
^ John Harris.&#13;
t s y T h o e e receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X "ver this paragraph, will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with next number. A blue X&#13;
si((ni!l&lt;-a that the time has expire , siad that, in accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
LOCAL JClflNGS.&#13;
Joseph Monks' new residence, on&#13;
UnadiHa street, j s nearly enclosed.&#13;
Sykes &amp; Son are putting a new roof&#13;
on their blacksmith shop.&#13;
H. Harrington will ship another car&#13;
load of sheep to New York this week.&#13;
Apples are still coming, in numer--&#13;
ously at the depot.&#13;
James McNamara, formerly of this&#13;
place, is the fusion candidate for State&#13;
-Senator in the Alpena District.&#13;
Gilbert Abel, of Fowlerville. a former&#13;
citiz.cn of Pinckney, is in town today.&#13;
There is great" temptation for the&#13;
small bey now-a-days to play__truant&#13;
and go nutting.&#13;
Miss Johnson, of Chelsea, is visiting&#13;
• An American who went into business&#13;
in Paris, and advertised on the&#13;
fences, was fined $50 byu the cour s&#13;
"for annoying the vision of the public."&#13;
Chas. Bailey has started up the old&#13;
Climax Cider Mill, and will run it in&#13;
connection with his fruit evaporator.&#13;
Mrs. Dreier, of Bath, Clinton county&#13;
is the guest of her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. J. J, Livermore, this week.&#13;
Mr. Springstein, of Orange county,&#13;
Florida, has been the guest of friends&#13;
and old time acquaintances in this vicinity&#13;
the past week,&#13;
Isaac Page, of Fowlerville, one of&#13;
the pioneers of Pinckney, is visiting&#13;
among old friends in this village and&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
The Brighton Market Fair was a&#13;
complete success again this year, both&#13;
as regards exhibits and financial receipts.&#13;
This society has made its annual&#13;
meetings very popular with the&#13;
farmers of Livingston and Wrestern&#13;
Oakland counties.&#13;
E. R.-Wilcox, Esq., of Pontiac, Ivas&#13;
announced to address a Democratic&#13;
meeting at this place Tuesday evening&#13;
, b u t f o r s o me reasondid not conic&#13;
— hence no meeting was held.&#13;
W. B.~Gampbell, one of—Einckney-Ji&#13;
Svkes &amp; Son were awarded first&#13;
premium on carriage work at the&#13;
Stock bridge fair. The buggy receiving&#13;
the "blue ribbon" is a beauty and&#13;
no mistake. Many pronounce it the&#13;
finest piece of carriage work they ever&#13;
saw. Go and take a look at it—in&#13;
their warehouse.&#13;
Common Council Proceedings.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH., OCT. 13th, 1884.&#13;
Council convened and was called to&#13;
order by President Grimes. Present:&#13;
\ ustees Haze, Mann, McGuines8-and&#13;
Wheeler.&#13;
Report of Village Marshal received&#13;
and accepted.&#13;
Liquor, bond of Martin Welsh presented&#13;
with John and Alfred Monks&#13;
AS sureties.&#13;
On motion for approval of same,&#13;
yeas and nays being called for, vote&#13;
was as follows:&#13;
Yeas. Mann, McGuiness, Wheeler&#13;
and Grimes.&#13;
Nay. Haze.&#13;
On Motion, Council adjourned to&#13;
next regu.lar meeting.&#13;
W . B . H O F F , Clerk.&#13;
most popular and esteemed young men.'&#13;
has secured a position in the wholesale&#13;
dry goods house of J. K. Burnham&#13;
k Co., Detroit, alfd" entered upon the&#13;
duties of his new situation yesterday.&#13;
Bert is a competent salesman, and will&#13;
Real Estate Transfers.&#13;
and all building materials furnished on short no- tice, GREGORY, MICH.&#13;
TTKTEHINABY SURGEON, Howell, Mich.&#13;
. y Mr, Winegar will attend to calls promptly&#13;
night or day. Milk fever and other diseases in&#13;
cattlf and horses a specialty. Terms reasonable.'&#13;
Residence on Byron Koud. Telephonic connection&#13;
with central oUice at Howell,&#13;
CHARLES MACLEAN, 1&gt;. 1). S.&#13;
•TvENTlST, Graduate of the Dental Departlament&#13;
of "" ' ' " " '&#13;
Green aw ay&#13;
£*r-Particular att&lt;&#13;
of the natural teeth.&#13;
Will be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
'the University oT Michigan. OlHce in&#13;
Block, over 1'osUmce. Howell,&#13;
ilar attention paitroo the preservation&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
Ten *e*e# pleasantlylocate^ .31of J * m i l e w v s l&#13;
fcitockhridge. Apple, cherry peach and paar orchards,&#13;
nice house, (jrood well and cistern, out&#13;
buildings, well fenced, good «oil. Applv on&#13;
premises. L O R E N C E R I C E .&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
' G. W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^ B A N K E R , ^&#13;
Does a General Banking Business,&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
Deposits received. (&#13;
Uertiticates issued on time deposits,&#13;
;' And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
Having bought Mrs. Lewis' stock of&#13;
Hair Goods I can give you good bargains&#13;
in the same. Call and be made&#13;
beautiful. Mrs. Wagne:.&#13;
Call on Teeple &amp;, Cadwell for coal for&#13;
threshing engines.&#13;
Fou SALE—A full set of Butchering&#13;
Tools, at Teeple k Cad well's&#13;
Fine flavoring Extracts, always&#13;
fresh and reliable, at&#13;
Winchell's Drugstore.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn ai.l&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of T.&#13;
Grimes or on the premises of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.'&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at Bush's" Planing Mill, Plainfield.&#13;
Electric Bitters, at Winchell's Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTICE.&#13;
Parties having Organs that need repairing&#13;
can have them put., in first&#13;
class order by calling on - *"~&#13;
C. L. t'olliei, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A bunch of desirable lambs for&#13;
sale. -,&#13;
F.- A. BAHTON, Unadilla.&#13;
It is well known that tUi1 Kidneys&#13;
are the human sewers, which wash&#13;
her sister, Mrs. M. B. Markham, ard j undoubtedly make himself useful to&#13;
other relatives in Pinckney, this week. I the firm with whom he is engaged.&#13;
—The following transfers are reported&#13;
for the PINCKNEY DISPATCH by Register&#13;
Dudley, for the week ending&#13;
Oct, 11th, 1884.&#13;
Mary A. Taylor heirs to Angelina&#13;
Keith, lot in Howell, $475.&#13;
Euphemia C. Barnard to Mary E.&#13;
Burwell, one-third interest in land in&#13;
Howell, $1,000.&#13;
Fred Redinger to Edwin J. Holt,&#13;
M. Dolan is refitting his building A Democratic meeting at the rink I land in Howell, $2,800.&#13;
on Main street, fui the accommodation | Friday evening last, w v quite large&#13;
PINCKNEY PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY BY&#13;
Oct. 16,1884. TOMPKINSdISMON.&#13;
Whfiat, No. 1 white,&#13;
" No, 2 white,&#13;
" No* 2 red,...&#13;
" No, 8 red,..,&#13;
Oftts,&#13;
Corn -.—&#13;
Barley,&#13;
Dried,Ap^](B»fr^.,.'.V.'.'.".'.'.'.".'.'.'!...." 06Vi&lt;s&amp; .07,&#13;
PotatoeaV— *'•&#13;
BttWefT^ 20&#13;
t^gs, 15.&#13;
' " tus, p*r lOOTbB i 7 75®8.0O.&#13;
^ ^...ickons .' 9&#13;
Seed 4 O ® 4.50.&#13;
1 01*711 . &gt;"&#13;
.7^!&gt;1 t y&#13;
Clover I&#13;
Reading Notices.&#13;
To any onybody who has disease of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
^ured the same complaints in other&#13;
ca§es» Address,&#13;
I T - HAZELTINK, Wrarren, Pa,&#13;
'Uric acid in the blocd is^tke^cause&#13;
of all rheumatism. T^id^acid is the&#13;
cause of infianiatwrtv which ^ is the&#13;
source of greAtr^pain. It is through&#13;
the inaptkm of trie Kidneys tha' the&#13;
_ Xccutnulates in the ^blood. Kellogg&#13;
Y Columbian Oil acts directly on&#13;
the Kidneys, and thereby removes the&#13;
cause of all Rbetrmatis'm, and.eti'ecta&#13;
permanent cure.&#13;
away the impuritie"- and deb.is&#13;
When they become clogged or inactive,&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian, Oil will ejnovejhe&#13;
cause and c eate a healtl.y |&#13;
action, anu~enect a permanent cure.&#13;
BUGGIES AND CI'TTKKS.&#13;
Having,the agency for the Kakn&#13;
zoo Buggies ano^Cutters those w'&#13;
to buy a good bluggy cheap \VM ' i&#13;
well to call on me.&#13;
Emm eft Murph_&#13;
at Pinckney Livery Barn. .&#13;
Physicians -Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepareoUrom the very best materials,&#13;
at " Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
TEAM FOR SALE!&#13;
I offer for sale at a bargain my span&#13;
of Roan Mares, 8 years old, sourd.&#13;
well matched, and excellent workers.&#13;
Any one desiring such a team will t o&#13;
well to look at th n.&#13;
James T. Eaman.&#13;
Cure that cold. All the leading&#13;
Cough R.\i&#13;
'Is Drug Store.&#13;
Mrs. M. •'• i»tM&lt;i-h;;v'&lt;ipcnr(l ;i bra;&#13;
ful line of Millinery good* o;u,0K5side&#13;
of McGuiness it ToumeyY^sfore. Ladies&#13;
please call and^ee^what elega u&#13;
new styles she 1:&#13;
I w i l l ^ r k e orders for a li n.&#13;
amoufitTof seasoned cord wood.&#13;
J as. T. Eaman. -&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Grimes &amp; Johnson having ad'1&#13;
considerable new machinery and r.-&#13;
paired quite extensively their cvsto &gt;&#13;
and flouring mill; would announce to&#13;
the public, generally that it is running&#13;
again.Being well pleased with the liberal&#13;
patronage in the past would invito&#13;
their many patrons to c L again&#13;
and satisfaction will be guaranteed.&#13;
pMckriey, Oct. 6th, 188'&#13;
of Martin Welsh's saloon, which will&#13;
be opened therein soon.&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Mann returned from Toledo&#13;
yesterday, accompanied by her&#13;
brother, S. Whittlesey, Esq.&#13;
A : ather disgraceful row is sa;d to&#13;
have occurred on the fair grounds at&#13;
Stockbridge, Friday last.&#13;
Mrs. D. P. Markev and children, of&#13;
West Branch, Ogemaw- county, are&#13;
visiting friends and relatives in this&#13;
village and vicinity this week.&#13;
Mrs. Burwell and Mrs. P. Barnard,&#13;
of Howell, were the guests of H. LL&#13;
Barnard and family Saturday and&#13;
Sunday last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Harris, of Bancroft,&#13;
who have been visiting their&#13;
daughter, Mrs. D. C. Walters, return&#13;
ed home on Monday 'ast.&#13;
Mr. Pierson, special traveling agent&#13;
of the American Express Company, is&#13;
in town this afternoon completing arrangements&#13;
for the Pinckney office of&#13;
the company.&#13;
Some malicious person obstructed&#13;
ttvFlrack of the A r r Lfrre~ road&#13;
Wixom, last night, and came very&#13;
near wrei king tjuviate evening train&#13;
from the^ea-sf.&#13;
e Annual meeting of the Stal&#13;
Horticultural Society will be held in&#13;
Ann Arbor, the first week in December.&#13;
'&#13;
Lakin &lt;fc Sykes have leased the building&#13;
just west of F. L. Brown's hardware,&#13;
and it is being neatly fitted&#13;
up for the accommodation of their&#13;
large and increasing business.&#13;
^J¥he Stockbridge Fair w*ra^grand&#13;
success again this v e a r ^ t h e grounds&#13;
beingcrowde^i-a^most to an uncoulfortabJj^&#13;
elTtent on Thursday, when it&#13;
ported that nearly. $1,500 was taken&#13;
at the gate. Enterprising manageiv!.&#13;
nt is what seems to be the "matter"&#13;
with the famous "world's fair."&#13;
The first quarterly meeting for tl '*&#13;
conference year-will be held at the 1\i.&#13;
E. Church next Sunday evening, Oct.&#13;
19th, Love feast at 6:30, with a sermon&#13;
following by Rev. Dr. McEldowney,&#13;
of Detroit; after which the sacrament&#13;
of the^Lord's Supper will be administered.&#13;
All are invited. The&#13;
quarterly conference will meet at the&#13;
same place on the following (Monday)&#13;
morning at 9 o'clock. All the official&#13;
members are requested to be present.&#13;
-*— Rey. H. Cartledge, Pastor.&#13;
ly attended, and the principal speaker,&#13;
Mr. Henderson, of Mason, is highly&#13;
complimented for the happy manner&#13;
' .i which he presents his views of the&#13;
political issues.&#13;
The Hero Reaper received first&#13;
premium at the Stockbridge Fair last&#13;
week. The Hoosier Grain Drill also&#13;
took first premium there, these are&#13;
very nice machines and were exhibited&#13;
by James Markev, of this village.&#13;
Quite a number of our townspeople&#13;
went to Detroit'Tuesday to see Blaine&#13;
and Freemont, and a good many more&#13;
"WnTTFlio\veTt Wednesday for the&#13;
same purpose.&#13;
William Smith, late of the Freeman's&#13;
Journal office, Dublin. Ireland.&#13;
-[-is spending a few days in Pinckney ast&#13;
the guest of his. triend, Edward Mc-&#13;
Garigle, of the Grand Trunk Railway&#13;
office. Mr. Smith is a "typographical&#13;
artist" and expects to be employed-in&#13;
one of the Detroit printing establish;,&#13;
;;..!KS.&#13;
We introduce to our readers through&#13;
our advertising columns this week, a&#13;
1163,1 ] new firm—Tourney BrosT~of Jackson.&#13;
They are not unknown to many of our&#13;
people however, as they were former&#13;
residents of Dexter, and have the reputation_&#13;
of being one of the most enterprising&#13;
business houses-!!!" the"&#13;
-Central City."&#13;
A copy of the Brooklyn^Mtcri.) Ex'&#13;
ponent. kindly haru^etJus by Mvs.&#13;
Markham. is^rrtiited, with a black&#13;
margimjWSorder, in respect to the&#13;
Lucy Wheeler to Laura C. Naylor,&#13;
one-na If interest in lot in&lt; Howell,&#13;
$3,000. ' .&#13;
Geo. Yv\ Wood to Rose i^^Coleman,&#13;
lot in Howell, $800.&#13;
Jam^-^ P,"Clark to Fred H . Harper,&#13;
lot inCohoctah, $200.&#13;
Ros-o Fow'er to Freeman Rohra&#13;
bacher, JQ acres in Cohoctah, $1,600.&#13;
Fr?cm . : Rohrabacher to Rosco Fowler,&#13;
1 &gt; in Handy. $1,500.&#13;
"~i£o..r.-t W. Radford to DeWitt C.&#13;
Melvin. 40 acres in Handy, $1,600.&#13;
James Case to Alvin W. Park, 60&#13;
ac*es in Tyi one, $3,500. „&#13;
Meshael G. Norris fo Myran B.&#13;
Hutchinson. 55 acres in Tyrone,$1,100.&#13;
Robert Meeker to Martin E. Curtis,&#13;
land in Tyrone, $800.&#13;
ATvin Ma-nn by Ex. to John&#13;
A. Donaldsov. .0 acres in Putnam,&#13;
$1,525.&#13;
Patrick Gallagher Jo John Dunlavyv&#13;
199 acres in Hamburg, $199.&#13;
Ellen Conkhn, et al. to Thomas&#13;
Conklin, et al. 3-7 interest in 47 acres&#13;
in Deerfield, $768.&#13;
Tory of its late editor and proprietor.&#13;
Chas. W. d o u g h . In the death&#13;
of Mr, Clough the newspaper fraternity&#13;
of Michigan lost one of its most&#13;
honored and useful members, and the&#13;
village of Brooklyn one of its most enterprising&#13;
and valued citizens.&#13;
The October elections are passed and&#13;
the sachems of the two parties are trying&#13;
to figure out their influence on&#13;
the Presidential election in November.&#13;
Ohio gives a Republican majority of&#13;
from 12,000 to 18,000, with a gain of&#13;
six Congressmen, as against 12,000&#13;
Democratic majority two years ago,&#13;
but i'aMs somewhat short of the October&#13;
majority of 1880, when Garfield's&#13;
candidacy w?s a factor in the contest.&#13;
Western Virginia has probably given&#13;
the Democrats a majority .of from 2,-&#13;
000 to 5,000. The results are not&#13;
such as to diminish the excitement ot&#13;
the campaign, and both parties ,will&#13;
wage a determined fight far victory what modified form, is enjoyed in,&#13;
in November, - some parts of the United States,&#13;
, The "rui:schban," one of the favorite&#13;
sources of amusement in Denmark, is&#13;
thus described: "A tower stands at&#13;
either end of a railway, which is perhaps&#13;
ISO feet m length, 40 feet high&#13;
at one extremity and half as hij&#13;
the other. I climbed the rude^-Staircases&#13;
of the higher towejv^and found&#13;
myself in a roomjiFcrwded with peoplewaiting&#13;
their-tippor-tunity for a "ride.&#13;
At tjuMfmran^e^stopd a phaeton-like&#13;
STIon four small iron wheels, the car&#13;
being very stout and holding two people&#13;
with comfort. Tbe«*wheels were&#13;
in grooves and the course extthwj^d over&#13;
the descending and ascending sTfcpes.&#13;
The oeople would get into a car and&#13;
be strapped in by a leathern boot; the&#13;
car would be started down the incline&#13;
plane by an attendant, and away it&#13;
would go down the first slope, and by&#13;
its impetus rise to the next hight, go&#13;
over and down and up again, at ^$eh&#13;
rise pitching a little lower, at each&#13;
pitch rising to a lesser hight, until the&#13;
last slope, when it rushed up the hill,&#13;
bumped against a buffer and the two&#13;
..avelers got out. The car would&#13;
then be seized, dragged aside, put upon&#13;
a lilt, hauled up to a hight above^&#13;
and sent back with other passengers&#13;
or empty down a corresponding road&#13;
parallel to the first^aaSB terminating&#13;
i.i a similar tp&gt;werby the side of the&#13;
one I j ^ a r m , whe^e it would be hoisted&#13;
again into place, and be ready to&#13;
make the round of the rush railway&#13;
again." The amusement, in a some&gt;^&#13;
r i... ' \ fA T&#13;
# - •i&lt;~-&#13;
) h&#13;
wm W T&#13;
a&#13;
T O O O B B B S P O N D B N T 8 .&#13;
_ _ l _ 2 l f f brthV name of tba author; n o t neow-&#13;
2 2 W ? r PoblloaUon, bat M an «Tldenoeof good&#13;
EfZh ;Si the Dart of the writer. Write only on GOB&#13;
Sa?of th«rfa'pSr. B»particularly earful .tajrlvLaK&#13;
IUUBM antf date*, to W e the let&#13;
slain and distinct. Proper uamea&#13;
U decipher, beoaiue of&#13;
ifoieh wer are written, the&#13;
rs and (buret&#13;
often difficult&#13;
oareleei manner In&#13;
"MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN. »»&#13;
N K W i M O TBAGJEDY&#13;
An Unfaithful Wife a n d t i e r P t m i u o u r&#13;
murdered*&#13;
A thrilling tragedy occurred at Newaygo&#13;
lust before midnight Sunday, October 5. A&#13;
man named Armstrong, who moved to Newaygo&#13;
a few months ago from the southern part&#13;
of the stat*1, saw his wife on the bed with a&#13;
man named George Bates In Bate*' room,&#13;
bate*, who came to Newaygo from Blur Kaptds&#13;
but two weeks ago, waa boarding with them.&#13;
Armstrong teized an ax to tatter in the door&#13;
to Bate*' room, which waa upstairs, and niBhed&#13;
np. He had seen them from outdoors. On&#13;
knocking at the door Mis. Armstrong opened&#13;
it, seized him about the waist&#13;
to hold him and told Bates to go down stairs&#13;
for the revolver and they would fix him. He&#13;
soon broke loosii from her and struck herewith&#13;
the axe, and then cut her throat with It. Then&#13;
he rushed down stairs, met Bates and struck&#13;
him several times with the axe, killing htm.&#13;
Then he went to the jail and gave himself up&#13;
to the sheriff and is now in custody. Armstrong&#13;
ia about 30 yearn of age. His wife waa&#13;
some younger, and they had one child about a&#13;
year old. Bates was about 22 to 34 years old.&#13;
The community at Newaygo is not fierce in its&#13;
condemnation cf Armstrong aad seems to have&#13;
gained the impression thatJBatca was a tough&#13;
fellow. '""" " ' '&#13;
W c h l g a n a t New Orleans.&#13;
8e&lt;yetary W. F. Noble of the commission&#13;
appointed to arrange for the Michigan exhibit&#13;
at the New Orleans exhibition, makes the following&#13;
statement of the work which is being&#13;
done:&#13;
"There is much more Interest manifested&#13;
in this exposition than there was In the&#13;
prior arrangements to the centennial. The exhibit&#13;
of Michigan will be on a grander scale&#13;
than it was at that time, also. I have had only&#13;
two weeks in which to work, but I have been&#13;
able to accomplish more than in six months&#13;
prior to the Centennial. At that time we had&#13;
no experience In fiUtiU vvuik, and spent much-jtlme&#13;
in learning. Now we know just what to&#13;
do and how to do It. The commission is working&#13;
harmoniously in every way, and there is&#13;
every evidence of an eminently successful career.&#13;
_ _ _&#13;
"The mineral exhibit made~~b/ ttre~Upper&#13;
Peninsula will be very large and embrace the&#13;
proper display of all Michigan's many minerals&#13;
Mr. Davis, one of the associate commissioners,&#13;
has the matter in hand. A cabinet collectloa&#13;
of minerals will be one of the special features&#13;
of the exhibit. The salt Industry will be especially&#13;
prominent, and the salt basin represented&#13;
In ail its districts. Salt Inspector Hill&#13;
represents that department and will display&#13;
the valuable saline resources of the state as&#13;
completely as possible.&#13;
- 'The forestry of Michigan is the finest in&#13;
any of the states, and the people generally are&#13;
much interested 1n securing specimens. I was&#13;
in the Saeinaw Valley this week, and the lumbermen&#13;
are very much interested. Erhibits&#13;
will be made of the hard and soft woods In sections&#13;
of trees, planus and polished specimens.&#13;
A cabinet collection of 400 pieces, the property&#13;
of M. Eaglemeun, of Manistee, will form an&#13;
intereetijg Dart of the display.&#13;
•'The cereals of the state have this year been&#13;
of splendid quality and quantity. There will&#13;
be exhibits from every county in the 6tate.&#13;
The farmers are very much interested, and I&#13;
am dally In receipt of returns of what has been,&#13;
collected. I make occasional trips into the interior&#13;
as occisijn demands, and I find not only&#13;
the farmers but alithe people interes&#13;
this exhibit.&#13;
"Tne pomologicaf displa,&#13;
ever exhibited. The fruit1, crop tnis yearTias&#13;
been uuu6ually good, both m—quanftty -&amp;tid&#13;
quality. B. P. Lyon and (J^WrfJUrdelJ have&#13;
me matter iu charge aira&gt;*reinaklng their collections.&#13;
Mr. Garjiefcl visited the State and&#13;
Western Michigan fairs and rtquested the&#13;
fruit grojvefSin picking their fruit, to be careful&lt;&gt;&#13;
ndpre serve toe'best specimens; So If callupon&#13;
they wllla&gt;e ready to respond.&#13;
"President 8/ _J. Hammond, of the State&#13;
Wool Growers/association, is engaged in making&#13;
the collections for the'wool exhibit, which&#13;
will De a credit to the state. Michigan pro^&#13;
duces a grade of wool thiit is much sought&#13;
after, an^thts collection will be viewed with&#13;
Interest./&#13;
"The/educational department, it is desired,&#13;
will b/more complete than at the Centennial&#13;
exhibition, where the exhibit attractedjnaxkesl&#13;
attention irom the educational congress. Gen.&#13;
Ejtton, the head of the educational oureau aT&#13;
ashingtou, has especially requested ihat&#13;
ichjgau make a complete exhibit. Grand&#13;
Rapids public schools, the university, the state&#13;
normal school, anil the^ptrblic school ai Coldwater&#13;
will all make especial exhibits. Specimens&#13;
of work at the Flint deaf and dumb asy&#13;
lum will alsobe sent to New Orleans. Rt quests&#13;
will be. made of the various industrial schools&#13;
in 'hi: state to exhibit their workings.&#13;
"The apiary will be in charge of Prof&#13;
cf the agricultural college,kand will be very&#13;
complete. That gentleman will act as demonstrator."&#13;
October, and go into the earth to pupate. The&#13;
pupa re*einbles the larva except it Is shorter,&#13;
and cot so pointed in front. '&#13;
The fly which comes forth in June is black,&#13;
with red head and legs. It is leas than onehalf&#13;
of an inch lontt. In form the ty resembles&#13;
the house tly. The wings are light crossed&#13;
with dusky bars.&#13;
These magnets do not attract attention very&#13;
much till in September, and so are much the&#13;
more harmful in autumn fratt. They do work&#13;
some, however, in winter^fruit.- In this respect—&#13;
being for the most part confined to fall&#13;
apples—and in this respect alone, they are less&#13;
to be dreaded than the codling moth. As will&#13;
be easily understood by the above, this insect&#13;
is a terrible enemy, and we may well work to&#13;
stamp it out at the very outset.&#13;
As the apples attacked become ripe early&#13;
and fall prematurely, we have but to keep sheep&#13;
or hogs in the orchard tu destroy them. Thli&#13;
is the only remedy which I can at present&#13;
suggest. Of course apple* containing these&#13;
maggots, which are gathered for use, should be&#13;
fed to hogs as soon as their condition is learned.&#13;
It &lt;s of the utmost importance that, all this&#13;
"wormy"—we better say maggoty fruit—should&#13;
be treated so as to destroy the maggots.&#13;
Lansing, 0*t. 10, 1884. A. J. Cpcx.&#13;
A Disastrous € o o n l n g Expedition.&#13;
A horrible calamity occurred in Green&#13;
Oak township, just east of Brighton, Saturday&#13;
night, Oct. 4 by which Geo. Hooper, 35 years&#13;
old, a son of Mr. Peter Hooper, lost his iif^. In&#13;
company with a younger brother he went out&#13;
for a night's sport "treeing coons," and after&#13;
considerable labor from which they experienced&#13;
much weariness the pair went over to the railroad&#13;
track to rest and wait for their dogs to&#13;
come up. Before they w^re aware of it, they&#13;
had both fallen victims to slumber, and a&#13;
freight cowing alon&gt;r shortly afterwards cut off&#13;
the former's head. The younger brother barely&#13;
escaped the same horrible fate, as he had but&#13;
rolled over and cleared himself from the track&#13;
M the tialn went whtaalng by—Fate seems to&#13;
be diicipling old Mr. Hooper, as it was but a&#13;
few months ago he buried a beloved Bon who&#13;
was the victim of an accident \n the lumber&#13;
woods. Much sympathy Is expressed for&#13;
the heart-broken parents, who are Kenerally&#13;
known and highly respected.&#13;
IN T H E STATE.&#13;
The fire in the Calumet mine has been extinguished.&#13;
A fine vein of rait has been struck at Algonac,&#13;
at a depth of 1,500 feet.&#13;
It is expected that Moody, the evangelist,&#13;
wtllopen meetings in Detroit about Nov. 20.&#13;
Battle Creek has a man mean enough to sell&#13;
water to his neighbors at 10 cents per month.&#13;
Thievei stole 47 bushels of clover seed from&#13;
S. B. Lewis' barn in Monroe the other morning.&#13;
Thomas KUldufl of Rodney, Mecosta county&#13;
waTkffleTa^XutherirntlFunloading logs from&#13;
a train.&#13;
A farmer named Abr&amp;ms, living two miles&#13;
from Brighton, committed suicide by taking&#13;
morphine*&#13;
Tne 1'entwater Lumber company's saw and&#13;
sbiug'e mil) was destroyed by Are on the Sth.&#13;
Loss 135,000.&#13;
Lucy G. Knapp, of Leslie, widow of a solrier&#13;
of the war of 1812, has been awarded a back&#13;
pension of $1,01)0.&#13;
There is no grist mill in Manltou County and&#13;
the islanders take their gristjg largely to Elk&#13;
Rapids io*8chooners. ^&#13;
The Crawford county treasurer's safe was&#13;
opened the other evening, and about $2,000 of&#13;
tbe public moneys stolen.&#13;
The number of deer that are being shipped&#13;
from the north woods is almost iLcredible. It&#13;
is said they have never been found so fat as&#13;
now.&#13;
The Adrian brick and tile machtne^rorKs are&#13;
castlDg a number of cannon tcv-be used as a&#13;
part of the soldier's monunSent in Hillsdale&#13;
county.&#13;
Several Catholic priests of the~sTate have&#13;
trlbuted"towArd the subscription to pay of!&#13;
of tbe Zion Baptist church of East&#13;
So says a leading Baptist paper.&#13;
' If the legislature gives the necessary appropriations&#13;
early in the session next winter, the&#13;
new northern asylum for the insane at Traverse&#13;
City may be made ready for use iu the&#13;
early spring. —&#13;
8tate Salt Inspector George W. Hill has been&#13;
requested to matie a collection of salines for&#13;
the World's exposition at New Orleans. Every&#13;
salt district In thestate will he represented at&#13;
this collection.&#13;
A'mail poueh was stolen from its hook in&#13;
Dowagiac .the other afternoon. The pouch&#13;
was taken a short distance from the track and&#13;
letters opened and the contents taken. The&#13;
thieves escaped.&#13;
There was a falling off of 40,000 tons of&#13;
freight in the Lake Superior trade* for the&#13;
month of. September compared with the pre&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
T h e Apple Maggot.&#13;
The following from Prof. Cook of the Ag&#13;
rlcultural College will be read with interest&#13;
the thousands of farmers Interested ln^apple&#13;
culture. '&#13;
While at t,he state fahv"lftr. C. M&#13;
Weed called my attentlon-ttfthe fact that fruit,&#13;
on exhibition was attacked by the apple maggot.&#13;
(Try peta^pomoneJ 1 a.)&#13;
Since returning home I hays found a half&#13;
apples, procured fnm Shtawas*&#13;
county, entirely ruined by this Insect. I&#13;
also hear that this maggot is quite common in&#13;
apples about Lansing.&#13;
This insect has attickeI th? apples in New&#13;
Tork and some of the New England states for&#13;
years and has liien considered by-many as themost&#13;
grievous pest of the, orchard. Last year&#13;
I received this insec from Mr. Phoenix o/ Delavan,&#13;
WK The insect has been known to in&#13;
feat the thorn-ipple/In Michigan, Wisconsin&#13;
and Illinois for years, but until this fall I have&#13;
not heard of its attacking our Michigan apples.&#13;
Whether the eastern maggots h*Vtf been Imported&#13;
here JUS fruit shipped west, or whether&#13;
our native injects of this "species have learned&#13;
that apples are toothsome, it' is hard to say.&#13;
it is enough to know that it is here and at&#13;
work. / ,&#13;
A vwo-winged fly lays lays many eggs on tbe&#13;
appfe.ln Jujy. Tne little white, footless magqte&#13;
arepofhted at the mouth end,*and are pos-&#13;
/sesfied of little biack freely-movable hooka&#13;
' which are attached t o a frame work just back&#13;
of the head. ThiB pointed nlack headApd the&#13;
absence of feet are enough U enable us to distinguish&#13;
this insect from tne coolibg moth&#13;
larva. There are several, not one, as in the&#13;
case of the old "aople-worm," in a single fruit.&#13;
I have taken twelve maggots from a slugle apple.&#13;
These maggots eat tnrough and thrcuga&#13;
the apple and not just; about tbe core, so me&#13;
apple Is not simply injured, it is ruined, Unices,&#13;
forfooth, it Is thought well to make cider of&#13;
such fruit. The filtny tunnels and p'ump maggots&#13;
msrke such applies most distrusting.&#13;
The inaguots aru about tw,-tenths of an inch&#13;
long, and when full fed come forth from small&#13;
circular holes. I have an apple that now, Sept.&#13;
, SO. shows »ix of these boles.&#13;
The larvae leave the apples In September: n 1&#13;
vlous month, as shown uy the St, Mail's falls&#13;
ship canal reports. ,&#13;
A young boy named Willie Hatfield was&#13;
killed by an engine while switching cars at&#13;
Hillsdale. He fell on the track and the engine&#13;
backed over him before he was discovered,&#13;
killing him instantly.&#13;
At the recent session the Detroit M. E.&#13;
conference offered a series of-district centennial&#13;
conventions to be held this fall. The first&#13;
n i i O f these will be held Nov. 18 and 19 in tho&#13;
. _°„rTGarland street church at Flint.&#13;
Geo Hobson, au edgeman for Dewing &amp;&#13;
Sons, Crooked Lake, warliilled a few dayB ago&#13;
by a piece of edgingwhich flew from a saw and&#13;
penetratedhiseye. He died almost Instantly.&#13;
His remains were taken to La Grange, Ind.&#13;
s Samuel L. Late, Mayor of Grand Haven,&#13;
was putting his horse on board the steamer&#13;
Menominee for Chicago, he was kicked in the&#13;
face by the horse and seriously Injured. His&#13;
jaw-bone was broken and other injuries sustained.&#13;
Mr. Geo. W. Lewis of Adrian has received&#13;
from the Hon. B. K. Bruce of Mississippi an&#13;
appointment as assistant honorary commissioner&#13;
of the department of colored exhibits at&#13;
the coming great world's exposition at New&#13;
Orleans.&#13;
Jofca Jfurpfcy&gt;a young man 19 years old, in&#13;
the employ of the boom company in Midland&#13;
was drowned the other day in crossing the&#13;
river on logs. His body wis recovered after&#13;
two hours. He lived in EdenvUIe, Midland&#13;
county. /His parents reside in Maine.&#13;
J. H. Sullivan keeps a pet bear in the&#13;
Webster House barn at Greenville. The other&#13;
night some very smart young fellows attempted&#13;
to steal it, but they were glad enough to&#13;
return tbe animal after receiving a few hugs&#13;
and scratches from the little black darling.&#13;
Tbe State Salt Inspector's report for September&#13;
shows the product of the vario us counties&#13;
to have been as follows: Saginaw, 155.954&#13;
barrels; Bay, 1547,033-, loseo, »4,820; Huron,&#13;
37,282; Manistee, 18 114; Midland, 7,864: at.&#13;
Clair, 6,883; Gratiot, 40f. Total, 377,718 barrels.&#13;
A trunk from which there came a horrible&#13;
smell, was received at Bay City the other day.&#13;
ana it^was supposed it contained a decomposed&#13;
human body. It was opened by the officers&#13;
and a horrible fact was presented to their view&#13;
and Bmell. It was 125 pounds of limburger&#13;
cheese.&#13;
Rev. ThomasjStalker, one of tbe most prominent,&#13;
widely known aud talented Methodist&#13;
ministers in this state, whose recent charges&#13;
hays been Detroit, Pontiac, Port Huron, etc,&#13;
has been appointed to one of the most important&#13;
church positions in New Orleans, and will&#13;
soon leave for that city.&#13;
It is now supposed that a human life w*s&#13;
lost In the burning of a barn at Clayton, Lenawee&#13;
county, a few nights ago, as bones believed&#13;
to have been those of a human being,&#13;
buttons, etc, were found in the ruins. It is&#13;
supposed a tramp bad lodged in the barn,&#13;
and in some way set the hay on flro.&#13;
A8pringfield, 111,, dispatch says; "A license&#13;
to incorporate the Phillips gold mining&#13;
company of Chicago, which proposes to oper&#13;
ate in Michigan vas Issued "by the secretary&#13;
of 6tate yestert' The capital stock named&#13;
Is $1,000,060 and the incorporators are John&#13;
Phillips, H. R. Du.rkee and Andrew J. Cooper."&#13;
About 12 o'clock tbe other night the-barking&#13;
of a dog awoke A. E. Turner of Cadillac,from a&#13;
sound slumber, nearly suffocated, to find the&#13;
housejenveioped in flames and his wife Insensible&#13;
from suffocation. By prompt action he escaped&#13;
through a window with his wife and child;' and&#13;
saved a few articles of furniture The loss is&#13;
$2,0t0—Insured for $600.&#13;
Andreas Sundln shot and killed WllHam&#13;
Ber« in a Swede boarding house in Ontonagon&#13;
a few nights ago. The bay severed the'maln&#13;
artery of the heart, klllirg him Instantly. The&#13;
murderer Is a young man about 22 years old&#13;
and a Swede. He took to the woods and has&#13;
not yet been captured, bnt can hardly escape,&#13;
as a large force are hunting him.&#13;
Chas. Drake, of Ovid, brought from Detroit&#13;
bv Sheriff Collins on complaint of Lee Bros.,&#13;
the Elsie bankers, for running away with $500&#13;
and a $600 draft September 12, waived examination&#13;
*ud was- bound over 4or -trial a t the~faext&#13;
term of the circuit court. In default of $1,000&#13;
ball be was removed to the county jail to&#13;
await trial. His father thinks his mind Is unsound.&#13;
Quail shooting Is allowed only during the&#13;
month* of November and December of each&#13;
year, so says Sec 3 of the session laws of 1881&#13;
relative to the protection of game. Many have&#13;
supposed the season for quail shooting opened&#13;
Oct. 1st. Let them feed another month on the&#13;
wasting and they will be larger, fatter, and&#13;
perhaps a little harder to kill,—Livingston&#13;
County Republican.&#13;
Kalamazoo Telegraph- A£r4«n~d In California&#13;
writes to Fred Brl^terxof this cltv that&#13;
George L- Gale, thjs-^noted founder of Galesburg,&#13;
died IrMthatTstate and that his grave Is&#13;
known to—the writer. It will be remembered&#13;
that^tlreiast that was heard of him_ was many&#13;
ars ago when a Paw Paw man who was well&#13;
acquainted with Gale, met him on the plains,&#13;
in the time of the gold excitement.&#13;
Heavy rains have raised the Ontonagon River&#13;
twenty-two feet, flooding the whole county.&#13;
Bridges-are more or less Bwept away or damaged.&#13;
Loss, thousands of dollars. A large&#13;
number of the Diamond Match Company's logs&#13;
jumped the boom and have gone out into&#13;
Lake Superior. No Btages have been able to&#13;
leave or come into the county during the past&#13;
two days. PackerR have started with mails on&#13;
foot.&#13;
Large numbers of deer hunters have already&#13;
gone to the woods, while others are daily arriving,&#13;
some from Illinois, Indiana,and Ohio.&#13;
The shipment of deer from East Tawas and&#13;
other places promises to be quite large; some&#13;
very fine deer hive already been brought to&#13;
market, one weighing 1S4 pounds. Hunters&#13;
accompanied by their hounds are quite apt to&#13;
lose them, as the still hunters are killing all&#13;
hounds which come in range of their rifles.&#13;
A brakeman on the Detroit, Grand Haven &amp;&#13;
Milwaukee Railroad, had his leg crushed at the&#13;
knee by a car wheel running over it at the&#13;
stock yards in St. Johns. The accident was&#13;
occasioned by another brakeman standing on&#13;
the car ladder and as the car was moving 6lowly&#13;
Ur&gt;m thn Bfnnlf.yirrl he WM« thrnwn rlnwn hy&#13;
ng be&#13;
^&#13;
The advisory committee of the Detroit annual&#13;
M. E. conference is composed as follows:&#13;
Ministers. Messrs. Pope, Allen, Richards, Mc-&#13;
Eldowney, Ramsey, Arnold; laymen, Messrsr&#13;
Robinson and Wasey. David Preston acts as&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
E. P. Fuller of Grand Rapids, has presented&#13;
the West Michigan Farmers' Club with an immense&#13;
puff ball weighing over eleven pounds&#13;
and measuring three feet in circumference. It&#13;
was grown on his farm in Ada. P. S.—This is&#13;
not a free puff.&#13;
The $250 manikin purchased abroad for the&#13;
Somervllle school has arrived in this country&#13;
and will be placed in the school apparatus&#13;
room soon. It is said it is so life-like that it&#13;
will always make the girls sure "there is a&#13;
man in the house."&#13;
Dr. Herbert Yemans wires his father, Dr. C.&#13;
C. Yemacs, that the Corwln has arrived safely&#13;
at San Franclscj f*otn her cruise in Arctic&#13;
waters. The expedition started last April ior&#13;
scientific purposes, and was sent out by the&#13;
Smithsonian Institute.&#13;
Eckerman, the convict *ho refused to leave&#13;
Jackson prison at the expiration of his sen&#13;
tcnue, was taken before Judge Gould and adjudged&#13;
insane by Drs, Williams ana Kimball.&#13;
Kent county refused to act in the matter. He&#13;
was taken to Kalamazoo.&#13;
The Lenawee Agricultural Society is willing&#13;
to lease, for an indefinite term of years, the&#13;
rac&lt;! track on tbe Adrian fair ground, to any&#13;
responsible partv or parties who will put the&#13;
truck in shape, build a grand stand and judges'&#13;
stand, and fence the track.&#13;
striking against the post of the stock-yarti&#13;
gangway, and fell against John Seifert, who&#13;
was hurled instantly under one of the wheels&#13;
of the car. He was taken to his father's hom«&#13;
in Bengal. ~&#13;
The annual reunion of the Second Michigan&#13;
infantry, of which Sumner Howard is president&#13;
and Joel Cowgili secretary, will be held&#13;
at Flint, October 10. O. F. Lochead, vicepresident,&#13;
Flint, or Joel Cowgil?, secretary,&#13;
Cassopolls, 'Vlii answer all questions. Arrangements&#13;
have been made with the Flint &amp;&#13;
Pere Marquette and Chicago &amp; Grand Trunk&#13;
railroads for reduced rates of fare for comrades&#13;
and their wlyes attending the reunion,&#13;
namely, one third fare returning from the reunion,&#13;
on presenting the certificate of the&#13;
secretary.&#13;
Addison Stoddard was caught and arretted.&#13;
tbe other morning for stealing money from the&#13;
money drawer of Turk Brothers, grocers, in&#13;
Pontiac. He was arranged before Justice Webster,&#13;
waved examination and was held for&#13;
triai, in the Oakland Circuit Court. Stoddard&#13;
is a printer by trade. He was formerly connected&#13;
with an Oxford paper. He now hails&#13;
from Orion, and claims to he a writer for the&#13;
Orion Review. He does not deny the charge&#13;
made against him, but claims that he was&#13;
drunk at the time. He has recently served a&#13;
short eenterce in jail at Orion for drunkenness.&#13;
While the work of drilling a well was in&#13;
progress on the farm of Edgar White, about&#13;
one-half mile west of Port Huron* naving&#13;
reached a depth of 197 feet, a large vein of gas I&#13;
was tapped and the volume of gas that is said 1&#13;
bing is being done to check the progress of&#13;
he jFrft-- It is feared the damage will bn great&#13;
unless it be soon checked. Two, John Hapsau&#13;
and Thomas Grebble, have lost their lives by&#13;
Kolng down to tho 11th level, where they were&#13;
to start the pumps. As tbey did not return&#13;
when expected auother party was sent to their&#13;
rescue. Tbey saw Kapson, who had been suffocated,&#13;
but could not get near enough to get&#13;
his body. Again they tried but were overcome&#13;
themselves bv the smoke and rescued barely la&#13;
time to preserve their lives by the .vigorous&#13;
application of restoratives. Rapson's body&#13;
has since been recovered but his companion&#13;
has not been found.&#13;
About four weeks ago a party of four hunters&#13;
came to Grayling from near Youngstown,&#13;
O. A few nights ago one of their number, T.&#13;
P. Eddlngton, while watching for deer, climbed&#13;
a tree near the runway. A 200-pound buck&#13;
came along. The hunter fired, three shots taking&#13;
effect. In his excitement to get at tbe&#13;
deer he fell about twenty feet, breaking his leg&#13;
below the knee. He dragged himself a few&#13;
rods, cut the buck's throat, then with the help&#13;
of a companion, set his broken limb and rode&#13;
forty miles, beiDg in Oscoda county at the time&#13;
of the accident, and took the train for home&#13;
the next morning. Tbe hunting season opens&#13;
fair. Hunters arrive by every train. Citizens&#13;
are Indignant at the number of bounds being&#13;
brought In. Unless steps are taken by the&#13;
legislature saon to prevent this indiscriminate&#13;
use of hounds the deer will all be exterminated&#13;
oi driven out of this section.&#13;
Miss Kate Sehnell, a very young German,&#13;
made a complaint before Justice Swayze of&#13;
ForestviUe, Sanilac county, that James Wallace&#13;
attempted to ravish her on the night of&#13;
October 4, or rather on the morning of the btb.&#13;
She states that while she was attending a dance&#13;
at a neighbor's, Mr. Moors, Bhe met young&#13;
Wallace, and about daylight of the 5th Wallace&#13;
requested her to accompany him for a walk.&#13;
^ h e did so, and,' when about half mile from the&#13;
house whereihe dance was, he asked her to sit&#13;
down by the roadside. This she refused to do,&#13;
when Wallace xaugbt hold of her and pulleu&#13;
and dragged h'r to the side of the road, and&#13;
when she attempted to scream he placed his&#13;
hand on her mouth to prevent her so doing.&#13;
Fortunate for her a youcg man of their acquaintance&#13;
cam" along the road on horseback&#13;
and frightened the isscal, and he released her,&#13;
she running back to the bouse where the&#13;
dancers were. Wallace Is a young farmer about&#13;
25 years of age, and the girl is a frail little&#13;
creature of about 14 years, and the daughter of&#13;
Fritz 8chnell, a German farmer of Delaware&#13;
township. A warrant was issued for his arreBt.&#13;
Mr. Edwards, from Gen. Poe's office in&#13;
Washington, has been looking over the river&#13;
banks, between Algonac and this city during&#13;
the past few days. His work is tbo first&#13;
step here in response to the petition addressed&#13;
to congress some time ago asking for the&#13;
inauguration of a system of~plling for tbe&#13;
protection of the river banks from washing&#13;
away and damaging private property. -Mr.&#13;
Edwards expressed his opinion that the matter&#13;
of protection Is one greatly needed and&#13;
will recommend its completion^, not only as&#13;
petitioned, but along the entire river front to&#13;
Port Huron. Mr. Edwards differs in opinion&#13;
with many people in this section in that he&#13;
is confident tbatuih^washings from the river&#13;
are not carrJetTdown the south -efeaenel at&#13;
the FUtsVthus endangering the government&#13;
but rather tbat these washings pass&#13;
down the north channel aud are spread out&#13;
along the lake fronting at New Baltimore. He&#13;
argues this from 'he fact ihat the current in&#13;
the last named channel is stronger and tlie&#13;
water deeper. A government engineer will&#13;
doubtless be the- next investigator in the&#13;
matter.—St Clair Republican.&#13;
Nellie Day.of Ogden.Lenawee county.aged 17&#13;
years,wasfound dead in straw stack afe* mornings&#13;
ago. 8he was married December lJ8, 1S82,&#13;
to a young man, with who she lived bur a lew&#13;
months, when he deserted her. Since then bhv&#13;
lived at home, and it has been renmrked of&#13;
late that Bhe was at least' Imprudent lu her&#13;
associations, aud her parents, have felt called&#13;
upon to c^Ide her far her waywardness. She&#13;
became intimate with oue Charles Worden,&#13;
and a few nights since she was .out all night&#13;
to a bowery dance, aua her mother on Sunday&#13;
severely censured her conduct, saying she&#13;
would rather see her In her grave than to follow&#13;
a questionable life. The girl said; "You&#13;
can dig my grave »B BOOH as you choose." Sunday&#13;
night "she went out and' did not return,&#13;
but in the morning was fouud lying on her&#13;
face 6a the straw stack. She had vomited,aud&#13;
evidently had suffercd^Beverely. The physician&#13;
present said she died from the effect of tansy&#13;
and it was also found on post mortem that she&#13;
was enceinte, thus confirming her mother^&#13;
worst fears. Worden is a married man, and&#13;
of course severely censured. The girl was&#13;
knoffn to be poor, but was till lately regarded&#13;
as vory upright in everv regard.&#13;
•&#13;
A U O K K I B L E CKIJUE!&#13;
W o m a n Murdered Qecanne&#13;
W o u l d Not Sign a D e « i .&#13;
Slie&#13;
to escape is powerful enough to&#13;
twenty horse-power engine. Tbe&#13;
A horrible CTime was brought to light at&#13;
Troy, Ind., by finding the headless body oi a&#13;
woman in a cistern on the farm of Peter Backeer.&#13;
The body was nude and the head was found In&#13;
a thicket 100 yards from the cistern. This was&#13;
late Wednesday evening, Octeber 8. When&#13;
the body was taken from the water it was yet&#13;
warm and blood gushed from tire trunk. It&#13;
was the body of a portly woman weighing&#13;
about 160 pounds and about 40 years old. A&#13;
deep gash was cut t&gt;elow the shoulder blade as&#13;
if with an ax, and there was a wound on the&#13;
forehead as if done with a blunt instrument.&#13;
The body was taken&#13;
to Troy where it was viewed by&#13;
a large number of people, but not identified&#13;
until the next day when it was recognized as&#13;
the body of Mrs. Stillwell Hendersnot who&#13;
resided on a farm fourteen miles back of Troy.&#13;
A-neighbor of Hendershot, while in the city the&#13;
day after the body was discovered saw the&#13;
murdered soman's husband, and also noticed&#13;
a valise marked.T. H. Hendershot. A search&#13;
warrant was procured, and the valise opened&#13;
and found to contain clothing of the victim&#13;
covered with blood. Warrants were 'made Immediately&#13;
for;Stillwell Hendershat, husband.&#13;
andF. H. aud Wm. Hendershot, sous.. The&#13;
old man and his son William were arrested and&#13;
brought to Troy, but the oldest son refused&#13;
to come and defied arrest. A posse was sent&#13;
after him, and he was brought to^Troy-and&#13;
placed in jail. He acknowledged committing&#13;
the crime himself, and says his faiher and&#13;
brother had nothing to d o \ with&#13;
it. The old man's testimony seems to throw&#13;
run"a"ten"orlt n e "tight of crime upon himself and the oldwell&#13;
is locat-f MLBon«&#13;
ed about 150 feet from the boiler and engine&#13;
used for diary purposes, and on Tuesday last&#13;
a pipe was laid to the boiler and tbe gas ignited.&#13;
It burned brilliantly aud furnished enough&#13;
heat to raise steam The driller believes that&#13;
the oil vein would be found at a depth of 500 or&#13;
500 feet.&#13;
A few days ago Lisle, daughter of Mortimer&#13;
Osmun, of Waterford, Oakland county a young&#13;
&lt;iirl 20 months old, was drowned in the following&#13;
sad manner: She was with her father at&#13;
his barn across the road from his house, and&#13;
waiting to go to the house her father put her&#13;
over the fence and she started with a large&#13;
shepherd dog which belonged to tbe family.&#13;
Soun afterwards Mr. O.imun started for the&#13;
hou«e and found the littlo girl in a small pond&#13;
of water lying with her face and head wholly&#13;
underwater. The rest of her Person was out&#13;
of water and the dog had evidently dragged&#13;
her partly out of the pond. Every attempt was&#13;
made to resuscitate the child, but life was already&#13;
extinct.&#13;
A fierce fire has been raging in the shoring&#13;
timbi-rs on the 16th level of the Calumet and&#13;
Hecia mine, some 800 feet below the cvrth's&#13;
surface. The shafts are all closed, and every-&#13;
The murder of Mrs. Hendershot arose from&#13;
her refusal to s'ga away the farm to whfch she&#13;
\ ,had a deed In a fee simple, which father and&#13;
son wanted to dispose of. Several hundred&#13;
people were present at the trial, and about&#13;
neon an effort was made to seize the criminals&#13;
and mete out summary vengeance against&#13;
them, but the officers succeeded In averting&#13;
the attack. The re suit of the preliminary&#13;
trial released William. Tho other brother anil&#13;
and father were remanded to Jill.&#13;
In the evening one mob at Troy took the&#13;
eldest son out of jail and hanged him* to a&#13;
beam In the barn where the crime was committed&#13;
He made the confession that his father&#13;
shot his mother, and that he cut ber head off&#13;
with an ax. A few hours after ward _the^mob&#13;
passed througb Tell City on the way to Conneltoc,&#13;
three miles above, to hang the father&#13;
and other son, who arc'in j all there. There is&#13;
a mob of 200 strong.&#13;
town Herald.&#13;
Storm Signal*.&#13;
As tho ooming of a great storm is&#13;
heralded by the display of cautionary&#13;
signals, so U the approach of that dread&#13;
and fatal disease. Consumption of the&#13;
Lungs, usually announced in advance&#13;
by pimples, blotches, erruptions. ulcers,&#13;
glandular swellings, and kindred out'&#13;
ward manifestations of the internal&#13;
blood poison, which if not promptly expelled&#13;
from the system, attacks the delicate&#13;
tissue* of the lungs, causing them&#13;
to ulcerate rind break down. Dr. Pierce s&#13;
'•Golden Medical Discovery" is the&#13;
great remedy for this, as for all diseases&#13;
having their origin in bad blood. It&#13;
improves tho appetite and digestion, increases&#13;
nutrition and builds up the&#13;
wasted system. / .*&#13;
The three natural gas wells at Pitteburg&#13;
pay $80,000 a month profit and&#13;
thoy expect to make it pay $150,000 by&#13;
another year.&#13;
For diarrhoea, cholera morbus, dysentery&#13;
and bloody flux, colic or cramps&#13;
in stomach, use Dr. Pierce's Compound&#13;
Extract of Smart-Weed- Specific, also,&#13;
for breaking up colds.&#13;
A bee-hive recently discovered in*&#13;
peak in San Bernardino Cal., revealed a&#13;
mass of honoy estimated to contain at&#13;
least 500 barrels. -&#13;
7&#13;
Young or middle-aged men, suffering&#13;
from nervous debility or kindred affections,&#13;
should address, with three letter&#13;
stamps for large treatise, World's Dispensary&#13;
Medical Association, Buffalo,&#13;
N. Y. _ _ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
The average number of letters written&#13;
by each person in England in a year is&#13;
36. The total number of letters posted&#13;
annually is 1.280,000,000. '&#13;
Ob, the Orator's vol$e is mighty power,&#13;
As it echoes alorg the green,&#13;
But the fearless pen has more sway o'er men&#13;
To sound the praises of Carbollne.&#13;
B E L Y A LOCKWOO,D says if she is elected&#13;
president, Ben. Butler can have his&#13;
choice of cabinet positions. The '»Wily&#13;
Widow" gazes longingly at the pro3pc ,&#13;
tive.&#13;
When you visit or leave New _ora City, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Expressage and&#13;
13 Carriage Hire^jmd stop at the Grand&#13;
Union Hotel, opposite said depot Six HuJF~&#13;
dred elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one&#13;
million dollars; fl and upwards per day.&#13;
European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the best Horse cars, stages and&#13;
elevated railroad to all depots. Families can&#13;
live better for less money at the Grand Union&#13;
Hotel than at any other first-class hotel In the .&#13;
city.&#13;
In London, unlike American fashion&#13;
centers, "the season1' is in the summer.&#13;
From September to May Belgravia and&#13;
the West End generally are deserted,&#13;
and the society people are all down in "&#13;
the country. '&#13;
"Of all the saws, we ever saw saw,&#13;
wo never saw a saw saw like this saw&#13;
s a w s . " This is the universal verdict of&#13;
all using Tho Battle Crsek Pateiit Self&#13;
Feed Wood Sawing machine. The company&#13;
have a large and constantly increasing&#13;
trade on them for moro than&#13;
twenty years past, throughout this and&#13;
in-many foreign countries. They are&#13;
the WorUVt standard Machine. Send&#13;
for circular and price list to The Battle&#13;
Creek Machinery Co., Battle Creek&#13;
Mich. Advertisement in another&#13;
column.&#13;
In the province of Sap Pedro, Brazil,&#13;
the destruction of all efioalyptus trees&#13;
has been orderort.&#13;
TO THE UNMAKJRIED:&#13;
An Association for T h e i r Benrflt a n d&#13;
W h a t It la Doing for T h e m .&#13;
There are but few of the many unmarried&#13;
persons In Michigan who are aware that an institution&#13;
organized to assist its members upon&#13;
entering tbe matrimonial Btate. has been In existence&#13;
the past year and a half.&#13;
This association Is known as the Mutual&#13;
Marriage Benevolent Association of Marine&#13;
City, having been inconorated under the laws&#13;
of Michigan in 1888, it' is the only institution&#13;
of its kind In the Btate. The association has&#13;
pidd in benefits since August 2, $6,000, and is&#13;
paying several thousandTa 'month to Its members.&#13;
The following letters of acknowledgement&#13;
are a few of the many the association are receiving.&#13;
MARIXB CITT, Mich., Aug. 2, 1884.&#13;
M. M. B. Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—Please accept my thanks for the&#13;
very prompt manner in which you have paid&#13;
my benefit, amounting to one thousand dollars&#13;
($1,000). This speedy settlement should&#13;
make the Mutual Marriage Benevolent Association&#13;
deserving of confidence and patronage&#13;
of every unmarried person In the BV JL' I&#13;
have derived n larger benefit by beingX*2en_.&#13;
ber of the association than I ever anticipated.&#13;
As an investment I know of no equal, and I&#13;
would advise every unmarried person to join&#13;
t^e association, and hoping that success may&#13;
continue to crown the Mutual Marriage Association,&#13;
and tbat it may be the means of making&#13;
happy the hearts aud homes of thousands&#13;
of young married people, I am&#13;
Yours, thankfully,&#13;
GEO. MoHANEY.&#13;
A new play called "Separation" is&#13;
being performed*" in New York. It is a&#13;
pioce in which a great many actors and&#13;
their-wives have appeared. — Norrw I market or none, than they aid ia._ajiy&#13;
— -MARIIW CITT,Sept. 3, 1883.&#13;
To the officers of the M. M. H. Association:&#13;
Gentlemen—1 take this opportunity of thank-&#13;
Ing you for the promptness in which you have&#13;
paid my benefit., amounting to one thousand&#13;
dollars. I am very much pleased with the manner&#13;
in which my claim has been settled, and&#13;
wishing the association every success,!remain&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
MRS. ROSE MCDONALD.&#13;
MAKINTC CITT. Mich., Sept. 10,1884.&#13;
R. MCNEIL, Sec*y M. M. B. Association:&#13;
I am in receipt of benefit on my certificates,&#13;
and am much pleased with my investment.&#13;
This benefit will be the means of paying off the&#13;
mortgage on my home, leaving me out of debt&#13;
and a balance to put in tbe bank for a rainy&#13;
day. Thanking the association for what it has&#13;
done for me, I remain&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
ORVILLK W. MCDONALD,&#13;
AU unmarried persons, of either sex should&#13;
otn. Write for circularsexplaining tbe plan.&#13;
Address the Secretary, R. McNEIL.&#13;
" Marine Cty, Mich.&#13;
American farmers, after supplying&#13;
the home demand, now have a bigger&#13;
surplus of breadstuifs in three years,&#13;
for which they must find a foreign&#13;
forty years before the war.&#13;
/ •&#13;
/ ' -4*--- V&#13;
^ X y&#13;
v&#13;
X" /&#13;
/ s*&#13;
/&#13;
"N**' ^.&#13;
* ^»| fP^T".'^-Jf^"???&#13;
..--&gt;"&#13;
w*-*«&#13;
'"'• .:' •'•' ' ' " - ' ? " ' ' ' '• ' : - f r " ' ' *•• ^ . 1 ¾ • ' &gt; : • * ' ' ?/'• • &amp; ' - / • &lt; . : . ; '&#13;
"3T • ' : • * •&#13;
IN T H E F O R E S T .&#13;
BY ANNA DUKK.&#13;
Ab! what a mournful change 1B here,&#13;
Since laat 1 stood beneath these trees :&#13;
When In tb« Bunny summer time&#13;
Their grten leaven trembled on tiie breezf.&#13;
Then happy birds, with joyful eong,&#13;
Filled all the air with rauatc eweet.&#13;
Then all the forest ranr with alee,&#13;
And flowers blossomed at my feet.&#13;
The birds are flown, the flowers gone,&#13;
The leaves fall slowly fluttering;&#13;
Beneath the trees they fall and spread&#13;
A Bold and crimson carpeting.&#13;
There's naught but silence all around.&#13;
A solemn stillness ev'rvwhere;&#13;
A sadness o'er the fallen leaves,&#13;
A sadness in the very air.&#13;
From deep, dim recwsea there comes&#13;
The odor of decaying leav*a;&#13;
The wind, among the naked boughs,&#13;
In hoarse and hoUow murmur grieves.&#13;
Beside the rocks, so cold and gray&#13;
The long fern hangs a drooping head,&#13;
Here saddened nature seems to mourn&#13;
A summer-time forever ^ ¾ ^ ^&#13;
S&#13;
T H E R E ' S MUSIC IN A M O T H E R ' S&#13;
VOICE.&#13;
There's music in a mother's voice.&#13;
More sweet thanbre*a°a sighing;&#13;
There's kindness in a mother's glance,&#13;
Too pure for ever dytne.&#13;
There's love within a mother's breast,&#13;
Bo deep, 'tis still o'eraowing.&#13;
And care for those she calls her owr,&#13;
That's ever, ever growing.&#13;
There's anguish in &amp; mother's tear,&#13;
-- When farewell fondly UkiDg,&#13;
That BO the heart of pity moves&#13;
Itscarcely keeps from hr£aklfl&amp; .&#13;
And when a mother kneels to Heaven,&#13;
And for her child is praying,&#13;
Ob, what sn*^ *&gt;a" t h e fervor tell&#13;
That burns in all she's saying.&#13;
A mother, how her tender arts&#13;
Can soothe the breast of sadness!&#13;
And through the gloom of life once more&#13;
Rid »Mne the sun q^gladneas^&#13;
A mother! when, like tvenlng star,&#13;
Her course h«s ceased before us,&#13;
From brighter worldB regards us still,&#13;
And watches fondly o'er us.&#13;
—Exchange.&#13;
A SUSPIC'OUS LETTER.&#13;
BY HELEN WHITNEY CLARKE.&#13;
"She's a powerful good g i r l - g o o d&#13;
as gold!" remarked Miss Refteeea Bell&#13;
flower, with an air of satisfaction 'I&#13;
kivered wtth-uspers, cut in notches an&#13;
holes, as nice as you please. A n ' the&#13;
•pots an1 kittles, the milk-pans an&#13;
strainers, alius cleau an' bright, and&#13;
the brass dog-irons an' candel-sticks&#13;
kep' rubbed an1 scrubbed till they lookshiny&#13;
as gold. Yes, Lura's t h e best&#13;
girl I ever had, a n ' I don't keer a pin&#13;
if brother Basil has tuck a notion to her.&#13;
He couldn't find anothei^girl I'd sooner&#13;
he'd hev then h e r . " " "' , /&#13;
And if Miss Sebocca_ wj*_ satisfied.&#13;
Come now, as soon as possible, or everything&#13;
is arranged and I will be ready&#13;
for vou. Be sure and bring the Indian&#13;
laddei. Come on the 9 o'clock train&#13;
without fail, and I will go back with&#13;
you. Your—"&#13;
— T h e r e it stopped, without any signature;&#13;
but on the other side of the&#13;
paper was Lura's name, plainly written.&#13;
'•Dear—deary me !" —; ——-&#13;
Miss Rebecca sank, pale and limp,&#13;
into the friendly arms of a cretonne&#13;
covered rocking chair which stood ready&#13;
to receive her.&#13;
"What—what will Basil, say? And&#13;
what kin she want of the Indian ladder,&#13;
do you s'poseP&#13;
Woman's Department.&#13;
M a k e H o r n s A t t r a c t i v e .&#13;
There's no tellin'! Mebbe s h e ' a -&#13;
goin' to 'lope out o' the winder; or else&#13;
she's a-goin- to let some one in to rob&#13;
the house, an', like as not, kill you an'&#13;
Basil!" declared Zeralda. impressively.&#13;
•'An' I trusted her an' liked her so&#13;
much!" groaned Miss Rebecca, helplessly-&#13;
"Appearances is mighty ^deceitful,"&#13;
sighed Zerelda. hypocritically. " F u r&#13;
mv part. I alius thought there was&#13;
somethin' suspicious lookin' about her,&#13;
a n ' — "&#13;
"And what, Miss Zerelda—what have&#13;
you got to say against Lura Gaines?"&#13;
demanded Basil Bellflower, striding&#13;
angrily into the room. ^&#13;
Zerelda gave a little scream, but she&#13;
quickly recovered, and put the letter&#13;
into his hands.&#13;
"Read that and see what you will&#13;
think t h e n , " she retorted triumphantly.&#13;
And with an incredulous smile on his&#13;
handsome face. Basil read the damaging&#13;
words.&#13;
"Oh, Basil! do you think she means&#13;
to rob u s ? " asked'Miss Rebecca faintly.&#13;
"Rob us! Pshaw—what ngnsenjsej"&#13;
cried her brother; his handsome face&#13;
covered with scornful incredulity.&#13;
"Butrwhatrdoes~she want-of-the Indian&#13;
ladder?" asked Zerelda. -'An'&#13;
What- "&#13;
"That's her business," said Basil&#13;
loftily.&#13;
Then turning to his sister, he added:&#13;
"you Ftay here, Rebecca. 1 will find out&#13;
what this means. But remember I have&#13;
perfect faith and confidence in L u r a . "&#13;
And he strode away.&#13;
The waning yellow rays of the pale&#13;
November sun were peeping into the&#13;
wide roomy kitchen where Lura Gaines&#13;
stood contemplating1 the fruits&#13;
never had a girl before that k e p ' t h e afternoon J Hbaking-^-&#13;
pantrv soolean an' the dresser a r l o ^ ^ i _ £ t ^ m - g 0f ii»htj-'brown bread.&#13;
so neat; the shelTOS_aU_^scou*wr^cr h a l { a d o z e n p[^-&#13;
pretty Lura Gaines was no less SOL; jktid n 0 8 a&#13;
she went singing about the~ohtrfaTm- .«i&#13;
their flaky tops&#13;
powdered with^vfhite sugar; a frosted&#13;
pound cakef looking like a drift of&#13;
newlyjfatten snow, a jar of cookies and&#13;
ajjlafter/Oi "crullis."&#13;
"Laura contemplated her work with&#13;
eminent satisfaction.&#13;
"Llira!"&#13;
The sloe-black eyes Hashed, and a&#13;
rich jcrimson dyed her olive cheek^as"&#13;
/Basil quickly made his way to her-sido.&#13;
"Have you lost anything, .Laura—a&#13;
letter?" he asked withassumedcareless-&#13;
Emily J. Bouton in Toledo Blade.&#13;
" I am disgusted," said a bright little&#13;
woman to me one day, rushing into my&#13;
den and throwing herself down tumultuously&#13;
into a chair. " One cannot&#13;
turn around without seeing cheap daubs,&#13;
nhnnp n r n h m M n r y Phnn.fi ohjna. an,d,&#13;
cheap ornaments of all kind. Everybody&#13;
has fancy work upon the brain,&#13;
and such hideous things as are marie&#13;
for decoration arirenough to drive one&#13;
ravine: mad. I went over to Black&#13;
Nancy's just now, and what do you&#13;
think I saw. Actually 9- banner hanging&#13;
to the dirty old wall made of these&#13;
newspaper advertising pictures pasted&#13;
011 a strip of white paper, with a fringe&#13;
of blue tissue paper, and tissue paper&#13;
tassels tied to the stick which held it&#13;
u p What are we coming to ? " and&#13;
she fanned herself vigorously.&#13;
I listened to her without interruption&#13;
until she had nestled down in the easy&#13;
chair exhausted, but with a look of real&#13;
vexation and disgust upon her pretty&#13;
face.&#13;
" D i d it ever occur to y o u , " 1 asked,&#13;
when the whirlwind she had created&#13;
had subsided, " t h a t this decorative&#13;
craze which seems to exasperate you to&#13;
such a dufrree is a step forward incivilization&#13;
that will do as much or more good&#13;
than any other which has been taken&#13;
for years; that it is a reaching out after&#13;
the better things of life; that it is a real&#13;
help to every good cause under the sun,&#13;
and that it will, by making homes&#13;
brighter and m o t e attractive, render&#13;
them happier? To me, there is some&#13;
thing pathetic in the effort of that poor&#13;
old black woman, rude and uncultured&#13;
as she is, to m a k e the little cabin which&#13;
IsTEbme to her }ook, pretty. Not only&#13;
was she happy and contented while&#13;
making the banner, but it is a-constant&#13;
source of pleasure to her sinceTand if&#13;
the truth were known she has quarreled&#13;
loss and been a much better woman."&#13;
My friend looked dazed and doubtful.&#13;
" " I ' l l find o u t , " . s h e said in her&#13;
quiet, energetic w a y . " If you are right,&#13;
I'll never find fault again, no matter&#13;
what representations Of impossible&#13;
things I see painted or embroidered, or&#13;
hideous imitations of wkat is really&#13;
beautiful." Jb—&#13;
A^fejwjia^ns-AfteirsnTuud me that inry&#13;
among the neighbors near old.&#13;
Nancy had developed the fact that for&#13;
some reason—they did not know why—&#13;
she had been far more peaceable of late&#13;
than ever before and theyJsegan to think&#13;
s h e W88 " f t ^ ^ l x rulii^Win H ~.—.„.&#13;
, . singini&#13;
house, washing dishes, sweeping floors,&#13;
and the like, the very type of/ a busy&#13;
countrv girl descritred-in tbe^e-ld song:&#13;
"tjp~in the eartv morning,/&#13;
Just at the peep of day&lt;&#13;
Straining the milk In the dairy,&#13;
Taming the cows aw^y.&#13;
"Washing the breaKTast dishes," --&#13;
MaklDg the beds opstaira,&#13;
Sweeping the flopr in the kitchen,&#13;
Dusting the parlor chairs."&#13;
L a t a was prejtyy too; so a t was_no_&#13;
wonder if handsome, stalwart Basil&#13;
Bellflower had; taken a "notion" to her,&#13;
with her sloe-black eyes and hair to&#13;
match; her dark, olive-hued cheek,&#13;
and her mouth, soft and scarlet as a&#13;
sun-ripened Indian peach.&#13;
*«Ia—is Basil going to marry her,&#13;
t h e n ? " asked Miss Zerelda Mugwort,&#13;
who had been making an afternoon&#13;
call upon Miss Rebecca.&#13;
" I dunno as he is, an' I dunno as&#13;
he a i n ' t , " was the sententious answer;&#13;
" b u t a r I said before, if he wants her,&#13;
an' she"l hev him, I-shant hev nothin'&#13;
to say agin it."&#13;
" B u t I shall!" thought Miss Zerelda,&#13;
malignantly, though she kept her&#13;
thoughts to herself. " A poor hired&#13;
. girl like her to git the best lookin' an1&#13;
the best to-do young man in the neighborhood!&#13;
It's out-raereous! But—we'll&#13;
jbpee!"&#13;
Ku In truth, Miss Zerelda evidently&#13;
considered herself a better match foj&#13;
Mr. Basil Bellflower, though possibly&#13;
• he may not have viewed the subject in&#13;
exactly the same light himself.&#13;
m m - * * * *&#13;
"A-hem! I thought ' t w a n ' t nothin'&#13;
more'n right. Miss Itebecca, to lei you&#13;
know something I've found out about&#13;
thatgirXpt y o u r n . "&#13;
_ A - 4 r i u m p h a n t look sparkled in Ze^&#13;
relda Mngwort's sharp gray eyes as&#13;
-looked Hp-with-a^amilp intn Basil'* ptag^r dia pm« over some little matter, &gt; n d&#13;
she carefully drew a letter from the&#13;
pocket of ber dress.&#13;
"Something about Lury! What on&#13;
airth isM? What do you meanP" asked&#13;
Miss Rebecca1 with an expression&#13;
mild wonder depicted on her countenance.&#13;
" I t ' s this here letter. Read that;&#13;
it'll tell you what I m e a n , " returned Zerelda,&#13;
holding out a missive which Miss&#13;
Rebecca feluotlantly received.&#13;
• '"-*4$utwhftt is itP and where did^your&#13;
get HJVLane asked, turning it oyer^over,&#13;
without offering to read i t ^ r ^&#13;
" I t ' s a letteT^she^wtote—-Lury. I&#13;
foundJJLwJiere ^shVdropped it. in t h e&#13;
path by tjve^pastufc-bars,'' explained&#13;
Z e r e j d a v i m patiently. "Read i t - d o ,&#13;
^JViiss Rebecca, and see what a-an im- g&#13;
posture you've been a-harborin' undeH—*—&#13;
vour ruff."&#13;
And thus adjured; Miss Rebecca&#13;
opened the note and read, in the handwriting&#13;
she knew to be Lura's, the mysterious&#13;
words:&#13;
"Dear Jerry-*-You said you would&#13;
come to me whenever I wrote for you.&#13;
A letter? No, I think not&#13;
asked Lura, innocently.&#13;
He handed, her the letter.&#13;
"Is this yours, L u r a ? "&#13;
His voice was calm, although&#13;
heart beat like sledge-hammer.&#13;
Lura glanced at the missive.&#13;
g l t t i n ' reliqKro.&#13;
No doubt many of you&#13;
the greatest a b s u r d i t y to&#13;
his&#13;
and&#13;
facp&#13;
"Oh, yes, I dropped it i suppose; but&#13;
it is not important. Amos Skinner&#13;
dropped in yesterday on his-way to the&#13;
mill, and got me to write it for him to&#13;
his brother in the city. You know Amos&#13;
lives in that little cabin up on Hemlock&#13;
Hill, and he says his brother always declares&#13;
he will bring an Indian ladder to&#13;
olimb up to it. This is the draft of the&#13;
letter I wrote and then copied it in i n k . ' '&#13;
" H u m p h ! I don't believe a word of&#13;
it V' muttered Zerelda listening from behind&#13;
the kitchen door. "Anybody&#13;
could make up such an excuse as that!&#13;
Buc if he's fool enough to believe it, let&#13;
him!"&#13;
And, with quick, angry steps and a&#13;
scowling brow, she wended her way toward&#13;
home.&#13;
And she utterly failed in her determination&#13;
to "git the best-lookin man in&#13;
the neighborhood," for Basil's faith&#13;
and confidence in his wife, Lura, has&#13;
never/jet diminished.&#13;
y An old carpet destroyed in San Franslsco&#13;
the other day had covered the&#13;
floor of one of the rooms in the mint&#13;
and had-been used for five years. The&#13;
dust of the precious metals used in the&#13;
coinage had, during that period, daily&#13;
fallen upon it, and when it w w taken&#13;
up the authorities had it cut in small&#13;
pieces and burned in pans. The ashes&#13;
were subjected to the process employed&#13;
with mining dust and thev realized&#13;
$2,500,&#13;
As the sun ioes not wait for prayers&#13;
and incantations before he rises, "but&#13;
straightway shines forth and is hailed&#13;
of }-oialL_sa.dQ no£_ waitto...dojropd^for applause&#13;
and noise and praiae-iwt do it of&#13;
your own desire; and^iike the sun, you&#13;
will be loved. ^ - ^&#13;
Intersession is the very safety valve&#13;
of Ijove.^ When we feel that we caa&#13;
neatly do nothing at all in return for&#13;
some remarkable kindness or affection,&#13;
how exeedingly glad we are that we&#13;
may and can pray.— Danville Tribune.&#13;
During the last 30 years the Episcopat&#13;
cburch in Scotland has gained 133&#13;
clergyman, 50,000 members, three&#13;
cathedrals, 120 churches and 90 pnrson-&#13;
You can tell an ex-sclioolmaster&#13;
every time. He always tries his chair&#13;
with'his hand before sitting down in it.&#13;
—Burlington Free" Press.&#13;
Money you can earn is- much bright*&#13;
er than any you can get out ot^dead&#13;
men's bags* " -&#13;
will think it&#13;
t t assign the&#13;
making and looking at that rude little&#13;
banner as the cause of good nature, but&#13;
it you will only stop and think what an&#13;
influence the possession of a pretty thing&#13;
has upon yourselves, you can readily&#13;
believe it. Especially are you pleased&#13;
if you have dene something with your&#13;
own brain and hands that challenges&#13;
admiration. Many an attack of blued&#13;
B~warded off by absorbing interest&#13;
iu a bit of fancy work or painting,&#13;
and many a heart made lighter by&#13;
the pleasant thoughts conjured up by a&#13;
good picture.&#13;
I remember well the story of the&#13;
group of children who had got into a&#13;
attractive. Brighten up your old furniture&#13;
with inexpensive trimmings that&#13;
can be so easily obtained, if your purse&#13;
is not deep enough t o buy new. Fresh&#13;
cretonne covering will turn, a battered&#13;
old chair into a new and invitidg seat;&#13;
a little ingenuity will m a k e that soap&#13;
box into a pretty ottoman; a very little&#13;
work and expense will drape your windows&#13;
with soft creamy cheese cloth&#13;
curtains, and so one may go on to the&#13;
end ot the chapter". TUB liuwu uf uu&#13;
one need be bare and unattractive in&#13;
these days, for there are the beautiful&#13;
ferns, the bright colort d Autumn leaves,&#13;
the brilliant berries, all of which can&#13;
be utilized in adornments.&#13;
A home that is void of adornment;&#13;
upon whose wall* are no pictures; where&#13;
tables are bare of books; where there&#13;
are no softly flowing draperies, no pretty&#13;
banners, or none of the thousand ami&#13;
one bright little oddities that are so easy&#13;
to make and obtain, is not so happy a&#13;
one even though large and pretentious&#13;
as that, little cottage which looks as if&#13;
loving hearts had prompted busy hands&#13;
to make it as attractive and pleasant&#13;
for the dear ones as was possible. Surroundings&#13;
have much to do with mental&#13;
conditions, and the most practical and&#13;
un-entimental of people will be insensibly&#13;
to themselves influenced to a&#13;
pleasant, hopeful state of mind when&#13;
the eyes are resting upon brightness&#13;
rather thau gloom, upon what is beautiful&#13;
rather than upon repulsiveness.&#13;
Decorate your homes. A little ingenuity&#13;
will do wonders. A touch of&#13;
bright"coloring here and there, if it is.&#13;
nothing more than the knot of ribbon&#13;
that ties b?-ck your curtain, a bunch of&#13;
grasses with bright red berries intermingled&#13;
fastened to the wall, cattails,&#13;
peacock feathers and the hundred and&#13;
one other things that come within the&#13;
reach of almost everybody, can be utilized&#13;
in this direction in a wonderfully&#13;
successful manner. Do not be discouraged&#13;
because you have not much&#13;
money to spend. One of the most attractives&#13;
rooms-I ever saw-was furnisJaed&#13;
with the smallest outlay of money,&#13;
and sometimes I am going to describe&#13;
it to you. ^&#13;
About Vrarioa» Matter*.&#13;
To color black kid gYovesT F u t - a&#13;
large handful of- logwood into a bowl;&#13;
-ftrover with alcohol; let stand one day&#13;
or jiirfil it looks strong. Put one glove&#13;
on the hand. Rub -all oyer carefully&#13;
wi+n a small woolon—cloth or sponge&#13;
dipped in the liquid, and let dry. Repeat&#13;
tho process pnd it will be black.&#13;
To make the hair grow: Get a good&#13;
-bair brush, a n d brush your hair from&#13;
were upon the verge of blows, when the&#13;
mother entered with an engraving of a&#13;
" Magdalen" which she hel&lt;£tip to view.&#13;
"•L-Was very beautiful. / T h e face was&#13;
upturned and a soft radiant lighTTEaT&#13;
seemed to strike i t i f b m above brought&#13;
into fine relief thurexquisite features and&#13;
great mournful eyes in which a glad&#13;
hope was dawning, giving it a heavenly&#13;
expression. Silence fell upon the noisy&#13;
group as they gazed. "Do you think&#13;
15 to 2d minutes, everyday, never using&#13;
a eumb any more t b a x is neca^sary.&#13;
Try it, and you will be pleased with_the&#13;
result&#13;
Ham dumplings are very much better&#13;
if ihe meat is "cooked tender before&#13;
making the dumplings. Make ihe~CTast&#13;
without shortening sn,d they will be&#13;
nice and light. /&#13;
To take iron rust out of wbito goods,&#13;
saturate them/with, lenon juice and&#13;
place in sur/shine. To prevent hiiir/&#13;
from falling oft' wash tj^e scalp frequently&#13;
with^age tea. ,s /&#13;
T ^ - d r v pumpkins f o ^ winte/ use:&#13;
Cdok the pumpkins as you would for&#13;
present u«o very dry, then spje'ad it on&#13;
plates and after it is dry roll up and tie&#13;
in paper. When wanted for use soak&#13;
over night or a few hours in milk, then&#13;
proceed as you do for fresh pumpkin&#13;
pie.&#13;
Mangos.—Take as many large sweet&#13;
peppers as you want to use, ripe or&#13;
green—I use both. Remove the core&#13;
and seeds as carefully as possible, place&#13;
the shells in salt water two days, then&#13;
ramrwB thflm Allow to draia.. Preshe&#13;
sees G o d ? " one l'ttle fellow whispered&#13;
reverently. And this was the keynote&#13;
of tho feeling which seemed t o pervade&#13;
tfcem all, for the dispute was forgotten.&#13;
And for a long time it was on ly&#13;
necessary to point to the picture for the&#13;
youngest to give up his naughtiness,&#13;
because he was sure that the pretty&#13;
lady saw God, and therefore He could&#13;
not" be far off.&#13;
Decorate y»ur homes. In these days&#13;
of cheap pictures lack,of means need&#13;
not be urged as an excuse. A very&#13;
small amount of money will 2:0 a great&#13;
ways. There jare many ch«ap&#13;
chromos that are very pretty, and advertising&#13;
cards without number which&#13;
are really ornamental. With a little&#13;
more money fine engravings can be purchased,&#13;
that, besides, are the best kinds&#13;
of educators for the young. One really&#13;
good picture in y o u r home will pay&#13;
a better interest and do moreJof'the&#13;
well-being of your children^than its cost&#13;
invested in any othejc^tfay. It has a&#13;
constant refining^tfftuence. It brings&#13;
__good thoughtsTand they help us all to&#13;
p u r e j r j M o e t t e r lives. "&#13;
^-Bbmebody says ihat time spent in&#13;
fancy work is wasted, for it might be&#13;
given to reading a useful book. I t is&#13;
Trot true that it is wasted. Whatever&#13;
is done to make home look brighter and&#13;
prettier is work in a right direction.&#13;
There are times when the weary honswwife&#13;
can find real rest and recreation in&#13;
putting together some bright materials&#13;
in pleasing form which she could not&#13;
obtain from the book that would tax her&#13;
brain and memory. If she enjoys doing&#13;
it, she is sure to find relief in the work.&#13;
Of course there is a possibility of&#13;
spending too much time in this sort of&#13;
thing, of tiring the hands and eyes to&#13;
the verge of exhaustion, of neglecting&#13;
-XealjdiUios, but so too may she who is&#13;
fond of reading.&#13;
must be taken in moderation. Judir&#13;
ment must be used in this as in every^&#13;
thing_else, or w h a t - m a y add vastly to&#13;
the- ploasuro of the hnmfi circJjBjgittbe&#13;
turnod into a pain.&#13;
Spare no pains to make your homes&#13;
pare as much cabbagre by chopping very&#13;
fino as you think will till them; season&#13;
with salt and pepoer. press in firmly.&#13;
When filled put in stone jar, cover with&#13;
good vinegar, placing a light press over&#13;
them, tie a covering of thick paper oyer&#13;
the jar. They will keep until w a r m&#13;
weather,and longer if put in self-sealing&#13;
j a r s , and are very nice.&#13;
Muskmollon Pickels. — Take ripe&#13;
muskmellons, r e a o v e seeds and peel&#13;
and cut in pieces. P u t into a jar and&#13;
cover with hot cider vinegar. Let&#13;
them stand until tho next day and pour&#13;
off the vinegar. Heat and pour on&#13;
again. Do the same every day^utftil the&#13;
fourth day. Weigh thejoeilon, and&#13;
every 5 lbs. add 3 lbar"of white&#13;
and 1 qt. of the^rinegar, a n d - s p i c e to&#13;
Broiled Tomatoes.—Select 9ffD, r i p e&#13;
tomatoes, out them in two, a n t p l a c e&#13;
them upon a well-greased double broiling&#13;
iron. P u t them over A clear fire&#13;
and broil, first one side and t h e n 0 »&#13;
the other. Now place on ft hot dieb&#13;
and pour over them melted butter, seasoned&#13;
with cayane pepper and s a l t .&#13;
Serve immediately.&#13;
Green Tomatoes Fried.—These a r e&#13;
preferred by -some people to the etzgplant,&#13;
and Bitty Well take" im plsua. C u t&#13;
the outer slice off, and then cut the inner&#13;
p a r t in slices about haif an inch&#13;
thick, roll them in flour and fry in b a t -&#13;
ter; sprinkle pepper and salt on t h e m .&#13;
This may be used as an entree or a&#13;
garnish with meat of any kind,&#13;
Breakfaft Dish.—Thin slices cold&#13;
roast beef, 3 tablespoonfuls of butter, I&#13;
tablespoonful walnut catsup, 1 tablespoonful&#13;
vinegar, 1 spoonful current&#13;
jelley, 1 teaspoonful made m u s t a r d ;&#13;
seasoning; w a r m water. Lay the thin&#13;
slices of beef in a saucepan: set it in a&#13;
pet of boiling water, cover them with&#13;
gravy made from the above ingredients;&#13;
cover lightly and steam for half an '&#13;
hour, keeping the water in the outer&#13;
vessel on a bard boil. If the meal&#13;
should be underdone this will be found&#13;
particularly nice.&#13;
Chili Sauce.—Twenty-four large tomatoes;&#13;
4 onions: 2 pods of red pepper;&#13;
1 tablespoonful each blackipenpeTrcin^-&#13;
uamon, cloves and allspice; 1 tablespoonful&#13;
sugar; 1 tablespoonful salt; 1&#13;
qt. strong vinegar. Cook all together&#13;
until stiff. This.will make one gallon.&#13;
^ - ^ . -.—&#13;
L o c a l F a i r s a s E d u c a t o r s .&#13;
Ll?e Stock Journal.&#13;
Farmers have not as cordially devoted&#13;
themselves to the,success of a n n u a l&#13;
fairs as their importance demands.&#13;
The local annual fair is the farmer's&#13;
home school, and should teach a valuable,&#13;
practical lesson. The fair shouldjbe&#13;
expected to bring together the best&#13;
evidence of the advancement of agriculture&#13;
in its district. If the farmersin.&#13;
thejdj strict,^represented by the annual&#13;
fair, entered*in to it as a matter of&#13;
personal interest, competing whenever&#13;
an opportunity offejed, offering prize*&#13;
ia-all th^sfi^e^aTtments:.most requiring&#13;
improvement, stimulating a lively rivalry,&#13;
such enthusiasm would prod ace&#13;
most unexpected progress, and soon&#13;
give the fair a wide T^putation.&#13;
The fair is capable of being organized&#13;
into a most instructive school m&#13;
any or all departments of agriculture.&#13;
Let us suppose that/cattle feeding for&#13;
beef is an important industry in t h e&#13;
district. Now this business, by some,&#13;
i i supposed by some to be well understood&#13;
by farmers, and tbey are hardly&#13;
aware that any thing remains to be&#13;
learned about it; but when you m e e t&#13;
one wbo holds that opiniont just ask&#13;
hiui what it costs, accurately, to raise&#13;
n^^ thrifty bteer-ih«- first-twelve- m o n t h s .&#13;
He c^n do nothing more than give a&#13;
guess at it. As he does not know the&#13;
coit of the steer, he does not know&#13;
/Whether it is kept at a profit or Idas;&#13;
this i*the precise state of agricultural&#13;
knowledge upon this matter. But the&#13;
proper management of the fair will&#13;
soon produce accurate knowledge on&#13;
this question. Let $40 be offered for&#13;
the best two-year-old, and ¢20 for t h e&#13;
best yearling and half the amount t o&#13;
the second best, with a full account of&#13;
All the food given in seperate periods&#13;
of six months; making it easy to determine&#13;
the real cost of the animal*,&#13;
this will not only render it easy to figure&#13;
the cost of t h e animal at one and&#13;
two years old, but it will show a n o t h e r&#13;
important fact, the cost of keeping a t&#13;
different ages, This point would be of&#13;
the greatest consequence to the oldfashioned&#13;
farmers, who have been&#13;
wont to consider beef under three t o&#13;
four years of inferior value, and w h o&#13;
have never discovered that their steers&#13;
do not pay their keepi ng in grain after&#13;
they are two years old. This test in&#13;
actual feeding will show them t h a t t h e&#13;
younger the animal the less it costs topat&#13;
on a hundred pounds liye W e i g h t -&#13;
that it takes less foo^t i n e last six&#13;
months than the second, less the second&#13;
than the^-ttilrd, and s o o n ; and&#13;
when this4aw is thoroughly understood&#13;
thejoem producer will govern himself&#13;
cordingly.&#13;
The fair is_tho practical school U&gt;,&#13;
teach such principles.' Every prize of*&#13;
..v'vn&lt;&#13;
sugar&#13;
to fered should be for the illustratitfh of&#13;
some important point in agricultural&#13;
practise; end as the feediugof live stock&#13;
suit&#13;
ten&#13;
P u t ^ t o g e t h e r and simmer till ^absorbs more of the capital and time of&#13;
The next day but one pour&#13;
"the syTup and boil it down so there&#13;
will be just enough to cover the mellon.&#13;
Hominy Butter Cakes.—Boil one p t&#13;
hominy very soft, and. an equal quantity&#13;
of corn meal, with a teaspoonful of&#13;
salt and •&gt;• teaspoonful of butter. Make&#13;
into a thi v batter with three eggs And a&#13;
sufficient quantity of milk, that is to&#13;
say at least one qt., perhaps throe&#13;
pis. Boat altogether some time, and&#13;
»&gt;ake them on a griddle or in wain" &lt;&#13;
irons. When well made and baked very&#13;
thin, these eakes are delicious, especially&#13;
when eaten v i t h maple syrup. When&#13;
egg$ cannot be had yeast makes a good&#13;
substitute. P u t a large spoonful in the&#13;
batter and let it stand several hours to&#13;
rise. If the griddle is used, the best&#13;
way to grease it is to rub it over with a&#13;
piece of salt pork with a fork. This&#13;
prevents adhesion, and yet does not&#13;
allow the fat to soak into what is cooked.&#13;
• •&#13;
Pudding.—Make thick batter of dour,&#13;
2 tw«.»cupfuls of sour milk, one teaspoonful&#13;
of soda, pinch of salt, steam 25 mincare&#13;
if&#13;
rich a s&#13;
AIT oTlliese"things ^otes tn cups filled half full, and oat with&#13;
Family Jealousy.&#13;
Philadelphia Call.&#13;
Little Maud—Well, I d o n ' t&#13;
your ma is pretty. She ain't so&#13;
mine.&#13;
Little Mollie—Yes, she is, too.&#13;
When she goes to a party she has&#13;
a French maid come to do up her hair;&#13;
so there, now.&#13;
Little Maud—Pooh! that's nothing.&#13;
My m a sends hers to the hair-dresser^.&#13;
sauce or cream and sugar.&#13;
- Feather Cake.—Three effgs, *ywx&gt; cupfuls&#13;
of sugar; one of lard or butterj&#13;
P5?r^ur/ftrl^f-milk^-eight-of-fiQirr; two&#13;
teaspoonfuk of~creaUi of t a r t a r ; one of-&#13;
Bodat o n e of lemon extract&#13;
"You can do aay.hinir, if you have&#13;
p a t i e n c e . " said an old uncle, who had&#13;
made a fortune, to his nephew, who had&#13;
nearly spent one. " W a t e r m a y be carried&#13;
In a sieve, if yGU only wait.'&#13;
" H o w I o n s ? " asked the penitent spend-&#13;
-tfcriffc—"T4U4t-freeaes." was the cold&#13;
the farmer th*n any^ other specialty,&#13;
so it should occupy a very p r o m i n e n t&#13;
position at all our local fairs, and t h e&#13;
prizss should be given to illustrate in a&#13;
practical way all the live stock specialties.&#13;
All breeds of cattle should be encouraged&#13;
alike, lor each breed ha*&#13;
special qualities adapting it to certain&#13;
localities. AH matters in farm practise&#13;
should be illustrated at our fairs, and&#13;
every farmer should regard it as his&#13;
duty to assist in building up^Ufeae local&#13;
fairs.&#13;
reply&#13;
•w&#13;
I&#13;
• _ _ _ — • 4&#13;
-OVR NEIGHBORS&#13;
•~~ FOWLEKV1LLE.&#13;
From the Reriew.&#13;
M*. Martin Elliott and Miss Ada&#13;
Loree, both of Iosco, we're married at&#13;
the M. £ . parsonage by Rev. Jesse Kilpatrick&#13;
on Saturday.&#13;
Dr. Ruel Randall died on Saturday&#13;
at his residence two miles north ol&#13;
this village, of general debility, aped&#13;
76 years.&#13;
Mr, Qeo. F. Stowe, who has been&#13;
sufterrng with hngeriog consumption&#13;
for the past few years, died at his&#13;
father's residence in Conway, on&#13;
Wednesday morning.'&#13;
,0, H. Philo has sold his house and&#13;
tot to James Place and will remove&#13;
to Lansing.&#13;
F. H. Starkey has sold his trotter,&#13;
Camara, to a man living at Harrison&#13;
for $650.&#13;
Mr. TJieron Metcalf, of this place,&#13;
hf.s purchased the restaurant business&#13;
of Mrs. Cline, at Lansing, and will&#13;
continue the business at the same&#13;
stand.&#13;
Dick Morehouse, of Conway, started&#13;
on Wednesday with three teams to&#13;
drive to Kansas. He was accompanied&#13;
by Almon Miller and Geo. Skinner.&#13;
Mr. E. Durfee received a telegram&#13;
on Tuesday announcing that his son&#13;
William, who is in the northen part&#13;
of the state on a hunting trip, was&#13;
accidently shot in the shoulder.&#13;
The job for maktirg-the Cedar river&#13;
improvement was let at auction at the&#13;
CounciDioomsatthis village~on~ Monday&#13;
afternoon to Mr. E. W. Sparrow, of&#13;
' Lansing, for f 12,000 and 10,000 acres&#13;
ot swamp land.&#13;
Freeman Rohrabaeher has traded&#13;
his house and blacksmith shop to Ross&#13;
Fowlerjfor a farm in Cohoctah. Freem&#13;
will remove to' his farm in the near&#13;
future.&#13;
Mr. H. A. Brirhdage and Miss J. L.&#13;
^ e n r y , Both of West Howell, were&#13;
pade one at the residence of Alonzo&#13;
Fowler on Sunday, Rev. Jesse Kilpatrick&#13;
officiating.&#13;
A young qolt kicked onj^halLQfjk&#13;
B. Davis' ear off on Sunday.&#13;
m&#13;
__.. y.&#13;
From the Citlrei&#13;
Art Miller hfts^ moved back fro&#13;
Kalamazoo^/&#13;
Rev;; Mr. Bryant has resigned his;&#13;
pastorate of the Presbyterian church.&#13;
John Daniels fell from a threshing&#13;
machine at Parshalville, the other day,&#13;
and broke one of his arms.&#13;
The brick are on the ground for the&#13;
addition to St. Patrick's church. A&#13;
tower and an organ loft will be among&#13;
the improvements.&#13;
parried, at the Kensington Baptist&#13;
parsonage, Mondaj, Oct. 6th, 1884, oy&#13;
Rev. P. P. Farnum, Mr. Eugene Phillips&#13;
and Miss Alice Morgan, both of&#13;
Milford.&#13;
Saturd?y night a young man, evito&#13;
furnish the Vandepoele ineamlescent.&#13;
light for use in houses .it the low&#13;
price of one dollar per li^ht a mouth.&#13;
The light will no doubt come into&#13;
quite general use.&#13;
The Edison Electric company has&#13;
been formed in this city with .1. K,&#13;
iieal as President. It lias hccn given&#13;
permission by the common council to&#13;
to erect poles and wires in the streets,&#13;
the system to be in operation within&#13;
six months.&#13;
The Fair its acknowledged on all&#13;
hands to have been the most successful&#13;
ever held in Washtenaw county.&#13;
The total receipts were, according to&#13;
Treasurer Henderson, about ijjv5.000-&#13;
an amount sufficient to guarantee the&#13;
fair'*- linancial success.&#13;
A strong petition asking that Milo&#13;
Pulcipber be reinstated in his position&#13;
as operator at t'le Western Union office&#13;
in this city was sent to ..headguar- ;&#13;
t-.'rs Saturday, it was signed by the!&#13;
officers of the University, the city authorities,&#13;
the bank officers, the newspap&#13;
r men and the solid men- ot the&#13;
town.&#13;
Fire broke out late .last Tuesday;&#13;
night m a barn belonging to Charles'&#13;
Kempf, of Lodi, two miles and a halt;&#13;
south ot" this citv. The bam was destroyed,&#13;
with all its contents, including&#13;
20 tons'of hay. 75 bushels of oats,!&#13;
farm implements and a straw-stack&#13;
nearby. The loss was about $1,000.&#13;
Insured for$800' in the. Washtenaw&#13;
German Mutual.&#13;
1 Settled Fact NO DOUBT ABOUT I T !&#13;
That you can save nearly one-half by trad-&#13;
- ^ - i n g at&#13;
Just received a fine line of&#13;
IJUKKCH L O A D I N G G U N S ,&#13;
- T 1 I K&#13;
PIEPER RIFLE AND SHOT QUM&#13;
AUD MAGAZINE RIFLES,&#13;
WiM-iirrvtli.. best Knulv* &lt;»« SIGHTING PUWDl-:&#13;
U unit till kintlwqf Aiiinumittou and »§«»tiiuj»&#13;
Jjnnilw ^t'Ui'lull.V.&#13;
ROLLER SKATES,&#13;
FOCKET CUTLERY,&#13;
TUOMEY BRO'SJ " S H M&#13;
' SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
MUSICAL AND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
All kinds of repairing neatly a n d&#13;
promptly done.&#13;
—RESPECTFULLY,&#13;
BARTON &amp; C A M P B E L L ,&#13;
West Main Street, Pinekney, Michigan,&#13;
%&#13;
4 .&#13;
4 a&#13;
D E X T E R .&#13;
Froiii the Loader.&#13;
— X gymnaMum club has been organized&#13;
in Dexter.&#13;
(ieorge Crane ha? again taken up&#13;
his residence among us.&#13;
J. B. Latiphear and Hattie Biu-kelew&#13;
were married in Ann Arbor a tcv^\&#13;
days la#o. • % ,-'"'&#13;
A new departure at tli£.Xim^ega;-&#13;
tiona.1 Sunday school^-is"the; introduction&#13;
of an orchestra of six pieces.&#13;
Four pieees&gt;v"ere used at their evening&#13;
sery-icjo Sunday 'with good—effect.&#13;
Jk&amp;. Lanphear has made an assignme,&#13;
nt to John L. .Smith for the b.-neiit'&#13;
of his creditors. It is tlvuiylit that -after&#13;
paying 100 cent*; on the dollar,&#13;
something handsome will lie left.&#13;
-* i&#13;
Married, at the residence _oX.._t_he..[&#13;
bride's mother, in Dexter, Wedne&gt;day 1&#13;
moining, Oct. 8th, Mr. Geo. K. IMes-, :&#13;
of Genoa, and Miss Mattie Buckeh.'w, j&#13;
of Dexter, Kev. It. C Mosher ohViat-j&#13;
ing. The wedding was a very quiet j&#13;
one, the family only being present. I&#13;
-llev. IL C,-Mosher-ehwed hw pastorate&#13;
with the Baptist Church last Sunday,&#13;
baptizing two candidates as a&#13;
part of his last services to the church,&#13;
l ^ O T - s ^ H E I R P R I O r S : ^&#13;
Best Prints made, - - Sets, yard,&#13;
Best Ginghams, made, - 7&#13;
Fruit of the Loom BL'ch'd Cotton, 8½&#13;
Good Cotton'Batts, - - 7 lb.&#13;
Good yard-wide Factory, - - 5 yard.&#13;
The Best Factory, - - 6k*-*- r&#13;
Turkey Bed Table Linen, - 3 5 u&#13;
Good all-linen Crash, - - 6 "&#13;
Large Size-"Cpochet Bed Sp^adsTTS" each.&#13;
All-Wool Black Cashmeres, 40in. wide, 45c.yd.&#13;
Good Worst^ilressJSoods, 12!-2c.yd. s&#13;
Cheney Bro^ Colored American Silks, sold&#13;
elsewjwre at 81.25 and $1.50, our price SI.&#13;
^ Slin. Gilbert's Plaid Flannels, $1 yd.&#13;
^i+ks, Velvets. 'Flannels, Hoseiry and t'nderwear at lower prices than any other&#13;
house in-M-ichiuMn. Immense stock Ladies' and Misses' Ne-w-mttfkets, liu&gt;&#13;
smfiCircles, t.'lo;iks and llavtdoeks. The tare to Jackson is very little compared&#13;
to what yon vvill save if you have any trading to do. We have the&#13;
largest stock of Dry floods in Central Michigan. We buy ami sell &lt;\xelu-;ivelv&#13;
for cash^ Our la rye business enables us to yet the lowest prices. W« have but&#13;
"one price" for all marked in plain figures,&#13;
•Kespectfnllv.&#13;
•wr.&gt;'."iKM:i£E!&#13;
A fav(»rf»«» prescription or one of th&#13;
most notoil ;ni&lt;i Muv.-osnul bpcu'lullplfi i n theO.C&#13;
(uow it-tlr(.&lt;))!or»l.' s-uwii &amp;'eri't&gt;u* liebititift&#13;
JLost Maiihtxxi {, ahn".&lt;&lt;8 antl Dernif.Seut&#13;
ixi plain Beak"'viiv M(it)t/&gt; ?e DniKJ-'iBteJcauflUlli&#13;
Addrtss D « . WARDji CO. Uuiiiani. SJfli.&#13;
D.W. Miller Carriage Co.&#13;
k &gt; &lt; i i • • , ^ C 2 ;&#13;
GE1 JS£ (tSJ I S C=«&#13;
^ ^ o 63 e&gt;&#13;
Manufacture a large vmritty f&#13;
173 Main Street,&#13;
TUOMEY BROS.,&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAE ONf,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, * C f ,&#13;
After th* most approved deiriRni »tth»TeryIow*lt&#13;
prices consistent with good workmanship.&#13;
&gt;2xloleo— of otir manufacture aro now'in use in thin and&#13;
foreign countries and atteot th» excellence o f&#13;
"|" I ~\!Cm 1 &lt;mr fjoiiil* bjr the universal satisfaction wbicu they J a c k s o n , M i e n . *\*v.ETerr.„'?h,r,,e K\ wABBAm».-«ptetai&#13;
' attention will be given to nail orders.&#13;
CATALOGUES FREE.&#13;
Mr. Leonard liurdick, of X. Y.&#13;
dently abput 20 year* oUig6, hire^" afStuTerlirother of Mrs. I)evereaux on&#13;
liorse and carriage at gelding's livery&#13;
istable, sayingr he wanted to go to&#13;
Jioweli. As he did not return on&#13;
time Mr. Belding began to think something&#13;
was wrong, and brought the&#13;
telepHonelntd~lxse7 and mailed~cards,&#13;
offering rewards for the man and outjit.&#13;
On Monday morning word was&#13;
received here by telephone frx)m Jackson,&#13;
that a young man answering the&#13;
description was in the hands of authorities&#13;
there, and they would wait orders.&#13;
Mr. Belding at once started for&#13;
Jackson, taking constable Chas. Cobb&#13;
with him, and the latter brought the&#13;
young thief home, arriving here&#13;
Tuesday evening, while the former remained&#13;
to get the horse, buggy, etc.&#13;
He left the top of the buggy at Williamgton&#13;
to pay for his hotel bill, the&#13;
i'Uggy at Jackson, and traded the laplobe&#13;
for a saddle. _ All will be recovered.&#13;
When the officers caught him&#13;
bo was on foot, in a swamp, near Parma,&#13;
having abandoned the fcorse—at&#13;
that place. He gave his name ^as&#13;
iMurry Wat»on, and now boards "with&#13;
sheriff Axtell.&#13;
4 N N ARBOR.&#13;
t rom titayftogiatw,&#13;
Miss Florence Waterman baa on exhibition&#13;
at Detroit, a handsome painting&#13;
of "Nero," a shepherd dog owned&#13;
16 Vandepoele Ele'tric Light&#13;
cxnnjMmy has completed arrangements&#13;
v- ,. ••__„ • . _'.^/_.^ :&#13;
SOUTH LYON.&#13;
From 'the Excelsior,&#13;
J. H. Sterns, of Jackson, has engaged&#13;
with the Uuilding k Mi':«^-tympany&#13;
here as carpenter and joiner.,.&#13;
LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER. W e w i l l - e l l L u m b e r a t tlie t o i i u w i n y p r i e e s t o r t h e n e x t &gt;&gt;!&gt; d a y s .&#13;
X X X I S i n c h S h i n g l e s , ] i e r t h&lt;nr&gt;a in 1 777177777. £."&gt;.!&gt;().&#13;
C l e a r IWitts I S i n c h S l i i n ^ ] , . , ^ \A-x tliuti.sTiid '1:1').&#13;
(•'nil Shii)i{Ie^ IS inch, per thousand, , 1.20.&#13;
Nn 1 J.uth, per thousand feet ...."i,S0.&#13;
No 2 Lath, per thousand feet,.... 4.0(».&#13;
Hill Stuff, iiududinjr iS/t No. 1, per thousand feet, , U.O0.&#13;
ditto}' Hoards, per thousand feet '. . . .S.50 to 11.00&#13;
Ham Lumber, per thousand feet lo.OO to 17 "&gt;().&#13;
Shipping Culls, per thousand leet ' l:L00.&#13;
Fenein^ p.-r thtMisand feet '-. . .".0 00 to 14 00.&#13;
Finishing Luntber ]&gt;er thousand f •••t. 20.00,to 50.00.&#13;
Siding per thousand fe&lt;'t.. 14.00 to 20.00.&#13;
POSITIVELY'NO CREDIT:&#13;
A. L. IIOYT, Manager, rinoknoy, Mich.&#13;
the Base Line, with his family, will&#13;
soon occupy the Lee Uevcreau.x I evidence.&#13;
A bouncing boy of 9 pounds .avjdr- i&#13;
dupois, arrived Monday nitfh't at the :&#13;
home ot Mr. and .Mrs. William Mac*,&#13;
key.&#13;
Monroe Dunlap has traded the east&#13;
ball of his place, 18 acres and small&#13;
house, tor a 100-acre farm near Milford,&#13;
belonging to Mr. Briley. The&#13;
parties exchange residences in about&#13;
two week*.&#13;
The west end of Liberty street is&#13;
eclipsing all other portions of the village&#13;
in the building boom. Mr.&#13;
Moody and M 13. Webster have each&#13;
broken ground this week for newresidences.&#13;
Making four nearly within&#13;
a stone's throw. ^"&#13;
Another periodical outbreak of decency,&#13;
caused by the effects of whiskey,&#13;
Sunday jnofning, to the shame and&#13;
dishonor of any civilized being, was&#13;
the actions of "Didf," Bridson; while&#13;
wild and crazed with drink lie heartlessly&#13;
drove his family to the barn,&#13;
and with a crow bar or other instrument&#13;
be smashed the sash, lights,&#13;
doors, stoves and furniture nearly to&#13;
atoms.&#13;
PINCKNEY PLANING MILL. W c are now prepared to do&#13;
Planing, Resawing.aii kinds of plain and fancy&#13;
Bracket-Sawing, Carving and Turning&#13;
In wood; ande\vill .noon be aide to do turning in iron and general machine&#13;
repairing. We are also agents for W. S. Julius' Asbestos Materials, Kngine&#13;
Packing, Mill "Boards, Felts, Hoofing, ( emeut. inside and outside Liquid&#13;
Taints Ham, Koof and Fire-proof F a i n t s "~7 ~ -&#13;
J?IXCKNEY PLANING MILL. _&#13;
Near (Jrand T r u n k W p o t , . •" ' F I N T K N K Y , MICH.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
CINCINNATI, O,&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOR THE CAMPAIGH. PKWE*S 8w uinllt ilB oanfdte rt h•*U cWttoEnE KfLoYr onFlyR E8fBt CENTS.&#13;
JLdrlr—&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
Detroit. Mich.&#13;
HARRIS REMEDY CO.. 'USSifc&#13;
- - " ^ ^ ^ ^ I»Tg CktuUU sad Holt fro^t M&#13;
PftOF.HAaR^PASTlLURfcMEOY&#13;
tiHmp U*n aad oiheti win iUflkf&#13;
from K^rroui tad P&gt;jtital D«bll- I Hj, frtmtnan Kxtoot'loa « A 4&#13;
»ro quickly *u4 radltaUjr ou*d.&#13;
Vha ntmrAf U pm np In h u m . 1 . . I fi«.t4«r T -nw nl H|^|^-&#13;
The only thing an Arab won't steal&#13;
- • v . . i • »&#13;
Uy^GeorgeU. ^4^^5111^01-21^666½^&#13;
Kail watermelons are said to bring:&#13;
on chills,-but perhaps the chill confers&#13;
i s jjaojjieijijan^ religion;&#13;
Kail watermelons are sa&#13;
on chills,-but perhaps the&#13;
when the farmer's dog takes, hold;&#13;
When tlio word Eatey or the&#13;
word Crgaa is non.tion.ed, they&#13;
each s u r e s t the othor* DO widely&#13;
-teows-ctsd so popular are tho in-&#13;
«trumeut3andthe makers.&#13;
Five letters in each, cf tho two&#13;
words are reminders cf enjoyment&#13;
in multitudes of homes. Illustrated&#13;
Catalogue mailed free to all&#13;
applicants.&#13;
I d . t (*no«uh t«flTfc» acure, unleu Itiirrnrt caw«i.&gt;f4j kJT?&#13;
(Utiing ihroe monihO. •?• Sint by mill la plain ^rappera.&#13;
Dir+ttlom tor t.lng »froaip«ity « r h Hot. ParncPifet oatcrb&#13;
Wfcl thU toaaj. %a&amp; nwua ttvim »«iuaa«Jad«aappUaaU«i»&#13;
DO YOU KNOW THAT&#13;
LORILLARD'S CLIMAX&#13;
PLUG rOIJACCS,&#13;
With K(MI Tin Tus:. i^ tlu&gt; lit&gt;~*t? la tho p u r e s t :&#13;
ia nevt'r (idiilti'ruti'd wit'i ^hu'&lt;&gt;H*», h a r j t ^ , m o -&#13;
laast'.o, (ir any •&lt;! l&lt;'[i'rio;is iuu'rvilioJVISv-Jtt^a-thft&#13;
i-p,ft&gt; u i t h m m i v 11Mmf t«&gt;l)»CC&lt;&gt;M. $-*—&#13;
LOKIL ARD'S ROSE JL AF FIXE&#13;
CI:T TOBACCO&#13;
.i»_ftl.«o_ilLiid«i ol ihiiJiiiti!*ijstuck, and for aromatic&#13;
rhewing i|ttn 1 itv is si'.i'onri to none.&#13;
LORI AKO'S XAYY CLIPPINGS&#13;
take tlr.^t rank'as u solid (Uirai»le Hmoking tobac^&#13;
i'ii wlit-u'wr introducvtl.&#13;
LOKILLAKU'S FAMOUS SNUFFS&#13;
h*vc hppn lined for r&gt;\&gt;&gt;r \2-\ years, and are »ul&lt;l t o&#13;
a larKOji'.xtfiit tliun uuy otliVrs. i&amp;insnmui&#13;
mstwtw Secure M—Ithy&#13;
action to the Lives&#13;
aid relieve ell bila&#13;
a a a H B a a a a M M r ^ O T i o a i t r o u b l e s .&#13;
X v t i j 7«iiUU&lt;; Vc Qiipiag. Prie. 1S«. All S r a o ^ L LIVER&#13;
Pgwsxixnx&#13;
GRAND OPENING! I am pleased to announce that I have just started a general store at&#13;
' My line consists of a large and varied assortment of&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
Ev±rjdiod^-eU]-4m4-exftnim^ o u r stock «f-jrood». Highest t&gt;rtce paid for&#13;
B U T r E H A N D KGGS. Everything sold at rock bottom prices. V&#13;
Don't forget, l ' .:&#13;
s*- P. CUNNINGHAM, Gregory; HHich.&#13;
&lt;rtva«M «»BHM trwm Utftmr* aftcaM amffMr U4rma,\&#13;
U4 laara aMMCtklaf to «Mr ^rm«ta««. / It la m* • tnua.#&#13;
AUnma Dr. C, I. LaBARflR, Pr«H aa&lt;t ftrvtelaa ta Charf&#13;
CMtral H*4. k tarf. laatMqto, 9&lt;0 VtMit *U St, Loah, Bo.&#13;
* or to Dr. Butu'IMRWIIMUT. /KsUMlrtM 10 T«&#13;
ft jX&gt;r.£«aB*ra;a&#13;
InTdiaMSM oft ho , „ _ .&#13;
]aiB«4»a(T, OrtMta WaakMav Bwrraam, B^WtSTVn^&#13;
mwdlca. Dc*&gt;rmi«M Treatrt. Call or Vrtft for"litoJ&#13;
qowtions to boannwprefl by thow detirli.gtrp^nwnllviMS&#13;
r&#13;
I liave now on liuntLa lnrs&lt;T and hottor 8»ock nf&#13;
H»riH»B« than v w r iK'f«r&lt;* u»Kt&gt;tlit&gt;t vUh a grand&#13;
Bttpplv i&gt;{ JIAKJVESS GOOr^S !_&#13;
eAhlosoap w ahsip slh ta&gt;fu lc hterwasphoexst.. At'Kum coaosjdn atsr itmhetn hinoi«;t aanndd ryto'puariHriPniKf. neatly and protwpUv tlonn. Set? for&#13;
FAYI'/l'TK-KKASOX.&#13;
STOCKBRIDCE MlCHtflAH&#13;
:%. s f&#13;
,*».:'&#13;
&gt; ' •&#13;
-7~&#13;
vgjagpfWWM A • • • • V - A.'ivr JJ&#13;
•^^.xiiCi^i^&amp;^.^AX&#13;
•&#13;
The Hoyheard&#13;
Z&#13;
mil the Hell-Wether,&#13;
I heard Z'l&gt; Van-- f i l i n g bow lie&#13;
captured tin* vuie oi a i&gt;.;« iv'.vood*. .-.«•!.-&#13;
tlemeiit in North CM- d i m when uc&#13;
riist ran lor Con^iv^. He *»'d 1««'&#13;
had never been imJiat^eUlemeiil ami&#13;
didn't know the boys, l i e rude o w r&#13;
thu mountains and l'ouud 11 bout MXIV&#13;
grocery&#13;
WE. CAN OFFER YOU&#13;
sovereigns at a eross-nnud .&#13;
and lie g««t down and iuteiied ln&gt;&#13;
horse and began to uiake tlieir acquaintance&#13;
and erack his jukes&#13;
around, and thought he was geumalong&#13;
pretty well with thein, IJUI lie&#13;
noticed an old man with *haggy eyebrows&#13;
and bi£ brass spectacle* sitting&#13;
on a chunk and marking 111 the ,&gt;and&#13;
with a stick. The old man didn t&#13;
aeem to pay uny attention to Vance,&#13;
und alter a while Vance concluded&#13;
tiiat the old man was bell-wether of&#13;
the rloek, and that it was necessary to&#13;
capture him, so he sidled up close to&#13;
him, ami tile old man got up and&#13;
,sh »ok himself and leaned forward on&#13;
h;s stick and su-itl solemnly:&#13;
Mr. Vance, 1 believer '&#13;
" And you&#13;
L'I'lus I?&#13;
jnr. oeueve: -'\e», sir&#13;
said Vance, A n d you have come&#13;
ovSr hereto see my boys about .their&#13;
votes, 1 believe'.'' " i'es, s i r , ' said&#13;
Vance '"that is my business,"&#13;
"Well, sir,' said the old -man,&#13;
"afore you proceed with that business&#13;
1 would like to ux you a lew&#13;
questions. "-&#13;
"Certainly, sir, certainly," said&#13;
Vance.&#13;
" W h a t church mout you belong&#13;
to?" said the old man.&#13;
I N - HEATING THAN WERE EVER GIVEN IN PINCKNEY,&#13;
WE HAVE THE LARGEST STOCK,,&#13;
WE HAVE THE BEST ASSORTMENT,&#13;
_• WE HAVE THE LATEST DESIGNS.&#13;
Royal IMIERE W E R E MORE O F T H E S E STOVES SOLD LAST SEASON&#13;
T H A N A L L O T H E R M A K E O F R O U N D STOVES, AND T H E Y&#13;
G I V E THE V E R Y BEST OF SATISFACTION.&#13;
OetTk:!&#13;
/^----&#13;
That was a sockdologer—'Vance&#13;
didn't belong to any church. He&#13;
knew that religion und meeting was&#13;
a big thing in the backwoods and&#13;
controlled their politics, but he didn't&#13;
know what their religion was, for&#13;
North Carolina was powerfully spotl&#13;
e d . i i u t he squared himseii'.tor IUIL)&#13;
responsibility and he says. "Well,&#13;
now, my friend, I will tell you about&#13;
that, for it is a fair question. Of&#13;
course it is. Well, you see my&#13;
grand father came from Scotland, and&#13;
you know that over in Scotland&#13;
everybody is Presbyterian." Here&#13;
he paused to note the effect, but saw&#13;
no sign of syihpathy with his grund-&#13;
"But my grandmother ea-hiu lroni&#13;
England, and over there-everybody&#13;
belongs to the Episcopal Chvirch."&#13;
He paused again ami the old man&#13;
made another mark in the sand and&#13;
spit his tobacco way oil'&#13;
"But my father was born in this&#13;
country in a Methodist settlement, and&#13;
so he gnew up a Methodist." Still no&#13;
.si^n of approval from the old man.&#13;
and so Vance took hi;, last shot and;&#13;
But my good old mother was a Baptist,&#13;
and its my_ opinion that a man&#13;
must go under water to #o'to heaven."&#13;
• The old man walked up, und. taking&#13;
him by the hand, said: "Boys, lie li &lt;io&#13;
and you may vote tor him'. 1 thought&#13;
he looked like a Baptist." And the 'old&#13;
man slowly drew a thi7k iVom his coattail&#13;
and lianded it to. Vance to sea! hifaith.—&#13;
Ex.&#13;
I3ST COAL STOVES WE KAVE THE , ATHA^.OEL MADE BY SHERMAN S. MEW ETC '&amp; CO ,&#13;
—J'i.T&amp;D T H E&#13;
WHICH ARE (}OOD HEATERS,&#13;
And the most E C ( ) \ ( ) M I C A I &gt; ^ t o v e s in use. Our expenses are light and we can sell goods cheap.&#13;
us and get the benefit of low prices&#13;
F. L. B R O W N , PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
V l i e n von \isit nr h'tivi' Ni''u York City PUVP&#13;
Hii'.'L'iiL'1'Kxpri'sfittrv iiiul &lt;'urria:.'!' Hire and stop&#13;
at tti'MiniiHi liiiuii Hotel n|i|)H!4itt' llrund (Vntral&#13;
Depot.&#13;
t'.li'L'ant room* lilted up at a copt of on*1 mil&#13;
lion (lollmv, reduced to' «1 inid upwards per day.&#13;
Ki:ro]&gt;i"in pi;ui. , Kli'\ utiir, Kestauran! supplied&#13;
with thi' ln'^t. I tor-"' curs,- siii.v* and nleyated&#13;
railroad* to nil ijfpots. Families ran dive better&#13;
fur lcsr. nioiii'v at tin; (O'iind t'liioii Hotel than&#13;
:111)1 utlii't' lii'M cla^r- hotel in the eitv.&#13;
CALL AND GET&#13;
r-o&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion,&#13;
Premature Decay, &lt;&gt;&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An W)-TW-'t' c^itti-lHuinrt Hook of Advire to&#13;
Youn:* or Middle-aired Men.wtth proscriptions&#13;
JIT Sr-lf-tr^itnient )&lt;v a Kfjiular Physician. S r%U 1^T I Cr Dn rCpCo snt umrepcse.i ptAA dHodHfrI %ttwB**»o t;h ree-cent&#13;
T. W»UL»AWd &lt;Sc C O . . MILWAUKEE, W»&#13;
MichiganBuggyCo.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
The lJads&gt;vinger in Texas.'&#13;
"Stranger what mout he your&#13;
trade?" u»ked an inquisitive Austin&#13;
hotel clerk, who w&amp;s new at the hu&gt;iness,&#13;
of a dignified stranger in 1'daeU,&#13;
who arrived on the evening trainv7&#13;
" I am a professor," was the &lt;piiet&#13;
reply.&#13;
"Oh, yes, one of the slight-of-haml&#13;
fellows who pulls rabhits out of a&#13;
h a t . '&#13;
"No, sir; I am not that kind of a&#13;
professor/'&#13;
"Corn" doctor?""^&#13;
The stranger smiled, and gave the&#13;
young man to understand that he&#13;
y,%a one of the professors engaged a t&#13;
the University of Texas; in other&#13;
Words, a p e d a g o g u e . _ j molesale Manufacturers of all kinds of Open and&#13;
A p e d a g o g u e ? &gt;&gt; hat'S t h a t ? Top BCGGIES and RtUI&gt; CARTS. Agents wanted&#13;
" A / S c h o o l t e a c h e r , ' r e s p o n d e d t h e LeTerynhere. Vnte for catalogue Wid pricelist,&#13;
stranger, rather sharply " I hope, i n s a WORK A. SPECIALTY.&#13;
sir, I have sueeeetfetM n - b r iaging fchejsubject&#13;
within the range of your comprehension,"&#13;
"Do you know what we call them&#13;
North ( 'arolina, where I was raised?"&#13;
"I have no idea."&#13;
•'f&gt; "Gad-swingers," was the reply.&#13;
'"So yotfare one of the gad-swingers ^o ai3o manufacture a fun lino of crrTERS,&#13;
a t t h e U l l i v t r s i t V o f T e x a s ? T o t e l l deluding SUPII Body, Tortland, Sqaare Box&#13;
the truth, I took voii for a monte , l w 0 " e t t P o r t l a n d t n d r ° n c r Sle,'sh8'&#13;
S h a r p # o m i ? a u A V l l t o n i o " 8 « d for tuts and price, before purcbaaine. -&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
KAL1MAZ00, » l d u&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAiJEMENT!&#13;
BEFORE3UYING fftis Horse&#13;
ELSEWHERE.&#13;
MANN BROSr&#13;
13 TTLLIXQ&#13;
'"'iftt if be dont ooll hia Hear? Draft, Hnmo kiUinc&#13;
1 uder, and buy on&#13;
LiASY RUNNING&#13;
DEERING TWINE BINDEH&#13;
at once, erery hone on the farm will soon be detd&#13;
WILUAM DEERING &amp; CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
B I N D E R S , R E A P E R S AND - M J Q S Z B A .&#13;
THE HOR8E8' FRiENOS.&#13;
TOM SSLZ ST&#13;
^ S. ANI&gt;HEWS. Howell, Mich.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 23, 1884.&#13;
HAVING DECIDED TO QUIT THE&#13;
GROCERY BUSINESS,&#13;
WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK&#13;
Timbered Land for Sale or Exehauye.&#13;
I h a w •'iu'litx- ;icrea of timber land In the town-&#13;
,-!ui&gt; of \V|iitt'"i&gt;ak, InuliamCo., which 1 will 8*11&#13;
for i,..i-li nr.trade f i r other land* or property i n&#13;
•jOtitli.'rti l.ivin^ton county. Address,&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
^ Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
*m&#13;
A Mobile man who went out to&#13;
hunt squirrels wounded a school teacher,&#13;
and at once married her to prevent&#13;
a suit for damages.&#13;
Kicking Horse Pass is the name of&#13;
a new town on the Canadian Pacific&#13;
Haiiroad. No horse ever passed lluit&#13;
way.&#13;
A.Pensacola man w-ent out to fish&#13;
for sharks about four weeks ago. is&#13;
supposed to have caught one, and has&#13;
jiot heen seen since". Impure inside.&#13;
The police of Spain are not allowed&#13;
.AftLreao.rt to-violence to extort confession&#13;
from *u*pects, but keeping a&#13;
prisoner on bread ahd water for two&#13;
or three ^veeks is not considered violent'e.&#13;
i&#13;
REiD THE DETROIT POST&#13;
The Best Newspaper in Michigan.&#13;
iHil.v — $T per W a r ; LOOtUs por Month.&#13;
Oni' Uollur pi&gt;r Yoar,&#13;
AVo.-klv&#13;
DSON, MOORE &amp; CO.&#13;
WHOI.KSA1.K nirXTEHS^TS"&#13;
DRY fiOODS&#13;
DRTKOTT.&#13;
CALL AND GET PRIC&#13;
BUTTER AND EGGS WANTEO&#13;
WE'HAV E A 1 A RGE LINE OF&#13;
B O O T S AND S H O E S ,&#13;
GLOVES AND MITTENS,&#13;
ATOIICH -W fT QEEEJELC&#13;
GET OUR PRICES BEFOlfE BUYING-&#13;
- — T ' —~ H O F F&#13;
f«Ti nunmo&#13;
Bi, luk'j Ira Toil&#13;
K B A t T B and VIQOS of YOUTH! IN all tlioav&#13;
diseases requiring aceruinand efflcletu'loM'&#13;
•specially Dyspepsia. Want of Appetite, ln&lt;1 Ijre.&#13;
tloa, Lac\ of Strength, etc., its use Is luarki&#13;
with Immediate ana wonderful results. Hou«&#13;
muscles and nerves receive new force. Enlivti&#13;
toe mind and supplies Brain Power.&#13;
• / ' A P%| sao*-*ufferln{r from all complaints&#13;
l a A l l l E o peculiar tothelrsex win flu.I lu-&#13;
©X. KAXTXK'S XKOK TONIC a »itie and *\* &lt; &lt;ly&#13;
core. U (tlvcs t clear and healthy complexion.&#13;
The stronjr'eat testimony to the value w UK,&#13;
HAKTBRN \HOS TONIC 1» 1hat frerinent siteiniits&#13;
At_counitriLiUiycijate. anlj .added H'the l'&lt;&gt;pnlar*&#13;
ltvof the orWwl- Ifvou eariM-.«itlv«leslr&gt;- n&lt; «iTTl&#13;
donot experhiirut—geUhe OKKHNAI. \i&gt;U iii.t&gt;T,&#13;
~«en&lt;i your mldrsss taThs Dr. Harter W*4£°-&#13;
Htl^iHx. Mo., for our "DKXAX BOOJC."&#13;
^Fallot Hrstuts and nswfnl In'oMtstlon.free.&#13;
i. HAHTiH'a IROW"¥6WIO is row 6*n at AU.&#13;
D«hJOQl8T» AND P&gt;A(.CRa EvKRVWHCM.&#13;
)&#13;
S&#13;
s&#13;
/*&#13;
y&#13;
-r N&#13;
mmmmp&#13;
^^Ct.-.t-T-..-&#13;
•M&#13;
\&#13;
ispafcfy.&#13;
JEROME W I N C H E L L , E D I T O R .&#13;
expeditionary force should have a gill&#13;
of Madtria. Generous wine is a preat&#13;
preservative of health, and is certainly&#13;
no dearer than rum or b r a n d y . "&#13;
T H E national museum exhibit at the&#13;
New Orleans exposition will illustrate&#13;
the national history of the country. Its&#13;
mineral resources will be represented&#13;
by fine collections representing primary&#13;
- G E N E R A l ^ ^ U B ^ ^ v ^ i - h T ^ article | ^ ^ ^ ! ^ ^ f ^ ? ^ 4 - ^&#13;
on the Battle of Bull Run, in the No-&#13;
Xntered at the Po**o««&gt; M M O U U matter.&#13;
CURRENT TOPICS,&#13;
vembor Century, gives the reason why&#13;
the Confederate victory at Bull Run&#13;
was not followed up by an attack on&#13;
Washington. R e also discusses his personal&#13;
relations with Mr. Davis, and&#13;
criticises, with much plainness of&#13;
speech, the subsequent conduct of the&#13;
w a r on the Confederate side.&#13;
( I T is the little things in life that&#13;
count. A couple in New^ York state&#13;
lived happily together for two years,&#13;
A few mornings ago 8 fly made a misstep&#13;
on the brim of the cup and fell into&#13;
the wife's coffee. The offender was&#13;
pioked out by the husband and accidently&#13;
tossed upon the lady's plate.&#13;
She became .very angry, packed up&#13;
her belongings and went home to her&#13;
father. The separation is said to be&#13;
final.&#13;
I K A Philadelphia court suit was recently&#13;
brought by a young woman&#13;
against the Sisters of St. Francis to recover&#13;
damages or alleged breach of&#13;
contract. The plaintiff was formerly&#13;
a member of the sisterhood which she&#13;
sued. She claims that upon enterhig&#13;
the order she surrendered to it the&#13;
personal estate ot which she was possessed,&#13;
it being stipulated that the&#13;
order would keep and protect her during&#13;
her lifetime, in sickness as well&#13;
as in health, and at her death would&#13;
bury her decently. She was expelled&#13;
for some irregularity. Thd plaintiff's&#13;
case was closed and a motion for nonsuit&#13;
was made by the .defense. After&#13;
argument the judge granted the moiion&#13;
and discharged the j - r y .&#13;
T H E skeleton of Guiteau h a s been&#13;
t h e object of so much persistent and&#13;
annoying inquiry that the officials in&#13;
\ charge of the army medical museum at&#13;
Washington have found it necessary to&#13;
dispose of the^assassin's remains. Nearly&#13;
every visitor to the institution Has"&#13;
made inquiry to see the bones, but the&#13;
exhibition will be the animal product&#13;
department, showing uses made of&#13;
animals and their products. T h e textile&#13;
department will also be very complete.&#13;
The bureau of ethnology will&#13;
furnish collections representing arts of&#13;
the aborigines. Collections of casts of&#13;
fishes exhibited at the centennial exposition&#13;
will also be sent to New Orleans.&#13;
Collections purchased for the New&#13;
Orleans exposition will at the close of&#13;
the exposition be deposited in the&#13;
national museum. * Collections now in&#13;
the museum will not be drawn upon to&#13;
any extent to supply the cases at New&#13;
Orleans. The tish commission will&#13;
have exhibits representing the present&#13;
state of the fisheries and work of the&#13;
fish commission. It is proposed to send&#13;
a car-of carp to New Orleans and to&#13;
have various processes of hatching-go—I arts*&#13;
ing on during the exposition. Prof.&#13;
Beard intends also to send the steamer&#13;
Albatrjss to work in the Gulf of Mexico&#13;
during the exposition and to have results&#13;
shown from time to tTmo Tn The&#13;
exposition.&#13;
A T a convention of the International&#13;
association of fairs and -expositions&#13;
held in St. Louis, Mo., a few months&#13;
ago, a proposition was presented to&#13;
hold a world's fair in 1892 in commemoration&#13;
of the 400th anniversary of the&#13;
discovery of America by Columbus.&#13;
After discussion a resolution was a d o p ^&#13;
ed directing the president of the convention&#13;
to appoint a committee of thirteen&#13;
to report a plan of organization and&#13;
management for such a fair. T h e committee&#13;
was appointed^ a n d a q u o r u m o f&#13;
it met in St. Louis on the 8th inst., at&#13;
the fair grounds, and after considering&#13;
the matter adopted a general plan submitted&#13;
by Morris R. Locke of Illinois.&#13;
The plan contemplates a charter from&#13;
the state in which the fair mayHbeheldr&#13;
The ^management is to be governed by&#13;
a code of by-laws in barmonv with the&#13;
E K I C A N C O A t S - O F - A K M S ,&#13;
or Recognized in the H e r a l d r y ot&#13;
t h e New World.&#13;
An interesting subject—one t h a t has&#13;
not yet received the attention to which&#13;
it is entitled—is that of tho recognition&#13;
of industry in what might bo&#13;
called American heraldry. Tho coatsof-&#13;
arnis and official emblems of oldworld&#13;
nations, as might be expected,&#13;
are monopolized b / i d e a s of pride and&#13;
warlike power. With popular rights&#13;
and peaceful industries the founders of&#13;
European dynasties and kingdoms had&#13;
no sympathy. No less was jit to be expected,&#13;
on "tho other hand; that selfgoverning&#13;
communities of 'frugal and&#13;
industrious folk, sot in a land where&#13;
everything was to be wou by arduous&#13;
effort, should embrace ever)- opportunity&#13;
to laud the labor which was tho&#13;
corner-stone of tho fabric of their prosperity—&#13;
of their very existence.&#13;
A glance through such a work as&#13;
Prof. Hough's "American Constitutions,"&#13;
or Admiral Preblo's "History&#13;
of tho Flag of tho United States of&#13;
America," will not fail to reveal an almost&#13;
universal recognition of industry&#13;
and commerce. Tho most notable&#13;
omission is in the case of tho seal and&#13;
arms. Jin not one of the design? suggested&#13;
bv or to the committee appointed&#13;
July 4, 1776, to prepare a device for&#13;
the great seal oi the United States—a&#13;
committee whose members were&#13;
Franklin, Adams, and Jefforsou—was&#13;
there any recognition of the peaceful&#13;
—Ad-am*''design was tho "Choice&#13;
of Hercules" -what a pity that upon&#13;
our passports and commissions we do&#13;
not behold1 'delineated "tho hero,resting&#13;
on a club; Virtue pointing to her&#13;
rujrged mountain on one hand and&#13;
peWtt4uUng-4uni—to._n sound, i and SIoth&#13;
request has been invariably refused. A&#13;
short time ago, to prevent further annoyance&#13;
in this respect, the bones were&#13;
placed in the personal charge of Surgeon&#13;
Billings, and hereatfler it will bo&#13;
impossible for any one to see them&#13;
without permission"from him. He will&#13;
carry the only key to the lock that bars&#13;
the horrible treasures, from sight. It&#13;
is understood that the bones have n e v -&#13;
er been mounted, notwithstanding the&#13;
reports to the contrary.&#13;
AN ordinance was passed by the&#13;
Roanoke, Va., council some months&#13;
ago prohibiting certain animals, among,&#13;
them horses, from running at large&#13;
within the city ttmits. Mules were&#13;
omitted—accidentally, it is supposed.&#13;
T h e owner of one of these animals was&#13;
arraigned before t h e mayor, charged&#13;
with violating the ordinance in question.&#13;
He pleaded in bar of, the offense&#13;
that mules were not included in tho&#13;
ordinance. The mayor accepted the&#13;
charter, which recommends the city of&#13;
St. Louis as the place be3t suited for&#13;
holding said fair, and provides for the&#13;
appointment of a committee to procure&#13;
a charter and to memoralizo congress&#13;
for proper recognition and such assistance&#13;
as will insure the complete success&#13;
of the enterprise. The plan was&#13;
adopted as the report of the committee&#13;
and will be submitted to the next meeting&#13;
of the association to be held in St.&#13;
Louis on the 3d of next l&gt;ecember,&#13;
when it will no doubt be a lopted, and&#13;
all necessary machinery put into opera-&#13;
-tion-fOr carrying out the p r o j e c t - •&#13;
~pTea, and dischafgedrhim on the ground&#13;
that " a mule was hot a h o r s e . " Since&#13;
that time the owners of these kicking&#13;
quadrupeds have not been slow to take&#13;
advantage of the decision, as well as of&#13;
tho defective ordinance. The present&#13;
executive, however, has just fined one&#13;
of these parties.^eciding that m contemplation&#13;
of Ihe law " a mule is a horse."&#13;
STANLEY, t h e African explorer, says&#13;
that he has solved the problem of health&#13;
in equatorial Africa. " W e have now&#13;
fewer death with 155 employes on the&#13;
Congo than we had five years ago when&#13;
we had only 14» The African elinmte&#13;
is not unhealthy, provided that you&#13;
feed-properly a n d JLYOM spirits.__The&#13;
whole secret lies in diet. —Give a man&#13;
the right kind of food and he will live&#13;
as well in Africa as in England. Thegreat&#13;
mistake that has been made-hltherto&#13;
has been in expecting Europeans&#13;
to face an African sun on an African&#13;
diet The secret of h e a l t h ^ i r t o&#13;
supply Europeans with Euj^poan food&#13;
wherever he "may hftj-^The quality"of&#13;
the food kjlla-of'Tt saves. I t is the&#13;
same wiHTfour-footed animals as with&#13;
Feed him generously with the&#13;
food on which he has been reared, and&#13;
he will thrive and grow fat in regions&#13;
where he would have perished if be had&#13;
tried to for» onr native fare. Every&#13;
r ~v&#13;
night at dinner time every man fulhe&#13;
F a a m W o r k for O d t o b e r .&#13;
-AmericanAfeficultnrlalr for October.&#13;
We hope the town, county, district,&#13;
state, and other fairs, have attracted&#13;
the merited attention of farmers everywhere.&#13;
Many of those exhibitions are&#13;
heid this month, and there is still time&#13;
to cast in tho sickle of attendance, and&#13;
reap a larg^ harvest of new and valuable&#13;
ideas. Winter wheat may be&#13;
sown up to fhe~mld*tte~of^the—nroDth.&#13;
Where the soil is deep, rich and mellow,&#13;
late sowing may be better than earlv,&#13;
as'theplants-thus escape the ravages of&#13;
the Hessian fly. October sown wheat&#13;
maybe much benefited by.au&gt; application&#13;
of a quick-acting commercial fertilizer,&#13;
which will stimulate the young&#13;
plants to a rapid grouth. Two hundred&#13;
pounds per acre of either sulphate of&#13;
ammonia or nitrate oi soda may greatly&#13;
increase the crop.&#13;
Where there is a market for husks,&#13;
the ears of the corn may be picked&#13;
from the stalks and husked hi the barn,&#13;
otherwise it is better to ,husl$ the corn&#13;
in the field. If tho seed ears have not&#13;
been selected, do this important work&#13;
now. Leave a few of the husks on-the&#13;
seed ears, by which they can be braided&#13;
and hung up in bunches in a drv&#13;
place out of the reach of vermin. After&#13;
husking, bind the stalks in bundles&#13;
and set these in large shocks. If this&#13;
work is properly-done, the fodder&#13;
"may s t a n d in -the field until winter"&#13;
and bojirawn to the barn&gt;s^desired.&#13;
As-soon &amp;g frosts are expected, the beets&#13;
'must be harve3ted^aext secure tho carrots,&#13;
and f o j l p w w i t h turnips. Roots&#13;
keep well^while stored in pits, if frost&#13;
dpj»s-liot reach them, and there is sutclent&#13;
ventilation provided.&#13;
• •&#13;
A rare and beautiful plant of the&#13;
morning glory speeies is owned by Mrs.&#13;
E. N. Leavens, of Faribault, Minn.&#13;
Tho blossoms are exceedingly abundant&#13;
pure white, at least four inches in&#13;
in diameter and very fragrant. From&#13;
twelve to twenty of the flowers open&#13;
wide like a Chinese umbrella sudder&#13;
iy each evening, between 6 and 8&#13;
glancing at her flowery paths of pleasure,&#13;
wantonly reclining on the ground,&#13;
displaying the charms'both of her eloqueuco&#13;
and person, to seduce him into&#13;
vice!'' FranklWMVfls for a design presenting&#13;
the whelming of Pharaoh;&#13;
Jefferson for the "Children of Israel in&#13;
the Wilderness, plus Hengist and&#13;
Horsa." Among tho supporters in the&#13;
various designs afterward reported are&#13;
to be found American Indians, Roman&#13;
soldiers, "maidens with loose auburn&#13;
tresses," "knights inarms, with bloody&#13;
lances," but'nowhere a husbandman or&#13;
an artisan, and on the &lt;:roat seal&#13;
finally adopted June 20, 1782. nothing&#13;
typiiios labor, unless it bo the unfinished&#13;
pyramid which scoffers kave insisted&#13;
upon regarding as prophetic of&#13;
„the Washington monument&#13;
Ycry different, however, is it with&#13;
tho arms of the different states; there*&#13;
tho omission to recognize trade or industry&#13;
is tho comparatively rare exception^&#13;
~ Maine has a s - l i e r s u p p o r t e r s a husbandmnn&#13;
leaning on his s c y t h o a n d a&#13;
sailor resting on an anchor..&#13;
New Hampshire shows a ship on the&#13;
stocks with" American banners displayed,&#13;
and a group of busy shipwrights.&#13;
— . ——&#13;
Vermont places beneath her towering&#13;
pine-tree three erect sheaves and a&#13;
red cow—a nobler beast tiian any of&#13;
the Hons, griffins, boars, and bears&#13;
that ramp and roar through tho foresjts&#13;
of European heraldry. , """ .&#13;
Massachusetts has a decidedly warlike&#13;
coat-of-arms, with liev belted and&#13;
moccasined Indiati, atfu her "dexter&#13;
arm clothed and grasping a broadsword,&#13;
11 and Rhode Island's ''aneker''&#13;
-has no reference to maritime interests.&#13;
Nor do Connecticut's three vines, supported&#13;
and fruited, relate to viticulture,&#13;
but, instead, to tho threo original&#13;
colony presentsilk&#13;
to the king. The&#13;
side the genius of the&#13;
ing a skein of&#13;
convention of 1777 adopted a seal&#13;
whereon was shown " a n elegant house&#13;
and other buildings, with sheep and&#13;
cattle, a river running through tho&#13;
same with a ship under full sail"—a&#13;
description leaving not a little doubt&#13;
as to whether tho river r a n through&#13;
the elegant house, or the sheep. The&#13;
present seal, adopted in 1798, bears the&#13;
following elaborate dovice: "A view&#13;
of the seashore, with a ship bearing&#13;
the flag of the United Statos riding at&#13;
anchor near a wharf, receiving on&#13;
board hogsheads of tobacco and hales&#13;
of cotton, emblematic of the exports of&#13;
the state; at a small distance, a boat&#13;
landing from the interior of tho state&#13;
with hogsheads, etc., on board, representing&#13;
her internal traffic; in the&#13;
back part, a man plowing, and at a&#13;
small distance a flock of sheep in differ*&#13;
ent postures, shaded by £ flourishing&#13;
tree; the motto, •Agriculture and&#13;
Commerce.' " Not a bad coat-of-arms&#13;
for the thriving southern commonwealth.&#13;
Florida places a side-wheeled steamboat&#13;
on the river in the middle ground&#13;
of her coat-of-arms.&#13;
Arkansas crowds the shield upon the&#13;
bosom of h e r eagle with a steamboat,&#13;
a bee-hive and plow, and a s h e a f o f&#13;
wheat.&#13;
Tennessee places in one division of&#13;
her coat-of-arms a plow, a wheat-sheaf,&#13;
and a stalk of cotton, with the word,&#13;
-"Agriculture." The lower half occu-&#13;
^iea_by_a_]oaded barge, with the word,&#13;
"Commeroe." -&#13;
Ohio, which was without a n y i e g a l -&#13;
ized seal for more than half a century,&#13;
places tho familiar wheat-sheaf on hor&#13;
shield, and has as supporters a farmer&#13;
with sheaves of wheat and implements&#13;
of agriculture, in tho distance a locomotive&#13;
and train of cars and a smith&#13;
with anvil and hammer, and also water&#13;
and a steamboat.&#13;
Indiana's buffalo is being soared&#13;
over the prairies by the resounding ax&#13;
of a lusty wood-chopper.&#13;
Iowa has on her arms a sheaf and&#13;
field of standing wheat, with a sickle&#13;
and other farming implements, a l^acl&#13;
furnace and a pile of pig lead, a plow&#13;
just left by a citizen soldier, and, in the&#13;
rear of a l l a steamboat upon the&#13;
MississjppL&#13;
PENSIONS T O J^JLJJ&#13;
X. SOLDIKHS &amp; SArLOMS.&#13;
who wore disabled bv wounds, diseasa, ao«M«lt&#13;
oitUtberwiit*,th« IOBJJ of a toe, pJltw, raatooee nliM,&#13;
dironic diarrhoea, rapture, LOM of tttsttt or (partially&#13;
s o l lohu of bearing, failing bao* of a t M t M ,&#13;
rhetnuaatm, any disability, no luattsr bowaslfbt,&#13;
jriv+B you a poatjion. $ou&gt; and U+norabU mm-&#13;
« « V M Obtahutd. Widows, children, moths**,&#13;
and fathers of aoldtars dying in the Berries, or&#13;
a l w w a r t l s , from dieeaae ouufracted or woamW received&#13;
while in the service, are entitled to paction&#13;
. K«j*HK&lt;Ki autl ttt&gt;amk&gt;n&lt;«i claims a epetdarty.&#13;
BOUNTY; BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS Cot'&#13;
L8CTED.&#13;
I N C R E A S E YOUR P E N S I O N .&#13;
A uenaion can be increased at any time wbea&#13;
Ita disability warrants it. As you grow older the&#13;
wottad has gradually undermined the constitution,&#13;
tka disease has made you more helpless. Ja B O B *&#13;
manner the disability has increased ; BO apply for&#13;
an increase at once.&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED&#13;
•tamp&#13;
Box 4&amp;5,&#13;
M. V. T I F i i N E Y ,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS H E A L T H F O R M E N&#13;
¥ P R O F .&#13;
HARRIS'&#13;
A Radical Cr.ro&#13;
FOB&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
—IMPOTEIieY.&#13;
KB- T e s t e d f o r o r e r f t&#13;
y e a r s 0 7 ume In thous&#13;
a n d s o f c a s e s .&#13;
T. TRIAL&#13;
PACKAGE,&#13;
rTRHTOOB D I B I U r t&#13;
orguid i M b w i ana ofr&#13;
o»y, lad Mmaiw* JB&gt;&#13;
Han dU—iti. U B S M&#13;
•ktUrol phjLiclint, radg&#13;
from yoatWol IO&amp;IMM.&#13;
Uou, toe KM lodalfwd^&#13;
a a d o w briio werk. Do&#13;
tot tomporlM white M i&#13;
CBcuicaturk iayovajsteta.&#13;
ATOU Mag inputs&#13;
on by pretmduw eUliu of&#13;
ct!m remedte* tot few*&#13;
boable*. Get our free ctrcu-&#13;
Ur Wvd trfiU p*ofcH&lt; MS&#13;
leum import*nt faeU baJoftl&#13;
taking OcatauMU elwirbeM.&#13;
Take » romedy th»t ku aarofl&#13;
thoaMsdj, »ofl deei n*t interfere&#13;
with kttratioa to badt&#13;
t a or cftusa p*Io or Uooo.&#13;
vcnUnc*. Founded OB Ml'&#13;
futlftc mtdlcil principles.&#13;
G rowing la tkYor u ( rtpul*.&#13;
lion. Direct »pplk»den to Sto&#13;
leUBfdlwua stakotitttp*&#13;
- flfte lnUuenoo felt without&#13;
del»jr. The natural faa«-&#13;
tlooa of the human orcaa*&#13;
Ism are mtored. Tt»'&#13;
mlmatinr. element* of&#13;
life which save been&#13;
watted am t*v«a bask.&#13;
Tba patient booomea&#13;
cheerful and «aiaa&#13;
•treofth rapidly.&#13;
C O . , M'f g Chemlsti,&#13;
SEND ADDRESS&#13;
HARRIS REM&#13;
806½ North I0ta StM St. Lou!*, Ho.&#13;
QUE UONTH-8 TREATMENT, $3; 2 MOMTHS,$5 ; 3 UOMTHB, $7,&#13;
pi a n t a t i o n 3 o f ~Har t for\T,~ WTnH 10 f, an d&#13;
Weatherfiold.&#13;
New York's :jrms linvc DO recognition&#13;
of labor or trade, if we except the&#13;
two vessels approaching each other on&#13;
the Hudson.&#13;
New Jersey, however, displays three&#13;
plows ia an escutcheon, makes Ceres&#13;
one of ^£ho supporters, and takes aa&#13;
crest a horse's head.&#13;
Pennsy 1 vania's supporting hor-'C.:i_are&#13;
of tho rampant "old war-hors"" 'ureed,&#13;
but her shield is charged v. niace-&#13;
| l u l emblems—a ploivT_oTr~jr&gt;. n n a r y&#13;
proper, a ship tinder full sail; ana a&#13;
stalk of ruaizc. This coat-of-arms was&#13;
taken chiefly.from the old seal of the&#13;
city of Philadelphia, adopted in 1701,-&#13;
which had in three of i u quarters a&#13;
balance,'a wheat sheaf, and a ship s.ailinjr&#13;
upon an ocean.&#13;
Delaware shows in one division of&#13;
her azure shield a cow, and in the&#13;
other a sheaf of wheat and a bundle of&#13;
leaf tobacco. The crest is a ship under&#13;
full sail, and the supporters" are a&#13;
mariner and a hunter.&#13;
Maryland, in adopting the arms of&#13;
Lord Baltimore, was so fortunate as to&#13;
obtain as supporters a fisherman and&#13;
plowman.&#13;
Virginia, on the reverse of h e r great&#13;
seal, which is nothing if, rtofclassical,&#13;
shows Cores, with lier" cornucopia in&#13;
one hand and^trrfcar of wheat in the&#13;
other. ^ ^&#13;
W^sTVirginia has an encyclopedic&#13;
rgat-of-arrus. On the dexter side of&#13;
her ivy-twined rock is a farmer, clothed&#13;
in tho traditional hunting shirt of the&#13;
mountain region, his right arm.resting&#13;
on tho plow-handles, and his left sup*&#13;
porting a woodman's ax, with, at his&#13;
feet, a sheaf of wheat and a corn-stalk.&#13;
On t.hc sinister ia a miner with a pickoral&#13;
at his* feet, while an anvil, on,&#13;
which rests a sledge-hammer, is partly&#13;
seen.&#13;
North Carolina has on&#13;
Cere with tho cornucopia in one hand&#13;
and in the other threo wheat ears.&#13;
Georgia haa always celebrated trade&#13;
o'clock, And provide a most curious^ reolony of silk-worms, sericulture being&#13;
and delightful entertain in ent.&#13;
snr wfieat^ia^fttstjvox-&#13;
wagona moving&#13;
and industry with elaborate enthusi-_| (rnniip^uJLJm s.-iid st&gt;nve_thiug a b o u w&#13;
asm. When George II. chartered the&#13;
colony, in 1732, one face of tho seal&#13;
represented a provident and laborious&#13;
\ | the special object of Mtbe rrcw'sottlement.&#13;
When it became a crown col-&#13;
Wisconsin, has upon_ Ecr_ THield_ air&#13;
anchor and a mechanic's arm, grasping&#13;
a hammer, a plow, a spade and&#13;
pick-ax crossed, and two stalks of&#13;
grain. Tho -supporters--are—a sailor&#13;
and a shirt-sleeved laborer, with 0&#13;
pick-ax&#13;
Minnesota sTiows a farmer, plowing,&#13;
his gun resting on a stump, while an&#13;
Indian recedes before him toward "his&#13;
bright home in tho setting s u n . "&#13;
California blazons upon her shield a&#13;
hardy miner, with his pick, seeking&#13;
for gold, and two clipper ships upen&#13;
tho bay.&#13;
Oregon has at the base of her^shicTJL&#13;
sheaves of wheat, a plow, a^-ntke, and&#13;
a pick. Ih the upper.iraTf is a landscape&#13;
with an emigrant wagon, and in&#13;
the background' a sea bearing a steamship&#13;
antral brig flying American colors.&#13;
,..-Kansas displays a river and a steamboat,&#13;
a settler's cabin and a man plowing,&#13;
and a tram of&#13;
westward.&#13;
Nevada has a benefitting coat-ofarms.&#13;
It shows a quartz-mill, a tunnel&#13;
from which a miner is pushing a car of&#13;
ore; a plow, a sheaf, and a sickle; a&#13;
train of railroad cars passing a mountain&#13;
gorge, and a telegraph line.&#13;
Nebraska shows a blacksmith at&#13;
work at his anvil, a sheaf of wheat on&#13;
his right hand and a treo on his left;&#13;
in the .middle-ground are a wheat field,&#13;
a log cabin, and a river bearing a&#13;
steamboat, witb, on tho further bank,&#13;
a locomotive and train of cars.&#13;
Colorado bears on the lower half of&#13;
her shield a miner's pick and mallet&#13;
crossed.&#13;
Of the territories, Utah has a beehive&#13;
on a stand surrounded by flowers,&#13;
jsdth,bees hnvnying nfiari it. Washington's&#13;
"female figure with flowing&#13;
tresses" has an anchor by her side; to&#13;
her right a city with spires and domes&#13;
and a steam vessel; on her left a log&#13;
cabin and a pine forest. On D a k o t a ^&#13;
shield an anvil and agricultural implements&#13;
appear in decidedly incongruous&#13;
juxtaposition with an Indian spearing&#13;
a buffalo. Arizona is represented by a&#13;
miner, dressed in shirt and trousers&#13;
and a broad-leaved hat, resting on pick&#13;
and spade. Montana shows plow,&#13;
pick, and spade in the foreground of&#13;
her shield. Wyoming displays in one&#13;
compartraont of her escutcheon a railroad&#13;
and a train' of cars; in another&#13;
are agricultural implements.&#13;
Thus are labor and commerce represented&#13;
in American heraldry.-*-Act*&#13;
York Mail and Express.&#13;
mm • —&#13;
W h a t He R e m a r k e d .&#13;
WITHOUTMEDICINE.&#13;
T H I S M A G N E T I C / B E L T IS&#13;
ftWARRANTEDTOC0HE&amp;?"&#13;
ito_lvHtbout&#13;
mr-rticlTlo:—I'aln In t h e b s c k , hlpa,bend, or&#13;
limb*. "&lt;vr* OH« d&lt;.&gt;l&gt;!iny,lumbago, generut dsbiUCj,&#13;
rheumiitlnti!, puraljata, ncurrnlslo, aclatlcs, dlaesa-&#13;
*«oi the LlilrK.-yt.ftplnal dleeajiea, torpid liver, mont,&#13;
eemlnul emlaalona, Iwpotcncy, asthma, nenrt d!»«&#13;
enae, Jyapppala, conatlpntlon, cf-yalpelaa, Indignation,&#13;
hernia or rupture, cuUtrrs, pile*, opllepaj,&#13;
dnmb affile, e t c&#13;
\v hoti ahy debUlty of the CEXTR ATIVE ORG A XS&#13;
occurs, loat vitality, lack of nervo I'orro snd vigor,&#13;
TOurtiliic weskneaaca, and all thoae dlaeaaea or a per-&#13;
•onul nature, from whatever caune, tho continuous&#13;
stream of Magnetism permeatlagr through the pnrt*&#13;
moat reatore them to % healthy action. Tii«8 i* DO&#13;
mistake about this appliance.&#13;
He was a particularly hard-up debtor—&#13;
or, at least, one from whom it was&#13;
difficult to collect anything. One day his&#13;
long-suffering creditors sent a new&#13;
clerk to dun him, not with much hopes&#13;
of success, however. In duo time the&#13;
collector returned.&#13;
'•Well," said the employer, *'did}'ou&#13;
but he promised to pay at&#13;
"He's alwavs promising,&#13;
but he nevg&#13;
e t t h e m o n i i v ? '&#13;
"No;&#13;
once.'"&#13;
ivs er llxes a d a y . "&#13;
"This time he did—he said to come&#13;
her sliield-a-j.around^Tua=idax^nexJ,^vt.ll o'clock aud__&#13;
he'd give meiho money."&#13;
"He did? Did lie suy'anjthing else?'&#13;
• No, sir. O, ye.-, he did. As 1 was&#13;
'pig's eye,' 'over tho left' — but the remark&#13;
seemed to bo utterly irrelevant.1 '&#13;
—Drake's Magazine.&#13;
0 n y,^nT7Mrfts floal a ho wed on-one tinotr4uiads^_&#13;
C. B. Streotor, of&#13;
Norwaik, Ohio,&#13;
found in a field a saake with two dis-&#13;
LrM&gt;|E3AGNETlC&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER. •&gt;&#13;
TO THE U D K i - S &amp; P i S S Exhacatl*a,I&gt;z.«»«p«ta,arwlth plaaanaoftHo Lly-&#13;
•r, KMnera, Heada«h« o r O o l * Fetfc » « 1 1 « «r&#13;
Weak A alt lea, • r S w o l l e a Feet, an. Abdominal Boft&#13;
and a pair of Uagnetlo Foot Battoriei haro no roparlor&#13;
la tha rallef aad core of all the** complaint*. 11117&#13;
oarry a poirefful inasnetio toroe to tha Mat of th*&#13;
B s s l b W c s k s M s o f t h e 8»li&gt;c, FaU.&#13;
I«4 af the womb, Lcaoarrhoza, Chroate IanaaiBa.&#13;
Has s a d Ulcermtloa of the Wasth, l a e l a e a U l Hawarrhaffoor&#13;
Floadins* Patnfal, ftappreated s a d firr&#13;
a n l a r Meaatraatloa, Harreaaeaa, and e h a a s s af&#13;
UftTiSls U the Beat Appllsnae s a d CurstlraAasmt&#13;
for all form* of F e s i s l s DtfleaHtea It Is nrrjurpaawd&#13;
by anything- before Invented, both aa a curatira&#13;
a-*ant and aaa source of power and rttaUaation.&#13;
Prtos of either Belt with Magnetic toat BattenM, 110.&#13;
Sent by express C. O. D. ,and examination allowed, or by&#13;
mall 00 receipt of price. In ordering', send naaanre or&#13;
walat and also of ahoe. Remittance can be made In oar.&#13;
reney. sent In letter at our risk.&#13;
—The Magneton Garment* are adapted to all ages, are&#13;
Worn over* the under clothing, (not a e s t t*_ Che&#13;
body like the aasny Galvanic and Eleetrle &amp; « « •&#13;
bugs adrertlaed i o crt^intTcly) and Bhoold bs&#13;
taken off at nIf?ht. They hold thwrpou&gt;er/OT«t*r,ssd&#13;
are worn at all soaoons of the year.&#13;
Send stamp for tho "New nejinrtnre In Medical Treat*&#13;
ment Without Medloine," with thouaandtfof teatlnas-&#13;
T H K M A G N K T O N A P P I J A N G E C O j .&#13;
» 1 8 S t a t e S t . , C h l c a c o , 3QJ.&#13;
The Magnetic appliances may be seen&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store, Pickney&#13;
Micb. 4&gt;^&#13;
I5KERM0TTS&#13;
ts&#13;
t/&gt;&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liter&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
" N O T I C I S . — W i t h o u t a particle of doubt, Kcr-&#13;
-w^u^a-Pills nra-lhflmoHjfflpulaTQt'any on thu tnur-&#13;
Ki-t. Havlng'heRn belbrotlie public for K quarlcrof&#13;
;i ci'.MiHry, and having always performed more t h a i&#13;
u-)M promised for them,' hoy merit the incoeiw tnst Uicy haroAttarard. P r i c e , « 5 C p e r b o a t .&#13;
For sate by all druxKUt*.&#13;
Kerruotts Pills always in stook a&amp;-&#13;
Winohe.Ps Dnij? Store, Pinckney, Mint&#13;
V&#13;
.*.&#13;
"T"&#13;
J&#13;
&gt;&lt; '&#13;
s&#13;
S* /&#13;
s&#13;
^&#13;
*&#13;
-tm&#13;
V&#13;
•X&#13;
N B W I NOTKft&#13;
THBT HXJLD TDBJJ tTK&#13;
Five K»ked men entered the honee of John&#13;
Sherry of Edeutiurg, Pa., the other evening,&#13;
wkile the family wtre eating supper and commanded&#13;
all to hold up tbt-lr bauds.. Besides&#13;
Sherry there were at Uie table two men—Michael&#13;
Reiser and George Beef, a servant girl and&#13;
boy. The entire party were gagged and bound,&#13;
and Sherry was then compelled to open the&#13;
safe, from wbleh they atstracted 1200. They&#13;
alto obtained ttt.UOO from bureau drawers and&#13;
other place* about the house. The gang then&#13;
drove off lu a carriage which was waiting.&#13;
Tuere la no clue.&#13;
A SUSPECTED OEHMAS.&#13;
Carl Selfert who came to Meriden, Conn.,&#13;
In April last from Turzlg, near RummelsbMg, Serminy, formerly kept a tavern in that town,&#13;
t tte cellar of which the skeletons of six hum&#13;
lajjagg have been found. One of these has&#13;
fcMp Moulded, by clothing and a traveling&#13;
t i g , at that of B Fuerestenberg, Jr., a meru&#13;
i t of the locality, missing for three years,&#13;
and wbo was at the time supposed to have been&#13;
murdered and robbed. The cable me*saxe&#13;
which brought thta Information to the German&#13;
newspapers on this side the water states that&#13;
"the remaining nve skeletons were probably&#13;
all merchants who were killed by Seiftrt, who&#13;
robbed and then buried them. This horrible&#13;
discovery was at once made known to the state&#13;
authorities, and thej have done all they cau to&#13;
capture the murderer, who Is now In America." SMalferts say they came to America at the&#13;
ttt of their son-in-law'. knew ot the starch&#13;
Blfor Fuerstenberg; intended returning&#13;
1» Germany; but had no knowledge of the&#13;
skeletons or of suspicions of ti;einseWes in&#13;
connection, except as they got It through reading&#13;
the German newspapers. No lirreur has&#13;
been nrade, as the German consul at New&#13;
Fori has no official information tSat Selfert lu&#13;
wanted in Germany.&#13;
DBOWNED IN.LAKE MICHIGAN.&#13;
Ten men employed in the constructional a&#13;
new w$ter tunutl fcr the village of Hyde Park,&#13;
south of Chicago, were drowned in plain view&#13;
Of the village* at tf o'clock the other mornlne.&#13;
Thirteen ruvn~wFi%i effliployed npon the work of&#13;
sinking a tunnel and constructing a new crib&#13;
at a point tn Lake Michigan one mile from&#13;
shore. AbuvK tbe crib had been constructed&#13;
a platform about forty feet fciuare, supported&#13;
bv poles bjULiil together by heavy cbaii:*.&#13;
Upou the platform had been Rullt a sffialreabtn&#13;
tn which tue men slept and had their meals,&#13;
having lived the r« for the past three wetk?.&#13;
The platform was supported by heavy timbers&#13;
restlug on piles. About D o clock the sea became&#13;
so heavy that portions of the platform&#13;
washed away. - The men dwoku about 5:30 aDd&#13;
found spray with every wave washing&#13;
_lhfi__ .aide of their hut. They&#13;
were not much alarmed and proceeded&#13;
to get breakfast, which they succeeded In easing.&#13;
The storm continued to increase in fury,&#13;
and finally a threat wave struck the cabin sua&#13;
carried it falny iuto the boiling sea, and with&#13;
11 everv max upon the frail structure. Twelve&#13;
of the tueu succeeded In cllmbinir upoa the&#13;
hujte BtriuKt-T?, *nd lying facedown with their&#13;
\arms arouud the beams they awaited the ar&#13;
fihrahuf assbuueu. Every moment increased&#13;
th\ir danger, and the waves with terrible force&#13;
torfr them one by one from Aheir anchorage&#13;
until only eight remained. Meantime the crew&#13;
of ibti G'/iicago life-saving station bad been advised&#13;
of tbeir situation and were dispatched to&#13;
their refcUf. Tbey arrived at the scene about&#13;
UoVltJck, anil »heoihey were within throwing&#13;
distance a line was made fust bv the almost&#13;
drowning men to'ttmoera and made light from&#13;
the boat. Then the eight survivors attempted&#13;
the feat of working through the eurf to the&#13;
boat, but ouly tuur succeeded in making the&#13;
journey; One ofthem^n wa6hed off succeeded,&#13;
with tnc aid of a pi auk, in reaching shore.&#13;
Among the drowutd areXVVm. H. Sbcpanuan&#13;
and K. Corbiu, coutractors\if the work.&#13;
OCR PRXCIJU8 METALS.&#13;
The director of the mlut\tstimateH the&#13;
amount of goiri aud silver coin in tbe United&#13;
SUtcfl, October 1, at 1815,000,000. Ol this&#13;
$558,U(K),i,OU is gold, $18 2,000,00J standard silver&#13;
dollarc, and $75,000,000 snbsidarysilver, a&#13;
gain from October 1, US3, of $35,OOU,flOQ, $13,-&#13;
000,000 being gold coin and $££,000,000 silver.&#13;
In addition to the coin in circulation October&#13;
1, the mints and assay offices held bullion for&#13;
coinage amounting to gold $53,000,000, sllveh&#13;
$5,OOJ,000, making the total amount of United&#13;
8taws coin and bullion available for coinage in&#13;
the country October 1, $873,000,000, of which&#13;
$010,000,000 Is gold and $253,000,000 silver.&#13;
The amount of goild coin outBlde-ine treasury&#13;
waa about $7,500,000 less than on October 1,&#13;
1883, while the amount in the treasury was&#13;
$20,000,000 more. The amount, of silver in&#13;
banks aud general circulation Is about $8,000,-&#13;
000 less than in 1883, and the amount la the&#13;
treasury about $31,000,000 more. The amount&#13;
of outstanding gold and silver certificates is&#13;
nearly $50,000,000 more than on October 1,&#13;
18kVJ.&#13;
WILL TRY TO UKBAK THE STRIKE.&#13;
1 For several weeks Philip Dnrner, a well&#13;
known labor contractor of Pituburg Penn.&#13;
who recently broke the strike among the miners&#13;
of H. C. Frick &amp; Co. by filling their place with&#13;
foreigners, has been making frequent trips&#13;
between Pittsburg and the flocking valley. It&#13;
has just been ascertained that Dorner has a&#13;
contract with the Hocking operators whereby&#13;
be is to receive $5,000 it he is successful In&#13;
breaking the strike. The men supplied by him&#13;
already great'v outnumber the strikers and&#13;
with their families occupy tbe houses of those.&#13;
evicted. They are paid at the rate of 50 cents&#13;
a ton, which is 23 cheaper than the old hands&#13;
were receiving. These men are all experienced&#13;
miners, composed of Poles, Hungarians and&#13;
Germany and are under the lromclad agreement.&#13;
WMMBCUTgD TOR R16HTEOU3SES3, SAKE.&#13;
/A Attachment of the sTlvaftoir«A.rmy"&#13;
KOttfht before Justice Kennedy,&#13;
were&#13;
of the 8ui&#13;
court In Syracuse N. Y. the other day on&#13;
i wfcHt of habeas corpus to determine the right&#13;
of the Common Council to make an ordinance&#13;
'oterferlng with the religious liberty of any&#13;
people. He decided that the Council had the&#13;
right to protect the public peace on the higawaj*.&#13;
and that a police justice must determine&#13;
whether a breach of the peace had been committed&#13;
by the army. This detachment was&#13;
arrested while parading with drums&#13;
—and^fer—A short time before a detachment&#13;
— wa» arrested for singing In the etrcfet.imt were_&#13;
acquitted. Another detachment was then sent&#13;
out, and they, too, were arrested. They were&#13;
each fined $15, which they refused to pay, and&#13;
ttatj.weTe taken to the penitentiary. They de-&#13;
&lt;«ltnthat they will all goto jail rather than&#13;
"olffjafce fines They also declare that they will&#13;
.*• | W » 6 n parading and Binging. If the local re&#13;
awttt give out, they will import detachments&#13;
from other points who will take their places.&#13;
A long war is in prospect, as the authorities&#13;
are determined to stop the street parading and&#13;
singing. •&#13;
LIRE AN OLD CREAK! WINDOW&#13;
SHUTTER.&#13;
- That is the way a man's rheumatic&#13;
joints sometimes are. Hinges old, rusty,&#13;
and worn, and badly need oiling. The&#13;
trouble is in the blood. A man who iff&#13;
of any account is worth repairing. The&#13;
repairing can be done by means of&#13;
Brown's Iron Bitters. That enriches&#13;
and purifies the blood, drives *out the&#13;
pains, and works complete restoration.&#13;
Thousands testify to it from happy experience.&#13;
Mr. C. H. Huntley, 918 North&#13;
Sixteenth St., St. Louis, says, "I used&#13;
Brown's Iron Bitters for rheumatism,&#13;
general debility and prostration, with&#13;
the best results."&#13;
N T B 1 Y S T H A W 8 .&#13;
The Hamilton Powder Wo'ks near Hamilton,&#13;
Oat., blew up the other morning, killing&#13;
four men.&#13;
Cattle coming from the Uoited States must&#13;
be quarantined before being allowed to pass&#13;
through Canada.&#13;
Issue of btandard silver dollars for the week&#13;
ending October 4, $491,997; corresponding&#13;
period last year, $615,999.&#13;
O^tobur 9, William Daniels published his&#13;
letter accepting tbe nomination to the vicepresidency&#13;
on tbe Prohibition ticket.&#13;
The Canadian Pacific railway Is seeking the&#13;
ftstahllshment of a line of steamers between&#13;
Port Moody, British Columbia, and China and&#13;
Japan.&#13;
' An Ottawa, Ontario, dispatch says it is understood&#13;
eight captains of small steam crafts&#13;
will join the Nile expedition, starting from&#13;
Quebec.&#13;
The London Daily New's financial article&#13;
says it is generally expected the bank of England&#13;
will raise tbe rate of discount to two and&#13;
a half per cent.&#13;
John McCullough became very violent in St.&#13;
Louis the other night, and knocked do*n a&#13;
conductor who. attempted to prevent him from&#13;
getting on board a train.&#13;
Judge Tour*ee has consolidated his "Continent"&#13;
with the New York ChriaUdb at Work.&#13;
Mr. Tourgee will continue ~Hs department,&#13;
"Mlgraa," in the Christian at Work.&#13;
The pjpe has ordered a larue number of&#13;
nurses to be in readiness at the various convents&#13;
in Home to attend cholera patients&#13;
should the disease become e^idnnle lu Rome.&#13;
The diary of Lieut. Lockwood, victiia of the&#13;
Greely expedition, which was written in shorth&#13;
a n d ' s now being written out by his. flaucee,&#13;
who is the only one who understand* his system.&#13;
Gen. Grant thiuks our relations with South&#13;
America would be much pleae&amp;nter and more&#13;
profitable if commercial agents were appointed&#13;
at every port with the privilege of engaging in&#13;
business. '~&#13;
Chinese immigrants are' taking advantage of&#13;
Justice Field's recent decision in San Francisco,&#13;
that Chinese born lu the United States cannot&#13;
be excluded, and 30 of them have already&#13;
sworn to their American birth.&#13;
Prif*™ Albert Vlrtpr Christian Kflffpr'1, flfo*!&#13;
son of the Prince of Wales, will be of age next&#13;
January, and parliament wili be asked to grant&#13;
him $50,000 a year to maintain his rank Tbe&#13;
radicals will oppose vigorously.&#13;
The commissioner of internal reverue announces&#13;
a further post-panement of the proposed&#13;
change in tbe method of enforcing the&#13;
collection uf taxes overdue on distilled spirits&#13;
in bond until September 6,18SR. The last postponement&#13;
is believed to be a practical abandonment&#13;
of the proposed change.&#13;
A circular has been issued to the people of the&#13;
United States from the headquarters of tbe&#13;
national prohibition party In Chtc^o&#13;
urging tbe united observance on Wednesday,&#13;
October 29, as a day of fasting, humiliation,&#13;
confession and prayer for the speedy suppression&#13;
of the traffic In alcoholic qrmke.&#13;
At the church of St. Mary in Boston an encyclical&#13;
letter from Pope Leo XIII. was read,&#13;
forbidding Catholics from Joining secret societies&#13;
under penalty of a refusal of deathbed&#13;
absolution and Christian burial. The letter&#13;
states that all the late troubles of the church&#13;
in.Europe have come from secret societies.&#13;
Henry Al. Stanley fays the trade of the Congo&#13;
country will be of "ereat benefit to Great&#13;
Britian, and that the way toBecurethis advantage&#13;
Is to urge upon the British Government the&#13;
necessity of sending two crutserB to the mouth&#13;
of the Congo Rlvtr, pending a decision by&#13;
European powers of tbe Congo question.&#13;
Interesting exercises attending the reinterment&#13;
of the remains of the celebrated Iroquois&#13;
Chief Ked Jacket and other famous Iudlan&#13;
chiefs In a lot donated for the purpoee br the&#13;
Forfst Lawn Association brought together at&#13;
Buffalo, Oct. 9, au unusually large delegation&#13;
of Iodians from various rcservatlone of New&#13;
York and Canada.&#13;
Pisb's Cure for CJonHUtpptlim 1B n u t o c i y pieasauL&#13;
to take but It Is sure to cure.&#13;
Viscount Savernake has married&#13;
Dolly Jester, an employ of the Westminister&#13;
Aquarium.&#13;
C o l V a C a r b o l l a a l v e Instantly relieves the pain&#13;
of Burns and Scalds and never leaves a wear. It Is&#13;
the b e u s t i l v e l a the world for Kenentl family use&#13;
25cand 7fiCK At druRKlstsor by mail.&#13;
J. V^ COlM&amp; Co., Black Klver Falls, Wis.&#13;
If your earthen pie-plates are discoK&#13;
ored, rub thdea well with whiting or&#13;
sand-soap. \ ~&#13;
" THEY WILL SURELY FIND YoT.&#13;
They are looking for you everywJyayeT Drafts&#13;
of air Jn unexpected pladee, going from hot&#13;
rooms to cool ones, carelessness in changing&#13;
clothing;—In short anything Vhlch ends In a ucommonc6ld In the head." Unless arrested&#13;
th's kind of cold becomes seated i \ t h e mucous&#13;
membrance of the head. Then it is Catwr*HIn&#13;
any and all its stages this disease- always&#13;
yields to Ely's Cream Bala. Applied to tbe&#13;
nostrils with the finger. Safe, sgreeable^ certain.&#13;
Price fifty cents. • \&#13;
The simplest and best regulator of the DiSr;&#13;
ordered Liver in'the world, are Carter's Little&#13;
Liver Pids. They give prompt relief in Sick&#13;
Headache, Dizziness, NaUees, &lt;fce.; prevent&#13;
and cure gConstlpation and Piles; remove&#13;
Sallowness and Pimples frohrthe Complexion,&#13;
and are mild and gentle in their operation on&#13;
the bowels. Carter's Little Liver Pills are&#13;
small and as easy totafce-as-sugarv One pill a&#13;
dose. Price 25 cents.&#13;
"BUCHU-P&gt;IBA,fT Qulc*. completP. curesall&#13;
noying Kidney and Urinary Diseases, | 1 an-&#13;
Twin servants of pain are those dreadful&#13;
diseases, inflammatory rheumatism and neuralgia.&#13;
They are met in every walk and station&#13;
of life, and baffle ordinary attempts to deal&#13;
with them. In Athlophoros is found the&#13;
conquering agent. It attacks the seat of disease,&#13;
vfhich is in the blood, and drives out the&#13;
foreign substances which have poisoned and&#13;
infiamed- iU Prlce--$I per-.JaUle^. If your&#13;
druggist hasn't it, send to Athlophoros Co.,&#13;
112 Watt Street, N. Y.&#13;
CUBOT A I X&#13;
DISEASES OP T H E&#13;
KH»TEY9,&#13;
IiTTER, BLADDER,&#13;
AND&#13;
TJBINARY OBOANS,&#13;
DBOPST,&#13;
GRAVEL, TIABSTEa,&#13;
BKXGHT'S DISEASE.&#13;
PAINS ENTHB&#13;
SACS,&#13;
LOUTS OR SXDE,&#13;
NSBVOUS&#13;
DISEASES.&#13;
B y the uso of this RBMTTDY, t h e&#13;
Btomach end Bowels spoodiiy refrain&#13;
their s t r o n f f t h , aud the b l o o d ia&#13;
purified.&#13;
It i s pronounced by hundreds of thobectdofctowto&#13;
"be the OITLY CT/KE fa v all kinds of Kidney Disoasos.&#13;
Zt is purely vegeuMo, and eurea when other medicines&#13;
fail. Over J.00 Physicians intho State of Rhode&#13;
Island on record testifying in it3 fayor and who pxo-&#13;
Boribo it regularly.&#13;
It i s prepared expressly for these diseases, ananas&#13;
novor been known to fail. Ono trial will convince&#13;
yon. For salo by all drugrfsta. PRICE $1.25.&#13;
Send tor Pamphlot of Testimonials.&#13;
S X T J Z i T W G B S S £ S 9 " T C O . .&#13;
PKOVIDEN'CE, n . I.&#13;
A. W. Brown, M.D., of ProvMcnoe, R. 1., soys:&#13;
«*I havo osed HUNT'S IKidney and Liver) REMEDY&#13;
in my practice for the past sixteen yodrs,an;l&#13;
cheerfully rcconunend ** as being * cafo and&#13;
reliable mmody," . . . *&#13;
ONE HUNDRED DOSES ONE DOLLAR&#13;
Can be applied truthfully to Hood's Sarsapanlki only&#13;
and il is an unanswerable and convincing argument&#13;
as to the slrenjcth and real economy of this, great&#13;
medicine. Hood's Sursapiirilla is made of roots&#13;
herbs, barks, e l c , long and favorably known for Iheir&#13;
power in eradicating disease from the system, and&#13;
purifj'injf the blood.&#13;
Restored to Health.&#13;
"Durinjj the summer months I have been somewhat&#13;
debilitated or run down. I have taken Hood's Sarsapariila,&#13;
which gave me new life and restored me to&#13;
my wonted health a n * strength." WILLIAM HC'LOt'&lt;&#13;
iH, Tiltoo, X. 11.&#13;
Given an Appetite.&#13;
"Williin a week after taking Hood's Sarsaparilla,&#13;
my appetite began to improve, my headache leit me,&#13;
my strength setmed to be renewed, and I lelt better&#13;
in every part of my body. I rejoice when I think of the&#13;
good Hood's Sarsaparilla has done me." C H A K M S&#13;
1.. UAWBITT, Syracuse, N . Y.&#13;
HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA&#13;
Sold by all druggists. $ i ; six for $5. Mjde only by&#13;
C. I. H O O D &amp; CO , Lowell, Mass.&#13;
100 Doses One Dollar&#13;
'»mB*&#13;
DO THEY I K U U B L E Y O U ? H A V E THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D W I T H OUK X E W TEST UENSES&#13;
BY W H I C H W E OFTEN S U C C E E D W H E N&#13;
OTHERS KAIL.&#13;
ROEHM &amp; WRIGHT,&#13;
IMPORTERS, J E W E L E R S A N D OPTICIANS,&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D A V E . , D E T R O I T , MICH.&#13;
K. K. K. RADWAVS&#13;
READY&#13;
RELIEF,&#13;
In from ona to twenty nalants*. acmr ftdH to 1»&#13;
&amp;«•« PAIN with one thorough spp&amp;aittoa. N*&#13;
matter how violent or exarac&amp;ttnf the MIB, Ilk*&#13;
Rbetuaatic, Bedridden, Infirm, OrlppM, Mtrroaa,&#13;
Heurilffic, or prostrated with disss in may suffer,&#13;
BAD WAY'S BEADY RELIEF will afford tneUos&#13;
BRM5,&#13;
fisJiP&#13;
- T H E&#13;
BEST TONIC.&#13;
Ibi*-medicine, combining Iron with puto_&#13;
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely i'ures Dyspepsia, Indlsestlon, Weakneiw,&#13;
in pure Blood, Alalaria^CfalllM and Fevers*&#13;
and Neuralgia.&#13;
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the&#13;
Kidneys nnd Liver.&#13;
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
"Women, and all who lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—other Iron medicines do.&#13;
It enriches and purifies theblood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, and strengthetiK&#13;
the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack pi&#13;
Energy, die., it has no equal.&#13;
J&amp;9- The genuine has above trade mark and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
Badcoulrby BKOW.N CHESICAL CO* SALT IK OKI, MIb&#13;
CATABBH J C A T A R R H&#13;
A disease of tbe mu&#13;
cous membrane, it&#13;
generally originates&#13;
in the naealpassages&#13;
and maintains Its&#13;
stronghold in the&#13;
head. From this&#13;
point it penda forth&#13;
a poisonous virus&#13;
alonjr the membranous&#13;
1 i n i n v s and&#13;
through the digestive&#13;
organs, corrupting&#13;
th&lt;^ blood and&#13;
producing other&#13;
troable?ome Ja n d&#13;
dangerous symptoms.&#13;
Cream B a l m is .1 mmei&#13;
diagnois otthis Oi-i'iise '.ind&#13;
50c at (irujyjfist, txn; hv mivil&#13;
y founded on a. corrcc"&#13;
&amp;in he depended u|X3n&#13;
, sample ho't e by mail'&#13;
loc, E L Y BROS, rruggists, Oweifo. N, Y.&#13;
Protective. No&#13;
such p r o t e c t t . v «&#13;
aKalnsi chills and&#13;
fever and other diseases&#13;
of a malarial&#13;
type exists as HOB&#13;
tetter's S t o m a c h&#13;
Bitters, it relieve*&#13;
constipation, liver&#13;
disorders, rheuniatlsrn,&#13;
kidney and&#13;
bladder aliment*&#13;
with certainty and&#13;
p r o m p t i t u d e . A&#13;
change as gratlf vine&#13;
as it i« complete&#13;
U s e s place tn the&#13;
nppoftraae&amp;y as wol&#13;
s s the sensation, of&#13;
the wan and hiw-&#13;
Hard invalid who&#13;
U«OB this standard&#13;
promoter of health&#13;
and strenfrth For&#13;
sale by all nruvpWts&#13;
ind Dealers nenera'-&#13;
iy.&#13;
^M^&#13;
6I¥TE"B5&#13;
HALL'S&#13;
Qatarrh (jure&#13;
Is Recommended by Physlciansl&#13;
¢4 0 0 mm flti Muff 1&#13;
We manufacture and tell itwitha DOBitlve&#13;
guarantee that It will cure any&#13;
C.a8eiand wo will forfeit the above amount&#13;
ui*ulsin.Asln8«e Instance,&#13;
j + , u n , i k e a n y otnt&gt;r Catarrh remedy, aa&#13;
distressing dlsease.^k yourDruggist for it, and&#13;
ACCSTT po lUtTATxbx OR SUB*TITUTE. If he&#13;
has not got it, send to us and we will forward&#13;
immediately. Price, 75 Vnts per bottle&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CK Toledo. Ohio.&#13;
MARSH'S CYLINDER BED FOOT LATHE: g&gt; Tula is « n e w L a t h e , ind&#13;
5 on a n e w p l a n , hiving »&#13;
3' C y l i n d e r l i e d , which Is&#13;
2 much mora s i m p l e snd&#13;
v. c o n v e n i e n t th*n the old&#13;
o1 style. It has a t t a c h t a e n U&#13;
C. for C i r c u l a r snd Scroll&#13;
? S a w i n j c . and for B r a c k -&#13;
3, e t M o u l d i n g . N e w *&#13;
g n o v e l , a n d T 1 1 E B E S T&#13;
2, I n v e n t e d . nr"Manufsc.&#13;
_ &amp; tured and sold by UM&#13;
BAnLE CREEK MACHINERY CO., Battle Creek, Mick.&#13;
THE T I P P I M Well Boring A&#13;
inc i i r r in R o c k Drilling&#13;
MACHINERY!&#13;
For Horse or Steam Power&#13;
Hundreds of the best men In 30 States&#13;
and Territories use it and will have no&#13;
otter I&#13;
RELIABLE! DURABLE!.SIMPLE!&#13;
I Established over 35 years,we have ample&#13;
[facilities to fill orders p r o m p t l y , aud&#13;
'to satisfaction of our customers. Catalogue&#13;
FBKK. Addrtwg&#13;
LOOMJ.S A- N Y M A N . Tiffin. O h i o . David Pmtor &amp; Co.,&#13;
BANKERS.&#13;
DETROIT, - MICHIGAN.&#13;
ESTABLISH-Er-DO - 1853. PWroemtrpatn asnacdt caa greenfuerl aal tBteanntkioinng Btou sCinoellsesc tions on any part of the globe,&#13;
BQNJJS.&#13;
UWnitee db nsyt aanteds s. eSllt aatlel ,c lCasosuenst yo, f rTeoliwabnl,e aloncda lSitciehso—ol District HoDds. Good&#13;
REAL ESTATE MORTGAGES&#13;
Land Warrants and choice commercial papers. Interest&#13;
allowed on time deposits. Careful attention&#13;
given to the accounts of out of town Banks and&#13;
Bankers. DAVID PRKST^ON A vo. __&#13;
BEST IN THE WORLD!&#13;
THE BATTLE CREEK&#13;
SELFJ&#13;
F E E D&#13;
WOOD-SAWING MACHINE&#13;
lt*de ]&lt;• two sixes, and s*ld with or with out »oweA&#13;
ALSO CIRCULAR WOOD-SAWS.&#13;
BATTLE CREEK MACHINERY CO,, Battle Creek, Mich,&#13;
Sena tar Circular and Ptice-Llac&#13;
. . LYDtA E. PINKHAM'S ,&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
* , * IS A rOSJTJVE'CUKE FOR » # «&#13;
All those painful Complaint*&#13;
~ and Weaknegscs 80 cointunn *&#13;
* * * * * * t o our best * * * * * *&#13;
.* * FEMALE rOPt'LATIOX. * *&#13;
PrW t l !• liquid, pill cr lowiy* fori*.&#13;
• rfs purport &lt;* *olety for the legitimate healing oj&#13;
tiiMaa* and Vie relief of pain, and that it docs all&#13;
It claims to do, thoutandsofladie* can gladly testify. •&#13;
• U will onro entirely all Ovarian troublt's, Inflammation&#13;
and Ulceration falling and DispL&amp;cetients, aiitf&#13;
consequent- Spinal Weakness, and i3 particuiarlj&#13;
adapted to thu chaagp of life. * » • » * « * # * • * • *&#13;
• It removes Faiutus^, riatulency, destroys all cravinff&#13;
for stimulant-*, and relieves Weakness of the Stouiavh.&#13;
It curvs llioatiiii;, livad&amp;chus, Jfervims Prostration,&#13;
Oener&amp;L Dcljility, Sle«.'plo«.siiesH, Deprcssiion and Indiirextlon.&#13;
That fit-liiiK of bearing down, causing puin,&#13;
ajid baokachp. is always pcrnB^nentiy cured by its us&lt;.&#13;
• Send stamp to Lynn, Mass., for pamphlet. Letters of&#13;
inquiry conildeiituiily answered. For sale at druggist*.&#13;
* * * * * * » : : - 1 « a * * &lt; « » » » « » » « »&#13;
The ipuvERs' G U I D E is issued Sept&#13;
and March, each year: 224 pages, S* x 11J&#13;
-imhesfynthrorer~&amp;f30Q illustrations—&#13;
a whole picturegallorv.—Clives wholesale -&#13;
prices direct to consumers on all goods for&#13;
personal or&#13;
Tells how to&#13;
ery thing you&#13;
eat, wear, or&#13;
with. These&#13;
family use;&#13;
order, and&#13;
cost of eruse,&#13;
drink,&#13;
h a v e fun&#13;
invaluable&#13;
hooks contain information gleaned from&#13;
the markets of the T :&gt;rTd. WQ will mail&#13;
a copy F r e e to any address upon receipt&#13;
of the postage—8 cents. Let us hear&#13;
from you. v. Respectfully,&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.&#13;
« 8 ? A S » » Wabash Avenue, Caioac*, 1U,&#13;
BOWEL COMPLAINTS,,&#13;
DYSENTERY, D I A R R H S A f CHOtr&#13;
ERA M O R B U 8 .&#13;
Zt win, la a few mlnntes, when Uken aoeord&amp;is;&#13;
to directions, cure Orsmps, Bpssms, Soar Stomach,&#13;
Heartburn, Sick Headache, 8UMMEB COMPLAIKli&#13;
DlarrhoBS, Dysentery, Cblic, Wind In the Boweta,&#13;
sod sil lnteraal pains.&#13;
Travelers should always carry a bottle of RAXV&#13;
WAY'S READY BELIEF with them. A few drop*&#13;
In water will prevent sickness or pain from caanaf&#13;
of water. It Is better than French Brandy or Brtten&#13;
as a stimulant.&#13;
THE TRUE RELIEF.&#13;
KADWAY'S BEADY BELIEF la the only rem*,&#13;
dial agent in vogue that will Instantly atop pain. Tt&#13;
Instantly relieves and toon cures headache, whether&#13;
sick or nervous, toothache, neuralgia, nervousness,&#13;
and Bleeplessneas, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and&#13;
weakness In the back, spine, or kidneys, pains arouod&#13;
the liver, pleurisy, swelling of the Joints, sprains,&#13;
bruises, bites of insects, and pains of all kinds, Radway's&#13;
Ready Belief will afford immediate ease, and it*&#13;
continued use for a few days effect a permanent cure.&#13;
MALARIA IN ITS VARIOUS FORMS&#13;
FEVER AND AGUE.&#13;
There Is not a remedial agent in the world that w**.&#13;
cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bill*&#13;
lour. Scarlet, and other fevers, (aided by Bsdwagr't&#13;
Puis) so quick as Radway's Beady Belief. Price fifty&#13;
cents. Sold by druggists.&#13;
/ ^ : "&#13;
SARSAPARILLUN RESOLVENT&#13;
The Croat Blood Purifier.&#13;
For cure of all chronic diseases, Scrofula, Con&#13;
sumption, Glandular Disease, Ulcers, Chronic Btreu.&#13;
matlsm, Erysipelas, Kidney, Bladder and Liver com.&#13;
plaints, Dyspepsia, Affections of the Lungs and&#13;
Throaty purines the Blood, restoring health and vig*&#13;
THE SKIN,&#13;
After a few days' use of the Ssrsaparillian becomes&#13;
clear and'beautiful. Pimples, blotches, black spots,&#13;
and skin eruptions are removed; sores and ulcer*&#13;
rpon CUKXL/ Persona suffering from scrofula, eruptive&#13;
diseases of the eye*, mouth, ears, legs, throat&#13;
and glands, that have accumulated and spread, either&#13;
from uacured diseases or murcury, may rely upon a&#13;
cure if the Sorsaparillian ia coatiuned a sufficient&#13;
time/to malic its i^inre«3ion on the system. Sold by&#13;
gists. Price $1 per bottle.&#13;
RAOWAY'S REGULATING PILLS,&#13;
The Great Liver a n d 8 t e m a c h&#13;
Remedy,&#13;
purge, regulati.'. purJy, cleanse, and strengthen.&#13;
RADWAY'S PiLLa for the cure of all disorde**&#13;
of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,&#13;
Pain ia the back, Loss of Appetite, Languor, Nervous&#13;
Diseases. Headache, Constipation, Costivenesa,&#13;
Indigestion, Dyspepsia,. Biliousness, Fev«rr Inflammation&#13;
of the Bowels, Piles, and all derangements of&#13;
the Internal JTiscera. Purely Vegetable, containing&#13;
no mercury, minerals, ofdeleterious drugs.&#13;
A few doses of BAD STAY'S PILLS will free the&#13;
system of all the above named disorders&#13;
PRICE 25 CENTS P E B BOX. Bold by all droggjita,&#13;
"FALSE AND TRUE."&#13;
C O ,&#13;
Read&#13;
Send a letter stamp t o B A D W A Y ,&#13;
Ko. 3 * W a r r e n S t - N e w Y o r k . _&#13;
formation worth thousands will be sent to you.&#13;
TO T H E PUBLIC.&#13;
Be sure and ask for Badway's and see that Use&#13;
name of "Badway" la on what yon buy.&#13;
C R The Oldest Medicine in the World is&#13;
probably Dr. ISAAC THOMPSON'S elebrated Eye Watel This article is a carefully prepared physician's&#13;
prescription, and baa been In constant use fur nearly&#13;
a century, and notwithstanding tbe many other&#13;
preparations that have been Introduced* into the&#13;
market, the sale cf this article is constantly Increasing,&#13;
if the directions are followed it will never fail.&#13;
We particularly »nvlte b* attention of physicians to&#13;
its merits, •&#13;
John L. Thompson, S o n s . * Co., Troy, N Y.&#13;
JOSEPH CILLOTTSi&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
SOLD B r ALL DEAtB^S^rwuut^uu 1 Tw, WO RLD&#13;
GOLD MED A^ PAR IS EXPOSITION- I 8 7 B .&#13;
KIDNEY-WORT&#13;
A m o m e n t of time is a x m o m e n t of&#13;
mercy.—Nashville Advocator&#13;
"HOUGH ON CORNS," Ibc A s a for itTStomplete&#13;
cure, hard or soft corns, warts, buttons. \ -s; .Young M e n - R e n d ^ T h i s ! \&#13;
THK VOLTAIC BELT CO. of Marshall, Mick,&#13;
offer to senrt their celebrated ELECTRO-VOL-S&#13;
TAIC BELT anil other ELECTRIC APPLIANCES&#13;
on trial for thirty days to men (young or old)&#13;
afflicted with nervous debilltv, loss of vitality&#13;
and manhood, and ali kindred troubles, Also&#13;
for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and&#13;
many other diseases. Complete restoration&#13;
to health, vigor aud manhood guaranteed.&#13;
No risk 1« Incurred as thirty days* trial is allowed.&#13;
- Write them at oncn for illustrated&#13;
pamphlet free.&#13;
"BOUGH ON ITCH" cures humors, eruptions ringworm,&#13;
tetter, salt rheum, frost d feet, cbilblalns.&#13;
'-• J —&#13;
A C A R D - T o all WHO are suflertntf ironi errors&#13;
o f youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss&#13;
of manhuod. A c 1 will send a recipe that will&#13;
cure you, KKKS OF C1IAKUK, This tireat remedy&#13;
was discovered by a missionary In 8&lt;*uth America,&#13;
Bend aelf-addressed envelope to KttV. JOSKPH T.&#13;
I N M A N , Biation D. New York. _ _&#13;
"ROUOH ON PAIN." Quick cure for Co lie. Cramps,&#13;
Diarrhoea. Aches. Pains. diTaine. Headache.&#13;
MEXBMAN'S PBPTONIZin BKBF TONtC, the t\&#13;
preparation of beef containing its entire nutrittoi&#13;
properties. It contains blood-makltiK, force-ttener&#13;
atlngand Ufe-sustainlnn properties; Invaluable for&#13;
INDIOKRTION, DY8P*P8tA, nervous prostration, and&#13;
all forms of general debility; also, In all enfeebled&#13;
conditions, wnether the result of exhaustion, nervous&#13;
prostration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly&#13;
if resulting frompulnonaryconiplaluts. C A S -&#13;
"WaH, H A Z A R D * C O . , P r o p r i e t o r s , Aow York. Bold&#13;
by n « a u n t s .&#13;
T H E SURE C U R E&#13;
" ™ ™ ~ " F O R "-——&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASES,&#13;
LIVER COMPLAINTS,&#13;
CONSTiPATlON, PILES,&#13;
AND BLOOD DISEASES.&#13;
I PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTTIILLYY T|&#13;
•'Sidney.Wort is tho most suoocssfaa remedy&#13;
Ioveruscd." Dr. y . c . Ballon, Monkton.Vt,&#13;
"Kidney-Wort i3 always rcllablo."&#13;
Dr. B. N . Clark, 8 0 . Hero, Vt.&#13;
" Kidney-Wert has cured tay wife after two yeara&#13;
suffesi^s." Dr. C M. Sunuaerlla, gun Hill, Ga.&#13;
IN THOUSANDS O F CASE8&#13;
it has cured where air elso had failed. It is wild,&#13;
butcfflclant, CEJtTAIN I N I T S ACTION, but&#13;
harmless i n all coses. . , •&#13;
^ 9 - I t eleaaaes the Blood and Strea*tke»* and&#13;
gives a e w l i f e to all the Important organs of&#13;
tho body. I n o natural action of t h e Kidneys is&#13;
rectored* Tho Liver ia cleansed of all diseaso,&#13;
and tho\Dowel« a o v o freely and heaithAilly.&#13;
In this w a y tho worst diseases aro eradicated&#13;
from tae-gyatea.-- - — . _._&#13;
PBK3, 1M.0O Uh^jD CS DKT, SOLD BT B»rCC13TS.&#13;
Dry &lt;*ar. be scr.t by mail.&#13;
vVEIXS, R I C U A f e p s p y A CO. Rurllnffton Tt.&#13;
I f t S T H M A CUREDI&#13;
I G e r m a n A s t h m a t-'urenever/aiI* to give im-1&#13;
tmetiiate reiifj lu the wOrHt eaKei.lUHUiKB LL,nfort-l&#13;
lable Bleep; effect* e u r o s where a!lothern f a i A\&#13;
Itrial eontrineea the m&lt;&gt;*( tkrjUteal. Prit^ OOc. andl&#13;
lai.OO,ofDru&gt;rcriHti»orbvni*i!, Snnii&gt;loFRKrl&#13;
|forstamp:_ DRTlt. HCHirFMAN.Ht. Pnul, Minr^l&#13;
BATH CUKE&#13;
HURON- STRKT.&#13;
YPMLAUTI, JII'R&#13;
Sciatica, Rheumatism, Catarrh. fanew.-N^rv^u*&#13;
Pe tllty, Female Olseases, Liver, Kidney and Ssin&#13;
Diseases successfully TKBATKD and C^CKKD. Hundreds&#13;
of tes i m o o U N furnished ou applicntlou&#13;
For Board, Treatment or Information.&#13;
Address, DR. Vr. U. U *LL. PropriPtor&#13;
WMPTION:&#13;
LOVE toaiL 'Ihiananoito&#13;
COUBTSHIP and MABBIAOK.&#13;
Wonderful secrets, revelations and&#13;
discoveries for married.or single.&#13;
I securing health.wealth and happiness&#13;
_. _ e book of iso pawe*.mailedf01 *&#13;
W cents by tnhaen oUnnoimone P1 ublishinir Co.. Newark, N. ortuly&#13;
H E L P W A M E O , F E . f l A L F . ^ !&#13;
Wanted—Ladies and gentlemen to fake nlce,li*bt&#13;
nleassnt work at their own hime&lt; (distance no objection);&#13;
work sent by mail; 13 to $5 a day can be&#13;
quietly mnde; nocanvasstn-. Pleas* adiress at once&#13;
K E U A B L E Al F G CO.. Phlladelphla,Pa.. box l i »&#13;
J/i&#13;
Xddress&#13;
PLACB" t o ewfloraa thorough *rH&#13;
useful edueation.ls at the OR A vra&#13;
KAPinfl (Mich.) BcstXKM &lt; OLVMQ%&#13;
Writ* tor Collage Journal&#13;
Or OrJWXKtfBUBO,&#13;
ASTBN1 Believed immediately and cured&#13;
by usins CONB A S T H M A CO.VQCSBOB&#13;
price |3 per bottie or 3 bottles fo&#13;
IS delivered. Address ttR. C. M S U X T , Manager&#13;
Hamilton. Ohio.&#13;
Learn Telegraphy or Sk*ort-Haa#&#13;
_ t t,.. _ i I t * a Payiof? bualnoM. Situation*&#13;
lUhed. Com. &amp; B.B. Tsl. Collafs, Ann Arbw, Midk&#13;
L, . 1 » V A « E X T 8 W A N T E D ! To Introduce&#13;
aiulse 11 Dr. Linguist's Spinal Health Corset. Apply to&#13;
R. UNiiUlST'SC«K»KTCO.,4La Broadway, N. Y&#13;
? KIDNEY-W W N. L, p - a - 4 8&#13;
OPIUM #7/22¾1 " * "**»»« C a r * ! l a K&#13;
i&gt;tt. J. &amp;&gt;Tiu&lt;U£^a, Ijebanou, Ohio, PARSON f V " PILLS f o s t t i r e l y eure SICS-BBADACRZ. Biliousness, snd all LIVXB and BOW^L Complaints, Ma&#13;
1 P 0 I 8 O N , \A DOf \}T P o r » e - ^ i ~ ? r ^ • •&#13;
CatharUo a n d L l v e i P m , — - ~&#13;
BLOOD _»0I8ON, a n d S k i n Diseases (ONE PILL _ _.&#13;
have s o equal. " I find them a valuable Csthartio and Llvi&#13;
" I n xny ptaoMoe I use no otLer,— J. Dennlsoo. i*\D., D«n&#13;
«Ail for 8&amp; o»a ia stoiunsr v «iuabi« iofonnaiioft rSMJk&#13;
T.AflYJ&#13;
aent&#13;
.'Ft&#13;
psx&#13;
A&#13;
OUR N E I G H B O R S&#13;
P K T T Y 8 V I L L E .&#13;
Mrs. Buck, wife of the Hon. Max&#13;
Buck, of Burlingame, Kas., is visiting&#13;
at A. Buck's.&#13;
Mr. 0 . M. Edmuuda, of Ann Arttor,&#13;
is visiting at Mr. Cady's.&#13;
Pettysville has organized a base hall&#13;
club, with Henry Northardas captain.&#13;
A large number ol people, froni this&#13;
section visited Howell^esterday to see&#13;
Blaine and Freemont.&#13;
Clarence Travis, who has been with&#13;
a surveying parly in Minnesota and&#13;
Dakota the past summer returned&#13;
home last Friday.&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
The Hi Henry minstrels gave a first&#13;
class performance to a full house on&#13;
Saturday evening, A good company&#13;
alwrys meets a good audience in the&#13;
Opera House.&#13;
_The Maxwell are plaving "Libbv&#13;
Prison"-and "The Sheets' of .New&#13;
York" this week, for the benefit of&#13;
the Waddell Post G. A. R.&#13;
Circuit Court is in session and the&#13;
trial of Jerome Smith i s in —progress:&#13;
Alden Tucker and Hairy \Vatkins&#13;
will be sentenced at the close of the&#13;
term.&#13;
Kellogg, Garland &amp; Co., opened a&#13;
branch store at South Lyon on Saturday.&#13;
The town to-day is filled with&#13;
Blaine menianxious to catch a glimpse&#13;
of the great leader. The news from&#13;
Ohio and the fine weather makes them&#13;
very entbusastic.&#13;
N e w GrObds!&#13;
IL, rE3-3 B E E B E ,&#13;
UNDERTAKER, (&#13;
AND DKALKU IN&#13;
FURNITURE.&#13;
Picture Kramlnjj, Repairing, Etc.&#13;
WEST MAIN (iTKKKT,&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIGAN.&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROWN,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All kinds of custom work, and general&#13;
repairing, including&#13;
HORSESHOEING. •&#13;
Sliop-lijickjiP^Innu's Iilo«*k, PINCKNKT&#13;
TEe") prrooccte ssion is&#13;
headed by the veterans, who voted&#13;
Freemont and Dayton in 1856,&#13;
for&#13;
Prom our Correspondent.&#13;
Hattie Tyler has come to spend a&#13;
tew weejts with her son Will.&#13;
Our new Methodist Minister, Mr,&#13;
Lowrey, fras rented the Evans house,&#13;
and has taken his goods there.&#13;
4 '&#13;
.Mrs. Jeanette Watts, is to be post&#13;
mistress in place of Mr. Stowe, who&#13;
stalled last week with his family for&#13;
their new home in DeLand, Florida.&#13;
Don't imagine that I am going to&#13;
tell who all had company Fair week&#13;
for if I did I would have but little&#13;
room for other news.&#13;
C. R. Backus, of WUliaraston, called&#13;
on Unadilla friends last week, he came&#13;
flown to attend the Fair at Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Austin Moore, a daughter of&#13;
Thomas Roper, died very _suddenly&#13;
Sunday night. She seemed well at&#13;
bed-time but died -before morning.&#13;
She leaves"a very sorrowful fatuity.&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Slnee the introduction of Kellogg*?&#13;
Columbian Oil it has made more permanent&#13;
cures and given better satisfaction,&#13;
on Kidney Complaints and&#13;
Rheumatism than any known remedy-&#13;
Its continued series ot wonderful cures&#13;
in all climates has made it known as&#13;
a safe and reliable agent^ to employ&#13;
against all aches and pains, which* are&#13;
frha forerunners of more serious disorders.&#13;
It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and often&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely uae an rheumatism, kidney&#13;
affection, and all aches ancfppains,&#13;
wounds, cramping pains, cholera morbus,&#13;
diarrhoea, coughs, colds, catarrh,&#13;
and disorders among children, makes&#13;
it an invaluable remedy to be kept always&#13;
on hand in every home, No&#13;
person can afford to be without it, and&#13;
those who have once usedlt never will.&#13;
It is absolutely certain in its remedial&#13;
effects^ and. will a]ways_cure when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
Call at YVINCHELL'S DRUG STORE and&#13;
get a memorandum book giving more&#13;
Full details of the curative properties&#13;
of this wonderful medicine.&#13;
WE ARE NOW OPENING&#13;
AN IMMENSE LINE&#13;
03F=&#13;
1&#13;
G O O D S&#13;
YOURS RESPECTFULLY,&#13;
LAKIN&amp;S^KES.&#13;
HOLLAND BULBS.&#13;
Our Autumn Catalogue&#13;
of Bulbs and Seeds will&#13;
b e mailed F « X t o aH applicants.&#13;
Address,&#13;
D . X . F E B B Y &amp; C O . ,&#13;
p r n t o i T , MICH.&#13;
SLAP! BANG!&#13;
HERE WE ARE AGAIN! V I'NRtB Aealnto the front, in MB ne.w store, where, for&#13;
Hie next sixty days from this date, for cash. 1&#13;
ESTABLISHED 18(54.&#13;
NO ^ENTNO'TAY LARGE STOCK. NEW GOODS&#13;
PATENTS THE OLD RELIABLE IS STILL&#13;
Obtain for Mechanical Devices, Compounds,&#13;
Designs and Labels.&#13;
All preliminary examinations as&#13;
to patentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our "Guide to Obtaining Patent,",&#13;
is sent free everywhere. :&#13;
HEAD-QUARTERS&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
(pI romise to give to' allT^y patrons more quantity&#13;
»nd better quality fur less money, any of the following&#13;
articles, than any «tUer dealer in the&#13;
y:ounty, viz: PAINTS! MIXEDr&#13;
(n any quantity, Bent LlnBeed QIT— raw or boiled&#13;
•Turpentine, Bub VaruiBue^ Flowing VarnisheB&#13;
Dryers, Knotter's PuVy. and Painters1 Supplies&#13;
-•f all kinds. Any shade otcoJor desired mixed&#13;
and ready for applying, t*»j»r cent, cheaper than&#13;
&gt;ny other house in town. Paper hanging, f rest nmff,&#13;
glass stainins and graining specialties. Give&#13;
m a call and satisfy yourselves that we only say&#13;
vvhat we mean, and mean all that we aay.&#13;
|TQCKBRIDGEi MAY 8' 1884.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS BAGGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
I 3 S T -&#13;
DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES,&#13;
AND EVERYTHING IN THE&#13;
FRUir&#13;
:5S RS&#13;
. ^ f e a ,&#13;
W h o l e s a l e Di-.ue.s. 111 OifcTEKSaUlli'OKKiliN KKIUT8&#13;
Mauulacturera of lleniu'tieariy Scaled Goods.&#13;
Pickle*-, Preserves, etc,,&#13;
.M,r&gt;5 ami ;u Jeflerriou, Ave., DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
THE DETROIT TWKS i» » bright and&#13;
tH'\sx y juipt-i•. Its telegraphic news colics hy&#13;
special wire fp'iii tilenewrt eentei'H (if the country&#13;
to its (•ditui ial nmins. Like nmtit p&lt;u)pL-tliia&#13;
full TUK TIMKS is independent in politic?,- although&#13;
it is hv no mean* neutral.' Every just&#13;
c:iu&gt;e receive- fair anil adequate treatment frotti&#13;
IN T H E l J A l * E R 'Inn T-I'MES. While the&#13;
TIUKS i_'ivi s iimre attention to humuess than to&#13;
imin'(lei&gt;, it ni'\ei-nesjleet*'iniirilers or any real&#13;
ne\\&gt;, am! it isn't seared bv hem;; called sensational.&#13;
'I'll" people uke TH'K TIMKH because it is&#13;
nuMishei! 8 &gt;le\v in A\W interest of its readers^&#13;
ion can have tln;|);uly TIMES sent to your adl&#13;
ili ess one inontli for&#13;
the Daily and Sunday,&#13;
FOR THKy\A)Y E.&#13;
-sUe)v ceenn tps;a pore.ri#s&gt; ua c\asene kha, vsee nt you for .¾) cents a&#13;
month., i'Ins is he best investment offered this&#13;
futl. Xddrcss&#13;
&gt; TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
U E T H O I T 8. C L L V E L A N D&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamert&#13;
City of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third St Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leave&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at 8.30 p. m.&#13;
T H E S 2 . 2 5 R O U T E&#13;
Week days-Standard Time.&#13;
T H E S 3.0C R O U T L&#13;
City of WacKihac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne St. Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
For Marine City St. Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisvitle&#13;
Cheboygan St. Ignace and&#13;
TICTURESOUf: MACKINAC&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cents for-QUI"&#13;
illustrated book of 120 pagss,&#13;
I U K 2 T O U « TO PICTURESQUE MACKMIAC&#13;
hin'.orica! r.rd descriptive of this&#13;
Cfeai Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
C- O. VJji'cnm^, oen'I Pnee. A«cn^&#13;
;.o, 10 WaynoSt.. Detroit, Mak*&#13;
P i Q - T R A l M S l T&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned at 5 cents peruor&#13;
ume, for 7 days.&#13;
ii Tickets for 25ctR.&#13;
I» k* " . . . . . 50 «&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds will be de~&#13;
voted to increasing and improving&#13;
the library&#13;
For books or further information&#13;
_ apply at_ _&gt;'.)&#13;
»*&#13;
W I N C H E L L ' f l DRUG STORE,&#13;
P l S C X N K Y , MjCHIGAN&#13;
Wraiwi Tiiuik Railway Time Table.&#13;
Vh'H. AIU LIVE DIVISION'.&#13;
STATIONS, WKST ROUND TRAINS,&#13;
No.«. No. 4. No. e 2.&#13;
RlOGEWAV D:.V&gt;a. in. S:M8, m. 7:4ft a. m,&#13;
Aniiiidu 10.1(( " '"&#13;
UOTIIHO KIl'Jll&#13;
Hiuiu-J-tcr, U ;7v&gt;&#13;
«:15&#13;
7:10&#13;
\ ;ir.. lv!;A'&gt; p. in. 7:1«&#13;
7:45&#13;
H : *&#13;
I'"nti,u'' |, .l,p. l:ir.&#13;
Wixom, i-.-A)&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
._,--^ NOW OPEN AND&#13;
READY FOR BUSINESS!&#13;
Bread and Buns Fresh Every Day.&#13;
Warm meale and lunches at all Uoura. Oysters&#13;
and all delicacies in tholr aea«on. W'« have a line&#13;
of fresh groceries, a gnod aasurtineut uf tea fro":n&#13;
90 to 75 cents a pound, Highest price paid for&#13;
Butter and Eggs- Cora* and see ua. We wilLgive&#13;
yo.u nood j&lt;oods ana fajlr prices.&#13;
- \V. H. L A W R E N C E , PKOPR ,&#13;
LINE OF GENERAL&#13;
: MERCHANDISE.&#13;
E. A. MANN, East Main St., Pinckney.&#13;
Job Printing, less than city prices, at* the&#13;
DISPATCH Office.&#13;
s..„.i, ..v,.„.; ,^: *:;;;&#13;
llrtiohuru'. 4:1)5&#13;
PINCKNEY 4:40&#13;
Mount I't'rritu',... "):ir&gt;&#13;
Slockhrirtno, b.Xt&#13;
Henrietta, (&lt;:i)o&#13;
ins&#13;
9 : »&#13;
' 10:10&#13;
10:40&#13;
11:.¾)&#13;
. 11:1*&#13;
, 11:80&#13;
, ll:5o&#13;
1* :08 p.m.&#13;
I*:*) JACKSON «:45p.m. i2:;op.m,&#13;
.STATIONS. | KAST BOUND TKAIN8*&#13;
No. 3.&#13;
Mi\«l.&#13;
7 :.00 a. m.&#13;
7.&gt;&gt;r&gt;-&#13;
» -.;15&#13;
JACKSON ••••&#13;
Hetirit'ttH, ...&#13;
Stoekhridp'.&#13;
Mount Ferner,. *M&#13;
PINCKNEY »:io&#13;
llamburg, ,. '.1:40&#13;
South Lyon . ^ ¾ ,&#13;
Wlxom 11:*'&#13;
I'onMac •* »r-.-'Wi»P. m&#13;
IOI1MUC, ( ( | e p 1 ; ( ) 0 Kochoi»ter,v,...... 1:40&#13;
Honieo, ', d:i"&gt;&#13;
Armada,... :i:05&#13;
Rj&gt;QEWAY »:«)&#13;
V*BB.&#13;
\'$0 p. m,&#13;
4:4f&gt;&#13;
5;05_&#13;
5:15&#13;
5:35^&#13;
rt:0H&#13;
«:20&#13;
fl:.V)&#13;
7:20&#13;
8:15&#13;
«:25&#13;
»:05&#13;
f&gt;:56&#13;
10:20 .&#13;
10:50&#13;
No.l.&#13;
Pass.&#13;
5:00 a.rix&#13;
5:22&#13;
6:00&#13;
8:10&#13;
6:85&#13;
7:08&#13;
7:J» .&#13;
7:35T&#13;
All trains run by "'«entral standard" timeT&#13;
All trains run dailv, SundayB excepted.&#13;
W.'J.'HPICKK,- JOSEPH HICKSON»&#13;
Superintendent. . Weneral Nanagwf,&#13;
li iiHMiiiilifli wmk</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 Dispatch October 16, 1884</text>
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                <text>October 16, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1884-10-16</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
JbROME WINCHELL, PUBUSHfcftr&#13;
ISSUED THUHSDATS.&#13;
Subscription Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
rritasient Advertisements, 25 cants per Inch for&#13;
first inser£i6n and ten cants per inch for each subsequent&#13;
Insertion. Local notices, 5 cents per line for&#13;
•each insertion. Special rates fur regular advertisements&#13;
by the year or quarter.&#13;
msmss:DARDS.&#13;
D. M. GREENE, M. D.f&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
Office at residence. Special attention ^iven to&#13;
surgery and diseases of the throat and lungs.&#13;
J \&#13;
AMES MARKEY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance Ajrentr Legal papers made on&#13;
short notice and reasonable terms. Office on&#13;
Main St., near Postottke Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
0RIMES &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of grain. Pinckney^ Michigan.&#13;
' JvAlxirO—X~i mm A BxA £i y&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Ofnce in the Brick Block, PINCKNEY&#13;
rrr p. VAK WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in CHANCEKYOfflceoverSlgler'sDrug&#13;
Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
HALSTB.AD GREGORY,&#13;
DEA1.EH IN , -&#13;
GRAIN, LUMBER, LIME, SALT, &amp;c.&#13;
Highest market price paid for wheat, A good&#13;
stock of Lumber always on hand. Doors, sash&#13;
and all building materials f urtiished on short notice.&#13;
G R E G O R Y , MICH.&#13;
A Conscientious 'Minister.&#13;
)KAK SIR:- -Having tried your&#13;
] White Wine of Tar Syrup, 1 believe it&#13;
' to Li; an excellent medicine, ar.d can&#13;
conscientiously recommend it to others.&#13;
Respectfully yours',&#13;
Kingsvillc, Mo. Row Win. St.cven.son.&#13;
1 Never Saw Its Equal.&#13;
Du. C. D. WAJSNER-—Kind Sir—Ireceiled&#13;
tlie bottle of White Wine of&#13;
Tar Syrup you sent mo, and have used&#13;
it, and will say I think it cannot be&#13;
excelled as a'throat remedy. At least&#13;
'I have never tried anything -that&#13;
seemed to relieve and benefit me a.-'&#13;
that did. Yours fraternally,&#13;
RJKV. R. F. BEAVERS,&#13;
Perehe. Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.&#13;
For nale at C E. Holliater's, sigler Bro's, and&#13;
\V'hicli&gt;.'Jl'e Drug Store.&#13;
TIIK HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE. ,^.&#13;
We will send FREE for ONE EVTII.E&#13;
YEAR, to every lady who sends us AT&#13;
ONCE the names ot ten married ladies,&#13;
at same address, and twelve" . two-ct.&#13;
stamps for postage, ourTiandsome, entertaining&#13;
and instructive Journal, devoted&#13;
to Fashions, Taney Work, Decorating,&#13;
Cocking and Household inatierji.&#13;
Regular price, $1,00,—S-KND TOA&#13;
. . "WT:N"-:BGrA.Rs&#13;
T7BTERINABY SUROKON, Howell, Mich,&#13;
y Mr, Winegar will attend to calls promptly&#13;
TUght or'day. Milk fever and other discuses in&#13;
cattle and horses a specialty. Terms reasonable.&#13;
Residence on Byron Road. Telephonic ronti.eetlon&#13;
with central office at Howell.&#13;
PAY, and secure next number. Address,&#13;
DOMESTIC JOURNAL, Nunda,&#13;
X. Y .&#13;
LADIES' MEDICAL ADVISER.&#13;
A complete Medical Work for Women,&#13;
handsomely bound_iu cloth and.&#13;
illustrated. Tells how to prevent and&#13;
cure all diseases of the sex, by a treatment&#13;
AT HOME. Worth its weight in&#13;
Gold to eyery lady suffering from any&#13;
of the diseases. Over 10,01)0 sold al;&#13;
ready. POSTPAID ONLY 50 Cenjs.&#13;
Postal Note or two-ct. stamps. Address&#13;
NUNDA .PUBLISHING CO.,&#13;
Nuhda, \ . Y.&#13;
An Answer Wanted.&#13;
Can anyone bring us a case of Kidney&#13;
or Liver Complaint that Electric&#13;
Bitters will \ o t speedily cure_?___We&#13;
say they can not^ as thousands of cases&#13;
already permanently cured and who&#13;
are daily recommending Electric Bitters,&#13;
will prove. Blight's Disease,&#13;
Diabetes, Weak Back,"or any urinary&#13;
complaint quickly curedV They purity&#13;
the blood, regulate the bowels, and&#13;
1 art directly on the diseased, parts.&#13;
Every bottle guaranteed. For Saje at&#13;
CHARLES MACLEAN, I). 1). S.&#13;
•pvENTIST, Graduate of the Dental Depart-&#13;
Ljinent of the University of Michigan. Ollke in&#13;
Oreenaway Block, over Poet Office, Howell,&#13;
£gr~Particu)ar attention paid to the preservation&#13;
of the natural teeth. ~&#13;
\Vill be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located, ^ of a mile went&#13;
Stockbridge. Apple, cherry peach and piiar orchards,&#13;
nice house, good well and cistern, out&#13;
buildings,&#13;
premises.&#13;
well fenced, good soil. Apnlv on&#13;
LORENCERICE.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE, -&#13;
^ B A N K E R , ^&#13;
Does a Genera! Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes.&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
" T * Certificates issueclon time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.&#13;
PINCKNEY PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORRECTED WEEKLY. UY&#13;
Oct. 18,1884, TOMPKINS ci ISMON.&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,! . 8 .7:2.&#13;
" No. 2white, .. «8.&#13;
" No.Sred, 7v&gt;.&#13;
" N o . 3 r e d , /; Til.&#13;
Oaf&gt; .-. trs^r^^7T.-wnv—.- rtftr&#13;
Con....&#13;
SJMMLI A' pples&#13;
Potatoes,&#13;
Butter,&#13;
Dressed Hogs, per lOOfts.&#13;
Dressed Chickens&#13;
Clover Seed......&#13;
:4).&#13;
. 1 00¾¾ 1 .¾).&#13;
.7.¾ 1 (X).&#13;
. .031-,(4. .0().&#13;
:4i&#13;
21.'&#13;
l f &gt; .&#13;
7 7o(&amp;8.bi&gt;.&#13;
"uxiU 4.¾).&#13;
Reading Notices.&#13;
To any anybody who has disea.se of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send -proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tor Consumption has&#13;
cured the same complaints in other&#13;
cases. -Address,&#13;
E. T. HAZELTINE, Warren, Pa.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
The M. E. Parsonage, a very desirable&#13;
property. For terms inquiry of&#13;
C. E.Jlollister, W. D . Lakin, F. L.'&#13;
Brown, Dan Jackson, W. P . Wilcox,&#13;
Trustees.&#13;
It is well known that the Kidneys&#13;
are the human sewers, which wash&#13;
away the impurities and" debris*&#13;
When they become clogged or inactive,&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil will remove&#13;
the cause and create a healthy&#13;
action, and effect a permanent cure.&#13;
BUGGIES AND CUTTERS.&#13;
Having- the agency for the Kalamazoo&#13;
Buggies and Cutters those wishing&#13;
to buy a good buggy cheap would do&#13;
well to call on me.&#13;
Emmett Murphy,&#13;
at Pinckney Livery Barn.&#13;
Physicians Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepared from the very besl materials,&#13;
at Winch ell's Drug Store.&#13;
, TEAM FOR SALE!&#13;
I offer for sale at a bargain my span&#13;
of Roan Mares, 8 years old, sound,&#13;
well matched, and excellent worker's.&#13;
Any one desiring such a team will do&#13;
50 cents a.bottle1, at&#13;
WinchellVDrug Store. \&#13;
Bncklen's Arnica Salre.&#13;
• THE BEST SALVE in the world"* for&#13;
iluls4__jkius.es^r. Sores. Ulcers, .-Suit.&#13;
Kht'um, Fever Sores, Totter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains. I'orns, and all skin&#13;
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,&#13;
or no pay-req-Hirod .--It is guaranteed&#13;
to give perfect satisfaction, or mono}'&#13;
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.&#13;
For Stile, at WINCHELL'S'Duro STOKE.&#13;
An eirftrprisiiiir, Reliable House.&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store can always&#13;
be relied upon, not onlv to carrv in&#13;
stock the best of everything, but to&#13;
secure the Agency tor such articles as&#13;
have well-known nurit, and are popular&#13;
with the "people, thereby su-t,idling&#13;
the reputation of bring always&#13;
enterprising, and ever reliable. Having&#13;
secured the Agency for the celebrated&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption, will sell it on a positive&#13;
guarantee. It will surely cure any&#13;
and every affection of Throat Lungs,&#13;
and Chest, and to show ojirj^njideaicJir&#13;
we inviTeyblFto caTTaiid get a trial&#13;
Bottle Free.&#13;
well to Took at them.&#13;
James T. Earaan.&#13;
Look out for new goods at Wine-&#13;
hell'Drug Store Early next week&#13;
we shall open a fine line of novelties&#13;
at surprisingly low prices.&#13;
I will take orders for a limited&#13;
t^nrcunroTseasoned xonTwoooT. "&#13;
J as. T. Eaman.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Grimes Si Johnson having added&#13;
considerable new machinery and repaired&#13;
quite extensively their custom&#13;
and flouring mill, would announce' to&#13;
the pubiic generally that it is running&#13;
again.Being well pleased with the liberal&#13;
patronage in the past would invite&#13;
their many patrons to call agam&#13;
and satisfaction will be guaranteed.&#13;
Pinckney, Oct. 6th, 1884.&#13;
OATS WANTED!&#13;
I want to buy 500 bushels of oats,&#13;
tor which I will pay Detroit quotations&#13;
for "mixed oats" the day they are&#13;
bought or delivered.&#13;
T. Birkett,,&#13;
Dover Mills, Oot. 1st, 1884.&#13;
—A fiheTun~BIood—Jeisey- Bull for&#13;
sale cheap. Inquire of.&#13;
John Harris.&#13;
A few full blooded bucks for sale.&#13;
Apply to F. A. Barton, UnadiLla.&#13;
1TE.HS OF IXTUREST.&#13;
Call on Teeple A; Cadwell for coal for&#13;
threshing engines.&#13;
Fon SALE—A'full set of Butchering&#13;
Tools, at Teeple A Cad well's&#13;
Fine flavoring Extracts, always&#13;
fresh and reliable, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
"Uric acid in the blocd is the cause&#13;
of all rheumatism. This acid is the&#13;
cause of inflamation, which is the&#13;
source of great pain. It is through&#13;
the inaction of toe Kidneys tha'.. the&#13;
acid accumulates in the blood. Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil acts directly on&#13;
the Kidneys, and thereby removes the&#13;
cause of all Rheum^trroi, and effects&#13;
permanent cure.&#13;
A very desirable liQtise, barn ar.d&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated on&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of T.&#13;
Crimes or on the premises, of Mrs.&#13;
Bridget-iuigan—&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at, Bush's Planing Mill.Plainiieid.&#13;
Electric i/illers. at V) iii'-i.i-li's iVug&#13;
Store.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTICE.&#13;
Parties having Organs that need repairing&#13;
can have them put in first&#13;
class order by calling on&#13;
C. \J. Collier, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A bunch of desirable lambs for&#13;
sale. __&#13;
F. A. BARTCCV Uuadilla.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
A span of Colts, o years old past.&#13;
K. Mercer, Fettvsville.&#13;
Washing made easy by using Babbit's&#13;
"1776" Pearline. Call and get a&#13;
package, at&#13;
-WkielrtelTV^nig^orcT&#13;
gjrTThoee receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over thia paragraph,"will please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with next number. A blue X&#13;
si.uuiiiei* that'the time has expired, aud that, in accordance&#13;
with oar rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
unti.l subscription is,renewed.&#13;
LOCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
First snow storm of the season, tod&#13;
a y . . . M a r k it: Hnwn in y m r d i a r y t&#13;
Tire P. C. B. now use the skating&#13;
rink as a band room.&#13;
Cold,lingers for the corn buskers to-"&#13;
day.&#13;
Fall wheat has not looked better lor&#13;
many years than.it does this season.&#13;
' Martin Welsh will occupy the rooms&#13;
over M. Dolan's store as a residence.&#13;
Everybody prophesies better times&#13;
after election is over.&#13;
Express matter for Pinckney now&#13;
comes over the Air Line road.&#13;
Roger Sherman, of Conway, and&#13;
Fred H. Warren, of Fowlerville, were&#13;
in town yesterday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson are&#13;
visiting at their sons' in Marion this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. McDonald, postmistress at&#13;
Birkett's, has been very ill for a Week&#13;
or two past.&#13;
Mrs. W. D. Lakin is visiting friends&#13;
in Cohpctah.and. other parts of the&#13;
count-v this week.&#13;
G. D. Wood and family are visiting&#13;
relatives at Caro, Tuscola county, this&#13;
week.&#13;
Still our exchanges keep talking&#13;
about "a new Prohibition paper at&#13;
Howell."'but the Howell people don't&#13;
know anything about it.&#13;
Still another shipment of sheep goes&#13;
to New York this week, and Mr. Harington&#13;
goes withfhein.&#13;
• Dull as business is throughout the&#13;
country, there is one class of men who&#13;
don't see many idle days—the ^ politicians.&#13;
Cold or warm, sun or shine^&#13;
the candidates are busy: J* What will&#13;
the Harvest be," is a song, which has&#13;
Weatherwise people predict an early&#13;
winter.&#13;
Ed. G. Embler, Esq., of Howell, was&#13;
in town Saturday.&#13;
Johci VanFleet will soon occupy his&#13;
new residence near Pettysville.&#13;
Murry Watson, who stole a horse at&#13;
Brighton recently, goes to Ionia for a&#13;
year.&#13;
Samuel Hinchey, Esq., and Mrs. D.&#13;
F. Webb are visiting relatives and&#13;
friends at Lansing this week.&#13;
Miss Nettie Cooper, of North Lake,&#13;
is the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. H.&#13;
Wood, this week.&#13;
Mrs. Hugh McKeever, of Sheldon,&#13;
Iowa, is the~guest of her parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. John M. Kearney.&#13;
Morris Osburn, Esq., of Owosso", Republican&#13;
nominee for State Senator&#13;
from this district, was in town Tuesday.&#13;
^ 3 -&#13;
Lakin and Sykes will move into&#13;
their new store first ol the week, and&#13;
open up with a largely increased stock.&#13;
Michigan farmers should learn by&#13;
the experience of the past lew years&#13;
and the prospect for years to come&#13;
t-hai-sto€k-raising wi 11-pay better than&#13;
wheat raising in this locality.&#13;
Richards k Co. have their store fixed&#13;
up in "daisy" style. It is now one&#13;
of the handsomest store-rooms in the&#13;
village.&#13;
It costs this country over a hundred&#13;
millions of dollars every four years&#13;
to elect a president—and then .those&#13;
who elect him sometimes wish they&#13;
hadn't done it.&#13;
Irving J. Abbott has removed his&#13;
family from Dutton, Kent county, to&#13;
this place, and will buy a farm and&#13;
settle here if he can^ find a piece of&#13;
property to suit him.&#13;
"Tot." Reason threshed for Sitas&#13;
Barton the other day 27 bushels and&#13;
6 lbs. of clover seed in less than 4£&#13;
hours. It was the product of 12 acres&#13;
J u n e clover.&#13;
At a Vernon church recently a marriage&#13;
ceremony was performed on&#13;
prayer meeting night. It was the&#13;
"most numerously attended" prayer&#13;
meeting ever known in the village.&#13;
Ira Abbott, of Plainfield, having de&#13;
cided to make Pinckney his home, has&#13;
moved his family into Mrs. Collier's&#13;
house, corner of Unadilla and—Dexter&#13;
muiiiirmeanThglbnnreni just now.&#13;
streets.&#13;
Mr. LaRue announces that a fine&#13;
prize will be given to the best lady&#13;
skater at the roller rink this evening,&#13;
competition open only to usual patrons&#13;
of the rink.&#13;
Gen'l Clingman, of North Carolina,&#13;
extols tobacco as a specific remedy for&#13;
cuts,_bruises and all sorts of of external&#13;
diseases. It should be used with&#13;
cautioir,boweve4,&#13;
r^s.tQbacco_ is_ a poison.&#13;
A traveling man fell off the high&#13;
embankment back of the Hamburg&#13;
depot, Tuesday night, with a heavy&#13;
"grip" in each hand.' As he happened&#13;
to be a liquor drummer his battered&#13;
face will servo as an Advertisement of&#13;
the wares he "peddles."&#13;
Judge'Chatterton, of Mason, will&#13;
address a republican meeting in Pinckney,&#13;
Tuesda) v evening, Oct. 28th.&#13;
The place of meeting has not yet been&#13;
announced but will probably be either&#13;
at the rink or Monitor House hall.'&#13;
A gentleman who is now a resident'&#13;
of-this township was-well acquainted&#13;
with Belva Lockwood when she was a)&#13;
girl (and her name was Bennett).&#13;
Says he has taken her to many a dance&#13;
and that Belva was quite a gal in her&#13;
day—we won't say how long ago that&#13;
was because it might hurt the lair&#13;
dame's chances for the Presidency.&#13;
An Ann Arbor man has "transmogrified"&#13;
a baptist church into a dancing&#13;
academy, and some of the good&#13;
citizens of that town feel scandalized&#13;
years ago turned a church into- a&#13;
variety theater, and the town has not&#13;
veTsbared tii*-fate-o£J5c4om^_&#13;
Indian summer will probably come&#13;
in November this year.&#13;
Geo. Younglove's new residence i n&#13;
Marion township is nearly completed.&#13;
J, B, Allen and T. J. Bogg, of Dexter,&#13;
spent last Sabbath in Pinckney. \&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Barnard visited \&#13;
Mr. E. A. Allen's family last S u n d a y . /&#13;
Israel Bennett, of Iosco, called on&#13;
D. D. Bennett's family Sunday last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jackson are&#13;
visiting at Metamoca, Lapeer county,&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Baker visited&#13;
Williamston relatives and friends a&#13;
few days last week.&#13;
The telegraph line from Jackson to&#13;
Pontiac is complete. When shall we&#13;
have ihat new passenger train over the&#13;
Air Line? " \&#13;
' Under the operation of the "Ed- '&#13;
munds bill" 1,200 Mormons in Utah&#13;
have been disfranchised an&lt;f many of&#13;
them expelled from public offices they&#13;
were occupying. It is said the law&#13;
is working well. —&#13;
Ben. Rowe, the genial representative&#13;
of the Michigan Farmer, was the&#13;
guest of MrT-fc—&amp; Aukr—yesterday,&#13;
and will spend several days in this vicinity&#13;
looking over the. fine herds of&#13;
blooded cattle and other stock in the&#13;
vicinity, and otherwise looking after&#13;
the interests ot his paper. He visited&#13;
Wm. Ball, Tuesday, to take a glance&#13;
at the fine short horns for which that&#13;
gentleman's premises are famous.&#13;
Yesterday he viewed the beautiful •&#13;
Aberdeens on Mr. Auld's place; and~&#13;
to-day will go down and take a look&#13;
at Will Boyden's stock in Scio.&#13;
Real Estate Transfers.&#13;
The following transfers are report-&#13;
- e i for the PIXCKNEY DISPATCH by Register&#13;
Dudley, for the week ending&#13;
Oct 18th, 1884.&#13;
Wm. H. Brock to Robert W. Griswold,&#13;
4£ acres in Hartland, $800.&#13;
John Oyer to Louisa Kennedy, lots&#13;
in Putnam, $ I 0 0 ~&#13;
Owen Gallagher to John Dunlavy,&#13;
199 acres in Hamburg;, $7,057.&#13;
Geo. L. Bryant to Friend Fishbeck,&#13;
115 acres in Genoa, $4,125.&#13;
Charles Fritz to Emma J. Colby, lot&#13;
in Howell, $410.&#13;
John E . Gregory to Sarah L. Gregory,&#13;
lots in Howell, $66.&#13;
Alfred Taylor to James E. Hoards&#13;
60 acres in Unadilia, $2,263.&#13;
Mary Harris to Edward W. Sparrows,&#13;
40 acres in Handy, $1,100.&#13;
Joshua Sprague to Elias C. Sprague,&#13;
SO acres in Cohoetah/ $150.&#13;
John Dunlavy to Robert W. Radford,&#13;
et al., 40 acres in Handy, $995.&#13;
Geo. F. Stowe to Win. P. Stowe, 80&#13;
acres in Conway, $2,000.&#13;
Isadore L. Davis io Wm. Hemingway,&#13;
land" in Unadilia, $150.&#13;
MARRIED.&#13;
At 'the residence oftixti__hride s parents, in&#13;
H^melli jyj^«^', , i i i .v e\-e^TnijrOcTr~r5tltr--1^8V-by--&#13;
TtevTTTTl^ Water?, Mr. Frank D. Hecox and&#13;
Miss' Ida Bailey. (&#13;
At the resilience of the bride's parents, in Marion,&#13;
Wednesday evening, Oct, l."ith, ISS-4, by Kev.&#13;
G, i*. Waters, Mr. Homer Gordon and Miss Loia&#13;
Lyons.&#13;
DIED.&#13;
At her home in t'nadilla, of Intiammatoiy Rheumatism,&#13;
Mrs. Euieline Hopkins, wife of Philander&#13;
Hopkins, fcundaj morning, Oct. li)th, 1S84. \J&#13;
Mrs. Hopkins was born in Oneida&#13;
county, N . Y., July 14th, 1844, and at&#13;
the age of nine years moved with her&#13;
parents to Michigan, first residing in&#13;
Stockbridge where she received a common&#13;
school education. She was mar-.&#13;
ried to Philander Hopkins Jan.' 4th,&#13;
I860, with whom she lived 24 years.&#13;
Deceased_leayes_an aged -."'mother, two.&#13;
sisters, one brother aud two t children&#13;
besides a large circle of mourning&#13;
friends. Her remains were deposited&#13;
in the Williamsville cemetery, there&#13;
to remain until the resurrection morn&#13;
hen all must-appear before the great&#13;
I AM. •&#13;
It seems like the irony of tate when&#13;
a milkman gets drowned in his own&#13;
well.—New York Journal.&#13;
The lad who was pounded by another&#13;
lad to whoin he owed a cent,&#13;
now declares the other fellow was&#13;
"penny wise-^and pound foolish."—&#13;
JthitiehaU-Tnrresr&#13;
: \&#13;
( • •&#13;
/&#13;
z—-&#13;
&gt; w&#13;
% s &gt;v&#13;
"V - T V&#13;
^ ^ I V wm m w» - « * ' • » • &gt; mmm&#13;
&lt;.A.&#13;
i!&#13;
TO COBBBSPOaDENTS.&#13;
All communication! comwuilud by ihe nam feo ro ft hthise p aa-pitenro rssh ounlodt 'p!&gt;e•e aecs - SV&amp;f oonr tphueb pli*cratt ioofn ,t hbeu wt raitse ra. n Weriittdae noon* yo of nK ooonde e of the paper. Be particularly careful In *r\y aamea and Satea, to hare the letters ana fl-ui l&#13;
6wliah tidaceh ca intphdhe edyrU ,a trbieie cwcta.r uitsPteer noop. fe r tnhaem folsa raerleet oaf tmana ndnl«ero o« a&#13;
it MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN."&#13;
W h e a t a n d Oat* in Rllclilgan*&#13;
From the Michigan crop repot t for October,&#13;
we glean the following statistics concerning&#13;
the wheat and oat crops:&#13;
The number of scree of wheat reported&#13;
thrashed lo the southern four tiers of counties&#13;
la 361,321; number of bushels, 4,677,090, an&#13;
avarage per acre of 16 and 63.100 bushels.&#13;
Acres reported thrashed In - the northern&#13;
counties, 38,370; bushels, 561,5-8, an average&#13;
of 15 and 44J00 bushels per acre. These figures,&#13;
together with the acreage In May, as returned&#13;
by the supervisors, iudicate an aggregate&#13;
product In the state of 3\l44,56tt bubhels.&#13;
or 271,000 bushels less than estimated In Sep-&#13;
The foregoing statistics of wheat thrashed&#13;
are from records kept by thrashers. . . '&#13;
Of the whole mlmbtr of answers r e i v e d In&#13;
September and October the question which&#13;
variety of wheat has given ihji highest yield&#13;
per acre, 4Cb' cjrrespondeuts in the southern&#13;
four tiers of counties answer Clawsoa,. H0&#13;
Fultz, 158 Egyptian and 59 Lancaster. To the&#13;
question which variety has Elveu the second&#13;
highest yield Wanswer Clawson, 157 Fultz,&#13;
136 Egyptian and 80 Lancaster. To the .answer&#13;
which-f arietv is third la order of yield,&#13;
91 answw Clawson, 157 Fultz, Vi&amp;. Egyptian&#13;
and }09 Lancester,&#13;
In the southern four tiers of counties 117,751&#13;
acres of oats thrashed yielded 4304,561 ba. an&#13;
average of 35.71 bu per acre; ana in the northern&#13;
counties 23,-340 acres thrashed yielded 742,-&#13;
536 bu,-an_average of 31,95 bu per acre. *&#13;
Reports have been received of the quantity&#13;
of wheat marketed by farmers during the&#13;
month of September at 214 elevators and mills.&#13;
Of these 186 are in the southern four tiers of&#13;
counties, which is 39 per cent of the whole&#13;
number of elevators and mills In these counties.&#13;
The total number of bushels reported&#13;
marketed is 1,3(4,731, of which 313,4-35 bushels&#13;
were marketed in the first or southern tier of&#13;
counties; 404,274 bushels in the second tier;&#13;
225,346 bushels In the third tier ;j248,520 bushe's&#13;
In the fourth tier, and 115,158 bushels in the&#13;
counties north of the southern four tiers. At&#13;
24 elevators and mills, or i 1 per cent of the&#13;
whole number from which reports have been&#13;
received, there was no wheat marketed during&#13;
Jtojnonihi&#13;
thinks It has a grievance against the Detroit,&#13;
Lansing &amp; Northern railroad growing, out of a&#13;
disagreement about car rates, on the occasion&#13;
of Sutler's visit to East Saginaw. It has,&#13;
therefore, voted to boycott that railroad,by not&#13;
doing any freight transportation over the line.&#13;
Miss Jennie Taylor of Kalamazoo, a beau&#13;
tlful utrl of 24A yearn, while alone in the sitting&#13;
room had a fit-and felt oa the grate of the&#13;
open fireplace* burning her head, face, neck&#13;
and shoulder so terribly that part of tbe flesh&#13;
on one side and the ear dropped off. Returning&#13;
consciousness enabled her to give the&#13;
alarm, and saved her from a horrible death.&#13;
Sherman T. Millard, the i9-yeare old son of&#13;
Capt. Wlllouahby Millard of West Bay City,&#13;
met with initaut death the other morning in&#13;
the yard of the Michigan Central railroad on&#13;
the west side. It is supposed that in stepping&#13;
in between the cars to uncouple them hia foot&#13;
caught In a frcg and that the brake beam&#13;
caught him and.pu'led him under the train.&#13;
He was terribly mangled- '&#13;
Clem Schafft r, a balNwltted man, was taken&#13;
with a fit while watching the workmen at the&#13;
new bridge at Belleville and fell off, striking&#13;
his head against the abutment. His satchel,&#13;
which stood upon the bridge, caused the workmen&#13;
to'notice his absence, and when found he&#13;
was'lying In the water nearly dead with cold&#13;
and luj uries on the head. He was taken to his&#13;
home in Sum:&gt;t&lt;r township.&#13;
By dincflon of the Secretary of War Capt.&#13;
John V. Forey, Assistant Quartermaster, in&#13;
addition to .the uvsent duties will assume&#13;
charge of tie work of "Improvement of the&#13;
cemettrv !o: at Fort Gratiot, Mich., occupied&#13;
by the bodies of soldiers who died in. the service&#13;
of the Untied States,"provided for in the&#13;
act of congress making appropriations for&#13;
The total number of bushels of wbear. reported&#13;
marketed in August and~September is&#13;
2,401,174.&#13;
, *&#13;
IN T H E STATE.&#13;
Diphtheria is prevalent at Kalamazoo.&#13;
Bad Axe is moving to secure a new railroad.'&#13;
Six disciples of Blackstone are trying to make&#13;
a living In Manlstique.&#13;
The ladles of the Adrian Baptist church will&#13;
soon open an art loan in that city.&#13;
Cheboygan bakers are having a tight over&#13;
prices. As a result bread can be bouiiht for&#13;
almost nothing.&#13;
Strawberry plants are In bloom at Cheboygan&#13;
for the second time this season. Sure sign&#13;
of aa open winter.&#13;
The Cheboygan Lumber company's mill has&#13;
yet 5,000,000 feet to cut, and will probably run&#13;
as lone as possible.&#13;
A South Haven farmer reccatly marketed a&#13;
$2,100 load of cabbage seed and it wasn't as&#13;
heavy aB a load of wheat either.&#13;
The summer vacation of the agricultural college&#13;
is to be bnt one week hereafter instead&#13;
nf thrnp, &amp;a has been the custom. *&#13;
Charzes of favoritism at the auditor general's&#13;
ofHcc in connection with certain land&#13;
tax matters are tobe investigated.&#13;
Miss Annie Buechner of LftElon while practicing&#13;
on roiJer skates in the parlor of her&#13;
home, fell and broke one of ber legs.&#13;
Wm, Godley, formerly of Adrian, was sent&#13;
to Jackson for life in 1876, for murder.^ He&#13;
died on ihe 14th inst. of consumption.-&#13;
The A. W. Wright Lumber "company of&#13;
Saginaw report a sale of 6.O0tf,000 feet of lumber&#13;
to easters parties for $9, $13 and |3b.&#13;
Armstrong, whtfinurdered his wife and her&#13;
paramour atrNewaygo some days ago, has been&#13;
bound^over for trial at the next term of court.&#13;
^Ffe&amp;ident Arthur has appointed Hon. Burton&#13;
Parker of Monroe, Indian agent at the&#13;
' Fort Peck agency, in Montana, vice Suyder,&#13;
resigned.&#13;
St. Ignace rejoiccth in the discovery of a&#13;
mineral well, the water of wtich riv*! iu etfi&#13;
cacy the fountain of youth for which Ponce de&#13;
Leon sought.&#13;
At tnc special election held at PJalnwell the&#13;
proposition to borrow $3,100 for use iu rebuilding&#13;
the water works pump house and purchasing&#13;
a tight therefor was voted down.&#13;
The latest footings of the iron ore shipment*&#13;
from the Like Superior mines this season&#13;
reached 2,159 568 tons—an increase of over&#13;
300,0(10 tons above last year's shipments.&#13;
The villa«e of Rogers City was almost en-&#13;
-ttTCJy destroyed by Are on the 18th. The lire&#13;
originated in a saloon, and It Is thought was&#13;
caused by a lighted pipe dropped by some halfdrunktn&#13;
Individual. .&#13;
Charles llBzlttt of Belleville, loaded his gun&#13;
-te-ktil cats, bnt, accidentally got the charge&#13;
In bis own person whej the gun went off. He&#13;
is not seriously hurt, but has gone out of the&#13;
cat killing business. t&#13;
A young ,boy named Willie Hatfield was&#13;
killed by an engine while switching cars at&#13;
Hillsdale He fell on the track and the engine&#13;
backed over him before he was discovered,&#13;
killing him Instantly.&#13;
During the season jast closed there was&#13;
shipped from Monroe 38,300 baskets of. grapes,&#13;
averaging fifteen pounds each, and making a&#13;
total of 499,500 pounds. This brought to the&#13;
growers about $12,000.&#13;
At a recent college entertainment in Albion,&#13;
C. Waldo responded to the toast "book canvassing,"&#13;
and showed that of the 20 students&#13;
who went out from college to canvass, not one&#13;
came out ahead financially.&#13;
A Sparta man valued his nose at $5,000. A&#13;
any rate he brings suit against a telephone&#13;
company for that amount, bi cause he fell over&#13;
some planks which the company's men Lad left&#13;
carelessly around,, and broke his probosics.&#13;
bundry civil eapei »&lt;s oi the stovernment&#13;
A fctrnniter applied to Rev. Dr. Rexford of&#13;
Dj.iroir. B''ine time ago for aid, representing&#13;
Limself to be Rev, Dr. D)x of Washington.&#13;
The aid was given, when Dr. Rexford's suspicions&#13;
wsre aroused. The police were notified&#13;
and at once arrested the man. Upon examination&#13;
he was remanded for_trlal. Subsequent&#13;
developments prove the man to be Ex Gov.&#13;
Moses of North Carolina, at one time one of&#13;
the most prominent politicians In the South.&#13;
A. C Davie, the first agent of the great Calumet&#13;
and Hecia mine, has been appointed speclaTcommlssloner&#13;
to see that the mining interests&#13;
of the Upper Peninsula are properly&#13;
represented in toe New Orleans Exposition,&#13;
and will in that capacity s o n address himself&#13;
to the mapagers of the different copper mining&#13;
companies, who, it Is to be hoped, will do&#13;
all in their power to see that the copper raining&#13;
industry Is properly represented.—Calumet-&#13;
Newsr&#13;
At Rawsonvllle/a little village near Ypsilanti.&#13;
a girl named Martha Bell died the other&#13;
morning under suspicious circumstances. An&#13;
inquest showed that an abortion had been attempted.&#13;
The inquest was adj mrned and the&#13;
plrl'R atnmach gent to Detroit for analysis.&#13;
Miss Bell's parent* live at Wayne, but for the&#13;
last three yearc she has been living in the family&#13;
or Michael Bumpus of RiWsonvMe. Archie&#13;
McCoy, a hired man, admitted having been&#13;
criminally intimate with the girl.&#13;
The Djwaglac Republican has the following&#13;
bit of information on sorghum raising,: J ames&#13;
Moore of Suver Crtefc U pushing his sorghum&#13;
mill to its fullest, capacity. The sorghum is&#13;
broueht to him from all parts of this section,&#13;
some of it coming from near Benton Harbor.&#13;
He makes as hit&gt;h as 10&gt;) gallons a day»and expects&#13;
to make 2,0tX) gallons of syrup tola year.&#13;
Oae acre of gotd cane will make four barrels or&#13;
128 gallons of molasses which retails at5J cents&#13;
per gallon. The cjst of having it ground and&#13;
made into syrup ia 29 centsiper gallon, while&#13;
the cost of raising the cane is very small. The&#13;
best place for laising the cane is on light,&#13;
sandy soil which is not well fitted for other&#13;
kinds of produce. This pays well and yields a&#13;
gixui return.&#13;
Patrick Hcwt s, committed suicide in Schoolcraft&#13;
a few days ago by shooting. He had&#13;
been in the place but a few days and was stopping&#13;
with Horace Pattingale, with whom -hlf&#13;
bad formerly worked at putting up Pattmg'ale's&#13;
patent elate .blackboards, He w,as-'6omewhat&#13;
dissipated and was suffering from disease product&#13;
d by his indiscretions. Mr. Pattlngale&#13;
says, he heard him^seteral times during the&#13;
night and wentu-p to ouVr his assistance, but&#13;
.Hewes told^him to go back as it was all ritht,&#13;
he was ocTv a little sick at the stomacb. About&#13;
lOjo'clock Pattlagale went up and proposed to&#13;
call a physic Ian, which angered Hewes very&#13;
much and ht; drove Pattinjiale down stairs.&#13;
Shortly afterwards the report of a pistol was&#13;
heard, and rushtrg up stairs Fattingale found&#13;
him with the bedclothes over his head; turning&#13;
them iiown he Baw blood oozing from a hole'in&#13;
the forehead. He Immediately ran on the&#13;
street and called for help, and returning found&#13;
Hewes dead. He had placed the muzzle of the&#13;
revolver to his forehead and the bullet carue&#13;
out near the base of the brain. The remains&#13;
were taken in charge by Mrs. MeLcod and&#13;
Sawyer and will be prepared for interment by&#13;
them.&#13;
•&#13;
H'i'&#13;
*&#13;
?twSuSo 3 ?£*u&#13;
NEW'NOTaW&#13;
8TABVIXO WO&#13;
The Falls cotton milk at Nor&#13;
shut dejui^oyer BIX weeks ago,&#13;
remain closed all winter. Between&#13;
500 operatives art* idle and most of them are&#13;
now destitute. For awhile they wen allowed&#13;
"trust" at tuacsmpany's store, hut lately that&#13;
source of supply has been cut off. What they&#13;
are to do they do not Know. They have no&#13;
means to migrate to other mill towns, and&#13;
even if they had, the universal stagnation&#13;
throughout New England offers no oenefit&#13;
from the change. Rows of families are seen at&#13;
the selectmen'* office dally, many of the women&#13;
and children weeping as they apply for&#13;
bread. In all the mill villages in New England&#13;
the situation is pretty much the same.&#13;
The help live from hand to mouth, and rarely&#13;
save a dollar. When the mills shut down the&#13;
operative is as helpless as a castaway in midocean.&#13;
It is the opinion of an observer, whose&#13;
business has called him to all parts of New&#13;
England, (hat the coming winter will witness&#13;
Buffering among the working people unparalleled&#13;
in the country's history.&#13;
a SHUT DOWN.&#13;
A written agreement was circulated Oct. 15&#13;
among the mills ac Fall River, Mass., to close&#13;
for a week, commencing Saturday night, Oct.&#13;
IS. It was signed by thirty one mills and will&#13;
stop over 1,000,000 splndlers of a total of 1,400,-&#13;
000 employed on print goods, and throw out&#13;
of work for a week 10,000 persons. The prospect&#13;
is that unless the market improves the&#13;
shut-down will continue indefinitely. The&#13;
shut-down includes every cotton goods mill in&#13;
the city except those making fancy goods and&#13;
a few large print works.&#13;
juroa LYJJCU HOLDS e^UBTt&#13;
F. A,. Burton, president of the Blaine and&#13;
Logan club of Lacrosse, Wis., was shot dead&#13;
by_a ruffian nam H1 "Scotty," while a procession&#13;
was forming the dthe. evening. The&#13;
murderer was arrested and hurried to jtil and&#13;
locked up. As soon as the people learned&#13;
what hnd occurred, hundreds of men surruunded&#13;
the jiil and demanded the prisoner. The&#13;
officers were not able to resist the mob, who&#13;
finally secured the murderer, and hung him.&#13;
Never t&gt; sfore were such exoit 1 ng scenes w 11-&#13;
nessed in Lacrosse. The murdered man.; was&#13;
one of the most promioent young men of the&#13;
place.&#13;
OUK CIBCULATINO MEDIUM.&#13;
The Director of the Mint has prepared a&#13;
statement In regard to the present money circulation&#13;
inS9 of the principal countries of the&#13;
world as compared with the circulation a year&#13;
ago, which shows a decrease- in gold circulation&#13;
of about $52,000,000, an increase in stiver&#13;
circulation of $42,000,000, and an increase in&#13;
paper circulation of $112,000,000. He attributes&#13;
the loss in gold circulation to reduced&#13;
production and to the increased use of that&#13;
metal in ornamentation and art.&#13;
, tatjBMtto wtth the * Moil* Kaftlns,"&#13;
] th«* cafl iiemselves, and e r w tbott wbo w«M&#13;
The New Orleans Bulletin, "a paper devoted&#13;
to booming the coming World's fair at that&#13;
city, coataios a handsome picture of the pavilllon&#13;
to be devoted to the exhibits mAde by&#13;
the Grand Riplds furniture manufacturers.&#13;
Perry Hannah of Traverse City is reported&#13;
as aaylng in it the pine foreste'Of.this state&#13;
would last about 10 or 15 years more; that Is,&#13;
before the year 19U) the great lumber industry&#13;
of Michigan would have died out for want of&#13;
mate'-iaL....&#13;
The FranUfort lumber companv^effers an&#13;
$80 Michigan stove woi'ks range^tothu farmer&#13;
wiio will deliver the 40l*rgest and heaviest&#13;
ears of corn, a clothes^wrlnger to the second,&#13;
and a Bet of silvelr knives and forks to the&#13;
third. Ayeff liberal offer, Burely.&#13;
. DavtdLynch of Jackson, brakeman on a way&#13;
freight train, was killed Wednesday, 15th, at&#13;
ZUwaukee while coupling cars. His neck was&#13;
broken, head bruised and arras fractured. H i r&#13;
remains were brought to Bw City and senTto&#13;
Jackson where be had a wife aBd family, —-1&#13;
The Butler and West Club, of/fit Louis&#13;
4&#13;
oo&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white..&#13;
Wnear—No. 2 red...&#13;
Flour 4 50&#13;
Corn 50&#13;
Oats . 26&#13;
Parley 1 £0&#13;
Rye 3 65&#13;
Clover Seed, 7fi bu 4 75&#13;
Timothy Seed $ bu. 1 55&#13;
Apples per bbi 1 25&#13;
Butttr, * B&gt; 20&#13;
EggG 17&#13;
Chlckejjs C'J_J§|__&#13;
Turkeys 12 (¾&#13;
Potatoes 35 (g&#13;
Onions per bu... 40 @&#13;
Honey 13 (¾&#13;
Beans, picked — . . . 1 25 (¾ 1&#13;
Beans, unpicked 0 90 (3 1&#13;
Hav 12 00 @12&#13;
Straw 6 00 @ 7&#13;
Pork, dressed, * 100 6 00 (g 6&#13;
Pork, mess new S (10 @ $&#13;
Pork, family 18 50 «18&#13;
Shoulders ." fiXs&#13;
Lard.,.. 9&#13;
Beef, extra mess \z 00&#13;
Wood, Beech and Maple 4&#13;
Wood,. Maple 6&#13;
Wood, Hickory ... ... 5&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
* CATTLB—Export*, |66 @&lt;; choice shtppins&#13;
$5 9i&gt;(a6 50: common to fair, $4 (go 60; Texan,&#13;
$3 40@4.&#13;
SHEEP- Inferior to fair, $2 10@3; medium,&#13;
$3@4 25; Texans, $2 10@3.&#13;
Hoo«j— R mgri packing, $4 75@5 15; packing&#13;
and shipping, $5 20@5 7o; Ugii&gt;, $4 6it@5 35;&#13;
(¢¢12 50&#13;
f5 Oil&#13;
50&#13;
8HOT BY&lt;vA XEOKO OUAKD.&#13;
A great Bensation was created throughout&#13;
Georgia a week ago by the killing of a convict&#13;
in Lockett's camp by a Negro guard. The&#13;
story as then told, was that a party of 16 convlcts.&#13;
all white, under guard of armed Negroes,&#13;
had been sent to Cbattoohoochie river, when&#13;
F. M.-Paulkuer jumped into the river and was&#13;
Bhot at by Djck Jackson, a Njgro. The body&#13;
of the convict was found next day riddled with&#13;
buckshot. The idea that even whito convicts&#13;
were placed under the power of Negroes lo.&#13;
Georgia, created a thrill of lodigaaMon which&#13;
the pie6S and people freely vented upon the&#13;
convict lessees. The coroner's jury found-that&#13;
the killing was justlflible. Ev dence was accumulated,&#13;
however, which shows the crime to&#13;
have been deliberate murder. Faulkner ft 11 in&#13;
the river aid cried lustily for help, and the&#13;
only repp &gt;nse he received was a charge of&#13;
buckshot from:ar Negro guard, which caus d&#13;
his death. Jackson has been arrested aid is&#13;
now iu-Fulton county jail. The convict camp&#13;
of-Loekett has always had a hard name. It&#13;
la stated as evidence of the treatment of convicts,&#13;
that since February 1 out of 150 convicts,&#13;
20 have died.&#13;
A, N4VAL COLLEGE.&#13;
The secretary of the navy has issued an order&#13;
establishing a college for an advanced&#13;
course of professional study for naval officers,&#13;
to be kaown as the naval war college, to be&#13;
under the general supervision of the bureau of&#13;
navigation. The principal building on Coaster's&#13;
Harbor Island, Newport, R I., will be&#13;
assigned to its use, and is transferred to the&#13;
custody and control of the bureau of navigation.&#13;
The college will be under the Immediate&#13;
charge of an officer of the navy not below the&#13;
grade of commander, to be Kroraas, the presldent&#13;
of the naval war college'.—ae'wlil be assisted&#13;
in the performance of his duties by a&#13;
faculty. A course of instruction embracing&#13;
skips and grassers,&#13;
7,000 unsold.&#13;
$3 &lt;6@4 50, Closed weak:,&#13;
FAOfl A K O K E I W N S H O R E .&#13;
i FRENCH V1CTOHT.&#13;
Gen. De Lisle telegraphs from Chuajv-on&#13;
the upp r Los Chuan river, undcr-dato of&#13;
Mondaj,Oe&amp;. 1?, as follows: jXHtfl. Donnier,&#13;
after a brilliant engagement Friday, carried&#13;
the bightscammaadijurTne fortress of Chuanp&#13;
f rming the pointd^appul of a large entrenched&#13;
Chinese caj&amp;p'which was defended by/five&#13;
casematedfortft. The Chinese forces were&#13;
large. Their losses durln*/the engagement&#13;
were heavy. Ou SaturdajPtney attempted&#13;
to assume the offensive, i)ut our artillery&#13;
strewed the ground with Chinese booics. After&#13;
losing all their positions the Chinese fled&#13;
toward LangsoM, halting near Pheetonong and&#13;
Kuarch. The French loss was twenty killed,&#13;
one tfflcer, ant ninety wounded. Two officers&#13;
were wounded. Our troops were anltaated&#13;
with the greatest ardor. The Chinese engaged&#13;
were part pf the best troops of the Empire,&#13;
peritctly armed and manuevered in European&#13;
style. The Chinese losses were 3,00) killed,&#13;
including their chief .commander. The ChineaeTDVasTon&#13;
oTTonquin has been arrested in&#13;
the direction o Langsoa.&#13;
the higher branches of professional study wiQ&#13;
be arranged by a board consisting of all the&#13;
members of the faculty, including the presi&#13;
dent of the college, who will be the presiding&#13;
officer of the board. The course of instruction&#13;
will be open to all offi'cers above the grade&#13;
of naval cadet. Commodore G. B. Luce has&#13;
been assigned to duty as president of the&#13;
college.&#13;
A TERRIFIED CANADIAN TOWN.&#13;
R(-port8 received in Toronto on the 17th inst.&#13;
from Mlchlpioton, on the north shore of Lake&#13;
Superior, say that town is in possession of a&#13;
gang of roughs aud whisky sellers. The respectable&#13;
people of the place have received&#13;
notice to quit the town. The other night the&#13;
Canada Pacific railway office was riddled with&#13;
bullets.by a band of masked men. John Macktnzig1an_&#13;
emplo&gt;c, was Bhot through the&#13;
and. (japt. Burden was fired at while in bed&#13;
a fewnighis ago. The ball passed within a few&#13;
Inches of his.head. Tae roughs are employed&#13;
on the Canada Pacific railway construction.&#13;
Wherever work on ttiat line is in progress the&#13;
public works act, which prohibitd the sale of&#13;
liquor, Is enforced. The navvies object to this&#13;
and aid the whisky peddlers in openly defying&#13;
the law. On an attempt being made to suppress&#13;
the traffic, the liquor sellers culled in the&#13;
assistance of the roughs and whisky men from&#13;
Peninsular harbor and by their assistance the&#13;
stipendiary maglbtrate was set at diiUncc, but&#13;
not until a serious riot had occurred,&#13;
in which revolvers were freely used ana&#13;
two of the constables were shot. On&#13;
the night of Oct. 9 several revolver&#13;
shots were fired after dark near the quarters&#13;
occupied by Capt Burden, the Ontario magistrate,&#13;
and those of Alexander Macdouald,&#13;
agent oi the Canada Pacific railway. No great&#13;
Importance was attached to the fact, but on&#13;
the following day a notice was found posted&#13;
in the neighborhood of the railway office&#13;
threateningdeatb toMacdonaldand'bther persons&#13;
supposed to be connected Tlth him in&#13;
the suppression of the-^hisky traffic. The&#13;
notice was slgrcd^by order oi the vigilance&#13;
committee."^0a the evening uf that,day a&#13;
simultaneous attack was made by about 35&#13;
men up JO the quarters of the magistrate and&#13;
the heacquarters ot the Canadian Pacific railway&#13;
compauy. Some 2JO or 300 shots from&#13;
revolvers and Winchester rifles were directed&#13;
into the building. Some of tntr shots passed&#13;
through the windows and lodged at the Dick&#13;
ot the house o cupied by the magistrate. Im&#13;
mediately afterwards an attack Was made upon&#13;
the lockup. The front door was forced&#13;
open and three cell doors wrenched&#13;
off and the prisoners set free. Three&#13;
newly appointed constables, who were obnoxious&#13;
to the whisky gang, were shot at and&#13;
twoofthim wtuuded, i&gt;erhapB fatally. Notices&#13;
were found placed In positions where&#13;
they would be certain to be seen, saying that&#13;
the three newly elected co. stables would be&#13;
killed unless .they left by the next steamer&#13;
leaving for Toronto. On the following day&#13;
further demonstration was made. Another&#13;
lntlma ion was given to the Canada Pacific&#13;
railway agent that unless he stopped his opposition&#13;
to the whisky traffic he would be shot.&#13;
No confidence could b J placed in any of the&#13;
xonjtatles On l&amp;e spot, and a Urge majority of&#13;
the Inhabitants, the teamsters and others were&#13;
1 The president will not take action on the labor&#13;
commissionership until congress meets.&#13;
The United States will be asked to take&#13;
pirt in the Congo conference soon to meet in&#13;
Berlin.&#13;
The Chinese government has forbidden any&#13;
trade in implements of war between Europeans&#13;
. _and Chinese.&#13;
The president has appointed Stephen F. Wilson&#13;
associate justice of the supreme court of&#13;
New Mexico.&#13;
Canadian authorities'are investigating the&#13;
causes for the&#13;
UnltedBtates.&#13;
Issue of silver dollars&#13;
sympathy with them ware afrali lo&#13;
forward and Live evidence. As tfct k&gt;-&#13;
authorities were unarmed it was domed&#13;
advisable that the local government should be&#13;
appealed to. The facts were duly brought t )&#13;
the notlcetof the local government at Toronto,&#13;
and armed volunteers will be sent to Michlplooton.&#13;
But as it is three days' journey from&#13;
Toronto, it is feared that blood may ba shed&#13;
before assistance gets there.&#13;
A BHOKBK BYAK.&#13;
The middle span of the bridge across the&#13;
east fork of the river on the Cincinnati&#13;
Eastern Narrow Gauge Railway at Batavia, 0.,&#13;
gave way as the Manchester express was passing&#13;
over. The bridge is fifty feet above water.&#13;
The engine, baggvge car and first coach were&#13;
burled to the water beneath, while the rea* car&#13;
remained on the sound portion of tne bridge.&#13;
Forty-five persons were on the train at the&#13;
time and many made miraculous escapes,&#13;
several leaping to the stream below. Three&#13;
persons were instantly killed and many others&#13;
seriously injured.&#13;
REVISED KETURN8.&#13;
Official returns from 00 of the 88 counties in&#13;
Ohio, with seml-tfllclal returns from the remainder,&#13;
give Robiuson (rep.) for stcretary of&#13;
state a plurality of 11,321, and for Flickauger&#13;
(rep.) for the board of public works 17,416.&#13;
The beuU-otficlal returns do not report on the&#13;
other Republican candidates; but with the 6J&#13;
counties the plurality of Johnson for supreme&#13;
judge ia estimated at between 15,000 and 16.0U).&#13;
i'ue total vote1 of majorities by congressional&#13;
districts canjxat,.be given, but the vote by counties&#13;
ou coogresomjju shows 58,544 Republican&#13;
majorizes and 41020 Democratic, a net Rrpub-&#13;
Ueaufmajority on/the congressional vote of&#13;
18,4187- ' •*-&lt; |&#13;
ATTEMPTED TRAIN WRECKING.&#13;
A deliberate attempt was made to wreck A&#13;
train loaded with passengers on the Boston &amp;&#13;
Albany railroad at Nigger Hollow crossing, 12&#13;
miles irom Albany, the other night. The train&#13;
was running at a high rate of speed and struck&#13;
a tie on the track. The momentum was so&#13;
great that the heavily-laden baggage car shot&#13;
over the engine 50 feet in advance. Isaac Davidson,&#13;
engineer was klJIeii. He had been&#13;
employed fcy the company 35 years. Fireman&#13;
Frank Sticking was fatally loured.&#13;
OCR HOME PROTECTORS,&#13;
The annual report of Adjutant General&#13;
Dmin has been submitted to the secretary of&#13;
war. The condition of the militia in the varl-&#13;
QHH statesis reported to be suprlsingly good&#13;
considering the slight encouragement given&#13;
the organization by the 6tate governements.&#13;
The greatest zaal has been required to pre*,,&#13;
their present high degree of efficiency. It is&#13;
deemed unnecessary at the present time to&#13;
dwell on the Importance that a well organized&#13;
and intelligent milltlaJaaa upon national defense,&#13;
as the fact hae been recognized by all&#13;
the statesmen and high military authorities of&#13;
the country from the first establishment of the&#13;
government. Upon this question the report&#13;
BayB: "During the last seoslon of congress a&#13;
bill was presented by Gen. Slocum of New&#13;
5fork, tvhlch it is believed has few&#13;
if any defects, and its adoption&#13;
would go very far to still further&#13;
develop aud improve the efficiency of the militia.&#13;
The detail of army officers as professors&#13;
of military science and tactics at educational&#13;
Institutions is said to have proved successful&#13;
in its results. The retirement ohthreequarters&#13;
pay of soldiers who have seived lor&#13;
35 years is urged. The reduction of first eu&#13;
li tments from five to seven years, it is said,&#13;
operates to increase tne temptation to desert.&#13;
It is recommended that the apprehension of&#13;
deserters be made by liw the duty of marshals&#13;
aud deputy marshals, aud that the actual tx&#13;
pense of such arrests and delivery of prisouers&#13;
be paid In all cases in addition .to the reward&#13;
of $3J- The Fort Leavenworth prisoner mauagement&#13;
ii commeudtd. The -industries ure&#13;
repotted to be thriving, but the institution id&#13;
ol inadequate proportions. There were four&#13;
officers and 15 enlisted men committed to the&#13;
hoapii&amp;l for the Insane during the jear,&#13;
S T I f AY S l i U W S .&#13;
Moody and Sankey are laboring with Brjok^&#13;
lyn sinners.&#13;
President Arthur has appointed Frank Hatton&#13;
postmaster general.&#13;
The International prime meridian conference&#13;
adopted the meridian of Gretnwlch.&#13;
A British protectorate is to be established&#13;
over the southern coasts of New Guinea.&#13;
Woman's Face.&#13;
"What furniture can give such finish&#13;
to a room, as a tender woman's face,"&#13;
asks Goorge Elliott. Not any, we are&#13;
happy to answer, proyide'l the glow&#13;
of health tempers the tender expression.&#13;
The pale, anxious, bloodless face of&#13;
the consuniptaive, or the evident sufr&#13;
ferings of the dyspeptic, induce feelings&#13;
of sorrow ano grief on our part and&#13;
compell us to tell them of Dr." tierce's&#13;
"Golden Medical Discovery," the sovereign&#13;
remedy for consumption and&#13;
other diseases of the respiratory system&#13;
as well as dyspepsia and other digestive&#13;
troubles. Sold everywhere.&#13;
American railroads use more than ten .&#13;
million iron car wheels.&#13;
Best Goods are Put lu Smallest Parcels.&#13;
The old proverb is certainly true in&#13;
the case of Dr. Pierce's "Pleasant Purgative&#13;
Pelleis," which are little, sugarwrapped&#13;
parcels, scarcely larger tnan&#13;
mustard seeds, containing as much&#13;
cathartic power as is done up in the&#13;
biggest, most repulsive-looking pill.&#13;
Unlike ihe big pills, however, they are&#13;
mild_/and pleasant in their operation—&#13;
do^not produce griping pains, nor render&#13;
the bowels costive afier using.&#13;
The Princess- trf Wale» doaigna the&#13;
stvlcs of her child fen's dresses. * -&#13;
increased emigration to the&#13;
for the week ended&#13;
October 11, was 1585,907; corresponding period&#13;
last year 1439,999.&#13;
Vanderbilt sent hfs check for $500,000 a few&#13;
days ago to the college of physicians and Burgeons&#13;
in New York.&#13;
John A. Atkinson of the firm of Davles, Atkinson&#13;
&amp; Co., pnrk packers, is a defaulter in&#13;
he sum of $110,000.&#13;
Stephen ¥. Wilson of Pennsylvania, has been&#13;
appointed associate justice of the supreme court of New Mexico. -&#13;
The Philadelphia international electrical exposition&#13;
closed on the 11th. The net profits&#13;
are estimated at $5J,000.&#13;
. &lt; 1—&#13;
MISCHIEF IS WROUGHT&#13;
by bad cooking, tough meat3, late&#13;
hours, business worries, irregular livers,&#13;
sour dispositions, evil digestion and impure&#13;
blood. Much of this mischief can&#13;
be overcome by the use of Brown's&#13;
Iron Bitters—the best tonic over made.&#13;
Mrs. Etnilie Crawford. Reidsville, Ga.,&#13;
writes, "After trying Brown's Iron Bitters&#13;
we are persuaded that it is all that&#13;
it claims to" be- -a good and reliable&#13;
tonic." Thousands of others speak in&#13;
like manner.&#13;
We call the attention of our readers this&#13;
week to the advertisement in another column&#13;
of the well known house of K. B Gawley A&#13;
Co., Commission Merchant*, whom we take Bleaaure in recommending as prompt and reable,&#13;
and their numerous patrons can feel&#13;
assured of prompt remittances when goods&#13;
are sold.&#13;
"THE ELBERON."&#13;
The new wood Parlor stove. uThe Elberon,"&#13;
better known as the "Cleveland Wonder," is&#13;
exciting the admiration and wonder of all who&#13;
have seen it. The Ladies pronounce it "perfectly&#13;
lovely." In form it resembles an el- gant&#13;
modern residence, with bay window, Mansard&#13;
roof, cornices, doors, windows,&#13;
vernada, etc., and is considered by all to&#13;
be the handsomest stove structure ever pro*,&#13;
duced. It is a base heater; also double beater,&#13;
and ia said to be simply perfect in its operations.&#13;
Special Inducements are being offered&#13;
to one or (wo influential parties In each town&#13;
for Introductory purposes. Write fJooperative&#13;
Stove Co., Cleveland, Ohio, for full description&#13;
and par^lculara.&#13;
* *. * * Delicate diseases t&gt;f either sex.&#13;
ho»vover induced, radically cured. Address,&#13;
World'* DispensaryJledical Association,&#13;
Buffalo, ixYY.&#13;
"Biggest thing on ice,1 ' cried a voluble&#13;
fellow at the doorway of a conceit&#13;
hall as reported fn Chicago, " a dancing&#13;
floor of solid ice. Walk in, if you&#13;
don't believe mo. A section of the&#13;
arctic regions combined with the beauties&#13;
of the tropics. Admission t r e e . "&#13;
It was nut altogether a swindle. A&#13;
space of 30 feet square in the flooring&#13;
of the hall had been lowered a foot or&#13;
so and then paved with tbin blocks of&#13;
n this frozen ^foundation a_matting&#13;
with wide meshes &gt;?airhtfd~so that&#13;
the he could be plaiinlV seen, and at&#13;
the same time a dry surface was formed&#13;
for tho dancers. !.&#13;
The best interests ofhumaiuty depend&#13;
on the good health of ou^wjbmen folks,&#13;
and yet those with brightest intellects&#13;
seem to suffer most with ailments&#13;
peculiar to female life. It is well to remember&#13;
that the whole female system&#13;
catTbB built'up to a proper state of endurance,&#13;
pimples, sores, swollen limbs,&#13;
monthly paius, and other indications of&#13;
female disease, made to disappear and&#13;
robust health of mind aud body take&#13;
the place of illness and distress, if a&#13;
timely use is made of Dr. Guysott's&#13;
YelJow-Doek and Sarsaparilla. I t re-&#13;
Btores the blood to perfect health, it&#13;
strengthenTThe, muscular aud nervous&#13;
system. It gives tonp to t h e d i g e s i i m .&#13;
aud urinary organs. It allays all iriita*&#13;
tion of the mucous membranes. In a&#13;
word, it is a porfect female medicine,&#13;
and aids every function of female life.&#13;
No other remedy equals it. Have your&#13;
druggist got it. Take no substitute.&#13;
Logging Railroads.&#13;
New Yark Mail and Express.&#13;
The logging railroads are working a&#13;
revolution in the lumber business,&#13;
They make operations independent, to&#13;
a great. flTtanl, of high and low wateiUand&#13;
gather in a groat amount that formerly&#13;
could not be reached, owing to a&#13;
distance from streams. A train of&#13;
twenty-five cars, containing 40,000&#13;
feet of logs, is loaded on the average in&#13;
seventy-five and unloaded in nice min&#13;
utes. Each train runs about 160 miles&#13;
daily, aud a well equipped road has&#13;
three such trains, one being loaded&#13;
while the other two are in transit&#13;
When a region is cleared of its standing&#13;
timber by this unsparing process,&#13;
there will'not be much left to sow seed&#13;
for a new crop, or to mitigate climate,&#13;
or regulate the ilowof water in streams.&#13;
Every one should tell his neighbor&#13;
that the best remedy for curing coughs&#13;
and colds, and the only sure remedy&#13;
for Consumption, is Dr. Wistaria Bat&#13;
sam of Wild Cherry. It is pleasant to&#13;
take and very soothing and healing in&#13;
Its effect. ~ &lt;&#13;
"The Doctor showed a book printed&#13;
for circulation among the French&#13;
schools, entitled 'Manual on Hydrophia.'&#13;
This is how the disease is produced,'&#13;
he said: •This gives a minute&#13;
account of rabies, andwery few children&#13;
oould read it without thinking that they&#13;
had the symptoms, or would get them&#13;
from the first dog they mot.1 In the'&#13;
book was a woodcut purporting to&#13;
represent a dog in the first stage of&#13;
manness. Ic looked like an ordinary&#13;
animal, such as are encountered on th«&gt;&#13;
streets daily in dozens. A reader might \&#13;
supposo from--seeing it that all dogs are'&#13;
in the first stage of rabies. Continuing&#13;
Dr, Dulles remarked: 'Iwish you wot&#13;
say that this prevailing fear of^Jhyd'ro-&#13;
Ehobia is groundles. PeopJe^ne«d not&#13;
e afraid. It is hapily-rory rareu^and&#13;
besides that it is ourable.'—Dr. IToote's&#13;
Health Monthly.&#13;
&gt;akn&lt;&#13;
«5?&#13;
A lady, who suffered from weakness&#13;
peculiar to ber sex, * in writingsjo a&#13;
friend, said: "1 tried various kidney&#13;
medicines, but only found myself growing&#13;
worse. A friend told, me to use&#13;
Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla.&#13;
lis effect on me was soon indicated&#13;
by a clear and beautiful complexion,&#13;
a freedom from aches and&#13;
pains, a complete removal of neivoua&#13;
deoression, painless regularity in habits&#13;
of digestion and otherwise. I can&#13;
not praise the remedy too highly as a&#13;
true friend to suffdring womanhood and&#13;
as a strengthening medioine.&#13;
Y / -sn&#13;
s \&#13;
' y-&#13;
&gt; y y / -x v' r&#13;
y&#13;
/&#13;
X&#13;
.* B I H C 1 I B R O O K MILL.&#13;
HY JOHN ORBEXLEAV WKITTiBK.&#13;
A noteless stream the Blrchorook ratio&#13;
lieneath it* leanltiK trees;&#13;
That low, soft ripple 1» It* own,&#13;
That dull roar is theaea'a.&#13;
Of human sl?ns it sees alone&#13;
The distant church-spire's tip,&#13;
And, ghostlike, on a bunk of gray,&#13;
The white sail of a ship.&#13;
No more &amp; toller at the wheel,&#13;
KoItr dwanaan dneorsr arto nItds Isw liellf;t to tell&#13;
Where once was Blrcbbrook Mill.&#13;
The timbers of that mill have fed&#13;
Lovft since a farmer's fires;&#13;
His doorsteps are the Btooes that srouna&#13;
The harvist of his sires.&#13;
Man trespassed here; but Nature lost&#13;
No right of her domain;&#13;
She waited, and she brought tbe old&#13;
Wild beauty back agaiB.&#13;
By day the sunlluht through the leaves&#13;
. Falls on its moist, Kreen sod,&#13;
Asd wakes the violet bloom of spring&#13;
And autumn's golden-rod.&#13;
Its birches whisper to tbe wind,&#13;
Tbe swallow dips her wings&#13;
In the cool spray, and on Its banks&#13;
The tray sopp-Bparrow sings.&#13;
—N&lt;'vemb«&gt;r Atlantic.&#13;
* RASH OF UGHJNUUl&#13;
BY EBKN E. KEXFOUD.&#13;
"What a strange girl Miss Wayne is!&#13;
Don't.vou tfiink so?"&#13;
Miss" Casilear asked the question of&#13;
Hoyt Graham one morning when they&#13;
were standing on the steps together.&#13;
Miss Wayne was tying up red carnations&#13;
in obe of tho beds down the path.&#13;
" I think her a very charming girl,1'&#13;
answered Graham, looking in the direction&#13;
Miss Casilear's eyes had taken.&#13;
"She seems quite different from most&#13;
voung women I know.1'&#13;
*Jiow, may 1 ask?" said Miss Casilear.&#13;
"In whaT^aryes the di ft\&#13;
consist?"&#13;
"She seems wholly truthful,' answered&#13;
Graham. "I see nothing artificial&#13;
about her. She is frank and never&#13;
flatters."&#13;
"She seems frank," said Miss Casilear,&#13;
"blut there is something about her&#13;
that I do not understand and I doubt if&#13;
you could ifvou knev of it."&#13;
"Tell me what you mean," ho said.&#13;
" I cannot now," she said, "Miss&#13;
Wayne is coming,"&#13;
Cecile Wayne came up the path, and&#13;
joined them. Sho^had a swe'et, true&#13;
face, frank eyes, and an air of artlessness&#13;
about heir that Hoyt, Graham felt&#13;
sure was not assumed. ~,&#13;
Prently Miss Casilear left them, and&#13;
they sat and talked pleasantly for an&#13;
hour. Those quiet talks of theirs were&#13;
always pleasant ones In them they&#13;
were learning the old lesson that is ever&#13;
ncrw— the lesson of loving.&#13;
Ono day. not long after that, Hoyl&#13;
Graham asked Celile Wayno to bo hi?&#13;
wife. She put her hand in his for answer,&#13;
and he felt that he had won a&#13;
true and faithful woman for his companion&#13;
in tho journey of life.&#13;
" I wonder if Beechwood is haunted?"&#13;
Miss Casilear asked the—quontion -Q&#13;
morning at tbe breakf*st table.&#13;
" I never heard of a*iy ghost about&#13;
the place," ^answered Mr. Wayne.&#13;
"Why did y6u ask, Miss Casiloar?&#13;
Have"you seen one?'.'&#13;
•^-iiardiy knew&gt;" -answered Mjss&#13;
Casilear. "If not a real ghost I saw&#13;
something that marvelously resombed&#13;
one, last night, near the old clump of&#13;
cedars at the end of the lawn. Did you&#13;
Bee- it. Miss Wayne?" she asked,&#13;
turning suddenly to Cecile. " I heard&#13;
you stirring in your room after that,&#13;
and thought perhaps you might have&#13;
been looking out when I was."&#13;
" I saw no ghost." answered Mifs&#13;
Wayne. Hoyt Graham saw that her&#13;
face had grown a trillo pale, and had a&#13;
troubled look in it.&#13;
"Tell us what you saw, Mis3 Casilear,"&#13;
said Mr. Wayno. "Was your&#13;
ghost in traditional white, and did it&#13;
melt into thin an ?"&#13;
"Perhaps it is not a ghost," answered&#13;
Miss Casilear: "1 might have beeu deceived&#13;
by my eyes, but I think not"—&#13;
with another keen look at Cecile, who&#13;
kept Ker eyes upon her plate ana pretended&#13;
not to hear what was being said.&#13;
But Hoyt Graham knew she did by the&#13;
look in her face.&#13;
What could Miss Casilear meahT&#13;
There was evidently something at the&#13;
bottom of the affair that be could not&#13;
understand. ^&#13;
One day bjMshel Cecile were in the&#13;
parlor, reading Tennyson. Ho road&#13;
theUtfciesong of Vivian to Merlin:&#13;
love, if love be love, il love be ours,&#13;
'Faith and uufaith can ne'er be equal powers.&#13;
Unfatth tn aught, 19 want of faith in all.&#13;
"It Is the little rift within the lute&#13;
That by-and-by will make the music mute,&#13;
And, ever widening, slowly silence all.&#13;
"It is not worth the keepingMet it go 1&#13;
But eball it! Aua*er, daring. Answer no,&#13;
And trust mc all in all, or not at all."&#13;
He laid the book down, and there&#13;
was a little thoughtful silenco between&#13;
them, which by-and-by he broke.&#13;
"I think there is a world of truth in&#13;
that little rhyme. We ran trust fully&#13;
so long as confidence has not been&#13;
shaken, but the moment distrust creeps&#13;
in, all trust is gone. It must bo perfect&#13;
trust, or no trust at all. "Unfaith in&#13;
augh^ is want of faith in all.1 "&#13;
"Yon can trust me,1' aUa ooi&#13;
a half-shy earnestness,&#13;
that, don't you?"&#13;
"How could I believe otherwise?" he&#13;
answered, kissing ner.&#13;
, "I do believe tho place is haunted,"&#13;
•aid Miss Oisilear the next morning.&#13;
" I saw the ghost again last night."&#13;
She looked across tho-table with that&#13;
inexplicable smile on her face'that Ho^t&#13;
Graham had seen there, before when&#13;
the fffcott of Heechwood&#13;
talked abomt.&#13;
And again he Baw Cecile Wayne's&#13;
face grow pale, and her eyes fall.&#13;
"Did you see any thing last night?"&#13;
Miss Casilear asked. *'I heard you&#13;
moving about long after thafc."&#13;
'•I saw no ghosts." answered Cecile&#13;
A half-scornful look flashed across&#13;
Miss Casilear's face. What could it&#13;
mean? There was a mystery here.&#13;
It began to interest him.&#13;
"It must be the place is haunted,"&#13;
went on Miss Casilear, as if anxious to&#13;
cause Cecile as much embarrassment as&#13;
possible, for she directed her remarks&#13;
to her. "I was sitting at my window&#13;
about 11 o'clock when I saw a white&#13;
figure eliding down the avenue, and&#13;
another figure, or ghost—whatever&#13;
you choose to call it—met it there. I&#13;
don't think it can be that 1 imagined&#13;
all this, for this is the third time I have&#13;
seen the mysterious figures, and always&#13;
after the house has grown quiet."&#13;
She kept her eyes on Cecil©'* face.&#13;
Cecile never once looked up. ^&#13;
Hoyt Graham, watching both, saw&#13;
all that passed. The triumphant look&#13;
on Miss Casilear's face, the pale, halffrightened&#13;
one on Cectle's.&#13;
" I wish you would tell me what you&#13;
mean by your ghost stories," he said to&#13;
- Mm ^""ifpaji whan he met her on the&#13;
veranda after breakfast^&#13;
"What would you think of a woman&#13;
who, ongaged to one man, kept stolen&#13;
interviews with another?" she asked, a&#13;
world of meaning in her tone.&#13;
"Tell me what you mean," he said.&#13;
"Watch and see," she answered, and&#13;
woujd have no more to say about it.&#13;
That night fell dark and rainy Now&#13;
and then lightning flashed vividly across&#13;
the inky sky, and long, terrible peals&#13;
of thunder shook the house. The guests&#13;
seemed in no mood for social Intercourse,&#13;
and went to their rooms at an&#13;
early hour.&#13;
Hoyl Graham did dot feel like going&#13;
tobed. He sat down by the window&#13;
and^looked~lmT~tBto~tfae wtrd-,—blacknight.&#13;
v&#13;
she said, with&#13;
'•You beliove&#13;
Jm&#13;
i«Sbs&#13;
Suddenly as a flash of lightning made&#13;
everything a&lt;* light as day, he started,&#13;
for there gliding down tho" svenue, was&#13;
Miss Casilear's ghost&#13;
-He waited4or another-flash.&#13;
Pretty soon it came, and by it3 light&#13;
he saw, down by the stunted old cedars&#13;
at tho end of the lawn not one figure,&#13;
but two. A man and a woman, and&#13;
the man's arms were about the woman's&#13;
form. and. as the lightning lit the landscape&#13;
with a fierce white light, he saw&#13;
that the woman was Cecile Wayne-&#13;
He staggered as if a shaft 6f lightning&#13;
bad struck him. He had counted&#13;
h^r Fio mi^i and rihft wgjL false. He&#13;
knew, now, what Miss Casilear meant&#13;
Suddenly a line of the song he had&#13;
read rung through his brain, to the accompaniment&#13;
of a long roll of far-off&#13;
thunder. '&#13;
"Unfaith in aueht is want of faith in all."&#13;
Going down the hall next morning,&#13;
Cecil Wayne met Hoyt Graham with a&#13;
traveling shall over his arm.&#13;
"I am going away." ho said, in answer&#13;
to her questioning look. " I hoped&#13;
I should not seo you, I have loft a&#13;
etter for you. Of course after what&#13;
I saw last night Ibirfe~carrt5B~rro moro&#13;
oetween us."&#13;
She turned pale as death.&#13;
"Let me explain," she said.&#13;
"Do not attempt t o , " he answered&#13;
coldly. "Good morning."&#13;
~"Ob, wail, wail! listen-to mo, for-the&#13;
love of God!" she cried, "let me tell&#13;
you the truth, and you can not blame&#13;
mo so much.."&#13;
But the man she appealed to with&#13;
such agony in her entreaty, never turned.&#13;
He went down the path, stern&#13;
and pitiless, with no answer for&#13;
her beseeching and she fell prone upon&#13;
tho floor, with such a cry as comes from&#13;
a breaking heart.&#13;
Years after, Hoyt GraTfirnr^topped-ata&#13;
little rude cabin on a Western prairie,&#13;
and asked for shelter for the night. A&#13;
man was the only occupant of the place.&#13;
"You can stay," he said, and Graham&#13;
sat down beside the door to rest&#13;
himself after his long day's tramp.&#13;
Suddenly his eyes fell .upon a grava,&#13;
with a white board at its head. Ho got&#13;
up and went to it. Bending down he&#13;
read:&#13;
"CECILS W'AYXB, AGKD 22.&#13;
He turned toward tho cabin door&#13;
where the n u n stood watching him.&#13;
"I knew a womau -once whose namo&#13;
was Cecile Wayne," he said, and his face&#13;
was pale with old memories.&#13;
"It is my sister's grave," tho man&#13;
made answer.&#13;
"The Cecile Wayne I knew had no,&#13;
brother, I think," said Graham, coming&#13;
back to the cabin. He sat down in&#13;
fchja.uoorway and let his thoughts go&#13;
back to that dead summer. The hand&#13;
of the man whose sister was sleeping in&#13;
the lonely prairie gn»vo rested on t,he&#13;
rude trellis over which some some&#13;
wild flowers ran as they clambered&#13;
up about the door. H e caught the glitter&#13;
of a ring upon it, and his face grow&#13;
pale.&#13;
"Was that your sister's ring?" Graham&#13;
askod.&#13;
"Yes," the other answered, "What&#13;
made you think thatP"&#13;
"Tho Cecil Wayne I knew, and the&#13;
Cecil Wayne whose grave is yonder,&#13;
were the samo person, aiswofed Graham.&#13;
" I saw that ring upon her finger&#13;
often. Tell me about her and her&#13;
death."&#13;
"She died of a broker^ heart," Cecile&#13;
Wayne's brother answered. " I was a&#13;
wild and reckless fellow, in mv younger&#13;
days, and my father turned me out&#13;
of doors and threatened to send out any&#13;
of the family after me who ventured to&#13;
have anything to do with mo. My sis-&#13;
'erraanagud to soe me once in while, in&#13;
spite of ray father's threats. At last I&#13;
took i t into my head to come Wes*; and&#13;
•be trieflftfr kelp me. It seems that the&#13;
man she was engaged to saw her meet Se ope night, and he believed she was&#13;
lse to him. He refused to listen to&#13;
any explanation of her conduct. My&#13;
father found out that she had been trying&#13;
to help me, and bade her leave the&#13;
old home. She came to me, and together&#13;
we came here. She lived about&#13;
a year, and died like a broken flower."&#13;
"My God! and I believed her false,&#13;
while all the time she was true to me!"&#13;
cried Graham. "Ob, Cecile, forgive&#13;
me!" and the strong man threw himself&#13;
in passionate sorrow on the grave&#13;
of the woman he had misjudged so&#13;
cruelly, and all night long he lay there&#13;
asking her who slept beneath the grasses&#13;
to forgive the wrong he had done ber.&#13;
Perhaps she did. Who knows?&#13;
— m , .,&#13;
A Copious L a n g u a g e ,&#13;
San Francises News Letter.&#13;
The copiousness of tbe English&#13;
tongue, as well as the difficulty of acquiring&#13;
the ability to use its immense&#13;
vocabulary correctly, is well exhibited&#13;
in the following array of synonymous&#13;
words, which, if not new, is a capital&#13;
illustration of the nice distinction which&#13;
characterize so many of vocables. It is&#13;
no wonder that wo slip occasionly, even&#13;
the wariest of us A little girl w a s&#13;
looking at the picture of a number of&#13;
ships, when she exclaimed: "See what&#13;
a flock cf ships!" We corrected her by&#13;
Baying that a flock of ships is called a&#13;
fleet, and that a fleet of sheep is called&#13;
a flock. And here we would add, for&#13;
the benefit ol the foreigner who is mastering&#13;
tho intricacies of our language in&#13;
respect to nouns of multitude, that a&#13;
flock of girls is called a bevy, that a&#13;
bevy of wolves is called a pack,&#13;
and a pack of thieves is called a&#13;
gang, and that a gang of angels is&#13;
called a ho&amp;t, and a host of porpoises is&#13;
called a shoal, and a shoal of buffaloes&#13;
is called a herd, and a herd of children&#13;
is called a troop, and a troop of partridges&#13;
is called a covey, and a covey of&#13;
-baauties i3 called a galaxy, and a galaxy&#13;
of ruffians is_„cilled a horde, and a&#13;
horde of rubbish is called a heap, and a&#13;
heap of oxen is called a grove, and a&#13;
drove of blackguards is called a mob,&#13;
and a mob of whales is called a school,&#13;
and a school of worshippers is called a&#13;
congregation, and a congregation of&#13;
engineers is called a corps, and a corps&#13;
of robbers is called a band, and a band&#13;
of locusts is called a swarm, and a&#13;
swarm of people is called a crowd, and&#13;
crowd of gentlemen is called the elite&#13;
and the elite of the city's thieves and&#13;
rascals is called the most dangerous&#13;
men in the cbmmunity.&#13;
^ .&#13;
H o w F r o g s H e l p Farmers*&#13;
American Agriculturist.&#13;
Mr. C. M. Weed, of the Michigan&#13;
Agricultural College, has recently examined&#13;
the contents of the stomach of&#13;
eight common frogs (Ranp halccina),&#13;
and finds undoubted evidence of toe&#13;
usefulness of frogs as destroyers tff insects&#13;
injurious to farm and gulden crops.&#13;
The average quantities or various&#13;
insects and other substances determined&#13;
by the examinations are a3 follows: In*&#13;
sects, eighty per cent.; spiders, live per&#13;
cent ; sow-bugs, ono per cent., and the&#13;
balance, vegetable matter of various&#13;
kinds. Of the insects, over halt are&#13;
tknown to be injurious, and one-quarter&#13;
are on the doubtful list. Much of the&#13;
vegetable matter, (leaves, etc.,) was&#13;
probably swallowed accidently, along&#13;
with the insects and spiders. Nearly_&#13;
all of the stomachs contained grasshoppers,&#13;
and in ono they made up seventy-&#13;
six per cent of the contents. The&#13;
Cafabid beetles formed a large part of&#13;
the food taken by some of the frogs.&#13;
The Strawberry Crown Girdler was&#13;
well represented, as also were several&#13;
other pests of the garden. Much has&#13;
been said for and against the fro^s, the&#13;
robin, and the crow, but there- is no&#13;
-evidence-of—usefulness more positive&#13;
than the finding of large numbers of&#13;
injurious insects in the stomachs of&#13;
these creatures. Under the dissecting&#13;
knife, the frog is sure to have its right&#13;
to live vindicated. By their good works&#13;
we shall know them, and learn to protect&#13;
our croaking friends, as well as&#13;
their relatives, the toads.&#13;
A H a r m l e s s R e m e d y for I n s o m n i a .&#13;
Herald of Health.&#13;
I am usually a good sleeper, I was&#13;
about to say, a perfect sleeper, but&#13;
twice of late I have failed to do my&#13;
whole duty in that line. Once was&#13;
some three or four weeks since and the&#13;
other time was last night. On both occasions&#13;
I awoke soon after midnight,&#13;
and sleep refused to be wooed by me,&#13;
though 1 made, my best endeavors to&#13;
win that sometimes fickle goddess. On&#13;
the first occasion I remembered haying&#13;
a short time previously read in the New&#13;
York Tribune a statement that relief for&#13;
sleeplessness could be fouud by wetting&#13;
a linen handkerchief, folding it and&#13;
placing it under the back of the neck,&#13;
with a dry clolh under the kerchief to&#13;
protect the pillow. I thought I could&#13;
improve on that, which I think I did byfolding&#13;
the kerchief to the right width,&#13;
wetting it and wrapping it around my&#13;
neck and enveiopingthat with a dry&#13;
tovvol, folded somewhat wider, than th©&#13;
kerchief was. Last night I repeated&#13;
this treatment. In both cases very&#13;
soon after returning to my bed I was&#13;
lost in sleep, as perfect as that which&#13;
comes to us iu childhood's happy bouis.&#13;
If I were habitually a poor sleeper I&#13;
would try such au enrelopement of the&#13;
neck on retiring, and if 1 should become&#13;
wakeful in the latter part of the night&#13;
I would agaitiyWtt tho kerchief aud&#13;
place it on tb/neok.&#13;
A Cornell paper is authority for the&#13;
statement that the Cornell freshmen&#13;
this Year "will enibraca 2Q,voung women."&#13;
All A b o u t E y e b r o w s . J&#13;
Harper's Bazar.&#13;
When the eyebrows are far from each&#13;
other at their starting point between the&#13;
eyes they deaotu warmth, frankness and&#13;
impulse--a generous and unsuspicious&#13;
nature. A woman or m m having such&#13;
eyebrows would never be causelessly&#13;
jealous. Eyebrows, on the contrary,&#13;
which meet between the eyes in the&#13;
manner so much, admired by the Persians&#13;
denote a temperament ardent in&#13;
love, but jealous and suspicious.&#13;
Eyebrows somewhat higher at their&#13;
starting point, and which pass in a long&#13;
sweeping line over the eyes, drooping&#13;
slightly downward at their termination,&#13;
show artistic feeting and great sense of&#13;
beauty in form. The Empress Eugenie's&#13;
eyebrows are of this form, which gives&#13;
a sweet and wistful expression to the&#13;
face, and'which some old writers havo&#13;
asserted to be the sign of a violent&#13;
death.&#13;
Eyebrows lying very close to the eyes,&#13;
forming one direct clear line on strongly&#13;
defined eyebones having the same&#13;
form, show strength of will and extreme&#13;
determination of character.&#13;
This sort of eyebrow appears on the&#13;
bust of Nero; but then its indications&#13;
of determination are deepened with&#13;
cruelty by the mas&amp;ive jaw and the development&#13;
of the cheek boms by the&#13;
ear. This form of eyebrow in conjunction&#13;
with other good indications would&#13;
mean only constancy in affection and&#13;
power of carrying out a project despite&#13;
all difficulties.&#13;
Eyebrows that are strongely marked&#13;
at the commencement, and .hat terminate&#13;
abruptly without sweeping past&#13;
the eyes, show an irrscible and impertinent&#13;
nature.&#13;
Eyebrows slightly arched show sensitiveness&#13;
and tenderness of nature; bait&#13;
eyebrows that are so much arched as to&#13;
give tbe appearance of being raised in&#13;
astonishment give an indication of a&#13;
wea&amp; and silly nature completely without&#13;
originality or will power&#13;
Eyebrows that are straight at the&#13;
commencement and aro gently arched as&#13;
they reach the temples show a pleasant&#13;
combination of firmness of purpose and&#13;
tenderness of heart.&#13;
Eyebrows that are very much raised&#13;
at their termination, so as to leave&#13;
much space between them and tht&#13;
corners of the eyes, denote p person&#13;
who is totally deficient in the scienco&#13;
of figures, whilst eyebrows which lie&#13;
close to the eyes s t their' termination&#13;
show mathematical talents.&#13;
When the hair of the eyebrows is&#13;
ruffled and growing in contrary directions,&#13;
it denotes ah onergetic, easily ir-&#13;
.rated nature, v unless the hair of such&#13;
eyebrows is fine arid soft (acombination&#13;
sometimes, but nor, often,' seen), t in&#13;
which case this ruffled growth would&#13;
oulv indicate an ardent but tender disposition.&#13;
When the eyebrows are formed of&#13;
short hairs, all lying clo?ely together&#13;
and leaning one way, it is a very decisive&#13;
s-ign of a'firm mind nnd good.&#13;
unerring perceptions.&#13;
Eyebrows that bend downward close&#13;
to tho eyes, so as almost to meet the&#13;
eyelashes.when they- are raised, denote&#13;
t e n &lt;i o' r no S3 an&lt;f mel a neholy.—Xhc-bi?autiful&#13;
statue of Antinous has this form of&#13;
eyebrow&#13;
Angular, Mrong and sharply interrupted&#13;
eyebrows close to the eyes always&#13;
show tire and productive activity.&#13;
I have never seen a profound thinker&#13;
vnth weakly marked eye brows placed&#13;
veryiiTglT^rTTtre forehead,&#13;
eyebrows almost always indicates a&#13;
want of mental and bodily force.&#13;
The nearer the eyebrows are to , the&#13;
eyes, the more earnest, deep and firm&#13;
the character; the more remote from&#13;
the *)yes, the more volatile and less resolute&#13;
the nature. ~-&#13;
pie, as the children generated during&#13;
the eivil war develop into manhood,&#13;
that the influences under which they&#13;
were cenceived render them muen&#13;
quicker to resent insult, and morerea^y&#13;
to resort to forms if provocation were&#13;
given.&#13;
Wo think both the views of Mr. Pome&#13;
roy and those of Prof. Sizer are interesting&#13;
to those who make a study of&#13;
heredity. It would seem at Wast quite&#13;
probable that the influence of the&#13;
mother's mind as she contemplated&#13;
foeticide, would be to create in the&#13;
plastic mind of tbe unborn child a want&#13;
of regard for the sacredness of life.&#13;
And it is equally probable that the&#13;
effect of the minds of patriotic wives as&#13;
they sent their husbands forth to battle,&#13;
would be to produce a race of hereditarysoldiers,&#13;
such, too, as in the&#13;
absence of war might give rein to their&#13;
impetuous dispositions in deeds of&#13;
vioienca in social life.&#13;
^tJ***&#13;
Eyebrows lighter than the hair show&#13;
a weakness and indecisiun. 'Eyebrows&#13;
much darker than the hair deuoto . an&#13;
ardent and passionate but somewhat inconstant&#13;
temperament.&#13;
Eyebrows the same color as tho hsir&#13;
show tirrnnesN resolution aud constancy;&#13;
but in judging of the eyebrows&#13;
it must be remembered that if form and&#13;
color_give different indications, the form&#13;
(a"nd"tn"is"a1so moans that of the brow)&#13;
gives the most important indication, the&#13;
color and texture of tho evebrQw_being_&#13;
secondary to its position as regards the&#13;
eyes and forehead.&#13;
. ^&#13;
A^XIa^ufifizJor_lncrea8e of Murder.&#13;
Dr. Fcote's Health Monthly.&#13;
A discussion recently&#13;
A P l e a for One in A d v e r s i t y .&#13;
Bill Nje In Courier-Journal.&#13;
I learn with much sadness that Mr.&#13;
William H. Vanderbilt's once princely&#13;
fortune has shrive3ed down to $150."-&#13;
000,000 This piece of information&#13;
comes to me like a clap oTThirndigrotrt —&#13;
of a clear sky. One**petted, fondled&#13;
-ftnil-cajpisipd, Win?*™ H Vandf^bJIt^-&#13;
shorn of his wealth, arid resting upon&#13;
no founcktion but his sterliftgJntegrity,&#13;
must struggle along with the rest of us.&#13;
It would be but truth to say that&#13;
Mr. Vanderbilt will receive very little&#13;
sympathy from the world now in the -,&#13;
days of his adversity and penury, when&#13;
the wolf is at his door. , There are&#13;
many of his former friends who will say&#13;
that William could economize and&#13;
struggle along on $150,000,000, but let&#13;
them try it once, and see bow they&#13;
would like it themselves; $15C,CO0,0OO,&#13;
with i o salary outside of that amount,&#13;
will not last forever.&#13;
A poor man might pinch along in&#13;
such a case till he could get something&#13;
to do, but we must remember that Mr.&#13;
Vnnderbilt has always lived in comparatively&#13;
comfortable- circumstances.&#13;
,tiis &lt;hauds. therefore, are tender, and&#13;
his stomach juts out into the&#13;
autumn air. Ho will therefore, find it&#13;
hard at first to husk corn and dig potatoes.&#13;
When he stoops over a sawbuck&#13;
around New York this winter his&#13;
stomach will be in the way and his vest&#13;
will no doubt split open on th* back.&#13;
Ail r.hpsR f?tu,lr.s will annoy tho spoiled&#13;
child of luxury, and his broad features&#13;
will bo covered with sadness. They ~~&#13;
will, at least, if there is sadness enough&#13;
in the country to do it.&#13;
The fall of William H. Vanderbilt&#13;
and his headlong plunge from tho&#13;
proud eminence to which'his means&#13;
had elevated him._dQWJirward to the&#13;
cringing poverty of $150,000,000 should&#13;
be a warning to us all. This fate may&#13;
fall to any one of us. Oh, let-us be prepared&#13;
when the summons comes. For&#13;
one, I believe 1 am ready. Should the fc&gt;&#13;
dread news come to me tomorrow that&#13;
such a fate had befallen me I would&#13;
nerve myself up to it and meet it like&#13;
a runn. With tho ruin of my former&#13;
fortune 1 would buy me a crust of bread&#13;
ands ome pie, and then I would tako&#13;
the" balance and go over into Canada,&#13;
and there 1 would establish a home&#13;
for friendless bank cashiers who are&#13;
now there, several hundred of them,&#13;
and with no one to love them.&#13;
All kinds of charitable institutions,&#13;
- costing many thousands of dollars, are&#13;
i: &amp;^7\ -Jmilt4ja-A^aer4ea--feom~year to^aj,ior__,&#13;
the comfort of homeless and friendless&#13;
women and children, but man is left&#13;
out in the cold. Why is this thus? Lots&#13;
of people in Canada, of course, are doing&#13;
their best to make it cheerful and&#13;
sunny for our lovely cashiers there, but&#13;
still it is not home. As a gentleman&#13;
once said in my hearing, "There is no&#13;
place like home." And ho was right.&#13;
In conclusion, 1 do not know what to&#13;
say, unless it be to appeal to the newspaper&#13;
men of the country in Mr. Vanderbilt's&#13;
behalf. While he was wenlthy he&#13;
was proud and arrogant. He said,&#13;
"Let 4tho newspapers bo blankety&#13;
blanked to blank," or words to that effect,&#13;
but we do nof6are for that. Let&#13;
us forget ail that and remember that&#13;
his sad faie may some day be our own.&#13;
In our affluence let us pot lose sight of&#13;
the fact that Van is suSeringa"Let-ua-"--^&#13;
procure a place for him on some good&#13;
paper. His grammar and spelling are&#13;
a little tit rickety, but he could begin&#13;
as janitor and gradually work his way&#13;
up. Parties having clothing or funds&#13;
which they feel like giving may forward&#13;
the same tq me at Hudson, Wis.,&#13;
post-paid, and if the clothes do not fit&#13;
Van they may possibly fit me.&#13;
i&#13;
occurred in&#13;
Providence. R. I., in which the question&#13;
was raised why crime is so much on the&#13;
increase. A lady present, said—"Ask&#13;
Mr. Ponieroy by letter." The lady&#13;
referred to M. M. Pomeroy Esq.,&#13;
better known as Brick Pomeroy,&#13;
who is 'Hliting The United States Democrat&#13;
if New York. The question with&#13;
its ansv »r is published in The Democrat.&#13;
Mr. Poi.;eroy, in: his reply, attributes&#13;
the increase of crime, and particularly j American people."&#13;
t h a t o f i m i r d e r ^ o t h e etects upon t h e ' "Were von a general in the war,&#13;
unborn, resulting from the late war. stranger? '&#13;
He gays substantially that it is "twenty, "No, sir. 1 fit in the war, but not as&#13;
A N o t e d M a n .&#13;
"Yes, gentleman," he said, •'I'm a&#13;
well known man. I'm a New Yorker,&#13;
and my name is a familiar one to the&#13;
odd years since the war cloud was&#13;
spending its fury over the laud and&#13;
people, When men left their homes* to&#13;
become soldiers, thousands of them left&#13;
wives behind. Many of these&#13;
wives were in various stages of&#13;
pregnancy. Many of them began&#13;
a cruel and cowardly war upon&#13;
tho unborn babes." This influence&#13;
of the mother's mind upon thoso who&#13;
escaped attempted foeticide was to implant&#13;
in these children an impulse to «&#13;
destroy life, with little or no provoca- ] A farmer in Ohio&#13;
tion. I tobacco measuring 43&#13;
a geueral."&#13;
"Congressman, perhaps, or Governor&#13;
of .some state?"&#13;
"No, sir. I ' m not not a politician&#13;
nor a statesman, I am a private citizen&#13;
and proud to say it."&#13;
"Well, if you aro not a great soldier&#13;
or statesman, what is it that has made&#13;
your name a fsmiliar one throughout&#13;
tho country? Who are you?"&#13;
"I'm John Smith."&#13;
Mr. PomcroV's views are quite ib the&#13;
line of those offered at ono of ou'* parlor&#13;
meetings by Prof. Nelson SiztT,&#13;
who Fiprc&amp;sed "the opinion that foreign&#13;
m a i m s better look out how they&#13;
step on the toes of tho American peocounty,&#13;
Ky., has&#13;
inches from the&#13;
stalk to the tip of the leaf and 20&#13;
inches m width.&#13;
The latest invention's an electric fan&#13;
which is warranted "to lower the temperature&#13;
of a room from 95 degrees to&#13;
60 in a few minutes "&#13;
v&#13;
\&#13;
/ • ' - - - L . - A -&#13;
X s S .&#13;
s. / s&#13;
s&#13;
TT-r •fi^piy^^HHwrat" yifcja'Vw^v*&#13;
5 **•&#13;
.„.. ,*-&#13;
! » • • i.,&#13;
\&#13;
•r~&#13;
l&gt;&#13;
J&#13;
* !&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
AN# ARBOR&#13;
from th* Uegitust:&#13;
Thomas Bu/ns of the fourth ward,&#13;
died Saturday, at the age of 18, of&#13;
consumption. The funeral was held&#13;
at 9 o'clock Monday morning from St.&#13;
Thomas' church.&#13;
At the first Congregational church,&#13;
JBalem, on Sunday, Oct. 5th, Everett&#13;
]Larne&lt;J, of Northfield, and Miss Clara&#13;
Bobar, of Salem, were united in the&#13;
bonds ot matrinjony by the Rev. J .&#13;
Mills Gelsion,&#13;
Nora Francis, wife ot Job Latshaw,&#13;
and daughter of John and Nancy&#13;
lUynn, died at her home in the third&#13;
ward, of heart disease, Sunday, She&#13;
was 27 years and 10 months old- The&#13;
funeral was held Thursday morning&#13;
from St. Thomas1 church.&#13;
Mrs. fc&amp;uisa Welch, wife of Hiram&#13;
Welch, of Bridgewater, died Monday&#13;
At the residence of Walter Lathrop, in&#13;
ihe&gt;sixth ward of this city, a t the age&#13;
of 71 years and 6 months. She leaves&#13;
pnedaughter, Mrs. Julia Benning, of&#13;
£his city,&#13;
A young men's lecture, association&#13;
has been organized4n4his city 4o-prtu|to space from a surface that is twelve&#13;
sent a lecture course this winter.&#13;
,Jhey have already made the follow.&#13;
ing bookings with prominent Catholic&#13;
clergy men: Monsignor Capel, Oct,&#13;
&lt;29th, "Moral and Intellectual freedom&#13;
:" Rev. A. (X. Lambert, Nov. 19,&#13;
/'Science and Revelation;" Rev. Eugene&#13;
Higgans, S. J., Dec. 12, "David&#13;
Hume;" Rev. Eugene Brady, Jan. 10,&#13;
subject not yet selected; Rev. Thos.&#13;
^ u g h e s / F e b . 25, "Biology and Physical&#13;
origin pf man;" Father Ryan, the&#13;
poet priest, March 16, "True and False&#13;
progress;11—The&#13;
take place in the Grand Opera House.&#13;
re—aH to-| similar course. The weight of the sun&#13;
D E X T E R .&#13;
Jtom the Leader.&#13;
Wm. Stockbridge, of Lima, has leased&#13;
bjs farm for three years to E. Stu-&#13;
Phoebe Bostwick received last week,&#13;
$1,800 back pension on her son's death&#13;
in the army.&#13;
Warren E. Walker, of Ann Arbor'&#13;
was nominated for Representative by&#13;
the Republicans, of this district, at&#13;
^heir convention last Saturday.&#13;
pnrton Alley has just had erected&#13;
to the memory of Ins son Dennie, who&#13;
jlied recently, a beautiful and highly&#13;
polished monument, made of Whitney&#13;
granite.&#13;
Miss Mary Conlan, we are informed,&#13;
Jias qfiened a dress-making establishjnent&#13;
over Lee &amp; Curlett's drug store.&#13;
A few Russian pumpkins, that are&#13;
"some pumpkins," were to be seen -at&#13;
Costello's last week. "I'hey weighed&#13;
134, 113, 87 and 83 pounds, and were&#13;
raised by John Doody, Dexter.&#13;
FOWLERVILLE.&#13;
from tbe Review. S&#13;
The shook.shop resumed operations&#13;
again on Monday. •&#13;
Eddie J, Cleckner died on Tuesday&#13;
evening of diphtheria, aged nine&#13;
j e a r s . "&#13;
' While digging the sewer on Grand&#13;
Ave. an old cross walk was found&#13;
about three feet below the present&#13;
gTSde". —~&#13;
Mr. Silas Fowler and Miss Nettie&#13;
Seed were married at the M. E. parsonage&#13;
oo Wednesday, Oct. 8th, by&#13;
Jlev. Jesse KUpatrick,&#13;
Geo. Hartman, formerly of this&#13;
place, now of Roscommon, fell from a&#13;
wagon last week, breaking his leg and&#13;
receiving internal injuries, which it is&#13;
(eared will prove fatal.&#13;
Mr. James Galligher is the ohampion&#13;
beet grower of America, He&#13;
left a beet a t this office on Monday&#13;
which measures 1&amp; inches m~ctrcunv&#13;
feren.ee and is 24$ inches long and&#13;
weighs 34 pounds. Now, we would&#13;
just like to see the beet that can beat&#13;
that beet.&#13;
tbeir son Albert.&#13;
Mrs. Brock, ot Salem, starts for&#13;
California next Monday in company&#13;
with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Bennett, and&#13;
will spend the winter with her brother,&#13;
Daniel Austin.&#13;
John J. Hooper, the young man&#13;
killed by being rim over by the cars&#13;
on the 4-th inst., was a member of the&#13;
Knights of Samaria ot this place, and&#13;
was the first death loss in the entire&#13;
order of this state. He held a certificate&#13;
for $1000 which will be received&#13;
by his father,&#13;
The long looked event which forever&#13;
bound together the beating hearts&#13;
which have heretofore been claimed by&#13;
George Clark and Miss Addie Alderman,&#13;
both of Green Oak, took place at&#13;
one o'clock Thursday, at the residence&#13;
of the bride's parents. and_was attended&#13;
by a long li-t of invited guests.&#13;
THE SUN.&#13;
In any reference to the physical history&#13;
of the sun, the stupendous magnitude&#13;
of its sphere must,be kept vividly&#13;
present to the mind. With a diameter&#13;
lOo times longer than that of&#13;
the earth's, the solar orb looks out inthousand&#13;
times larger that the one&#13;
which the earth enjoys. The bulk of&#13;
the sun is one million three hundred&#13;
thousand times that of" the earth. If&#13;
the surface of the sun were a thin external&#13;
rind, or shell, and the earth&#13;
were placed in the middle of this hollow&#13;
sphere, not only would the moon&#13;
have space to circle in its lisual orbit.&#13;
without ever getting outside of the&#13;
solar shell, but there would be room&#13;
also for a second satellite, nearly as&#13;
far again as the moon, to accomplish a&#13;
is three hundred thousand times the&#13;
weight of the earth, or, in round numbers,&#13;
two thousand millions of millions&#13;
ot millions of millions of tons. The&#13;
mean distance of the sun from the&#13;
earth is so well ascertained, thoughinvestigations&#13;
which have been niade&#13;
in sevdral distinct ways, that there can&#13;
scarcely be in the estimate an eiror of&#13;
500,000 miles. The distance, nt the&#13;
present time given, is 92.885,000 miles.&#13;
This measure is in itself so vast that,&#13;
if any traveller were to move at the&#13;
rate of four miles an hour for ten&#13;
hours a day. it would take him 6,3«&#13;
years to reach thej^un. A curious' illustration,&#13;
attributed to Prof. Menden&#13;
hall, is to the effect that an infant,&#13;
with an arm long enough when&#13;
stretched out from the . earth to reach&#13;
the.sun, would die of old a^c be for&#13;
could be conscious, through the transmission&#13;
ot the nervous impression from&#13;
the hand to the hrain, that it had&#13;
burned its fingers. In order that the&#13;
earth, thus moving round the sun&#13;
with a chasm of 93.000,000 miles of&#13;
intervening space between them, may&#13;
not be drawn to the sun by the preponderent&#13;
attraction of 330,000 times&#13;
larger mass, it has to shoot forward in&#13;
its path with a momental velocity&#13;
fifty times mgre rapid than that of the&#13;
swiftest rifle ball. But, in moving&#13;
through twenty miles of this onward&#13;
patlvthe .earth is drawn..-.ant of... a&#13;
straight line by srometb-mg—less than&#13;
the eighth part of an inch. This deviation&#13;
is properly the source from&#13;
which the amount of the solar attraction&#13;
has been 'ascertainod. If the&#13;
earth were suddenly arrested in its onward&#13;
flight, and its momentum was in&#13;
that way destroyed, it would be drawn&#13;
to the sun, by an irresistible force of&#13;
its attraction, in four months, or in&#13;
the twenty-seventh-pa-rt of—the—time&#13;
which a cannon ball would take to&#13;
complete the same journey. '&#13;
oi.il&#13;
tor \Y . s . ,joiin&#13;
Packing, Mill Boards, Felts, Booting, t.'emcnt, inside and outsid&#13;
iJhiints, Barn, Hoof and Fire-proof Paints. ' —&#13;
A Settled Fact NO DOUBT ABOUT I T !&#13;
That you can save nearly one-half by trad-&#13;
•mg at TUOMEY BRO'S,&#13;
• »&#13;
U&#13;
'7 '&#13;
5&#13;
6¼&#13;
35~&#13;
6&#13;
lb.&#13;
yard.&#13;
a&#13;
a .&#13;
, ,&#13;
each.&#13;
NOTE THEIR PBIO.ES: * ,&#13;
Best Prints made, - - Sets. yard.&#13;
Best Ginghams made, - - 7&#13;
Fruit of the Loom B l W d Cotton, 8%&#13;
Good Cotton Batts,&#13;
Good yard-wide Factory, -&#13;
The Best Factory,&#13;
Turkey Red Table Linen,&#13;
Good all-linen Crash, -&#13;
Large Size Crochet Bed Spreads, 75&#13;
All-Wool Black Cashmeres, 40in, wide, 45c.yd.&#13;
Good Worsted Dress Goods, 12 l-2c. yd.&#13;
Cheney Bros Colored Ameriean Silks, sold&#13;
elsewhere at $1-25 an* $1*50, our price 1 L&#13;
54in. Gilberts Plaid Flannels, $1 yd.&#13;
Silks, Velvets. Flannel,, Hoseiry and Underwear at lower prices tlmn any other&#13;
house m Michigan; Immense stock Ladies' and Misses Newmnrkc s, hu,-&#13;
sian Circles, Cloaks and Havelocks. The fare to_jMJwpjLJs v.-rv little compared&#13;
to what vouwill save if you have any trading to do • V .- him n.e&#13;
largest stock of'.Drv -Hoods in Central Michigan. . We ouy and -•&gt; --:^,UHV-V&#13;
-for cash. Our largo busine^ enables us to get the lowest pri&#13;
"one price" for all ••••marki'd-in plain figures. ~&#13;
dust received a line line of&#13;
1MKKCH LOADING GLTNS,&#13;
PIEPER RIFLE AND SHOT GUN&#13;
WD MAGAZINE RIFLES.&#13;
\\V carry the best grades of S i ' D K i i N(i ' 1'OWUK\&#13;
i mill nil kinds uf Ammunition utul n|i&lt;irtiii£&#13;
jJiHKlsyrm-ritllv. ' a&#13;
ROLLER SKATES,&#13;
POCKET CUTLERY,&#13;
CLOCKS, WATCHES,&#13;
JEWELRY, AK9&#13;
SIL VER PLA TED WARE,&#13;
MUSICAL AND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
All kinds of repairing neatly t*nd&#13;
promptly done. ,&#13;
- ' I l f r s r i X T l T L L Y ,&#13;
H A i r r o X ' i CAMl'DKLL,&#13;
&gt;Ves( .Main Kkivrf, 1'Iiiekr.ey, .Micliiiraiv.&#13;
gar*&#13;
SHIM&#13;
EE!&#13;
IELF-CURE A favorite prescnp'.inn ot" nun of th&#13;
most noted and SIK'I-VJSM'U! s i v c L i l i s i s n i ' t h e C L&#13;
inow retired)i'ort)i..•.•liv-tot b'si-I-I&gt;UHUtilityt&#13;
liOtt Manhood )1 iakwsx u&gt;i,l lit-caif .Seut&#13;
iOpl«lnscalec*. ciivciopt.'/'r.v'.l)iiij.vlst»cj'iifillit,&#13;
Address DR. WARD &amp; CO. Louisiana Mo.&#13;
' ••• » T H B .——* — — D,W. Miller Camap Co.&#13;
w,&gt;. !I!VI'&#13;
173 Main Stn&#13;
Hi&#13;
^et,&#13;
i t i i h '&#13;
TUOMEY B1KXS.,&#13;
Jackson, Mich.&#13;
UMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER. iwing prices tor the next ('&gt;'.) i t ; t v » .&#13;
.'.Ml&#13;
We will sell Lumber at 1 lie {'olli&#13;
X X X 1&lt;S inch Shingles, per tlioiistim&#13;
Clear Butts IN inch Shingles, per thou-tm&lt;l :.'.-!").&#13;
Cull Sliinj^les IS inch, per thousand, . ^ l.LJ.&#13;
Xo 1 Lath, per thousand feet .'. •"&gt;.*&lt;&gt;•&#13;
No 2 Lath, per tlmu.suid feet 4.&lt;"&gt;.&#13;
Bill Stuff;-mekiding Lsft No. L per thoii&gt;iUid feet,' &gt; 14.IK).&#13;
(Hoof Boards, per thuu&gt;;tml feet .S.oi) h&lt; 1 l.lk)&#13;
Barn Lumber, per ilmuMind feet lo.txi !u IV oil.&#13;
Shipping Culls, ju-r thousand feet .- . . , . lo.&lt;)(.).&#13;
Fencing per thousand' feet :..-, H'AHi i.i 14 'Hi.&#13;
Finishing Lumber per thousand fret... . ; 'iu.ou to ou.UU.&#13;
Siding per thousand feet 14.(JO to JO.uu.&#13;
POSITIVELY NO CREDIT.&#13;
A. L. HOYT, Manager, IMnekiioy, MiftU.&#13;
PINCKNEY PLANING MILL.&#13;
We nre now prepared to do Planing, Resawing.ali kinds of plain and fancy&#13;
Bracket-Sawing. Carving and Turning&#13;
In wood ; and will soeii be able to do turning in iron and general machine&#13;
repairing. We are also agents for W. S. dohns' Asbestos ^laterials, Kngine&#13;
Liquid&#13;
Manufacture a large variety of&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARRIAGES, PHAETONS,&#13;
CARTSrBtffitfts, WAGONS, &amp;C,&#13;
Aiter the most apprnvod dosiRna at the very lowest&#13;
_ prices consistent with guud wofkuiausbil?.&#13;
—50,000 voHioloa—&#13;
of onr tnauufaoOiro aro n^w in use in tliis *n&amp;&#13;
foreipn countries a?ul attest &lt;tut-iiXcelifiLco. e f :&#13;
cur godds by the univergatnatiofaition which they&#13;
givo.- Y.Mty Tehlrlc is WA lilt A M KD,—Special&#13;
i t t e n t l o n will be given to mail orders.&#13;
CATALOGUES FREE. D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
L Fifth St., CnWert St. and Eggleiton Arc,&#13;
— CINCINNATI, o .&#13;
P1KCKNEY PLANING MILL&#13;
Xear Grand Trunk Depot, P I N T K N K Y , MICH.&#13;
j^®.&#13;
Wayne, t)u P»ga Co., Illinois, HAS IMPORTEO FROM FRANCE&#13;
-Pgrciirrun Horn** -r*tae6-nr93f000,000,"&#13;
uhich includes&#13;
SOUTH LYON.&#13;
from the Pl&lt;*»t,&#13;
• Stone payed gutters are being placed&#13;
in front of the block of stores on&#13;
tot Lake street,&#13;
W. A, Jles the new F. M. minister,&#13;
will arrive Saturday and preach at the&#13;
Church Sunday morning and evening.&#13;
' Isaac Bennett and wife *tart for&#13;
£ubom, "California, next Monday,&#13;
^fatrc they will spencl the winter with&#13;
7 5 PER CENT OF ALL HORSES&#13;
Wbo«* par'.tV of h\nrn[ in «&lt;rnhlt*bed by ttxtr M4tcrM&lt;&#13;
raeordMi ta IL«l&amp;Tl'.D MOUKf* O F F R A N C E .&#13;
EVER I M P O R T E D TO A M E R I C A .&#13;
^ e ^ f l l ^ STOC KIOSNOH iNDi&#13;
lo^HM Brood Urn,&#13;
IflwriU Sfiiiieii,&#13;
Old teof«b tot&#13;
Mfrie*.&#13;
10O COLTS.&#13;
Two y**ri aid tad&#13;
JUeorviahif ta« prta&gt;&#13;
elplt MNPM4 • » Ml&#13;
. tawllirttii »fM4«f* ikai,&#13;
tfwtttr w«|| tfi aalcaati&#13;
B»r b« «wW to tw, if itm&#13;
THE FREE PRESS FOR THE CAMPAIGN. W« will aenU the WEEKLY FREB&#13;
PKES8 until after elect ion for only 2»&#13;
CENT8,&#13;
A4anm THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
Detroit. Mi oti.&#13;
HARRIS RESVIEy/ 0 0 . , ^ « ^ ^&#13;
[PriOF.HAIiPlS'PASllLLtRLMEDH&#13;
\&lt;HII&gt;K Mfn aul othtrs «ho sutftf—&#13;
from &gt;:..rvou* and Ph.ysi «l Debility^&#13;
Premature Ex(.»js'loo acd&#13;
ititir miyiy Kluornv cou-ieijjenoe*,&#13;
Tbe Remedy li put np In hoxci. No. 1 Uaxii.u; a moutb), f t .&#13;
(luting three month*), |J. Sent Ly mail in plain Nfapp*"-&#13;
Haj IhU IUMW «A4 uoOe of cur) »KLI actual oa ipplicaUcOj&#13;
DO YOU KNOW THAT&#13;
LORILLARD'S CLIMAX&#13;
PLUG rOHACCH&#13;
v&lt;&#13;
b i v - f tin' juirrst;&#13;
a n t e s , niois*&#13;
tin*&#13;
+BFB--&#13;
Wlua the word Estey or t b t&#13;
word Crran ia mentioned, they&#13;
•aoh traesMt the other* so widely&#13;
known sad so popular are tbe instrument*&#13;
and the makers.&#13;
Five letters in each of the two&#13;
words are reminders of enjoyment&#13;
in multitudes of homes. Eluetra-&#13;
Cataloffuo mailed Croo to all&#13;
applicants.&#13;
GRAND OPENING! I am pleased to announce that I have just started a general store at&#13;
With Rt'dTiu T;n_\ in th&#13;
is ni'vcr iiilu)t"r;i"«l wl\'i&#13;
lasses, nr Hny d -leirrimis liiu'iviiii'iun,&#13;
case uilli iiutiif iitlii-r tdliiucns,&#13;
VVT TOBACCO&#13;
is alft&gt; madi&gt; of the .inr.-t stuck, »n(l for aromatic&#13;
i'lu'\si:u: (iii::lity i&gt; :-.^'nm! to none.&#13;
LORILIjAK'rrs NAVV ( LIPPIXCiS&#13;
take ftr.-t r;ink u,- u ,-nli,1. duraiili' smoking tobacco&#13;
w !ii'!.:\ir iiMi'udiKi'd.&#13;
liOKILLAKirS FAMOl'S SM'FFS&#13;
have boon used forove'r 1*J1 year-*, and ;ire sold t o&#13;
a lar^tT extvnt thivn^utiy others.&#13;
^&gt;v^ _, ••tfirw* are set reeertfed. aad C U M I b7»aiD«eMetiii&#13;
f1-"?*-.&gt;J'.*t.'t&gt;?tt",&gt;* ^n.o««L&lt;wy at rr.*M,-I will MII »A&#13;
2rr?n»t * 2"im.i p*e£*m*tft rit$ ! ^ 4n a•^a•tTor' ete. tf»en«»« l y tbt otraai r*e«rtf !• tae *ad i e t t&#13;
nia«raiw «&lt;&amp; StofWie 9«nm 1 ia. laaiemo* of 4*Tr&#13;
It M&#13;
ikt&#13;
rt4#ed»flf:* Oeaaaei ^ . ^ . , ^ . . 1 ^ 7 ^ 1 1 ^ ¾ •eaaear. Ue sen TMMM ef ui MMMI puMt^t^-&#13;
My line consists of a large and varied assortment of&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
orybody call and examine our stock of goods. Highest price paid for&#13;
J T r E R A N D EGGS. Everything sold at rock bottom prices.&#13;
Pon't forget, , •&#13;
?. CUNNINGHAM. Gregory, Mich,&#13;
Ev&#13;
BU&#13;
W 3 INDUS&#13;
Secure He&amp;thy&#13;
action to the liver&#13;
A d relieve all bilious&#13;
troubles.&#13;
Forii? VifftUtterHa 2;.,ii£. Price 25a. All Diauiits.&#13;
a tDr. La Barge,&#13;
^j/«;fXTK88ng TO&#13;
lapetearr, Orsuie Weakaeu, Wonort-hrrv Svphilltlf end&#13;
Krmri*! AVevUoat. Scirrtiflc tn-atnifiitj mik' and sura&#13;
Temerilp*. DcforrnlHM Trpafort. Cn'\ or wrilo foriint at&#13;
que*tiors«to boanrwerwl bythotq deal ring trc atmrnt by mail* Ctnttm* taSrrlmtfram Rnprorr ihnntd »»D(1 Ibelr »d4reM,%&#13;
idlMm MMrtkla* to &lt;Mr *drantam&gt;. It 1»not a trnaa.#&#13;
Caatral Sad. A Bur*. laUllutc.fi'.'O Lwu.l «%.. hi. Lonl*. So.&#13;
. SgtteMortoDr.fiutU'DiiDcnwrv. £*Us(labe&lt;I 80 Yean.&#13;
KC A.:Ft2STESS 1&#13;
IJiavp now on hand al;ir_'.'" ;uid Ixttcr stock «f&#13;
Harm&lt;»» thatiVve'r before tou'i'thcr with a i;raud&#13;
""llAKNESS G()()J)S !&#13;
Als«o, . .w„ hk li.p. j~i'f aiulI »L u. .s -hI . - ' ^ ^&#13;
choaj) JIM thi' chcti[u'».i&#13;
rt-pairinn neatly und proniiiilv tloue.&#13;
yoursoU. '&#13;
\s» L'ood Hrt tin' bent and&#13;
irriuiro triin.initjc and&#13;
iSk'« fop&#13;
FAVIiTTK liKASoX, "^&#13;
&lt;&#13;
STOCKSRIDGE.. MlCHIQ/VN&#13;
" \ .&#13;
S.&#13;
s&#13;
'/*&#13;
S&#13;
s&#13;
/- /&#13;
-pi'—iiiiad'Lhanodii&#13;
mm&#13;
v&#13;
- • * * »• « * , * ttthii S*'.?* •+**&amp;**&amp; x Jiir-s* •* 01:, U*t ^ • ^ f t * ^ " * ! !&#13;
•M&#13;
I V&#13;
THREE REMOVES.&#13;
1 (Jreat-grund-sou of Patrick Henry&#13;
In a L misville Police Court.&#13;
Patrick Henry's g-reat-&lt;;rtuul-soii,&#13;
W. H. Caniwell, luul s.&gt;bcmi up&#13;
enough to bo tried. Ho cmue into&#13;
the city court looking as if he was&#13;
just off from a long npree.&#13;
"Mr. Cardwell," remarked Judg •&#13;
Thompson, "I understand you want&#13;
to go to Nashville,"&#13;
"I'll go this afternoon if you will&#13;
lot me off, your honor," replied the&#13;
* prisoner.&#13;
"You may go, then," yd'ul the&#13;
Judge, &lt;kand bo sure you leave."&#13;
Cardwell thanked hint warmly, and&#13;
hobbled out of the room with the a d&#13;
of a cane and crutch.&#13;
"That is one of the most brilliant&#13;
men I ever knew," remarked a lawyer.&#13;
''He is extensively and profoundly&#13;
read, a fine conversationalist&#13;
and an able and rea/ly speaker. He&#13;
has traveled much and seen a great&#13;
deal of men and their manners. He&#13;
has an extremely pleasing address&#13;
and the happiest of social faculties.&#13;
I used to live in Hopkinsville, where&#13;
~ he came some years ago. He was as&#13;
ragged and dirty then as he is now,&#13;
but a lawyer who had come from the&#13;
flame country in Virginia took him&#13;
to his house,-gave him clothes, and&#13;
treated him as a guest and an honore&#13;
d guest. He stayed there for some&#13;
time, and I made his acquaintance&#13;
thr*High~hi^askmg-_far siiial 1 1&lt; urns.&#13;
Finally he got on a fearful spree, and&#13;
going to his benefactor's house abused&#13;
and insulted his wife in a manner&#13;
that no gentlemaur no matter how&#13;
drunk he was, would ever have donef&#13;
After that he left of course."&#13;
Cardwell has a singularly powerful&#13;
and resonant voice, such a one, perhaps,&#13;
as that with which his greatgrandfather&#13;
thrilled the continental&#13;
congress in the dark days preceding&#13;
the revolution. Such a voice might&#13;
be heard with ease in an audience of&#13;
10,0()0 people. Cardwell is said to&#13;
have inherited some of the immortal&#13;
Henry's ability as an orator, and certainly&#13;
he has a voice unrivaled for&#13;
declamation&#13;
THE SPARROW.&#13;
• *I return.eddu)iue from the chase,&#13;
and-wtfhdered through an alley in&#13;
-"-thy garden. My dog bounded before&#13;
me. Suddenly he checked himself,&#13;
and moved forward cautiously, as if&#13;
he scented game. I glanced down&#13;
the alley, and perceived it young&#13;
sparrow with a yellow beak and down&#13;
upon its head. Jt had fallen &gt;ut of&#13;
the nest (the wind was shaking the&#13;
beeches in the alley violently &lt;, and&#13;
lay motionless and helpless on the&#13;
ground, with his little unlledged&#13;
wings extended.&#13;
The dog approached it softly, when&#13;
suddenly an old sparrow, with black&#13;
breast, quitted a neighboring tree,&#13;
dropped like a stone right before tindog's&#13;
nose, and, with milled plumnge&#13;
and chirping desperately and pitifully&#13;
sprang twice at the open grinning&#13;
mouth.. She had come to protect her&#13;
" • little one at the cost of her own life.&#13;
Her little body trembled all over,&#13;
her voice was hoarse, she was in an&#13;
—agony—she offered herself.&#13;
The dog must have seemed a gigantic&#13;
monster to her. But, in spite of&#13;
that she had not remained safe on her&#13;
lofty bough. A power stronger than&#13;
her own will hud forced her down&#13;
The dog stood still, I t seemed as&#13;
t h n n g h hp q U n felt t i n * pnvypr, I&#13;
hastened to call him^back, and went&#13;
away wtttrna feeling of respect—&#13;
"Spnrgouneff.&#13;
V&#13;
The love of Christ was no fine saying;&#13;
it cost Him rf is life to say these&#13;
words with meaning, "As I have loved'&#13;
you"—Robertso D .&#13;
Wise sayings often fall on barren&#13;
ground; but 2 kind word is never&#13;
thrown away.—Arthur Helps;— —&#13;
Doing good is the only certainly&#13;
happy action of a man's' life.—Sir&#13;
Philip Sidney.&#13;
* ft is not work that kills men; it is&#13;
worry. Work is healthy; you can&#13;
hardly put more upon a man than he&#13;
can bear. Worry is the rust upon the&#13;
blade.—Henry Ward Beecher.&#13;
Every great book is an action, and&#13;
every great action is a book.—Luther.&#13;
It is another's fault if he be ungrateful;&#13;
but it is mine if I do not "give.&#13;
To find one thankful man, I will oblige&#13;
many that are not so —Seneca.&#13;
It is impossible for that man to despair&#13;
who remembers that his helper&#13;
is omnipotent.—Jeremy Tayfor.&#13;
Whan God tells ye to gang into the&#13;
mirk,—gang!—Mac Donald.&#13;
Humanity is never so beautiful as&#13;
praying for forgiveness, or else&#13;
forgiViug;another.—Rtchter.&#13;
Let prayerl)e4he key of the morning&#13;
and the bolt^o^the^evenmg.&#13;
Matthew,&#13;
.or&#13;
- ri U v¥ CAN YOU AFFORD?&#13;
T O BTJ"^T&#13;
-J&#13;
&lt;-r HARDWARE&#13;
I am selling- everything in my line CHEAPER than any one else can afford to.&#13;
BECAUSE X BTJY GOODS&#13;
'--v- MY EXFENSES ARE-ALM0ST4WIHING. «£ ./5)&#13;
*V)&#13;
I CARRY NO STOCK BUT WHAT ARE NEW AND SALEABLE GOODS.&#13;
YOU NEED THE BENEFIT OF OUR COMPETITION.&#13;
F. L. BROWN, PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
W h e n you visit or Ifiive S e w York City save&#13;
HiiL'tlNs.'!1 Kx|iresfrtL''' find &lt; arriuL'e Hire unit ship&#13;
al the (inuiii I'liitiii lintel opposite (iraml Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
KleL'atit r o o m - tit ted up jit a cost of one mil&#13;
liotl llolllii'.s, reilnet'd tii £1 illni Up'iVirn!- per day.&#13;
Kui'opean plan. Klr\ ator l{i--taiii'.mt r-upplieil&#13;
with tin- hesL llol'si^ i-iirs, -';r:-'- ili'l c!e-,a!e&lt;l&#13;
niilroails to all depots. Istniili. - ' a n live K. • i (. • :•&#13;
f.or less motley at the Cruml t nioii Hotel t!;an&#13;
aiiv other iiist rliiss hotel in iliecitv.&#13;
CALL AND GET&#13;
JKepynua Exhaustioii^&#13;
Premature Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An P0-pa.rc cloth-hound Hook of Advice to&#13;
Yoimuor .Miil(lle-;!i.'i'il Men.witli preseriptums&#13;
for Sfif-tr*':ittiient i'v 11 Regular riiysjei.'in.&#13;
S E M *7 B T D P P o o receipt of two tliree-oeat&#13;
. » w ' " W R E stamps. Address&#13;
T. W 1 L U A M 3 &amp;. C O . , MILWAUKEE, Wi&amp;&#13;
Michigan Buggy Co.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
BEFORE BUYING fiiis Morse&#13;
ELSEWHERE.&#13;
MANN BROS&#13;
13 TEXLI-VCJ&#13;
«THIS M A N s -&#13;
Thntif hfrdont sell Lis Hoary Draft, Horee-killias&#13;
Linder, and buy a*&gt;~» .&#13;
4£ASY RUNNING&#13;
- DEEWMG- TWINE BINDER&#13;
fct once, every horse on the farm will soon be dead&#13;
WiLUAM OEERING &amp; CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
BINDERS, REAPERS AND MOWEBS&#13;
T H E H O R 8 E 8 ' FRiCNOS.&#13;
FO»a»XXB*&#13;
—S* ANJVRUVX. Howell,Mich,&#13;
Wholesale Mannfactorera of all kiuds of Open and&#13;
Top BUGGIES and ROAD CARTS. Agents wanted&#13;
ererywhere. Write for catalogue ftud Pfiso list,&#13;
FINE WOES A SPECIALTY.&#13;
BrHTOffiEBr23r1884r&#13;
1&#13;
We also xaanoiactnre a full line of CTJTTERS«_&#13;
Including Snell Body, Portland, Square Bo*&#13;
two teat Portland and Poner Sleighs.&#13;
Bend for cuts and prices before purchasing.&#13;
# MICHIGAN BUGGY CO., '&#13;
KUiMlZOO, Mich,&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT!&#13;
READ THE DETROIT POST&#13;
The Best Newspaper in Michigan.&#13;
GENTLEMEN!&#13;
We invite your attention to our line of&#13;
GENUINE CALF SHOES&#13;
Timbered Lund for Sale or Exchange.".&#13;
I have einhtv acres of timber land in tho township&#13;
of White oak. ImrlianU'o.; which 1 will sell&#13;
for eash or trade for other lands or property in.&#13;
jjonthern Livingston I'ouutv. Address,&#13;
NORMAN BURGESS,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
ALSO OUR LINE OF SHOES&#13;
AT- ~f&#13;
SI.75, S2.00, $2.25, $2.50.&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS RCCAROING Dr. Sarin's \m M&#13;
re&gt;r«late&#13;
KK TttI&#13;
I those&#13;
Diily—JT per War: tiO Tents per Month. Weekly&#13;
-•One Dollar per Year, We shall continue to offer the same great&#13;
ncMUMAADt 9 rt\ Inducements to purchasers as before&#13;
DRY GOODS , °u r P iT&#13;
c ^im ^.„&#13;
D E T R 0 I T r RE8PECTFCLI.Y.&#13;
^ 1 1 ni'-EL'"'''' *"d enrich the BLOOD* r&lt;&#13;
RXAXTH and VIOOB of TOUTfc! In aJ „„&#13;
dlsea»e« reuulrlng a certain ami efflcleiit TONIC,&#13;
•specially Dyspepsia, Want of Appetite, lidijfe*-&#13;
tton, LUCK ot Strenitth, etc., its use Is &gt;nark*&lt;i&#13;
with Immediate ana wonderful results. Hones,&#13;
muscles and nerves receive new ion**. Enlivens&#13;
the mind and supplies BraiiiTower.&#13;
I A M B O suffering from all romplal»t%&#13;
k A U I B B p e c u l i a r to tliflr sex will fliulln&#13;
Dm. UAXTWmm XfiON TONIC a sutV toul speedy&#13;
enrt. It Kive«4 clear and healtliy complexion.&#13;
'The strou»st testimony to the value of DK.&#13;
BART*R'9 lRO!f TONtc is that frequent sttenipts&#13;
at eounterfelting have only added to thepopuliiN&#13;
ftyof the orlgtnal. If you earnestly desire health&#13;
donotezperiment—Kttthe ORIGINAL A*D BE»T.&#13;
Irout addresatoThaDr. BarterMjdXO;^&#13;
oola, Ma, for our "DBSAX BOOX."|&gt;&#13;
lol atre&amp;a* sod us*fol iofornaatioo. rrw-w&#13;
On* HAHTM'S IRON TOWC IS TOR Sate »v A**&#13;
QmMQtSTt ANO PCALKR« EVKRrWr&lt;iRI&lt;&#13;
»• "'' "^-^ .*&gt;'&#13;
PRW ...., .*. v ^ " * M f c « . ; , - . t » . ' - . **** •»- * ^JftZZTaCr.&#13;
i&#13;
*&#13;
V&#13;
/&#13;
^^4641^-^^^^^&#13;
J5S&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
i'rom our Corr/eapupdent.&#13;
Court all the week.&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
bride returned&#13;
tour Thursday&#13;
i , i ,&#13;
Harry Knapp and&#13;
from their wedding&#13;
last.&#13;
The young pQQple ot the Episcoi&#13;
church have organized a broom la-igade.&#13;
T, J. Watts has gone to South Lyon&#13;
to manage the branch clothing house&#13;
of Kaliogg, Garland &amp; Co., just opened&#13;
at that place.&#13;
Cards are issued for the wedding of&#13;
Miss Anna Mountain and Mr. Koene.&#13;
Rev. C. C, Miller will address a Kepubhean&#13;
meeting at the Opera House&#13;
Thursday evening, Oct. 23, and Hon.&#13;
Marsh W. Stevens a Democratic meeting&#13;
the evenings prevjoui,s .&#13;
Following are the majorities in the&#13;
several congressional districts at last&#13;
week's Ohio election:&#13;
Disk Name Majority.&#13;
1 Benj. Bntterworth, rep.. .. !l/otf'"&gt;.&#13;
2 Chas. E. Brown, rep., r . . . . .'-^'v^.&#13;
5 J as. Campbell, dem ,.412.&#13;
L4 C. M. Anderson, dem :»10.&#13;
| 5 Benj. LeFevre, dem 5,122.&#13;
-,6 W. D. Hill, dem..:- 3.W1.&#13;
'7 Geo. E. Seney, dem.. 4,uui&gt;&#13;
13 John Little, rep 7.54S&#13;
9 W. C. Cooper, rep 1.830&#13;
J.0 Jacob Romeis, rep. 22M&#13;
&gt;1 W, W. Ellsberry,dem.. . . . . .. .41«&#13;
12 A, C. Thompson, 'rep.. ..".""... . " ^ W&#13;
33 J . H . Outhwaite, dem -..4.JS2H&#13;
14 C. H Grosvenor, rep .. '&gt;.•&gt;( }'&#13;
15 Beriah Wilkins,dem: o.'-\\&gt;&#13;
16 Geo. W. Geddes, dem ,. .7&#13;
17 A. J. Warner, dem.. .-.. .• 217&#13;
18 I. H. Taylor, rep..-.... .;.-.. .0.1-^&#13;
19 E . B . Taylor, rep 3.W1&#13;
20 Wm. McKinley, rep.. . . . . . . .1.231&#13;
21 M. A. Foran, dem 1.27U&#13;
OPENING!&#13;
UNDERTAKER, °&#13;
AND DKALKK IN&#13;
FURNITURE.&#13;
Picture Framing, Impairing, Elc.&#13;
WKST MAIN riTHKKT,&#13;
WE ARE NOW ENGAGED IN&#13;
REMOVING OUR STOCK&#13;
To tlie Brown Building, next door west of F.L.Brown's hardware.&#13;
This store has boon fitted up expressly for us, and-is the lightest mid best salesroom in town.&#13;
Total Republican majority.. .43.511&#13;
Total Democrat majority... .-24,14!» I&#13;
Net IJepubliean majority&#13;
W P — • — — — —&#13;
..H&gt;.37u&#13;
The following Patents were grantrrt&#13;
to citizens of MICHIGAN-, bearing date&#13;
Oct. 14, 18&amp;4-, reported expressly for&#13;
tbis paper by Louis Bagger k Co., Mechanical&#13;
Experts and Solicitors of Patents,&#13;
Washington, D. U.-&#13;
Baluss, Hamilton, Wayne, Doorlock,&#13;
306,460.&#13;
Bradburd, John, Wayne, Churn,&#13;
306.465:&#13;
Green, G. F., Kalamazoo, Electric&#13;
battery, 306,684.&#13;
Hill, Wm. E., Kalamazoo, and M. J.&#13;
Lyons, Saginaw, Log-loader, 306,31^:&#13;
Mallon, James, Houghton, ISleigl)-&#13;
knee, 306,412.&#13;
Rayment, Wm. L., and G. W. Dean.&#13;
Quincy, Platform spring, 306.426.&#13;
Russell, C. A., Otsego, Chum, 306,-&#13;
700.&#13;
Bhine, O. B., Covert, Combination&#13;
tool-holder, 306,539.&#13;
• Smith, L. A., Ludington, Pocket&#13;
knife, 306,651.&#13;
St. Mielcarek Waldistans, Grand&#13;
Rapids, Ventilator for stove-pipes,&#13;
306,438.&#13;
Stockfocd, B J L , Sturgis, Wrench,&#13;
306 439. ~&#13;
Wilcox, Ralph and R., Utica, Mid&#13;
dUngs purifier, 306,567. /&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHim.&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROWif,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All kinds of custom-work, and general&#13;
repairing, including&#13;
HORSESHOEING. '&#13;
Shop back of Mann's Block, PINCKKKT V&#13;
Wholesale JJi'iilfi'y in OVSTKKS ami FOUKKJN muiT8&#13;
'MmiiilSctiU'^rrt ol ili»niii7tlr»iTIy Si-ahnl (ioode.&#13;
k Pickles, Preserve, eti\,&#13;
")H,55 ami 57 Ji'fti'rson, Ave., DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
'A&#13;
V&#13;
The Greatest Kedicine of t h e ^ g c&#13;
Keliln^gg g's Columbian Oil i^a power- ful redfedy, whieh can be taken " internally&#13;
as well as externally by the tcnderest&#13;
infant. It cure/almost instant-&#13;
Jyt is pleasant, actintfairectly upon the&#13;
nervous system ./causing a sudden&#13;
buoyancy ot th#4mnd—Jn^hoi'VtUti&#13;
cl&#13;
wonderful effects of this wonderful&#13;
reraedy_canzlot be explained m written&#13;
l a n g u a g e . A single dose inhaled&#13;
and tajcen according to directions will&#13;
convince anyone that it is all that is&#13;
d for it. Warranted to cure the&#13;
lowing diseases: Rheumatism or&#13;
Kidney Disease in any form, Headache,&#13;
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises. Flesh Wounds, Hunions,&#13;
Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections,&#13;
Colic, Cramping Pains, Cholera Movbus,&#13;
Flux, Diarrhoea, Coughs, Colds,&#13;
aches and pains, external or internal.&#13;
Full directions with each bottle.&#13;
For Sale at-WixciH-.LL't; Onuo STOWS&#13;
SLAP! BANG! 1 HERE WE ARE AGAIN! V15KLE&#13;
At{ai&amp; to tbe front, In his new store, where, for&#13;
the next iirty days from this date, for cash, I&#13;
promise to givn to all my patrons more quantity&#13;
:md better quality for lee's money, any of the following&#13;
articles, than any other dealer in the&#13;
county, viz; PAINTS ! S S R&#13;
.n any quantity, Best Linseed Oil—raw or boiled&#13;
Turpentine, Rub Varnished, Flowing Varnishon&#13;
Dryers, Knotter'a Putty, and Painter*' supplh'H&#13;
• f a l l kinds,- Any Bbade of colj.r tfrnirt'd mixed&#13;
pad ready for applying, ten tier tent, cheaper rh'an&#13;
i.uy other house in town, Paper lianjrioU, fresco-&#13;
; ig, glass staining and graining spi'dniti«»8, Give&#13;
i ) a call and satisfy yourselves tliat w,- &lt;miy say&#13;
v. hat we mean, and mean all that w&lt;- wav.&#13;
&gt;$ fOCKBRlDGE, MAY &amp; 1884.&#13;
THE DETROIT TLlIliS ^ » bri-ht and&#13;
IH'W^'V p;i[)i r. its ti'h":r:iphir news conies by&#13;
spri'kil wire fiM-.ii t!ii-news ci'iitt'rs uf Ilic-coitntn-&#13;
to its editoiinl roonitf. \.\k&lt;' moVt j&gt;»-nJJK- this,&#13;
fill I 'i'Ht: TI.MKS is indeuendent in jiolitii's, although&#13;
it is by no means neutral. Kvery just&#13;
cause receives fair and adequate treatment from&#13;
I S T R K P A P E R T m ' TIWKS. While the&#13;
TISIKS L'iw's more attention to hnsinest) than to&#13;
murders, it never neglects murders or any real&#13;
news, and it isn't scared by hcine railed Hensv&#13;
tional. 'i'he jieopte like THE TIMKS because "It is&#13;
publisher: B.dely in the interest, of its readers_&#13;
•V_au can 'u»ri'-t-UeDaily TIJIKS neut-to voitr— ad&#13;
F O R T H E P E O P "K. d i e s one month for •M) cents; or yo;i ran have the Daily and Sunday,&#13;
seven irajiers" a wee];, sent you for r*I cents a&#13;
month. This is iliebest investment offered this&#13;
fail. Ail dress&#13;
TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY,&#13;
DETKOIT, MICH. .&#13;
U t T K O M '£'CLEVELAND.&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
City of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third St Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leavs&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at 8.30 p. m.&#13;
T H E . S 2 . 2 5 ROUTE!&#13;
eek days-Standard TimeT&#13;
T H E $ 3.0C R U U T L&#13;
City of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne St Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays and Saturdays at 10 P. If.&#13;
For Marine City St Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisvill*&#13;
Cheboygan St. Ignace and&#13;
V have p u r d l W a alarf f t . !inr of elegant wraps In both Newmarket and Russian Circular, dirnct. from the ,nanacturors&#13;
/s\ o shall have-tlu^stock open on 1 uesday^and invite all who intend pnrvlnusin. to inspect our st,,-k&#13;
before birvTng elsewhere. Thanking you for your liberal patronage in the past, we ^ic^peak'^nir'Vnui^Vo'r'tl'ic future,&#13;
knowing that we can make it to your advantage to make our store your headquarters.&#13;
/ Yours, etc.,&#13;
tSKIN &amp; SYKES:&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1804.&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
Obtain for Mechanical Devices, Compounds,&#13;
Designs and Labels,&#13;
All preliminary examinations as&#13;
to patentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our "Guide to Obtaining Patent,"&#13;
is sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS BAGGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
LAME-STOCK. NEW-G80m&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON. D. C.&#13;
FiisrcicisrE'sr&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
HEADY FOR BUSINESS!&#13;
Bread and Buns Fresh Every Day.&#13;
Warm meala and lunches at all hours. Oysters&#13;
HIKI all (U'lh'Rcii's in their fcctiHon. We have "a line&#13;
of frt'wh j,'roct&gt;rk'8, a geod unHortmeiit of t«&gt;a from&#13;
•J) to 7'&gt; ct'nl.H a pound, Hiu'heHt price paid for&#13;
HuttiT ami K ^ s . Come and »co IIB. We will give&#13;
you j,'ood fjoods and fair prices.&#13;
\V. H . L A W H E N C E , P H O P R .&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE IS STILL&#13;
HEAD-QUARTERS * FOR BARGAINS —&#13;
I3ST—&#13;
DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES,&#13;
AND EVERYTHING IN THE&#13;
LINE OF GENERAL&#13;
MERCHANDISE.&#13;
E. A. MANN, East Main St., Pinckney.&#13;
rXTllRFSnU:; M A O U N /&#13;
•olders free—Or send 25 cent* for ogr&#13;
illustrated book of 120 pages,&#13;
ft LAKETOUR TO PICTURESQUE MACKINAC&#13;
nir.'oncal and descriptive of this&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
O. D&lt;. W W t o f l w h , OenM P a s s . A e m *&#13;
TNWCr A10P WIJaHyLn e STt . RDoAtVoNf" SMiIfTh T *&#13;
A A. it.'ii. V&lt; AN &gt;.» KJ.. a.&#13;
CIRC [HATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned at 5 cents per volume,&#13;
for 7 days.&#13;
0 Tickets for 2acts.&#13;
»&lt; a 50 "&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds will be devoted&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
the lit&#13;
—JuiT-Uooks or further information&#13;
apply at . / ^&#13;
W I X C H E L L ' S DRUG STORE,&#13;
PINCKNKY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway Time Tabic.&#13;
MICH. AIK LINE DIVISION.&#13;
STATIONS, WEST HOUND TRAINS.&#13;
No. 6.&#13;
Miaedr&#13;
Job Printing, less than city prices, at the&#13;
DISPATCH Office.&#13;
FfcDGEWAY 9:55»,&#13;
Armada, K);10-&#13;
Komeo.... 10:'JO&#13;
Kochester, ..11 :.¼&#13;
Pontine .* ^.-..12:45 P.&#13;
Wi\om,....'..., 'J :-JO&#13;
South Lyon ^ 3&#13;
IhSmbury, 4 :(i"&gt;&#13;
PINCKNEY 4:io&#13;
Mount Kcrricr,... .r&gt;:15&#13;
Slockt&gt;ri 1^'» •'':35&#13;
Henrietta tt:ii"&gt;&#13;
JACK SON-.^._. *-M)&gt;-&#13;
.STATIONS. |&#13;
m.&#13;
IV).&#13;
No. 4. No. B. 2L&#13;
—Paasr Paa~&#13;
5:,¾ a. m, 7:45 a. m.&#13;
H:15 8:fW^&#13;
«:35 8 : a » ^&#13;
7:10 8:52&#13;
7::ir&gt; «:1R&#13;
7:45 0:^5&#13;
8:28 11):10&#13;
« . . . 1(1:40&#13;
**•" 11:.¾)&#13;
1171^&#13;
11:30&#13;
..'. ll:5o&#13;
12:08 p. m.&#13;
12:20 .&#13;
12:50 p . j n .&#13;
EAST HOUND TIJAINS.&#13;
m.&#13;
No. 5.&#13;
Mixed.&#13;
JACKSON 7:uoa.&#13;
Henrietta, 7:45&#13;
Stockhrid^e..... 8:15&#13;
Mount Ferrier,, 8:32&#13;
PINCKNEY--. «:io&#13;
Hamburg 9:40&#13;
South Lyon) »r V2:!'5&#13;
m&#13;
5:00 a.m&#13;
m 5:22 - »:. «;oo&#13;
«;H)&#13;
•ft :85&#13;
7:08&#13;
7:20&#13;
. _ 7:35&#13;
All trains run by ' " a n t r a l standard" time~&#13;
w-AJ-llf tirSaiSnaF r?u-n d,a ily., J.0SSunEd™ays excepted HICKSON, /' Superintendent General Manager&#13;
Wixom.&#13;
Pcmtiac, | d Y p&#13;
Rochester,&#13;
Komeo&#13;
Armada* 1 U I X U L U&#13;
RiDQEWAY&#13;
/ dpl0:M&#13;
11:80&#13;
12:30 p.&#13;
1:00&#13;
.1:40&#13;
2:85&#13;
3a05&#13;
8:¾)&#13;
No. 3.""&#13;
1'asa. ,&#13;
4:20 l). ru.&#13;
4:45&#13;
5:05&#13;
5:15&#13;
5 :.¾&#13;
ti:08&#13;
fi:20&#13;
B:50.&#13;
7:20&#13;
8:15&#13;
8:2.¾ .&#13;
»:05&#13;
9:65&#13;
10:20--&#13;
10:50&#13;
*No, 1.&#13;
Paaa.&#13;
: % . * " -r</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 Dispatch October 23, 1884</text>
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                <text>October 23, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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                <text>1884-10-23</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</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>PINCKNEYDISPATCH&#13;
JfcROME WINCHELL, PUBLISHER.&#13;
1B8UK11 THUWJ1MY8.&#13;
SiibMirtptlon Friee, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
ADVERTISING RATES .&#13;
Fmnslent advertisements, 25 cantB parJnch for&#13;
Arst insertion and ten cents per inch for esu-li tmWuuant&#13;
insertion. Local notice*, Scents per line for&#13;
«&amp;ch Insertion. Social rates for regular advertisements&#13;
by the year or quarter. _ _ _ _ _&#13;
D.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
M. GREENE, M. 1).,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.'&#13;
Omce at reHidence. Special attention iriven to&#13;
•urtfery and diseases of the thruat anil lum»a.^&#13;
FAMES MARKKY,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And Insurance A^ent. Legal papers made on&#13;
ahort notice and reasonable terms. Office ou&#13;
Wain St,, near PostotHce l'lnc-kiiey, Mich.&#13;
/^K1.ME« &amp; JOHNSON,&#13;
\j Proprietors of&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING AND CUSTOM&#13;
MILLS,&#13;
Dealers In Flour and Feed. Cash paid for all&#13;
kinds of urain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
TAMES T. EAMAN,&#13;
ATTORNEYS COUNSELOR AT LAW&#13;
and Justice of the Peace,&#13;
Office in the Brick Block. PINCKNEY&#13;
1IT p . VAN WINKLE,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at LAW&#13;
and SOLICITOR in.CHANCERYOfflce&#13;
over Siller's Drug Store. PINCKNEY&#13;
HALHTLAD GREGORY,&#13;
UEALKK IN&#13;
GRATV. LUMBER, LIME, SALT, Ac.&#13;
Hlghes . i' t |&gt;rice paid for wheat A good&#13;
etock ot . 'i • &gt;i v always ou hand, liuors, sash&#13;
and all b u i . ^ ; i; materials furnished on short DOtlce.&#13;
GREGORY, MICH.&#13;
VETI': XVBY. Sd'i;&lt;;KU-v, Howell, Midi.&#13;
Mr V\ ineyar will attend to cahs pnmiptl\&#13;
mt'ht or (lav. Milk fever and other di^-a.-erj m&#13;
cattle and Imrses a sj^'ciulty. 'I enn.-rejisonnhle.&#13;
l i e s i d e n c oil l i y r o n l i o a d . T e l e p h o n i c 1'inmec&#13;
(ion with central otlice at Howell.&#13;
CHARLKH MACLEAN, 1». J). S.&#13;
DENTIST. Graduate of the Dental Department&#13;
of the InneisitN of Miehinan. nilice in&#13;
Gri'iMiawac Block, river liir-i oilre, IhmciO'&#13;
fj^Tarti'nilar attention paid to the juvr-n \ ation&#13;
of the natural teeth.&#13;
Wtfl be at the Monitor House, Pinckney,&#13;
on Thursday of each week, commencing&#13;
on July 17th.&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly located, *i of a mile west&#13;
fitockbridtfe. Apple, cherry peach and paar orchards,&#13;
nice house, pood well and cistern, out&#13;
buildings, well fenced, good soil. Apply on&#13;
premises. L O R E N C E RICE.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BAM&#13;
G. W. TEEP.LE,&#13;
cv5/j: BANKER,&#13;
Does-Q General Banking Business.&#13;
M n n n y " I .nflnpri tin A p p r o v e d N o t e s .&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits.&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
COLLECTIONS. A SPECIALTY.&#13;
A Conscientious Minister.&#13;
DKAU SIR:—Having tried your&#13;
White Wine of Tar Syrup, I believe it&#13;
to be an excellent medicine, and can&#13;
oonscienciously recommend it to others.&#13;
Respectfully yours,&#13;
Kingsville, Mo. Rev. Win. Stevenson.&#13;
I Never Saw Its Equal.&#13;
DK. C. D. WAKNEH-—Kind Sir—I received&#13;
the&gt; bottle of . White Wine of&#13;
Tar Syrup you sent me, and have used&#13;
it, an(l will say I think it cannot be&#13;
excelled as a throat remedy, .At least&#13;
I have never tried anything that&#13;
seemed to relieve and benefit me as&#13;
that did. Yours fraternally,^&#13;
REV. R. F. BEAVERS",&#13;
Perche. Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.&#13;
For sale at C E. Holliater'a, Siyler liru's, and&#13;
Winchell'e Driltj Store.&#13;
THE HOUSEWIFE'S FAVOKITE.&#13;
We will send FKEE for ONE ENTILE&#13;
VEAR, to every lady who sends us AT&#13;
ONCE the names of ten married ladies,&#13;
at same address,--and twelve two-ct.&#13;
stamps for postage, our handsome, entertaining&#13;
and instructive Journal, devoted&#13;
to Fashions, Fancy Work, Decorating,&#13;
Cooking and Household matters.&#13;
Regular price, $1.00. SEND TODAY,&#13;
and secure next number. Address,&#13;
DOMESTIC JOURNAL, Nunda,&#13;
N . Y .&#13;
LADIES' MEDICAL ADVISER.&#13;
. , A complete Medical Work for Women,&#13;
handsomely bound in cloth and&#13;
illustrated. Tells how to prevent and&#13;
cure all diseases of the sex, by a treatment&#13;
AT HOME. Worth its weight .in&#13;
Gold to eye»y lady suffering from any&#13;
of the diseases. Over 10,UOO sold already.&#13;
POSTPAID ONLY 5U Cents.&#13;
Postal Note ur two-ct. stnnp&gt;. Address&#13;
NUNDA PUBLISHING CO.,&#13;
M unda, x. Y.&#13;
An Answer Wanted.&#13;
Can anyone bring us "a case of Kidney&#13;
or Liver Complaint that Electnc&#13;
Bitters will not. speedily cure? We&#13;
say they can not, as thousands of cases&#13;
already permanently cured and who&#13;
are daily recommending Electric Bitters;-&#13;
Will prove. B r i g h t ^ Disease.&#13;
Diabetes. Weak Back, or any urinary&#13;
ify tht'.bh'nd. ivgulate the bowels, andact&#13;
directly on the diseasi'il^part.-.&#13;
Kvery bottle guai'anteed. For Sale at&#13;
"&gt;U cents a bottle, at&#13;
Wineheli'.s Drug Store.&#13;
WOOD FOU SALE.&#13;
I have about 400 cords of seasoned&#13;
wood for sale in quantities to suit&#13;
purchaser—will deliver it or sell it oh&#13;
the ground. T. Birkeit.&#13;
Birkett, Oct. 30th, 1884.&#13;
Ladies, notice advertisement of Embroidery&#13;
silks and Briggs' Transfer&#13;
Patterns in another column.&#13;
Look out for new goods at Winchell'&#13;
Drug.Store Early next week&#13;
we shall open a fine line of novelties&#13;
at surprisingly low prices. ^.&#13;
I will take orders for a limited.&#13;
amount of seasoned cord wood.&#13;
J as. T. Eaman.&#13;
SHEEP FOR SALE.&#13;
.150 wetliers, 3 years old and upwards;&#13;
95 wethers, 1 and 2 years old,&#13;
heavy shearers; 60 breeding ewes,&#13;
good shearers; 50 half-breed lambs—&#13;
Shropshire and Cotsvvold; 3¾ high,&#13;
grade merino lambs.&#13;
Thomas Birkett.&#13;
Birkett, OcL 30th, 1884.&#13;
Physicians Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepared from the very best materials,&#13;
at Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Grimes &amp; Johnson having added&#13;
considerable new machinery and repaired&#13;
quite extensively their custom&#13;
and flouring mill, would announce to&#13;
the public generally that it is running&#13;
again.Being well pleased with the liberal&#13;
patronage in the past would invite&#13;
their-many patrons to^alL again&#13;
and satisfaction will be guaranteed.&#13;
Pinckney, Oct. 6th, 1884.&#13;
Best grades of smoking and chewing&#13;
tobacco^, cigars and cigarettes, at&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store.&#13;
OATS WANTED!&#13;
I want to buy 500 bushels of oats,&#13;
for which I will pay Detroit quotations&#13;
for "mixed oats" the day they are&#13;
bought or delivered.&#13;
T. Birkett&#13;
Dover Mills, Oct. 1st, 1884.&#13;
STOLEN -From the residence of Wm.&#13;
Cobb, near Portage Lake, Oct. "21st,&#13;
pair river boots. The person taking&#13;
si mi1 will please return . them to E.&#13;
r.:f];".;'s or b»&gt; prosecuted 'to" thefull extent&#13;
ot the law.&#13;
John Parker.&#13;
DENTISTRY.&#13;
Mr. Harrington will ship another&#13;
lot of sheep to New York next week.&#13;
Wm. Hotf returned to-day from a&#13;
several weeks' visit with friends in&#13;
Superior and Ypsilanti.&#13;
Dr. Rainey announces that he will&#13;
be in Pinckney again Nov. 10th, to remain&#13;
one week.&#13;
Miss Lizzie Darrow has been visiting&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Arnold, at Three&#13;
Rivers for the past two weeks.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Kennedy returned last&#13;
week from a long visit with her son&#13;
in Ogemaw county.&#13;
An "Ann Arbor man has 12,000 head&#13;
of cabbage which he will work up into&#13;
sauer kraut. •*&#13;
The average yield of wheat in&#13;
Michigan this year is about 16 bushed&#13;
per acre.&#13;
An examination of Teachers by the&#13;
County Board, was held at the Pinckney&#13;
Public school building in Pinoki&#13;
ney Friday and Saturday last.&#13;
Miss Frankie Burch closed her&#13;
school at Unadilla last week Saturday,&#13;
and was the recipient of a handsome&#13;
present from her pupils.&#13;
At the prize skating match Thursday&#13;
evening last, the rink was filled,&#13;
and some very fine exhibitions of fancy&#13;
skating are rej.&gt;orted. The prize, a&#13;
handsome cameo ring was awarded&#13;
to Miss Julia Barnard.&#13;
Miss Maggie Mercer, ot Hartland,&#13;
has been the guest of her sister, Mrs.&#13;
K. H. Crane, for a couple of weeks&#13;
past.&#13;
Lakin &amp; S;rkes have got nicely settled&#13;
in their new store at the "west&#13;
end," with shelves and counters chock&#13;
full ot new goods. •»&#13;
Mr. Austerbanks and family, of Novi,&#13;
Oakland countv, are the guests of&#13;
THE 1U&#13;
Cuts&#13;
Buckleu's Arnica Salve.&#13;
•:ST SALVE in the Vorld for&#13;
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Saltlkhruin,&#13;
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
i 1 a mis, Ch \\ bla i H,S. '--Corns. and-a-U-.- kin-&#13;
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,&#13;
or no pay' required. It is guaranteed&#13;
to give perfect satisfaction, or money&#13;
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.&#13;
For Sale, at WINCHELL'S Dure; STOI:K.&#13;
An enterprising, Reliable House.&#13;
Winchell's Drug Store can always&#13;
be relied upon, not only to carry in&#13;
stock the best of everything, but to&#13;
secure the Agency for'svu-h articles as&#13;
have well-known merit, and arc popular&#13;
with the- people, thereby &gt;u.-t.aiu-&#13;
4ng the reputation -of—be-inur a 1 ways&#13;
enterprising, and'ever reliable. Having&#13;
secured the Agency for the celebrated&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption, will sell it on a positive&#13;
guarantee. It will Vurelv cure anv&#13;
I will&#13;
lo,h an&#13;
pleased t&#13;
vic&gt;&#13;
W i&#13;
in Pinckney Moi day. Nov.&#13;
lain one week . Shall be&#13;
•e all who desire, my seribn'His&#13;
at the Monitor House.&#13;
iUo ie m Unadilla, Mondav.&#13;
Nov. -'- I and relnain"one week.&#13;
Respectful'v,&#13;
W. R. Rainey, Dentist..&#13;
CUT.HANE IJHOS.—Cooperage. and Repair&#13;
Shop.---Apple Barrels. Flour Earrels&#13;
and Tight work of all kinds-;—-Repairing&#13;
done on short notice.&#13;
Shop in the foundry building just&#13;
ea&gt;r oi the school house, Pinckney,&#13;
.Mich. Prices reasonable. . ,&#13;
C^r-Those , receiving their papers with a red&#13;
X over this para^raph^wlll please notice that their&#13;
subscription expires with nest number. A blue X&#13;
sutiiries that the time has expired, and that. In accordance&#13;
with our rules, the paper will be discontinued&#13;
until subscription is renewed.&#13;
n N C O E Y PRODUCE MARKET.&#13;
CORRECTED W E E K L Y B Y&#13;
Oct.80,1884. TOMPKINS &amp;ISMON.&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,...&#13;
" " ^ d T X w T u f e ; . -&#13;
Oata,.&#13;
'• No. -i red,.&#13;
" No. 3 red,.&#13;
rley, 1 ttXiil&#13;
'M,. 7E&amp;1&#13;
ed Apples C&amp;MU&#13;
Potatoes,&#13;
Butter,&#13;
Eggs,&#13;
Dressed Hft^s, per WOffis&#13;
Dressed Chickens&#13;
Clov«r Seed&#13;
.72-&#13;
.68-&#13;
.2.V&#13;
5()-&#13;
(XIand&#13;
every affection ot Throat Lungs,&#13;
and Chest, and to show our confidence,&#13;
we invite you to call and get a trial&#13;
Bottle Free.&#13;
It is well known that the Kidnevs&#13;
•!;•• the human sewers, which wash&#13;
a &lt;/ the impurities and debris'&#13;
Wi.uu they become clogged or inactive,&#13;
Kel'logg's Columbian Oil will remove&#13;
the cause and create a healthy&#13;
action, and effect a permanent cure.&#13;
LOCAL JOTTINGS.&#13;
J. H. Barton has purchased the&#13;
residence now occupied by G-. W.&#13;
Ho?.'&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. N. Whitcorab visited&#13;
friends in Oakland county the past&#13;
we*ek.&#13;
"Rev. K. H.{Crane' attended the meeting&#13;
of the Congregational Association&#13;
at Ypsilanti last week.&#13;
Half a score (nearly) 6t the Candl-&#13;
7 75&lt;&amp;8.&#13;
4()1)66 4&#13;
.25-&#13;
.22-&#13;
• IS.&#13;
ou.&#13;
0&#13;
50.&#13;
ITEUS OF IVrKKKST.&#13;
A very desirable house, barn ai.j&#13;
two village lots for sale, situated or.&#13;
Main Street. For terms inquire of_ T,&#13;
Reading Notices.&#13;
To any anybody who has disease of&#13;
throat or lungs, we will send proof&#13;
that Pjso's Cure tov Consumption has&#13;
cured the same complaints in other&#13;
cases. Address,&#13;
E. T. HAZELTINE, Warren, Pa.&#13;
Uric acid in the blocd is the cause&#13;
iof all rheumatism. This acid is the&#13;
cause of infiamation, which is the&#13;
source of great pain. ~It is through&#13;
the inaction of the Kidneys that the&#13;
acid accumulates in the JWood. Kellogg's&#13;
Columbian Oil acts directly cm&#13;
thfi-K4dneys, and .thereby removes the&#13;
cause of all Rheumatism", and effects&#13;
permanent cure^&#13;
uoxes,&#13;
eld.&#13;
Drug&#13;
Grimes or on the premises o( Mis.&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section&#13;
at Irish's Planing Mill. Plain&#13;
Eletyric Bitters, at Windie]!'.&#13;
Store.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTICE.&#13;
Parties having Organs that need repairing&#13;
can have them put in first&#13;
class order by calling on&#13;
C. L. Colliei, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
The M. E. Parsonagev a - very desirable&#13;
property. For terms inquire of&#13;
C. E. Hollister, VY. D. Lakin, F. L.&#13;
Brown, Dan~JacksonrWr-Pr -WTfcor;&#13;
Trustees.&#13;
A fine full blood -Jersey Bull for&#13;
sale cheap. Inquire of&#13;
Jobin Hams. •&#13;
A few full blooded bucks Jor sale.&#13;
Apply ^ o ~ ^ J L . A. Barton, Unadilla.&#13;
dates for county officers were in town&#13;
Tuesday. Also Hon. E. B. Winans&#13;
made a iriendly call at the DISPATCH&#13;
office.&#13;
A friendly note from W. B. Jenkins&#13;
says he lias hud an excellent crop this&#13;
year on his new farm near Bear Lake,&#13;
They had no frost until the 9th of&#13;
October.&#13;
The Methodist Society at Unadilla&#13;
will give a soeial at the residence of&#13;
R. Baumm &gt;Vednesday evening next,&#13;
the proceeds to fio toward purchasing&#13;
stoves for the parsonage.&#13;
We have on exhibition a common&#13;
garden radish grown by J. J. Hause,&#13;
Esq., which we think will "take the&#13;
rjhhnn," We .will give its dimensions&#13;
and if y&lt;Tu think our word isn't -as*&#13;
good as George Washington's, call and&#13;
see the "root sass" with your own eyes:&#13;
.WAipht Ififrlha.&#13;
Circumference, 1 7 | inches.&#13;
Length, S6 inches.&#13;
Mr. arid Mrs. S. N. Whitcomb.&#13;
L. V. L). Cook, the genial candidate&#13;
for Sheriff on the Democratic ticket,&#13;
paid the -Di* 'ATCH office a brief visit&#13;
to-day.&#13;
Mr. Harvey, a brakeman on the Air&#13;
Line, had one of his arms~raangled the&#13;
other day while coupling cars on the&#13;
west bound freight.&#13;
Corn is estimated at 85 per cent ot&#13;
a full crop and 95 per cent of an average&#13;
crop in Michigan this year. Some&#13;
termers in this vicinity have an extra&#13;
good crop.&#13;
. On SaturehtyrNov. 1st, the Township&#13;
Board of Registration-will be $n&#13;
session to register the names of any&#13;
new voters who may have come into&#13;
the township since last election, and&#13;
to correct the poll list generally.&#13;
The Normal Class ot the Pinckney&#13;
public school closed it? labors Thursday&#13;
evening last, and presented their&#13;
teacher, Prof. Sprout with a handsome&#13;
token of their affection and esteem—a&#13;
fine easy chair.&#13;
Wilber F. Storey, for many years&#13;
publisher and proprietor of the Chicago&#13;
Times, but previously a Michigan&#13;
newspaper man. died at his home&#13;
in Chicago, Monday last.&#13;
Judge Chattortoa-r-ef Mason, ad&#13;
Mr. Mott, an old resident of Howell,&#13;
was buried Sunday last.&#13;
Miss Harger, of Marion, is the guest&#13;
of her cousin, Miss Millie Barnard.&#13;
Wm. R. Miller, Democratic candidate&#13;
for County Treasurer, made us&#13;
a brief call while in town this afternoon.&#13;
Rev. Hodgkiss and other prohibitionists&#13;
will speak at the Town&#13;
Hall this evening.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Barton will visit&#13;
Chicago and western cities, on their&#13;
wedding tour.&#13;
Deli Beebe, ot Fowlerville, has&#13;
been very ill with bilious fever for a&#13;
couple of weeks past..&#13;
James Markey, Esq., returned today&#13;
from Sandusky, Ohio, where he&#13;
has been spending a few days on business.&#13;
:&#13;
Rev. Geo. F. Waters gave a masterly&#13;
address on the temperance question&#13;
at the Howell Opera House Saturday&#13;
evening last&#13;
The Howell Roller Skating Rink&#13;
will be opened to-morrow (Friday)&#13;
evening, with an exhibition by Prof.&#13;
Haytoih&#13;
Tompkins &amp; Ismon have again&#13;
made arrangements to ship grain to&#13;
Port Huron and points east, so the&#13;
farmers may be sure that Pinckney&#13;
will not be behind in the wheat market.&#13;
C D , VanWinkleyEi&gt;q^ now—walk*&#13;
with a cane. He fell from a load of&#13;
stalks last week; spraining his ankle&#13;
quite badly. "Justice is lame" in this&#13;
instan' e surely.&#13;
Five days more and the great campaign&#13;
of 1884 will be a thing of the&#13;
past Well for the business interests&#13;
of the country that its termination is&#13;
so near.&#13;
Jay Allen, of Dexter, soirof E r A.&#13;
Allen, formerly of this village, is reported&#13;
to be dying trom the effect of&#13;
the wound accidentally received some&#13;
time since while hunting.&#13;
While all the other presidential candidates&#13;
have their supporters in this&#13;
vicinity w© don't hear anybody pleading&#13;
the cause oi Belva Lockwood.&#13;
Won't somebody please speak a good&#13;
word for the old lady ?&#13;
Anaoji Bennett brought us last&#13;
night a rose which had blossomed&#13;
since tfce late frosts. Both leaves and&#13;
flower were fresh as in summer, notwithstanding&#13;
the fact that it grew in&#13;
an unprotected spot in the garden.&#13;
dressed a very fair audience, Tuesday&#13;
evening,; alrthe town hall, He presented&#13;
the tariff question from a Republican&#13;
stand-point and held his audience&#13;
wellthrcagh q u i t e a lengthy speech&#13;
consisting largely of statistical information.&#13;
Wm. Black's team ran away yester^&#13;
da^, with a load of wood. The wood&#13;
was loaded on an ordinary box7 and&#13;
piled tip to- a considerable/neight&#13;
When iust in front of Richafds &amp; Co's&#13;
store some of the wood slipped down&#13;
from the front of the loa'd and struck&#13;
the horses frightening tnem so that&#13;
they started up Main street at a lively&#13;
pace. Mr. Black7 lost his foothold and&#13;
slid down behHid the horses heels, but&#13;
with Tortamate presence of mind&#13;
The feLtawing Patents were granted&#13;
to citixe«8 of MICHIGAN, bearing date&#13;
Oct. 21, 1884, reported expressly for&#13;
this naper by Louis Bagger &amp; Co., Mechanical&#13;
Experts and Solicitors of Patents,&#13;
Washington,; D. C.&#13;
Baker, W. H., Oxiord. draft equalizer,&#13;
306,995. . ' „ . 7~&#13;
Barnes, Emory, Mount Pleasant,&#13;
door protector, 306,806..&#13;
Braziet, Daniel, Detroit^ grate for&#13;
stoves and furnaces, 307,010. / -&#13;
Brown, CL £., Jackson, Castle, 306,-&#13;
899.&#13;
Corder, J- W., Grand Rapids, fire escape,&#13;
307,019.&#13;
figgleston, L. B . ^ n d P. Brinkerhoi,&#13;
Battle Creek, cable railway, 306,-&#13;
909. /&#13;
Geiger, Leonard, Hudson, projectile,&#13;
306,739.&#13;
Higby, 0. W., Jackson, bustle,&#13;
306,829. /&#13;
Moses7, Joseph, Lapeer, wagon running&#13;
gear, (2 patents) 306,052 and&#13;
306,053.&#13;
/Penruddock, J . H., Fort Gratiot*&#13;
.locomotive fire-box, 306,357.&#13;
Peters, R. GM Manistee^- circular&#13;
sawing machine, 306,949.&#13;
Ray, J. FM Detroit, electric meter.&#13;
306,957. •&#13;
Schuett, H. J.f Detroit, combined&#13;
cigar-tip punch and former, 306,867.&#13;
reined the frightened team against a&#13;
heavy latching post in front of Barton&#13;
Jt\Campbell's jewelry storey where&#13;
BORN.&#13;
To Mr. amd Mr*.&#13;
*&amp;tk, a voo.&#13;
G«o. 8 g!«r, Hnnuty, Oct,&#13;
To l b . old MM, Jolia \ itca, Monaay eveain;&#13;
Oci. \.tu,. aoa.&#13;
KAJtRlEB.&#13;
iy came to a halt, with- bat little&#13;
damage to either horses ox driver,&#13;
At tte mUMC*&lt;rf lb* to life's ptxenM, ^ . ^ -&#13;
J«uto Clark, oCJPatnast.&#13;
At lb«zMidMe* of Mr, J. P. Hodgeman, aear&#13;
s&#13;
CPtaoxeJfceadijy*;,a Mittrt.y dPa. yW. aolel,t . oaftNuo, rtit8f&amp;te»MT,» y *^ad3|M, r^» .&#13;
Todd, cdt-AaAAfbori&#13;
-\&#13;
ssjrffc&#13;
"~*a ,UI VtiK 1W»I&#13;
" ^ f ¢^-¾^ *&#13;
._._ . . .&lt;»&gt; ..&#13;
W W W&#13;
^ ' ^ V » , .-.-,. •••• •*-.&#13;
.?•&#13;
1&#13;
n&#13;
"TO COBBBSPOJiDEKTU,&#13;
which t W we vrltu-n. w&#13;
or&#13;
ruu&#13;
'MICHIGAN m «»CHI&#13;
— ^ * &gt; — • - . . . *&#13;
CiltANDMABAlS T H 1 U E D 1 E S .&#13;
F u l l Account o&lt; Uie F i r e W i l l i l U ' f w o&#13;
I ' a t a m t e s — A D r o w n i n g A c e l d « n t .&#13;
GKANU MAKAI3, Oeioher 20.,-Sunday was a&#13;
ead and evemful day lu t h / history ot our&#13;
young and usually qumt village. Ab-.»ut -&#13;
o'clock that mornlne the stable of the urand&#13;
Murals Hotel, owned by John Duggav. was&#13;
discovered to be on lire. The wind was k.owini:&#13;
freshly from the south and such w^s tlie&#13;
rai-i«.!itv witii wLicu the ttauta spread that&#13;
mai v rprrow escapes cm the part ot tne- hotel&#13;
rue sis wire experienced. One unfortunate&#13;
mau named Peter Nelstcr, a Swede, and a&#13;
blacksmith by trade, was observed late Saturday&#13;
i.i-ht to be cocsidorably uuder the Influcn.&#13;
v oi liqu-jr, but this not being an unfrequent&#13;
occurence, no particular notice was ta^en of&#13;
it until he was missed during the fire, and a&#13;
seau-li reveiltHi hit* body, lying lace downwards,&#13;
burnt ai'd :hurred beyond recognition, in au&#13;
alley between the ttableuuu yard feuee, the&#13;
bones of the limbs crumbled into dust.&#13;
Th;* f^kull was completely bereft ol skin&#13;
covering and V. stemed as if the&#13;
chs'of the. hack cf the uwlt contracted&#13;
with the heat to suchau extent that the face&#13;
was elevated above the level of the body, pretentlng&#13;
a fixed, ghastly stare of warning and&#13;
admonition to all who are slaves of the cup.&#13;
The deceased was about 30 years of age, a&#13;
auiet, inoffensive man and good mechanic.&#13;
Little is known of -his previous life, but he resided&#13;
snuao time at Point Ignace and Port Huron&#13;
where it is believed he has friends. The&#13;
flames communicated with the saloon and hall,&#13;
a two-story building 24x60, and soon enveloped&#13;
the hotel, ten feet to the south, which was&#13;
a three-story building 3«x60 feet, and in which&#13;
about 50 people were sleeping, thence passing,&#13;
to an adjoining cottage occupied by Mr. Elllott,&#13;
mail carrier, and thence to Dr. SuydeiV&#13;
new double store, drugs and merchandise. In&#13;
less than two hours $10,000 worth of valuable,&#13;
wed paying property was in ashes. Little is&#13;
known of the insurance as yet, but it is feared&#13;
that nothing commensurate with the loss'is&#13;
earned. During the progress of the lire an&#13;
altercation took place between Mr./Duggan&#13;
and Mr. Oeorge II. Gamble, which threatened&#13;
once to result fatally, Mr. Duggan is under&#13;
urrest.&#13;
There are various theories regarging the&#13;
origin of the fire. Many are of the opinion&#13;
that it was the dark deed of an incendiary,&#13;
while others surmise that the victim, Netster,&#13;
woke up cold, and, not knowing where he was,&#13;
lighted a match which in his stupor he carelessly&#13;
threw aside, thereby setting fire to the&#13;
hay and sLraw about the stable. But two&#13;
ptrcng points contradict this theory, one being&#13;
that it he. was able to light a match he was also&#13;
able to get out of the way of its terrible consequences;&#13;
while, on the other hand, the fire&#13;
originated on the opposite side of the building.&#13;
The bellowing of two cows In the stable, and&#13;
the scrtamiug of two pigs in an adjoining pen,&#13;
attracted the attention of the right watchman&#13;
of Messrs, 13razel bros.' saw-mUl, who immediately&#13;
blew the whistle aud alarmed the sleeping&#13;
villagers&#13;
Since writing the above another man is missing,&#13;
and fears are entertained that he too was&#13;
lost in the lire, His name is Joseph W«ods,&#13;
aged about 30, dark complexion, full beard,&#13;
and Is hoarse, probably from bronchial affection.&#13;
He is supposed to have worked in Dollar&#13;
&lt;Jc Chapman's camp's, and was here but a&#13;
few u3ys, aud all the time more or less intoxicated.&#13;
A Noble S c h e m e .&#13;
Rev. Charles R. Henderson of DeLroit has a&#13;
plan for the relief cf imbeciles, idiots and defective&#13;
pcr^n*. He says that statistics show&#13;
that this class of unfortunates are largely the&#13;
illegitimate offspring of weak-minded girls&#13;
who are not properly cared for by society and&#13;
wco become the prej of evil men. He has&#13;
draf'ed tke plan for a bill to be introduced into&#13;
the. legislature through the efforts of the&#13;
State Board of Charities, to provide for these&#13;
unfortunates. He has also mude a draft of a&#13;
bill to provide for inebriates under the same&#13;
control. The bills have been submitted to a&#13;
lawyer, whr'&gt;, after studying the legal aspects&#13;
of the cases, will prepare them for presentation&#13;
iii proper shape.&#13;
Tiie bill relating to inebriates provides for&#13;
their confinement by process, similar to insane&#13;
prr;"iif=, in the inebriate home, under judicial&#13;
sentence, for period of one, three or six.&#13;
year*, to be released only upon suspended&#13;
sentence. If after t;a yeara of trial the patient&#13;
does not reform- he shall be confined for&#13;
life. Two-thirds of the earnings of the inebriate&#13;
shall go to hi3 family.&#13;
IN THIS S T A T E .&#13;
Flint clotsr.'t want the electric light.&#13;
Gold has been discovered in Marquette county.&#13;
BurElars are uncommonly active throughout&#13;
the :Jtate.&#13;
The addition to the Battle Creek Sanitarian&#13;
f tiiiV.;hed.&#13;
Miss Elber of Alpena fell over in a fit and&#13;
broke her n?ck.&#13;
• 'I i.ere hi good sleighing in the northern part&#13;
cf the lower peninsula.&#13;
H-.K- &gt;• pedal ilccth'ii held at Plain*titlh e&#13;
sit ion to borrow $'i.l0J for use in ivbuildrellcdat&#13;
school lu Baldwin a few days ago and&#13;
Roberts was stabbed three times*&#13;
\ t tboBAPtirt state convention held in K'nton&#13;
a niSuiloii WM adopted urging the establishment&#13;
of a state inebriate asylum.&#13;
Wt'lls W. Fisher, treasurer of Franklin&#13;
township, Roscommon county, Is under arrest&#13;
toTSobt wling 1^00 of the county funds.&#13;
Aldrew Sitodlu toe 8wed« wbo killed Wm.&#13;
Here at Ontonagon a few w«eks ago, baB been&#13;
sentenced to st»te prison for ten year*.&#13;
TheB»y; Cityetreet ear company is held liable&#13;
for the death of little Lovtna Deno, who&#13;
was run over by the cars a few days ago.&#13;
Charles QilH, a GermanS2 years of age, fell&#13;
into the evaporating pan at Crawford a sail&#13;
block, lu Casevill'.', aid was fatally scalded.&#13;
The emigration to CMYCSC-O has been so great&#13;
that it is thought th-' quarter-master-geueral&#13;
will be asked to furuish .cuts, as houses cannot&#13;
be bull'- f**t enough.&#13;
to&#13;
town&#13;
W'.&#13;
At&#13;
prop&lt; . . . .&#13;
ing the w-M-r worivf. pu^ip Infuse uud puretiabing&#13;
u L-k'it ti.ta-for was voted down.&#13;
*' A little two year dau^liicr of William Der.o&#13;
of Bav tUty was run over aud lulled by tae&#13;
street ear.s C n the 21st. The driver was arrested&#13;
on a clur^e or criminal carelessness.&#13;
Prof. L. L. dtone, of Battle Creek, has beeu&#13;
.sued for*5,UOJ damages by Mrs. Henry Ingram,&#13;
who claims he ran into her carriage, causing it&#13;
to overthrow and Injure her very much.&#13;
1 It 5s stated th&amp;t there will be §3,000 tons of&#13;
ore shipped from the Vermillion river iron region&#13;
ia Klinnesota next year. Michigan caplcal&#13;
is largely interested in those mines.&#13;
The village of Hougu4s». in: the Upper Petineula,&#13;
with a population of less than-1,600,&#13;
has issued $25,000 of six per cent, bonds in&#13;
order to tupply its inhabitants wi&gt;h water.&#13;
Up in Preeque Isle eounty, between the Oc^&#13;
quenoc and Rainy r i v e r s , . ^ "farmers claim&#13;
tnatthev have ths rieheit land in the state&#13;
and back it up by cxhlfeitine iS-pound turnips.&#13;
All but about $300' of the money required to&#13;
secure the establishment of the proposed foundry&#13;
at Battle,Creek has been raised. It Is hoped&#13;
to have the foundry running before snow&#13;
*tes. y&#13;
Tb^Homer fruit evaporator has prepared&#13;
2,000 pounds of fruit this season. These evaporators&#13;
aresolvlng the-probiem of what to do&#13;
with Michigan's fine apple crop in a very satisfactory&#13;
manner.&#13;
Unless operations are soon resumed at the&#13;
Calumet and Hecla mine, there will be great&#13;
suffering among the miners. AlreaJy many&#13;
cases of destitution have&#13;
village authorities.&#13;
A young bov ur.mcd Willie HalfiVid was&#13;
killed by iin engine while switching cars at&#13;
Hillsdale. He fell on the track and the engine&#13;
backed over him -before he was discovered,&#13;
killing him instantly.&#13;
During the season just closed there was&#13;
shipped from Monroe 33,310 baskets of grapes,&#13;
averaging fifteen pounds each, and making a&#13;
total of 499,500 pounds. This brought to the&#13;
growers about ^12,000.&#13;
It is a little queer, but it is a fact that the&#13;
roller skating craze is most severe in several&#13;
little mill towns where there is great distress&#13;
on account of the mills having shut down,&#13;
leaving the operatives penniless.&#13;
Mayor Humphrey, of Adrian, is a practical&#13;
kind of moral reformer. The city dead walls&#13;
were placarded with flaming yellow posters of&#13;
a vulgar patent medicine, and the Mayor immediately&#13;
ordered them obliterated.&#13;
The advantages of. an oatmeal diet are various.&#13;
A St. Claff county youth, whose age is&#13;
between 4 and 5, told his mother the other day&#13;
that he ate oatmeal to make his stomach hard,&#13;
so that he could ride down hill better. -,—&#13;
A satltnry convention Js to be held in East&#13;
Saginaw December 3 and.3.&#13;
Grand Rapids' city hall Is to cost $150,000.&#13;
E. E Myers of Detroit is the architect.&#13;
About 13.714 rods of drain have been constructed&#13;
in Ionia county, at a cost of $19,600.&#13;
Certain eastern capitalists are talking of establishing&#13;
a new national bank in Battle Creek.&#13;
Mcody the evangelist will hold a three days&#13;
series of meetings in Detroit, Nov. 21, 22 and&#13;
23.&#13;
Deacon James Kiop of St. Johns, a member&#13;
of the legislature of Michigan la 1857, died on&#13;
the 21st ihst,&#13;
Belva Lock dei.r, will in&#13;
The Flint and Pere Marquette railroad com&#13;
pauy has purchased a large tract of bayou land&#13;
between Brewster and Atwatcr streets, East&#13;
Saginaw, which will be filled to a level with&#13;
surrounding streets, and rented to mill ownc-a&#13;
who wish a site for a lumber yard.&#13;
The total of the St. Clair county's tax apportionment&#13;
for this year is $33,008 89, including&#13;
a county'indebtedness to the state of $10,-&#13;
376 96. Twelve specific objects are enumerated,&#13;
while "general purposes of state" covers $8,-&#13;
436 11.&#13;
Some of the manufacturers will operate on&#13;
their best tracts of pine the coming winter.&#13;
-They recognize the fact that the country is&#13;
flooded with common lumber, and they hope to&#13;
improve matters by having a better grade to&#13;
sell,—Muskegon News.&#13;
Fred Burleigh, crootf, sport and confidence&#13;
man, well known at Graud Rapids, East&#13;
Saginaw and elsewhere in Michigan, took a&#13;
fatal dose of morphine at Grand Rapids, and&#13;
died on the street. He had been drlpklng&#13;
deeply for some time past-&#13;
Mathlas Atcn, a pioneer of Lenawee counly,&#13;
died at his home in the township of Clinton&#13;
recentlv. He leaves a wife, with whom IIJ had&#13;
Jived neariv half a century/two sous and a&#13;
daughter. * He resides upon the name farm&#13;
which he settled when Michigan was comparatively&#13;
a wilderness.&#13;
Sunday, October 19, Mrs. Benjamin Stocking&#13;
of Quiney was crossing the Lake 8hore &amp; Michigan&#13;
railroad track on her way to church,&#13;
when she was struck by a traiu aud instantly&#13;
killed. She was about 65 years old, an earnest,&#13;
ChrisLlan worker and will be mourned by a&#13;
large circle of friends.&#13;
Asa Sheldon, of Midland was robbed of $70&#13;
and several hundred dollars in notes at Eas*&#13;
He claims that a&#13;
woman stole his&#13;
8aginaw, v.hlch r.ow comes to Detroit anil&#13;
Port Huron.&#13;
During the month ot September 61,861 bushels&#13;
of wheat were marketed at six of the nine&#13;
eltvatois in this county. It U estimated that&#13;
the average jleld of coin v1'' acre throughout&#13;
Livingston county will be lil.SO bushels, and&#13;
that our crop of potatoes Is 96 per cent ot an&#13;
average crop, and winter apples about 56 per&#13;
cent of the average yield.—Livingston County&#13;
Republican^&#13;
A fire cecarred at the isolated Ut,tle Vidage&#13;
of Grand Marals, or. the ILHh. A hotel and&#13;
dwelllug&amp;nd two stores were burned. Two&#13;
lives were lost i-.i the hotel. The names were&#13;
not learned. Henry Gamble, a prominent citizen,&#13;
was shot at while the lire was burning&#13;
but was not hit. The loss is not. ascertained.&#13;
Grand Marals is a lumbering village on Lako&#13;
Superior, half way betwem Marquette and&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie.&#13;
A stranger applied to Rev. Dr. Rexford of&#13;
aid, representing&#13;
tiunhewas remanded for trial. Subsequent&#13;
developments prove the man to be Ex-Gov.&#13;
Moses of North Carolina, at one tune one of&#13;
the most, prominent politicians in the South.&#13;
A. C. Davie, the first, aeeut of the great Calumet&#13;
and Hecla miue, has been appointed special&#13;
commissioner to see that the mining interests&#13;
of the Upper Peninsula are properly&#13;
represented in the New Orleans Exposition,&#13;
aud will in that capacity SOJU address himself&#13;
to the managers oflthe different copper niiniue&#13;
companies, who, it is to be hoped, will do&#13;
all '.a their power to see that the copper raining&#13;
industry is properly represented.—Calumet&#13;
News. --&#13;
A fatal accident occurred in Muudy, recently.&#13;
While Emmett Udell was in'the act of&#13;
priming his gun with It reclining across his.&#13;
left arm it accidentally discharged. The force&#13;
of thfi, first charge threw the weapon to the&#13;
floor"breaking the stock and at the same time&#13;
discharging the other barrel, the charge entering&#13;
the right groin. Evidently the charge severed&#13;
the-large aorto leading to the heart, as he&#13;
bled profusely aud lived scarce a minute after&#13;
the accident 0ceurred.&#13;
At Rawsofiville, a little village near Ypsllanti.&#13;
a girl mimed Martha Bell died the other&#13;
morning under suspicious circumstances. An&#13;
inquest showed that an abortion had been attempted.&#13;
The inquest was adjourned and the&#13;
girl's stomach sent to Detroit for analysis.&#13;
Mis* Bell's parents live at Wayne, but for the&#13;
last three years she Eas'Weh living in the family&#13;
ot Michael Bumpus of Rawsonville. Archie&#13;
McCoy, a hired man, admitted having been&#13;
criminally iutimate^with the girl.&#13;
A correspondent asks if it Is true, as stated&#13;
t evening paper, that every votrr in&#13;
the state must register anew this year. No,1&#13;
only in Detroit, in some other special locations&#13;
aud in cities incorporated under the general&#13;
charter law-of 1S73 (act 178). The general&#13;
state law provides for a new registration every&#13;
ten years, beginning with 1SS2. The charter&#13;
of Detroit requires it ewry Presidential election&#13;
year, as does the general charter law for&#13;
cities incorporated under that act.&#13;
Albert Peterson, the.child beater who broke&#13;
•jail here in August, has /or several weeks been&#13;
about his old home in Oecola. Close watch&#13;
has been kept of those who were likely to «lve&#13;
him shelter and sustenance. Last Thursday&#13;
Charley Newman and two companions met him.&#13;
in a piece of.woods, and after getting his gun&#13;
in their hands, on a pretense of trading, took&#13;
him prisoner. However, he succeeded lu getting&#13;
away and is still at large, though quite a&#13;
posse'of men in Hartland tried to catch him&#13;
when he passed through that township in his&#13;
flight.—Livingston Conniy Repnhliraa.&#13;
NTH AY STKAWN.&#13;
England refuses to mediate between France&#13;
aud China.&#13;
The Pacific railroads owe the United States&#13;
$10,2V3,7i)3.&#13;
The postofllce department lacks $13,593,137&#13;
of being self-bustalulng.&#13;
English consen stives are seeking a compromise&#13;
on the franchise bill.&#13;
An attempt was made the other day &lt;o wreck&#13;
the train upon which Gen. Logan was traveling.&#13;
AH unsuccessful attempt was made a few&#13;
days ago to assassinate Kiu^ Leopold of Belgium.&#13;
Mills In different parts of New Hampshire&#13;
have been obliged to shut down for want of&#13;
water.&#13;
There arc hundreds-of homeless and starving&#13;
rtshermeu on the north shore of the gulf of St.&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
It is stated that the expense of the Nile expedition&#13;
will be mot by addlug a penny to the&#13;
income tax.&#13;
The British man of-war R-uubler has received&#13;
orders to proceed to Chinese waters in No-.&#13;
Ye m bee.&#13;
The libel suit brought by Blaine against the&#13;
Indianapolis Sentinel has been postponed until&#13;
December 23.&#13;
Five men were killed by the explosion of a&#13;
threshing machine boiler at Red L*ke, Minn.,&#13;
on the 21st iust.&#13;
Chicago policemen have been,ordered to arrest&#13;
airwomen seen otrthe street J n "Mother&#13;
Hubbard" dresses.&#13;
The chief examiner of the patent ofllce has&#13;
rendered 'a "decision granting ptjorltv of !nventlon&#13;
of the telephone to-Bell.&#13;
TtvenLy-two&lt; women working ia the chain&#13;
gang was the spectacle seen by the cltisena of&#13;
A t l a n t a , P a . , r e c e n t l y . _&#13;
•~&gt; It is proposed to , raise by subscriptions a&#13;
fund of £10,000for the benefit of the family of&#13;
the late Alexander M. Sullivan.&#13;
The village of Calorydornie, near Quebec,&#13;
ha^ been completely wiped out by fire. People&#13;
weru forced to flee to the sea for safety.&#13;
AUxandtrM. Sullivan, the-well.known Irish&#13;
leader, and one of the founders of the homerule&#13;
movement, died at Dublin, October 17.&#13;
It-iS8tatednow_thatthe Egyptian army will&#13;
be reduced to 4,000 men with eighteen Eagllsh&#13;
officers. The police force v ill be increased to&#13;
3,000,&#13;
The Canadian Government will pay the, sum&#13;
of $T4U|0C0 In estimates the coming sessionjjp&#13;
lay a sable between Nova Scotia and Sable Islaud.&#13;
President Theodore D. Woolscy his resigned&#13;
from the Yale college corporation bt'cau'se of&#13;
hl6 advanced age."' He will be t3 years old next&#13;
month. - -&#13;
ThcR. C. archbishop of Quebec acknowledges&#13;
the receipt-of $50U for tne relief of Labrador&#13;
poor, from Mrs. Maitland, of Nouville&#13;
Gleheoe, 111.&#13;
Miss Etntdla Burgher, z teacher in the public&#13;
schools of Columbus, 0., wai throwu from a&#13;
buggy the other evening aud instantly killed.&#13;
Increase of the tlave trade has furnished&#13;
Gladstone with a pretext for ordering a BritLsh&#13;
protectorate oyer "New'Guinea. Slaves have&#13;
been captured.&#13;
-The breaking of a dam a!, Anfonia, Com:.,&#13;
did great damage to property. The water&#13;
power is abut ofi from ail the mills and 10,00u&#13;
people are out of work.&#13;
Commissioner cf Pensions. Dudley, emphatically&#13;
denies that one dollar for campaign purposes&#13;
has been paid out of tne general fund In&#13;
the pension commission.&#13;
JU M i T K O I T T i ? ! A K * k J K T » .&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white.. $&#13;
:Whear—No. 2 red&#13;
10&#13;
wood,&#13;
the would-be woman-predvade&#13;
Michigan, and make eam-&#13;
''•A! tCiiwi&#13;
of Bay City,&#13;
ie lumbsjrbusiare&#13;
thrown&#13;
down of&#13;
-,&#13;
.I'.'n-s Netbitt, of Flint, took morphine to&#13;
ci'.ot; hii toothache, got too large a dose and died&#13;
i'fom the (ilecte.&#13;
The assessed valuation of Bay County, is&#13;
$14,255,070, of which $11,415,260 is real and&#13;
\h40y401 personal.&#13;
Tu&gt;Allegan county supervisors have rsised&#13;
(Ac balarlc^nafthc treasurer and_prosecuting&#13;
miorney-fo SL^OO-eaeh&#13;
Dascum Culver, a pUmcjjr&#13;
prominently identified wit&#13;
neos of the btate, is dead.&#13;
Over 100 mill men at Au&#13;
out of employment byMUKT&amp;huttlng&#13;
the two mills in tb&gt;rplace.&#13;
Mlchiganhorte-brceders formed an organizationJp^&#13;
Jifckson a few da\s ago, to promote&#13;
thejbrtfeding of fine horses.&#13;
During the season ot 185:4 200 rods -of new&#13;
stone road have been constructed in bay&#13;
county at a cost of $6,340 03.&#13;
A South Haven farmer recently mark&#13;
$2,100 load of cabbage seed and it wjuxft as&#13;
heavy as a load of wheat either.&#13;
T. 8. Freeman, formerjjr'editor of the&#13;
Petoekcy Record, has^Kceived a fortune of&#13;
#211,000 from a defected relative.&#13;
Charles Roartno a n ^ Erneat Roberts quar-&#13;
He has&#13;
with his&#13;
suspects&#13;
Saginaw. pocketbook and pessed tt to a man.&#13;
Identified the man who ran away&#13;
pocketbook, who was one of the six&#13;
who had been arrested.&#13;
At the regular meeting of the Adrian scientific&#13;
society recently an interesting experiment&#13;
was conducted to test the anKsthctic properties&#13;
of gasoline. A mouse waa subjected to&#13;
the vapor and manifested the ordinary symptoms&#13;
produced by chloroform and other actesthetlcs.—&#13;
Adrian Times.&#13;
Deubcl'.Bros., millers, etc., at Ypsilanti, propose&#13;
to light, their mill by electricity, and make&#13;
the citizens a proposition to furmsn light for&#13;
stores, etc., at $1 p:-r mouth for each lamp.&#13;
As thev USL- their iucxhaustable, water power&#13;
to drive the dynamo machines, they can furnish&#13;
the light very cheaply.&#13;
Will Spencer formerly lived luGra^rRapIdsj,&#13;
He went to Dakota. The oihor^day he dislocated&#13;
Lis t-houlder. •Dak^tfrf'talent was not&#13;
equal to the emcrgencyr He came home to&#13;
Grand"Rapids, fcad^s physician replace his&#13;
shoulder wherVlt belonged and then returned&#13;
to Dako&gt;&lt;tfaving traveled 1,200 miles.&#13;
,e J. R. Foster of Coopersville, county&#13;
(urveyor, was surveying in the woods near&#13;
Holland, recently, a sportsman mistook his&#13;
horse for a deer and shot it dead. As the&#13;
horse was a jet' black there is a strong prob&#13;
bility that that hunter had drawn too J±c«?ily&#13;
on the sutler's department for liqu,"^&#13;
ment&#13;
Mrs. Emma G. Nunn^eTVassar, Mich., has&#13;
secured letters patejarfor an invention which&#13;
she hopes will-aommend itself to systematic&#13;
housekMepewTltls a simple and strongly made&#13;
heat Ijidfcator for ovens, and is so arranged&#13;
tbatriy consulting a dial the amount of heat lu&#13;
an oven may be ascertained and accordingly&#13;
If the Saginaw, Tuscola and Huron road be&#13;
extended to Bad Axe it will cross the road&#13;
from Pontiac to Caseville, two miles from&#13;
Bay Port, its present terminus, and Intersect&#13;
the Port Huron A Northwestern at Bad Axe.&#13;
This would send considerable trade to East&#13;
Flour 4 50&#13;
Corn : 50&#13;
Oats 26&#13;
Ryp '."....' .T.'."... 3 65&#13;
Clover Seed, $ bu 4 75&#13;
Timotby Seed ¥ bu 1 55&#13;
Apples per bbl 1 25&#13;
Butter,* lb 20&#13;
Eggs *. 17&#13;
Chickens C9&#13;
Turkeys , 12 @&#13;
Potatoes •/, 35 (¾ *u&#13;
Onions per, bu 40 @ 45&#13;
Honey - 13 (¾ 15&#13;
Beans, picked 1 25 @ 1 50&#13;
Beans, unpicked . . 0 9 0 (a) 1 00&#13;
Hay.. 13 00 @13 50&#13;
Straw 6 00 1 7 00&#13;
Pork, dressed, V 100 6 00 &lt;j$ 6 10&#13;
Pork, mess new S 00 @ 8 50&#13;
Pork, family 18 50 ($13 75&#13;
Hams 13¾¾ 14&#13;
Shoulders B&gt;tf$ 9&#13;
Lard , 9 @ 10&#13;
Beef, extra mess la 00 ¢¢12 ,50&#13;
Wood, Beech and Maple 4 50(85 0)&#13;
Wood, Maple 0 25&lt;»)6 50&#13;
' Wood, Hickorv . . . 5 00(¾&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
CATTLE—Exports, $660@7; choice shtpplns&#13;
$5 9006 50: common to fair, $4(j|5 GO; Texan,&#13;
M 40@4.&#13;
SnBBP- Inferior to fair, $2 1C@3; medium,&#13;
$3@4 25; Texans, $2 10@3.&#13;
HOGS—Rough packing, $4 75@5 15; packing&#13;
aud shipping, $5 20Cq!o 7n; light, $4 60@5 £5;&#13;
skins and grasses?, $3 &lt;6@4 50, Closed weak:&#13;
7,000 unsold.&#13;
A GOOD M A N Y F A I L U R E S . "&#13;
— D u r i n g tbo voar 1883 t h e r e wero 10,-&#13;
Tull Oaki from Little Acorns fcirow.&#13;
Groat anji good results often Hprin^&#13;
from smMl d e e d s tmd so fatal disuaaes&#13;
coiuo of H scjomintjly trilling ueglect. •&#13;
('olds neglected otmn ioud to serious&#13;
c a t a r r h a l troubles. If this is your caso&#13;
loso no time in b e c o m i n g a c q u a i n t e d&#13;
with Dr, S a g e ' s C a t a r r h r e m e d y . I t s&#13;
healing virtues will s u r p r i s e you. It is&#13;
simple, eilicacious, speedy, .sure. D u l l ,&#13;
heavy h e a d a c h e , obstruction of t h e n a -&#13;
sal passages, d i s c h a r g e s from t h e nose&#13;
i n k i l h a i h r o a t a r o s y m p t o m s of this&#13;
horrible c o m p l a i n t .&#13;
Polecat Colloge is the n a m o of a collego&#13;
in Georgia.&#13;
" F r o z e n F a c t a " is a p u r e l y A m e r i c a n&#13;
expression, a n d o n e , too, of recenfc \&#13;
origin. I t h a s tbo m e r i t of a t t r a c t i n g&#13;
attention, and also sooms to bear convielioa&#13;
of truthfulness ou its face. Wo&#13;
m a k e room in o u r i?sue of to-day for a&#13;
fact of this c h a r a c t e r . A correspondent,&#13;
Henry• W h i t i n g , E s q . , of B o s t o n ,&#13;
Mass., says: " D r . K. V. FiercB'S&#13;
'Golden Medical Discovery' lias c u r e d&#13;
m y son of a fever-sore- of two years1&#13;
stanrling. P l e a s e a c c e p t our g r a t i -&#13;
t u d e . " Wo beliovo it to bo :* fact, &lt;&#13;
wht-tl'ior " f r o z e n " or otherwise, t h a t&#13;
A m e r i c a needs m o r e m e n like Mr.&#13;
Wliitiug; rava who nut, -nrnr-vyiju in-"&#13;
Te'istiglftiMxiTlliSr^^'~&amp;etz"6 op'pTfttffit^&#13;
ties. -" _&#13;
bpain is&#13;
country..&#13;
the greatest lead-producing&#13;
If all so-called remedies have failed,&#13;
Dr. Sage's remedy cures.&#13;
The Italian ironclads are pronounced&#13;
unsoaworthy.&#13;
Ca r b o l i s a IVO cures I t c h i n g s uni. I r r i t a t i o n s of&#13;
theSkin &amp; SCUIIJ, Poison* Bites of lrmects, Pllea,&#13;
I'lcers, Ac. Cures Burns and Sculda w i t h o u t a scar.&#13;
email boxes 26c: larae75c. Get the senaine. 8ol&lt;l by&#13;
i&gt;rugai8ts. J, W. COLE ft CO., Black RiYerFallB, \Ti».&#13;
An Association Which Pays its Members&#13;
— at Marriage a Benefit,&#13;
The association Is&#13;
Marriage Benevolent&#13;
known a&amp; the&#13;
Association of&#13;
Mutual&#13;
Marinc-&#13;
City, huving been incoporated under the laws&#13;
of Michigan in 1SS3, it is the only institution&#13;
of its kind in the state. The association has&#13;
paid in beneflta siace August 2, $6P00J. and is&#13;
paying several tnousandamonth to "its members.&#13;
"rr~iif.;rfa'.d-iGEOKGs MCHANET of Marine&#13;
City $1,000, OHVILLE MCDONALD $1,000, Mas.&#13;
ROSE MCDONALD $1,0OU, WALTKK WEHBSR&#13;
* 1,000, WM. G. PniLWM $2-50, FKKD)SOVBBZI«N&#13;
$250 E N. WEBBEK$l,0ve)iand several othera.in&#13;
Michigan aud Canada. ^&#13;
letters of acknowledgement&#13;
many the association are re-&#13;
1 lie nil&#13;
sro .s f\'':i_&#13;
owing&#13;
;.&gt;:' the&#13;
.'IVi&#13;
It is rumored that the Chinese govertjr.Ru!,&#13;
has concluded a loan of 2,00'J,000 taels with *&#13;
banking firm. Half a million are sild to have&#13;
beeu paid luto the Canton treasury on account.&#13;
The New York supreme court has decided&#13;
that sleeping car companies are not common&#13;
carriers, but BTprely furnish conveniences&#13;
for sleeping, the railroad company being the.&#13;
carrier.&#13;
^Thc StrJamea (London) Gazette in a hading&#13;
editorial 'predicts a serious uprlslfltf in&#13;
India, and bases its prediction on charges of&#13;
incompetency and favoritism on the part of&#13;
the British officials resident there.&#13;
A ten percent reduction took effect thoothtr&#13;
morning in the wages of the employes • of tne&#13;
Ntrnoek &amp; Brittaln manufacturing company.&#13;
This is the second reduction this year and falls&#13;
rather severely. About 500 men are affected.&#13;
Gen. Wolseley has been granted fuller supplies&#13;
in Egypt under a threat that he would&#13;
—resign otherwise.—An earlv aclvauct is cxp'tct-&#13;
568 failures in tho United States and&#13;
Canada. Soino of t h e m were big concerns,&#13;
and some wero very small. Failu&#13;
r e is sorrowful . business t o any&#13;
m a n , especially if it is his&#13;
health that fails. A g r e a t man:&#13;
times 10,568 people fail in h e a l t h i a r t h o&#13;
course of a year. M a n y o l ^ h e m r n i g h t&#13;
bo saved if they w o u l d ^ a l E o B r o w n ' s&#13;
Iron Bitters, the. gr^atTiamily medicine&#13;
and restorer ol^vasted health.&#13;
• •&#13;
Thejdtfndon press is still divided as&#13;
tary Anderson's draniaUc powers.&#13;
CARBOLINE.&#13;
Sourish-&#13;
He wins at, last who builds his trust&#13;
Iu loving words jiiid i.CIons just,&#13;
Vv'hose htail, whose walk, bis ver^rnlen,&#13;
Pruchdm the use of' Car.boihi^.&#13;
T h e l i m e s t o n e ^ r o r Georgia's&#13;
State Hoasojwffl cost $862,756.&#13;
ed at Wady Haifa. The Nile is rising rapidly;&#13;
373 Canadian boatmen have reached Assouan.&#13;
Gen^Grant has been bu«y all summer in&#13;
the preparation of his series of r.rclclcs for the&#13;
Century magazine, on the decisive battles of&#13;
the war, aim he has come to like the work so&#13;
well that, he haa already commenced a volume&#13;
of personal reminiscences.&#13;
Theezamicer-ln-ehlof of the patent cfllee has&#13;
rendered a decision awarding to Alexander&#13;
Graham Bell priority of invention of the telephone&#13;
receiver. This was awarded by the&#13;
examiner below to McDonough The point at&#13;
issue Is regarded as the principal feature of&#13;
the telephonic iuvention.&#13;
Adrlen Hitt, who started from the East&#13;
River bridge, Juue 19, to walk to California&#13;
on a wagerjof $2,000 that be could make 80&#13;
miles a day, won the bet, and is now on his&#13;
way walking back on a wager of $4,00X1, to&#13;
reach New York ia f 0 days. He has g;&#13;
12 pounds.&#13;
The amaua^ report of the acti:&#13;
cate general of the army hae^beeh submitted&#13;
to the secretary of wai&gt;^The report shows an&#13;
increased nuraber^-crf court martiala in all&#13;
branches ot ihe-^ervke, and recommends various&#13;
mimy^-changts lu tne rules governing militarY^&#13;
tfrisprudence.&#13;
editor of the Cluciunati Commercial Gazette,&#13;
was found near hi^s home the other morning&#13;
with his neck broken. He was vtry aged, and&#13;
in coming from a i;ch&gt;hbo*-'&amp; the night before,&#13;
inthe darkness he had fjilk-n over «cme obstacle.&#13;
TheM..:ualM&#13;
Marine City,&#13;
GiNTLBUEN.—I&#13;
acknowledging th&#13;
VMILTON, ONT., Oct. 8,1SS4.&#13;
rhvge Benevolent Association^,&#13;
lien. ^ ^&#13;
have much pleasure in&#13;
receipt of your draft in full&#13;
of my certificates (1 to 4) inclusive, for $1,000.&#13;
It, is especially pleasing to me as a member&#13;
of your association to ace the remarkable progrcsa&#13;
of your aiSsHMation, also the prompt maum;&#13;
r in wnieh all ciaims on the association are&#13;
settled.&#13;
It Is an acknowledged fact that no investment&#13;
in the Uslted dute3 does produce the&#13;
very large profit that can be derived from a&#13;
few certificates with you.&#13;
We're your eysten; more carefully studied&#13;
ty the young men of this continent, your business&#13;
iLstead of being one million dollars per&#13;
ye;ir, would be twenty millions.&#13;
However, your Benevolent Association can&#13;
not help but soon be so popular that it will be&#13;
as common to ask when a young man marries,&#13;
was he a member of the Mutual Marriage&#13;
Benovolent Association, as to aak" If he was insured&#13;
at death.&#13;
Wishing the Association, the tu*cess it so&#13;
richly deserves.&#13;
1 am yours truh,&#13;
E.'N. \ V E B « 2 * .&#13;
POUT HVKON, Mich., Oct. 6, 1854.&#13;
To the Editor of the TIMES :&#13;
Will you kindly grant me space In your valuable&#13;
paper to acknowledge the receipt of $350,&#13;
being the amount due me on the benefit certlhcate&#13;
Issued to me Sept. 17, 18b3, by the Mutual&#13;
Marriage Benevolent Association of Marine&#13;
City. My claim has been paid promptly by&#13;
the Treasurer, Ed. J. Rogers, and I frankly&#13;
state that my deallugs with the Association&#13;
have been perfectly satisfactory in every respect.&#13;
This plan of insurance is safe and&#13;
ckeap, and I advise all my young uumarried&#13;
friends (ladles and gentlemen) to become&#13;
members of the M. M. B. A. Thanking the&#13;
officers for their 'genM''manly' deallugs, \x€-&#13;
main - Yours, Etc.,&#13;
i'KSD. D . ^ O r B U E I Q N .&#13;
For further particulars-address R. McNeil,&#13;
Secretary, Marine^jCrty, Mich.' It will pay&#13;
you.&#13;
"ROUGI&#13;
amoot&#13;
DKNT1ST" TOOTH POWDER. Kin©&#13;
laanslnK, Refreshing, P r e s e r v a t i v e , l i e&#13;
THE ELBEHON."&#13;
The new wood burning Parlor stove. " The&#13;
EiberoTr," better known as the '^Cleveland:&#13;
Wonder," Is exciting the admiration and wonder,&#13;
of "all who have seen It. The Ladies pro&#13;
nounce it " perfe'cTljTovetyT1 Iu~'form it re7*7"&#13;
semblts an elegant modern residence, with bay&#13;
window, Mansard roof, cornices, doors., windows,&#13;
veranda, etc., and Is consiuered by aU to&#13;
Griffin Halstcad, father of Murat Halstead, "tSFttixrhandsomest etove structure ever pro-&#13;
- . - duced. It is a base heater; also double heater,&#13;
and s said to be s(m'ply perfect In its operations.&#13;
Special inducements are being offered&#13;
to one or two influential partus ui each town&#13;
for introductory purposes. Write Coopeeratlve&#13;
Stove Co., Cleveland, Oido, for full description&#13;
and particulars.&#13;
new&#13;
FOR IETING THROAT TROUBLES&#13;
AND COUGHS " —&#13;
"Brown's Bronchial Troche*" have a worldwide&#13;
reputation. Sold only m botes. Price 25 cents. '_ '&#13;
Evangelist Moody will start a revival&#13;
in Virginia.&#13;
When you visit or leave New York City, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Expressage and&#13;
$3 Carriage Hire, and stop at the Grand Union&#13;
Hotel, opposite said depola Six hundred elegant&#13;
rooms fitted up at s cost of one million&#13;
dollars; $1 and upwards per day. European&#13;
plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with&#13;
the best Horae cara, stages and elevated railroad&#13;
to all depots. Families can live better&#13;
for lees money at the Grand Union HoUl than&#13;
at an? other first-class, hotel in the" dtf.&#13;
Boone, the man who assauUedGov. Cleveland&#13;
the, other day, wag examined by several nhysl&#13;
clans to determine art to hU sanity. He was&#13;
pronounced perfectly sane, but laboring under&#13;
f;i v&lt;'te,ncrYous excitement, and therefore irrc&#13;
sponsible. Boone was discharged upon request,&#13;
of Gov. Cleveland.&#13;
The Southern Exposition at Louisville, Ky.,&#13;
.closed Saturday uiuht, Oct. 25, a grand euccesa&#13;
in every respect. Tne immense building was&#13;
crowded nil day with peonle, and at right full/&#13;
40,000 took part in the closing seine. President&#13;
Young spoken a few appropriate wonls, Gilmore&#13;
played national airs and Liul&amp;villc'rt great&#13;
show was at an end.&#13;
•&#13;
There are now more than 300,000&#13;
persons in England who use tha bicycle&#13;
and tricycle, and the capital invested in&#13;
the manufacture of these machines is&#13;
$15,000,000, employing nearly 10,000&#13;
men.&#13;
AnjA^entive Yankee is said to have&#13;
introoucod into England a perforated&#13;
linen suit made of coat, vest and trousers&#13;
all of one piece, with A valve at the&#13;
bottom of each trouser leg to close the&#13;
perforations in case of wet weather.&#13;
The whole structure weigMB only two&#13;
pounds and is donned by means of a&#13;
hinge'like arrangement at the waist.&#13;
A P r e s s A s s o c i a t i o n i l l lie.&#13;
The annual rifle shoot of the Lowell,&#13;
Mass.. Press association recently took&#13;
•piaco in that city.—A special prize of a&#13;
Winchester repeating rifle to be known&#13;
as Hood's Sarsaparilla rifle was. contested&#13;
for. J&#13;
Th*: Q u e e n a n d C r e s c e u t R o u t e .&#13;
The abovo mentioned iirst class&#13;
passenger line embracing the well&#13;
known CINCINNATI SOUTHERN RAILWAY&#13;
and associate roads, constituting the&#13;
shortest and best lines, via Cincinnati&#13;
to Florida, New Orleans and Texas,&#13;
having thoroughly revised and improved&#13;
passenger service, is a specially&#13;
attractive routo for winter tourists, or&#13;
visitors to the World's Exposition at&#13;
New Orleans.&#13;
Send for a copy of Winter Cities injk-&#13;
Siummer Land, a complete guide^to&#13;
Southern Resorts. Addresa-drTS. G\hmore,&#13;
North WeHteria l^asenger Agent.&#13;
81 Clark St Chicagoror £71». WiIso».&#13;
General Passenger Agent, Cincinnati,&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
r-f- »..—.t. —rth—w•»«-»—&lt;—•'• i mt^m *0m*+***U,± mwm *f&#13;
am * H M I&#13;
AOXtJ'STrtBST. ..,..-&#13;
Its bare, dry boughs must&#13;
(V&#13;
Tko tree 6T f*1th&#13;
That tjcarer btavtu the living ones may&#13;
climb;&#13;
The fal^e muet full, though from our bUores&#13;
Of til))l! &lt; „ .&#13;
Tk« old lament be heard: "Great Pan 1s&#13;
d.:adl "&#13;
That wall IB error's from hl8 higu I,lace&#13;
hurled,&#13;
This sharp recoil Is evil understood,&#13;
Our time's unrest, au angel sent of God&#13;
Troublloc with life the waters of the world.&#13;
Even as they list the winds of the spirit blow&#13;
To turn or break our century-rusted&#13;
y&amp;nea;&#13;
Sands shift and waste, the rock alone remains&#13;
_ ,&#13;
Where led of hearen the strong tides come and&#13;
* CO&#13;
And Btorm-cloud6 rent by thunderbolt and&#13;
wi»d — ..-..,. .&#13;
Leave, free of mist, the permanent stars behind.&#13;
Therefore I trust, although to outward sense&#13;
Both true and false seem threatened: I&#13;
will hold&#13;
With newer lifcbt my reverence for the&#13;
old,&#13;
And calmly wait the births of providence.&#13;
No gain Is loft: the cleai* eyedMriBts-leekdown.&#13;
Untroubled on the wreck of schemes and&#13;
creeds;&#13;
Love yet remains, Its roeary of pood deeds&#13;
Coun tins in task-nehi and o'er peopled town:&#13;
Truth had chann'd life; the Inward word survives&#13;
And, day by day, its revelation brings;&#13;
"'FaTth.TiopO!' and charity, whatsoever things&#13;
Which cannot be ehaknn stand. Still holy&#13;
lives&#13;
Reveal the Christ of whero the letter t&lt;;_ld,&#13;
And the tew gospel verities the old.&#13;
—JOHN G. WJIITTIEK.&#13;
. his new friend down the stairs, and out&#13;
into the lighted street.&#13;
They wont directly to Broadway.&#13;
"Walking alone/ that brilliant thoroughfare.&#13;
Porcy tried to appear as if, he noticed&#13;
nothing; but ho saw much, and&#13;
thought more. Among other things, ho&#13;
observed that the majoritv of young&#13;
men carried a slender walking stick",&#13;
which seemed to add grace and dignity&#13;
to the boarera. An air-of oleganco surrounded&#13;
these men, which, to Percy's&#13;
mind, came directly from tho fanciful&#13;
roods which thoy waived coquettishly&#13;
with daintily gloved fingers. Moreover,&#13;
they afforded employment tor&#13;
otherwiseunoccupied hands; and Percy&#13;
wished for a cane. Kingsloy—that was&#13;
the name of his new friend—earned "a&#13;
beauty," the top representing an exquisite&#13;
leg and foot, the knee] oint forming&#13;
the bend of the handle. Percy resolved&#13;
to have one just like it. In fact&#13;
he greatly admired Kingsley. He took&#13;
on no airs, was neither supercilious nor&#13;
patronising; and Percy, grateful for&#13;
his-attentions, pionouncedhim a •'firstrate&#13;
fellow."&#13;
'•Do you drink, Howell?" said Kingsley,&#13;
pausing hesitatingly, before a brilliantly&#13;
lighted saloon.&#13;
"No," said Percy, as if ashamed;&#13;
"Neither do I," said the other, moving&#13;
on.&#13;
•'I take&#13;
THE BROAD WAY.&#13;
"Many there bo that go in thereat,"&#13;
and poor Percy Howell was one of t-ho&#13;
many.&#13;
Ho was a frank, good-natured, impulsive&#13;
boy; the latest born and only&#13;
surviving "child of his aged parent*.&#13;
One by ope the others, whoso brief&#13;
lives wore IuHj5f, bjeraings; had &amp;ccn&#13;
buried in the village churchyard, and,'&#13;
without a shadow ol doubting, tho&#13;
old couple hoped to see their boy's&#13;
promising youth ripen into the fra: grance and fruitage of a perfect ,jiiahhood.&#13;
AlasLthey never_saJt-utiier the shadow&#13;
of that tree-^nor inhaled the perfume,&#13;
nor gazed on its beauty, nor partoojt-'&#13;
tffits bounty, for the axe was&#13;
-early laid at its roots!&#13;
Percy was just twenty when ho left&#13;
his native house for the distant city—&#13;
his father's village, with its simple&#13;
cheer for a homeless abode among&#13;
strangers; his fond 'parents, and the&#13;
tried friends ofliis youth, and the sweet&#13;
girl of his choice, for the mixed multitude&#13;
of the metropolis.&#13;
Had you been there when tho'stagecoach&#13;
stopped at the lane gate; had&#13;
you seen tho f.orious faces of. the neighbors&#13;
gathered around, the aged mother,&#13;
wiping her streaming eyes, the feeble&#13;
father uttering his blessing; and Annie&#13;
Collins, Percy's sweetheart&#13;
'Go with youP Of course I would!"&#13;
he, aniocis&#13;
light' you&#13;
but ho said:&#13;
a glass of champagne,&#13;
easionly,- but "champr ' '&#13;
know."&#13;
Porcy didn't know.&#13;
"Yes, certainly.''&#13;
"I am a temperance man," continued&#13;
Kingsley, with an emphatic gesture;&#13;
"I don't moan to say that I believe in&#13;
total abstinence. That is simply intemperate&#13;
abstemiousness. ~ThVirfWc&#13;
says, 'Lot your moderation bo seen of&#13;
all men. abstinence is&#13;
just as immoderate as&#13;
nesfl. We should shun&#13;
total&#13;
both&#13;
drunkenex&#13;
tronies.&#13;
has made&#13;
distractedly into tho house, you w&#13;
almost havo thought Lhal tho&#13;
thing had never happened&#13;
rushing&#13;
culd&#13;
-37rmo&#13;
before.&#13;
They, at least, thought so. Tho neighbors,&#13;
as thoy walked Jbonieward, said&#13;
to one another that thero were not&#13;
many boys' nowadav3 liko Percy Howell.&#13;
The old couple returning to fheir&#13;
firesido, wept to see his vacant chair,&#13;
his lonely doer, his empty place at tho&#13;
table, and his unpressed pillow. Surely&#13;
no other son so dear had ever left a&#13;
home so sorrowful!&#13;
As for Annie Collins sho went back&#13;
to her father's cottage, and quietly&#13;
discharged her daily duties. But&#13;
whatovor occupied her hand or-heart&#13;
there flowed constantly an undercurrent&#13;
of thought of which Percy was the&#13;
burden. "My Percy!" she whispered&#13;
to herself a thousand times a day, as&#13;
if to insure her sad heart of its blessed&#13;
ownership.&#13;
During tho journey Percy, with&#13;
eyes on tho lookout and cars on the&#13;
alert, and with ' a heart full of bright&#13;
4iopea.-aiid-.uiilri£d_iixpectations, went&#13;
joyfully on ttnd thought but_ little of&#13;
the dear ones at home.&#13;
Yet when at nightfall he found himself&#13;
in a little hall room, containing a&#13;
bed quite suggestive of a bier in its&#13;
"six-by-tbrco dimensions and white covering,&#13;
-a wasbstand of iron with-ordina—&#13;
ry accompaniments, minus comb, one&#13;
chair and a diminutive looking glass,&#13;
lie began to wish himself at home;&#13;
"Wh-e-w1.11 said he, giving vent to a&#13;
deep-drawn breath. Wonder how Annie&#13;
is! S'pose she's thinking' of me&#13;
this very minute. 'Fraid father won't&#13;
get along with the out-door work.&#13;
Wish I hadn't ha' come! Don't believe&#13;
thore's a fellow in New York that's&#13;
got a mother liko mine! W-h-o-w!&#13;
Guess I'll look at tne news!"&#13;
He had already seen everything of&#13;
interest in the daily paper, but ho&#13;
caught it up and glanced over it to&#13;
keep tho moisture from gathering in his&#13;
eyes. Running down the column, he&#13;
chanced upon the "amusements," and&#13;
tho following attracted his attention&#13;
\&#13;
try seekiug employment, clergymen,&#13;
the judges of the various cpjurts, policemen,&#13;
and all officersoi-^ho law, should&#13;
visit the Widegate-Theatre to see "The&#13;
Old Man of^th^ Moor."&#13;
'Wasrft brought up to go to the&#13;
rtre," thought Percy, reading it&#13;
again. "Don't believe In it; but—"&#13;
A knock at the door. Instead of&#13;
calling "Come in," as a man does&#13;
when he has been in a boarding house&#13;
six weeks, Percy cautiously opened the&#13;
door and peered out. A fine-looking&#13;
fellow beside whom he had eat at&gt;the&#13;
six o'clock dinner, said:&#13;
"Beg pardonl Are you a strangerP I&#13;
thought you might be lonely. Would&#13;
you liko to go out for a short strollP"&#13;
Percy was very grateful, and said as&#13;
miroh; then toot'his hat and followed&#13;
In my opinion, the pledge&#13;
more drunkards, and,, consequently&#13;
"more liars, than ajxy-Other one thing on&#13;
the face of the-glooe! Do you play b.ill&#13;
i a r d s ^ - " '&#13;
,, "Not much," replied Porcy, unwilling&#13;
to admit that, ho had never seen a&#13;
•billiard table.&#13;
"Como lh and try a hand," said his&#13;
companion.&#13;
Percy would gladly have excused&#13;
himself, but with a show._of alacrity followed&#13;
KiDgsley up a flight of broad&#13;
steps into a brilliant room whero a&#13;
number af gentlemen were at play.&#13;
"Bolierel won't play to-night—I'm&#13;
rather tired, said he, as they entered.-&#13;
" I suppose so," replied Kingsley,&#13;
throwing himself ona luxurious lounge.&#13;
"Make yourself comfortable for&#13;
awhile." /"""]&#13;
Following his example, Perry/took a&#13;
sofa, and in the course of an hour gathered&#13;
some knowledge c ^ t ^ ^ ^ m o .&#13;
True, ho heard som«., thing3 said that&#13;
sent tho blood tingling to his brow;&#13;
true, ho observed that the players invariably&#13;
supplemented their game with&#13;
a visit to tho bar below, and he thought&#13;
of his mother and of his Atinio. Nevertheless,&#13;
ho determined that ho would&#13;
learn billiartts:&#13;
"Come in and havo a drink," said&#13;
Kingsley, as they ran down the stairs,&#13;
'Only a glass of lager, it will make you&#13;
sleep."&#13;
So Perry, yielding, found himself&#13;
standing at the marble bar drinking&#13;
from a glass hold in a richly-wrought&#13;
receiver of silver a, beverago which, to&#13;
his untaught palate, was exceedingly&#13;
offensive.&#13;
"It is hotter, certainly, if one has&#13;
ono's own house and can afford to keep&#13;
a billiard-room," said Kingsley,. wiping&#13;
his moustache, as they loit the sa'lon.&#13;
"Then a fellow can choose'his company.&#13;
But, since we can't have our private&#13;
billiard-rooms, are we to bo deprived of&#13;
this manly and elegant past-time? Of&#13;
course, tho society at these public places&#13;
isn't just tho thing, but what can a&#13;
man do?"&#13;
Percy thought of poor Tray, who was&#13;
cruelly beaten for no other reason than&#13;
being found in bad company, but said&#13;
nothing.&#13;
.When ke reached his room it was&#13;
nearly midnight. Though very tired&#13;
he took up tho paper,'and looked again&#13;
at tho singular adveritsement that had&#13;
interested' him belore-gcdng_out. - -Itseemed&#13;
to apply to him. Ho was a&#13;
"young man from tho country, seeking—&#13;
employ me nt;" and he might get&#13;
some, very useful- hints from tho ".Old&#13;
Man of tho Moor." If.clergymen wont.&#13;
as tho advertisement implied, ho might,&#13;
surely, And ho believed ho would go.&#13;
Next morning ho rose late, and took&#13;
breakfast in company with a very pretty&#13;
young lady, who.-declared J v i t k . a .&#13;
very bewitching smile, that since they&#13;
sympathized in the matters of rising&#13;
and breakfasting, they must be firm&#13;
friends. Her hands Were so small and&#13;
white, her complexion so delicate, her&#13;
waist so slender and her hair so beautifully&#13;
arranged iu rolls and crimps&#13;
and curls,--That Percy regarded her!&#13;
witJvmtenso admiration, and mentally&#13;
c i e r k V r y o u B ^ m ^ with Annie Collins. I t '&#13;
- - - - -^ hardly neea bo said that his concluunfavorable&#13;
When shall we go?" said&#13;
matedly.&#13;
"1 am engaged for to-night, and tomorrow&#13;
evening and the next. I can&#13;
go on Thursday."&#13;
" Porcy thanked her most gallantly,&#13;
and as it was now half-past nine, excused&#13;
himself and went after the morning&#13;
papers. Sitting in his little room&#13;
ho' ran over the columns of "Help&#13;
wanted," and found two or three dozen&#13;
advertisements which he decided to answer.&#13;
Not having the slightest doubt&#13;
that among them all he should find a&#13;
situation, he concluded which place ho&#13;
would like the best, and started. But,&#13;
everywhere he wont, the answer was&#13;
invariably to tho effect that they were&#13;
suited.&#13;
And this morning, in late rising, prolonged&#13;
breakfast, and tardy applicat&#13;
i o n s for work, was but a^ sample of&#13;
many that followed. He was ever**too&#13;
late" to obtain a position. "Some&#13;
lucky fellow" was always "ahead of&#13;
him. He forgot his good old father's&#13;
maxim: "The early bird catches the&#13;
worm." Indeed, he seemed altogether&#13;
to have forgotten home and friends.&#13;
Ho neglected writing because he had no&#13;
"good news." He intend to write as&#13;
soon as fre procured a situation; and so&#13;
herd*&#13;
three weeks passed, and the lonely aux&#13;
ious hearts oJLthe aged parents were uncheeivd&#13;
by tidings of the atwant boy.&#13;
Meantime ho went with Miss Sybil to soe&#13;
"Tho Old man of the Moor." He was&#13;
dazzled, bewildered,delighted, and proposed&#13;
going again. But tho young lady&#13;
reminded him that there were 'many&#13;
other theatres as line as.the Wildgate,.&#13;
and many "others plays as good as this,&#13;
and that he had not yet seen them. So&#13;
tltey went the-ronmw-of-tho- U«wtt«« u&gt;&#13;
gether; and at the end 01 the fortnight&#13;
Percy found himself without money and&#13;
without work.. He stood at nightfall&#13;
in his little room, considering what had&#13;
best be done. To ask h.13 fat tier for assistance&#13;
was out of the question. He&#13;
knew that only by the most frugal and&#13;
self-denying care the old n ^ n had provided&#13;
him tho fifty dollars with which&#13;
he left homo. He drew his Watch from&#13;
his pocket and looked at it, It was his&#13;
father's gift.&#13;
"If I could sell or pawn it," said lies&#13;
"What do I want with an old silver&#13;
watchr1"&#13;
An hour later he stood at a pawnbroker's&#13;
counter.&#13;
"What do you want?" asked the&#13;
Jew. "Ten tollars! 1 say no! I give&#13;
vou tree dollars; no more. What von&#13;
say?"&#13;
" I say no!" cried Percy, angrily.&#13;
Then on second thought, "Well, give&#13;
the three.""&#13;
But this was not enough even for hi&lt;&#13;
immediate need. Under a dosperab&#13;
impulse he stepped into a drinking saloon&#13;
and midnight found "liim at the&#13;
gaming table. Pretty Sybil Pearson&#13;
had shuffled cards for bim with her&#13;
delicate, beautiful fjngurs, and had&#13;
taught him to play. Under tho tuteTige&#13;
of Ins temperance friend, tho elegant&#13;
Kingsley, he had learned todriiiT; wore&#13;
than lager; but Low and when to stop&#13;
drinking had not been a part of his- instructions]&#13;
What, need to toil more? You find&#13;
his history repeated in, that of thous-&#13;
:reat cities, and&#13;
crime upon tho&#13;
and^yvho throng our.&#13;
end a short career of&#13;
gallows&#13;
The grey hairs of his&#13;
were brought down in&#13;
grave, and Annie Collins&#13;
were covered with tho&#13;
spring time.&#13;
aged parents&#13;
sorrow to the&#13;
' golden curls&#13;
fresh" turf of&#13;
T h e C h i n e s e Baby's First S h a v o .&#13;
Portland Oregonlan .&#13;
When a Chinese boy is ono month&#13;
old his head'is shaved and a bladder is&#13;
drawn over it, and as his head grows&#13;
tho bladder bursts and tho queue&#13;
sprouts forth. Tho first shave is&#13;
made the occasion of a magnificent&#13;
banquet and the guests are expected to&#13;
make the host a handsome present in&#13;
coin for the newly shaven baby, with&#13;
'which a bank account is started to his&#13;
credit. This is the most pleasant feature&#13;
of the affair for the baby, - as tho&#13;
razor always pulls and he can not take&#13;
part in the feast.&#13;
FARM AND GARDEN.&#13;
Separate tho yoarlings of the&#13;
and flocks now, and give -them&#13;
feed.&#13;
A hay crop of two and a half tons&#13;
carries off 400 pounds of mineral matter&#13;
to the acre.&#13;
A top dressing of lino stable manure&#13;
in winter is a great benefit to lawns and&#13;
grass plats.&#13;
The government has sold more than&#13;
$200,000,000 worth of public lands in&#13;
eighty years.&#13;
The annual sales of sawed lumber in&#13;
the United States are said to aggregate&#13;
$223,000,000.&#13;
Sheep in Colorado hayo done remarkably&#13;
well this season, not only in wool&#13;
production but increase.&#13;
The annual pack in this country of&#13;
fruits, meats and fishes is said to&#13;
amount to about 600,000,000 cans.&#13;
Including imported and native born,&#13;
it is claimed that there are now in this&#13;
country about 25,000 registered Jerseys.&#13;
Flax is a South Dakota crop. The&#13;
high price at which it was marketed&#13;
last year caused a large increase injhe&#13;
^oreago thisryear^ — "1&#13;
Now is the most favorable time in&#13;
the year for collecting all sorts of vegetable&#13;
refuse and muck for winter use&#13;
in yards and stables.&#13;
The secretary of the American carp&#13;
culturo association states that 25,000&#13;
persons in this country are now engaged&#13;
in the culture of"carp.&#13;
Common earth is a good deodorizar,&#13;
and fmlv those who live in crowded&#13;
eities have any use for chlorides, carbonates,&#13;
and otiier bi-chemicals.&#13;
Suckers should be -culled from the&#13;
corn held, except in tho cases of the&#13;
jellow. flint and hv.'eet corn, as ,tho&#13;
suckers in these varieties produce ears.&#13;
During, the past seven months Chicago&#13;
packers, have slaughtered and&#13;
salted 1,509,000 hogs, against 1,585,000'&#13;
for the corresponding period a year ago.&#13;
The second annual meeting of the&#13;
national convention of stockmen will&#13;
be held -at—the -Grand--P-aeifie-Hote 1 in&#13;
Chicago on November 13 and 14.&#13;
Tho first point to bo learned 1¾ successful&#13;
stock raising is, never to allow&#13;
an animal to lose a pound of flesh.&#13;
This is equivalent to throwing two&#13;
pounds away.&#13;
The domestic supply ef wool of the&#13;
United States for the vear 1834 is estimated&#13;
at about 330,000,000 pounds.&#13;
This is an increase of about 10,000,000&#13;
pounds over 1883.&#13;
For removing the seed from6 broom&#13;
corn, take a board and make a comb of&#13;
it by sawing ono end of it to make tho&#13;
teeth, whiv.li should be sharpened at&#13;
the omls.&#13;
The yield of onioiiv, this season.,&#13;
throughout Massachusetts ranges from&#13;
300 to 700 bushels per acre, lu some&#13;
localities in' New York t-ho yield was&#13;
1.000 bushels per acre~ : ~&#13;
Working oxen should have a separate&#13;
feeding ivir.ee. and a due and regular&#13;
supply of food. There should ho no&#13;
opportunity of their interfering with&#13;
other cattle, or being interfered with.&#13;
Whole oats, wheat, bran and cornmeal&#13;
forms an excellent ration for young&#13;
stock. The health and complete and&#13;
symmetrical growth of the body sre&#13;
h.pgf. gpfmrpd hy fppdinnr a Variety of&#13;
says that tho bugs will shun it every&#13;
time, and for ten years he has Thus&#13;
been successful in growing potatoes&#13;
extraf whilo others have failed.&#13;
KVery fall there is a great deal of&#13;
refuse gathered around the fields which&#13;
should bo piled up and burned. Much&#13;
of it wili consist of weeds whoso final&#13;
cutting has not entirely prevented seeding.&#13;
If left till spring, these seed*&#13;
will fall to the ground^ and burning&#13;
the refuse then will miss ono of its&#13;
important objects.&#13;
The English farmers, remarks the&#13;
Breeder's Gazette, are now giving unusual&#13;
attention to questions relating to&#13;
the dairy, and every effort is being made"&#13;
to improve the quality and increase the&#13;
quantity of dairy products. The American&#13;
creamery and factory system are&#13;
being tried in various localities, and&#13;
appear to have worked well in the main&#13;
and to have given a wholesome stimulus&#13;
to the dairy interest.&#13;
Teach a young borso three things:&#13;
To know that you are his kind master,&#13;
to be guided by the motion of vour&#13;
hand and to obey the word "whoa,"&#13;
and his further education can be con- -&#13;
ducted at your leisure. But the most&#13;
important^of all lessons is to obey the&#13;
word "whoa." In case of an accident&#13;
or danger it is the one important safeguard,&#13;
and in all driving and getting in&#13;
and out, it is a special comfort and&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
A correspondent cays that tho man&#13;
who expee+^to rtti«o first class colts&#13;
from ordinary meadow grass will be&#13;
misled. Old pastures will furnish good&#13;
nutrition,so will anuplaad pra. '•• -ingo,&#13;
for the grn'"-.^ are various. U r'-;&gt;&#13;
mavc-i '•• ' LI&gt;J worked, it should only ue&#13;
at lurl:-- :u'&gt;w labor. It is better to work&#13;
tho maro before foaling than after, and&#13;
a tivv.-ral daily fe*:d of oats durinrr the&#13;
suchiitig season wiil Ud! in enhan&#13;
value ' u tlv.3 colt.&#13;
od&#13;
the govern muni ar-&#13;
"One Sal-&#13;
The recipe for&#13;
ness dressing is as follows:&#13;
Ion neatsfoot oil, two pounds barberry&#13;
tallow, tsvo pounds beeswax,two pounds&#13;
of tallow. Put the above in a pan&#13;
over a moderate tire. When thoroughly&#13;
dissolved add two quart-* of castor oil,&#13;
then while on the fire stir in one.ounco&#13;
of lampblack. M;x well and strain&#13;
through a fine cloth to remove sediment,&#13;
let cool, and you have as tine a dressing&#13;
for harness or leather of anv kind&#13;
as can be had. ' -&#13;
A member of the Elmira Farmers7&#13;
Club reports that he has found a solution&#13;
of saltpeter, a full tablospoonful&#13;
of saltpeter to ton or twelve quarts of&#13;
water, efficacious as a remedy for~&#13;
cabbago worms. He feels safe fn recommending&#13;
it, because the saltpeter&#13;
does not harm the head in the least,&#13;
and the weak solution imparta no t»3to&#13;
when tho heads are cooked for the table.&#13;
This remedy has been tried by the man&#13;
proposing it for several years, therefore&#13;
he is "quite convinced_tif its excellence.&#13;
An Albany County (N. Y. ) plum&#13;
growers retards the—blossominu of his&#13;
grain.&#13;
Corn gives strength to&#13;
sions were very uniavoranie to the&#13;
swwet girl whoso devoted heart was&#13;
ever magnifying his graces and accomplishments.&#13;
Meantime the young&#13;
lady whose name was Sybil Pearson,&#13;
ontertaiued him with her pretty chitchat,&#13;
and he lingered long over his coffee.&#13;
At last, with some constraint, he&#13;
said:&#13;
"Do you over go to tho theaterP"&#13;
"Oh! yes! I never lose an opportunity,"&#13;
sho said, with a look that meant,&#13;
"try mo and see."&#13;
' "Have you seen the "Old Man of the&#13;
Moor?' "&#13;
"No; but I want—oh! ever so much&#13;
to see it!" /&#13;
" I would like—I mean, I intend to&#13;
go. Wotild you—" ^,-&#13;
- Keeloy—motor- a-too-k- is soid4n New-4-1&#13;
York and Philadelphia at 9 cents on tho&#13;
dollar.&#13;
A student of New York names finds&#13;
tfiat Tayter keeps a clothing storey-&#13;
Brewer a saloon, and Baker a confectionery;.,&#13;
that lleiter is a bookseller.&#13;
Sellers a salesman, Bayer a buyer, ai.d&#13;
Scholar a teacher. - " •&#13;
Tho financial condition of tho Italian&#13;
G^Wr^menT~has"Vety much .improved&#13;
of late years; deficits in the annual&#13;
budget are smaller than formerly, the&#13;
one for 1885 being set down at only a&#13;
million of dollars. The peninsula' no&#13;
longer keeps financial company, with&#13;
Turkey, Spain and Egypt.&#13;
A farmer whohasj^pent some little&#13;
time and money in draining a swamp&#13;
on his place that had become an eyesore&#13;
writesjo'tbo Ohio Farmer : I enjoyed&#13;
it hugely when I got that drain&#13;
through aud saw tile water run out, and&#13;
the frogs jumping about in the greatest&#13;
consternation; .baft tho enjoyment ^ 1 ^ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
far greater yesterday, when I saw the c r a c k e d . withhorses, moreJM-I&#13;
ground fairly covered with splendid&#13;
potatoes, worth almost, a cent apiece.&#13;
This enjoyment was not causod by the&#13;
dollars tho crop would bring&gt; although&#13;
these will oome very handy this dry ~ - w season. but part of it came from t h &gt; | ^ ^ s t f G e y&#13;
fact that a stinking, unhea^ry-r'unsightly&#13;
hole, a bright pi ace^iorn^alaria&#13;
and-frogs, had boen--tfansfonned by&#13;
means of a littlo labor and skill, into a&#13;
very fertili««ig and productive piece of&#13;
land^-ft was the enjoyment of conit,&#13;
with no harm done except to the&#13;
rogs, flags and miasma.&#13;
x&#13;
the horsed&#13;
Therefore, where h:s work continues&#13;
th0-sam^r-g-ive-a-little-mora-coxn_ a a-4 ha&#13;
weather becomes cold. But if the/work&#13;
falls off, as in winter, tho f'ied of corn&#13;
may^be decreased.&#13;
Sixty-eight per cent, of t&gt;6 12,000,-&#13;
000 bushels of ouckwheat grown in the&#13;
United States is raised in New York&#13;
and Pennsylvania. Buckwheat does&#13;
not do well on prairie' soil, preferring&#13;
light and thin land. / '&#13;
Lato corn that may not ripen before&#13;
frost should-bo cut up andfod in bulk.&#13;
All kinds of st;ock are fond of it, and&#13;
will fatten rapidly on it. For early&#13;
pork and th&lt;3 feeding of milch cows it is&#13;
particularly valuable.&#13;
Professor Arnahl stlites~tliatTf costs&#13;
more to make milk from old cows than&#13;
it does from young ones, having tho&#13;
same milk capacity. Asarule, the best&#13;
effects do not last boyond the eighth&#13;
year of the cow's age. ...'•&#13;
plum tree:-, till 0 e danger from frost is&#13;
past, by placing a liberal "supply of&#13;
manure arouhd tho trees, and by this&#13;
process keeps the frost in the roots and&#13;
prevents the blow from coming until&#13;
the danger of lato frosts.,Ja past; Tho&#13;
trees this season were two weeks behind&#13;
tkoso- of his neighbors in blossoming.&#13;
If tho frost comes before.tho blossom&#13;
or a couple of weeks after, the&#13;
be affected, but when&#13;
it opens and the gociu&#13;
light frost is almost&#13;
Tjpel&#13;
fruit&#13;
errs&#13;
it would not&#13;
/ t h e blossom fir&#13;
is.tender a very&#13;
always fatal to plums&#13;
C. M. Weed says, in the Philadelphia&#13;
Press, that to keep flies out of the stable&#13;
nothing is better than soft soap and&#13;
carbolic acid thrown on the floor once&#13;
or twice a day. The mixture may be&#13;
made of crude carbolic acid, which can&#13;
be obtained very cheap, and ordinary&#13;
soft soap. The amount of the acid depends&#13;
on the strength of tho soap. This&#13;
can easily bo told "by pouring the two&#13;
together and letting them stand, after&#13;
thoroughly mixing, for an hour or two.&#13;
Then mix "a little with soft water. If&#13;
too much acid is present it will' bo&#13;
shown by particles of oil floating on the&#13;
surface. Two or three table-spoonfula&#13;
of-aekl to a quart of soap- svilh usually&#13;
suffice.&#13;
Peach and plum stones, if kept in a&#13;
cellar during the winter, must be exposed&#13;
to freezing before spring. Tho&#13;
best way is to spread them on abed, and&#13;
cover them with a few inches of earth&#13;
or tan bark and allow '•hem to remain&#13;
out al winter.&#13;
The Mississippi Valley produces 185,-&#13;
000 t c s of cottonseed, one-fourth of&#13;
which is marketed in Memphis, much&#13;
of it being shipped in a crude state from&#13;
that-PoinP to Italy, whence it is returned&#13;
to this country in tho shapo of. "pure&#13;
olive oil."&#13;
The Husbandman insists that tho best&#13;
way to thresh buckwheat is with the&#13;
flail, in the old-fashioned way, since by&#13;
this way the srram is left free and whole*&#13;
1 thegrarii is&#13;
jMrtess filth&#13;
is mixed with it.&#13;
The approximate number of sheep&#13;
in the woridls set down at 415,000,000.&#13;
Thisudoes not include a large number&#13;
in the Asiatic* and some of&#13;
tho North African countries, as well&#13;
as upon certain of the more important&#13;
islands of which no enumeration has&#13;
been attempted.&#13;
A Wisconsin farmer claims to hare&#13;
found a sure cure for potato bugs.&#13;
His plan is to plant one or two flax&#13;
Winter Bye.&#13;
This is a crop that ought not to be&#13;
neglected; tut few field crops pay&#13;
better and but few will grow on so&#13;
many different soils. Sown from tho&#13;
first to tho middle of the month, it will&#13;
get well established before winter sets&#13;
in. It"was the custom of our grandfathers&#13;
to sow rye in the corn the last&#13;
time hoeing in July, but it was found&#13;
by experience that it is better to sow&#13;
later in the season, say from the middle&#13;
of September to tho . middle of&#13;
October. * Land that is to lie from&#13;
September to MJ.y without a crgpon it,&#13;
would boyrervin, ch improved by sowing&#13;
winter rye t &lt; be ^plowed in tho&#13;
spring as a green-ctDp; by so doing tho&#13;
ground wi^be enriched * t less expense&#13;
than... -by" any fertilizer that can be&#13;
.iotrhd in the market, especially—it-it bo&#13;
land deficient in vegetable substance.&#13;
The advantage of having land covered&#13;
with growing vegetation during&#13;
tho late autumn ana earlv spring&#13;
months, is more than it has usually&#13;
been considered, By keeping the land&#13;
covered during freezing weather&#13;
it preTenU tho great waste which occurs&#13;
when land is exposed to the freezing&#13;
weather ana- high winds&#13;
of winter, and the growth&#13;
ot the crop of rye during the - autumn&#13;
and spring months collects from the&#13;
air gases which enter the crop, and&#13;
when plowed under it decays, it wilt&#13;
seeds in each nill of potatoes. He- -produce both carbon and nitrogen&#13;
JU&#13;
: * • *&#13;
-"V.&#13;
.^Fjvnuyv ,/rvw'viiii!.'.&#13;
r «&#13;
t-1 A&#13;
11' T'&#13;
•i&#13;
\&#13;
wi*+im^^mm*mmpmmm***&gt;B+m*i—m&#13;
\ N . i:.v.&#13;
S ' l ' l l t '&#13;
11IMI1 w i l l !&#13;
Ilvet (unit1 )' iiii-i' l o o k i n g&#13;
little f^i'ip -•\.'ry ^lick tall-&gt;&#13;
&gt; loiul i\i lis !iiy crowd- o p e n s&#13;
I:I&gt; i'in;js 1'i»r sale- Mmietliiny.&#13;
, i i ,1 toi'v ;rt'ts c rowd&#13;
c&#13;
$&#13;
VP&#13;
I t&#13;
A&#13;
O U R N E I G - H B O R S . [ ^ i v d ^ - m ^ . - - ^ . A r t m i d - w i l l n M&#13;
jiri'si'iit he relict' a ^ e n t lor the I). L&#13;
CNADILLA,&#13;
From our Correnpondent.&#13;
School lias closed. W e a r e all sorry&#13;
to lose t h e t e a c h e r , Miss F r a n k i e&#13;
B u r c h .&#13;
W i l l T y l e r h a s b o u g h t a n interest&#13;
in t h e h a r n e s s shop a t S t o c k b r i&#13;
a n d expects to m o v e t h e r e t h i s week.&#13;
E d i t h D u H o i s h a s j u s t *«tuvuud&#13;
from a visit a m o n g friends a n d relatives&#13;
a t N o r t h S t c k b r i d g e .&#13;
Rev. H u n t is g o i n g t o occupy t h e&#13;
Griffin house, j u s t v a c a t e d by -lames&#13;
M o r g a n , w h o h a s moved on his 1'arni&#13;
a few miles n o r t h of t o w n .&#13;
T o m m i e a n d Vie H a r k e r a r e visiti&#13;
n g r e l a t i v e s in S o u t h L y o n a n d Cana&#13;
d a , t h i s Week.&#13;
' M r s . R o b e r t M a r s h a l l a n d Mrs. C. 1).&#13;
B i r d a r e s p e n d i n g a few d a y s at L i m a ,&#13;
w i t h J a m e s M c C l a r e n ' s family.&#13;
T h e postofftcH h a s be^-ii r e m o v e d t o&#13;
i t s former.^position in. t h e U n a d i l l a&#13;
H o u s e .&#13;
M a t i l d a H i l l a n d h e r son, from t h e&#13;
n o r t h e r n p a r t of t h i s s t a t e a r e spendi&#13;
n g a few w e e k s w i t h M r s . H i l l ' s pae&#13;
n t s , M r . a n d M r s . W i n . D a v i s .&#13;
er. talk&#13;
tri'i|i 1&#13;
•new- t&lt;-:i • ^mtii&#13;
LfoO'l-naMi'i'.l ])iUs S I 1 ' ailii *.r&gt; hi&#13;
in ring's "just, t o a d v e r t i s e t h e m "&#13;
irood LTI'IMIS. "all wool" :) riii!_fs !&lt;i&#13;
dliUAi'A'..liLiiuike _ilU iia^y -"iiiku—tiu*&#13;
lot tor l?:!?1' N o -Man opens one—&#13;
$10 bill t h e r e s u r e Man sees little&#13;
m a r k on one-• - t h a t ' s t h e one- takes&#13;
t h e l o t ? Ye:;- pr&lt; sto c h a n g e m a n&#13;
goes oft a n d o p e n s t h e m - d r i n g s&#13;
worth about 10,- m a n ^oes homewife&#13;
w a n t s n e w lumuet- -can't atl'ord&#13;
it- too h a r d t i m e s .&#13;
D E X T E R .&#13;
From the Leaders&#13;
Died, Wednesday- e v e n i n g , Oct. 2:M,&#13;
S a r a h , wife of E. J e d e l e , after a few&#13;
w e e k s illness.&#13;
Geo. ,B. Rosier, J r . , of W e b s t e r , harvested&#13;
500 b u s h e l s of F u l t z w h e a t this&#13;
y e a r / f r o m 12 acres ot g r o u n d .&#13;
J u s t i c e P a g e , on S a t u r d a y , t h e li*tli&#13;
inst., m a r r i e d Ransford A u s t i n ami&#13;
Nettie. Blades, both of H a m b u r g . .&#13;
Mr- H e r m a n E a s t o n a n d Miss S a r a h&#13;
A. S m i t h , w e r e m a r r i e d W e d n e - i t a y ,&#13;
a t J . L . S m i t h ' s by R e v . R. C. Mosjicr.&#13;
O u r p h o t o g r a p h e r , M r . Clark, ' h a s&#13;
m a d e a r r a n g e m e n t s to g i v e u p t a k i n g&#13;
I n Mai1 li \\ •:&#13;
w!th w ai r a&#13;
shar;' fi i. ;&gt;.,&#13;
the e.'Ttl. .iv- I&#13;
hard, dr&gt; &lt; oji ,&#13;
quite lil\« d iiji i'r&#13;
inch o r m o r e of&#13;
vacuity hciwrcii,&#13;
quisitii'enc-s \vh&#13;
troubles&#13;
t h e m&#13;
DOUBT ABOUT IT 1&#13;
That you can save1 nearly one-half by trad-&#13;
TUOM H Y B R O'S ! Philosophy.&#13;
••i! is s n t u r a t e c&#13;
• a : e n i g h t s ol i&#13;
-ee, in iiMrning!: I&#13;
^(ine i&gt;r other, i&#13;
hi lh" g r o u n d - I&#13;
Qjii w*. LL 1&#13;
NOTE THEIR PlIICi::&#13;
.:u i;. wiih half ftfiTJnkif-p,.:-).^-,, I ^ O / I A&#13;
p i p i n g e a . e r n - l i k e i i 3 e S l I A I H I * i i i U i U t * , licis. yard.&#13;
A hoy- willi the in&#13;
eli is sometime» Best Ginghams made,&#13;
' r r ^ ^ r r , r , S ! l l e ; 3 Fruit of the Loom Bl'cli'd Cotton, 8¾&#13;
•»&#13;
^½&#13;
needful k n o w l e d g e — a s k e d lately how f i n n r l P n f f m i T ^ O T M ' . '&#13;
the ground on each side ..of t a t t o o * A J U - M U - V H L L U i A - ^ U ^ ? ll&gt;.&#13;
walk came to i,e raised u,&gt; thatway. • QG0([ y a r c t - w i d e F a c t o r y , -&#13;
it)&#13;
p i c t u r e s in D e x t e r , a n d will close h i s&#13;
g a l l e r y in a s h o r t t i m e .&#13;
F r i d a y e v e n i n g , Oct. 31st, u n d e r the&#13;
a u s p i c e s of t h e y o u n g people ot 1 »ex-&#13;
Uf course the e\[)lai:aiion was by show&#13;
lug how ice formed from water m a k e s T l i O " R i O c f T ^ i l i ^ t f l T ' V •&#13;
fthV^rbitlk H u r t t h e wtttur, a n d t h a t + l 1 1 ^ ^ l JT UK^lJ , ^&#13;
the force of thi-expansion i&gt;;so g r e a t a s - X l i r k e V R e d T a b l e L l l i e i l ,&#13;
to- burst anvtlnnir ni wlueli the w a t e r is ^ , • / ^ i&#13;
confined, as o ten happens t o bottles, ( j O O t t c i l l - l m e i l L T a S h , " -&#13;
r o u n d pots and eveo .stones or the&#13;
largest roeks if there is a iissure into&#13;
which wati'i" can etoer. and on freezing&#13;
h as- n ot TOO ; n"trrp \77r111 • !r " ~! ~~ ~&#13;
T h e stone- of the path e.re too solid to&#13;
include any w a ' e r . hei the earth on&#13;
each side is lull of ;!. and thi&gt; H\'-&#13;
pansion ot 1 e u a t e r ;,' - ami sjireads&#13;
tl\e earth, iienee we ,'nd the moat&#13;
compact clay made unite open and loose&#13;
by t h e frost, and it r e m a n s so until&#13;
beaten down a_aiu by heavy rains or&#13;
trodden by a n i m a l s ' feet. But roots in ^:1 T&#13;
such soil, especially if y o u n g a n d tender.&#13;
Cannot stretch to such an extent, and ' ,.&#13;
are often broken otr', as we find by ex- j N " ^ s -&#13;
a m i n i n g the roots of the wheat p l a n t s ! l ' r house in M i c h i g a n&#13;
after freezing nights and t.^«vwing,,wet 1 s i a n ^'""'dcs. t. loak&gt; and I l a v d o . - k s . I he tare to .l-mdisnn is v.1 •;• i;t,|.&#13;
days. T a p e r i n g roois, as those of clover 1 ' p a r e d to w h a t y o u will save it' v o u ' h a v e ar.v trailn^g to 00&#13;
yard a/&#13;
u&#13;
i 4&#13;
list received a tine line of&#13;
l i U K K t ' I I L O A O I N C ; G U N S ,&#13;
- -Till':&#13;
PIEPER RIFLE AND SHOT GUN&#13;
WD MAGAZINE RIFLES.&#13;
w - .-.,.-1.- Mo- hi-st Lrrjui.-.H of si'(.nn'is(J r o w -&#13;
1M-: t; unit all kiiutn ai Aiiimiiaitlua uuil spurflu^&#13;
J.'DI r t ! . . I J I M U ' I ' i l l h ' .&#13;
ROLLER SKATES,&#13;
POCKET CUTLERY,&#13;
CLOCKS, WATCHES,&#13;
JEWELRY, AND&#13;
SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
M'JSiCALAND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
All kiml.s of r e p a i r i n g n e a t l y a n d&#13;
[u'omptlv (lone. ^&#13;
i i r ^ P l - i r T ' r . l J L L Y ,&#13;
l i A K T o N vV- r A M L M J K L L ,&#13;
IVe-t yi::hi ? i i r e d , I'inckiie.v, M i c h i g a n . -&#13;
p FiSiEEI&#13;
P'SOiLESELF-eiiRE&#13;
A faviiritf pr^secl/&gt;rion of 0110 of *ti&#13;
niosi Tiot&gt;vl ami Mici-v^^uii s.P«*L-tul!&gt;rs : .1 Iht'.U.SL&#13;
&lt;Iio\v n t i r o ! .i'or th rnr.: ul}*'rri-t&gt;n» I&gt;f}&gt;\iityt&#13;
ZiO.it ManJioml ;S . nkH*8a n Hil'lierttffr&amp;ent&#13;
inpUliisL'ulci' ,«nvnl&lt;)|iL'/,»,v*,,l)rn(.'Kls;tsi;ttiiflIUt,&#13;
Address.LH. WARD &amp; CO. Louisiana Mo.&#13;
g .&#13;
Lar^eStze Crocket Bed Spread^&#13;
AI2-W'OGI. D^ack Cashmeres, 40in. wide, 45c.vc!.&#13;
' Good Worsted Dress Goods, 12 l-2c. 'yd.&#13;
Cheney Bro's Colored American .Silks, sold&#13;
clr^where at §1.25 and S1.50, our price SL&#13;
5-liii. Gilbert's Plaid F l a n n e l s ^ U ' d .&#13;
D.W. Miller Carriage Go.&#13;
Iks. Y e l v r K 1- Ktnne H o s i e r y a n d r n d e n v e a r at l o w e r pi-icr&lt; thai*.;?&gt;:y o&#13;
l n i n i o i n e &gt;tock L a d i e s ' a n d M t&gt;^"&gt;" N / w n u vU"t-. 1.'&#13;
Y- .1:&#13;
ter, a " Y o u n g P e o p l e ' s H o p " will l-e&#13;
h e l d a t Sill's H a l l .&#13;
B R I G H T O N .&#13;
From the Citizen.&#13;
W i l l i a m S t u b r b u r g is p r e p a r i n g 1o&#13;
b u i l d a m a t e t o R. E. B a e t c k e ' s ne'.v&#13;
store, a n d a d j o i n i n g it on t h e \vi&gt;i.&#13;
e a r l y n e x t s p r i n g . E x c a v a t i n g for the&#13;
. . _ s a r a e is n o w b e i n g d o n e .&#13;
T h e r e is a m a n in H a m b u r g t o w n -&#13;
s h i p w h o h a s six crops of w h e a t in l&lt;i&gt;&#13;
b a r n , b u t w o n ' t sell. H e says tlnav&#13;
is g o i n g to be a f a m i n e .sometime, a no&#13;
t h e n he will m a k e a f o r t u n e .&#13;
M a r y L. Va.nVVormer, m o t h e r o&#13;
— M r s . A. J o n e s , of t h i s village, d e c&#13;
S u n d a y . H e r body w a s t a k e n to S;&#13;
Charles, w h e r e m a n y of her t r i e m&#13;
live, for b u r i a l .&#13;
R. M. F i l l m o r e h a s leased a lot Y&gt;&#13;
M r s . S t u h r b u r g , a d j o i n i n g t h e pusi&#13;
office, a n d will build a n e w b a r b e r&#13;
s h o p t h e r e o n a t once.&#13;
A p a i r ot r i n g p e d d l e r , w h o did a&#13;
business s i m i l a r to t h e " s o a p g a m e , ' '&#13;
took in B r i g h t o n i n n o c e n t s to t h e t u n e&#13;
, of $40, last F r i d a y e v e n i n g .&#13;
A littlft son of Rev. a n d M r s . F a r -&#13;
n u m , a b o u t 11 y e a r s old, w h o has b n n&#13;
perfactly helpless fron infancy, &lt;]i -xi&#13;
S u n d a y . ^ T h ^ i ^ i 1 a ^ v ^ : ; s T n ^ # n - v ^ ^ H&#13;
'three m o n t h s old w i t h s p i n a l m e n i n -&#13;
gitis, w h i c h d e p r i v e d i t of i t s sightfind&#13;
left it in such a c o n d i t i o n t h a t - it&#13;
n e v e r g r e w in s t r e n g t h o r intellect&#13;
t h e r e a f t e r . I t s case w a s t h e m o s t pitiable&#13;
we h a v e ever k n o w n or heard of.&#13;
P e t e r s o n , t h e s c a m p who r e c e n t l y&#13;
h r o k e j a i l , has been h a n g i n g a r o u n d&#13;
his h o m e in Oceola mo.-;t of t h e t i m e&#13;
since his escape, a n d was n e a r l y c a u g h t&#13;
last F r i d a y . C h a r l i e N e w m a n m e t&#13;
h i m , a n d shook haiuL&lt; w i t h h i m , a t t h e&#13;
- s a m e t i m e c a t c h i n g hold of. h i m .&#13;
T h r e e or four m e n w e r e by a n d had&#13;
t h e y t u r n e d i n a n d h e l p e d C h a r l i e ,&#13;
P e t e r s o n could h a v e been easily cap&#13;
t u r e d . A s it was, t l i e y s t o o d j a n d look&#13;
ed on, a n d let t h e w r e t c h g e t a w a y .&#13;
a n d of seedling trees, are often lifted&#13;
quite out of the g r o u n d by a succession&#13;
of such expansions a n d heaving, of t h e&#13;
crust; which, freezing fast to the c o l l a r&#13;
of the' plant, raises it with it, t e a r i n g&#13;
a p a r t the weak, s l e n d e r r o o t l e t s r - W e l l -&#13;
d r a i n e d soil r a r e l y holds so m u c h&#13;
w a t e r as to givo the frost such p o w e r&#13;
for destructive mischief.—*V.&#13;
UtiC.&#13;
Y. Trith&#13;
iaryrest &gt;toek ol' I&gt;rv (ioods in C&lt; n t r a l M u ' l i i ^ a n . W&#13;
for cash . ( hir laryo busini1&#13;
'•one p r i c e " for all - m a r k e d&#13;
;s t".;;; lib's us \&lt;.\ \i\-l tih&#13;
in ]&gt;!,;i(i !i^'iir&lt;N.&#13;
r&gt;;n'c:fiill\'.&#13;
lowt&#13;
imv an&#13;
o: ;c&#13;
,l .•&#13;
i / 3 iua-:n fetrecr..&#13;
LUMBER!&#13;
TUOMEY BSO.&#13;
!&lt;:.i. ', I&#13;
Wt&gt; will s.'ll bimiln'i' at iiiiL !'^)i"wing 11L':e-&gt;• —&#13;
X X X I s incl; ShiiigU-s, p e r lhoti.-:ii; i&#13;
C l e a r IjTiits l-s inch S h i n g l e s . p» r ti;,'iu-and&#13;
('t.il Si.ingh-s 1^ inch, per. t h n i i s a n d ,&#13;
Nn 1 l,a;h, per t h o u s a n d leet&#13;
No '_'. b a t h , per rln)U.&gt;a.nil feet,&#13;
Sill Stnii, i n c l u d i n g b s b No. 1, ]»&lt;•;• t h o u s a n d I ' o i ,&#13;
unit' iSnar'b, per t h m i s a n d feet&#13;
B a r n I.U'.nb' r. per thou&gt;and feet&#13;
sbirvptiT^tirii~.~pT~i- rhvrrr&gt;"aiTi't-TTsT;"'~~.~-~T7".... . ~&#13;
e n e i n g p' r thoHsand f e e t . . . &lt; , . . ' . .&#13;
i n i s b i n e l.uniber-jiei" t h o u s a n d f e d&#13;
S i d i n g per t luaisand f e e t . . , ,&#13;
Manufacture a large variety ef&#13;
LIGHT and HEAVY CARWGE"SrFH7lFr0MS,&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, AC,&#13;
After the most approvpfl rJesffjna st the very lowwt&#13;
price* cDuaietent with ginid workm»nshii).&#13;
— - S O v O O O " v o l x l o l o c i —&#13;
of our manufacture aro now in use in this and&#13;
foreign countries and atteet the excellence of&#13;
cur gonds b j tbe universal natiBf&amp;ction which 1116^&#13;
Sive.- Kvery rehlclc »8 WARRANTED,—«V«cUI&#13;
attention will be glres to mall order*.&#13;
CATALOGUES FBEE.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
£. Fifth St., CulT«rtSt, andEgflMtoalta.,&#13;
CINCINNATI, 0 .&#13;
t . ' i . i ; ' » :&#13;
. • ! • • : i&#13;
I b n ,&#13;
(&#13;
POSITIVKLY&#13;
A. L. IIOYT, M a n i l a ' s&#13;
P1NCKNEY PL&#13;
. 0 O.i&#13;
. ^1.).!!() to .Vl'K)&#13;
M.uu to -;i!.'A)&#13;
NO CKKDIT.&#13;
p r e p a r e d to&#13;
W»yne, Du Paga Co., Illinois,&#13;
HA$ IMPORTED FROM PRANCE&#13;
P e r c h e r o n U o r » M v a l u e d HI $3,000,000,&#13;
which includes&#13;
7 5 PER CENT OF ALL HORSES&#13;
Who** parity of hirvi,) in ««r»hll«tien hy thrir p«(llerw«&#13;
recorded ta ihe «4Tl l&gt; H O O K S O F F R A N C E .&#13;
E^VER I M P O R T E D T O A M E R I C A .&#13;
STOCK ON H A N D :&#13;
Imported Brood Mares,&#13;
IinpnrietJ STaiiions,,&#13;
Old ;ricMi(b for&#13;
«er»ic»&#13;
lOO COLTS.&#13;
Two }tm» r&gt;til tad&#13;
• f.nrjfcr&#13;
''Ri'fOfnirtrijr tb« prfnr&gt;&#13;
id »^.-epf«.i n&gt; til&#13;
lllfen "hr^ftiern &lt;htt,&#13;
&lt;tr welt Bfni Aiilm*,*&#13;
, i M I 4 to ht, I' thtn&#13;
V»d\t'»«A art ant recorded »n 1 cannri \&lt;» outheuti.-any&#13;
^ ' • o . ( ! ) • » thnnld b^ 'wowl only »s «rt«t)««, I will sell til&#13;
imporUtt Stoek fit G~*d* P'it*t lrhtn 1 rtnnut fum;&gt;n&#13;
w'lt ihi» •Dlmal »ol4 pe&lt;il£rr»o »tntifd by tb« origin*!&#13;
Frtnrb certlBc»i«i nf &lt;n number »nrl rfco'd Ir Ihf Stu.l Buc*&#13;
In Fr»or«, 1 4 0 P a * 0 t'mttiogat MDI frc# M m&#13;
lllnitriwid with SU Prii* HortM of Ibe Exhihinoi. of ins&#13;
Son«* fJirmoua Ptrtheronnt d f^»De» | rt,S4 • pur&#13;
rh»'fd br V. W Uasbam »nd drtira &lt;r«ca \)!&lt; t&gt;, K u t a B 6 u h e u r , taa m*#» famoM »( «11 »uia». puawt&#13;
Wv a r c now&#13;
Pianing, Resawing,£;8 kitidsaf plal;i&#13;
Bracket-Sawing, Garvmii and 1mm&#13;
m i^ncv&#13;
111 Woi.e&#13;
lvj'.ubiji&#13;
I'ui-kii,-&#13;
l ^ i l i i S .&#13;
I : a n d will s.ien lie a i d e tit du Uii'iib'j. in it'-n- a n d m'm ;•;;! maeliiiu&#13;
;:. W'v a r c aisu n^eiits lor W . &gt;';, .M'Lii-' A&gt;1»CSJ&lt;&gt;&gt; M a t e r i a l - , b n _ i n e&#13;
. M i l l lloai'd.-, l'\'lt^, Kouihur, ('eiai'Ut. in.-idc a n d eui.-i.'.e bi(jti,d&#13;
b a m , lvcud--;ual Fiiv--pm&lt;-d' l'ai^t,-, ' . ?&#13;
riN'CKXEV TLAXIXd' MILLi)&#13;
i'i...t,' !'i.N( WW-:;. &gt; . : ! ( ' ! ( .&#13;
THETREE PRESS FOB THE CAMPAIGN. - W« will send the WEEKLY F R E R&#13;
FRE88 a a t l l mtfr vlectlon for oaly %&amp;&#13;
CKNTS, .&#13;
THE FREE PRESS CO.,&#13;
ii I D e t r o i t . M l o b «&#13;
' / 1 B , O I , , ™ " " M *Tg CkfBjl.U niKtHiil* Pmp'i ol&#13;
PK0F.HA.1R:8'PA8TlLLt REMEOV&#13;
\uunv Mni ind otkrf* who luOer&#13;
froio «.WTVV»UI md Phjii rai p«bll.&#13;
ii;.' Hr»ni»i.urfl LxhausMott MM)&#13;
tiicir rui\nv (i^niT cou&gt;«jueBoea,&#13;
'rh.n.rr^A i . , w*re 1u';:k,J »'"&lt; r«dio»lly cored.&#13;
. he Remedy li put np In boxe«. ^n. 1 &lt;H*nlDg » DX.iitb), M.&#13;
fto. »(cnnu»b lotirrot nrnre, unlc«« in tevere c»«f« l » 5 i « o / a&#13;
(l:.v!mp ihrte mnrth.). «J. K.^t br mail l0 p i a l n ^r.pper,.&#13;
M1ri&gt;rttflTPJTi-.r I &gt;mj| Krn.tn|IMnT « f h ROT. Pamphlot deKri.&#13;
t i t j mi* (Use** and tu*io cf gu« Kin «eal«l on »pplioMi«&gt;, DO YOU KNOW&#13;
THAT&#13;
LOHILLARD'S CLIMAX&#13;
V\AG TOBACCS&#13;
t;i'.in&lt;l i r u n i&#13;
(Estisy Oraan Co.&#13;
SOUTH LYON. 7&#13;
From tbe Picket.&#13;
Isaac Bennett^and wii'e//started for&#13;
" California Monday mmj/ing.&#13;
Ttre1)and boy^ n^ed about $21 out&#13;
of their dance anx&amp;kating exhibition.&#13;
All the freight and telegraph business&#13;
of t h e ^ . L. &amp; N. il'y of this place&#13;
has been.4;ransferre"d to the G T. defK)&#13;
t. 7rank Bav will handle the wires&#13;
and tickets by day, itnd Vincent Lum-&#13;
W i e n t'-io vfctl E a t e y o r t k e&#13;
w o r d Crgau. ia riontioned, t h e y&#13;
each Bu^sost t h e o^Uor, so w i d e l y&#13;
k n o w n a n d so popular 0x0*1110 in-&#13;
^y^ s t r u m e n t 3 a n d t h e makers.&#13;
l(j Five l e t t e r s In each cf t h o tv/c&#13;
i. i . w o r d s aro r e m i n d e r s c.f enjoyment&#13;
in, multitudoo of homes. Illuatra-&#13;
CataIo£ruo'mailed free t o a l l&#13;
applicants.&#13;
SLAP! BANG!&#13;
HERE WE AVE AGAIN!.&#13;
Y INKLE&#13;
Afjain fu the front, in hi.« new f»f&lt;&gt;rf&gt;. where, fur&#13;
t h e UeXt Hixt.V (1,'l.VH f 1'.51 ill tliitt (Ijite, f.,r fiiKtl, 1&#13;
I&gt;r»ini?e to give tn all my iuitri&gt;nn lunre MIHHI'I i'fv&#13;
andbettfr (jimlity fur ICM^ money, ;my m' the iVi[-&#13;
'lo\vin&lt;.' urticles, tluiti aiiv uilu:r (ie'uier i;i the&#13;
countv, viz : PAINTS! S !&#13;
fn any quantity, lle^t Linseed njj _ r i i w m . huilcd&#13;
Turpentine, Huh \'aniisheH, Kluwiu;; YaniNhe*&#13;
Dryerh, Knotter's 1'iitty, nixi hunter*" Siinpiies&#13;
o f Itll k i l l ' t x . A l l V Hllilde ' o f c n l u i ( l e v i i c d i n i v i . i l : •». . . » i • • I /• ' ^f T T ' I ^ " • 1 /»&#13;
RnrtrPBrivfr.rH]»l;iyin^ti.n_i»ern\rif.riM^.ertk'1n^ c a l l a n d e x a m i n e o u r stock ot^fwDtls. _ H i g h e s t p r i c e p a n t for&#13;
he.-^t * Es tho inirt'St;&#13;
!;l:ii'&gt;n«\ |&gt;uryte:i, mu.&#13;
W i: h Heel 'i'iii Tiiiji. i-1 tin&#13;
ir- hi'V . '!• :id lit !'.|!nl witit&#13;
!:!-•;•-, nr ;i:iy •{ l.-lernui-* lii-Trdientn, ad 19 t h o&#13;
,t;i;'j w_itii !ii.u.\' oth.r Idhiu'tiitt,&#13;
Willi LAKl)»S ftOHK t K A F FTSJT&#13;
( I T T O I i U C O *•&#13;
in ;tl-&lt;i innde of t!i.'tire.^t etuck, and for 'aromatic&#13;
cle'w i:i^ [juiilit.v in fermid t&lt;&gt; none. ' '&#13;
L O R I L L A K D ' S XAVY C L I P P I N G S&#13;
take ih'st rank ti:- a .-olid rniniiili^siimkln^ tobacs&#13;
fn \\ isi'ie\ er iiitrodiu'ed,&#13;
L O K I L L A K I P S FAMOUS S M T F S&#13;
have been u-»ed forover VJi years, and are sold t a&#13;
a lurL.'er'exteTit thTtTTahy iHljers.&#13;
•maapraaar"&#13;
VEGETABLE HLL3&#13;
Secure H e a l t h y&#13;
action to t h e Xiivat"&#13;
a d relieve all bilious&#13;
trouble*.&#13;
GRAND OPENING! I nm }&gt;K'a&lt;L'&lt;l to-anwoiiiici' t h a t I h a v e j u s t s t a r t e d a g e n e r a l s t o r e a t&#13;
M y l i n e c o n s i s t s of a l a r g e a n d v a r i e d - a s s o r t m e n t o f&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
any other IIOIIHO in town. J'aper hain:i!i.',4i'eh( ,-,-&#13;
inj:, v\\i\&lt;f s*laijiiii&gt;: and eraiuitie i-penalties. (ii^e&#13;
us n cull and fati.-fy yiiiii'M-lM-H f!mt \\i- only way&#13;
vvhatwe mean, and mean all tlmt we unv&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8 1884.&#13;
B U f r K R A X 1 ) E G G S . E v e r y t h i n j r ^ e f o r a t r o c k b o t t o m p r i c e s .&#13;
D o n ' t f o r g e t , ^&#13;
P. INGHAM, Gregory, Mich.&#13;
Etttei? Vegetable; I.':GI.,.E3. Fries2Be. All Sratglita,&#13;
Sn'cHSsiiB TO JLM Aj^m • v ' ^ T&#13;
In (UnonsY-i iilthe Blaod, Skin aad DOOM.—N«n«a&gt; DebilUy,&#13;
Impolrnrr, Orfttnie Weakaews, €&gt;o&gt;otTB«a&gt; B»UIHIe and&#13;
Mrrrarlaf Atertloan, Sclcntlflo treatment\ aafe and tun&#13;
wmnllri. - rx-fnrmltlei Treated. CaH or write for lltt ef&#13;
qui'Kttonito ho onswcriwl oyihoto detlrlnfr treatment by paU. CPer*&lt;in» »nff»rlo*frn»iRnptnrwabmld Mad their addrMa.%&#13;
aod Itarn wmMhlarto thrlr adraBiaRf. ItlaMta trmia^&#13;
AddreM Dr. C. T.. I.aBAROK, Pret'i M d Phr.ltUa fB Olarfl*&#13;
r«atral Red. A Sor». I«»tltut». 010 Loeait »U, St. LoaU, l a , 6u«ce«»ar to Dr. BuUt'l&gt;lnm&gt;Mn. BaUaUahad 10 Taan.&#13;
I hiive now on hand a lur^'cr imd bettei1 stock »f&#13;
Harneri8 tlian ever before tir^etlier .with a ijrand&#13;
"" HAitNESS GOODS !&#13;
MHO whipH and I,;I^1IOH. AH uood as the best and&#13;
elieay it* the ehewiu'Mt. Carriitu'c triimhintt and&#13;
ivrmirnij; JH'atly and promptly dono. St*e for&#13;
FAYIi'iTK HKAS'OX,&#13;
r - • " STOCKBRIOCE MICHIGAN.&#13;
x&#13;
\ . , ^'.... j .&#13;
^&#13;
^ • / .y&#13;
•&lt;*'&#13;
-nr-/-&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/ ^ - &gt;&#13;
X " '&#13;
s&#13;
- ~-&#13;
. - • - ^&#13;
^&#13;
-&#13;
/'&#13;
"&#13;
' r&#13;
• / •&#13;
--—:&#13;
1 _ V&#13;
m&#13;
• '• , i -&#13;
mm&#13;
-Wf&gt;&#13;
•L&#13;
1..&#13;
. / x&#13;
aoouyinf tue Proportion*, of a&#13;
• ! In most rooms, aa w« find ihcra, some&#13;
treatment Is •necessary to modify a detent&#13;
In proportion, because even where&#13;
tbe question lias been well considered&#13;
in the building, the iloor joists niuat be&#13;
Bet on one level, and thin is determined&#13;
by the most important rooms on each&#13;
floor, leaving the other rooms in faulty&#13;
proportion of length and width to&#13;
height. The most universally recognized&#13;
rule for determining the height of&#13;
a room is the sum of half the width and&#13;
the square root of the length. The&#13;
adoption of this rule results in bringing&#13;
the angle formed by the ceiling and&#13;
wall just within the angle of vision of a&#13;
p e r s o n standing in the center, of the&#13;
room without raising the eyes; but of&#13;
course the rule can only be strictly observed&#13;
in one room on each iloor, unless&#13;
a double tier of joists is set above tho&#13;
smaller rooms, or unless it is possible to&#13;
have the floors of rooms in the same stoiy&#13;
on different levels, either course involvdifficulty&#13;
and expense. Thero is no&#13;
feet in proportion that can not be&#13;
modified in more than (me way; that is&#13;
to say, to assert that a room is too high&#13;
is equivalent to saying that ii is either&#13;
not wide enough or not long enough, o r&#13;
both; so that in trenting a room with a&#13;
view of modifying its apparent proportion,&#13;
the treatment thut_Js most "convenient&#13;
may be made to answer the purpose&#13;
in almost any instance; to appar*.&#13;
ently shorten a room being the same an&#13;
to apparently increase its width- and&#13;
height, to apparently Widen it bring tho&#13;
same as decreasing thi.' length and height,&#13;
and so on. Thus six remedies are a t&#13;
hand, one or two of which will suilice,&#13;
under-Any circumstances, to make a&#13;
room appear higher, lower, wider, narrower,&#13;
longer or shorter.&#13;
To make a room appear higher the&#13;
plane surface Of the ceiling should be decreased&#13;
by the moldings of the cornice,&#13;
by panels, or in the absence of these, by&#13;
bands of color performing the same office.&#13;
A vertical system of line should&#13;
be adopted in mural decoration, and the&#13;
mantel should be lower&#13;
To make a room appear lower exactly&#13;
the opposite treatment should be adopted:&#13;
tnat is, to increase the plane ceiling,&#13;
adopt a horizontal system of mural decoration,&#13;
witha~ dado and a high mantel.&#13;
To make a room appear wider is accomplished&#13;
to a certain extent by making&#13;
it appear lower; but where, this is&#13;
undesirable, or where it is insuflicien^,&#13;
the effect can be reached by adopting a&#13;
mural decoration on a graduated scale&#13;
of form, decreasing upward, so that two&#13;
or'more patterns at the ton similar to&#13;
those at the foot are found to occupy&#13;
the same spare as one. at the foot, and&#13;
this effect can be much increased by a&#13;
gradation of color upward from dark to&#13;
light&#13;
T o make a room appear narrower is&#13;
accomplished to a certain extent by&#13;
making it appear higher; but where this&#13;
is undesirable or insufficient the effect&#13;
can be obtained by adopting a stronglydrawn&#13;
large pattern in- strong color for&#13;
mural decoration.&#13;
To make a room appear longer is to&#13;
an extent accomplished by making it&#13;
appear lower and narrower; but wh'ere--&#13;
these are undesirable or insufficient theeftect&#13;
may be obtained by decreasm?&#13;
HOW CAN YOU AFFORD;&#13;
TO&#13;
BUT HARDWARE&#13;
I am selling everything in my line CHEAPER thait any one else can afford to.&#13;
BECAUSE I IBTJY QOODS&#13;
s&#13;
— - ( j r . MY EXPENSES ARE ALMOST NOTHING.&#13;
the scale andQ.strengtli of color of'the&#13;
mural decoration adopted at the euds.'&#13;
To make a room appear shorter is accompanied&#13;
fip an extent by making it&#13;
appear wider and higher: hut the effect&#13;
can be achieved by inereasing the&#13;
acale and sTrengtli jai-u^Jiu^-citrihir&#13;
; mural decoration adopted at the ends.&#13;
Any of these effects can be modified&#13;
Or increased by the treatment of the&#13;
floor surface, whether by carpets, rugs,&#13;
ainted boards, or bv parquet llooring, fi&#13;
I CARRY NO STOCK BUT WHAT ARE NEW AND SALEABLE GOODS.&#13;
YOU NEED THE BENEFIT OF OUR COMPETITION.&#13;
RL. BROWN, PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
wtm.&#13;
IMPORT&#13;
M'ln'n you visit oHeave New York C'itv *uvr&#13;
BK!_'i.'Hi.'i' Kxprty^fjitrt' and e a r r i n g llirp anil stop&#13;
at tlie UriyitrThion Hotel opposite (irutxi IVntral&#13;
I W o t . CALL AND GET&#13;
' Kletriint rooms fitted up at a cost of one mil&#13;
lion dollars, reduced to %\ and upwards per day.&#13;
K ;;!••&gt; I mam (4*n,—KUnatur. HestininuU auppluiii-&#13;
\&lt;ith the best, Horse carp, etairea and elevated&#13;
railroads to all depots. Families ran live better&#13;
for lei** money at the Grand t'nion Hotel than&#13;
anv other flret'clasa hotel in the citv.&#13;
ines running across a room, or ni&lt;rs "&#13;
laid down at intervals, having theenVet&#13;
of shortening, and, consequently, to an&#13;
extent of heightening and widening, a&#13;
room. Lines running in the length increaae&#13;
this dimension, and, to an ex*&#13;
tent, reduce the height ami width. A&#13;
polished floor increases the* apparent&#13;
tefght of an apitrtnrent by reelecting&#13;
all vertical lines ami prolonging them.&#13;
These are the main devices for niodi- Snxxg proportion without actual alteraon&gt;&#13;
ana the extent to which any&#13;
should be used must depend upon the&#13;
degree of the defect. In many instances&#13;
aeriniia de.fp.pta may he owed by&#13;
a. Uttie judicious carp^niryvsueh a a 4 a -&#13;
(Defeasing or decreasing the height or&#13;
width of doors or windows. Whore&#13;
the windows are too high, or' where it&#13;
is desirable to continue an unbroken&#13;
horizontal line, a transom bar may be&#13;
introduced in the window-frame, afford-'&#13;
ing an opportunity for stained-glass&#13;
lights above, and the usual sashes&#13;
casements below.&#13;
The panelling of doors may: -be also&#13;
made to assist any scheme, long unbroken&#13;
panels having-tfie effect of increasing&#13;
the hpigtif o' the door, and a&#13;
number of hori/.ontal panels having&#13;
fjie pppdsite effect.— A. Jf\ OaU.y. \n&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion,&#13;
^~ P r e m a t u r e Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An 80-pase Cloth-bound Book of Advice to&#13;
Youiur or Middle-aged Men .with prescriptions&#13;
f r Self-treatment ov a,ReRular Physician.&#13;
SgP,Un TI Cr nDRr rB o ng tamrepcse.i ptA dodf rttw-wo three-Mot&#13;
T. W I L L I A M S &amp; C O . . MILWAUKEE, Wit BEFORE BUYING fhis Horse&#13;
or&#13;
r * M.a naemia.&#13;
Michigan Buggy Co,&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich. ELSEWHERE,&#13;
MANN BROS&#13;
IS T U L U S Q&#13;
*THIS MAN^—&#13;
7\ntif he don t sell his Heavy Draft, rT-nr f i l i n g&#13;
1 &lt;::idnr, and buy an&#13;
UASY RUNNING&#13;
PEERING TWINE BINDER&#13;
at once, every horse on the farm will soon be dead&#13;
W1LUAM DEERING k CO., Chicago, III.&#13;
B I N D E R S , R E A P E R S AND IftOWKBS&#13;
T H E H O R 3 E 8 ' F R I C N O t .&#13;
1-. yOBOALBBf&#13;
A N D i t n v S . Howell, Mich.&#13;
r 7* i T:&#13;
Wholesale Mannfaemren of ill kinds of Open and&#13;
Top BUGGIES ami ROAD CARTS. A*&lt;PBU wanted&#13;
everywhere. Writ* for catalogue Md price Hit.&#13;
FINS WORK A 8PCCZAt.Tr.&#13;
SEPTEMBER •»:!. 1884.&#13;
nv-s !•{ K.ii-si i has ordered&#13;
\ :A to cost ^Ht. 00. It will&#13;
1'ur. trimmed with &lt;*Qkf.&#13;
\\\h rri; ious stonrs^-'She&#13;
]ntt &lt;in more styJtJ^if she&#13;
A bicvclc to run n;i "Iv• •» mny lie cal&#13;
ed an icicle. --Somcvvillc ..lonrnal.&#13;
— i'Le I'lr.i]&#13;
A cloak wiiie&#13;
lie of sauii'&#13;
and c»r olici&#13;
could li:irdl\&#13;
was an editor's wife- 0ilp4i/ Derrick;&#13;
• 4,Ai:! :i n-:-* u y*&lt;\&lt;\'' said Mrs..&#13;
UanisU.-tlian.: ".t &gt;kr"&lt;i!i otii- house by&#13;
the seas di\ and .df;'Milan t help murnuiriti^&#13;
t i my-Vlf, a-' i lay .-.wake, *b«&#13;
words'oU.^i'c'old .-on-.r, yop. know,-my&#13;
doav^/'Cettsc, !lii4.' h^viw/'^—lios'&#13;
y' - T h e r e '.A&#13;
oot coniainoi&#13;
of his court &lt;&#13;
lo precedence.&#13;
Jy nnd said..&#13;
and t:ie ilan-ist&#13;
Wo also manafactur* • fuH lino of CUTTERS,&#13;
Including Swell Bodr, Portland, Square Bo*&#13;
two aeat Fortland and Poney Sleigh*.&#13;
Bend for cuts aad pricai before purchasing.&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
KlLiXiJEOOi l i c k .&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT!&#13;
GENTLEMEN!&#13;
We invite your attention to our line of&#13;
GENUINE CALF SHOES&#13;
i o d X a n d for Sale o r Exchaug*.&#13;
• .i\i''Mj.ht\ liLTos of timlj^r land In the town-&#13;
.•I'lip i».'ii'!iit«''i);iW. Inj-hamCo., which 1 will sell&#13;
t"i- * ;.-li or trade fi&gt;r other lands or property In&#13;
.I'ni'.ivni Li\ia^stou county. Address,&#13;
NORWAN BURGESS,.&#13;
' ' Pinckney, MicV&#13;
ALSO OUR LINE OF SHOES&#13;
A.T&#13;
READ THE DETROIT POST&#13;
Tli&lt;\.B.e.j*t:'?Jowftpappr In X i r h i p&#13;
a w!se njonarcli&#13;
T^rorics. Two&#13;
.a dispute as&#13;
i. .»torv &lt;&gt;1&#13;
iti written&#13;
aipsals ^a&gt;&#13;
Tin' "\ us looked kind&#13;
it t!&gt;;&gt; oldest &lt;xo first.'*&#13;
. IMI ••aced ::nd wont it)&#13;
D-iily—$T per Ypar: liO Ct-nts* per Mouth.&#13;
—One Dollar por Year,&#13;
rati.&#13;
Weekly&#13;
$1.75, S2.00, S2.25, $2.50.&#13;
DSCN, MOORE &amp;. CO.&#13;
WHOLESALE DEALERS IX&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
D E T I R O T T . RK.PKCTFITM&#13;
We shall continue to offer the sar»6 great&#13;
Inducements to purchasers as before&#13;
and guarantee satisfaction to&#13;
our PATRONS in all&#13;
-—cases.—/"'&#13;
TONIC&#13;
FACTS RfCAttmO&#13;
Br, Buter'i Ira kk,&#13;
It will purify and etirlcU U» I L O O S , rcmilate&#13;
H VXQO&amp;of ttioaa&#13;
i reoutrlng a certain and efficient TONIC,&#13;
Jyl&gt;yspepat»,W»iit©f Appeilt«.lndlf««l&#13;
c ' v ^ . . B t ^ e n F y , ' 8 * « M 1 U u»e U narked&#13;
BlUCLTH and VIOOEof TOUTHt In all UIOM&#13;
diseases - '-* * -* — • -~"&#13;
especTail&#13;
tlon, Laofc\pr Btrenirt... , _^«, . .&#13;
witli tminedtata and wonderfni result*. Honea,&#13;
muscle* and uerYes receive new force. £allvena&#13;
(be njlnd and iuppfleVBndn Power. *"U T '""&#13;
L A D I F A aufferrni from all complatnta&#13;
DR. Ki4ETJ|B,« XXON TOKlOi^ife and sp^rdr&#13;
core. It gfttt i ctear and healthy complexion.&#13;
: freqnent attem&#13;
Trie »trpnjrest testimony to the value ot i&gt;H.&#13;
HARTtH'sftojf TONIC 111 hat&#13;
- - -eu - -&#13;
-** — « • - — ^ mm M v « ^-eii I T O I M n v * a i V K r a i u i&#13;
do not expcrltnetit^f «t the ORIGINAL AND B*.»*.&#13;
•t &lt;9ounterMtln«h»ve only added u&gt; lhe|K&gt;pid&gt;ltMr«&#13;
Ity of the origin**, If you earnestly desire health&#13;
N - f • " " - - ' " • - J&#13;
•nd your address toTbe 1&#13;
St. Lotila, Ma, for oar&#13;
?nilof •trmnaeaod&#13;
DR. HARTSR't IRON TONIO IS FOR 8 * L I BY AU- m a Ttoe Dr. Hatter Med Co. V&#13;
" D M U U C B O O K . H |&#13;
ns^fal Imornstlon, It—.^&#13;
K&#13;
? &gt; * * *&#13;
y&#13;
-J, _ _ • ,.T&#13;
ft) * WBiifeg *LX&amp;!**?'&amp;£!K&#13;
r 1»,&#13;
•fcv&#13;
1&#13;
fl&#13;
J&#13;
i]&#13;
/&#13;
V&#13;
n&#13;
y&#13;
JEROME W l N C p E L L , E D I T O R .&#13;
Entered at the ro»tofllee as 2ft class matter.&#13;
TOPICS OF THE TIMES,&#13;
XOKTMKRN- Pacific cattle shipments&#13;
this year have been the greatest since&#13;
the road opened. The revenue from&#13;
east-bound shipments already equals&#13;
the earnings made last spring on westbound&#13;
shipments. So far 50,000 head&#13;
of beef cattle have been shipped east,&#13;
and contranta already made call for&#13;
25,000 more. Last spring 100,000 one&#13;
and two years old cattle wore shipped&#13;
east.&#13;
out the room, and for the last two&#13;
weeks has been down on his knees,&#13;
scraping the floor for a smooth surface.&#13;
Two nights ago ho finished his task.&#13;
His floor was'as smooth as glass but,&#13;
oh, ihose knees! They ached like the&#13;
toothache and were now raw. To make&#13;
tko matter worse, his daughter went&#13;
up to try the now rink and, on the&#13;
first round, fell down and broke her&#13;
arm.&#13;
T h e F o r O l d&#13;
T H E passengers on one of the New&#13;
York ferry boats a few days ago saw a&#13;
well dressed man dash off his coat,&#13;
throw his hat upon tho deck and jump&#13;
overboard. In tho hat was this letter :&#13;
To whom it may concern—Whoever&#13;
picks this up I wish they would state&#13;
what th«y saw or heard of my jumping&#13;
into tho water and send t h h Jo Mr.*rE.&#13;
Colton of 116 Suydam street, Brooklyn,&#13;
E. D. I a m ' t i r e d , o f life and do this&#13;
cheerfully and without' regret. Yours,&#13;
i-£arfcer.&#13;
A N E W York inventor has j usl patented&#13;
a substitute for the troublesome&#13;
method of puttiug down and taking up&#13;
carpets under tho old system of tacking.&#13;
Tho improvement is in the use oi a&#13;
hooked clamped plate attached to suitaMeBTockg&#13;
of standards and acted upon&#13;
by springs for grasping and holding the&#13;
«dge of tho carpet. It is claimed that&#13;
by this invention carpets may bo hold&#13;
without injury and bo easily taken up&#13;
and replaced without the use of tacks&#13;
and hooks,&#13;
T h o m p s o n H # m e&#13;
L a d i e s .&#13;
Michigan Christian Herald.&#13;
On the corner of Cass and Hancock&#13;
avenues, there stands t b t i nest monument&#13;
ever reared by inuividual beneficence&#13;
in Detroit. I t is tho munificent&#13;
Rift of Mr. Mary Thompson, a lady now&#13;
herself, " looking toward tho sunset,"&#13;
to her less fortunate sister* who, but for&#13;
her, would find their pathway down the&#13;
"Valley of the Shadow" unlighted by&#13;
any beams of friendly interest or blessings&#13;
of home care.&#13;
When, ou tho death of her husband,&#13;
Mrs. Thompson looked about for the&#13;
most worthy object onkwhich to be-&#13;
Btow .soma portion of her ample fortune,&#13;
the Hged, needy ones of her&#13;
own sex, at leufctb. «nlistoned her warmest&#13;
sympathies, • and in 1873 aho&#13;
opened a " H o m o " for them in the&#13;
east wirjg of the Home for the Friendless.&#13;
Thi* was. endowed by her in&#13;
187G. It provided comfortable accommodations&#13;
for a limited number,&#13;
but was a very inadequate expression&#13;
*f thu philanthropic idea which was&#13;
over widening in her busy brain. This&#13;
noble thought has now found suitably&#13;
translation into brick and stone&#13;
It str.nds as an object lesson, pointing&#13;
out to the rich a way to realize a&#13;
laudablu ambition for name and place&#13;
in the memories of their kind, while to&#13;
•the-worthy poor it speaks of tho brother-&#13;
CHICACIO, Cincinnati, New Orjeans,&#13;
San Francisco "aannad sStt.. jLudouuiiss~~aa"rrec"r tkff&#13;
five cities of the United States that tolerate&#13;
Sunday theatricals. There are 11&#13;
regular theatres in Chicago, to say&#13;
nothing of museums, panoramas, concert&#13;
halls and other resorts. If tber&#13;
is any difference to be found in them&#13;
on Sunday nights it is that tho lights&#13;
are brighter and the fnu more uproarious.&#13;
It i.a the custom daring the week&#13;
to give eight performances, and with&#13;
Sunday night it runs up to nino. In&#13;
some theatres a matineo is given on&#13;
Sunday afternoon.&#13;
J A M E S WOUMLUY, tho famous Washington&#13;
boniface, was a colored man,&#13;
and wa-j born in 1820. He started out&#13;
in life as a driver for his father's livery/&#13;
stable, and subsequently opened ,ja&#13;
Washington a "hotel which has todon&#13;
over since known as "Worraley's.'X. He&#13;
was a favorite of Reverdy Johnson, accompanying&#13;
him,to England asjhis steward&#13;
when the latter wen/ there on&#13;
a special mission, and in later days&#13;
Koscoe L/'onkhng patronized him munificently&#13;
in money anil influence. A&#13;
long list of famous oien were his guests&#13;
during his days of/service in Washington,&#13;
and the place has been tho scene&#13;
of no end of Ehl/gnificent banquets and&#13;
t a r e after-dormer eloquence. -&#13;
A WXsuiJf.GTON police justice has&#13;
solved the legal probHam as to when a equally -attractive committee&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
.i.&#13;
rv&#13;
storage. Tho large, well-lighted dining-&#13;
room leaves nothing, to be desired&#13;
in the way of convenience or taste.&#13;
Descending to the kitchen, appetizing&#13;
odors greet us and we find everything&#13;
in shining array in pantry, wash-room,&#13;
cellar, etc. Said the. matron, " W e&#13;
have an excellent cook now and faro&#13;
sumptuously."&#13;
Wo visited, among others, " U o oldest&#13;
settlor," a serene faced lady who has&#13;
been with the institution from its foundation.&#13;
She sat by tho window reading,&#13;
and spoke of her enjoyment of the&#13;
pleasant view. Thoro are now eighteen&#13;
inmates and several more have been&#13;
entered, Tho building has accommodation^&#13;
for forty. In order to lessen&#13;
the expenses, boarders will bo received&#13;
in the rooms unoccupied by pensioners.&#13;
We understand that these must ho elderly&#13;
laMies.&#13;
Worthy women who have been residents&#13;
of Michigan for ten years, and&#13;
who are able to pay an entrance fee&#13;
of from $300 to $600, may enter&#13;
hero to spend their remaining days.&#13;
Tho property has been committed in&#13;
trust to an association, all the members&#13;
of which are ladies. Those may, at&#13;
will, appoint an advisory committee of&#13;
gentlemen.&#13;
TEo matron. Miss Austin, was formerly&#13;
at the head of the Homo for Workin^&#13;
women under the auspices of the&#13;
Woman's Christian Association of&#13;
Montreal. Sao Is an intelligent, capable,&#13;
warm-hearted woman with an appreciative1&#13;
word for many of the "lovely&#13;
old ladies" under her care. Everywhere,&#13;
ia hall, parlor and kitchen were&#13;
scattered about substantial tokens, large&#13;
and small. ' of interest in thi-s noble&#13;
charity on the part of Detroit's largehearted&#13;
citizens.&#13;
Somo tirao :vjrci,Mrs Thompson learnhood&#13;
but&#13;
or man, not as a pleasing fiction,&#13;
as a christian obligation, on the&#13;
part of some at least, cheerfully and&#13;
generously recognised.&#13;
Mrs. Thompson ia a clear-sighted)&#13;
sprightly, vivacious lady of indomitable&#13;
energy, large faith, and consecrated&#13;
purpose. She has not faltered "before&#13;
the unlooked for demands on her purse,&#13;
the endless perplexities caused "by the&#13;
superintendence of details, the weariness&#13;
of head and burden of heart which have&#13;
"often madelier la"bors bitter-jsweet, and&#13;
now it is hers to rejoice in that the end&#13;
so fitly crowns the vi ork. /&#13;
Tho building is a large/and handsome&#13;
structure, delightfully located. Its&#13;
materials are brick au,d Ohio stone with&#13;
-corrugated iron ornaments. It is finished&#13;
throughout with Norway pine, oiied&#13;
and varnished, is supplied with hot and&#13;
cold water, electric bells, speaSring&#13;
tubes, etc. Its cost approximate^ $50,-&#13;
000 and $10,000 more than the original&#13;
estimate. . Said Mrs. Thompson recently,&#13;
" T h e r e / i s no end to tho bills,&#13;
but I telV' them every one must be&#13;
paid before tho opening. Of&#13;
courso 1 bear tho expense of the building&#13;
itself, but have had excellent coadjutors'&#13;
in the details of the work, and&#13;
tho/ladies hare done- nooly as- regards&#13;
tho furnidhina.1' A visit to the Home&#13;
/verified this statement. Instead of loading&#13;
one to sing, "Backward, turn backward,&#13;
0 Time in&#13;
might almost bo&#13;
your&#13;
Ted to&#13;
night," ono&#13;
implore that&#13;
fleet old pursuer to hurry up, if one&#13;
could lookfbrward to beiug cradled in&#13;
so luxurious a homo. It is spacious,&#13;
bright and sunny from basement to attic.&#13;
A noticeable feature are the broad&#13;
handsome halls, lighted by windows of&#13;
stained glass. Passing through one of&#13;
these we observo three old ladies, two&#13;
inmates and ono a visitor, all sitting on&#13;
a sofa and merrily chatting. " I hat's&#13;
a cosy corner for you old ladies, isn't&#13;
it?" pleasantly remarked the matron,&#13;
" t h e y ' r e all pleasant corners,1 ' was&#13;
the bright response of one. "Everything&#13;
that is done for us is as nictf as&#13;
nice can b e . " The reception room is&#13;
tastelully ana oven elegantly furnished&#13;
in modern scyle. Across tho hall is the&#13;
ed that there were those among ucr old&#13;
ladies who wore haunted by tho foar of&#13;
burial in tho "Potter's Field," Sho sat&#13;
about dispelling this fear with characteristic&#13;
energy and generosity. A&#13;
tine lot • was purchased at&#13;
Eimwood and a suitable monument-&#13;
erected. Says a lady friend:&#13;
" I never saw a happier woman than&#13;
Mrs. Thompson when this was .accomplished'&#13;
and tho old ladies were informed.&#13;
Thev threw their arms about&#13;
her neck ani" sobbed out their gratitude&#13;
and joy, whilo her emotion was&#13;
little less than theirs."&#13;
And so wo leave these old ladies in a&#13;
homo as perfect as n perfect autumn&#13;
day,—a home ri^h in mellow tints,&#13;
bright in autumnal sunshine, ptaceful&#13;
as tho landscape from their window,&#13;
and promising as the harvest which&#13;
witnesses its opening. With slight adaptation&#13;
wo may apply to them Whittier's&#13;
Psalm:&#13;
No lousrer forward nor behind&#13;
They look in hope or fear,&#13;
Bn?, grateful, takt: thr «oo.t they flrni, ,&#13;
Flie best o' uu\v and here.&#13;
Tbu:? all the'j jniiT^rntrrof life&#13;
• fcetin b!(T'&lt;din&lt; iu a p.salnj,&#13;
And all the angles of i'8 strife * /&#13;
Blow roundii'g into calm.&#13;
A m&amp;hflp's Kl&lt;!dlc.&#13;
Tho following compound&#13;
composed byxho b i s h o D '&#13;
1. L have a box. '&#13;
•&gt; Thi* hnv has two V&lt;1-.&#13;
i t also has~Two"~caps&#13;
It contains two musical&#13;
riddto wos&#13;
Clifford:&#13;
mstrusil&#13;
«o in it two established&#13;
room.&#13;
3.&#13;
•I.&#13;
ments.&#13;
5. Ii| has&#13;
measures.&#13;
. 6. ltcontaius a groat number of articles&#13;
a carpenter could not dispense with.&#13;
7.. Tills*box always lias about it two&#13;
good lish.&#13;
g. Also a great many »&gt;f smaller sire.&#13;
y. In it you will tincl'lofty trees.&#13;
10. Also some gaudy, flowers.&#13;
11. The fruit ot* an .indigenous tree.&#13;
12. Two gentle little animals are&#13;
found in it.&#13;
13. Also a number of smaller and&#13;
less tamo animals.&#13;
14. A fine stag is found&#13;
ID. A great many&#13;
without handles.&#13;
16 It boasts of two halls or places&#13;
of worship.-&#13;
17. Somo weapons of warfare are&#13;
within it.&#13;
small whips.&#13;
/&#13;
puppy becomes a dog. This question&#13;
came up in the case of an aged colored&#13;
•"man charged with the crime of keeping&#13;
a dog without paying a licence. The&#13;
aged colored man pleaded that ho did&#13;
- not keep a dog—it was only a puppy&#13;
six months old. The judge decided&#13;
that the law imposed a tax on dogs, bu&#13;
was silent as to puppies. He knew,&#13;
from a large experience as a fancier of&#13;
dogs, that a puppy did" not become a&#13;
dog until he was ono yeaf old, and&#13;
therefore he would discharge the defendant.&#13;
The venerable darky, his face&#13;
radiant with rictorious smiles, retired&#13;
from the court room, holding a section&#13;
of ciothea-line, at the other end of which1? handsomely&#13;
Everywhere the windows.commauda(-alwaysfntt-ndin - t hrs • box&#13;
wide and pleasant prospect. The) is." And in it you find&#13;
private rooms af tho inmates, though&#13;
differing somewhat in size and style of&#13;
furnishings, are all homelike, all pro-1&#13;
v i d e d ^ v m h comfortable beds, easy&#13;
chairs, dressing cases, etc.,&#13;
and in those now occupied&#13;
are matiy traces of the individual&#13;
tastes of the owners: pictures,&#13;
books, papers, work-baskets, knickknacks,&#13;
Qgiving the effect, not of a&#13;
charity Home, but of homojeoruers.&#13;
Theio private aparUaonta a^o sometimes&#13;
furnished by the inmates, sometimes&#13;
by their friends, and in other instances&#13;
are fitted up by philanthropic&#13;
citizens of Detroit for "any worthy occupant.&#13;
Many inmates of first-class&#13;
boarding houses might well covet such&#13;
1 handsomftlv ffuurrnnii.sahhAedii,. convenient,&#13;
V'*&#13;
sunny rooms, and many a mistress&#13;
a well equipped establishment looks&#13;
with envy on the well arranged cupboards&#13;
and closets, tho lineu-vooa.s,&#13;
dumb-waiter and dozens of other household&#13;
convenieacos. Some of these&#13;
bear ample testimony to*the superinb,&#13;
e.e.n towi. nvg him, to l.e t her att.en. d. .t he £h*o?u*s*e.w,*i*f*e *s* QC,be rain. ° £Paatsts,i nge xpeurpie nctehdo&#13;
dangled the vindicated pup&#13;
T H E Toledo Blade has this on the&#13;
roller sfeating mania: A fifth ward man&#13;
has been playing a serious practical&#13;
joke upoD himrolf. His daughter has&#13;
o i | 68' .&#13;
10.&#13;
u p&#13;
broad, easy stairs, beneatk"the double&#13;
windows at each landing wo find&#13;
cushioned set*ts offering a delightful&#13;
resting place, for the weary pilgrims,&#13;
- ^ - - 4 ^ . . i , ^ „ „ . V | j . , - for the elevators are not yet in, 8tep-&#13;
^ n e m l y raked over-hi*-BUD* for a way ping ou*t o n the balcoaies, on this side&#13;
skating rink, and as he was a kind indulgent&#13;
parent, he hated to refuse her.&#13;
At the same time, he objected to haying&#13;
her godto a public rink, and conseout&#13;
o f t h e difficulty. At list a thought&#13;
struck him. H e had a large room in&#13;
the-attic which he used only as a lumber&#13;
room, and it occured to him that he&#13;
might « a k e a -home-rink out of it&#13;
Accordingly, he went to work, cleared&#13;
and that, they seem arranged with a&#13;
riew to affording_,dclightful surprises,&#13;
and though our voyage of discovery was&#13;
necessarily brief, the pleasant nooks we&#13;
found were numberless. In the upper&#13;
story are comfortable rooms- for the&#13;
servants and also an ample chamber for&#13;
mimbar of&#13;
weather-cocks.&#13;
19. The steps of a hotel are also found&#13;
in it.&#13;
20. Tho Kousc of Commons resounds&#13;
with two of my essential articles when&#13;
on the eve of a decision.&#13;
-"21. In the box you can find two scholars.&#13;
"22. And 1 hen find ton Spanish grandees&#13;
to wait upon t . e m .&#13;
All prenounce mo a wonderful piece&#13;
of mecliani m. but a very few have rcmoruuered&#13;
the strange things that make&#13;
up ray whole.&#13;
G r e e t i n g t o F r i e n d s .&#13;
Tho boarding school of Now England&#13;
yearly meeting of Friends was held in&#13;
Providence, R. 1., on the 21th,of October.&#13;
The Whittier anniversary was&#13;
celebrated by the presentation of a portrait&#13;
of tho puot by Charles F. Collin of&#13;
Lynn, Muss. Collin was a pupil at the&#13;
school fifty years ago, later a teacher,&#13;
and then committeeman, which office&#13;
he still holds. Tho portrait is life size,&#13;
representing Whittier sitting in an armchair&#13;
in an attitude of peaceful thought.&#13;
The picture has boon hung in Alumni&#13;
Hall, where tho exercises of the day&#13;
were held.&#13;
The attendance was notable. Upon&#13;
the platform, beside tho donor of the&#13;
portrait, were a number of prominent&#13;
citisens and Friends.&#13;
After prayer Thomas Chase, LL. 1).,&#13;
President of Haverford College, was introduced&#13;
and delivered an oration,&#13;
Speaking of Quakerism, he said no&#13;
other system of Christianity unites better&#13;
the conflicting tendencies of Hellenism&#13;
and Hebraism. Accepting and revering&#13;
the Bible, it respects and reveres&#13;
also the voice of God within the&#13;
soul. The lptter of The hook guards it&#13;
from vagary and mysticism; its freshness&#13;
-oi-spirit shieldsit from narrow interpretation.&#13;
Tho Society of Friends!&#13;
has always shown love of mental culture.&#13;
Its spirit, if uniiamporod, would&#13;
show that Lendonoy in a much greater&#13;
degree. Puritanic Quakerism has nut&#13;
always smiled., on _.art, but genu!no&#13;
Quakerism weiedmes overy form&#13;
of art whoso influence is&#13;
wholesome, and through which&#13;
breathes the eilicienco of the Great&#13;
Spirit who speaks to His creatures in&#13;
beauty as well as in might. Who, then,&#13;
is better fitted for ike sacred ollico ot&#13;
bard thaa the true sou of that society&#13;
who recognizes iu tho all Father the&#13;
over present friends of His children,&#13;
speaking to them in all tho lovely forms&#13;
of nature, inspiring all lovely productions&#13;
of art, whose spirit iu alwa)slying&#13;
close to our ^pirits, whom wjo serve in&#13;
renouncing self, defending tho oppressd&#13;
or helping the wretched, and whom we&#13;
honor when wo point out tho beauty of&#13;
His creations, whether in the outward&#13;
universe or in tho mind and heart and&#13;
soul of man.&#13;
J. K. Lowell, minister to England.&#13;
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Thomas M.&#13;
Clark, £. P. Whipple, George William&#13;
Curtis, Pliny Earlo Chase, Robt. C.&#13;
Winthrop, George F. Hoar, J . B. Thayer,&#13;
James Freeman Clarke, J o h n Bright,&#13;
John BoyleTPRoillyv-Matthew Arnold,&#13;
President Eliot, of Harvard University,&#13;
Jas. E. Rhoads, D. Hr Tuko and John&#13;
G. Whittier himself sent lotters regreU&#13;
ting and explaining absence.&#13;
A LETTKK FKOSI W H I T T I E R .&#13;
Whittier*s leite:' is as follows:&#13;
_ OAK K N O L L , DANTEKS-:. M A S S . , )&#13;
l o t h uiDtita, Vi, lbS-1. t"&#13;
To Amrus'tln.-' Jone», Principal of Krl.^iis'&#13;
School, ProviiJciH'c, K. I :&#13;
MY D.KAK F U I E N D — I h;rve received&#13;
tho kind invitation to bo with you on&#13;
the 24th instant, but i t " r - n i a r d i y ' p o ^ i -&#13;
blo that 1 can av.iil my,-elf of {^otherwise&#13;
than by proxy. . ly double or&#13;
"Counterfeit presentment" will of&#13;
courso be thriv. ami, as Hie party most&#13;
interested, may fitly supply my place.&#13;
The position tfa.SMgflcd it, between&#13;
the budts of tho great English&#13;
Friend and statesman and noble&#13;
woman, who like tho master,&#13;
visited "the. spirits in prison," poems so&#13;
far beyond the desert of its orig!n&amp;]4h*t&#13;
if tho portrait had the miraculous power&#13;
of locomotion attributed to mediaeral&#13;
pictures, it would feel constrained to&#13;
walk out of its frame and seek a humbler&#13;
place. I have reached an age when&#13;
flattery ceases to deceive and notoriety&#13;
is a burden, and the faint shadow of a&#13;
literary reputation fails to hide the&#13;
solomn realities of life, but a genuine&#13;
token of love and good will has no&#13;
limitations of time and is never out of&#13;
place. I scarcely need, therefore, say&#13;
I highly appreciate the generous compliment&#13;
paid me by my much valued&#13;
friend in placing my portrait in tho old&#13;
iind honored institution under thy&#13;
charge. I confess I heard tho first • intimation&#13;
of his purpose with somo sur-"&#13;
and mi9g*vlhg as I looked&#13;
PENSIONS T O A L X j&#13;
SOl.DlliJiS £ HAIL CUM.&#13;
who wore clieaMurt bv wounds, tliscttwj, aodA&#13;
or otlicnviue.ttje lues oi &amp; too, pikt«, varicose v«i&#13;
chronic (liarrha'ti, rupturo, lutw of aitfbt or {*&#13;
tittlly no), it)«e of lH-ariuij, falling luiek of w w r&#13;
rheumntlsm, any dlnuljillty, no niatt*'f kowwi&#13;
s;ive» you H ptwBioti. JVrtf unci Ifouoraole^&#13;
eha*v»a Obtained Wiih&gt;wn, children, niottauai,&#13;
and futiiora of soldiers ilyiiit? in tho berviflj, «&#13;
*ftdtwurdn. from iWse&amp;so contracted or wounds r«-&#13;
•eifed. whilo in tho Horvico, uro entitled to B K -&#13;
•ion. Hi'jecti'd and abandoned claims a •peclanr.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS Cott&#13;
UECTED.&#13;
INCREASE YOUR PENSION.&#13;
A pwision tan bo increaeed at any time &lt;&#13;
Mie disability warrants it. AH yongrow •tdw • »&#13;
wound haa gradually undermined tlwj conantnuon,&#13;
tlM disease tiaa made you more lioipleea. In *****&#13;
m«in«r the cHsahility lia* increaaed; so ap»f »Xor&#13;
an Increase at once. • '&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED&#13;
My experience, and being here at headquarter*&#13;
finable me to attend promptly to all claim* &amp;«aln*t&#13;
the Government. Circulars froe. Address, wflfi&#13;
8UlUl&gt;: M. V. TLFRNEY,&#13;
Box 485, WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS H E A L T H F O R M E N&#13;
P R O F .&#13;
A N S W E R .&#13;
1.&#13;
9&#13;
Tho box is the human bo'ly.&#13;
EyeluU. 3,&#13;
Drums. o.&#13;
Naihi. _ 7.&#13;
Muscles. ----- ,gr&#13;
Tulh.s (t^'o lips). 11.&#13;
-caps&#13;
12.&#13;
14.&#13;
16.&#13;
1*.&#13;
20.&#13;
22.&#13;
Calves. 13.&#13;
Hart. J 5.&#13;
"lorn pies.' 17,&#13;
Vanes. 19&#13;
Ayes and noes. 21,&#13;
Tendons.&#13;
Knee&#13;
Feet&#13;
Soles.&#13;
Palms."&#13;
Apples (of&#13;
tho eyes ) .&#13;
Hares.&#13;
Lashes.&#13;
Arms.&#13;
Insteps.&#13;
Pupils&#13;
A rare and beautiful plant of the&#13;
morning glory species is pwnod by Mrs.&#13;
E. N. Leavens, of Faribault, Minn.&#13;
The blossomslifeoxcoediuglya'biindant&#13;
pure white, at least fpur inches in&#13;
in diameter and very fragrant. From&#13;
twelve to-twenty/of the flowers open&#13;
^TdiTlilce^ aTCMnese umbrella suddenly&#13;
each ovwnine, between 6 and 8&#13;
o'clack, . and provide a most curious&#13;
and delightful entertainment. """ .&#13;
prise back&#13;
upon a. life, not indeed without honest&#13;
endeavor, yet marked by many weaknesses&#13;
and errors If, however, this gift&#13;
of uiy friend shall testify our common&#13;
interest in tho Friends' school and faith&#13;
in the principles and testimonies of its&#13;
founders, and if it shall serve to remind&#13;
those who see it that whatever may&#13;
seem worthy of commendation in the&#13;
life of its original is due not to himself,&#13;
but to tho Divina Providence which surrounded&#13;
his youth and streDgthoQed his&#13;
manhood, I shall bo more than satisfied.&#13;
I need not say to thee, my dear friend,&#13;
lliaTTdXh^xi^n^"^ffi^'"^ui,torl5yl5irthright&#13;
and sincere convictions, 1 am no&#13;
sectarian in the strict senso o£ the term.&#13;
My sympathies are with tho broad&#13;
church of humanity. Nevertheless, if&#13;
qno has to be " h u n g in effigy1- bo may&#13;
iavasomo-choice aatoUaa place.of execution,&#13;
and it goes far in reconciling&#13;
mo to toy own "fate to know that the&#13;
ceremony iu which I must be a passive&#13;
participant will bu performed in tho hall&#13;
of learning cf the Society of Friends.&#13;
I am very truly thy friend,&#13;
J O H N G. W H I T T I E R .&#13;
JOHN BRIGIIT'S LETTER&#13;
John Bright, tho British statesman,&#13;
in his letter writes:&#13;
Tho Virginia slave mother's lament&#13;
has often brought tears to my eyes. It&#13;
is short, but is worth a volume on the&#13;
great question which was ""seHTecTSCJ&#13;
years ago by your great conflict, in&#13;
which so much treasure -and blood was&#13;
expended to make freedom to the hertrage&#13;
of y o a r ^OTrtiffent. Those few&#13;
lines were enouglilo r o u s e , t h e whole&#13;
nation to expel from amongst you the&#13;
odious crime and guilt of slavery.&#13;
A Radical Crco .&#13;
FOB&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
VL3STX&gt;&#13;
IMPOTENCE&#13;
CGT'Teflted for over 6&#13;
j-oara fcy u s o . l a thou*&#13;
Danda of caooa.&#13;
T. ^e® TRIAL&#13;
PACKAGE.&#13;
NERVOUS DEBILITY&#13;
orguio we«ka«U m i 4+&#13;
o»y, Aid BomKout^&#13;
•dure di»e»»e«i U&#13;
akllMU phyrirrtm*. I&#13;
frwa yoailiAl fa"*&#13;
tlODI, tOO (tlM 1&amp;6&amp;2--&#13;
•adorerbriln wotk.&#13;
sot tcniportte whUo M0k&#13;
eacmioi hirk In jovt »Utern.&#13;
Avoid btluf »°P0**J&#13;
en by prcii'Qttoun ol«inn ol&#13;
ether rtuiioiio* tut iluw&#13;
trouble*. Get our free carcttjar&#13;
and trfol pack»g«' »*»&#13;
leurn important X»eH b«foW&#13;
tilclDg. truatuient clsewbej^&#13;
Take a remedy tbat tuui W W&#13;
thouaaciln, »tA doe I nit ta&lt;&#13;
tcrfero with attention to bo«*&#13;
cc-98 or class pain or lnoonvcnloaco.&#13;
Kouudod oh »ei«&#13;
cnaflo medial prJ&amp;clnJtfc&#13;
Growing ia f^vor ano reputation.&#13;
Direct opplic»tlon to tn»&#13;
ic»t ot dl«c»«o make* iU specific&#13;
inllunnoc felt without&#13;
delay, Tho natutal fun»-&#13;
tions of the bnman orfflwism&#13;
aro rcatored. Tto&#13;
anlaiatlni? e!en»cU or&#13;
life Tvhicli h»vo beca&#13;
waatcd t.rn e ' v t n bac'u&#13;
Tho r»( i Q n l b»oornW&#13;
i c h e f r f u l and gala*&#13;
strength rapidly.&#13;
CO., K'f g Chcmlitl.&#13;
., St, Louis* Mo.&#13;
SEND ADDRESS __&#13;
KARRIS R£MED&#13;
306½ North WthSt T ..&#13;
QKE MONTH'S tREATMtNT. $ 3 ! 2 HONTH3.$5; 3 MONTHS. $7,&#13;
win HOUTM™&#13;
s? c a&#13;
T H I S MAGNETIC BELT I S&#13;
WARRANTED TO C U R E j &amp; g r ' " -&#13;
!triotit modirinp&#13;
OH*T&#13;
tli« fol&gt;&#13;
I*»ln in friobacU, hi pa, head, or&#13;
TTltnotir mouirine:—i*mr&gt; in 1 no back, uipa, neaa. or&#13;
1'.ml.rs nervous (li'Idllty,lumbago, gcneroldebliitTt&#13;
rhc;i!nutlKu&gt;i paralyala, neuralgia, aotntlcct, dlaea&amp;'&#13;
^4ot ihc LiJui'Yu.oplnnl dlncaaea, torpid II vrr, gont,&#13;
rcralnnl cinlanlun*. Imnotcncy, anthma. h e t r t di»«&#13;
CMO, tly*i?opal«, conf.ilpntion, cryalpplaa, !ii(Hfire«»&#13;
t'.m, h«Tn!u or rupture* ctttarrh, pUe», ciiilepsy,&#13;
(iiipnb iii;ii&lt;Vt e l p . W1) .MI cmy debility of the GE^TRATIVE ORGANS&#13;
&lt;•&gt;• •,:!&gt;•, loot vitality, lnok of nervo toruo »nd &gt;luor,&#13;
\ i.-(\ax wcn!.ncaN«a, and oil tkone Ulni-nacn or n pcr&gt;&#13;
Konal nature, from \rhatover causo, tho continuoushirown&#13;
of MagiiL'tisni pennentlMtf through1 the pHrta&#13;
intiHt i-c«toro thorn to a hortltliy ocUou. TUere U no&#13;
niUtaliO nbont tiiij ai&gt;|&gt;llfuico.&#13;
LAO«ESAGNETIC&#13;
ABDOMINAL SUPPORTER.&#13;
TaTHE LADIES:—Si?' on rr* affllete4&#13;
i IthoanatiaJm&#13;
Kettmlila, Nerrou*&#13;
ExhBrttIon,D/apcpal«,orwlth DJaeaaeaof the L1T*&#13;
CP, KldnoTa, Ilead»ebe or Cold Fe*t, SwoUam or&#13;
Weak A n k l e s or Swollen Feet, an Abdominai Belt&#13;
and a pair of Magnetic Koot Batteries bare no superior&#13;
lttlne r«'lof and&lt;?ure of all these complatata. Th«T&#13;
carry &amp; powerful matfnetlo force to the aeat ot the&#13;
(Uaaaae.&#13;
For J.amo Ba«b, Weakaeei e f the C pi TIP, Fall-&#13;
Infc of the w e i b. .- Leweofrh. WH C...h roa-l e 4ln^f-l a a i a i .&#13;
tlen and Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhase&#13;
or Flooding, Painful, Snppreaaed a a 4 I&gt;-&#13;
r e n l a r alenatmatlon, KarreaBeaa, andebange of&#13;
Wfe, tale U the Boat Appllanoe a a d Curatlro A«eat&#13;
M.m»W&#13;
Jor all forma of Female Dlflcaltlt* It 1» trnsurpaawdby&#13;
any thing: berore invented, bothaBacuratiTe&#13;
ageBtandaJaBOuroeof power and vital iratlon.&#13;
Price of cither Belt with Magnetic Foot Batteriea, 110.&#13;
Bentby exprrss C.O.D.ond oiaminatlon allowed,or b j&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In ordering:, send measure oE&#13;
waist and site of ahoe. Reniittnnoecan be made In oarrency,&#13;
sent in letter at our risk.&#13;
Tho Magneton Garments are adapted to all ages, are&#13;
worn over the underclothing:, (not next to t h e&#13;
body like the many Oalranlo aad Kleetrto H a n .&#13;
bur* advenlaed ao extenalvclr) and should ba&#13;
token off at night. Thev holil their poiwr forever,and&#13;
aro worn At all seasons of thf»y»Mir.&#13;
Senclptamp for thu "Now irerartyire In Medical Treataifint&#13;
Without aiuillcln«i,"Vft,h tlunuandu ot te«tin&gt;&amp;.&#13;
Dial*.&#13;
» 1 8 S t a t o St., ChJcaffo, SSL*&#13;
The Magnetic appliances may b^seen&#13;
at W i n c h c i r s Drupf Store, Picflney&#13;
Mic5i.&#13;
i.KERMOTTS&#13;
UJ&#13;
aa&#13;
•fiC&#13;
C9&#13;
C J&#13;
t/i&#13;
&lt;*&gt;&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CUBE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liver&#13;
Comapnlad inmt, MInFditg esTtioHnE, CBo1n0s0tiDpa, tion,&#13;
MOXICK.—Without a particle* of doubt, Ker»&#13;
VA.ui's I'illsar* themost popular of iny oathtt iuariu&#13;
i. Having been before the public for a quartciof&#13;
\ ^"utnT-y. and hftTlng always performed More that&#13;
VM prnmuei for them, thry merit the soecess that,&#13;
«.iu v haveatuined. P r i c e * a s c p e r I M S *&#13;
Forwhsbralldrufglst*.&#13;
Kermotts n i l s always- in stock at&#13;
I Winche Vs D h i g Store, Pinokaey, Mk*-Z&#13;
s r&#13;
0 - - . -&#13;
Y&#13;
— ^ : : •&#13;
/ * - '&#13;
N B W W W O T K h&#13;
Xl&gt; KATOR SHOWN.&#13;
Twu Treasury d-'purtmeut has just Ondded&#13;
an inttrusilu;* ^uubtioa arising out cf the&#13;
Chinese rrtrtrimton act. T h o frtebyterlaL&#13;
Board of Fon-itru Mission fchipped at Canton&#13;
two convert* d Chinese wouu-n, with the object&#13;
of installing tli'.'tn »» teachers m the home inisaion&#13;
at Sin Francisco. Upon their arrival It&#13;
was found Uiut they were not provided with&#13;
the certlneace rt quired by law, and the department&#13;
w u applh-.a to fur luntructlou The Collector&#13;
of Customs Las been notified not to per&#13;
mlt ihem to land, *nd to s&gt;t/that they are re&#13;
t u r ^ d t o U b i n a .&#13;
CAHTHA.GE Jfl HU1XS&#13;
ThemoHt destructive tire that ever visited&#13;
Northern Now Voik brok^ out in Carthage on&#13;
the mom 1:^ or the 19;h and burned all the&#13;
afternoon. The lire began from ashes thrown&#13;
from Keren's tannery, which net Are to Eaton's&#13;
planing mills. Tha flames spread rapidly to&#13;
' Ko**!,furniture manufactory and Tarr's tub&#13;
fa&lt;J^», crossed the river to East Carthage,&#13;
catct-Mg upon . Uulot's planing mill, totally&#13;
destroying tee ltictories and buildings on Ryther&#13;
iind ttrltJKl'j's IsdhuM. The flames then spread&#13;
to all the Ixjufics on Spring street, Mechanics&#13;
street, Church street, the i.ew Opera House,&#13;
Pcck'uHoUl, the UJsciplefa' Church and Academy.&#13;
On Mniu street the Episcopal and Presbyteiiau&#13;
cburchea were burned and many residences.&#13;
School street, Upper James street and&#13;
"the east side of Main street aro all In ruins.&#13;
The flames spread HO rapidly thitt the firemen&#13;
4K&gt;uld not keep up with them. At 0:30 they&#13;
spjuned to be nearly under control, and J £ was&#13;
holed to save the buainccft blocks ox the vlibyc.&#13;
It IS estimated that 200housee were ties'. r,j;,td&#13;
a&amp;d thai tho loss will rewdi |1,OWUK)0. T&gt;iere&#13;
are not sufficient dwellings left lu -town to&#13;
shelter the Inhabitants. Carthago WOH extecftively&#13;
engayeii in manufacturing, i t Is situated&#13;
in JtiLrtou county, N. Y., &lt;.»u the rl^ht&#13;
banKof the Black river (which iurnishes extensive&#13;
water power;, fourteen miles north of&#13;
Utica, on tae U'icA\&amp; Black Klver railroad.'&#13;
All Its Industries ure m ruins.&#13;
«OV. CLfcVELAVD ASSAULTED&#13;
On hla way to the executive chamber in Al-'|&#13;
fcatiy, tho other morning, Gov. Cleveland was&#13;
«?sauUe&lt;lby S.iru'l l\ Boom, of Elmira, N. Y.,&#13;
who with his wife created an ixcltement smue,&#13;
•days since in the executive chamber wU!« ,&#13;
seeking the pardon of a.relative. Boom lay iu&#13;
wait for the governor at the corner of Lai caster&#13;
hiid Kdgie streets, and an he approached&#13;
adiiresftcil him, following up at once with two&#13;
blows, whicli Aerk warded eff by tbe governor.&#13;
Bceui then rushed into tbe street, and reached&#13;
for a paving stone. As he was picking Iz up&#13;
tie was seizeu b\ a pusser-by wud held, the&#13;
governor quietly pasting on. A largo ero*d '&#13;
at fixe coiie«.irtt, ^t.d in tbe confusion B'jora&#13;
escaped iu d euteied hts boarding house, near&#13;
the ecene of n.e i^auir, where he wasfoHowei&#13;
and arresu-i!. lie was taken before •Police-&#13;
Justico (iuim.m, whu'rcmaiided him fur t»-&#13;
omiuatioii. l'li&lt; '.;»&lt;Yernor wa.s visited by scores&#13;
of pet&gt;pleeUiT'iug-!.ho-nioriiiiJi;. 1-1 u makes light&#13;
of th'j affaii. '.'-ftuom, who is a small, delicate&#13;
mae, looked wiid, but talked raiioualiy. lie&#13;
admits that tl.e u.-^i.uli. was unjustifiable, but&#13;
ingots tlwv Lh \mV is djiug in Albany, t.iul&#13;
that.her lll'ji-.s ii greatly' a;^gravaied by her&#13;
fretting abfiit M p.udou &gt;vliicu she bought from&#13;
the govcrvor fur her brother i-oine days ILU.&#13;
Boo:u says I.e. h.is )ud ir.) sleep for upwards of&#13;
a week in c.uHiqr.enee of htr ilinecs, ted the&#13;
• attending pb^s«n-iau Kays tli.it hi,? wife&#13;
would liot vicjver. Tnt&gt;'poor felio-v umy be,&#13;
tenjpoirtrii&gt; ai leabfc, classed as a ''crank."&#13;
THB QAS WAS N'OT TUliNBO OFJT.&#13;
Through eotne one's carelessness, the gas In&#13;
the vault of a b-.uk at Elmira, N. Y., had not&#13;
been turned oil when the batik closed on&#13;
' Saturday night. Monday mornlDg, Oct., M,&#13;
John Art.or,the president, went Jnlotlie vault to&#13;
open the s;iie. aie, lighted a match, and almost&#13;
immediate! v a terrific explosion occurred, hurling&#13;
Mr. /vTimt a distance of in feet from the&#13;
floor. He Ha* budly brul«ed, but if not Injured&#13;
internally ids physicians think he will recover.&#13;
TUB QDKEN'S 8PEEOH,&#13;
Parllvment re-assembled October 243.. The&#13;
following is the Queen's RpeecU on the opening&#13;
of the session: MY LOKDS AND G$XTLBMBN—&#13;
1 have brought you together to enable&#13;
you to further consider the great subject of&#13;
representation of the people. 1 continue to&#13;
maintain relations of amity with all foreign&#13;
powers. The Information from 8oudan includes&#13;
painful uncertainties, but the energy,&#13;
courage and resource conspicuously displayed&#13;
by Gen. Gordon in the successful defense of&#13;
Khartoum deserve my warm recognition. The&#13;
advance of my troops to Dongola has for Its&#13;
object the rescue antr- security of that uallant&#13;
—officer and of tbose^wfce-bave so faithfully cooperated&#13;
with lilra. I am using my best endeavors&#13;
in Egypt to promote the further improvement&#13;
of tde cffalrs of that country. I&#13;
—have given my support to the Bgyptlan govercment&#13;
in the didicult financial" position in&#13;
which it was Iffc through the failure of the&#13;
recent couterence. 1 regret the occurrences&#13;
in the receut Transvaal, and am considering&#13;
with the Capo Government means to secure&#13;
the observance cf the convention. Gentlemen&#13;
of the House of Commons—The operations In&#13;
the Soudan render it necessary to ask of you&#13;
further pecuidary provision. "My Loros :tod&#13;
gentlemen, a bill for the extension of the Parliamentary&#13;
franchise will be at once introduced.&#13;
May the blessing of God. attend your&#13;
labors. *&#13;
A DISASTROUS COLLISION'.&#13;
An express train on the Grand Trunk ran&#13;
Into a cattle and freight train east-bound at&#13;
1'oiut^Clare station near_Muntieal. Theengluus&#13;
the exposition has voted $10,00(1) L&gt;r this pm&#13;
pose, and 1,000 tent* will be coueti acted for&#13;
the free accommodation of the vetvranfl. The&#13;
movement was organized under tbe ausplcl.B&#13;
of the grand army of the republic, and the local&#13;
association of the confederate armies of North&#13;
ern Virginian and Tennessee. Capt. Ediiar&#13;
Wheeler, of Lincoln post No. 1, G. A. K , at&#13;
Topeka, K.6., has been selected as commai.der&#13;
of the camp. The tents will be supplemented&#13;
by wooden barracks, and accommodations will&#13;
be provided for 10,000 persons.&#13;
COST OF A DKUNKBN 8PUE1S.&#13;
In the district court, at CAStroville, T&lt;xas,October24,&#13;
W. D. Ward was sentenced to tbe penitentiary&#13;
for 99 years for the murder of Bob Fly&#13;
about a year ago. Word was traveling corre^xmdentof&#13;
the Morning Expreea and was well known&#13;
throughout Texas as a newspaper man. Xe&#13;
and Fly were drinking together when Ward iu&#13;
a sudden freak put a pistol to his companion's&#13;
head and blew Qis brains o u t He declares he&#13;
has no recollection of the aflilr.&#13;
KESULT OV DIME NOVCL READING&#13;
The curious case of pistol shootl-jg iu which&#13;
James L. Clayton, an 18-year oil buy fired tsvo&#13;
Phots Into the. brain of bin friend, John 8.&#13;
Baker, and then put a bullet into his own&#13;
head und'fell dying by the eide of his comrade,&#13;
which occurred in PhllaJdpuia a few nights&#13;
ago, 1B the sut«3 x t of general c jnmieut. There&#13;
is no apparent motive for the crime. Baker is&#13;
but 17 years of age, the eon of a paper-hanger,&#13;
5BF SCRffFIO&#13;
You c;in be cured If you will take Hood's Sarsaparilla,&#13;
lh« great blood purifier. Whether the &lt;li»-&#13;
ease is hereditary or acquired, this medicine expels&#13;
every trat;e of impurity and vitalizes :ind enriches&#13;
the blood, while it also torte« and st^njjthens the system.&#13;
"I had lour tttrofuU sores come on my feel, which&#13;
j;rcw so bad that I could not wear a shoe Nothing&#13;
which I took did me any good till one day I&#13;
saw Hood's Sarsaparilla advertised in a paper aad i&#13;
decided to try it. I have taken two botlkb and the&#13;
sores arc almost entirely healed." - MRS. ADDIK&#13;
PITTS, South Potsdam, N . Y.&#13;
Clarehcejohnson, Erie, Penri., had scrofulous sores&#13;
on his face and head. JIc was entirely cured hy&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla.&#13;
Mr. J. H. Ketch,u!TfVof liurre, Vt., says that his l&gt;oy&#13;
liad s*:veral very u^Iy screlujous sores on his ley.&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparilla cured him. And Mr. Ketchumsavs:&#13;
" I can heartily r.eommcnd its use toothers"&#13;
HOOD'S SAESAPAEILLA&#13;
Sold t&gt;y all druggists. gl;sixior $5. M;ide only by&#13;
C. I. HOOD &amp; CO, apothecaries, Lowell. Mays.&#13;
100 Doses One Dollar.&#13;
day of the shouting youuj,' Uaker »vUh coniiaeii&#13;
to his bed with a sur; t!iro-it an--.-r. Mv^re i:old.&#13;
I i the eveuinz Clayton visited .him. T'Ue two&#13;
were linn friends. Biker lay &gt;&gt;: the t ^ a i u&#13;
the parlor and Clayton bat on ?&gt; chair hesldtt&#13;
him. They chatted in a most frieudiy way.&#13;
Mrs. Baker went up stairs aud left ihejriends&#13;
alone. Mr. Baker was seated In the basement&#13;
jBniokirjg, , About 8:¾ the parents were&#13;
atartleu by three pistdl shots, discharged In&#13;
rapid succession. Rushing dawn stairs into&#13;
the parlor Mr*. J3»ker saw her i-on lying on&#13;
the sofa in the Bame position in which &amp;k&lt;i&#13;
lt£t him, with the blood streaming from two&#13;
bullet wounds in the head. Clayton,was in a&#13;
half.sittlttgJ&gt;osture with his head resting on&#13;
the arm of hi* friend. There was a bullet hole&#13;
just above the right temple. Oa the Hoor at his&#13;
side lay a 23-caltber pistol of the British bulldo«&#13;
pattern. Three chambers were empty. Tne&#13;
patents were horrified. Dr. Thomas Conrad&#13;
and-Dr. £. B. ahapleigh, the family physician,&#13;
were summoEC.!. They fdund i.hat Baker was&#13;
dead. Clayton w»8 still alive but sinking rapidly,&#13;
tie died an hour later without haviog&#13;
regained ejusciousucss. Both bullets had&#13;
pa«sed throu^rti Baker's brain and he mu.^t&#13;
have died Instantly. His face was blackened&#13;
with powder, showing that the revolver hid.&#13;
been held cloaj to. his head. There U no apparent&#13;
cause for UK; tdtooting, aud it, is known&#13;
thit tho boys were the bc-^t of friends and h:»d&#13;
never quarreled. 'I'hey were bath fond of s o&#13;
RalirjcatliTerature, auu it is believed that tbey&#13;
conceived the idea ihat "it would be a heruie&#13;
] tmng to die together. The, fii-uds of lh^;&#13;
bo'jA say there is no doubt that tbvy made such&#13;
an agreemtv t.- Clavton was to 6hoot his&#13;
fner.d. and then hlm'self, and the plan was carried&#13;
out. They were naturally of a morbid&#13;
ci^posltioD. ^ _&#13;
Headache Is immediately relieved by th ef&#13;
Plso'B Keniedy f j r Catarrh&#13;
T h e P h i l a d e l p h i a Tinges advises Morosiui's&#13;
rfou-in-law t o g o a n d be a Niag&#13;
a r a h a c k t n a u a n d look d o w n on tho old&#13;
man. _ _ _ _ _ _ „&#13;
Editors are probably cautious in lending the&#13;
endorsement of their names and influence, but&#13;
Mr. John liearn, of the Valley Sentinel, Sidney,&#13;
O , writes that A'hlophorosgave his "alte more&#13;
relief from rheumatism and neuralgia than&#13;
anything she h«l ever tried, and she had tried&#13;
everything, having suffered hiteen years.&#13;
Price, $1 per bettie. If your druej;i*t.hasn't&#13;
It, feud to Athlophcros Co., 112 V/all Street,&#13;
•N. T. :&#13;
We recommend Carter's Iroc Pills to "every&#13;
woman who Is weak, nervous anddlBcourated;&#13;
particularly thosu who have thin, pale lips,&#13;
cold hands and feet, and who are without&#13;
strength or ambition. These are the cases for&#13;
which Carter's Iron Pills are specially prepared,&#13;
and this class cannot use them without benefit.&#13;
Valuable for men also. In metal boxes, at 50&#13;
cents.. Sold by HI druggists or "sent by mail.&#13;
See advertisement elsewhere.&#13;
Y o n n e m e t ) , H e a d Tlilttl&#13;
THE VOLTAIC BELT CO.. of Marshall, Mich.,&#13;
offer to send their EI.ECTHO-VOLTA.IC BELT&#13;
and other ELECTRIC APPLIANCKS on trial .for&#13;
thirty days, to men, (young or old) afflicted&#13;
|_with -nervous debility, loss of vital! y and&#13;
manhcxKl, and all kindred troubles. Also.for&#13;
rheumatism, neuralgiB, paralysis, .and many&#13;
diseases. Complete restoration to health, vigor&#13;
and manhood 'guaranteed. No risk is incurred&#13;
as thirty days' trial is :dlowed. Write&#13;
thenrst oncerfor illustrated painpMct freer"" "&#13;
'KOUOHONTOOTHAGIIE." As!i for it. Instant'&#13;
relief, quick cure, loc. UrugKlsta.&#13;
A C A R D — T o all WHO are Buffering from&#13;
errori and indiscretioas of youth, nenr»u«&#13;
wealtnesB, early decay, loss of manaood. &amp;o., I wilt&#13;
tend a-reelpe thai wiU oar* y&lt;»»,—KH«B 0**&#13;
CUAHGE. Thla great remedy was discovered bv a&#13;
missionary In South America. Send self-addressed&#13;
nvelope to R«v. J O S B P H T. INM*N. Htatton u, N. Y&#13;
BKl?fNYMEN. "SVella' U oat ft Kenewer" restores&#13;
-irealth and vigor cures Dyspepsia. Impotence. M.&#13;
of both trainsJ'wttws reported destroyed. Altxander&#13;
Stewart, engineer of the express train, was&#13;
klileciand the nrcman seriously injured,'both&#13;
legs being broken. A number of passengers&#13;
were blightly Injured. George McMasUr a&#13;
commercial traveler of Montreal, was badly&#13;
hujljrfebout the head and body. A large number&#13;
or cattle were killed. The loss in property&#13;
Is estimated ut over $100,000.&#13;
WOHAN'S WORK.&#13;
At Palmyra, Hurrisou countj*, Ind., a party&#13;
of bO women disguised in men's clothing rode&#13;
up to the liquor saloon of Wm. Bott, about 11&#13;
o'clock the other night, and demanded admission&#13;
of Bott, whose residence is in the tyvme&#13;
house wita the saloon. Enforcing the demand&#13;
with drawn revolvers, they were admitted to&#13;
the house and at once set to work and broke&#13;
all tbe decanters, glasses and other furniture&#13;
of the bar, aud knocked In the heads of all the&#13;
barrels and kegs and poured out the liquor.&#13;
They then gave Bott notice that If he ro-opencd&#13;
th^saloon they would pay him another visit&#13;
Wm lynch him, as they did not intend to tolcrattf&#13;
tae e*ic of liquor iu the town. - Bott !s&#13;
looking for another location.&#13;
— o y r i c u i . RflT^RXs^ ._....&#13;
The official returns from Ohio are all iu and&#13;
compllud by the Secretary of State as fellows:&#13;
FOR SECKgrAKY OVMXXT&amp;. -&#13;
Bobinson, RepubliCAn 891,599&#13;
Newman^ Democrat. 8S?i275&#13;
Thirty&#13;
Tears&#13;
Record.&#13;
Endorsed&#13;
by&#13;
ThytU } rta&amp;s.&#13;
IT IS RELIABLE&#13;
in curia? Brlfiht's&#13;
Disease, Fains In tho&#13;
Back, Lotna or Sld09,&#13;
Hetcutlon or Xfoo-RctCii-&#13;
Uxx of tTrine.&#13;
Morris, Prohibitionist »i&amp;57&#13;
erolii, Cireenbacker ,..'.....-. 8.5S0&#13;
rORSUPRSMB iJUDOS.&#13;
Johnson. Republican 813,917&#13;
Martin, Democrat 871,963&#13;
Roeeborough, Prohibionist 9,857&#13;
Grogan, Grcenbacker 8,780&#13;
rom MEMBBB 0 7 THX BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS.&#13;
Flicklnger, Kepubllcaa .893,855&#13;
Bemter,Tannocr«ttc.....'... r. •.-rrrr..::.fttfti8Mt\&#13;
Klrkondall, ProhlbltionU. 9,004&#13;
Ogden, Greetabacker t,537&#13;
1J0RTHAND SOUTH TJOTTWI.&#13;
One of the moat Interesting feature* of the&#13;
World's exposition In New Orleans will be a&#13;
ttolt»d encampment of the veterans of tbe war&#13;
- 0» both tides. The board of management of&#13;
IT IS A SPECIFIO&#13;
3?03&#13;
Kktoey &amp; Liver Troubles,&#13;
Dlaidor, TTrlnary said&#13;
L'.vcr Dl*e&amp;aea, Dropsy,&#13;
Grave} and Diabotcs.&#13;
HIGHLY REOOMMENDED,&#13;
licurcsBUlonsnc^a, Ilortdacrio, Jntindlee, Sottr'Bteraaoii,&#13;
DysjicpEla, Caaatipation aud PUoa.&#13;
IT WORKS PROMPTLY&#13;
tad circs Intemperanoo, Korvoua DlneaBOB, General&#13;
Debility, Esoosoos and Fcnialo Weaknoia.&#13;
USE IT AT OMCE.&#13;
ItTestorr^f!ioKID"N^rr3, IIVTT3, and BOWELS, tn&#13;
x hoaldy action aad CintSS when all other medicine*&#13;
fill. Huiiiircvl9have boencftved who bave been givou&#13;
r. ^t*^l»bv*ri«»&lt;l»*ndrphyaifllriiia. ._..&#13;
Piioa 81.£5. 3aud fovIliustwtcrt Pamphtot to&#13;
m r x r s BTME!&gt;V CO., PK&gt;TII:OUO&lt;S K . , L&#13;
BOLD BY ALL VRTJOQIF-TB. ' P .&#13;
Ilo'tetter's Stomnch&#13;
hitters Is aflno&#13;
blood deparenU a&#13;
rational c a t k a r l 0&#13;
find superb ftntl-bll*&#13;
lousupeclrtc. Ural-&#13;
Hen' the fulling en- errieaoi tae debllitiud.&#13;
«Dd checks&#13;
premature decay.&#13;
Fever and mgue,&#13;
bllUou« remittent,&#13;
dTspepsIa and bowol&#13;
complaints a r e&#13;
among the e v i l s&#13;
which it remorea.&#13;
In tropical countries,&#13;
wherflTVe&#13;
11TOT and bowels are&#13;
oraant mostttnfaTorabiy^&#13;
affscted by&#13;
tbeoomStaed inflnenoe&#13;
ot eusaats, diet&#13;
and w a t e r , iltaa&#13;
very a a e e s s a r y&#13;
salsnard. lor sale&#13;
by all Drufglsti and&#13;
J&gt;esi«n fenearily.&#13;
^3JM&#13;
DO THElf TROUBLE Y O U ? H A V E THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D W I T H O U B N S W TE8T LENSES&#13;
B r WHICH W E OFTEN SUCCEED W H E N&#13;
OTHERS KAIL.&#13;
KOEHM &amp; WRIGHT,&#13;
IMl'OKTEKS, J E W E L E R S A N D OPTICIANS,&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D A V E . , DETROIT MICH.&#13;
Oavid Preston &amp; Co.,&#13;
BANKERS&#13;
D E T R O I T , - M I C H I G A N .&#13;
M A T H ' S CYLINDER BED FOOT LATHES ii This is a new L a i lie, and&#13;
« on ft n e w plsui, bavin? a&#13;
a' C y l i n d e r B e d , which la&#13;
2 much more s i m p l e and&#13;
&lt;* c o n v e n i e n t than the old&#13;
o&gt; Kyle. It haa a t t a c h m e n t s ,&#13;
? for C i r c u l a r and Meroll&#13;
$ H a \ T t i » , and f o r B r e c k -&#13;
c e t M o u l d i n g . N e w ,&#13;
9 n o v e l , a n d T 1 I K H E 8 T&#13;
i. l a v e a t e d . S^~Manufao-&#13;
2 tured and sold by the&#13;
BATTLE CREEK MACHINERY CO., Batie Creek, Mica.&#13;
• , . r , ^ .&#13;
-THE §&#13;
BEST TONIC, r This medicine, combining Iron with j)urc^&#13;
vegetable tonic^ quickly and comple'fely&#13;
Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Weakness,&#13;
1111 pare Blood, AIaIarla,Chllte and Fevers,&#13;
ui:d Neuralgia*&#13;
His an unfailing remedy for Diseases of t i c&#13;
Kidneys nnd I.iver. .1&#13;
It is invalunblrf for Jpisc_aseff peculiar to&#13;
Wornen, and cil who lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It docs not injure the teeth, cause headaehe.or&#13;
produce constipation—other Iron medicines &lt;1y.&#13;
' It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, uids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and lielchrnc, and strengthens&#13;
tho muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermitted Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of&#13;
Energy, &amp;c., it has no equal.&#13;
Kir The genuine has above trarleir.ark and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Tulie no othor.&#13;
B*Ue jniyby Klt()Wi t'UEMCAI. CO., UAl.TIJiOJtE, HID.&#13;
8s Rocommended bv Physicians!&#13;
BEWmk&amp;!ft8N£J&#13;
Wo manufatture and eeliittritha ppfiitlvd&#13;
guarantee ihat It will cure any&#13;
r a s © « fl^d wo will forfeit tho aooTe aaiouut&#13;
tfit faifsin a single instance,&#13;
It-ia u n l i k o any oth.r Catarrh remedy,aa&#13;
Mistaken ttitemaMy. acting upont&#13;
h O B l O O d . I ' y o u ar*'troubled wiih this&#13;
distressing disease,ask yourDruggistfor it, and&#13;
ACCEPT NO IKITATIO* OE SUBSTITUTE. I f b »&#13;
has not got it, send to us and we will forward&#13;
immediately. Price, 15 cents per bottle.&#13;
F._i._CK^IIYAv:^n Toiedo.Qhift&#13;
We irancaota general Banking Buainas?.&#13;
Prompt and careful littentlun to Collection* on&#13;
any part of the globe.&#13;
B O W D H .&#13;
We buy and sell all classes of reliable securitie»—&#13;
ITnlied staten, State. County, Town aed School&#13;
District li&lt;jncla. Good&#13;
K E A L E S T A T E M O R T G A G E S&#13;
4»nd warrants and choice commercial paper. Interest&#13;
allowed on timedeposlMtti. Careful attention&#13;
given to the account* of out of t &gt;wn Hanks and&#13;
Hankers. D A V I D I'KKSTON St CO.&#13;
BEST IN THE WORLD!&#13;
THE BATTLE CREEK&#13;
SELFFEED&#13;
WOOD-SAWING jyiACHlNE&#13;
Made In two *Uea, and told with or without powon&#13;
A L S O C I R C U L A R W O O O - S A W S .&#13;
BATTLE CREEK MACHINERY CO,, Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
Hend for Circular u d Frice-LJau "&#13;
• . LYOIA C. PIKKHAM'S * .&#13;
VEGETABLE CUWHCUND&#13;
• , * is A rosrnvr: CUUE FOR *. *&#13;
All tltosa jmlnfui Complaints&#13;
*' anil Vi L'akiKssts «0 couiiu'm *&#13;
* * * * * * to uur best + * * * 4 '&#13;
, * *E3HLE POrt'LATIOX. ^ ,&#13;
VrUc $1 iu lipoid, p!U or 1C-».M:J;,I burr.&#13;
* Tts purpose &lt;3 solely fc\- the legitimate \eaUwj 01&#13;
rtiaeast and the relief of priin, aiid that it duci a.l&#13;
it cldtrnt to do, thou3andscf'ladies can. glad'cy testify. *&#13;
* It will CQFQ. entirely all Ovarian troubles, Infiamma&#13;
tioa and UlcerMion, Failinp a-id Di-placemcn'is, oi-r&#13;
c&gt;nse?iuent spinal V.'^aiaicss, a:td is i-^rt'-'-'uIa.!'!*&#13;
ndapted to tliu chan,?e of life. * « * • * • * • * « ' ' « *&#13;
* It remove.* Kai;i t ft.•.-«, Ha t'.iloncy, destroy * all cr^i;:;?&#13;
for stiiu'ilimts, ami rolk-vus Weakuo.-.* ui tin' hton.a ^&#13;
It carvs Bkiiitir.3, ili/adnchus, Nurv-tjua 1'jvisUatn n.&#13;
3*nenil DebiUtyiTsleepIe:isneHH, Uepresiion ani-t h e ! :&#13;
ijostioa. That tVelhi? of bcivrinjf down, causing \»u.\&#13;
iiivl backache, is always ix'rmi.iient;y cured by its u.-e.&#13;
* Send stamp t o Lynu, Maci., for pui.pbl"C. L^tteri ol&#13;
inqvdry coatliei'-tially aimwi-red. f.ir siiUatdruyjuts&#13;
* * * « « * * * * * « * &gt; » « * * » * * * » 0&#13;
Farms in Michigan Descriptive and Price lAul now r e a l r for FKKK&#13;
DISTRIBUTION. Over 2JU nrst-olass Karmi. ran»-&#13;
ln« from 40 to SCO aero*, at price* from 126 t • *1U0&#13;
par aero. Tiie premium farm of 7iX) acre* at|7Jper&#13;
acre. Address. Geo. W. Hnorer, Iteal Kstute aa4&#13;
isjun Aient, 1UU Urlswold ut.. Detroit, Mlon.&#13;
JOSEPH GILLOTTS&#13;
STEEL PENS&#13;
So LD SY ALL DEALERSTMTOuerctrrTHE WORLD&#13;
GOLD MEDAU-PARIS EXPOSITION-I87e4&#13;
Keraai *tXbvii*Cnrsn£rt?5krt&amp;&amp;9tnv\&#13;
&gt;nediaUrtiitfiatix9moni cases, ln«urea oon&#13;
jfortablaaleep; effects enres where all oUun fa&#13;
\A trial convince! th* most skeptical. Prle&#13;
50c. a&amp;C Sl.OG, of DnggintM or by&#13;
_3aocpls F r e e for stamp. Dr. &amp; SCBXWWA&#13;
|MAN, Bt. Faal. Mfaxn.&#13;
c ^ P L S a ' S CUKE FORr&#13;
\DISEASEBANISHED ^&#13;
Health Gained,&#13;
Long Life Secured,&#13;
BY USING&#13;
KIDNE^-^t3R¥&#13;
It Purifies t h e Blood,&#13;
tt Cleanses t h e Liver,j&#13;
jit Strengthens t h o Kidneys,&#13;
It Regulates t h e Bowels-&#13;
TRUTHFUL TESTIittOT.&#13;
KIDNEY DISEASES.&#13;
!&#13;
"Isuffered day and night vith Kidney trw&amp;ks, my&#13;
water vxx* chalky and bloody, Ieyy.Id get no relief t,rom&#13;
doctors. Kidney-Wort cured m«. lam as w U a.ievcr.&#13;
FRAXKWILSOX, FcOoodB, Haas.&#13;
LIVER COMPLAINT.&#13;
I inculd not he with out Ktd-nrg- Wortifit oos« ^10. It&#13;
cured my Liver and Kidney troubles after I had lost&#13;
•iiiujpe, . S4MLBODGES, WiUiamstoum, n\ Ya.&#13;
PILES! PILES!!&#13;
. IsirFrredforl5T/93r*frem Pilea,aa B*n«butVwse&#13;
lihnt iuxve t**n quieted can reaiize. Kidney-Wort&#13;
uiekly eurtd m«. LYXAX T. ABSLIt, Ofcrgtit, rt.&#13;
CONSTIPATION.&#13;
, 1 was a great tufftrer from diseased Kidney* and&#13;
iiKis terribly constipated for years. lainnowataevtn-&#13;
3fy as veil as tvor I tea* in my Hfe and it is dtt«|&#13;
galo** */i Kid»cjh Wort. C. P. BBO fT.V, Westport, X Y. \&#13;
RHEUMATISM.&#13;
5 ".\ft«r lUffevtnQ fop thirty years from Rheumatism.&#13;
end kidney trou,'&lt;le^ Kidtxeiz-IVort has entirtly cured&#13;
VW." KLEMVQE MALCOLM, West Bath, lie.&#13;
FEMALE COMPLAINTS.&#13;
"KMrsy-TVort hat&gt; cured wy «(/* after txto years&#13;
-Xijferinj and weak7te."f, ^l•o:^;^^f on byvse of a Srtellnj&#13;
Machine." i&gt;ii Q. 31. SUXILZSUX, Sun Hill, Ga.&#13;
FOR THE BLOOD.&#13;
S. "The pa«t year Ihape t:s!&gt;d Xidney-^'ort nor* than&#13;
?vc?, aud ictih the iiest result*. Take it all in all, it is&#13;
the mis* auf«estful remedy Ihtre ctvruted."&#13;
rnHZWC. LAL:.0L',X.D.,Xonkion, Vt.&#13;
MALARIA.&#13;
Inv) IWA'I for dcaih. A Ecrr:-i\:n trip, t£x-/ors andl&#13;
Snv.difi'nc did no i'.^cvT, vrtil /iis«\f JCiU'iwy.iJ'orf—that]&#13;
WCZGDIK" I1XXRV H'AKD, '&#13;
Late CoL iith lieQ,, A". G. ^. if. Y., Jersey City, X. J.&#13;
It.acvo at tho samo tlmo on the KIO&#13;
_&gt;«, LIVISH nnd UOWLLirstTTmrratmgi&#13;
(them to healthy action and keeping them&#13;
^in perfect order. 8gMbj»iiDn»5fUt«,rria»$ioo&#13;
I ^ n l d or Dry. Tho j.-\l:or c.vi be sent by mail.&#13;
WELL$,'R1CHARDSQN &amp; CO.,&#13;
8 U R U N Q 7 0 N , V E R M O N T , U . 8 . A.&#13;
K 1 D;N E^IWORT&#13;
The B T Y E I I S ' CJVID;: ;^ i^;;?*! Sept&#13;
and Marc];, each year: 5i2lpftges, Six I U&#13;
iacaes. with o w r i l . o O O i!lustrations—&#13;
awholepictnrejrallc-rr. (.rivesv.'holesa]-:&#13;
prices direct to consumers on all goods for&#13;
personal c r /ftfWP^, i^iriEf vise.&#13;
Tells how to / f l P ^ ^ ^ l order, and&#13;
gives exact ffl^ ^ ¾ cost of jverytlungyou&#13;
8¾¾ jefig use, drink,&#13;
cat, wear, OP ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^ h a v e fun&#13;
'.rith. These " ^ « K ^ ^ invaluable&#13;
bookc contain inform^im cleaned from&#13;
the markets of the world, ^'t- will rnai!.&#13;
a copy F r e e to urij addreso •; oon receipt&#13;
of the p^tage—8 cents. Let us-lxea;&#13;
from yon. Kespectftillv,&#13;
M O N T G O M E R Y WARD &amp; CO.&#13;
eVKS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.&#13;
BfcdtCou&lt;hbyrup. Ta*teHgo&lt;xl.&#13;
U»e in time, jsold by druggista.&#13;
•CONSUMPTIONS&#13;
C MBS HI ME SWINE&#13;
A Sew Breed la Moet of the States.&#13;
Sead fer-PMw fat*Vaa4 lHaatrated ci real »r. —&#13;
VY. G SMITH &amp; Co , MaasHeld, Ohio&#13;
LOVE COURTSHIP aad MAKBIAt&#13;
Wonderful necreta, revelationa&#13;
diaooverieti for married,or stroerle.&#13;
to «iL 'J-lus uauufcome l«&lt;i:&#13;
securing h«alUi,wealtb and bapptzMM&#13;
&gt;ma book of lsc V****, mailedlorpaty'&#13;
U cents h/tha Union PubUBhinsf Co.. Newark, N. J.&#13;
WWNTKD H E L P , t E l l L E S !&#13;
W.intei—Li^die3 and earulemen t&lt;&gt; t a t s nlcc.llelit,&#13;
pleiiaant wjrit at tUeLr &gt;j*a aoaiji idi^tanao no 0 0 -&#13;
jectlon); worK saac b / ux\V\ fi to f» a i\y c*n ba&#13;
quiatly made; IM c*rj7;naingr- IJle:uaadJr'a*8at onoa&#13;
KEI.IABUK M T G C O . . Palladelphia. i-.i.. b o x U ' i&#13;
?LA.''K to secure a thorough and&#13;
nseiul xdocatlon JsattheQRANU&#13;
KAI'lUS (rliGh.) BCSIVBSS ()01.-&#13;
LZGZ. Write for College Joaraai&#13;
Address, C. 0. SWKN3BtTRS.&#13;
ASTHMA R e l i e v e d imir.cdijitL'Iy j.w\ r-ired&#13;
by using1 ("O.NK A S T H M A C O N&#13;
UL'EKF.X. Prscc $3 per hotUc &lt; r&#13;
bottics !'ir J S ciulivercd. A d d r e s s D R . •(,'. M A K K T&#13;
Alatmirer. Murni'ton, O:.;.&#13;
F r u i t n^id G a r d e n L a n d s i n C o l o r a d o -&#13;
In 5 an i 10 acre iractb. Low Frlc-.-. Lonj:&#13;
Terms T 1 si.-ttkrs or n^c-n'-sOei't's.—Aotlress&#13;
lor pari iciHars, W. E PABOR, Fruita, (Jolo.&#13;
Aare&lt;ita W a n t e d ! It will pay person* wanting&#13;
Drotltable eMplTymeot to write lor ei'.r* teroit for&#13;
the Dest and fAstest selling Flcroriil Hooks, Blblea&#13;
and Albumo, to NATIONAL 1'CB.CO., Philadelphia.&#13;
Pa.. arfd-Chlcago. III.&#13;
SALTRHUEM&#13;
cular. 1)K. W&#13;
Absolute cure. J&gt;jrtiTc r&#13;
lor vears icstii'y to its vx&#13;
(".-Hence. W r i t e for cir&#13;
E . CHOATL, j.icK.son, Mich.&#13;
t A D T A G E N T S W A J T T X D ! To Introduce&#13;
and sell i&gt;r. Lin /ulst's spinal Uesilta (lor«ei. A poly to&#13;
l&gt;R.LIN(}liIdTSO&gt;K3KT 0O..4L2 Broadwair. J».Y&#13;
tenlabed. OoauABJ&#13;
Learn TcltfiBaky or Skort-Haa4&#13;
It's a paylM bustaws. Sltuatloof&#13;
E J . Tal. Oallaaa. Aaa Arbor. Mick&#13;
W.N. 17. I&gt; -»—44&#13;
OPiUM s i o r p h i n e 71*1.^^&#13;
toXOdavys. N u p a r ^ — v . x m ,&#13;
Da, J. iiTiti'HKNs. Lebanon. OHa.&#13;
( C t t r o d I n 1 0&#13;
1 ' D E T R O IT, N &gt; "-y '&#13;
ht; GRAN&#13;
to American purchasers to ¢50. A copy cannot be secured for less except from the publishers of&#13;
K j n t l J f r r j T f l A f A f T A B f »&gt;—Kvery future subscriber to this paper, however, can se*&#13;
iO£t l &gt; H l v i i U U U i i U D I i . cure a copy of this, the most valuable work of art ever&#13;
issued in the form of an engraving, by sending 4'Jc. in addKton to the subscription price, to&#13;
prepay cost, express and properly p a c k i n c or postage. It sent bv maTtr T h e publishers tft t h e&#13;
C t n c a « o U l o b o have contracted for the entire American edition, cur crder being for ^50,000&#13;
copies, w e paying cost of American plate.&#13;
THE LARGEST CIRCULATION ^ / 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 0 , Can only &amp;6 Secured by Dividing Profits&#13;
w i t h s u b s c r i b e r s , i n t h e f o r m o f l o a » t l m o f o u r p e r c e n t , l o a n s .&#13;
Anv subscriber is privilefred to apply for a loan, to bo m a d e out of advertising proilts, the&#13;
anr.mit borrowed beinjfcpermitted to remain unpaid as long as borrower remains a subscriber&#13;
and keeps the interest paid. Subscription price * ^ On the basis of 250,000 circulation&#13;
which will nrobablv be doubled) ihe business ami pRTrs will approximate as follows:—&#13;
1 1 K C E I P T S : '250,0.0 subsctTbAW, fW.OO.': 5A) inches advertising. W.50 per line. 11.1 per Inch,&#13;
o- issues, ?1,170,000— total, $1,670,000. E X P E N S E S * : for paper and press work, iWoO copies.&#13;
,SC is«.ii\&gt;, ?10MK'O: editorial work, otilce,-repairs, etc.. fCi.iXJO; premium engravings, ('250.000;&#13;
lnciilciitnis, sio.ooo—total,SRSO.OOO: leaving a net proiiv of sl.^lUxX). For this enownous profit&#13;
from Pale1 of advertising space, T h e G l o b e depends on Its ".50.i'*.» subscribers, for artvertisers&#13;
o.-vy for s'^ace in proportion to circulation. With but ivOOO circulntioa the profits would be but&#13;
a tenth of the amount. Therefore, as subscribers are doing us a favor when they send us their&#13;
names, we desire to return favor for favor. Any subscriber who desires to borrow from |1U0&#13;
tov"&gt;i«&gt;at 5 percent., the principal to stand if desired sis long as borrower remains a subscriber,&#13;
chould so state when he orders t h e premium. In such ca$«—&#13;
Tho SuBsc?iption Price* $ 2 . 0 0 , need no! hz scr&gt;, as i! can&#13;
be deducted whsn 'oar. is racde&#13;
Anrt rr;-hscription bogins. Your Individual note Is all thesocurity askfvi: provid&lt;Hl'yt5a will&#13;
t-end the nanjfs of several of your neighbors to whom we can, refer, not as 10 the amount w/&#13;
propertj- you ;\ro worth, but a s t o good character. mmi. Lnas c\x\o pro ran : nnt lc-ts t'.-r.n J'.O'') rrr r.irri* •'N.in f.SiXi. Fir;; rtar'&lt; in!«M*t&#13;
i.: * rcr ^"Mit., ainl »t(J subxcrlp:i.)n priJi- to he diMuo«i'&gt;! !'on\ aciou'ni loiuoJ. If&#13;
the subscriber &lt;5(X-J not »rply I-T a loan, iho iu^criptiou pit.-,? nui -t bt- seal, la&#13;
aJT«BC0. If a lo»u i* di-i'rc-l. i;^ nionry a*"?-! N; rent for »ub.-criplioa» tfec&#13;
charts} for the Precilum, ilc,\ only hoio; n.v,Qir-ii. »s tlie luN^criplijn And lr»t&#13;
rrir'a ir.i»r«!fiia bededoctel fmra the lo»n. Every subscrttnT must accept ».&lt; a condition of recclylrn the Preiat«»i,&#13;
that h&lt;- *-;il di»pl»7 it in »con&lt;picuout place in his bou»e or office, &amp;a«i inform those who cut how »ii4 wncre h^ soe*rcd&#13;
iu Positively ttili must be dono. V'.rerT Premlain seat out swurcs additionsl lubseriberj, and no application -wt)! b»&#13;
tntcr»N\ unit** the ebar^ouoB tboPretniura aro »eui,. Thcs« charg«5, 42:., haro »othiti5 w do with the subacrta-tloa&#13;
pric?. »r.l barely corcr cost, dellrory, ami properly packlni; JO lanw an cu^rarln;. and tbe d"ll»ery chirks B i v t ^ l&#13;
J'Ttpaid. The subscription price, $2 (wbicb ren«.i«nu a profit and not a direct expense! can rtuialn unpaid until loan&#13;
i made snd subscription besin*. fostase stamps wilt uot be received for l'romlum char&lt;ci except from places where&#13;
• postal note can aot be obtalced. When a loan is made&#13;
the adjclnlnj form gf note will b^sent, with tke money, to&#13;
the subscriber'* nearest bank oretpreis oScv&gt;, and no note&#13;
neid bo signed unlit tbe money is paid orer. Send the&#13;
oaraos of acT*ra] referenc««. and immediate inquiry will be&#13;
ciade. If no loan Is desired, BO references ueeJ be tent.&#13;
The Ptemlom will bo sent at onc«. AddTess, ,-&#13;
1W. Monro* St..&#13;
CHICAGO, ILLS.&#13;
MiySKAlfB PBPTOWT21D MX* TOXiU t&amp;« Only&#13;
preptTwtton of fceV«&gt;l&gt;UUitn« i u •nttry nutritteu*&#13;
KOSK»ua 11*BHrart»1ntn»Trropertt«rrmr»lu»ble f»r&#13;
INDIOISTION, DT8P1P8IA, neryoBs proslr»Uon, »nd&#13;
all forms of ganeral debility; also, in all enfeebled&#13;
conditions, whether the result of exhaustion nervous&#13;
BrostrtttJoa. averwork, or scute disease.psrtlo-&#13;
uisriyw" rte^stumrtUBnfli ffrro apuimoxtftrTOonpitunts. UA»-&#13;
w a u H A M A X a h O o ^ f t o n r t e t o r * . N i w Torst._8fl,d&#13;
J»T D n u o U t s ^ - »&#13;
MftbUl»fi ON PAar*' PORUffPLABTKR,_for B»ot* sohe, PiOnMa U« Chest, HbaumatUam. 16c&#13;
i'ne tTtmium win 09 sen* si ooco. i»m&#13;
The Chicago Gtpbe,^&#13;
Ono year t-tut date, for value received, I promise to pay&#13;
to the lirderof tbepabliiherof the CmcaooGLOas the aan&#13;
of Dollars with Interest at i pet cent, pei&#13;
annum after maturity. Tt Is understood and a«Tt*4 tha&#13;
n» aarv of tbe prtadsal of this now will be demanded, or&#13;
beceSM partible, (except at my pleasure,) as tosff as I remain&#13;
a utid-ap tubwriber to tbe shore aaawd asper.&#13;
(Signed.)&#13;
I PURGATIVE&#13;
f J &gt; " ... ' • , j L i »oe«i»-t,,'» *»»«•• Bi&lt;^.fl*AnAC^a,imif«8M8s. sad a n i BLOO: .»o:aox&lt;. snd stia »!.•••»•* &lt;coni TILL A »»C .&#13;
- ^ ^ Had tb*m vw\;\»s^s qsWtaitijoanditwsp&#13;
, we* »»• **'&#13;
I &gt; » • • no s&lt;,u*U. " 1 Had tb*m v w \ ; \ ^ l s q*«i»rU«sndLte a « &gt; . If •ntio.ile), jFtp!&#13;
^ •-' v&#13;
r&#13;
/ s&#13;
^,, - u a ^ .&#13;
S&#13;
r &lt;&#13;
"W&#13;
• \&#13;
famam mr***'**'-&#13;
-*£** •1» • « • tn\ t&lt;'&gt;r.ifi£2i*ir&amp;iP*k •,*fcV,*+iF'*n*t-1'' J" ••*•»"•&#13;
•c&amp;&#13;
ti-fca:-&#13;
* &gt;&#13;
f&#13;
i&amp;.-&#13;
$*'',&#13;
&gt;&#13;
.- f&#13;
^1&#13;
•••'X&#13;
18th&#13;
Board of Supervisors,&#13;
The Board convened on the&#13;
and continued in gession during the&#13;
(Week, TJjja following Supervisors&#13;
answered to roll call: Messrs. Hicks,&#13;
Brighton; Wickmari, Conway; Keller,&#13;
Cohoctah; Holconib, Deertield; BaeUke&#13;
Genoa; Lee, Green Oak; IJyan, Hamburg;&#13;
Thompson, Hartland: Beach,&#13;
Jfowell;Horton, Handy; Elliott, low,&#13;
Beacb, Marion; Hardy, Oueola; M.irble,&#13;
Putnam; Salsbury, Tyrone; barton,&#13;
TJnadilla.&#13;
Giles Lee, ol Green Oak, was chosen&#13;
.chairman, and the usual standing committees&#13;
were appointed.&#13;
The County Clerk submitted the report&#13;
of monies to be raisod I'or township&#13;
expenses as appears from the cerified&#13;
statements of the several townahip&#13;
clerks: ?—&#13;
Brighton $ 7 8 0 00&#13;
Conway. ,..600 00&#13;
Cohoctah »,..1,011 W geerfield ..1,150 00&#13;
enoa 575 00&#13;
Green Oak 1,190 00&#13;
J5a mhurg. 717 00 artland 725 00&#13;
Handy 850 00&#13;
Howell 1.500 00&#13;
Tosco .-. 6so 00&#13;
Marion 875 00&#13;
i ) c e o l a , , , , , , . . , . , , . , tj'»5 00&#13;
ART NEEDLEWORK!&#13;
t&#13;
BR1GOS' TRANSFER&#13;
AND—&#13;
P A W E R N S&#13;
EMBROIDERY SILKS.&#13;
_ » 9 ^ _ • •&#13;
Over 300 shades of fine imported&#13;
embroidery silks so graded as to make&#13;
artistic work possible to all. We have&#13;
just put in a mil line of thefe s.-lks to&#13;
accompany the Briggs, Pattern* and&#13;
can supply any wants less' than you&#13;
can buy them elsewhere."""'jSllfesr&#13;
please call and see the silks *£ja&amp; receive&#13;
free samples of Briggs' Patterns.&#13;
WINCHELL'S DRUG STORK.&#13;
U L I" i ( O I c . L L V t L A N D .&#13;
Putnam 1,875 00&#13;
Tyrone 1,:)(10 0 &lt;&#13;
TJnadilla 45U 00&#13;
The report of the Superintendents&#13;
of the poor showed §7,054.56 as the&#13;
amount expended during the year as&#13;
against $6,829.07 received. Fifty four&#13;
were supported a t the county house&#13;
during the year, 130 obtained relief&#13;
outside of the poor. ,hcuise, while 174&#13;
Others received assistance; five are supported&#13;
at the State Insane Asylum,&#13;
fcncTtwo deaths have occurred at the&#13;
county house during the year. Lyman&#13;
Judson was elected Supt. of poor&#13;
in plaoe of Stephen Galloway, whose&#13;
( e r a of office had expired^&#13;
Russian Circulars&#13;
am Navigation Company's Steamer*&#13;
City of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third St Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leave&#13;
from 23 River St Cleveland at 8.30 ft m.&#13;
T H E 5 2,.25 R O U T L&#13;
Week day-Standard Ttmt.&#13;
-THE $ i.OC ROU I t ;ity of Mackinac—City of Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot of Wayne St Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Mondays end Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
For Marine City St Clair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrisviile&#13;
Cheboygan S t Jgnace and&#13;
l 1( RJftFSOU-K M A C K I N A C&#13;
- A l S r IDtowns&#13;
with&#13;
and to aptaxes,&#13;
est:-&#13;
e countv of&#13;
18S5 at'$17-&#13;
The Board voted $4,000 for the sup&#13;
port of the poor ancTinsane for the en&#13;
Juing yeav.&#13;
The committee on&#13;
ponnty, county to state,&#13;
--portionstate and county&#13;
mated the expenses af th&#13;
Livingston for the year&#13;
¢02.40, as follows:&#13;
Contingent fund. .$ 6.500 00&#13;
Jurors 1,600 00&#13;
(Supervisors '. .. . 1,000 W&#13;
JSaleries of county ouirers. . . .4,000 00&#13;
~Wdoff'7uh"aT.Tr,7."'."'..' .".."T"4"0o"0'0'&#13;
Kepairs on roun^- ni,,''-i',u,, ,102 4*'&#13;
Pcor and insane in . ' . .. .. . .4,000 00&#13;
The committee also reported the entire&#13;
amount of taxes to be raised. ;is&#13;
follows:&#13;
Township, SfaJe gti^hton JL&#13;
oriway...,&#13;
Cuhot i..h&#13;
DeerUelcl,.&#13;
Genoa. "j" ?K&#13;
Greeu On. '•&gt;'' :i"&gt;&#13;
—Wowell ,u!ii w ::.-:1 70&#13;
Hartland 1,0I!' •*)• ).(&gt;;« u."&gt;&#13;
jLunbni.: &amp;&gt;i)( •") -!'-;0 .3&#13;
HftRjiiy ' i,l-*-n 1,M, Dj&#13;
IOSCO .ViM&#13;
Mjuion 10% V4&#13;
Pceola l,o-» &gt;" •jm* • - ¾ ¾&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
illustrated book of 120 piges,&#13;
ft UKETOOR TO PICTURESQUE MACKIIMC&#13;
historical and descriptive of this&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
°*P* Whrtoomh, Oen'l s*aee&#13;
NRorA IOP WIDayn e STt..R DAetrNoit.S IT&#13;
(TIGHT-FITTING.)&#13;
,C^b&amp;&amp;&amp;^ZThese&#13;
goods were made to order and ar^.flrst^ciass. in every respect.&#13;
In addition we have a large consignment of very fine&#13;
UNDERTAKER,&#13;
ANU DEALEU IN&#13;
rtrmrtruRE.&#13;
Picture Framing, Repairing, Utc.&#13;
WKST MAIN STKitET,&#13;
. H . . 0 . l&gt; - 0&#13;
..nkj A)&#13;
Conutv.&#13;
$1:-.-11) J&#13;
1,05; :&gt;n&#13;
l.tlld -.'o&#13;
1,0i:&gt; \M&#13;
1,08,1 ,')&#13;
1,08.¾ ', 1&#13;
i,&lt;w i ti.&#13;
aw-,5&#13;
i , a &gt; • 0&#13;
T O V . T I ,&#13;
£ , ') 1K1&#13;
j r &gt; 1 ; i&#13;
1 . 0 1 1 &lt;p.i&#13;
1 , 1 , » IX)&#13;
- .v. (0&#13;
f,i' t r&lt;)&#13;
1 , . i t ' i ' o»&gt;&#13;
, " 1 1&#13;
7 ! i , ) i tvO i'l)&#13;
(.SO ( M )&#13;
U'&lt; . IM&gt; &gt;."5U)&#13;
1,815(:3&#13;
1,K.&lt; (13&#13;
• ")t:o&#13;
Erom a jobbing house, thus making in all one of fiv largest lines&#13;
in the countv. This line consigned to m; \, ^ intent: to CLOSE IN&#13;
FIFTEEN DAYS, ^tid in order to do this w are&#13;
PINCKNEY MICHIGAN.&#13;
CHRISTIAN BROWN,&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All kinds of custom work, and grneraJ&#13;
repairing, including1&#13;
HORSE SHOEING.&#13;
Iiil&lt;-lc nl' ) . [ a n n ' s ] )1()(1 INTKNKV making&#13;
SPyvone.&#13;
Pnauillii.&#13;
TotJ lb,t&gt;ii/u 1 .^0.&#13;
The committee on public grounds&#13;
juid btiilctfugs repoi'ted that they found&#13;
ifyt&gt; court house and jail in very bad&#13;
condition, and recommended an appropriation&#13;
of $102.40 lor necessary repairs&#13;
on public buildings, and the further&#13;
sum of $400 for fuel for the county&#13;
offices.&#13;
The Board voted to pay J as. Farley,&#13;
of Hartland, $57 as payment in full of&#13;
tfee $um expended in looking after&#13;
stolen horses in the year 1883.&#13;
Board a'ljourhed to meet the first&#13;
Jlonday in January next,&#13;
VERY LOW PR1CFS.&#13;
We cordially iiivite an inspection of this stock.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
LAKIN&amp;SYK&#13;
The light snow storm which struck&#13;
this locality last Thursday was the tail,&#13;
end pf a genuine winter storm in Dt(-&#13;
ko.fa and Minnesota. /&#13;
/&#13;
_ T h e attentioii-cijiur--xeagei4ia call&gt;&#13;
ed to the advertisement of Lewis &amp;&#13;
Sykes in this issue, a n d _ \ ^ heartl&#13;
poncur in the advice printed o n ^ h m r&#13;
^barrel," viz: Ask your' grocer for&#13;
Uewis &amp; Sykes-XXX crackers." These&#13;
ire made- ofthe very best rna7&#13;
^er\a^ and by the most experienced&#13;
yoxltmen. Lewis and Sykes1 new fac-&#13;
^oxjr on Oftngress street west is aire of&#13;
the largest and most complete in rvery&#13;
R e t a i l i n i h e J?tirthwe*t. They make&#13;
^ e very hestot everything and the&#13;
people nav* found.it out, Try their&#13;
trackers and you will use no other.&#13;
/BuGOIES^A^B-OeWERS.'&#13;
Having th^ agency for the Kalamazoo/&#13;
Buggies and Cutters those wishing&#13;
to/tinj:' 9, good buggy cheap would do&#13;
#«U tQ QaJi 0¾ me.&#13;
^mmett Murphy,&#13;
tf, Ptecfcnay Liyery Barn-&#13;
T^AM FOB 8AI,K!&#13;
^LPJW^ (°/ ^ 9X a baygftift my apan CffftftW Mares, s years! old, «imC&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1864.&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
PATEN:&#13;
Obtain for Mechanical Devices, Com&#13;
STOCK. NEW GOODS.&#13;
as&#13;
Designs and Labels.&#13;
All preliminary examinations&#13;
to patentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our- ''Ottide-te-Obtftiniiig Patent,"&#13;
is sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOUIS BAGGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
SOLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
^ME 0tD^ELtABLE-I^8TILLHEAD-&#13;
QUARTERS&#13;
AiUIllllitltlirtTi* " I I l i T l i l i ' t i c n l J y Si&gt;u!(»(l (ii&gt;i&gt;d*„&#13;
Pickles, I'i'i rtefv'i-x, «»fi',&#13;
55 ami 57 Jefferson, A v e . , DKJ^tOlT, MlUH.&#13;
Ppf€K3SEY&#13;
-OULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned af 5 uwfs per volume,&#13;
for 7 days.&#13;
(• Tickets f o r " - • « - t"iets.&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds wjH be devoted-&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
the library : : ';*,&#13;
For books or further information&#13;
-appry-Talr;&#13;
W I N C H E L L ' S DRUG STORE,&#13;
t&#13;
P I R C K N E Y , MICHIGAN&#13;
FOR BARGAINS&#13;
X3STireft&#13;
matched, a^d excal^ent workers.&#13;
tor one 4 « ^ ? such a team will do&#13;
frell to lppk %\ tfem,&#13;
James T. Eaman,&#13;
Haadaom© line of fancy goods, boob,&#13;
and games, Japanese,, novelties, Kti\fw7o&#13;
j j g f o ~ etc., arrjying - at Winj&amp;fffB&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN/^ND&#13;
.JtBAJDSLJor BUSINESS:&#13;
Bread and Bans Fresh Tefy Day.&#13;
Warm metis antf lunch** at til hoars. Oysters&#13;
imd all dellcftciftBia their season. We have a line&#13;
of fresh g&#13;
* t t f ^&#13;
es, agaeeo d assortmeut of tea from&#13;
a pound, Highest price paid for&#13;
-Gome and sootw.&#13;
gooSi and fair pr-rr-s.&#13;
Store. Call and see th«ni, ^r. p . L A W ^ ^ C E , PROPR.&#13;
DRY GOODS AND GROH'&#13;
AND EVEPiPflriKG IN THE&#13;
^ ETl^EOFGENERAL(___&#13;
^-.—MERCHANDISE.&#13;
E. A. MANN, East Main Si.. Pinc.'mey.&#13;
Job^I^mting, thaa^eit^|H*iee$ at^the&#13;
SPATCH Offic&#13;
---/-&#13;
•»&gt;&#13;
To the Afflicted.&#13;
Since the introduction of jvenoggs&#13;
Columbian Oil it has mad^^more permanent&#13;
cures and-idven better satisfaction&#13;
on^Ridney Complaints land&#13;
Rhejuinatism than any known renmdy.&#13;
continued series of wonderful cures&#13;
in all climates has made it known as&#13;
a safe and reliable agent to employ&#13;
against all aches and pains, whTctTare&#13;
the forerunners of more serious dis.*&#13;
orders. It acts speedily and surely,&#13;
always relieving suffering and ofte"n&#13;
saving life. The protection it affords&#13;
by its timely use on rheumatism, kid&#13;
ney affection, and all aches a n d ^ a i i i s ,&#13;
wounds, cramping pains, chohefiv morbus,&#13;
diarrhoea, eoughvc^Tds, catarr&#13;
and disorders among children, j»a^«s&#13;
it an invaluable remedyto-belcept always-&#13;
eir hand in e y e f ^ h o m e . No&#13;
rson can afford-to be without it, and&#13;
-hose whpj*«ve once used it nev*r will,&#13;
I t ^ ^ b t o l u t e l y certain in its remedial&#13;
ects, and* will always our© when&#13;
cures are possible.&#13;
'_ Call at WiI NCHELL'S DRUG. STOH* and&#13;
get a memorandum boofr gjyji tg moye"&#13;
Iu41r details ofjhe curative jpfoiferTie*&#13;
of this wonderful medici .^-&#13;
Jr'2 -o</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 Dispatch October 30, 1884</text>
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                <text>October 30, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1884-10-30</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*v - —&#13;
JtROME WINCHELL, PUBLISHbR.&#13;
A t'oiiscieirtious Minister.&#13;
DEAK S I K : — Having tried vour&#13;
WOOD KOK SALE.&#13;
I have about 400 cords of seasoned&#13;
White Wine of Tar Syrup. I believe i f wood fur sale in quantities to suit | t r e n d s and r e l a t i v e tor several week&#13;
•to be an excellent medmtne, at.d can * purchaser—wilt deliver it or sell it on.' . ,,&#13;
conscienciomdy recommend it to otb- • tbe ground T u ; ''L -'-^ ' ^ '&#13;
IHHUlfll THUll»DAT«.&#13;
SubM'.rlption Price, $1.00 per Year.&#13;
A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E 8 .&#13;
t r a n s i e n t advertise mente, 25 caate per Inch for&#13;
ftwt insertion and ten cents JUT inrh for each suhs*-&#13;
qtwnt insertion. Local notices, ft centa per linn for&#13;
&lt;eac: h insertion. Special rates for regular advertise^ inont* by the year or q u a r t e r .&#13;
•John Myers returned Xui'sday last: Mr. Carother.s, wife and son, of&#13;
from Ohio, where he has been visiting; Wayne County, X . V,, are the gue.sk&gt;&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jackson. ..&#13;
ers. Respectfully yours,&#13;
Kingsville, Mo. Rev. Win. Stevenson.&#13;
T. Birkett.&#13;
Birkett, Oct. :50th, 1884.&#13;
Ladies, notice advertisement of Embroidery&#13;
silks and B"iggs' Transfer&#13;
I).&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS. .. -&#13;
jf. G R E E C E , M. D.,&#13;
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,&#13;
PLAINFIELD, MICHIGAN.&#13;
jLLfiice at rejiiiienre. Special attention given t o&#13;
•nursery anil ifi«ea&gt;te&gt;&gt; of tTfe t h r o a t a n d lua«a.&#13;
J A M E S i l A H K E Y ,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
And I n s u r a n c e A^ent. LeL'al p a p e r s made on&#13;
a b o r t notice and reaeouahre terma. Uttic« on&#13;
Main .St., near 1'ostoflice i'inckney, Mich.&#13;
/iKl.MEfS Jt J O H N S O N ,&#13;
\j( l ' r o p r i e t o r a of&#13;
' P I N C K N E Y F L O U R I N G A N D CUS-&#13;
; ~ " ~ " T O M T ^ r i L L S ,&#13;
Dealers in Flour and Feed. C a e r T p a i d for all&#13;
k i n d s of grain. Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
.1 AIWKS T. E A M A N ,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR AT L A W&#13;
and JuBtice of the Peace,&#13;
Office in the Brick Block. P I N C K N E Y&#13;
y i T P. VAN W I N K L E ,&#13;
ATTORNEY &amp; COUNSELOR at L A W&#13;
and S O L I C I T O R i n ' C H A N C E R Y -&#13;
Ortice over s i l l e r ' s DniK Store. P I N C K N E Y&#13;
HA L S T E A l ) G R E G O R Y ,&#13;
1IKALKU i.V&#13;
G R A I N , LUMBER, LIME, S A L T , &amp;c.&#13;
Highest, i n a r k e t price paid for wheat. A good&#13;
stock of L u m b e r always on hand. Doors, sash&#13;
and all building m a t e r i a l s furnished on s h o r t notice.&#13;
G R E G O R Y , M I C H .&#13;
¥E T E R 1 N A R Y S l / R G K O N , Howell, Mich.&#13;
M r, 4y«wH!ar w i l i - ^tejul_tii_£Alla.i.lli&gt;llll' 11 y&#13;
n i g h t or day. Milk fever and o t h e r dineaseB in&#13;
cattle and horses a npecialty. T e r m s reasonable.&#13;
Residence on Myron Road. T e l e p h o n i c connection&#13;
with central otlice at Howell.&#13;
I Sever Saw Its Kquiil.&#13;
D B . C . D. WAK*KK —Kind Sir— ]«•••• P a t t e r n s iu a n o t h e r column.&#13;
ceived the bottle of White W i n e of&#13;
Tar S v r u p you sent me, and have used&#13;
it, ana" will say I think it cannot be&#13;
excelled as a throat remedy. At least&#13;
I have never tried a n y t h i n g t h a t&#13;
seemed to relieve and benefit me a*&#13;
that did. Yours fraternally,&#13;
R E V . R. F. BEAVERS,&#13;
Perche. Mo.. Pastor M. E. Church:&#13;
good's hearers; 50 half-bieed iambs---j the past two weeks wi4li a bad cut in&#13;
j-Skmpahka_ _ and Cptsvyo-|d; oft .high j his toot, _&#13;
t H A R L E S MACLEAN, I&gt;.i&gt;rtf;&#13;
TAKNT1ST, G r a d u a t e of the Dejital^Departl&#13;
/ i i j e u t of the I Diversity of Mjplrfgau. OlH.ce in&#13;
Greenaway Mock, over l"o6t-Omce, Howell.&#13;
i ^ ' i ' a r t i c n l a r atteutii+rrpaid to the p r e s e r v a t i o n&#13;
of the nalural te&gt;Hr:&#13;
W iHlie-ax the Monitprftoufre, Pi nek-'&#13;
ney^on Thursday of each week» conK&#13;
meneing on J u l y 17th.&#13;
PLACE FOR SALE.&#13;
Ten acres pleasantly l'&gt;CHted,jy_of a mile west&#13;
JStockbridu'e. Apple," cTferry peach and paar orc&#13;
h a r d s , nice house, good well and cistern, out&#13;
buildings, well fenced, good soil. Apply on&#13;
premiBPF. LORENCE RICE.&#13;
PINCKNEY EXCHANGE BANK&#13;
ft&#13;
G..W. TEEPLE,&#13;
^BANKER,?^&#13;
Does a Genera! Banking Business.&#13;
Money Loaned on Approved Notes^&#13;
Deposits received.&#13;
Certificates issued on time deposits,&#13;
And payable on demand.&#13;
M . ^&#13;
COLLECTIONS A S P E C I A L T Y .&#13;
P I N C O ^ Y - P R O D U C E MARKET.&#13;
, ^ - ^ . CORBECTED W E E K L Y B Y&#13;
^ O V . tt, 1884. TOMPKINS A ISMON.&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white,&#13;
" N o. 2 w h i t e , ^ . , ^ ^ . :^111111111^11.&#13;
" No. 2 recvT. , ~ ~ — .&#13;
••• No. 8 red,&#13;
Oats, i T,TV^..„.&#13;
C o r n „&#13;
Barley,&#13;
$ .70&#13;
.65.&#13;
EL" 6».&#13;
25.&#13;
20.&#13;
1 00@1 50&#13;
n s , . ., 7K&amp;1 00,&#13;
ed Apples 08^(&amp; . ( ) .&#13;
Fbtatofie,&#13;
B u t t e r ,&#13;
E g g s ,&#13;
Dressed H o g s , per lOOftis&#13;
Dressed «^hlckens ^.&lt;"&#13;
Clover Seed .^A&lt;Z.&#13;
^^ Reading Notices.&#13;
For sale at C E. IIolli8ter"8, S i l l e r Bro"s, and&#13;
WluchelPe Drutf Store.&#13;
T H E HOUSEWIFE'S FAVORITE.&#13;
We wili send 'FREE for ONE ENTII.'K&#13;
YEAR, to every -lady wtro sends n.s AT&#13;
ONCE the names ot ten married ladies,&#13;
at same address, and twelve two-ct.&#13;
stamps for postage, our handsome, ent&#13;
e r t a i n i n g and instructive J o u r n a l , devoted&#13;
to r'ashion%v,Fancy Work, Decorating,&#13;
Cooking and.Household matters.&#13;
Regular price, $1.00. SEND TODAY,&#13;
and secure next n u m b e r . Address,&#13;
DOMESTIC J O U R N A L , N u n d a :&#13;
N . y . -&#13;
LADIES1 MEDICAL ADVISER.&#13;
A complete Medical Work for Women,&#13;
handsomely bound in cloth and&#13;
illustrated. Tells how to prevervt and&#13;
cure all diseases of the sex, by a treatment&#13;
AT HOME. Worth its weight in&#13;
Gold to eyery lady suffering from any&#13;
of' the diseases. Over lO.UUt) sold already.&#13;
POSTPAID ONLY 50 Cents,-&#13;
Postal 'Note or two-ct. stunp&gt;. Address&#13;
. N U N D A P U B L I S H I N G CO.,&#13;
.Nunda, N. Y.&#13;
Very Remarkable Recovery.&#13;
Mr. Geo. V. Willing, oTitanchester.&#13;
Mich., writes: "My wife lias been almost&#13;
helpless for rive' years, so helpless&#13;
that she could not-tttwi- o*er- in bed&#13;
alone. She used two bottles of Electric&#13;
Bitters, and is so much improv&#13;
that she is able now to do h&amp;v""own&#13;
work."&#13;
Electric Bittersjyi^HTo aH that i.&#13;
claimed for th^nr: H u n d r e d s of testimonials&#13;
jittest their great curative&#13;
Only 50 cents-it bottle, a t ^ - "&#13;
W inchell's Drugjsjfdi'e.&#13;
SHEEP-FOR S A L E .&#13;
150 wethers, 3 years old and upwards;&#13;
95 wethers. 1 and 2 years old.&#13;
heavy shearers; 00 breeding ewes,&#13;
grade merino lambs.&#13;
Thomas Birkett.&#13;
I n ' k e a , Oct. oOth, 1884.&#13;
Mls--e.s Minnie und Esther Rorabacher.&#13;
of Brigiiton. arc visiting at D. D,&#13;
Bennett's thi&gt;. we-ek.&#13;
The Pinckney Flouring Mills now&#13;
have all the improved bolting a r r a n g -&#13;
ied^ated Friday evening nienis ot ' t h e regular roller mill system&#13;
and are t u r n i n g out tiour ecpaal&#13;
to the best in the market.&#13;
ignite a numher of roller skaters&#13;
fruu^vt.",uadi.Ua aad- Brighton-wiU-prob- -&#13;
About forty couples enjoyed the social&#13;
hop at the Monitor House Saturday&#13;
night last.&#13;
The Howell skating link was successfully&#13;
last.&#13;
Mr. Garrett Wood has been crippled&#13;
Piiysicians Prescriptions carefully&#13;
prepared from i'je very best materials,&#13;
at " W "nct:eH's D r u g Store. ~&#13;
,- _ •..NCTICET"&#13;
Grimes &amp; on / r g&#13;
d&#13;
'..o.-'&#13;
C. " i .&#13;
e pi&lt;&#13;
o J o c(;&#13;
• • o u i&#13;
e ..o&#13;
1 • m g&#13;
'• ! i : / -&#13;
. i n -&#13;
' r i i m&#13;
conside» «;b'^ n • ,'&#13;
paired qo : e.&#13;
and'tioi*"'• ; ;. ' '&#13;
the public :'" .&#13;
again.lieing w&#13;
eral patrona , : I&#13;
vite their mn' v ;),&#13;
and-satisfactio.ivv"1 ' be gt' 'vanteed.&#13;
PincLnev, J - 1 . 0th, 1884.&#13;
Best grades ot smo ' n g and chewing&#13;
tobaccos, cigars and cigarettes, at&#13;
Wine-hell's D r u g Store.&#13;
— OA'ts W A N T E D ! -&#13;
I \v4.rl;xtp buy 500 bushels of oats.&#13;
tbr'~wl]' 'i I will pdv J e t r o i t quotations&#13;
iO • •_!ix(jd OtUs ' J.'e dav thev are-f&#13;
delive i'X&#13;
Tuesday was a '-wet day" for all the&#13;
candidates7and a-eold, Cold day for a&#13;
large majority cf theui.&#13;
^ T b e devil take the hindmo.u" is&#13;
about the .«50rt of sympathy the defeated&#13;
candidates are r ceiving since&#13;
eVetiori" day.&#13;
J a y Allen, who was reported la-t&#13;
week to be dying, has so far recovered&#13;
as to be on his feet again. —&#13;
ably attend the masquerade at the&#13;
Pinckney rink """Thursday evening&#13;
next.&#13;
Martin Wil-on raised some of the&#13;
finest white turnips we have seen in&#13;
M i c h i g a n - - a t least fhaTs the verdict&#13;
on the whole big bushel left for ye&#13;
editor's %mily- to '•sample.'' Thanks.&#13;
Among the many friends who have&#13;
remembere'fi the editor's family, were&#13;
b 0 ' : ' &gt; JL. (J.&#13;
— — — T . B i r k e t t ^&#13;
A.nd still the farmers are husking&#13;
corn.&#13;
"Pierson's Addition to the Village&#13;
of P i n c k n e y " was appropriately dedic&#13;
a t e d as public pro[jerty Tuesday.&#13;
Fred Cooper, of Mt. Plea-ant. Isa-&#13;
| hella coanty. has._beiin--the- gu-t.vt&#13;
his sister, Mrs. W. HTlVund^wrVTrither&#13;
friends in this vicdnitv&gt;htiia--t week.&#13;
X'has. E. BurcTi and family, ofi&#13;
Flushingj^^were the gm.'sts of his,.&#13;
A Wonderful I)iwoveiy.&#13;
Consumptives and all. who suffer&#13;
from any affection of the T h r o a t and&#13;
Lungs, can rind a certain cure in Dr.&#13;
J u n g ' s New Discovery tor Consumption.&#13;
Thousands of p e r m a n e n t cures&#13;
verify the t r u t h of this statement. No&#13;
medicine can show such a record ot&#13;
wonderful cures. Thousands of once&#13;
hopeless sufferers now gratefully proclaim&#13;
they owe their lives to this New&#13;
Discovery. It will cost you nothing to&#13;
give it a trial.&#13;
Free trial Pottle at W i n c h e l l V D r u g&#13;
Store. Large sue, S1.00.&#13;
__— K44ne.y -Com .p lai miserable&#13;
weakening, disease': pains in the -mall&#13;
of the back; strange. imle.-criUi;&gt;le&#13;
feelings in the back and sides; the&#13;
least exertion wearies; a show of brick&#13;
dust or albuminous matter in the&#13;
urine; an excess of urine or lack of it;&#13;
breath short; sharp and d a r t i n g pains&#13;
about the vitals, and dropsical swellings&#13;
are certain evidences of .diseased&#13;
kidneys. Kellogg's Columbian Oil&#13;
cures this disease in all its -forms, a n d&#13;
ydur druggist is authorized to warrant&#13;
all sold, and will refund, the monr&#13;
ey in all cases that fail to give sati&gt;-&#13;
^ e t i o n .&#13;
Bueklen\s Arnica Salve.&#13;
_ _ ^ T H E B E S T SALVE in the world, for&#13;
.'I CutSf Br irises;—Sorest/Ulcers, Salt&#13;
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped&#13;
Hands, Chilblains, CJoims. and all skin&#13;
cures Piles,&#13;
"rs-~yrt ara irt eerf&#13;
Eruptions, and&#13;
^&gt;r-4K&gt;-pay .requlb&#13;
give pev7ej&gt;TsatU*faction, oi; money&#13;
refunded. /Price 25 cents per box.&#13;
For Salef^at WINCHELL'S Dnro STORE.&#13;
ITE.HS OF INTEREST.&#13;
Dover M'Us Oct. 1st, 1884.&#13;
STOLEN*—From the residence o f » - m .&#13;
Cobb, near P o r t a g e Lake, Lkrl^ 21&gt;'&#13;
pair river boots. T h e p + ^ s o n taking&#13;
same wilTplease n^trtfrn them to L.&#13;
Lake's or b e ^ d s e c u t e d to the full ext&#13;
e n t ot t h e i a w.&#13;
J o h n Parker.&#13;
D E N T I S T R Y . -&#13;
I will be in Pincjcney Monday. Nov.&#13;
10th and r e m a k r o n e week. Shall be&#13;
pleased to-see all who desire my service^&#13;
K'"^'llooms at the Monitor Hon.. \&#13;
•A\ ill also be in Unadiila, Monda'&#13;
Nov. 25th and I'emain one week.&#13;
Respectful'y,&#13;
\V. R. Rainey, Denti „.&#13;
W H E A T FOK SALE.&#13;
I will sell one-third interest in 3&lt;S&#13;
acres ot wheat on ground, (team, and&#13;
self-binder t &gt; be furnished for harves&#13;
ing) on the premises of G. AMiZon,&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 15th. \V&gt;TV',fork.&#13;
P e r r y Blunt, Auj_jie^ee.r,&#13;
Full l i n e ^ o f masques, all prices,&#13;
colors a&gt;«^charactei,«5,.at&#13;
Winchell's D r u g Stors,&#13;
Good cow for sale. Apply to John&#13;
J. Donohue, on J o h n H a m s ' farm.&#13;
W A N T E D — C - D E K A P P L E S .&#13;
__VVill pay 20 cents per 100 lbs. for&#13;
sound cider apples delivered at the&#13;
Grand T r u n k stations in Pinckney,&#13;
Gregory and Stock bridge.&#13;
. J as. T- Eainan.&#13;
Call and select your masques while&#13;
the stsck is complete, at&#13;
W i n c h e l l ' s D r u g Store.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
All persons having unsettled accounts&#13;
with us are respectively re&#13;
inojJfel^ Mrs. Wni. Pureh, dur ing tll ie&#13;
past week. • ^ ' '&#13;
On account ot illjiess in the family.1&#13;
the'FOlmrl'ilaneTtaTanged to be l".«kl&#13;
at Wm. Gardner's Friday evening.&#13;
|,Nov. ?th. is postponed for a'time.&#13;
Thorhpson BeeheaFd Toirh" ?mitfi7:&#13;
-.-&lt;;.• \V. H'jff. who'e—Chili—Sarace&gt;&#13;
and Pii-kalily were line; ancL^tlien&#13;
there were' some delicjp»s^c!herries&#13;
from Miss Aggie Jv«^la"nd, of Unadiila.&#13;
SoWtiion Shaffer, an old resident.and&#13;
espected ciri/.en of Putnam.township,.&#13;
died at his home near this village,&#13;
Monday night last, a'Yer a lingering&#13;
iilne.-s of,main* months duration. He&#13;
was 0T \ eai-s old. Miv. Shaffer was&#13;
horn in Pennsyivuniat but romovGd to&#13;
tlrs Sta^e in 1826, since which date he&#13;
had resided in Washtenaw and Livm'iston&#13;
counties. His remains \ver e&#13;
laid io r-, : t in the •'HaU" Cemetery&#13;
Wednesdav, the toneral services being&#13;
*- - • o&#13;
held at the M. E. Church.&#13;
of this village, started last Tuesday ' \ cAryr rtainneg eemn.e enrttsa marne nb^erianTgt h e ' Pinckfor&#13;
New York State, where they will , n,«v Rnller Rinj^JtuT week from to*&#13;
spend several days visiting friends and night. ('l&gt;ufv'da\\ Nov. P3th.j The&#13;
relatives. \ ^&#13;
There were social parties at Ja-ne&#13;
Harris' and Thos. Clinton s &lt;)ii^L1fKlav&#13;
quested to call and settle the same and&#13;
oblige.&#13;
— — Grimes it Johnson&#13;
evening last.&#13;
Simon Progan&#13;
Marion, t o l m n g&#13;
KenJ^Jpounty.&#13;
Local news aside from electbm matters&#13;
is rather scarce this WC.-K -.U ^:,r&#13;
readors must excuse leanness of oalloc&#13;
a 1cotirmns.&#13;
Some of our citwen.s were " u p "&#13;
nearly all night Tues(hiy'night, waiting'for&#13;
election returns, T h " reports&#13;
however, were rather meager and unsatisfactory.&#13;
Hon. E. B. W mans is re-elected by&#13;
a majority of 1.010 or upward is the&#13;
latest report from this Congressional&#13;
District.&#13;
It is not yet certain which will have&#13;
the best appetite tor Thanksgiving&#13;
turkey—Blaine or Cleveland.&#13;
The newly elected Register of Deeds&#13;
pledged Irmself to the people&#13;
community that he would&#13;
£^~"Those receiving tt- ir •&gt;&#13;
-X over thia p a r a g r a p h , \v.: I d—^.&#13;
su •scription" expires witl' n&#13;
bijuiiieis that the time b&amp;A e.. •&gt;&#13;
cordance with our rulee, e pa&#13;
tinued until s u b s c r i p t i o n - reue\&#13;
• « •&lt; with a red&#13;
• ie ice that their&#13;
A u'ue X&#13;
« i&#13;
.•on-&#13;
To any anybody who h^s disease of&#13;
t h r o a t or lungs, we vn\\ send proof&#13;
that Piso's Cure tcnvConsumption has&#13;
cured the same e-omplaints in other M a n r ^ t r e e t . f o r tern&#13;
^ A d d r e ^ , . ^&lt;jnme$ or on the pr&#13;
E . T . ^ K A Z E L T I K E , W a r r e n ^ P r , HriH«ypt F n c r s r ,&#13;
ry Bull for&#13;
cases.&#13;
A fin-jyfuil blood J&#13;
sale cJieap, Inquijrerof&#13;
J o h n Harris.&#13;
F O R SALE.&#13;
T-he M . E . Parsonage, a very desirable&#13;
pro "&gt;erty. For terms inquire of&#13;
0 . E . H o lister, W. D . Lakin, F . L.&#13;
- B r o w n , Dan Jackson, W. P , Wilcox,&#13;
TrnsfeeH.-&#13;
CFLHANE BROS.—Cooperage and Repair&#13;
Shop.--Apple Marred. Flour Barrels&#13;
and T i g h t work of ait kinds. Repairing&#13;
done on short uoiice. .^---&#13;
Shop in the foundry buildiug-'bjiist&#13;
east of the school h o u s e ^ - ^ i n c k n e y ,&#13;
Mich. Prices reasonahtel&#13;
A very desirarble house, barn a i . l&#13;
two village Tots for sale, situated on&#13;
x , - : ~ ' b t r e e t . For terms i n q u i r e of T&#13;
eniises of Mrs&#13;
Bridget Eagan.&#13;
Bush's Beehives and Section Boxes,&#13;
at Bush's P l a n m g Mill, Plainh'eld.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTICE.&#13;
Parties having Organs t h a t need repairing&#13;
oan have thern put in tirst&#13;
class order by calling on&#13;
C. L. Colliei, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A few full blooded bucks for sale j through this time. In some sections&#13;
JLwJx-ta. F. A. Barton. Unadiila. Preston r a n well however.&#13;
This is pretty " s n u g " weather for&#13;
early November.&#13;
The Towuship T r e a s u r e r will soon&#13;
be calling for "shekels."&#13;
• Bro. E ^ D f S t a i r , of the Howell Rep^&#13;
uWican, paid us a brief call S a t u r d a y&#13;
'last. ' m '&#13;
A New Y o r k t &gt; a p e r n o w has its t y p e&#13;
set by machinery a n d its press work&#13;
done by electricity. *•&#13;
John W. Decke,•, of the A n n Arbor&#13;
Medical College, spent a "lew days"&#13;
here this week,&#13;
E u g e n e Markey is again engaged&#13;
to teach the school in District N o . 8 of&#13;
Webster, for the coming winter term.&#13;
The Prohibition vote t h r o u g h o u t&#13;
this State w a s r a t h e r light—just aj&#13;
little too light to help Gov. Begole&#13;
of t! !»&#13;
b o n n e&#13;
the abstract office and land sharks&#13;
from the registers' otrk&lt;\ We shab&#13;
,. if&#13;
patiently wait until the 1st o( Janursuay,&#13;
M.Lxfuei'ade on Wheels" -will be a&#13;
aoveity that promises to attract considerable&#13;
attention. The announotinieiit&#13;
that a pri/.e would'be given for&#13;
the best masque costume seems to Tnrvir"&#13;
-eeii s,,: ue what in is in' cr pretcd — some&#13;
supposing n ni'-ant l i e tiiiest or most&#13;
c - t i y ei.stume. whereas the intention&#13;
'is to award, the prize to the best "IMri:&#13;
i: o\AT:(&gt;\.' whether comic or o t h e r -&#13;
\s in'. Judges will be chosen from the&#13;
audience, and entire.fairness is assured.&#13;
Skuu-vsj-n masque only will beatiowed&#13;
Ltie use of ilie door d u r i n g the&#13;
I1-'1'" c j i - . ^ t . ( iU;y fbe Usual admiss:-.&#13;
n.cf In c u t s will be charged.&#13;
i'ii•' disagreable rain on Tuesday&#13;
L i s t !; a c e . e l e c t i o n ,\dy m t l l c l . a , . l i &gt; m a l&#13;
i. iK.'-4Uiai',y« ait over the country. Locally,&#13;
tnere was very littje excitement,&#13;
!•&lt;• a full vote, the township oi&#13;
ii casting about its usual ma-&#13;
• i' i "c democratic candidates,&#13;
«• ' v b n of vara: ions on account&#13;
."••rai' u,.,j nf "piusieTs." (.»m«&#13;
' '\vii.!i:;i!i, W. P. Van Winkle,&#13;
•'"•' Coin t Com!.ii.ssioniM-t r u n .&#13;
ticket&#13;
Lb..in&#13;
j •.•:• v&#13;
W i l l i&#13;
o f : ii c&#13;
fe):..-..&#13;
t o r Ci&#13;
O T ' aeour.""*'f' aiit-ab ot h'is&#13;
wiii.e. L. (,. Lm-'iei-, |br P&#13;
Aio.rney, &lt; -ii tjie Republican tie.&#13;
losecuting&#13;
ary for this-reform so long demanded -&#13;
1&#13;
;ved aoout :&gt;&lt;i Democratic votes.&#13;
by the people o( the county. ^ ', -i- ii-- result in Livingston Countv seems&#13;
Q ', .. • .i ,« 1 to oe the eic-ctum of the entire Demo,&#13;
uite a noveltv in the way ot adver- U " U L u t m o "&#13;
.- • .• 'i .i /• . At L'l'af ticket tor countv otlieer&gt; \f: eriitJi&#13;
suig\ \ was noticedi on th••e streets i Mro n- -s'OU is .a:-.nel b v t h o- l^ie1n1 u^b^l^i( «an-Us '.imiv- tmiaavr cahtetedr nuopo ann, dw dhoenw n, otuhre ysotiuenegt lwaedaire-s-- __ • JPu.v11l^n&gt;_oy_&#13;
ing handsome cloaks with placards&#13;
on theiiv backs advertising the new&#13;
stock of fine wraps just received at&#13;
Mann Bros.'&#13;
As we go to press the- election ret&#13;
u r n s are still doubtful: with Democrats&#13;
confident and Republicans hopeful.&#13;
New York will decide the mattei\&#13;
and it may need tin5 ofriJuJil canvas&#13;
to tell how the vote of that State&#13;
shall be counted.&#13;
,n;;.Y.\iug:ug from $M)0 to 10,-&#13;
• r.i • &gt;'.uc and National tickets.&#13;
' m c i rouiT oirTtio P i v - i d ' Y ' i a l&#13;
&gt; s;;;[ m Llaii-t with indications&#13;
,.I-IC' Cleveland, but not suf-&#13;
'.•etr.rus have been canvassed in&#13;
'«. or iv to exactly settle the standt'fnit&#13;
state which is claimed by&#13;
both parties, and will undoubtedly decide&#13;
the contest which ever side its&#13;
electoral Vote, is counted on. There&#13;
is considerable excitement still niani-&#13;
•fjLisjLed-ais—4-lie general result&#13;
a. m&#13;
i II i,&#13;
'lb&#13;
tb .&#13;
in&#13;
ti ••;&#13;
N&#13;
i n g&#13;
y&#13;
Wednesday evening last. Iriends I somewluit in - doubt neither partv&#13;
and relatives to the number, oi 25 or ' seem&gt; to know whether to hurrah or&#13;
30 gathered at the residence of Mr. i "take to the 'woods." The suspense&#13;
and Mrs. Prank Montague, and treat- : »»«--t be r a t h e r agonizing to the caned&#13;
them to a genuine ' surprise I didates whose fate is in doubt.&#13;
p a r t y . " After having a good t i m e ] 1 w i s h t o express my thanks to the&#13;
generally Hie. guests presented Mrs. many friends who showed- *uch mark-&#13;
M o n t a g u e with a tine cloak and Mr ed k i n d n e s s i u r i n g the protracted iff-&#13;
Montague a haiidsome hat, as slight I ness and brudal of my father. J&#13;
Wkansflfthfirifti-tmni—— • r ..... c. IJ. gluflU.&#13;
^v&#13;
&gt;•• ~ * r v&#13;
« v -&#13;
— T -&#13;
•*-:mm0»m-- . - H t ?&#13;
'•&lt;:&#13;
TO C O K H E S P O K D K N T S .&#13;
all communication, for thi- p a p e i 1 ^ ^ * • * • ;&#13;
fSKi on tSe Dart"l'the writer Write only on one&#13;
•fie of the Dupe" He particularly .earefa I tn giving&#13;
£"££?•»nrtdates t(ib»»9 t»e letters and MJrurw:&#13;
£ffn lad dl.tttSt' Proper names are often dlftoulx&#13;
8J%Baffihe)' oSSuse of the sarelesi maaner&#13;
whloh they are written,&#13;
In&#13;
a MICHIGAN MY MICHIGAN."&#13;
fi&#13;
A L a n d o f P r o m i s e .&#13;
While the Gogebic Iron range Is not as yet&#13;
experiencing any decided boom, still the outlook&#13;
Is encouraging and it is expected tbat&#13;
the coming summer will witness a material Increase&#13;
iu population and business. At the&#13;
Colby mine on eectlon 16, town 47, rauge 4t3,&#13;
Capt. Moore la engaged lu getting out a test&#13;
cargo of 1,000 tocp, part of which has been&#13;
already shipped to Milwaukee! via the Milwaukee,&#13;
Lake Superior and Western railway.&#13;
On section Usn, spine, town and range, a town&#13;
tile will soon oe/lald out by ihu railroad euiuany,&#13;
the name/of the place to be Bessemer.&#13;
"early seven /miles further west, near ttie&#13;
Montreal river, another town—Ironwood—&#13;
will boon be/plat ted. Tributary to Ironwood&#13;
will be the Ashland, Norrie,. Aurora, Case,&#13;
Albany and Vaughn mines hlready opened,&#13;
and the numerous explorations that are being&#13;
carried o'u in that vleaity. Near Bessemer are&#13;
the Colby, Lougyear Trouton Fay, Chequamatou,&#13;
Black -river aiui Hart -j&amp; Shore's&#13;
mines; and in this Ideality also some ex[&gt;}orlujz&#13;
Is being done. This insures the location of&#13;
two good towns OQ tbe east side of Moutr.-al&#13;
river. Oa the west side the northern Chief&#13;
mining company laid out a town on section 24,&#13;
Jtown 48, range 3 east, Wisconsin, and has&#13;
named it Hurley General lots have been sold&#13;
in Hurley, and a hotel, to be called the Aurora&#13;
house, is in course of erection. It is rumored&#13;
that another hamlet is to be platted at Wakeflel£&#13;
4tation. . , „&#13;
-•The Milwaukee, Lake Superior &amp; Western&#13;
railway Is completed a_bout * mile beyond Bessemer,&#13;
and it is thought rails will be laid to&#13;
the Montreal river by December 1. Bessemer ^ ^ ^ o i m c u l u o , ttWUB u ~ . w ««= ^&gt; u i ^ i&#13;
SB the" ^wiJnt^er,^ ^an^ a^ccSoml mSodnat^ion^ Sco^nncecotiungn t i e s of Michigan have,in creased inpqpu-&#13;
•daily with the passenger train, which, after&#13;
U u n d a y , Nov. a, will run no further than&#13;
Wateromeet.&#13;
As soon as more mines begin work, a num&#13;
ber of merchants will bring in stocks of goods,&#13;
-and those who visit Bessemer or Ironwood&#13;
next-summer can expect to see flourishing l a d&#13;
healthy towns. _&#13;
E v a r t I l l u m i n a t e d .&#13;
Evart witnessed the largest and most devastating&#13;
fire she has had for the past eight years&#13;
on the morning of October 81. The element&#13;
•caught In the hay loft of the Ardis Uvery stable,&#13;
and before 1t was discovered and the alarm&#13;
It-had ttalned much headway, being so&#13;
•difficult to check, no matter how efficient the&#13;
fire department. The fire soon Bpread throughout&#13;
the upper part of the barn, which was 50x-&#13;
125 feet, and but a few moments elapsed before&#13;
t i e large Evart House hotel barn caugty, likewise&#13;
the residence of James Deacey, on the&#13;
north adjacent lot. Things by this time became&#13;
hot. The water-works did their work&#13;
well, andjfour inch streams were piled into theburnlng&#13;
debris for more than two straight&#13;
hours. By this persistent labor the Evart House&#13;
block and several buildings which were imperiled&#13;
b'v the element were saved. In the&#13;
Ardis livery were four horses, three of which&#13;
burned in their stalls, including the valuable&#13;
stallion, B»M Richmond; also, six carriage*,&#13;
some fifteen cutters and sleighs, six tons of&#13;
hay, a large quantity of grain, etc. The loss&#13;
to ttie Evart House wa?, perhaps, about $400,&#13;
iully iosured. Several hogs burned In this&#13;
barn. James Deacey is damaged $300; no insurance.&#13;
The loss on the Ardis barn and contents&#13;
is about 14,000, with not one cent of insurance.&#13;
A ° still morning air did wondrous&#13;
work for u?. Evart has never -had a mere&#13;
severe wrestle with the flames.&#13;
L a w a n d O r d e r L e a g u e .&#13;
a A league was recently organized at K alama-&#13;
.too. This statement was -Adopted AS embody-.,&#13;
ipg the scope and purpose of the organization:&#13;
1. We seek to abridge no person's rights un-&#13;
•der the law, but to maintain our- own rights&#13;
in pursuance of law.&#13;
2. This league is to be in tbe broadest sense&#13;
political, ascertaining to the affairs of the&#13;
citizens; out is not to be political in a party&#13;
o a n c p&#13;
3. This league is not to supplant the natural&#13;
relations of private citizens, patents, guardians&#13;
or friends; but by moral support, and if&#13;
•needed by material aid, to encourage and assist&#13;
them iu the protection and defence of&#13;
those dear to tuem, by the exercise of their&#13;
Tights under the law.&#13;
4 / T h e officers and members of this league&#13;
axe not expected .to do the proper duties of&#13;
•civil officers, whose business and sworn duty&#13;
it Is to execute and enforce the laws; but will&#13;
•endeavor to m^ke It felt by those officers that&#13;
&lt;he moral Beuthuent of this community demands&#13;
at their hands, and willuphola them&#13;
in the strict execution of the laws.&#13;
A M o n t h * S h i p m e n t s .&#13;
The shipments from the port of Bay City for&#13;
the month of October as shown by Custom&#13;
House records were as follows:&#13;
Lumber,-fect 68,859,000&#13;
Shingles, pieces 16,466,000&#13;
Lath, pieces S,9S8.0()0&#13;
Jards In Bay City. Two of them were caught&#13;
l the act the other night&#13;
Amelia Burleigh of the township of OHve,&#13;
Cltuton county is under arrest charged with&#13;
the forgery of a $100 note.&#13;
Herbert Cole and John Updegraft of Schoolcraft&#13;
are under arrest and $300 bonds for selling&#13;
liquor without a license.&#13;
Van Buren county will need about 15,000&#13;
more taxes this year to mske up lor the deficiencies&#13;
of the year just closed.&#13;
Vau Buren county Agricultural Society has&#13;
settled with its creditors (those receiving&#13;
awards) at 50 cents on the dollar.&#13;
John Burrey, employed at Ross, Bradley &amp;&#13;
Oa's planing mill, Bay City, had an arm&#13;
taken off by the machinery recently.&#13;
Willis VV. Fisher, treasurer of Franklin&#13;
township, RoFcoimnon county, is under arrest&#13;
for embezzling $400 of the county funds.&#13;
Thieves secured $400 In money and two gold&#13;
watches from ThoiuasJMathlas, a wealthy farm.,&#13;
er living about six miles from Owoseo.&#13;
A Maiquoit e dispatch of October 28, says&#13;
the lire in Oft1 Cilumet and Heel.* mine, is SUbilued&#13;
ut last at.d work has been resumed.&#13;
Two-thirds of the families of Calhoun county&#13;
own their Louses and 4,612 people in that&#13;
county own their farms of 20 acres or more.&#13;
Peary tYarsull, sentenced July ft, 185*1, from&#13;
Kent county to two years at loma for grand&#13;
larceny has Ocen lunloued by the governor.&#13;
George Bentley, convicted of larceny at&#13;
Grand Rapids, and sentenced July IS, 1883, to&#13;
four years at J a c k t o ^ h a s been pardoned by&#13;
the Governor. -&#13;
Grand Rapids physicians have formed a medf&#13;
leal aeadetny for mutual improvement. Now&#13;
the citizens talk of forming an association for&#13;
mutual protection. —&#13;
Miss Franc Lower of Lansing, won't use the&#13;
roller skates again. While indulging in that&#13;
delightful pastime the other evening, she fell&#13;
and broke her leg.&#13;
A young child of 8herlff Lawless of Royal&#13;
Oak died In convulsions a few days ago, the&#13;
spasms being produced, it is said, by the child&#13;
taking fresh milk from the cow.&#13;
It is claimed that about half of the northern&#13;
A vein or bed of mjca has been discovered&#13;
about four miles from the Republic Iron Mine,&#13;
in Marquette county. The specimens taken&#13;
from tbe vein are said to be very clean and Eure, and well adaDted to commercial purposes,&#13;
teps will be taken at onee to open up this new&#13;
source of wealth of our Lake Superior mineral&#13;
products.&#13;
Two freight trains coming north from Sturgts&#13;
Nov. 1, collided at Nottawa, reeultlng fatally&#13;
to two men. When the forward train reached&#13;
Nottawa it slowed up and the train following&#13;
ran into tbe former's caboose, Instantly killing&#13;
William Greer of Mendon, and fatally Injuring&#13;
George Koons of the same place. Both men&#13;
leave families.&#13;
A little three-years-old son of August Langer&#13;
of 8t. Joseph, while playing round a cistern&#13;
fell in and was drowned. It seems tbat the&#13;
night before Mrs. Langer dreamed that her&#13;
sou Would be drowned aud uponmlsslug him&#13;
she immediately went *o the cistern,&#13;
and with a t o e succeeded In grappliug his&#13;
body aud brought It to the surface.&#13;
E. R. Landon died at his offlco in St. Louis,&#13;
while transacting busiuess,ou the afternoon of&#13;
October 29, Mr. Landon was one of the oldest&#13;
and highest degree members of the Masonic&#13;
lodge in the state. He has^beeiT'Jasrlce of the&#13;
peace for four years aud a resident of St.&#13;
Louis si* years, l i e was formerly a resideut of&#13;
Detroit and for many years conductor on several&#13;
railroads.&#13;
Inquiry at the United 8tates Express Compau&gt;&#13;
's office as to the amount of celery shipi»ed&#13;
by the company from this point elicited the&#13;
fact that they are birring celwy daily on an&#13;
average to 300 points, amounting to from&#13;
fifteen to twenty tons In weight. The Amerl-&#13;
GORDON A PRISONER.&#13;
Kbartoum Has&#13;
don El&#13;
Fallen, and Gen. Cor-&#13;
Mahdi's Prisoner.&#13;
lalion during the year ending September 1 at&#13;
the rate of about 4,000 inhabitants each.&#13;
Frank Lawson of Big Rapids Is under ar~&#13;
rest for criminally assaulting a young lady of&#13;
that village. In her struggle she bit the young&#13;
man's fingers, which led to his Identification.&#13;
Mecosta county has spent $31,154 j64 for improvements&#13;
and ordinary expenses' the past&#13;
year, leaving a oalance in the treasury of $8,-&#13;
355. For the coming year the estimate is $53,-&#13;
765.&#13;
Escanaba has a home theatrical corporation&#13;
called the Enterprise Amusement Association&#13;
which has just shown its enterprise by&#13;
increasing the capital stock from $3,000 to&#13;
$5,000.&#13;
Homer Wilkinson of Onondaga, found a box&#13;
containing the caarred remains of a child&#13;
under a burned straw stack near his house.&#13;
A number of trinkets were beside the mutilated&#13;
body, JJ&#13;
About $15,000 is necessary to defrav the expenses&#13;
of Michigan's exhibit at the New Orleans&#13;
exposition. This amount, the commissioners&#13;
think, can be raised with very little&#13;
difficulty.&#13;
The Saginaw Agricultural Society were al&#13;
lowed an af proprlatton of $700 by the Board&#13;
of Supervisors, which will enable them to pay&#13;
the premiums awarded at the fair held a&#13;
month ago.&#13;
E x Governor Moses of North Carolina is&#13;
registered at the Detroit hause of correction.&#13;
The ex-governor obtained money from a prominent&#13;
Detroit divine a few weeks ago under&#13;
false pretenses.&#13;
1A. G. A. R. post, with 15 charter members,&#13;
was organized at Sunfield, Eaton Co., recently.&#13;
It was chrlsened "G. W. Grinnell post," In&#13;
honor of Col, GrlnneUTwho served in the Mexican&#13;
war and war of the fe'BBllion.&#13;
It&lt;iS rumored at Grand Rapids that there&#13;
exist in that city two institutions known as&#13;
opium joints, a place where the inebriate and&#13;
disconsolate congregate- t o enjoy- the deadly&#13;
influences of tbe poisonous drug.&#13;
Mayor Humphrey, of Adrian, is a practical&#13;
kind of moral reformer. The city dead walls&#13;
were placarded with flaming yellow posters of&#13;
a vu I ear patent medicine, and the Mayor immediately&#13;
ordered them obliterated.&#13;
'2 A Saginaw divine classes skating rinks as.&#13;
among the places which have a bad influence&#13;
upon the young and cites the teachers In the&#13;
8alt, bbls&#13;
Timber, cubic feet&#13;
Staves&#13;
7,450&#13;
12,100&#13;
30,236&#13;
f. I&#13;
hold&#13;
the&#13;
/&#13;
I N T H £ S T A T E *&#13;
Battle Creek street cars are heated.&#13;
Marquette Is enjoying a building boom.&#13;
There is an increasing demand for Michigan&#13;
salt. _ :&#13;
The St. Clair salt works are now in active&#13;
•peratlon.&#13;
The taxable valuation of Wayne county is&#13;
$139,670,303.&#13;
4 Manistee turn* out about 15,000 barrels of&#13;
salt a month.&#13;
A gymnasium is to be built on the Hillsdale&#13;
-college campus.&#13;
Work has been begun on the Children's&#13;
iHomc at Kalamaxoo.&#13;
Measles have caused a temporary suspension&#13;
of Escanaba schools.&#13;
The North American Bee-keepers will&#13;
their next-meeting in Detroit.&#13;
A new worm is causing great trouble to&#13;
farmers around Portage rralrle.&#13;
Taking the muskrat's habits as an Indicator,&#13;
Michigan will have a long winter.&#13;
William Hartung, dug up the skeleton of an&#13;
Indian on his farm near Albion recently.&#13;
8ev.eral Charlevoix citizens propose a trip&#13;
from that place to New Orleans by boat.&#13;
Frank W, Abrams,the Brighton boy burglar,&#13;
Is wild to be insane. His trial Is set for Nov. 11.&#13;
Hereafter each township in Presqiie Isle&#13;
-county will J&gt;e ohUgeTTto look after Its own&#13;
poor.&#13;
Mackinaw Islanders are bestirring themselves&#13;
to secure that quarter-of-a-mlltlon-dollar&#13;
hotel «* .&#13;
The assessed valuation of Bay County, Is&#13;
$14,455,070, of which $11,415,^69 is real and&#13;
$2,840.41!l personal. - " k&#13;
Pish in the St. Jo River at CuJietan'tine are&#13;
being rapidly killed off bv.the explosion of&#13;
dynamite cartridges. ,.^-&#13;
Thicvea have Jjeen stealing logs from the&#13;
public schoolP, from tbe superintendent down,&#13;
as authority for this condemnation.&#13;
Edward Greenwood of Bay City, died of&#13;
lockjaw recently. This is the first case of the&#13;
kind ever reported in that city.—Greenwood&#13;
had a finger-hail torn off some weeks ago and&#13;
his death" resulted frcm the accident.&#13;
The new Methodist minister at Lake City&#13;
was recently burnt out, losing his entire library&#13;
and. nearly al}' his furniture. ' Who wants to&#13;
help himJ \t you do communicate, with Mrs.&#13;
Mary Reeder, of Lake City, Missaukee Co.,&#13;
Mich. /&#13;
The-village of Houghton, with a^populatlon&#13;
of les6 than 1,600, has issued $.5,0(50 of six per&#13;
cetrtC bondB in order to supply its inhabitants&#13;
with wator. The Sault with double the popu-&#13;
/Ution rejected-a proposition to raise $40,000&#13;
for the same purpose.&#13;
Some of the manufacturers will operate on&#13;
their best tracts of pine tbe coming winter.&#13;
They recognize the fact that the country is&#13;
flooded with common lumber, and they hope to&#13;
Improve matters by having a better grade to&#13;
sell.—Muskegon News.&#13;
John Donley, of Richmond, Macomb county,&#13;
committed suicide by shooting recently. He&#13;
borrowed a revolver, saying he wanted to kill&#13;
a dog with It, and taking It to his room shot&#13;
himself through the breast. Whisky was at&#13;
the bottom of the affair.&#13;
The immense trusses for the roof of the&#13;
Kalamazoo Pxesbyterian church are&#13;
being put into place. They are seventy-seven&#13;
feet long and weigh over twenty-five tons.&#13;
There are already 70O,CO0 brick In the building,&#13;
and 100,000 more to be added.&#13;
The Tlttabawassee Boom Company's raftings&#13;
for the season,-up to its close, will approximate&#13;
575,000,000, considerably less than was&#13;
expected, and about aO.OOOjMO^tggtof logs will&#13;
remain back at the eloa^^Tne rear 6 t the drive&#13;
is a short distance past the State Road bridge.&#13;
The $ i5,000 capital stock in the /Rochester&#13;
Roller Process Flour Company bss all been&#13;
taken, and the company has commenced remodeling&#13;
and enlarging their building (the old&#13;
GlUett &amp; Andrews mill), and expect to get In&#13;
the rollers and commence operations during.&#13;
November.&#13;
The Twenty-third Michigan Infantry have&#13;
this to say for themselves relative to their flag;&#13;
They claim that they were not responsible for&#13;
the loss, as It was on a wagon which had been&#13;
abandoned. They were afraid the acceptance&#13;
of the flag may look as if they were responsible&#13;
for Its loss.&#13;
While Joseph Lephlne and his voting son, of&#13;
St. Ignace, were out In a small skiff, lifting hsi&#13;
fish nets, oTTTCott's Point, LaKe MlChlginV&#13;
the boat was swamped In three feet of water,&#13;
and ou account of the heavy sea running. f,he&#13;
father In trying to save his drowning son was&#13;
also drowned.&#13;
,'George Bentley, who, was pardoned from&#13;
prison by Gov. "Bevole a few days ago, is the&#13;
old colored man who was Janitor of the fourth&#13;
national bank at Grand Rapids and stole a&#13;
Of money which had accidentally been IeffTout&#13;
ol the safe. He hid the mone; and was carrying&#13;
it home a little at a time when he was detected.&#13;
can Express Company are billing to 4iX) points&#13;
.aid tnip daily from twenty to twenty-five tons.&#13;
—Kalamozoo Gazette.&#13;
On Monday October 27 a shower of stones&#13;
began falling on th«gtarm of Sylvester Odborne,&#13;
Northern Castleton, Barry county, and tbe&#13;
storm kept up for several days. At times the&#13;
downfall was so great that men engaged in&#13;
husklcg were obliged to stop work. The stones&#13;
are of a dark color, and have the appearance&#13;
of having passed through fire. The people in&#13;
tbe vicinity think the world is about to wind&#13;
up business and settle with Its creditors.&#13;
A correspondent of the Rogers City Advance&#13;
says: "Deer' are being slaughtered in great&#13;
numbers. Dogs are employed to drlvethem&#13;
Into the water, where they are pursued by men&#13;
boats and clubbed to death." It is contrary to&#13;
law, but everything^ goes tnrthe deer season,&#13;
especially with the inhabitants of the place.&#13;
Hunters from outside sometimes get into&#13;
trouble through the jealousy of/these same in.&#13;
habitants, when emulating their example.&#13;
Some more stringent law should be passed&#13;
to protect the deer of Northern Michigan from&#13;
the Innumerable dogs used by the hunters.&#13;
We venture tti£ assertion thatseventy-flve dogs&#13;
have been brought' Into this county alone by&#13;
hunters from tjhe southern part of t h e s t a t e&#13;
since the loth of last month. The Legislature&#13;
will find it necessary to entirely restrain the&#13;
hunting of these animals for a few years if the&#13;
dogs are not kept back—Alcona County Review.&#13;
J,-Henry Leffer, a German, aged 45, recently&#13;
.from the lumber woods at Ashland, Newaygo&#13;
County, was fo«ind in a room at the Pacific&#13;
House in Graud—Raplds-with his throat cut&#13;
from ear to ear, and the arteries cut in both&#13;
arms, and a large jack-nife clinched in his right&#13;
hand. He left aK)ut $16 in money and a note&#13;
which reads as follows: "Here Is good luck to&#13;
csfiiiiiody and bad luck to Michael Yager.&#13;
Tou are the of this all,-' He.leaves a aiBter&#13;
and brother living at Tiffin. O.&#13;
It is safe to assert that pine stumpage iu&#13;
Michigan is worth at least twenty-five per cent&#13;
less than it was in 1881-2, notwithstanding Its&#13;
annual decrease In extent. Capitalists with&#13;
money to invest will undoubtedly be safe in&#13;
buying either pine trees or pine lumber at&#13;
present prices. There is hardly a probabllit&#13;
of either goi.,g much lower. There are sal"&#13;
to be several men In Michigan who sold pine&#13;
lands about three years ago, who arc now buj-&#13;
Ing the same lands back at an enormous profit.&#13;
—Muskegon News.&#13;
A fatal accident happened in Beaudry,&#13;
Champagne &lt;&amp; Co.'s saw mill at North Muskegon,&#13;
which caused the death of Jans Olson, a&#13;
«wede, aged 18 years. Hre w a s engaged i n&#13;
cleaning away 'the refuse in the bottom&#13;
cf the mill immediately under tbe circular&#13;
arbor when all of a sudden the arbor&#13;
bursted into about fifty pieces, one of which&#13;
struck Olsen in the head aud took out a chunk&#13;
of his skull. His death was instantaneous,&#13;
for when his fellow workmen gathered&#13;
around him life was extinct. None of the other&#13;
men were Injured. — — —&#13;
F. W. Noble, general manager of Michigan's&#13;
state txhiblts for the World's fair at New Orleans,&#13;
has In his office In Detroit some excellent&#13;
samples of wheat, oats and corn sent him&#13;
for exhibition, from Wayne county;—eatfr&#13;
sty&#13;
dd&#13;
weighing 44 poundB per-bushel and yielding 80&#13;
bushels to the acre; wheat weighing" 64 pounds&#13;
per bushel and yieMluw: 35 bushels per acre,&#13;
and corn yielding 120 bushels per acre. Mr.&#13;
Noble says he is weil pleased at the progress&#13;
being made. He hopes to receive from tbe&#13;
farmers samples of cereals from every county&#13;
where any considerable agricultural products&#13;
are grown.&#13;
Albert Smith of Big Rapids, an estimable&#13;
young fellow about 16 years of age, died at the&#13;
residence of his parents from blood poisoning.&#13;
A few days since, while gunning, he rested the&#13;
barrel on bis foot. By some' means the weapon&#13;
was discharged, and his big toe was badly injured.&#13;
He walked home, said nothing of the&#13;
accident, and resumed his occupation as if&#13;
nothing had happened. The latter part of the&#13;
week Inflammation set in, and then for the first&#13;
time his injury was made known. Despite the&#13;
best of medical aid he died as stated above.&#13;
This makes the fourth death out of a nearly&#13;
grown-up family of five children.&#13;
D E T R O I T J H 4 R K . E T B .&#13;
Wheat, No. 1 white..—.V7.771- 65 @&#13;
Whcar—No. 2 red, • • • * s s » » « 75&#13;
Flour 4 00&#13;
Corn 50&#13;
Oats 26&#13;
P v l e y 1 50 i*ye rrrrrr^r, ^:77^.7.... s 65&#13;
Buckwheat fc_lQ0 3 5C&#13;
Corn meal 22&#13;
Clover Seed, » b u . . . . 4 60.&#13;
Timothy Seed $ bu 1 55&#13;
•Apples per bbl.i 1 50&#13;
B u t t e r , * lb 20&#13;
Eggs 22&#13;
Chickens 12&#13;
Turkeys , 14&#13;
Potatoes 85&#13;
Onions per b u . . . 40&#13;
Honey 18&#13;
Beans, picked 1 25&#13;
Beans, unpicked I 90&#13;
Hay . . . . . . 1 3 00&#13;
Straw 6 00&#13;
Pork, dressed, V 100 6 00&#13;
Pork, mess new 17 00&#13;
Pork, family 18 25&#13;
Hams 13^(i&#13;
S h o u l d e r s . . . . ^&#13;
Lard&#13;
9&#13;
08&#13;
Bocf, extra mos sn»i .m m n * &gt;j M13-WWood,&#13;
Beech and Maple.^&#13;
Wood, M a p l e . . . :&#13;
WoodYHickorv..j&#13;
LIVH STOCX.&#13;
Ixed packipg, $4 £5@4 50; heavy&#13;
95; light, $ i 10(^4 65.&#13;
CATTM*—Native shippers l(@15c; lower, at&#13;
$4@6 25 for inferior to choice steers; Texans&#13;
steady at $3 72&lt;§4 25.&#13;
S H B I P - Western sheep, $3 @ 3 75: natives&#13;
%Z 3:@4 45. •&#13;
T h e D e t a i l • .&#13;
A Cairo dispatch of Nov. 1st rays: Khartoum&#13;
has fallen and Gen. Gordon 1» a prisoner&#13;
iu the hands of El MAhdl. A telegram from&#13;
Dongola to the kliedlve gives the following details&#13;
of the capture as told by a sheik who&#13;
left Shendy October 7. Seven weeks ago.&#13;
Khartoum being surrounded by n strong force,&#13;
of rebels and provisions being scarce, the feeling&#13;
of discontent and insubordination which&#13;
had for for some time eiisted among the garrison&#13;
manifested itself in open opposition&#13;
to the policy of Gen. Gordon. This feeling&#13;
was shared alike by officers and men, and&#13;
mauy of the former who had become convinced&#13;
that further prolongation o f resistance&#13;
to the si ge was useless, waited upou Gen.&#13;
Gordon, told him of the mutinous disposition&#13;
of a great part of the garrisou.&#13;
aud usked where the promised&#13;
relief expedition was and when It uiitrht be&#13;
expected to come to their aid. Receiving no&#13;
satisfactory reply they theu accused Gordon&#13;
of deception, of holding false hopes that he&#13;
might achieve grea-er giorv In the barely possible&#13;
event of holding Khartoum until assistance&#13;
should arrive, and declared that the temper&#13;
of the garrisou was such that a full and&#13;
sdtlsfactory explanation of the situation must&#13;
be made or trouble wouiii cneae. Goroon rcr&#13;
plied that the British expedition for their relief&#13;
was already at Donjola and making all&#13;
possible speed toward Khartoum. The officers&#13;
then asked Gordon to lead them northward to&#13;
meet It. Gordon agreed to do so and ordered&#13;
Col. Stewart to procure boats for the purpose.&#13;
This Col. Stewart set out to do, but before be&#13;
had completed his preparations 8,000 of tae&#13;
garrison deserted to the rebels, leaving only&#13;
2,000 faithful to Gen. Gordon.&#13;
The necessity fox a speedy departure was&#13;
now apparent aad with Ms remaining followers&#13;
Gen. Gordon embarked and proceeded&#13;
down the Nile toward Shendy. The first few&#13;
hours of the voyage were uneventful, but as&#13;
tbe boats proceeded down t h e ; river they were&#13;
beset by parties of rebels who thronged the&#13;
bank and threw spears and arrows at the fleeing&#13;
party wounding many of the occupants-of&#13;
the boats, some of them seriously. B y some&#13;
rapid means of communication the rebels wore&#13;
enabled to call from the mountains thousands&#13;
of natives, who awaited upon the banks further&#13;
down the river the approach of the boats.&#13;
Many of them were armed with rifles, which&#13;
they used with deadly effect upon the retreating&#13;
garrison. While passing Shendy the rebels&#13;
in possession opened a heavy artillery fire upon&#13;
the boats, disabling several of them and forcing&#13;
them so near the opposite bank&#13;
that—they were grounded. The remaining&#13;
boats which succeeded in passing kept on&#13;
down the river, but were so frequently and&#13;
savagely attacked from tbe banks that Gen.&#13;
Gordon decided to return rather than expose&#13;
his command to certain death by proceeding.&#13;
Tne baats,.jrith_thfejxceplionjQO.he_onja!i!on^.&#13;
mandod by Col. Stewart, which was far in a d -&#13;
vance of the others, were accordingly headed&#13;
toward Shenuy and proceeded up the river.&#13;
Arriving at Shendy they were again attacked&#13;
and competed to eurreuder. The occupants&#13;
of the boats which had grounded had already&#13;
been captured and taken on shore. The officers&#13;
and men are sMll prisoners at Shen'iy,&#13;
but on October 6, Gen. Gordon was placed in&#13;
charge of a strong guard aud conveyed to *iie&#13;
heacquarters of El Mahdi. Col. Stewart's&#13;
boat is known to have passed Berber, but beyond&#13;
this nothing definite can bo learned of&#13;
him. —:—-&#13;
AInosSwan and Wlufield Scott of Bloomfield,&#13;
Oakland Country, were making preparations&#13;
a few Dight* ago, at the resltlcrce of&#13;
the latter to go fishing," when some di/flculty&#13;
arose, and Swan drew a revolver, as It is reported,&#13;
and shot on^e at Scott's child and once&#13;
at Scott's wife, without effert. Then he pointed&#13;
the revolver at 8cott's head and Scott&#13;
struck the revolver with bis hand just as the&#13;
weapon was being discharged, and received the&#13;
bullet in bis right hand. Swan was arrpstod&#13;
by a Pontlac officer and put In jail and the&#13;
next day Scott made complaint against&#13;
him for assault with intent to murder. Swan&#13;
was arraigned before tbe magistrate and a day&#13;
set for his examination. The two parties to&#13;
this fracas were neighboring farmers, and the&#13;
whole community is startled by the occurrence.&#13;
G. M. D .&#13;
W a l k i n g d o w n B r o a d w a y ia v e r y&#13;
p l e a s a n t w h e n y o u f e e l w e l l , a n d T — —&#13;
K n e v e r felt b e t t e r t h a n w h e n h i s&#13;
f r i e n d a s k e d h i m h o w h e g o t o v e r Wt,&#13;
s e v e r e c o u g h of h i s s o s p e e d i l y . " A h ,&#13;
m y b o y , " s a i d T , «-ti M. D did i t ! "&#13;
A n d h i s friend w o n d e r e d w h a t G. M. 1).&#13;
m e a n t . H o k n e w it &lt;lid n o t m e a n a&#13;
G o o d M a n y D o c t o r s , f o r&#13;
h a d t r i e d a d o z e n i n v a i n ,&#13;
s a i d h e , j u s t h i t t i n g t h e&#13;
h e a d , " y o u m e a n D r , P i e r c e ' s ' G o l d e n&#13;
M e d i c a l D i s c o v e r y , ' o r G o l d M e d a l D o -&#13;
s e r v e d a s m y f r i e n d J S a l w a y s&#13;
d u b s i t . " S o l d by d r u g g i s t s . •&#13;
X K&#13;
" I h a v e i t , "&#13;
n a i l o n t h e&#13;
M e r c h a n t s i u C h i n a&#13;
p o r t p o i s o n e d t e a i n t o&#13;
h a v e tried t o \ e x -&#13;
F r a n c e .&#13;
W e a c c i d e n t a l l y o v e r h e a r d t h e f o l l o w -&#13;
i n g d i a l o g u e o n t^e s t r e e t s y e s t e r d a y .&#13;
Jones. S m i t h , w h y d o n ' t y o u s t o p&#13;
t h a t d i s g u s t i n g h a w k i n g a n d s p i t t i n g ?&#13;
Smith. H o w c a n IP 5Tou k n o w I a m&#13;
a m a r t y r t o c a t a r r h .&#13;
J, D o a s I d i d . I h a d t h e d i s e a s e i n&#13;
its w o r s t f o r m , b u t I a m w e l l n o w .&#13;
S. W h a t d i d y o u d o f o r itP&#13;
J. I u s e d Dr. S a g e ' s C a t a r r h R e m e d y .&#13;
I t c u r e d m e a n d i t w i l l c u r e y o u .&#13;
8. Vve'heard o f i t , a n d b y J o v e I ' l l&#13;
t r y it.&#13;
J. D o s o . Y o u ' l l find i t a t a l l t h e&#13;
d r u g s t o r e s i n t o w n .&#13;
Z o l a is r e p r i n t i n g s o m e o l d n o v e l s .&#13;
C o l d s , f e v e r s a n d i n d a m m a t i o n s&#13;
b r o k e n u p b y D r . P i e r e e ' s E x t r a c t of&#13;
S m a r t - W e e d . &amp;&#13;
— T h e t e s t i m o n y of m a n y w h o l o n g&#13;
suffered^from ill h e a l t h , c a u s e d by an&#13;
i m p u r e s t a t e of t h e b l o o d , g o e s t o&#13;
p r o v e t h a t t h e b e s t r e m e d y f o r m a k i n g&#13;
t h e b l o o d rich, r e d a n d p u r e , f o r b e a u -&#13;
t i f y i n g t h e c o m p l e x i o n , f o r c u r i n g s o r e s ,&#13;
p i m p l e s . a n d o t h e r s k i n d i s e a s e s , for r e -&#13;
mov-ing— a c h e s , - - p a i n s , - s t i f f j o i n t s ,&#13;
r h e u m a t i s m , e t c . , for i n c r e a s i n g t h e&#13;
p o w e r of e n d u r a n c e , f o r g i v i n g h e a l t h&#13;
a n d s t r e n g t h t o e v e r y w e a k p o r t i o n of&#13;
t h e b o d y i s D r . G u y s o t t ' § Y e l l o w D o c k&#13;
a n d S a r s a p a r i l l a . i t s effect p l e a s e s t h e&#13;
u s e r i n e v e r y i n s t a n c e . N o o t h e r r e m -&#13;
e d y e q u a l s it.&#13;
" S p e a k i n ' o f p r o d u c t i v e s o i l , " s a i d&#13;
t h e m a n f r o m D a k o t a , " t h e half h a s n o t&#13;
b e e n t o l d . A f e w w e e k s a g o m y w i f e&#13;
aaJH, ' W h y , J o h n , T h'liftVflynn'vR t o o k&#13;
t o g r o w i n 1 a g a i n . ' I m e a s u r e d m y s e l f ,&#13;
an1 I h o p e G a b r i e l ' l l m i s s m e a t t h o final&#13;
r o u n d u p if I h a d n ' t g r o w n s i x i n c h e s i n&#13;
t w o w e e k s . 1 c o u l d n ' t a c c o u n t f o r i t&#13;
for s o m e t i m e , till a t l a s t I t u m b l e d t o&#13;
t h e f a c t t h a t t h a r w a r h o l e s i n m y b o o t s ,&#13;
a n ' t h e i n f e r n a l soil g o t i n t h a r a n d d o n e&#13;
its w o r k . " — S t . P a u l H e r a l d .&#13;
W h e n b e t r o t h e d l o v e r s s i n g , it i s&#13;
m u s i c b y t h e b a n n e d .&#13;
T h e N e w Y o r k c r e m a t i o n f u r n a c e&#13;
w i l l b e r e a d y J a n u a r y 1 .&#13;
Y o u r c o u g h i s g r o w i n g w o r s e . T h a t&#13;
s o r e n e s s a n d p a i n i n t h e t h r o a t a n d&#13;
l u n g s i s i n c r e a s i n g . B e t t e r g e t r i d o f&#13;
t h e a b s u r d i d e a t h a t a n y t h i n g w i l l c u r e&#13;
a c o u g h o r c o l d , a n d g i v e D r . W i s t a r ' s&#13;
B a l s a m of W i l d C h e r r y a t r i a l b e f o r e it&#13;
is t o o l a t e . I t n e v e r f a i l s t o c h e c k c o n -&#13;
s u m p t i o n , a n d q u i c k l y c u r e s a l l c o u g h s&#13;
a n o t i c o l d s r&#13;
A n o v e l a n d it is s a i d p a i n l e s s m o d e&#13;
of ( e x t r a c t i n g t e e t h h a s j u s t b e e n i n -&#13;
v e n t e d b y a S w i s s s u r g e o n . A t h i c k&#13;
s q u a r e of soft r u b b e r , p e r f o r a t e d i n t h e&#13;
c e n t e r , i s p u s h e d o v e r t h e o f f e n d i n g&#13;
t o o t h u n t i l t h e u p p e r p a r t o f t h e r o o t&#13;
is w e l l e n v e l o p e d . T h e c o n t r a c t i o n of&#13;
t h e r u b b e r e x e r c i s e s a s t e a d y a n d p e r -&#13;
i s t e n t b u t n e a r l y p a i n l e s s p r e s s u r e ,&#13;
g r a d u a l l y s u n d e r i n g t h e n e r v e a n d v e s&#13;
s e l s a n d l i f t i n g t h e t o o t h f r o m i t s b e&#13;
w i t h o u t t r o u b l e s o m e h e m o r r h a g e ^ &gt; T n \ e&#13;
p r o c e s s r e q u i r e s four o r tive^days, b u t&#13;
is n o t a c c o m p a n i e d b y j w r y ^ s e r i o u s l i a -&#13;
b i l i t y t o i n f l a m m a t i&#13;
If y o u a r e ^ t r o u b l e d w i t h s o r e s , a c h e s&#13;
p a i n s ^ a n d g e n e r a l w e a k n e s s of t h e&#13;
o n s b o d i l y f u n c t i o n s , d o n ' t b e d e -&#13;
c e i v e d b y t h e a d v e r t i s e m e n t s o f b i t t e r s ,&#13;
k i d n e y m e d i c i n e s , e t c . , w h o s e certific&#13;
a t e s o f p r e t e n d e d c u r e s a r e o f t e n p a i d&#13;
for. P u t y o u r t r u s t i n t h a t&#13;
r e m e d y c a l l e d D r . G u y s o t t ' s&#13;
simple&#13;
IWMBMJ V . U I D U 4 / i vjujroujii o XellOW&#13;
Dock and Sarsaparilla^/it; will curt _ _&#13;
you by purifying the*'blood and i^^lf^&amp;igSX™'^&#13;
strengthening the weak portions of&#13;
your body. You will also find it very&#13;
refreshing to the brain and nervous&#13;
system. 'The proprietors receive hundreds&#13;
of letters bestowing upon it the&#13;
highest praise.&#13;
"Bring me a chair" is&#13;
saying a thing tire 3 you.&#13;
Doctors are getting more and more into the&#13;
habit of prescribing proprietary medicines In&#13;
their practice, especially tbat known as H U N T ' S&#13;
^ ^ d n c y and Llvfer) R E M ^ » ¥ f t»r diseases of thekldnevs*,&#13;
liver and bladder. They know from&#13;
experience that is of more value in such dis-&#13;
* a^i •- : !;an any prescription they can write.&#13;
B o o t h w i l l o c c u p y h i s h o u s e i n B o s t o n&#13;
e a r l y in O c t o b o r .&#13;
Iu a letter from Hoirs. Mu. PBKY, Castle Grey,&#13;
Limerick, Ireland, BBOWX'S BRONCHIAX&#13;
TKQCHRS are thus referred t o : "Having&#13;
brought your ' Bronchial Trocbes' with me&#13;
when I ';ame to reside here, I fouod that after&#13;
I had given them away tn t.^n^ 1 c n n ^ e r M&#13;
required them, the poor people will walk for&#13;
miies to get a few.'' For Coughs, Colds and&#13;
Throat Diseases they have no (qual. Sold&#13;
only in box-ts.&#13;
T h e .Garrett e s t a t e i s w o r t h b e t w e e n&#13;
$ 1 5 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 a n d $20,000.001).,&#13;
I L E S Itching or Rleeding, rclievod and permunently&#13;
cured by Cole'a Carboliaalv©. GettheGenuin&#13;
«, 2fi cents nnd 15 cents at drtiRKints or by matt.&#13;
J. W.C0LE4 CO.. Proo'8, Black Rfver Falls, Wis. P&#13;
X i e u t e h a h t GreeTyTs f a m i l y a r e a l l u n -&#13;
u s u a l l y tall.&#13;
When you visit nr leave New YorK City, via&#13;
Central depot, save Baggage Expressage and&#13;
$3 Carriage Hire, and sto*) at the Grand&#13;
~Union Hotel, opposite said depot Six hundred&#13;
elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one&#13;
million dollars; $1 and upwards per day.&#13;
European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with the best. Horse' carR, stages and&#13;
elevated railroad to all depots. Families can&#13;
live better for less money at the Grant! Union&#13;
Hotel than at any other first-class hotel In the&#13;
fiity^&#13;
Gold and silver ornaments are worn&#13;
by men, women and children in Ceylon.&#13;
An Association Which Pays its Members&#13;
at Marriage a Benefit.&#13;
The association is known as the MutuaV&#13;
Marriage Benevolent Association of Marine&#13;
City, having been incorporated under the laws&#13;
of Michigan in 1883, it Is the only Institution&#13;
of its kind in the state. The association has&#13;
paid In benefits since August 2, $6,000 and is&#13;
paying several thousand a month- to its members.&#13;
It has paid GKOHGE M C B A N B T of Marine&#13;
City $1,000, ORVILI.E MCDONALD $1,000, M i s .&#13;
R O S E M C D O N A L D $1,000, W A L T B H WBRBKR&#13;
-$i;600j WM.—G. PHILLIPS $250, FMBD OOVEKEION&#13;
$250, EvN. W E B B E R $1,000 ana several&#13;
others in Michigan and Canada.&#13;
The following letters of acknowledgement&#13;
are a few of the many the association are receiving.&#13;
HAMILTON, O N T . , OcfcS, 1884.M&#13;
The Mutual Marriage Benevolent Association,&#13;
Marine City, Mich. '&#13;
GENTLEMBN.--I have much pleasure in&#13;
acknowledging the receiptof-your draft ln'ruTT&#13;
of my certificates (1 to 4) Inclusive, for $1,-&#13;
000. '&#13;
It Is especially pleasing to me as a mem}&#13;
of our association to^see the remwkablfi^roeess&#13;
of our association, also the nwjiapt maner&#13;
lu which all claims on th&gt;*s»ociation are&#13;
ettl e d .&#13;
It '.i an acknowIedBetTfact that no investment&#13;
in the Unite&lt;rState8 does produce the&#13;
very large oj*ffl that can. bo derived from a&#13;
Tew certificates with you.&#13;
your system more carefully studied^&#13;
ness&#13;
the young men of this continent, your busl-fl&#13;
is instead of being one million dollars Dpeerr der year, would be at least twenty millions.&#13;
However your Benevolent Association can&#13;
not help but soon be so popular that it will be&#13;
as common to ask when a young man marries,&#13;
was he a member of the Mutual Marriage&#13;
Benevolent Association, as to ask If he was insured&#13;
at death.&#13;
Wishing the Association the success It so&#13;
richly deserves.&#13;
I am yours truly&#13;
E. N. W H B B E U .&#13;
To t h . a m , , of » » N " M I C H ' 0 C I - 8 ' » « •&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
• *&#13;
a new way of —&#13;
F I&#13;
--t&#13;
t&#13;
Will yiiu imaiy jrant m«* ipaos lnyon&gt;~vaTuaBTe~&#13;
^P«rtoacicn^wlWrfetherafietptorj|aiO, twin* ih«&#13;
arapuat flue me on-the benefit oen.fluaie Issued to&#13;
jn»fc*DUl7, 188». by the Mutual rfarnatfi B.nevo-&#13;
6 + ¾ 0 . 1 \Associawon or karine .Jity. M ol»la i i i&#13;
J Honors,&#13;
Boctatlim have baea perfect rsifeTTevery rss .eet.&#13;
This plan oflnsunnice is safe a d obonp, artd I advise&#13;
all my youn* unmarried frten s (ladies and&#13;
A. A..&#13;
deal*&#13;
FHHUV D. Sovauaiox.&#13;
For furtherpartloolar* address R, MotfetL Secretary.&#13;
Marine City, Mic*. It will pay you.&#13;
gentlemen) to oecorae memdersjf tbe »t.M&#13;
"Thanking the officers for their ftnt em inly&#13;
log's, 1 remain Yours. Kw.,&#13;
"!__-- ._-^~&#13;
1&#13;
T H E L,A»T F L Y OF SI TIITltiH.&#13;
•Tie the last fljr of summer&#13;
Lift buzzlug alone,&#13;
Kaehbruthrrly humoier&#13;
Has scooted'and ^oue.&#13;
Where syrup once trickled&#13;
'Twits there he would be,&#13;
And oft has he tickled&#13;
My noBe lu his Kite.&#13;
He buzaes to sadness—&#13;
Hlfl wtutdets are weak-&#13;
He hums not with gladness&#13;
When sweets he doth seek-&#13;
No dreams of the past pleasures&#13;
E'er gladden his soul?&#13;
thinks he of the treasures&#13;
Of the sujrar bowl (&#13;
* _at he Is all wearied&#13;
Is seen in bis look—&#13;
Slap! bang! he Is burled&#13;
Iwside of this book,&#13;
Next year resurrected,&#13;
He'll buzz svitb his mates,&#13;
And pay unexpected&#13;
Calls on hairless pates.&#13;
A STARNGE INCIDENT.&#13;
aoutRTllle Courier Journal.&#13;
Very few people in this busy work-aday&#13;
world are ever cognizant of the&#13;
strange, and often thrilling, incidents&#13;
which occur in lonely mountain byways,&#13;
unless the ubiquitous newspaper&#13;
man happens to wanaer that way and&#13;
nail the. incident fast lor the public&#13;
amusement and instruction; th^n for a&#13;
moment every body pauses to read,&#13;
and exclaim with curious interest, marveling&#13;
overdue strange diversity of human&#13;
life, in a lonely sequestered&#13;
nook, hidden away in the hilly heart of&#13;
, Piedmont, Va,, stands a shabby old&#13;
frame building in a grove of lnagnib'-&#13;
' cent oak trees. It is known through&#13;
that region of country as Sharon African&#13;
church, and has earned for itself a&#13;
well-deserved reputation for the quiet,&#13;
orderly and decoroii^ way in which ite&#13;
services are conducted and the general&#13;
goo i character of colored people who&#13;
compose its congregation. It isn't muchto&#13;
look at in point of\ architecture,&#13;
being the usual weather-boarded farm&#13;
barn, with a loose box for a pulpit, elevated&#13;
on a low platform, which does&#13;
duty for a chancel, and its seating&#13;
capacity in only about 150T although according&#13;
to negro custom nearly twice&#13;
that number usually contrive to&#13;
squeeze in* The old church is often&#13;
the theater in which are enacted&#13;
strange scenes, and about the strangest&#13;
one 1 ever witnessed took place within&#13;
its dingy walls on the night of the 27th&#13;
of May 1884.&#13;
I had been spending my two-weeks'&#13;
vacation in the vicinity at a lonely little&#13;
mountain farm, owned .by an.old&#13;
college mate of mine, and kept by him&#13;
for the sake of the hunting and fishing&#13;
-for which that part of the world is j u s ^&#13;
ly celebrated. My friend, Tom. ,&#13;
and I were sitting on the rough porch&#13;
after a hard day with the rods, smoking&#13;
our pipes and djscussing the day's&#13;
Jport while wo watched the sun sink&#13;
in a glory of scarlet and gold below the&#13;
tops of the , western hills. Presently&#13;
the footfall of a horse attracted our attention,&#13;
and the gate swung open to&#13;
ad^nit the soldierly form of Col. H., on&#13;
his big gray mare, come, as we supposed,&#13;
to spend a social evening with&#13;
us. But the uolonel'-s mission was one&#13;
of far more importance, as he speedily&#13;
explained to us, sitting with his knee&#13;
upon the pomiuol of the saddle, beside&#13;
the porch railing. He had come, he&#13;
told me, to invite Tom and myself to&#13;
ride over to Sharon church with him.&#13;
The colored people held a large meeting&#13;
there that night for the purpose&#13;
of arraigning one of their number before&#13;
the deacons and elders to answer&#13;
for certain moral lapses of which he&#13;
had been guilty. As we rode along towards&#13;
the place of meeting Col. H.&#13;
explained the matter at length. It appeared&#13;
that a man named Seth Courtney,&#13;
a tenant of the colonel's, had&#13;
been causing a good deal of talk and&#13;
dissatisfaction among the colored people&#13;
by the manner in which he chose to&#13;
conduct himself in regard to his fam^&#13;
ily. For years he had been a peaceable,&#13;
well-ordered negro, giving satisfaction&#13;
to his employer -and behaving&#13;
himself in a quiet and'respectable manner.&#13;
- HU wi£ev^woman named Jane,&#13;
a f^rmer&gt;«lave of Col. H.'s and a very&#13;
light^mulatto, enjoyed the reputation&#13;
being, -somewhat of a shrew, but&#13;
was, in spite ot her temper,&#13;
a smart, capable woman to&#13;
whom the white family were strongly&#13;
by every argument and persuasion in&#13;
power. It was of no use. however, for&#13;
the only reply he elicited was a sullen&#13;
reparation of the statement that he&#13;
"was done tired o' Jane, anyhpw; she&#13;
was sassy an' outdacious an' quarrelsome,&#13;
an' he wanted to get shot ov her.&#13;
He done live, wid her long enuf, t'well&#13;
he got tired ov hier." And when further&#13;
reprobated and pressed upon turned on&#13;
his former owner squarely with the unanswerable&#13;
statement that he "didn't&#13;
•ee bow come ole m a n ' r made such a&#13;
tiustration 'bout his quittin' Jane, kase&#13;
white folks quit dere wives jus' anytime&#13;
dey got ready."&#13;
All this happened last autumn. During&#13;
the winter and spring the deserted&#13;
wife got on with the support of her&#13;
children as best she could,'working herself&#13;
to skin and bones, and gradually&#13;
becoming mere and more dependent on&#13;
the white family for assistance. Times&#13;
were very hard with her, and would&#13;
have been harder but for the Colonels&#13;
kindness.&#13;
One evening, about two weeks before&#13;
the night appointed4or-the meeting al.&#13;
Sharon, Jane had flown up to the house&#13;
in a violent state of excitement to anr&#13;
nonnce to the family that her ill-doing&#13;
husband had coolly and quietly married&#13;
the woman who was the author of&#13;
her woe, and intended bringing her to&#13;
live on the adjoining plantation, almost&#13;
within gun-shot of the home he had&#13;
abandoned. The poor creature wept&#13;
and wailed and heaped maledictions&#13;
mountain high upon the betrayers of&#13;
her peace. She "didn't keer so much&#13;
'bout dat sorry nigger hisself," she affirmed,&#13;
"but it wan't f a r for hereto&#13;
have all de load? to tote. Dem_ chil'en&#13;
was as much his n as her'n an' he ought&#13;
to hep' to support 'em. 'Twant no&#13;
justice in a man bein' lowed to do such&#13;
a llrotDw7_-1l5i#fQe tt-rviincLk-, aarn»'' dduenn rpirrannnft lhiiissssenff onfflff&#13;
wid anudder wife an' lef her de chil'en&#13;
to 'tend to 'til she was wo' plum&#13;
an' wished she was daid, an' dem&#13;
attached. She hed been nurse for years&#13;
in Col. H.'s family, and as a natural&#13;
consequence her well-being was a matter&#13;
of interest to her white friends. At&#13;
the time I apea&amp; of she had been married&#13;
to Seth Courtney for eleven years,&#13;
and they had five children. They rented&#13;
a cabin and a few acre3 of land, almost&#13;
in sight of "ole ruars'rs" and for a&#13;
long time life flowed peacefully enough.&#13;
But into this colored paradise there&#13;
crept a serpent in tne form of a goodlooking&#13;
mulatto girl, named Frances, a&#13;
cousin of Jane's, who lived in service in&#13;
the city, and whom Jane had invited to&#13;
visit her in her country home because&#13;
the girl wrote that she had been sick&#13;
and the doctor recommended a change.&#13;
Even within the first week of her&#13;
cousin's stay poor Jane began to have&#13;
cause to repent of her hospitality, for&#13;
Frances, with her airs and graces and&#13;
city tied airs, everted ^herself to capti&#13;
vate the dusky host and to seduce&#13;
affections from their legitimajte^ohannel,&#13;
and she suoceededonly to well.&#13;
For months there was-quarreling, scandal&#13;
and disturbance^ which ended finally&#13;
in the outraged wife's .walking off to&#13;
the ^ o i g n o u s e " in a furious temper&#13;
requesting her old master's imerfeTonce.&#13;
Coi._ll. hunted up the man&#13;
at his work, and had a long talk with&#13;
him, in which ho pointed out to him his&#13;
duty as/ft man and citizen, as well as a&#13;
husha/ftd and lather, appealing to him&#13;
out,&#13;
to."&#13;
After her excitement had worn itBelf off&#13;
in tears and language, the woman explained&#13;
to Col. H that she had&#13;
carried the matter before-the deacons of&#13;
her churcbTand^ning from thom the&#13;
promise that they would call a meeting&#13;
and arraign her recalcitrant lord for his&#13;
evil conduct. Ami she had furthermore&#13;
come to her old mm aster to ask him to&#13;
please to ride quietly over on the apointed&#13;
night and sieze an opportunity to say&#13;
a few words to the negroes himself in&#13;
disgust and reprobation of the man's&#13;
conduct. "You see, sar," she explained,&#13;
"dey's only po' ig'nant folks an' dey&#13;
ain't none too anxious to meddle wid&#13;
Seth' bout what he's done, kase a sight ov&#13;
'em i9 done de very same derselves,&#13;
ah1, a eight more ov 'em may want to do&#13;
it in de future; so dey'U be easy wid&#13;
"him. An* Seth, he's—mighty—smart&#13;
'bout talkin1 an1 arrswerin' back an'&#13;
raisin' a laugh* an' he'll kar de crowd&#13;
wid him as sho1 as judgment of somebody&#13;
don't hinder him. Dey'll tu'n him&#13;
out'n de church, to be sho', but much&#13;
he'll keer for dat when he knows dat&#13;
all he got to do is jus' to 'serience&#13;
'ligion over agin nex' big meetin' time&#13;
an' den he'll be took back agin, like&#13;
'a bran' pluck fum de burnm', an'&#13;
t'wont nary one of dem keer 'bout my&#13;
totin' all de brans fur my burnin' dis&#13;
whole winter1 pen my back f ru all de win'&#13;
an' cole and snow fur to keep his chillun&#13;
fum freezin'. De deacon's aint,much,&#13;
sar. an' Seth he'll get de bes' ef you&#13;
don't step right in whenr-faegets done&#13;
wid his answerin' an' sassin1, and jus1&#13;
tell de folks zackly what a low-down,&#13;
free-nigger trick 'lis fur a man to lif&#13;
his own flesh an' blood to scuffle fur&#13;
dersef in de winter time, an' take up&#13;
wid strange wimmen.".&#13;
Col. H. yielded to the woman's persuasion&#13;
from very pity for her condition,&#13;
although he had very little hope&#13;
of being able to effect anything by making&#13;
the negroes a speech on t i e subject&#13;
of "marital duties, for, as the old soldier&#13;
remarked^ with a smile, "Negroes were&#13;
to the-full as obstinate and difficult to&#13;
fluence against their inclination as the.&#13;
purest Anglo-Saxon who ever drew&#13;
the breath of life." Still the&#13;
woman wished it, and he&#13;
had consented, calling for us on his&#13;
way to the church, thinking t!.nt We~&#13;
niight like to witness a scene which&#13;
promised to be both singular and dramatic.&#13;
The meeting was in session&#13;
when we rode up to the building, and,&#13;
dismounting, fastened our horses tohooks-&#13;
driven into the trees for the pur&#13;
Groups of colore* people stood&#13;
manner of a person very ill at ease.&#13;
His harangue, which was vague and&#13;
rambling, dealing principally with&#13;
glittering generalities, was listened to&#13;
with attention, but no enthusiasm. He&#13;
was followed by an elderly man, bent&#13;
with the weight of years, and&#13;
crowned with the snowy evidence of&#13;
time's silent flight. He spoke with&#13;
more energy and gesticulation than his&#13;
predecessor, making frequent use of such&#13;
ornate terms as "My on regenerated,&#13;
errin' biudder," and "My consecrated&#13;
Chmhton sister," terms which never&#13;
failed to elicit signs of approval from his&#13;
hearers. The gist of his remark* was&#13;
that all "disworryment, an' 'sturbance,&#13;
an' fam'ly 'sputin' was a turrible pity,&#13;
an' offensive in de nostrils of de church&#13;
an' a mighty heap of bother besides."&#13;
At the close of his oration he announced&#13;
the decision of the deacons which&#13;
was, that the countenance of the church&#13;
would be withdrawn from "Brother"&#13;
Seth Courreney until such time as he&#13;
should declare himself repentant, when&#13;
he would be received again into the&#13;
fold like • a sheep whar is strayed away&#13;
an1 got 16s*" in de breshwood an' de'&#13;
briar-patches o' sin an' bin hunted up&#13;
an' toted back by de Good Shepherd."&#13;
Then another man took the floor who&#13;
enlarged principally on the duties of&#13;
wives to their husbands, dilating on&#13;
their responsibility, and admonishing&#13;
them'always to be active, self-sacrificing,&#13;
earnest, sweet-tempered and diligent,&#13;
so that their lords might have no&#13;
fault to find with them, ,and so be deprived&#13;
of all desire to roam. He wound&#13;
up with quite a flourishing period, in&#13;
which he charged all the women present&#13;
to " ' member an' ponderate 'pon&#13;
de lesson whar de good book taught dat&#13;
wivesmus' be subjected to dur husbands&#13;
in all things bof great an' small, an'&#13;
mus' obey dem an' do dur will, or dey&#13;
couldn't 'spec' fur de mat'ermonia&#13;
state to komtiner widout de storms and&#13;
trouble an' sorrow ar)' strnction whar&#13;
wrecked de boat o' family love an' flung&#13;
it bottom upwards 'pon de sho's o' separation."&#13;
This speech was received&#13;
with vigorous applause by the male&#13;
portion of the audience and dead calm&#13;
by the f em ale, save whereweak-minded&#13;
sisters ""strove to curry favor with&#13;
their lords by ejaculations of "Dat's,&#13;
"Dat's so r "&#13;
pose,&#13;
about in the half-light, laughing and&#13;
jesting in great good humor, but with&#13;
an air of subdued expectancy. A&#13;
whisper had gone abroad that Col. H.&#13;
intended addressing the meeting, whether&#13;
in favor of Seth or in reprobation of&#13;
him was not clearly understood, and the&#13;
doubt had tilled the church to over-flowing.&#13;
Every seat was packed, and at&#13;
first it appeared almost impossible for&#13;
us even to enter the building,but negroes&#13;
are always mannerly when they feel&#13;
themselves in the position of hosts, and&#13;
Col. H. was personally known to them&#13;
all, BO they moved aside courteously,&#13;
crowding each other to allow ns to pass&#13;
in, one or two even rising to offer us"&#13;
seats. These we dee'.ined, preferring a&#13;
station near the door, where we^could&#13;
command fresh air at will and also observe-&#13;
the densely packed throng. When&#13;
the flutter attendant on our entrance&#13;
had subsided we glanced around curiously,&#13;
and I was conscious of considerable&#13;
surprise at observing a number of wiiite&#13;
men present. They were all of the&#13;
lower class and apparently had co me&#13;
with a purpose, for they nodded familiarly&#13;
to Col. H. and intimated by signs&#13;
and pantomime gestures that they were&#13;
there because of "him and in expectation&#13;
of amusement.&#13;
One of the doaoons, a big, pondfcrousiman,&#13;
was'addressing, the audience&#13;
in a big ponderous voice and with the&#13;
de truf!" "Yes, Lord!"&#13;
and the like, and one or two malcontents&#13;
who whispered aggressively that&#13;
"t'want fa'r to pack all to 'spulin' an'&#13;
all de t'arin' an fo'b'arin' 'pon'ooman&#13;
folks. Men ought to pull deir own&#13;
sheer "&#13;
"What the devil are they about?"&#13;
questioned Tom of a white bystander,&#13;
'* 'I thought they were here to drop into&#13;
Seth like blazes, _and not a soul has&#13;
said a word that could wouud the susc&#13;
e p t i b l e of a_ triple-plated divine.&#13;
Why don't they go for the fellow, hamm&#13;
e r a n d t o n g s ? " —&#13;
"The Lord knows," replied the man,&#13;
grinning. "I reckon their consciences&#13;
sorter pains 'em, and makes 'em let off&#13;
easy. The big fellow who spoke first&#13;
quit hianwn wite R fmv years back and&#13;
married agin. Niggers all do it. It's&#13;
their nature, and it's no use pestering&#13;
one's self about it, I vvonder Col. H.&#13;
takes the trouble. 1 dropped in tonight"&#13;
because i heard he was goirig to&#13;
make the darkies a speech, and 1 allowed&#13;
he'd improve the shining hour&#13;
by touching up their polities a'trifle."&#13;
"Hush," whispered Col. H., suddenly;&#13;
"Selkis_gojng^p_sjeakhiruself. Listen.:'&#13;
A small, wiry, brown-skinned man&#13;
stepped upon the platform before the&#13;
pulpit and stood facing the crow J. 1&#13;
observed him particularly and decided&#13;
at once that he was far ahead of mo3t&#13;
of his race present in intelligence and&#13;
determination. He opened his speech&#13;
well, in a cle^r, sonorous voice, using&#13;
frequent but easy and appropriate gestures.&#13;
The man was a natural orator, and&#13;
accustomed to addressing his race. He&#13;
caught tneir attention at once, and held&#13;
it unflagging all' through his harangue,&#13;
which lasted fully an houn He took&#13;
the ground that a bond of which either&#13;
or both parties had wearied ceased to be&#13;
binding, a t d argued his case with the&#13;
ease of a modern sophist. He enlargad&#13;
upon the unhappiness agd misery of a&#13;
marriage where love has given place to&#13;
rancor and unkindness, told of bitter&#13;
words, T harsh upbraidings, and of&#13;
the selfish and unkind conduct growing&#13;
out of such disastrous unions. He&#13;
spoke of this example to children and&#13;
fie certain perdition of souls brought&#13;
up in such an atmosphere. All the&#13;
grizzly horrors of a aonie devoid of&#13;
bows to deir decree, reservin' my own i&#13;
judgment." Seth took his seat triumphant,&#13;
among muph audible comment&#13;
and shuffling of feet. It was as&#13;
his wife bad feared—he had carried the&#13;
crowd with him.&#13;
Col. H. elbowed his wav quickly&#13;
peace and love he painted In dark, lund&#13;
colors, appealing at last to their common&#13;
sense whether it were not better^&#13;
for a man or woman to break away&#13;
boldly-from such a hell and stand forth&#13;
-free-to make another Btrikejor happiness&#13;
in a mure congeixjar union. "1&#13;
am distressed and sorrowful, my brethren,"&#13;
he said in conclusion, "to fee der&#13;
cause pf your all "sembJin' \ i p togedder&#13;
here to-night, I don't see rto use of it,&#13;
an' in yo'/hearts I 'spec ' y^u don't'&#13;
n o t h e i y I never did hold wid mixm' up&#13;
church matters wid fam'ly matters,&#13;
kase one belongs to de soul an' tother&#13;
to de body—oue is fur de week days an'&#13;
t'ther fur Sunday. You say I'se dq»ne&#13;
wrong in quittin' my wife" bekase we&#13;
couldn't 'gree togedder, an' maybe 'tiir;&#13;
but 'let him dat is widout oin amongY&#13;
you cast de fus' stone*' De deacons&#13;
whar addressed you—some two o r t h m&#13;
of 'era —quit deir wives bekase d e j was&#13;
onoomfortabl© to pit along wid. It I&#13;
done any worse* Deyrmarried agin b»&#13;
kase dey wanted to. ah' de Book&#13;
as how it ain't 'good fur man to d&#13;
alone.' I married agin fur&#13;
reasons, an' I ax you all, fa'r&#13;
men an' Women, has I done&#13;
den dey? Dey have turned&#13;
de church for followin'^Je&lt;^amBfa d«y&#13;
sot me, an' doin'jwhat dey deirselve's&#13;
is guilty of, a j M a o n ' t see&gt;ne farness&#13;
- — w a y -j ,,&#13;
through the throng and sprang upon&#13;
the platform, his erect, soldierly form&#13;
and noble gray head towering above&#13;
them all. With a calm, commanding&#13;
eye he surveyed the excited crowd, compelling&#13;
them by the old instinct of&#13;
obedience to silence. Slowly he turned&#13;
and confronted Seth,regarding him from&#13;
head to foot with an expression which&#13;
caused the man to falier and move uneasily.&#13;
Then he faced the people again.&#13;
He was a magnetic speaker, and he&#13;
addressed himself principally to the&#13;
male portion of his audience, for Negro&#13;
women seldom^or never desert their&#13;
homes and families, while with the men&#13;
the crime is common.&#13;
"Friends," betsommenced, in a tinging&#13;
voice that stirred his hearers like&#13;
the blast of a trumpet, "this man has&#13;
said—and you all hoard kirn—'let him&#13;
who is without sin among yo*u cast the&#13;
first stone,' and I answer his challenge.&#13;
I am not. Without sin no human&#13;
creature is, b u t i am - guiltless of that&#13;
sin. No desertecTwife sits alone in the&#13;
cabin slaving her life out to feed, clothe,&#13;
comfort and support the children she&#13;
has borne me while I spend my time,&#13;
and money, and energies upon unholy&#13;
ties. No woman whom I have sworn,&#13;
m the sight of God and man, to love,&#13;
and cherish, and protect while the&#13;
breath is in my body and the life in my&#13;
veins, toils through snow and wind,haU&#13;
and tempest bearing on her back, like&#13;
a beast of burden, the fuel which is to&#13;
warm and prepare food for the little&#13;
ones whom 1 have deserted. Being&#13;
guiltless of Jiiat sin, I may speak toyou&#13;
of it, and may hope that you will&#13;
iiston,to my womle, believing that my&#13;
voice is raised to warn and plead witn&#13;
you, my hand to beckon you from an&#13;
abyss and not to cast a stone."&#13;
"I,was born among you, brought up&#13;
among you, and have grown old witn&#13;
the same kindly dark faces which watched&#13;
over my icfancy^stiH-surrounding&#13;
me, still making the life of my home&#13;
complete. We are friends, you and I,&#13;
we Have always been friends." As master&#13;
and man, love and good will existed&#13;
between us, and now that the tie of&#13;
ownership is broken the tie of friendship&#13;
still remains, and i hope will continue&#13;
through the progress of the years&#13;
which are crowning our heads with&#13;
silver, oh to the time when the great&#13;
Master shall call us all to Himself. I&#13;
like you all, and take a warm, personal&#13;
interest in all that concerns you. Your&#13;
words and actions reflect credit or discredit&#13;
on me as well as on yourselves.&#13;
Did you ever think of that? No man's&#13;
actions ever stop with himself. It is&#13;
impossible. If any one of you steals,&#13;
or tells lies, or "deserts his family he&#13;
brings shame and injiiry-and disgrace&#13;
uponevery man, woman and child in&#13;
his county, state and country"--then&#13;
in plain, forcible language he .showed&#13;
them haw tkasQCiaLfubric is built. How&#13;
the conduct of one influences and effects&#13;
the conduct of others, and how no part&#13;
is so small and insignificant and mein&#13;
ns to pruvent its influence extending to&#13;
the whole body, its sins affecting the&#13;
whole body, or its well-doing redounding&#13;
to the credit of the whole body.&#13;
He then called their attention to the&#13;
holiesU)f all obligations, the most sacred&#13;
of all responsibilities, those involved in&#13;
the; marriage relation. He •explained&#13;
to them how those duties bound mankind&#13;
together, and how the neglect of&#13;
them loosened the bonds and endangered&#13;
truth and honor and righteous living,&#13;
which is the life of mankind. He&#13;
dwelt on the beauty and sacrefduess of&#13;
marriage, its holiness in the eye of God,&#13;
its honorableness in the sight ot men.&#13;
In soft glowing colors he "pictured to&#13;
them a happy homei, the fatner yfulhlli'ng&#13;
his duty to wife and child, protecting,&#13;
-supporting, counseling, guiding&#13;
them, the mother loving, cherishing,&#13;
ministering to husband and little ones&lt;&#13;
aiding with her slender strength^and&#13;
iaithful care the strong arm andpwilling&#13;
shoulder on which the burden of their&#13;
lives rests; the children growing up in&#13;
the sunshine of such a .home into brave&#13;
men and happy, juse'ful women, who&#13;
reflect credit on^their parents here, and&#13;
hereafter "riser up and call them bless&#13;
oi." x &lt; '&#13;
~ TBwtrhe presentedlheHfeverse ofth&#13;
pic&gt;ure—the broken, deslate home,&#13;
neglected," often ill-treated little ohes&#13;
forsaken by the father who should/protect,&#13;
or the mother who should/chor&#13;
ty, won't even the quencWeas fire and&#13;
the deathless worm be preferable to the&#13;
agony of horror and remorse the realization&#13;
of your sin will bring? Won't&#13;
you long, like the lepers of old, for&#13;
some wilderness into which to flee to&#13;
hide your uncleanness even from the&#13;
knowledge of God?"&#13;
The audience, before held spell-bound,&#13;
here broke into expression; the men&#13;
hung their heads and gioaned aloud,&#13;
the women rocked themselves back&#13;
and forth after the manner of their&#13;
race, sobbing audibly. The man Setb&#13;
moved uneasily and "insensibly shifted&#13;
his position to one nearer the door.&#13;
The old soldier raised his hand and&#13;
spoke again, drawing their attention&#13;
now to the great social evil of separation&#13;
and divorce; the enormity, the sinfulness&#13;
and the horror of it. Bravely&#13;
andiplainly, with no choice of delicate,&#13;
ambiguous phrases, no concealment of&#13;
ita loathsomeness, no glossing of its&#13;
sniHnt&gt;, he Bpoke-to them. With ilrm,&#13;
feaHess hand he tore away the veil oi&#13;
sophistry, false reasoning and excuse,&#13;
and showed them the canker that waa&#13;
fastening on their vitals. Showed ii&#13;
for the ghastly, sickening, noisome,&#13;
thing it is, in all its horror and deform-"&#13;
ity- ,&#13;
Even the .ignorant negroes glanced&#13;
at each other furtively, in half-terrified&#13;
disgust, and one of the wnite men who&#13;
had looked in for amusement fell back&#13;
against the wall, pallid and trembling&#13;
line a person in an ague. It.was a&#13;
man named Price, who, it was reported,&#13;
Jiived very uuBsppily with his&#13;
wife and wished to put her away. Thecolonel's&#13;
eye wandered over his audience,&#13;
sought out this fellow, caught&#13;
and held him, while he proceeded^ iii&#13;
words as plain, simple and persuasive&#13;
as he could make them, to entreat;&#13;
them all, his friends and neighbors*—&#13;
black and white, to aid him in trying&#13;
to diminish the evil, to labor with him&#13;
heart and soul in the cause of social&#13;
reformation. Long and earnestly he&#13;
pleaded with them against the danger&#13;
of viewing this matter with callousness&#13;
and indifference; bidding' them see how&#13;
their supineness but invited Samson to&#13;
lay his strength to the pillars of the- ^&#13;
social temple, the fall of which&#13;
would involve all in a common&#13;
ruin. Feelingly he pointed to the&#13;
miserable example in their midst, and&#13;
by name besought them all to awake to&#13;
a sense* of the danger which threatened&#13;
them.&#13;
It was a strange, weird scene—&#13;
the dim, half-obscured building; the&#13;
flickering, uncertain light of the smoky&#13;
lamps; the wrapt dusky faces; the mystic,&#13;
vital silence, broken now and ^hen&#13;
by the sound of stifled sobbing, and in&#13;
their midst the form of the Christian&#13;
gentleman standing motionless, "' with&#13;
nand upraised, a ray of light just^gildS&#13;
ing his gray, uncovered head.&#13;
The people tiled out quietly, and dispersed&#13;
to their homes without the&#13;
usual lingering for the interchange&#13;
of news and gossip. They had something&#13;
to think over. Col. H. was detained&#13;
a feiv minutes speaking to various&#13;
of the colored people who crowded&#13;
around him eagerly, and a3 we&#13;
waited for him unier the shadow of&#13;
the trees beside thejhorses, a fragment&#13;
of the conversation of two white men&#13;
came to our ears, which I cannot forbear&#13;
repeating. It was the man Price&#13;
whose voice I first noticed, and he was&#13;
saying: "I tell you, mate, what tho&#13;
old Colonel said to-night struck ri&#13;
home. A man don't stand that sort&#13;
talk. Why, when he told about /&#13;
broken-up home and the childr3n/ left"&#13;
to tumble uo any-which-er-way, Something&#13;
gript on to my heart and^aghtened&#13;
its hold every minute tAW 1 "could&#13;
skeersely fetch my breach. /\ ain't a&#13;
mushy fellow generally, /but I ain't&#13;
above owning thatxtearsriz to my eyes."&#13;
"Nor 1 ain t, .Bother,/ responded his&#13;
companion....--^Why, ".when the Colonel&#13;
called on^uli all by name, I sorter felt&#13;
the old^thrill'that used to come when&#13;
the. enemy was in/ sight and we knew&#13;
itr'would be as hot as heli in ""half an&#13;
hour, and the/old General on his big&#13;
gray horse would come riding down th*&#13;
line before/the order came.to charge,&#13;
Far'weliy'Price—far'well mates, Tve&#13;
got a wife and two kids down in North&#13;
Carolina I ain't seen fur a matter of&#13;
twoVears. I reckon I'll just light out&#13;
toward home in the morning and try&#13;
ajr square things with the old gal. A&#13;
^ s n with any grit can't listen to words&#13;
• lUe them~we hearn U&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
ing up arn.d neglect and unkind innuendos,&#13;
with tarnished name/uncertain&#13;
principles, shaken moralsy&amp;ughtby example&#13;
to deride obligations the most&#13;
sacred, and to set at na&gt;ight things pure&#13;
and holy and honorable. "Howthen?"&#13;
he questioned sternly, "can you fathers&#13;
who betray your/trust, mothers who&#13;
forsake your holiest duties, answer&#13;
when the book/of- your life is unsealed&#13;
an(Lthe acoplmt balanced? Can you&#13;
witlr-head erect and fearless front point&#13;
proudly to the work your hands nave&#13;
wrought/saying: "Here am I, Lord,&#13;
with the children thou hast given me?"&#13;
With/thoso marred, tarnished lives cryout&#13;
to heaven against you—lives&#13;
ich you, but for sin and folly and&#13;
vit\tempers, might have surrounded&#13;
wthVvpurity, honor and respectability—&#13;
can^you, I repeat, appear before the&#13;
one of God, where the socrots of all&#13;
earL' shall be read, expecting countenance,&#13;
justification or reward? Will&#13;
not every duty you have cast aside,&#13;
every obligation you bavu^erided, and&#13;
every bond you hMve broken rise up in&#13;
judgment against you? .When the mantle&#13;
ofjiea and sophistry and selfishness&#13;
but 11 is tora away from your hideous defottn-&#13;
1;&#13;
/ J&#13;
wadrst&#13;
fooling around with his hands in his&#13;
Sockets. The poor gal down in old&#13;
eaufort will be surprised to see me—&#13;
pleased too, ^shouldn't Wonder. Goodish&#13;
them; pictured these chttdre^ grow- J"g&amp;t, gentlemen! Good-jaight and&#13;
good- by!&#13;
"No," repeated Price as hesbo&lt;*kv&#13;
hands, "no man can't stand it,, and ho&#13;
oughtn't to neither Me .and my old&#13;
'ooman ain't been gittin' along com-:,&#13;
fortably here lately. Maybe its my&#13;
fault, maybe it's her'n—but that'*,&#13;
neither here n o r &gt;there—and .we got&#13;
three little 'uns^ Liiwyer Black and&#13;
me have tmd some r h a t about gittin' s&gt;&#13;
divorce, aud he said he could manage&#13;
it easy. I'll ride over in the morning&#13;
and tell him to take his infernal d i -&#13;
vorce back to th6 devil, whar &gt; it came.&#13;
from I won't say 1 shan't quarrel&#13;
with my wife when my temper's up,&#13;
and I won't sav I shan't jaw her; but&#13;
I'll be damned"if 1*11 quit her!"&#13;
HARNISII.&#13;
Among large fees given to physicians&#13;
was one of $7,500 received by Dr. Sir&#13;
W. Gull for remaining a week with a&#13;
patient. The largest fee on record,&#13;
however, was paid to Dr. Dinesdalo in&#13;
1768. For inoculating the Empress&#13;
Catharine and her son at St. Petersburg&#13;
he received $00,000 in money, a&#13;
life pension SfroOO a year and the rank&#13;
of l)aron7 "&#13;
uiSi&#13;
OUR NEIGHBORS&#13;
~ FOWLKKVILLE.&#13;
^rom the Kevj*w.&#13;
W. M. Hortoa is building si n e w&#13;
house on bis farm aorta of the village.&#13;
Mr. Noah Drew aad his sou J . W.&#13;
Drew, with his wife and child, left on&#13;
-•Thursday for England.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Marble is haying a r u n&#13;
of typhoid fever.&#13;
Mr. E. A. Sheldon, proprietor of&#13;
the roller skating rink, is still continued&#13;
to bis house with sickness a t his&#13;
home in Byron.&#13;
The family of Mr. Wm. Coffey h a s&#13;
~heen terribly afflicted with diphtheria, j take charge of the station at William- ]&#13;
three children having died within the j s.on. During Mr. A n u a d ' ^ ^ u ^ W + a&#13;
past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Coffev&#13;
and the three remaining children a r e&#13;
reported on the road to recovery.&#13;
The eldest son of Mr. Joseph Loree,&#13;
.of Iosco,, met with a serious and painful&#13;
accident last week. He was splitting&#13;
wood when a sliver flew and struck&#13;
him in the eye. He was taken to Ann&#13;
Arbor, where it was found necessary&#13;
to remove the injured eve in order to&#13;
preserve the sight of the other. T h e&#13;
operation was performed by Prof. Mc-&#13;
Lean, of the Michigan University&#13;
are now one ot the best lighted towns&#13;
in Hie State. '&#13;
K. S. l-'iveman. &lt;«f thu lVt:x\n&gt;\ lli:r-.&#13;
ord, had the u'oo i link to have a iv|at.&#13;
ive die and K'.ive linn , ^ 1 1 . (K&gt;0.&#13;
' Messrs. F. S. Moudy and l i n t Ki.d.U&#13;
are trying to liavi* a ^o.nl time hunting&#13;
and lishin^ at Orchard Luke this&#13;
week, and from theexp.'rienet* we have&#13;
had with tho&gt;e parties our&gt;elvesl we&#13;
doubt not but that they will have it.&#13;
John Arnold, t-r the past year the&#13;
genial and courteous agent t\w the 1).&#13;
L. k N. Co., a t this place, bid good bye&#13;
to friends last Friday and „ departed&#13;
for Remus to relieve the agent at that&#13;
place for a few days when he will&#13;
ettled Fact NO DOUBT ABOUT IT!&#13;
Just received a tine line of&#13;
m i K K l ' I I L O A D I N U ( J T N S ,&#13;
- ini:&#13;
PIEPER RIFLE AND SHOT GUN&#13;
WD MAGAZINE RIFLES.&#13;
We I'uiT.v tin- licsi u-raiU'i of S l ' U K T I N . i ; I'Otf*&#13;
l&gt;I.l( MU[ all ki1111s nl AluluUlliUoU mid ttpurtixM&#13;
jiunils uriu'i ally.&#13;
That you can save nearly onohair by trad-j ROLLER SKATES&#13;
_ i l l g « t j POCKET CUTLERY, T U OM E Y B RO'S, mm'mm&#13;
•t&#13;
i B R I G H T O N .&#13;
From the (Citizen.&#13;
T y p h d i ^ f e v e r is raging to a considerable&#13;
extent in the country surrounding&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
.Gould Bros, intend enlarging the&#13;
skating rink, making i t double its&#13;
present size, which will be a mo1 ye&#13;
t h a t w i l l — b e - g r e a t l y a p p r e c i a t e d b y&#13;
the skaters,&#13;
The m a n n e r ? of tlie skating rink&#13;
have set aside Thursday afternoon tor&#13;
the use of ladie*vexclusively, as there&#13;
are a g r e a ^ m a n y who wish to learn to&#13;
kate, UtffTdo no t wish to make their&#13;
first attempts before amix^d audience.&#13;
"' There were 11 persons continued&#13;
last Sunday by B p . Harris, 5 \ t fc&gt;t.&#13;
John's church, Howell; 2 a t St. P a u d s&#13;
Brighton; 4 at St. Stephen's H a m b u r g .&#13;
This is the second confirmation under&#13;
the administration of Rev. R. VY.&#13;
Rhames.&#13;
h • has made manv warm friends, who,&#13;
while they yei/i -t to -ve him leave,&#13;
join with us in .vi-iiin^ lii.ui siii.eess in&#13;
his new home.&#13;
ANN ARBOR.&#13;
From tin* I'uni'itM.&#13;
• Allies May, tiio infant uau-jhte!- &lt;•:&#13;
Bernard and Anna Murnhv. ot Xu; r!ifield,&#13;
died on Monday, t h e I'd.!1. (.'&#13;
dropsy ..of the brain.&#13;
Mamie, duui^litVr of .Itnnes and Eva&#13;
Miller, residents of the 5th ward, died&#13;
on the 51-h of October, 1884-, of intlamniation&#13;
of the brain., a^red 10 months&#13;
and 19 day*.&#13;
A gaiiij ot Western I'nion line men&#13;
were in the city Monday taking down&#13;
the extra wiiv of that company, procured/&#13;
by the consolidation with t h "&#13;
American : telegraph company sonic&#13;
ye^ rs a^i&gt;. '&#13;
«&#13;
1 JA-CZSiSOrJ.&#13;
N O T E . T H E I R P K I O D S :&#13;
Best Prints amde, - ^ Sets. yard.&#13;
Best Ginghams made, - - 7&#13;
Fruit of the Loom'Bi'di'd Cotton, 8U&#13;
Good Cotton Batts. - - - 7&#13;
Good yard-wide Factory, - - 5&#13;
The Best F a c t o r y , — * - — - - 0½&#13;
Turkey Red Table Linen, - 35&#13;
Good all-linen Crash, - - 6&#13;
•Large Size Crochet Bed Spreads, 75&#13;
JEWELRY, AND&#13;
SILVER PLATED WARE,&#13;
MUSICAL AND OPTICAL GOODS.&#13;
All Kinds of repairing neatly a n d&#13;
promptlv dotk\&#13;
K K S I ' K l ' T r T L L Y ,&#13;
B A i m ) N &amp;. CAM1MJK-LL/&#13;
West Mniu Street, lMiirkiwy, Michigan.&#13;
D.W. Miller Carriage Go.&#13;
On Friday evening last at&#13;
All-Woo! Black Cashmeres, 40in, wide, 45c.yd,&#13;
Good Worsted Dress Goods, 12 l-2c. yd.&#13;
about 7 Cheney BID'S Colored American Silks, s o l d [ P t e&#13;
elsewhere at S1.25 and 81.50, our price 81. J LIGHT ^SSSU \S^mnm&#13;
54in. Gilbert's Plaid Flannels, 81 yd.&#13;
o'clock. Dr. O. ('. Jenkins met wii.h a j&#13;
serious and painful 'accident that will!&#13;
be apt to confine him to his horn-' for •&#13;
several wer*ks.- While riding on WV&gt;! •,.,. V 1 ' ,,, i n - t r i ' ' , 1 (i n&#13;
u | ^nks, \ civets. [• lannels. lioxvirv and I lolerwear at lower prices lltan anv oth-&#13;
Huron st.I ;m company with Mr. Blnz.i,,,. iUM]Sl&gt; m Michi-au. Innm-i^e stock Ladies' ami M i ^ s " Newmarkets'. Ku -&#13;
sian Cirides, Cloaks and 11avrtorks. 'The tare to Jackson is \w\ little compared&#13;
to what you will &gt;avo it' you have any trading to tic W'c havi tin&#13;
larirest stock of l)ry (ioods in Central MicliiLran. Wv Imy a.!id&gt;"il oMdusiveiy&#13;
!'.r '-..-li. &lt;i;ir lar^-e liu&gt;inc-- I'n.ilili'- us to u'"t thclowe-; price.-. W'c have hut&#13;
•'i)n''.price" f..r ail nia.r^rd in plain !i'4iirc&lt;.&#13;
his horse became frightened when at&#13;
CARTS, BUGGIES, WAGONS, &amp; C ,&#13;
Alter TBS mosrafipro&lt;ired destgna at the very Iow«tt&#13;
prices cousistent with good workmanship.&#13;
— S O .&#13;
the crossing of Allen' L'reek. i,»y a {\&gt;^_i&#13;
sprii\^ingTitHroin tlie sutr of the road.&#13;
and making a sudden jam p. hor-'.&#13;
huffgw and occupants wen- preeiptat-&#13;
,ed in the ditch, which at this point is&#13;
arxmt ten feet lower than the i " i d&#13;
bed. \JVlr. Blitz escapcil witiiai:&#13;
but- \)r. Jenkin* wa&gt; no&#13;
[uaHl'itily,&#13;
TUOMEY'BROS.,&#13;
of onr manufactiire »rb now in use in this and&#13;
foreign countries and attest the eiceUt-uctr of&#13;
our goods by the universal satisfaction which they&#13;
give.-Erery vehicle is WABlUJiTEP,• -SpecUl&#13;
attention will be ghen to mall order*.&#13;
CATALOGUES TREE.&#13;
D. W. Miller Carriage Co.,&#13;
E. Fifth St., Culvert fit. »nd Egfletton Are.,&#13;
C I N C I N N A T I . O ,&#13;
in- 173 Main Stwet, Jackson, Midi.&#13;
The Brighton friends of Prof. For- j tunate. liK struck- up.ni h\&gt; ri-ht ~J&#13;
bes will be pleased to learn that he has&#13;
entirely regained his health and&#13;
strength. He writes t o D r . YYiley | tremory p ainfui, he&gt;id&lt;;s beitiL{ one that&#13;
that ke weighs five pounds more than&#13;
ever before ia his life. He is pleased&#13;
with his situation and school, and is [from a few x-ratches, tliouuhdt had&#13;
-prospering generally. H i s wife i,-&#13;
teachingin the same school as himself.&#13;
knee and spIitNth*' r : i ! ' thro!iy:h t h e '&#13;
center, causing a^r^ injury that i.« e\- LUMBER! LUMBER! LUMBER. o r | !ii' ii &gt; • /I i ' •'' d a x&#13;
will take a lon« time to'Ke^L s t r a n g e&#13;
to relate the horse was nohhjirt, a-ide&#13;
:•••!.!Mi&#13;
be hauled out with a rojic.&#13;
hu{?j,'y was (juite dilapidated.&#13;
iiiK'ti&#13;
' i&#13;
D E X T E R . . *&#13;
Prom the Leader.&#13;
Tire J . B. Lanphear hardware stock&#13;
has been sold to a Mr. Jenks, of Detroit,&#13;
by the assignee, John L. Smith.&#13;
Mr. Guinan, who purchased the&#13;
Rev. M r . Fisher's property,- has madi&#13;
H O W E L L .&#13;
From our ( orrt'ppondt'lit.&#13;
The last (jrraurl rally of the Hepuldicans&#13;
was held last. Saturday evening&#13;
Mrs. Dibble, anothej- tdd r*&gt;idcnt&#13;
living near Howell died la&gt;t week.&#13;
ska tin^r&#13;
' crr^vd&#13;
s. -&#13;
fele-bailding, amd are now—frttwrg—it&#13;
op. None to be admitted except members,&#13;
without an invitation. Officers:&#13;
President, J . B. Miles; Vice-Prtibident,&#13;
0 . C. Bostwick; Secretary, Richard&#13;
Kearna; Treasurer, Geo. Higgins.&#13;
Several yreeks ago we made the announcemeat&#13;
that J. M . Hale and Dr.&#13;
A. C. W r i g h t had formed a co-partnership&#13;
for the manufacture and sale of&#13;
''Hale's Improved— Laundry Irons."&#13;
Geo. C, Wetl^erbee, of Detroit, has now&#13;
purchased the r i g h t t o manufacture&#13;
t h e same, paying Mr. Hale a royalty&#13;
/in.&amp;ll manufactured.&#13;
The opening of the roller&#13;
rink was a grand success—bi&lt;&#13;
and a nice time. .&#13;
•A thief entered .Mr. (r&gt;venav,av's&#13;
beautiful re&gt;iden'-e .the other daw&#13;
went through the' housfj and took'&#13;
about $40 in cash ajvav with-him.&#13;
We will -adf Lumber at the ! ' I : ! I ' T I I I I ( p r i c&#13;
X X X IS inch Shingles, per thoii.-ai&gt;d&#13;
(dear Hu11s IS inch Shingles, per thou&gt;aini&#13;
Cull Shingles IS inch, per tTinusaii'iI,&#13;
No 1 Lath, pi-r thoiisaiul teet ; d.so&#13;
No' '2 Lath, i»ci' thou&gt;iui(l feol &gt;... -L&lt;"'.&#13;
Hill Stull, incdiulin-' isft Xo. 1. ]HT tb. u.-and i'eet / M.Oti&#13;
M^oof Hoards, per tlnm-and teel / s .'&gt;&lt;U,. 1 1 .no&#13;
l»as;n Lu'mber. per thon&gt;aiid ' fee!..- /, . . , . _. . L&gt;.U(J in Lrnt"*-"&#13;
Shifrpin^ ('oils, per thousand teet , . ./ ]:] ui)&#13;
^enciih^p ,r thousand feet,. . . . ., . / .- J . ' i n i,&gt; 1 1 00^&#13;
I ' d l l i - l i i l l i X , L u i l l l i e r p.el' t l l ' O U S i i i l d f f ' t - '. ,. '.LitMMl t n o l ) 0 0 .&#13;
Siding [)cr\|ioii&gt;and feet . ./. 14.00 to 20.00.&#13;
\ POSITIVKLY .\() Clt/KDiT.&#13;
-A. T,. I I O ^ \ 3IsuuiK-er, ; Pinckne.v, Midi.&#13;
- • - ' • -' \ I - 1 IV i . V 1 \.&#13;
a nice residence of the same, making a&#13;
decided improvement in t h a t corner.&#13;
The residence of John L. Smith was&#13;
crowd^d last week Wednesda) with&#13;
relatives and friends-invited to witness&#13;
the marriage of his youngest daughter&#13;
and Mr. Herman Easton, All seemed&#13;
to be fall of hearty congratulations&#13;
,for the happy pair, a n d if half "the&#13;
good wishes are fulfilled, they will&#13;
have a most prosperous life.&#13;
The Bexter Athletic Association pMUm^^t^^^ry^^^^^St&#13;
have leased the third story of'the V i ^ f c ^ W ! ^ ^ ^&#13;
PL 3 TBI LL. t«»&#13;
HARRIS REMEDY CO., B U %&#13;
BTy ChemUU inr| Hule Prop*! ul&#13;
PHOF.HAMiS'PASTJLLb ftt'MEDY&#13;
tuUBi Hen and oibtrs i&gt;ho suffer&#13;
from N^rvoun tad Physj al 0«bU.&#13;
ny, Premaiure Y.xhBjt'ioa toi&#13;
their rn^ny gloomy con«tvjueneel,&#13;
•re qukki; i i . l radically cured.&#13;
\\'c\^ir&lt;1 now prepare;&#13;
Planing, Resawing&gt;^3 kmda of plain and fancy&#13;
— Bfae^et-SawincjiCar^/hig and Turning&#13;
..fIl.\V.!2(-ilJ : OluLwiJIsoon .J.).e_iil.}k'.._Li)..dij&gt;t.LU,.uiiu:.-iii..irou and. genera''&#13;
repaiirin^. W'c are also n^a n.ts tor \ \ &gt; ; . J e h ,&#13;
PacUinn-, Mill I'xiards, Felts, Hunting, &lt;• ei,T( ut&#13;
i'aint-, Hani, Koof and Fire-jiroof P a i n t - . ^&#13;
in.-ide&#13;
I l i a C i M l H '&#13;
l.ii^inc&#13;
and outside Liquid \&#13;
O" MiltH'iul&#13;
&lt; 1&#13;
LUkiilA,\ ;•&#13;
1 » * 0&#13;
.ir.' f&#13;
FINK&#13;
;u;it ic&#13;
t i i l \ i ' i i i ' r ( r . i t i !&#13;
i.i I j: 'N(JS&#13;
- ' ' " il' : t ;!i|K".&#13;
'I.ORILl.AICD'S J A&gt;1(H'SSMFFS&#13;
ti'dc liri'ii u s e d for n\ I T :,1 vv.i!'.-, mid urc s o l d t o&#13;
a l;ir.:'T i'xti'iil'1 iee. ,i.i&gt; e; iici' •.&#13;
WEinnrs lirsiAN&#13;
Sepuro He Alt by&#13;
action to the Liver&#13;
a d relieve all bil-&#13;
Z ~ in1,« troubles,&#13;
Poreij Vea««4tli; It; 31.,.:^. Prise 25a. All Sntflita&#13;
f^OTVSVlUTVC'&#13;
MlTsKfn and BOD^H.—NerTOon UcUllty.&#13;
Near (drand 'frnnk I^opot,_&#13;
PIXCKSEY ^AXiXG MfLL&#13;
PINCKN!-: ^ . I C H .&#13;
ar^ti A r&lt;vrt;-i'» prp.-erij]f;,vi &lt;&gt;&gt;- o n c r f »H&#13;
n i o s , i.ofrd ;iU(\ n),.,.t.,.m'u; ,e,• .• i.ti: •. • &lt;5&gt; •, Ou-f''*&#13;
O o w I'dired",lorn . r m o o , \c,r,.„.-&gt;J}i-b,lit7;.&#13;
4 - o s f Manhood .4rvkw\sA cui Jjrcaif.Sr&gt;'ic&#13;
A d d r e s s Lifl. W A R D &amp; CO. L c i s i a n a uvu&#13;
fe^S).&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
soum LYON,&#13;
jfhm the fteket.&#13;
That J o n g / s m i l e 0» George Johnson's&#13;
face, is due to the arrival of CffTt&#13;
pound boy at his borne Monday night.&#13;
James O'Halloran, a G. T- fi*eraan,&#13;
well known bere) r i^'to he j n a r n e d - today&#13;
to Miss Nettie O'Grady, of* Stratford,&#13;
Ont.&#13;
Street Commissioner P a r k e r has&#13;
BnbusilY engaged p u t t i n g u p t h e&#13;
SfAP! BANG!&#13;
- HERE WE ARE AGAIN!&#13;
V I N K L "&#13;
"VThcii t i o w c r l Estey or the&#13;
word Crjr-^i ia mentioned, they&#13;
eadi cu~^osv tb.0 cLhcr.Bo widely&#13;
_ wn and 00 popular aro tlio in-&#13;
~f etrumenta and the rr..V.:cra.&#13;
k^ Five letters ia eacii cf tho twe&#13;
\ - W,ord3arorcdiader3cfoa(jcyraent&#13;
inxaultitudc3 of hemes. Illustratod&#13;
Catalcguo mailed free to all&#13;
applicants.&#13;
\ iDr. La B a r g e ,&#13;
^ H / B C c r K H M O B TO _&#13;
III disfflSOS oft ht' BkKMl,.,-... « J U u u u r ^ . — . i c r m u . urounj,&#13;
Impolonry. OrgAiite WMknm.v JjQ*OrrJ»ay- SyphUhl* «nd&#13;
MereurtaT.VffeptJon*. Scientific treatment; Mfe and iur«&#13;
rcmcdiis. Dpfonnirie* Treated. Call or write for list at&#13;
qm&gt;!ion»to bo answered b/thoso de»!rl»(f treatment bymafl. Crrr^rinmiofffrlnirrrom Rnpfareahoald tend tbetr sd«r«M,%&#13;
and Itnra somethloirto thele adTiaUfe. ItUaot i t r o u , |&#13;
Addre»» Dr. C. L, LaBARflR, PrMt am4 FV»kl»B *• f fc»rf*&#13;
Central Bed. * Snra. Imtltpte.940 Loeait it., fit. LonU, • • ,&#13;
'iuccewtor to Dr. Outti1 DiiDengarv. Srtablbkad 10 Yean,&#13;
H A R N E S S 1&#13;
I hnvo-now .»n hand n. lariror and hotter stock nf&#13;
lliirni'ss tluiu I'VIT b«;i\ii'v toother with a yrand&#13;
H A « \ E S S GOODS!&#13;
Also wi\i]&gt;s and Lashps. As «.'ood as* the hpst and&#13;
cheap ii* the che?!]!.'^. t•am'aire trimniitiij and&#13;
ri'liainn^; m-atly ami pnuuptlv ;lom&gt;. Xt.u for&#13;
youiM-'lf.&#13;
VAYKTTK HKASON,&#13;
STOCKBRIDGjf~1vTtCHIGAN&#13;
D OPENING! I am plea«!(i to announce t h a t I h a v e ju.-t started a ironcral storo a t&#13;
Attain to the front, in his new storo, wht«r*», for&#13;
the next sixty days from this datf, for tanli, I&#13;
promiap to give to aJl my patrons more quantity&#13;
and better quality for lesH inotiH.v, any of thp following&#13;
articlt'B, than any uther dealer in the&#13;
county, viz: PAINTS I S 1&#13;
In any quantity, Post Linsr-od Oil—raw or boiled&#13;
Turpentine,, Hub Varni?&gt;hH8, Flowjnu VarninhfH&#13;
Dryers, Knotter'a Putty, aiifl Painters' Supplies&#13;
'nf all kinde. Any shailo of color desired mixed m&#13;
and ready for .applying, t&lt;&gt;n per cent, cheapfr than , -^ , ' j ^ n j • 4 ^1. , 4? „ „ „ , ] , r r ; , ,&#13;
any other KOUSP in town. Paper namrln«, fresco- ! i!*VPrvr»ody CfiH a n d O X a m m e o u r s t o c k " I gOO(is». r l l g&#13;
{ 5 ¾ 8 ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^ j B U T T E R A N D K O G S . Kvoryth-ing sold a t rock l»„tto&#13;
what we mean, and mean all that we nay. | D o n ' t i'orgv.t, "&#13;
M y line consists of a large and varied assortment of&#13;
Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots &amp; Shoes, Clothing.&#13;
33- ^ V I ^ J E I / k J , WW stroet lamps the past week! W e ' 8TOCKBRIDGE, MAY 8' ip84&#13;
Wiyne, Du P«gd Co., Illinois,&#13;
HAS IMPORTED FROM FRANCE&#13;
l'erclirruu H u n e n valued ut S3,000,000,&#13;
whlcU iDcludtfM&#13;
7 5 PERCENT0F ALL HORSES&#13;
Wlio'i* wuntr nf hioo,| U »»»nhll»bf&lt;l hjr Itinr ptdlrittt&#13;
Ttet&gt;Mt&lt;% :u ir.* S T l Ii HOOIir* O F FKATVCE.&#13;
EVER I M P O R T E D TO A M E R I C A .&#13;
^ ^ c ^ ^ R f t ^ . STOCK ON HAND;&#13;
I S O&#13;
Imports Brood lim,&#13;
Imported suiijoas,&#13;
Old «D0»&lt;ta lor&#13;
«#r»ie» tOO COLTS. Two y(»r» old t a d&#13;
. fcacgtr&#13;
H«co|rniilnr tk« prig*&#13;
etpi* »cp*pi«i «17 t i l&#13;
iirllifiri brtrd«r&gt; ibtt,&#13;
ho«#T*r will Or Hi Mltnif*&#13;
TD*f b» M r J 10 r&gt;*. )» ift.ir&#13;
f l l O S t p r i c e p a i d I O l ^ . . n . » h » » *h«nl&lt;fb# *ilo»rtcnjyM »rr»U«», 1 will *etl i l l&#13;
_. t i e i r i r . j JmpnrUtt SUK&gt;I oJ 0 » * i * P'ttst whn&gt; 1 cannot fornl**&#13;
Frinrh c»rtipo»te nf m numt»«r »r&gt;4 r»cor J I* thp Stud BOOK&#13;
In rrinf*. 1 4 0 Pare &lt;'*ral«rue Mm fim u ia&#13;
JMoitraUK* wilb HU Pnn- Uarttt of tba BiUidiium of i*t~&#13;
- - - — - nf vt franca \SH4 • pa&gt;-&#13;
•7&#13;
X. mmWWm, ^repr^ Mlcft, — M S i r S V-&#13;
-, _. »ad drtwv rrrit) ill* br~ KwaA&#13;
» • • &gt; » • r, &lt;ha laatt fanwt. vt all *mew tmaiara ^&#13;
/&#13;
mmmmrngmmmmm&#13;
, . . . w : &gt; WISDOM.&#13;
—T!i" -h:&gt; t &gt;« :-\ to deal with a cold i*&#13;
to avoid ii. ^i, ii/n '/ri/junif&#13;
--la the IHMV )nil)i'(':itiou which is de-&#13;
Toted to el-'i-i ."ir manors to be classed&#13;
under the head, oi' li.flit reading or ll&amp;ah&#13;
literature? — LUSLUU Commercial Bulletin.&#13;
--The Washington s ntinel, the brewers'orjjau,&#13;
speaks of •• elderly women&#13;
of both sexe*.11 And u " i.-iey say thai&#13;
lager beer is not intox iiu . ^ : - O i l Git*&#13;
Derrick. !&#13;
—MflKe're down on hoss steaiinV* j&#13;
Mid tab chief of the vigilantes to the :&#13;
h o n e thiof they were a out to string I&#13;
op, " M k l we are pleased to see you ar« I&#13;
fa a-cord with u s . " -S. if. News.&#13;
—A facetious sweil, who danced with&#13;
m couple of Chicago &lt;iirls at % party re- !&#13;
cently,remarked that, although he liked&#13;
rings on his lingers, he couldn't aland&#13;
belles on his toes. — Chicago Herald.&#13;
— ' ' W h e r e shall we find our teache&#13;
r * ? ' * asks an educational exchange.&#13;
Well, many of our sweet girl teachers&#13;
may be found sitting ou soras with nice&#13;
young men, any time altar eight o'clock&#13;
;' p . m,— Detroit PosL ~~,&#13;
—•'Now, darlinj, will you grant me&#13;
one favor before I g o ? " "Yes, George,&#13;
I will," she said, drooping her^^eyelashes&#13;
and getting her lip's in shape.&#13;
" W h a t is the favor I can grant y o u ? "&#13;
"Only a little song at the piano, love. '&#13;
I a m afraid there is a dog outside&#13;
waiting for me, and I want to scare h i a&#13;
• w a y . " — Philadelphia Ca:L&#13;
Old Mr. Topeasy fell overboard.&#13;
H e was fished out unci sent home, and&#13;
while tearfully recounting his misfortunes&#13;
to his wife, ho said:&#13;
" [ swallowed about a gallon of&#13;
water."&#13;
"Then you know what it tastes&#13;
like at last!" returned Mrs. TH&#13;
e wis]Te^1ie"tur^1yeeh drowned.&#13;
One of the sublhnest things in this&#13;
world is the plain truth—Bulwer.&#13;
A head properly constituted can&#13;
accommodate itself to whatever pilowa&#13;
the vicissitudes of fortune may&#13;
id ace under it.&#13;
Confidence in another man's virtue&#13;
is no slight evidence of a man's own.&#13;
—Montague.&#13;
The worship of the golden calf is as&#13;
certain a fact in your great cities as&#13;
it ever was under Sinai—Mgr. Capcl.&#13;
Love, the child, clings obstinately&#13;
to the garment of Hope, even when&#13;
she has taken steps to flee away.—&#13;
•Goethe.&#13;
The fruits of true wisdom are&#13;
".modesty and humility. A vain or&#13;
proud man is in a positive sense an&#13;
ignorant man-—Mrs. Maeauley.&#13;
Every ;nljuration of love, every&#13;
oath of fondues-, always contains this&#13;
mental reservation. "As 1 »ng as you&#13;
are what you are now.-'&#13;
If we could rend the secret history&#13;
of our enemies, we should find in eurji&#13;
-man's life sorrow and sull'Ting enuiiLrii&#13;
t o disarm nil hostility.— Drift-woo^&#13;
Remember tht^4wn4-t&gt;-always- in&#13;
motion-Mnd tile spoke which is uppermost&#13;
will soon be under; therefore&#13;
mix m mbling with all your joy.—&#13;
IMiilio liiiirv.&#13;
HOW CAN YOU A F F O R D :&#13;
TO BUY HARDWIRE&#13;
I am selling everything in my line CHEAPER than any one else can aflEord to.&#13;
x&#13;
r&lt;\.&#13;
«$-&gt;- T^&gt;&gt;S NIY EXPENSES ARE ALMOST NOTHING.&#13;
I CARRY NO STOCK BUT WHAT ARE NEW AND SALEABLE GOODS,&#13;
-VL&#13;
YOU NEEO THE BENEFIT OF OUR COMPETITION&#13;
F. L. BROWN, PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
!*••&#13;
IMPORTANT.&#13;
When yon visit nr leave New York Citv Ptivr&#13;
nHs.'k.'titre'Ksnr^HHak'^ and Carriage Hire and Htop&#13;
M the IJ rami I'nhm Hotel opposite Grand Central&#13;
Depot.&#13;
Klctraat rooms fitted up at a cost of one mil&#13;
lion dollars, redueed to $1 and upwards per day.&#13;
-Knrop4&gt;Hn plan. Klevator. Restaurant supplied&#13;
with tin- best. Horn*" cars, Ht aires and Hevateri&#13;
railrnailt to all dt&gt;pof(». Families can live better&#13;
fnr II'SH. iimney at the (Tranil Union Hotel than&#13;
any other first'class hotel in the citv.&#13;
CALL AND GET&#13;
A [KT-on win) is too nice an observer&#13;
of the business of the crowd,&#13;
like one who is too curious in observing&#13;
the labor of the boos, will often be&#13;
lMunp for his curiosity.—-Pope,&#13;
"What, is the W\g comer in pork I&#13;
.hear about?" asked Luura. across the&#13;
cheery tea table. "The big comer&#13;
in pork," replied Tom 'Ms the ham "&#13;
Emma Abbott says the appreciation&#13;
of American beauty is on the« increase&#13;
abroad. What's the n u t t e r&#13;
of sendinjT'Ben Butler to E u r o p e /&#13;
asks the Kansas City Graphic.&#13;
"That's rather a shabby pair of&#13;
pantaloons you have on for a man of&#13;
Nervous Exhaustion,&#13;
Premature Decay,&#13;
Loss of Manhood.&#13;
An 80-paire t'loth-hound Hook of Advice to&#13;
YomiK or Middle-Hued Men.with prescriptions&#13;
f-r tfelf-t rent merit i&gt;v a Regular Physician. S C U T C D a w l r H fTc EC o, n receipt of two three-oeot t a m n . AddrtM&#13;
&gt;. W I L L I A M S &amp; C O . , MILWAUKEE, Wit&#13;
Michigan Buggy Co.&#13;
KALAMAZOO, Mich.&#13;
BEFORE BUYING f^jfor^&#13;
ELSEWHERE.&#13;
MANN BROS.&#13;
I .I TEUJNTJ&#13;
«TH*3 M A N - —&#13;
* T&gt;it if hedont .• • ilLisHeiv; £,:^1, Ec jsaviiiia^-&#13;
&gt; .xler, ard buy aa&#13;
UASY RUNNING&#13;
DURING TWI^E SINCE*&#13;
atonce, pTeryhorsoon the farm w ill soon be dead&#13;
WILLIAM DEERING &amp; CO., Cfceago, 111.&#13;
B I N D E R S , R E A P E R S / J i D MOWER*&#13;
T H E HORSES' F-RfE.KQ8.&#13;
S. A&gt;:i:.K£'iYS. Hotvall, Mich.&#13;
your position. — i es-, sir; -nbttrttt cchusnthnre s&#13;
do not make the man. W h a t if my&#13;
-pantaloons are shabby and worn, sir?&#13;
They cover a warm heart, sir."--&#13;
S e w York World.&#13;
As t h e late Professor Hamilton&#13;
was one day walking near Aberdeen&#13;
lie. met tf well-known individual of&#13;
v e a k intellect. "Pray," said the&#13;
V^ofesflor, "how long can a person&#13;
l i t e live without brains?" " I dinna&#13;
l«eh"Jrepired ,L mmi'V .scratching iii.*&#13;
head; -"how an Id are ye yoursel'?"&#13;
The greater longevity of women as&#13;
compared with men appears to be&#13;
veil borne out by the statistics of&#13;
every country that have yet been examined.&#13;
This sh,ows that, after nil,&#13;
ft is not tight,dresses, heavy skirts&#13;
jand thin shoes tlvit kill. It is' pavtl)&#13;
r t h e m— Phil. Call.&#13;
Doctor (who has been sent for at I&#13;
2 a. w.)—"Madame, pray send" at1&#13;
once Tor fluTcTorgymiin, ariTtr if you&#13;
want tt) make your will, for the lawyer."&#13;
Madame' ^ horrified)—"Good&#13;
gracious' h it so dangerous, doctor?"&#13;
Doctor—"Not a bit of it; ""but&#13;
1 don't wtiijt to be the only fool who&#13;
haa http'n disturbed lu~Tiid. klfen^lfer&#13;
TTholeMle Maoufkcttiren of all klodi of 0p«» tad&#13;
Top BUGGIES HH&lt;I ROAD CASTS. Arnt* winted&#13;
crerfwhere. Write for catalogue ft&amp;d ptlcoUit,&#13;
TINff WORK A SPBCULTT;&#13;
SEPTEMBER 23, 1884. y&#13;
w&#13;
VT» also mtDBfactnre a full tin* of CGTTKBS,&#13;
Including Snt'A Body, Portlaad, Sqmar* B«S&#13;
two teat Portland and Poney Bltifhu&#13;
8ead for cuu and prieea before purohaaiac.&#13;
MICHIGAN BUGGY CO.,&#13;
KKLAMAXOO, Hlda&gt;&#13;
UNPER NEW MANAGEMENT!&#13;
"GENTLEMEN 1~~&#13;
We invite yoiir attention to our line of&#13;
G E N U I N E CALF SHOES&#13;
iVrod l.i\:u\ f r r ' , a l e &lt;&gt;r E x o h a n ^ ^&#13;
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• w M f c f l J &amp; Q pecullwtoUiclrsi'X * m find hi&#13;
D A KAimSK'S.IRON TONIC a *«U' urn! M" &gt;dy&#13;
cnr». rtifcHves * j|c:i» nniT^iral^v ci)rii|'U'\i&lt;'ii.&#13;
T ^ &lt;«ir^i(.'i^t( tfst1ni&lt;wi&gt; ti&gt; HiV v.itiiv "i l»R.&#13;
| ln'iTMt'* 1«ov- TUMI' «'Mu»f ftfiitiifnt liiii-n.ntt&#13;
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i i * . v ' : i , ' . i : r i . i l i ' u M u T b i l ' r . Hitrter M. .(0.} fisi.'-v.V.^. v,.,.-.* .„.v -raKAM BOOK."]&#13;
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JKROME W1NCHELL. EDITOR.&#13;
Itebered M tile Pontofflce u M claas m»tt«.&#13;
TOPICS OF THE TIMES.&#13;
AH important decision under the&#13;
Pennsylvania law of 1881, protecting&#13;
the wages of laborers, has been rendered&#13;
at AUentown. The court held that the&#13;
Bathlehem iron company had uo right&#13;
to deduct store bills from the wages of&#13;
their employes. The amount involved&#13;
in similar cases is $20,000. The company&#13;
will appeal the matter to the supreme&#13;
court.&#13;
The department of state has received&#13;
from the king of Belgium the decoration&#13;
of the order of the Red Cross presented&#13;
to Commander Henry B. Seely,&#13;
United States navy, for services rendered&#13;
white in command of the United&#13;
States steamer Nipsie in assisting a&#13;
Belgian vessel in distress of the coast of&#13;
Brazil. The decoration will be retained&#13;
_ by the department until congress author-&#13;
* ize8 its acceptance by Commander&#13;
Seely, •&#13;
GEN. KOUNTZ. who is at the head of&#13;
the G. A. R... visited, writes a correspondent,&#13;
the battle ground of Mission:^&#13;
ry Ridge, near Chattanooga, a few^diys&#13;
ago. It was on the ridge, then^ crested&#13;
with tire, that Mr. Kountz lejrbne of his&#13;
legs. Twenty years ago^at tht time of&#13;
the wounding, he crawled to the porch&#13;
of Mrs. Emily Ford and she gave the&#13;
thirsty fellow a glass of buttermilk. The&#13;
other day/the same good Samaritan&#13;
smiled over her spectacles as she handed&#13;
him a'tumbler of the same beverage.&#13;
THE Chinese residents of "Chinatown*&#13;
11 New York city, organized&#13;
themselves into a self-providing body&#13;
about a year ago at the suggestion of&#13;
the home government. A hall was secured,&#13;
official records were started and&#13;
That of the man showed a face remarkable&#13;
for its beauty of features&#13;
and as ho said ho was six feet in&#13;
height, weighed 200 pounds, and was&#13;
as straight as an arrow, the widow had&#13;
no reason to doubt that he was a very&#13;
Apollo. He forwarded certificates of&#13;
good character, wrote in a glowing, intelligent&#13;
manner and confessed with&#13;
great frankness that he was poor. But&#13;
when the suitor presented himself at&#13;
her residenee she saw to her horror&#13;
and dismay that he was a mulatto.&#13;
His features were the fine Caucasian,&#13;
on/s shown in the photograph, but his&#13;
hface was unmistakably of the color that&#13;
proved Negro blood below the surface.&#13;
THE action of the Supreme Court of&#13;
the United States is sustaining the decision&#13;
of the Court of Claims, that the&#13;
period of time spent at West Point&#13;
Academy must be calculated as so much&#13;
time in the service when longevity pay&#13;
/is to be reckoned, has caused much&#13;
jubilation-ra the army circles. Under&#13;
the law the pay of an army officer is&#13;
increased 10 per cent after each tive&#13;
years of service until 20 years have&#13;
passed. An officer, therefore, who has&#13;
been in the army for '20 years is entitled&#13;
to 10 per cent additional pay to that alio&#13;
wedfor rank. For instance, the pay&#13;
of. af first lieutenant is ti^jed bylaw at&#13;
$1,600 per annum. 'Under the longevity&#13;
act he will receive $1,760 after tivu&#13;
years of service; $1,920 after 10 years;&#13;
$2;080 after 15 years; and $2,240 after&#13;
20 years,without having been promoted.&#13;
The accounting officers have been&#13;
heretofore reckoned the first five vears&#13;
from date of commission, therefore decreeing&#13;
that an officer can not draw his&#13;
full40 per cent until he has served 24&#13;
years from the time he first entered&#13;
West Point. The decision applied to&#13;
about 500claims that have already been&#13;
filed, and several hundred others not&#13;
yetpresented.&#13;
tt commission appointed&#13;
a peculiar system of politics was incorborated.&#13;
The principal office is that&#13;
of magistrate, and official who performs&#13;
the functions of judge, police justice,&#13;
district attorney, sheriff and counsel.&#13;
He is elected for one year and receives&#13;
a salary at $500, besides fees and perquisites.&#13;
OLIVER DALKYMPLE, the most extensive&#13;
farmer in the United Stater, is as&#13;
resident of St. Paul, Minn., where he&#13;
has lived for SO years. In _Cass and&#13;
Trail counties, Dak., he has two-thirds&#13;
interest in 75,000 acres of as line wheat&#13;
land as there is in the world. The&#13;
product as indicated by that already&#13;
threshed, will be over 600,000 bushels&#13;
jthis year. " Mr. Dalrymple employes in&#13;
his farming operations 1,000 men, 800&#13;
horses and mules, 200 self-binding reapers&#13;
and 30 steam threshers. In appearance&#13;
he is a tall man, with rather |&#13;
sandy and long hair and an iron-gray&#13;
chin whisker. , ^&#13;
A NUMBER of milliners at Allentown,&#13;
Pa., have lately been tne victims of a&#13;
clever swindling dodge. The sharpers,&#13;
two in number operated in this manner:&#13;
One would enter a store and represent&#13;
himself to be the son of a wealthy&#13;
farmer near that ctty. His story was&#13;
that his wife, who had not been able to&#13;
accompany him to town, wished him to&#13;
select several bonnets and take them&#13;
home, so she could make a selection.&#13;
One bonnet she would keep and pay&#13;
for and the other would be returned.&#13;
When the milliner showed a hesitancy&#13;
in acceding to this request the man&#13;
shortly before the adjournment of congress&#13;
to inquire into the organization&#13;
his independence, would offer to pay&#13;
for the most expensive bat. This woul d&#13;
have the desired effect and he was geuerallv&#13;
successful.&#13;
— *&#13;
COL. STEWABT has returned froru-the&#13;
Yellowstone park, whither he went&#13;
under a commission from Gov. Hall of&#13;
Wyoming Territory, to capture and&#13;
prosecute those who were illegally killing&#13;
game, and vandals engaged in destroying&#13;
or mutilating the park. The&#13;
laws are being enforced, and in the&#13;
past few weeks over a score of convictions&#13;
have been made. Relic-hunting&#13;
wealthy gentlemen have been arrested&#13;
and punished the same as the trapper&#13;
Who wantonly destroyed game. All&#13;
have been served alike. As to the result&#13;
he says: "The law-abiding people are&#13;
delighted and all are satisfied that we&#13;
have good laws fortheprotectibn of the&#13;
park. Criminals realize that the law&#13;
cannot bo evaded and that it will be enforced.&#13;
.&#13;
A Savannah man advertised for a&#13;
wife, and was answered by a rich widow.&#13;
A brief correspondence was followed&#13;
bynr exc^^^df^ph^to^aphs&#13;
and work of the coast and geological&#13;
surveys,signal service and hydrographic&#13;
office, will-probably meet in Washings&#13;
ton Nov. 11. During the rec.ess members&#13;
of the commission have been collecting&#13;
the opinions of scientific gentlemen&#13;
and head's of various bureaus&#13;
interested on the subject under consideration.&#13;
The national academy of&#13;
sciences was asked to consider the subject&#13;
and requested to furnish a report&#13;
to the commission upon, its reassembling&#13;
in November. That body referred&#13;
tho matter to a committee, of which&#13;
Gou, Meigs was chairmsn. Tho conimitteo&#13;
has completed its report but&#13;
will not make it public until it has&#13;
been given to the commission. It is&#13;
understood the report recommends a&#13;
radical change. A numbe r of members&#13;
of the academy have given free expression&#13;
to their opinion on the work&#13;
and organization of the bureaus. They&#13;
favor the establishment of a new government&#13;
department to embrace all&#13;
bureaus of a scientific nature. This&#13;
would include the signal service, hydrographic&#13;
office coast and geological&#13;
surveys, lighthouse board, naval observatory&#13;
and army engineers1 work in&#13;
the matter of improvement of rivers&#13;
and harbors.&#13;
The F r e a k s Memory P l a y s W h e n&#13;
t h e Body 1-» ABleep,&#13;
Gentleman's Magazine.&#13;
Impressions on some special sense&#13;
will produce very cuaracteristic&#13;
dreams, the origin of which may take&#13;
such trouble in its determination that&#13;
we might well b© tempted to deny the&#13;
material origin of the vision. Dr. Reid&#13;
had a blister applied to his head, and&#13;
deamed accordingly that he had been&#13;
scalped by Indians. Here the connection&#13;
between the dream and the outward&#13;
impression, manipulated, so to&#13;
speak, by the brain, was clear. But&#13;
that connection may be anything but&#13;
patent in cases where a person dreams&#13;
of being frozen to death, the exciting&#13;
cause having been merely a deficiency&#13;
of bed-clothes on a chilly night. In a&#13;
case related by Dr. Carpenter, where&#13;
an eminent judge dreamed of being&#13;
tormented by a crowd of lizards which&#13;
were crawling over him, the origin of&#13;
the dream was still more difficult to&#13;
trace. - The cause of his reptilian visitaiton&#13;
was readily explicable, however,&#13;
on his enteringthe apartment-in whieh&#13;
he had spent the previous evening,&#13;
when he saw on the base of the&#13;
clock a number of carved lizards. A&#13;
similar instanco is afforded by a personal&#13;
experience of the writer, in which&#13;
he dreamed that he was walfctirgrtrr-a&#13;
forest hu which lizards of every hue&#13;
and kind were engaged in a combat&#13;
with humming-birds. Puzzling himself&#13;
over the origin of hisdreanj, it at last&#13;
dawned upon his recollection that some&#13;
time previously he had traveled in a&#13;
railway carriage, having for his vis-av&#13;
i s a lady whose hat was decorated&#13;
with humming birds1 plummage fastened&#13;
by a brooch accurately representing&#13;
a lizard. Hy the same kind of association&#13;
revived by memory, and&#13;
often projecting forgotten reminiscences&#13;
into th* mental foreground,&#13;
dreams are suggested which dea^&#13;
with events at first sight api to be mistaken&#13;
for those of utterly spontaneous&#13;
nature. Maury relates that in early&#13;
life he visited a village on the Marne&#13;
named Trilport. His father had built&#13;
a bridge at this spot;. The subject of&#13;
one dream was that his childhood days&#13;
were being spent at Trilport, and that&#13;
a man in uniform, on being asked his&#13;
name, toid Maury that be was the&#13;
bridgekeepor, and mentioned his&#13;
name, which Maury distinctly remem&#13;
bered when he woke.—Of this name he&#13;
had no recollection whatever, bat on&#13;
inquiring of an --old sorvnnt- of—.bis&#13;
THK progress of the bill now pending&#13;
in the corps of legislation of France&#13;
for levying a duty of 27 cents per bushel&#13;
on wheat imported into the country&#13;
will be watched in this country&#13;
with great interest. As tho prevailing&#13;
roriiieiidedJtcUje^ffefidedT-^^ 8 a m e a s&#13;
that which led to the exclusion of Amer&#13;
ican hog products three years ago the&#13;
belief is that the bill will become a&#13;
Jaw in deference to the urgent demand&#13;
from agricultural classes which are&#13;
now the predominant (political power&#13;
In the chamber. The importance of&#13;
the proceeding to the American farmer&#13;
is apparent in the simple statement&#13;
tttat o u t shipments of ^heat and flour&#13;
to that country during 1883 were valued&#13;
at $17,000 500. The advance of&#13;
the German duty on rye ftom half a&#13;
mark per 100 pounds to- two marks also&#13;
indicaes the disposition of Bismarck&#13;
to bar out our breadstuffs as well as&#13;
our pork, though German purchases&#13;
of rye are a comparative trifle, our exports&#13;
thither during the fiscal year&#13;
1883 amounting to less than $500,000.&#13;
Tho effect of this policy on the part&#13;
of these governments it is believed&#13;
will lead to an arbitration At the approaching&#13;
session of congress in favor&#13;
of increasing the duties on French and&#13;
German products, such as wines, silks,&#13;
fancy goods, etc., :i demand which even,&#13;
f roe Inideis^wilLi^&#13;
impossible to resist. *""&#13;
lather's if a person of tho namo in quoa&#13;
lion was once gatekeeper at Trilport&#13;
bridge she replied in the affirmative,&#13;
and mentioned that the man kept the&#13;
gate when the bridge was built.&#13;
Thus does memory play strange&#13;
tricks with our imagination, especially&#13;
when the latter faculty runs riot in the&#13;
absence of will a^nd consciousness, and&#13;
relates itself to the world of-, dreams.&#13;
The .supernatural theory of dreams and&#13;
warnings recently revived in our midst&#13;
is, after all, but a sop to the Cerberus&#13;
of ignorance. It is easy- far too easy&#13;
for i he peace and comfort of many&#13;
miuds—to convert a mero coincidor.ee&#13;
between a droani and an event into a&#13;
close relationship which seems in the&#13;
dream a fore-shadowing of the event in&#13;
question. But in science, -ks in healthy&#13;
common sense, there is no justification&#13;
for the continuance of such superstition.&#13;
If certain dreams are warnings and&#13;
portents, what shall we say to those to&#13;
which nosuch functions can be attached&#13;
? And if of certain trivial events&#13;
we are forewarned, what is the explanation&#13;
of the striking anomaly, that of&#13;
the grave diasters of life we usually&#13;
receive no warning at all?&#13;
Dr. Mandsley says: "*It has been&#13;
justly remarked that if we were actually&#13;
to do in sleep all the strange things&#13;
we dream we do, it would be necessary&#13;
to put every man in restraint before&#13;
he went taJbed; for, as Cicero said,&#13;
dreamers would do more strange things&#13;
than madmen. A dream put into action&#13;
must, indeed, look very much like&#13;
insanity (e. g., the ordinary sleep vigil)&#13;
as insanity has at times the look of&#13;
a walking dream.1'&#13;
Poets without number have invariably&#13;
treated dreams as the_ best type of&#13;
the unrealities of life and nature. The&#13;
physiologist, on the contrary, sees In&#13;
tho visions ef the night no trifling objects&#13;
unworthy of serious study" and&#13;
reflection, but indications and clews to&#13;
the better understanding of the mysleries&#13;
which bes8t our waking lives.&#13;
"The grave portents11 oi the night in&#13;
this view cast no shadow over the future,&#13;
and exercise no sway over the&#13;
destinies of the modern mind. They&#13;
serve, howovor, a nobler purpose, a&#13;
aids, through their revelations of the&#13;
leisure fancies of tlis brain, toward a&#13;
knowledge of the boundaries which&#13;
separate the realm of body from that&#13;
of mind—boundaries which, in truth,&#13;
"divide our being.1' A&#13;
A Hindoo Legend,&#13;
All the Year Round says that the&#13;
Hindoo -legends are remarkable for&#13;
their wildness, and cites the following&#13;
specimen; Ghost haunt poepul trees&#13;
and are as tricky as mediums at a seance&#13;
nee. A wife going out of "doors on a&#13;
dark night, accidentally knocks up&#13;
against a Sankchinni, white lady ghost,&#13;
that sat on a low branch. The revengeful&#13;
creature at once took her by the&#13;
throat, thrust her into a hole in the&#13;
tree, and went in, taking her shape&#13;
so completely that the* mother-in-law,&#13;
that urrversal inmate of the Hindoo&#13;
hut, was d3ceived. The only difference&#13;
was that, wheroas the wife had&#13;
been weak and^anguid, tho ghost was&#13;
brisk and active. "She has turned over&#13;
a new leaf; so much the better," sail&#13;
the 'mother-in-law, wlipn the errands&#13;
and cboSnig were Jlono TnTThuxt to no&#13;
time. But one dav^the old woman&#13;
caught sight of the ghost fetching something/&#13;
something from the next room&#13;
ghost^fashion by stretching out a long&#13;
arm -for ghosts can stretch their limbs&#13;
a great way, though not so far as Rskshasis&#13;
can. She said nothing, but told&#13;
her son, and they watched, and before&#13;
long they saw the kitchen liearth&#13;
ablaze, though they knew there was&#13;
no fire in the house. Looking through&#13;
u chink they saw that the wife had&#13;
thrust her toot into the oven, and that&#13;
it was burning like a bit of wood. "She's&#13;
a ghost,11 they whispered, so they went&#13;
for the Ojha, who tested her by burning&#13;
fumeric under her nose. She proved&#13;
her ghostship by screaming, and&#13;
was then beaten with slippers till she&#13;
confessed, and showed where the real&#13;
wife was, and was beaten until she&#13;
promised never to do the family any&#13;
further harm. The poor wife must&#13;
have been a bad bargain after the active&#13;
ghost, for she was almost dead,&#13;
and very slowly got back to her usual&#13;
weak health.&#13;
« » ••••&#13;
•Teach T h e m t o S p e a k Properly.&#13;
Exchange.&#13;
One has only .to hear the children of&#13;
any ^family "speak .to know what&#13;
language is used by their superiors. It&#13;
is.not necessary to study,the rules and&#13;
principles of grammar-m order to be a&#13;
correct speaker. It is habit, and one&#13;
that is acquired frora~oarly infancy. Of&#13;
course the study of grammar is a great&#13;
help to a proper use of words- and expressions,&#13;
as it gives reason why such&#13;
and such words are used in a particular&#13;
sense But it is not an uncommon&#13;
thing to hear educated men and women&#13;
who should know better, make grave&#13;
mistakes in the use of language. It cannot&#13;
be because they are ignorant of the&#13;
principles of grammar, since they are&#13;
always able-to correct themselves after&#13;
a little thought. It must be, then, that&#13;
they have accustomed themselves since&#13;
childhood to a certain set of expressions,&#13;
which will cling to them through life&#13;
unless a great effort is made to rid&#13;
themselves of them. Parents, have the&#13;
means in their power of rendering their&#13;
little ones good grammatical speakers.&#13;
If fathers and mothers would use sensir&#13;
ble language in talking to their babies&#13;
when they are first learning to speak,&#13;
the child would never know any better&#13;
and would speak correctly just as&#13;
easily as it would incorrectly. For instance,&#13;
in the use of personal pronouns&#13;
almost every child will say "me wants&#13;
a bice of bread and butter11 instead of&#13;
*^I want11 etc., and very often th&gt;y use&#13;
no personal pronoun, but their own&#13;
name I have always heard it said that&#13;
it was almost an impossibility to teach&#13;
little ones the use of pronouns, but that&#13;
is no reason why we, as mothers, should&#13;
not try. I know personally of cases of&#13;
children only three years of age who do&#13;
use pronouns, and generally in the&#13;
proper place. Of course a groat many&#13;
mistakes are made daily, but if they&#13;
are corrected every time they are made,&#13;
the children will naturally fall into tho&#13;
habit of expressing themselves in a&#13;
proper manner, and take pndo in it,&#13;
too. Any cue who has had any experience&#13;
with children knows that it is&#13;
a common thing to hoar from tho lips&#13;
of girls and boys of perhaos ten or&#13;
twelve years ot age, such" expressions&#13;
as "I kDowed it," "I seen it,11 "Hain't&#13;
got nothing." "He brung it," and all&#13;
the forni3 of the verb to bo are generally&#13;
used in some wrong manner. It&#13;
takes time and patienco to stop them&#13;
whenever they make a mistake, but it&#13;
will save a good deal of labor for them&#13;
afterwards, and afiord us a large amount&#13;
of present gratification. Tell the child&#13;
to repeat the proper expression after you&#13;
and after one or two repetitions ot the&#13;
correction, they will not be apt to make&#13;
the same error again. Children make&#13;
use of expressions that they hear at&#13;
home, and if their elders will always&#13;
use good language the little ones will&#13;
do the same. Some mothers have an&#13;
idea that any affection for the baby cannot&#13;
bo expressed in good language, but&#13;
they must tell their love in what is&#13;
known as baby talk. Now this same&#13;
baby talk, although it sounds very cunning&#13;
for a while, soon loses its charm,&#13;
especially when the child is three or&#13;
four year* old, and we wish we had&#13;
talked to them in a proper manner,&#13;
and had done all that we possibly could&#13;
to make them correct speakers. It is&#13;
a rarity and also a great pleasure to&#13;
even older, speak so as, to be understood&#13;
by any one. Parents leave too&#13;
much to teachers, thinking that all&#13;
errors will be rectified when under&#13;
their charge. But habits of several&#13;
years1 standing aiVhard to break, and&#13;
a child who says "I seen" during&#13;
childhood, will be apt- to use the expression&#13;
when fully matured. I know&#13;
of many cases of ladies who use this&#13;
and similar pnrases, simply frora-force&#13;
of habit, not ignorance. They are conscious&#13;
of having used a wrong word,&#13;
and have often been mortified for so&#13;
doing. Grown up people who use&#13;
wrong words should put a watch upon&#13;
themyetveXnahd^nakeup their "minds"&#13;
to use only corect language. And&#13;
how much easier it-will be for our boys&#13;
and girls, when they are men and&#13;
women, if we have imstillod in their&#13;
minds only the proper forms of language,&#13;
so that speaking correctly will&#13;
be as natural to them as eating their&#13;
dinners.&#13;
* » r . .&#13;
Mr. P. Smith of Deadwood, a "grass^&#13;
widower,11 serves this notice on the&#13;
world: "My wife Sarah, has Shot my&#13;
ranche. When I didn't Doo a thing&#13;
Too hur an1 I want it distinctly Understood&#13;
that any man That Uke hur In&#13;
an' keers for hur On my account Wil&#13;
got himself pumped so Full of lead that&#13;
1 §ura tendorfnpt^wilL locato him_ fur a&#13;
Mineral clamp. A word To the wise u&#13;
sufficient ah brLer work on fools/1&#13;
PENSIONS T O A L L SOLDI KES AHAILOJb*.&#13;
who wore iliHublod 1 J v WOUIMIH, tftafUAe, act I d * *&#13;
or ntlu)rwi»e,th«) loan ot a loo, pile*, ruricoBe veins,&#13;
cbroHic (Uurrhcvi. ru»turo, UIBH of ttixbt or (ya*&#13;
tlnJly so), lotm of lif arlnj', falling back of mar ' ~&#13;
rfcemnttlnm, any dltiabiJItjr, nu lmitU'r howe&#13;
Kivex you u pension. New and HotioraMa&#13;
ckurf/ta Obtained. VVidown, children, nmtfettsv,&#13;
•aid fathers of milrUern dying in tbe aerviofi, wr&#13;
•itflrwardfl. frum diaeaue coulratted or woamte !••&#13;
(•ived wbi'o In the service, aio entitled to p*a-&#13;
•ion. Rejected and abandoned datum a apeHllfcf.&#13;
BOUNTY, BACK PAY, AND HORSE CLAIMS C o i l&#13;
LECTEO.&#13;
INCREASE YOUR PENSION.&#13;
A pension can be increased at any tide whtt&#13;
th« disability warrants it. As you grow older fh«&#13;
waund has gradually undermined the-constttwtiaq,&#13;
tb« disease nas made you moro helpless. In *j&amp;m&#13;
naun»r tbe di«sJ&gt;ility has increased; so apply &lt;oe&#13;
an increase at once.&#13;
LAND AND PATENT CLAIMS SOLICITED&#13;
My experience, andlwing hero at headquarUn&#13;
enable me to attend promptly to all claims again*!&#13;
tbe Governmeenntt.. Circulars free. Address, with&#13;
stamp:&#13;
Box 486,&#13;
M. V. TIFRNEY,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
VIGOROUS HEALTHroRMEN&#13;
HARRIS'B/i&#13;
_ _ _ _ m 5 # »o4 orer br»!a woit. —&#13;
A Radical Crjo&#13;
FOE&#13;
SPERMATORRHEA&#13;
1MP0TENCY.&#13;
BarTearted for over O&#13;
yoara by u s e In thou-&#13;
•*nda of c a s e s . T.x zz TRIAL&#13;
PACKAGE.&#13;
SEN0 ADDRESS, _&#13;
HARRIS REMED&#13;
KBRVOUB DBBrUTt!&#13;
orgftulo wMfcUMf and 4*&#13;
etj, iad I U H T N I at*&#13;
•cur* dlwmi, b«Atn&#13;
akillfo! phyUeUat, iwqi&#13;
from youthful iadiawatloni,&#13;
too free iDdalf*n«L&#13;
UatMk&#13;
....earij*;&#13;
tern. Avoid bclD| Inpoatf&#13;
«a t&gt;y pretention* clataf of&#13;
ether rcmedic* for titoM&#13;
trouble*, tiet our tret droa*&#13;
lor aa4 trtkl pkckog« toB&#13;
li'ini important fast* t*6x»&#13;
taking trtataienl eliewfcet*.&#13;
Take a remedy that bM earw&#13;
Uiouiandi, »•! doe* not ia&gt;&#13;
Urfere n ilh tttenUoa to bull*&#13;
ecu or ctasa p«ia or tooon.&#13;
veclenoe. Founded on acl&gt;&#13;
cntiflo medical prUdple*.&#13;
Gro«lsg In fivoraod repute&#13;
lion. Direct »pp!icMionto tb*&#13;
•eat of dlietM make* lu tpedflo&#13;
Influence felt withoot&#13;
delay. The n»lnrtl fun*.&#13;
tiooi of tho human omaiim&#13;
are restored. Too&#13;
animating element* of&#13;
life which hare been&#13;
waited an given back.&#13;
[The patient beoomea&#13;
cheerful and' gains&#13;
•trength rapidly.&#13;
C O . , M'Pg Chemlcttv&#13;
806¾ Kwth 10th St., St. ltmf«f«o*&#13;
ORE MONTH'S TREATMENT, $811 MONTH3,$5 ; 3 MOUTHS, $7.&#13;
HOOTMEDICINE.&#13;
THIS MAGNETIC BELT I&#13;
WARRANTED TO CURE"?[o'n er Re*&#13;
i , U»» following&#13;
diseases&#13;
rlthout medicine:—1'aln In (hoback, blpa, head, or&#13;
llnba, tii'rvou« dublllty,Jurabaffo, genemt debility,&#13;
rheumatlxm, purslyulm ncurBljtlu, aclotlca, dlaeM-&#13;
• • o t ihe kidney«,«Dttiiil dlacMee,torpid liver, rout,&#13;
aemlnaJ emUalona, Impotcncy, aathma* hetrt dlaeaae,&#13;
dyapep*!*, constipation, cryalprloa, Innlcc*-&#13;
tfonv-hernta or rupture, catarrh, pile*, epilepsy,&#13;
d \Vh«n%"clebiffty of the GENERATIVE OKOANS&#13;
occurs, loat vitality, lack ©f nervo lorco und vigor,&#13;
« U«1 fiier weakneMC*, and oil thoao dlacuae* of n per*&#13;
nonul nature, from whatever cause, tho continuous&#13;
«tr«am of M&amp;gnetiam permeating tbrougb tho porta&#13;
mu»tre»tore thrm to a h e a l t h / action. Thure i* no&#13;
mtntak&amp; about thu appliance.&#13;
lAD|E8r\GNETICf&#13;
ABDOyiNAL SUPPORTER. •&gt;&#13;
TO THE LADIES:— a ^ i f c - S i a s IW I I l k b n u i k V l Neuralitla, Nervoaa&#13;
ExkaTJ&gt;Uofl,Dr»|X)MlatorwHh Dlaeaaeaofthe U T -&#13;
ejr, Kidney*, Headache or Cold Feet, fiwoilea or&#13;
Weak Anklea, or Swollen Feet, an Abdominal Bert&#13;
and a pair of Magnetics Foot Batteries havo no superior&#13;
In the relief &lt;uid cure of all these complaints. They&#13;
carry a powerful magnetio force to the aeat of tha&#13;
For L a v e Baok, Weakaeaaof the Spine, Fall.&#13;
la*&gt;ef the w « b , Leaeorrkota, Chronlalnttaaima.&#13;
tlea aad Ulceration of the Womb, Iaeldcntll H e n .&#13;
orrhaf* or Flooding, Painful, Suppressed aad I*v&#13;
lar Menstruation, Harreane**, aad chance o t&#13;
, this la the Best AppUaaae aad Curative Agamk&#13;
For all forma of Featale DtCiemUles It Is nntwr.&#13;
paawiby any thing before invented, both a* a curative&#13;
ajTaatanduaBOurocof powerand TttaUaation. .&#13;
PTioe of either Belt with Magnetic Foot Batteries, f 10.&#13;
Beat by exprcsa CO. D., and examination allowed, or br&#13;
mall on receipt of price. In ordering, send measure or&#13;
valatandilseof shoe. Remittance can be made In currency,&#13;
sent In letter at our risk.&#13;
The Magneton Garments are adapted to all ages, are&#13;
worn over the underclothing, (not a e i t to t h e&#13;
body like the aaaay dalranlo and Eloetrle Hasa»&#13;
bags advertised so extenatvcly) and ehould bw&#13;
taken off at night. Thev hold th«drpotMr/or«ocr, a s 4&#13;
are worn at all seasons of theyear.&#13;
Bend utamp for the "Now Departure In Medical Tree*.&#13;
•sent Without U e d l d a e , " with thousands of teattmo.&#13;
1&#13;
?)&#13;
'&gt;&#13;
T H E M A G N E T O N A P P L I A N C E C O » " '&#13;
2818 S t a t e S t . , C h i c a f f o , Ala*&#13;
The Magnetic appliances tuay_be 9*en&#13;
at Winchell's&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Drug Store, PickneV&#13;
MERMOTT'S&#13;
C9&#13;
1"&#13;
MANDRAKE&#13;
PILLS, CURE Sick-Headache, Dyspepsia, Liver&#13;
Complaint, Indigestion, Constipation,&#13;
and PURIFY THE BLOOD.&#13;
N O T I C E . — W i t h o u t a particle of doubt, Korrnnti'a&#13;
Tills are thomost popularof any on thomar-&#13;
Kvi. Having been before l.hi! public for a quartctnf&#13;
:t i^nlury, and having alwnys piirfbraed norathafi&#13;
WHS promised for/tljcuv 'her merit the success t b a t ' M-.t-y lin»«!Atfi.iried. P r i c e , a^c. peirtoQac.&#13;
For sale by all druggihta. ^^&#13;
JBLerniixtts Pills al^wc^T^in stoyk ~&amp;T&#13;
Winch/1 \s 1)PttjfJSt^re,J^mckney, JMi?*b&#13;
Sw^ ««&#13;
-i&#13;
./%&#13;
/&#13;
- » « • / * * * * * • • •&#13;
m t&#13;
I V E W R N O T B B&#13;
ALASKAN UJBCOVEKI1*&#13;
Lieut George M. Stoney, who was detailed&#13;
by the government to explore the great unknown&#13;
river lu Alaska discovered by him last&#13;
year, has returned to San Francisco on the&#13;
government ecoooner Cuualwka. In an interview&#13;
published In the Dally Keport he Bays he&#13;
•sctnded thj; river 500 miles, where he reached&#13;
a large lake through which the river flows. On&#13;
account of tLiu lateness of the season he was&#13;
obliged to m u m . Stoney brinks specimen* or&#13;
g&lt;&gt;ld, copper and coal which he discovered;&#13;
*so, numerous Bpectintna for the Smithsonian&#13;
Institution.&#13;
A HOKKIBLB PBATH.&#13;
Owing to a misplaced switch a Michigan&#13;
Central freight train ran into a hiding near&#13;
Montrose, Ont, where several railway employes&#13;
were asleep, wrecking tbem and setting them&#13;
OB fire Herbert J. Thayer, conductor! was&#13;
boned to death. His brother had both legs&#13;
|»ahWB *ud was otherwise injured- H« W^U die.&#13;
4 Q £ PHOSPKCTIVS CIVlLlZaTIOK.&#13;
tti commleslontr of Indian Affairs, in his&#13;
ansa*) report, cays the progress of the Indians&#13;
toward civilization is most encouraging, and it&#13;
is fair to prt *utuu that in the near future they&#13;
will bo no longer a burden but a help to the&#13;
government. H« state that Indian appropriations&#13;
are too f-mail, and urges the necessity of&#13;
pasting auaupropnarlon bill early in the session.&#13;
Ongrees is urged to pass a stringent&#13;
law prohibit lug the sale of arms and ammunition&#13;
to the Indian*, and to enfoice the law&#13;
forbidding the sale of liquor to them.&#13;
•/ AN XMPOKTANT DECISION.&#13;
The Ohio Supreme Court has declared the&#13;
Scott law, taxing the Jiquor traffic, unconstitutional.&#13;
Opinions . vary as to l£e political&#13;
effect of this decision. B'fsoiue it lj believed&#13;
that it will gain many xoifiaJor the Democrats&#13;
from the saloon keepers, while on the other&#13;
hand, the lav, by rutsing the first year 18..000,-&#13;
000 of revenue, and relieving the taxpayers to&#13;
that extent, has"proved a very popular meas&#13;
ure. *&#13;
A BRAVE MAN'S DEATH.&#13;
A large brick building situated on the southeast&#13;
corner of Lasalle and Michigan si reefs,&#13;
Chicago, the lower floors of which were occupied&#13;
by hide dealers and the upper portion&#13;
by Fisher's cigar box factory, caught tire&#13;
about noon, October 29, and was completely&#13;
gutted. One man was killed by jumping and&#13;
two others smothered on the stairs. The factory&#13;
girls on the upper floors escaped with the&#13;
greatest difficulty. It la believed all are sate.&#13;
The loss wl'l reach $100,000. The building&#13;
was owned by Mr. Culver, of Culver, Page«k&#13;
Aoyne, .was a flvt-story structure, occupied by&#13;
-Sehnabel &amp; Co., barbed wire manufacturers,&#13;
t±rr€ampbell Press Company, Danhelzer Bros.,&#13;
chewing gum manufacturers, ana&#13;
W. E. Flsntr's cigar box factory.&#13;
The latter was In the top atory&#13;
and cm?lo\cl twenty-one men and eighteen&#13;
girls. The" foreman of the shto, James Carr,&#13;
got all thlrty-ninii souls together in good order&#13;
and coolly led the band to the fire proof jjtairs&#13;
and safely to the ground. Trouble! with&#13;
doubt as to whether any were left behind, Carr&#13;
quicklv returned into the fifth story, but remained&#13;
a few minutes too long, Tne flames&#13;
had cut oft every aveuue of escape. He hurried&#13;
to tiie roof and amid the wild excitement&#13;
of thousands of people below, was thrown a&#13;
rope from a building on the opposite side of&#13;
the street. Makiug the line fast he commenced&#13;
the perilous descent, g,hlle_ firemen held a&#13;
r of the audience were finally successful In persuading&#13;
tbosetntbe rear that there was no&#13;
fire and the pressure gradually lessoned, tallowing&#13;
those In front to get Into the street.&#13;
When the panic had subsided and the theater&#13;
was cleared it was found that 16 persons had&#13;
been killed, 13 fatally injured and many other*&#13;
badly hurt; while the corridors, aires and&#13;
vestibules were strewn with articles of clothing&#13;
and jewelry. The alarm was started by a discharged&#13;
workman about the theater, out of&#13;
revenge for his dismissal. He has been arrested.&#13;
• -&#13;
tarpaulm beuo.ath as a precaution. Suddenly&#13;
the rope snapped under the man's weight, or&#13;
was burned by burets of flame, and Carr's body&#13;
shot downward, head foremost, and to&#13;
the. horror of the people, went directly&#13;
through the turpaulin and was&#13;
picked up from the stones, neck broken and&#13;
mangled almost beyondjrecognltiou. Another&#13;
thrilling 6cene was meanwhile taking place at&#13;
the fire -scape from the chewing gum factory.&#13;
Eighteen young girls, panic stricken, came&#13;
down pelt mell and when within twenty-five&#13;
feet of the ground the last eight jumped to the&#13;
pavement, falling lu a confused Leap. Mostly&#13;
all were, hurt but none seriously injured except&#13;
three, who received painful cuts and bruises.&#13;
Carr, whose neck was not broken, as at first&#13;
supposed, revived on arrival at the hospital,&#13;
but died that afternoon. It cannot be ascertained&#13;
if there was any other loss of life. The&#13;
losses and insurance are as follows; Building,&#13;
loss $65,000; insurance, $39,000; Campbell&#13;
Printing Press Company, loss $15,000; insurance&#13;
$10,000; Schnabel &amp; Co,, barbed wire,&#13;
loss $30,000; insurance $10,000; Fisher &amp; Co.,&#13;
cigar boxes, loss $15 000: insurance $10,000.&#13;
— •&#13;
ttnOM A FOHE1UN 8 H O B E .&#13;
TENACIOUS TICSBORNE.&#13;
The Tichborne claimant, when released from&#13;
prison on the 21st, weighed SM pounds. When&#13;
he began his Imprisonment in 1S73 he weighed&#13;
864 pounds; lie still counts his adherents by&#13;
the tens of thousands. They include many&#13;
rich dukes and several members of Pardiment.&#13;
He has already begun au agitation Intending&#13;
to reopen tbt case, and force a new trial to&#13;
prove whether he is Arthur Orton, or Thomas&#13;
Castro, or Sir Roger-Charles Tichborne He&#13;
has issued a manifesto which he signs "rloger&#13;
Charles Ttcnborne," In which he charges the&#13;
Government officials with perjury, forgery,&#13;
bribery, suborning, coercing witnesses* and&#13;
packing juries.&#13;
A DIFFERENCE OF OPINION.&#13;
Kecent ofllcsal correspondence relating to&#13;
Egyptian affairs eas been made public. The&#13;
letter of Instructions from tbe^overnment to&#13;
Gen. Wolseley stated that the object of the&#13;
expedition was to bring Gordon and Stewiut&#13;
back from £bartouin. No further offensive&#13;
operations than should ;rove necsssary to&#13;
secure this end would be permitted. Neither&#13;
tbe l - g E l S or Egyptian government were preparaMMNtume&#13;
the responsibility of the gov&#13;
anuMSV «t the Nile Valley beyond Wady&#13;
HjMajHfrniMgh. they would be glad to see an&#13;
InQuy—rtniiil government established at Khartbtrin,&#13;
which would keep peace with Egypt,&#13;
would entourage commerce and prevent the&#13;
Slave trade. When J t was known that Gen.&#13;
Gordon had sent Stewart to burn Berber, the&#13;
government directed Kitchener to send counter&#13;
orders to Col. Stewart. In a recent letter&#13;
Gen. Gordon writes that he has offered freedom&#13;
and pay to slaves who desert the Mahdi&#13;
This policy he hopea will sound the doom of&#13;
slavery in the Soudan. He declares if Shendy&#13;
Is captuied by the rebels it will be due to the&#13;
government's failure to send Z ebbr Pasha to&#13;
him, Ha expresses the hope that for the aaka&#13;
of tfcakoBorof England the Abyslnians have&#13;
aotbfflMagaged to fight England's battles.&#13;
V T PANIC IN A THEATRE.&#13;
A terrible disaster occurred at the Star&#13;
theater In Glasgow, Scotland, on the night of&#13;
Nov. 1. During the performance some one&#13;
r1&gt;1&gt;^ . nry nf flra. In an Instant the lm_&#13;
znense audience was on its feet and rushing toward&#13;
the doors. The estlts became blocked&#13;
and a terrific struggle ensued, men and worn/&#13;
en fighting and tramping upon each other in&#13;
their frantic efforts to reach the street, (he&#13;
attaches of the theater and the police .vainly&#13;
tried to quell the excitement by assuring the&#13;
panic stricken that there was no fire, but their&#13;
cries only served to augment the chaos. The&#13;
shrieks and curses of the terrified and unreasoning&#13;
mass of people packed in the narrow&#13;
•islesand eorrldor* attracted a large crowd in&#13;
front of the building, but they could render no&#13;
assistance, bring unable to enter.&#13;
The fatal crash occurred where the corridor?&#13;
leading from the pit and gallery converged and&#13;
here the struggle was most violent. Hundreds&#13;
of men and women were almost entirely denud&#13;
ed. Men would force thtmseWes&#13;
shoulders of others, only-to be&#13;
thrown down and trampled uponvwtnie womtm&#13;
In their desperation foughM«e viragos. The&#13;
«ffort» of the actors ajdetrSy the cooler headed&#13;
/—&#13;
N T B A Y S T H A W H .&#13;
Brignoli, the renowned tenor, is dead.&#13;
Prof. Lewis Packard of Yale college, Is dead.&#13;
Three thonsand Colorado miners are on a&#13;
strike.&#13;
Idaho wants to be admitted to the sisterhood&#13;
of states.&#13;
Wilbur F. Storey,edltor and proprietor of the&#13;
Chicago Times, is dead.&#13;
Fltz John Porter has oeen appointed Police&#13;
Commissioner of New York.&#13;
Tilden's stables at Greystone were destroyed&#13;
by tiro Oot. 27. Loss $15,000.&#13;
A niece of Wagner, the composer, is living&#13;
in Chicago in destitute circumstances.&#13;
Michipicoten, on the north shore of Luke&#13;
Superior is completely controlled by a mob.&#13;
The Chinese irovcrnment is adverse to any&#13;
mediation betwen that country and France.&#13;
Tin re are hundreds of homelepsand starving&#13;
fibhermeu on the north shore of the guli of St.&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
Issue of silver dollars for the week ended.&#13;
October25, $640,499; corresponding period&#13;
last year,,$450,499.&#13;
A severe gale raged throughout Great Britain,&#13;
October 33, doing Immense damage to&#13;
property of allTtocriptlon.&#13;
The week from Nov. 9^ to 16 will be celebrated&#13;
as the centennial annlversay of the M. E.&#13;
The production of. precious metals in the&#13;
United StateB in 1883, amounted to ISOiToTOO,-&#13;
000; the coinage $214,000,000.&#13;
It is proposed to raise by. subscriptions a&#13;
fund of £10,000 for the benefit of the family of&#13;
the late Alexander M. Sullivan.&#13;
The Tichborne claimant has commenced a&#13;
series of meeting* in London with a view td&#13;
bringing his claim before the public. i&#13;
Gan. Gresham has resigned as secretary oft&#13;
the treasury aud hsg been appointed judge of&#13;
the seventh judicial district, vice Drummond &gt;&#13;
retired.&#13;
ThcR. C archbishop of Quebec acknowledges&#13;
the receipt of $500 for tne relief of Labrador&#13;
poor, from Mrs. Maitland, of Nouville&#13;
Glencoe, IU.&#13;
A Dane, unknown,being wanted for arson at&#13;
St. Helens, Ark., shot a deputy marshall who&#13;
attempted to arrest him. He was afterward&#13;
hanged by a mob.&#13;
Thomas Donovan, convicted of Illegal registration,&#13;
was sentenced by the United States&#13;
court of San Francisco to three years imprisonment&#13;
and a fine of $550;&#13;
Commissioner or Pensions, Dudley, emphatically&#13;
denies that one dollar for campaign purposes&#13;
has been paid out_of tne_general fund in&#13;
the pension commission.&#13;
Twenty students, most of them sons of superior&#13;
Russian employes lu Poland, and a&#13;
number of glrli" of good family, have been arrested&#13;
In Warsaw, charged with SelngNthlllst!?.&#13;
"WONDERFUL EFFICACY."&#13;
Some people are slow ,in telling&#13;
what good things have been done for&#13;
them, but Mr. John P. Daly, Gillisonville,&#13;
S. C , says he takes great pleasure&#13;
in testifying to the wonderful efficacy&#13;
of Brown's iron Bitters in dyspepsia,&#13;
fever and ague, and general debility&#13;
of the system. ,J&amp;a has, personally&#13;
experienced tHe ffrs^t satisfactory results&#13;
from the use of this valuable medicine.&#13;
Make a memorandum of this,&#13;
all ye whose systems are run down.&#13;
Brown's Iron Bitters will save yon.&#13;
Something that wllL^uiet the nerves, give&#13;
strength to the bodj^iyduce refreshing sleeD,&#13;
improve the qjaality ST the blood, and purify&#13;
and brighten the complexion, is what many fersons would be very glad to obtain. Carter's&#13;
ron Pills are made for exactly this class of&#13;
troubles and are remarkably successful in accomplishing&#13;
the ends desired, as named above.&#13;
They are useful for both men and women.&#13;
Sold by druggists. Price 50 cents a box. See&#13;
advertisement.&#13;
The Poultry Keeper, published at Chicago,&#13;
III., has achieved a wonderful success. In a&#13;
little over six months its circulation has Increased&#13;
to thirty thousand actual subscribers.&#13;
It is ihe paper for those-interebted irTtfle profitable&#13;
pursuit of poultry raising. Read their&#13;
advertisement in this issue.&#13;
"THE ELBERON.'." •&#13;
The new wood burning Parlor stove. " The&#13;
Elberon," better known as the "Cleveland&#13;
Wonder,1' is exciting the admiration and wonder&#13;
of all who have seen it. The Ladies pronounce&#13;
it as " perfectly lovely." in form it resembles&#13;
an elegant modern residence, with bay&#13;
window, Mansard roof, cornices, doors, win'&#13;
dows, veranda, etc., and is considered by all&#13;
to be the handsomest stove structure ever produced.&#13;
It is a base heater; also double heater,&#13;
and is said to be simply perfect in its operations.&#13;
Special inducements are being offered&#13;
to one or two Influential parties in each town&#13;
for introductory purposes. Write Co-operative&#13;
Stove Co., Cleveland Ohio, for full description&#13;
and particular*&#13;
T b e l r Name la Legion*&#13;
—Legioni of pBnplfl haye hud ihfljr Uvea mafln&#13;
miserable by Piles. This painful diffleulty is often'&#13;
Induced and always aKgrarated by Constipation.&#13;
Kidney-Wort ii the great remedy for all affections&#13;
of thlt kind, it acta »a a gentle cathartic, promotes&#13;
a healthy action of the bowels and soothes and&#13;
heals the inflamed surfaces. It has cured&#13;
hundreds of cases where all other remedies and&#13;
applications have filled. Sold by all druggists&#13;
ESPFltted ont for t h e s e a s o n . Dresses,&#13;
clouts.coats,stockings and all garments can be colored&#13;
successfully with the LMamond Dye?. Fashionably&#13;
colors. Only 10c at druggists. Wtlla, Hlchardson&#13;
&amp; Co,. Burlington, Vt. 1 "BJCHU-PAIBA," Qnlea, complete, cures all annoying&#13;
Kidney and Urinary Diseases,. SI&#13;
K afflicted with sore eyes, use Dr. Isaac&#13;
yfaompson'B Eye Water. Druggists sell IU afii;&#13;
"RbUOn ON ITCH" cure* humors, eruptions ring*&#13;
worm, tetter, salt rheum, froat.d feet, chilblains.&#13;
rtrm con-iiiviK on. made from seiectod liven&#13;
on the sea-shore, by CASWXLL, HAZARD A Co., New&#13;
Ycrk. It is absolutely pu?e and sweet. Patients&#13;
who have one* taken It to all others. Physicians&#13;
nave decided it superior to anv of the other oils in&#13;
market.&#13;
CHAfPED HANDS FACB, 'PTMPLBS and r'.&#13;
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, ma "&#13;
WK1 J*HAZAVD ACe- New YorkL&#13;
• ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
OA.&#13;
"ROUGH ON rORNtK&#13;
cure, hard or soft &lt; warts&#13;
Ask for It.&#13;
.bunions. -&#13;
Complete&#13;
rors of&#13;
nervoi ualsl wwehaok naerses ,s ueaffrelryin gd efcraoym, l oesrt- ron, ,KodR, KBac O.,F1 OwHillA sReGnd H I. a Trheicsi pger eatth raetm wedilyl Sweansd d siesclfo-vaedrderde sbsyed a emnivsesiloonpaer tyo IKnH BV«u. tJh0 8ABmPeHri cTa,. tmrATrsiatiMrD. Newport.&#13;
"RTUJGH ON PAIN." Quick cure tor Colic. Cramps'&#13;
Diarrhoea, Aohes. Pains, Sprains, Headache.&#13;
C ATAKRH IN THE HEAD&#13;
Originates in scrofulou* Uint in the blood. Heare&#13;
the proper method by which to cury catarrh, is to&#13;
Purify the blood. IU many dlk&gt;ajjrecable ssmptom*&#13;
and the danger of dev«loping into bronchitis or tha(&#13;
terribly J"iil;il disease, consumption, arr entirely re t&#13;
moved by Hood's Sarsaparilla, Vhich cures caUrrh&#13;
by purifying the blood and also tones up the system&#13;
and greatly improTcs the general health ul Ihose who&#13;
take it.&#13;
Cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla&#13;
"For muny years, beginning no iar back I don't r«-&#13;
mejiiber when, I had Ihc catarrh in my head. It rontiistnl&#13;
of an excessive tlmv from my nost, ringing&#13;
and bursting noises in my ears, and pains on tl»; top&#13;
of my head. The iiawkin;; and spi«*.ing wen- iuoht&#13;
e*res*tve in th'j uormng, when the back pnrt of mv&#13;
tonyu^ would b« thick with a while fur, and ihere&#13;
W(j»i&lt;d lie u bad Ustc in my rn'juth. My hearing was&#13;
a lice ted in my ielt e:ir, Kjve years ago I bc^im \o&#13;
use Hood's Sarsaparilla. I vv.is helped right awav;&#13;
but I continued to use till I felt myself cured. Mv&#13;
general health h;i» been good ever s-ince thv citunii&#13;
left me." M R S . R II. CAUI vituu, Lowell.&#13;
H o o d s Sarsapariila&#13;
Sold iVyult &lt;lniyi4i--,t.s. g i ; six for ¢5. M:tdc ' .r&gt;| v i,v&#13;
C. I. HOOD &lt;V Co., apothecaries, J/5we!i, Mass.&#13;
100 Doses One Dollar.&#13;
BRIfMei 5i&#13;
--• THE&#13;
BEST TONIC This medicine, combining Iron with pure&#13;
vegetable topics, quickly and completely&#13;
Cures Dyspepsia* Indigestion, Weakness,&#13;
Impure Blood, Malaria,Chills aud Fevers,&#13;
and Neuralgia*&#13;
It ia an unfailing remedy for Diseases of theij&#13;
Kidneys a ad Liver.&#13;
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to&#13;
Women, and all who lead sedentary lives.&#13;
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or&#13;
produce constipation—other Iron medicines do.&#13;
It enriches and purines the blood, stimulates&#13;
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, relieves&#13;
Heartburn and Belching, and strengthens&#13;
the muscles and nerves.&#13;
For Intermittent Fevers. Lassitude, Lack ol&#13;
Energy, &amp;c, it has no equal.&#13;
#8" The genuine has above trade mftrk and&#13;
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.&#13;
XliJc only by BROWS CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, SO,&#13;
There are 15,000,000 cowa in tiiis means that you must do everything&#13;
oountry, or a little more than one coV that I want you to, and you mustn't do&#13;
for every four people, ; anything that I don't want you t o , "&#13;
It is essential that the soil be rich, A bright five-year old waa listening&#13;
free from weeds, and the season hot to to the story of the pence taken from the&#13;
ensure a good crop of Hungarian grass, fish's mouth, and delightedly shouted:&#13;
In the purchase of labor-saving ma- ,,"£ guess those pennies came out 6t&#13;
chinery for the farm, the farm house Jonah's pocket-booa\"—Congregationshould&#13;
not be—though it oftea is—neg- • alist.&#13;
lected. | "What are you going to do when&#13;
All things considerered the farmer j y?u grov7 up, if you don*t know how to&#13;
can not select a better grape probably • cipher?" asked the teacher of a slow&#13;
than the Concord. It is hardy, produo boy. "I am going to be a school-teacher,&#13;
tive, the fruit is attractive and keeps j and make the boys do the ciphering"&#13;
well. I was the reply.&#13;
Eastward more flowers are grown than Near Half moon Bay, in 'San Mateo&#13;
Westward, but with every year of in-, County, California, while the farmers&#13;
creased age in the Western States ' are plowing, numbers of sea-gulls folcorues&#13;
an increased demand for flowers, low the plow, and now and then swoop&#13;
The practice of ensilaging green down and catch ^ a field mouse, and&#13;
fodder for cattle in winter ha-i one im- I with a twist, it is at onco swallowed,&#13;
portint advantage. The munure from ! In this way thousands of vermin are&#13;
s-tock thus fed is absolutely free from . destroyed.&#13;
weed seeds, j The f o a ting gardens at Kashmir, in&#13;
In August is a good time to plant j Eastern Asia, seems to be one of the&#13;
strawbery vines. If put out before the j wonders of the world. They cover an&#13;
fall rains appear, the plants should&#13;
give a fair crop ne*t spring, and a good&#13;
one the second yeaf.&#13;
All poultry houses should, it is recommended,&#13;
face the south in order to get&#13;
the full benefit of the light and heat&#13;
expanse of water about nine miles in&#13;
circumference, and on a subsoil of&#13;
grasses and aquatic plants they grow&#13;
melons and cuenmbers, and a crop is&#13;
raised of s;reat value.&#13;
A green-looking country lad, whoapfrom&#13;
the sun. It pays as part of the'peared dunilv but who really was&#13;
_-_,L quite sharp, was employed by a gentleman&#13;
as stable-boy. One day, while&#13;
the lad was curring the horse, the gentleman&#13;
said:&#13;
"Rufus, 1 see you are trying to&#13;
'curry favor' with Black Hawk."&#13;
"No, 3ir^' answered the boy; " I ' m&#13;
only: scraping an acquaintance with&#13;
him."&#13;
Prof. Rice, who has charge of the&#13;
oyster hatchery at Cold Springs, N. Y.&#13;
says the young oyster heads resemble a&#13;
high crowned Derby hat, while their&#13;
tails can scarcely be distinguished from&#13;
a b*t-t&gt;Moft felt, with the brim turned&#13;
down all around.&#13;
A dime museum in Philadelphia has&#13;
among its curiosities a talking walrus.&#13;
It Gutters ' . . . «&#13;
winter programme.&#13;
Air-slaeked lime in fine powder is a&#13;
food pi*i«ntiveof damage from many&#13;
inds of insects, It kills them by closing&#13;
the appertures in their bodies&#13;
through which they breathe.&#13;
One of the largest celery-producing&#13;
places in the Northern States is Kalamazoo,&#13;
Mich, The flat, broad and rich&#13;
bottoms of the Kalamazoo river afford a&#13;
natural situation and soil for celery.&#13;
Farmers should see to it now that the&#13;
pastures are not cropped too short, as in&#13;
case of a drought, where drought* hare&#13;
not already set in, and the stock is kept&#13;
on it, great damage is sure to follow.&#13;
After many experiments with broken&#13;
grain rilled with chess and other weed&#13;
seeds, it is the general experience of&#13;
poultry breeders that good clean wheat&#13;
tit for the market is the cheapest food&#13;
for hsns.&#13;
A little, girl of three explains the&#13;
Golden Kule to her older sister: "It&#13;
a !ew words with gre^t dis-&#13;
A tumorous statistician computes&#13;
that, ojn an average, 1,500 thimbles are&#13;
annually swallowed by babies in the&#13;
United States.&#13;
RBCKFORDWATCHES&#13;
Are unequalled lu EXJ.CT1XG SEE VICE,&#13;
s&#13;
„ ^ U s e ' b y t h s C h i e f&#13;
t j \ ^ V V M e c h a n i c i a n ot t h e&#13;
i&lt;*i'iuTM *?• &lt;*• C o a s t S u r v e y :&#13;
^ 5 ! 3 b - b y t h e A d m i i a l&#13;
c o m m a n d i n a i n t h e&#13;
U. S. N a v a l O b s e r v -&#13;
a t o r y , f f - r A s t r o -&#13;
n o m i c a l w o r k ; a n d&#13;
b y L o c o m o t i v e&#13;
K n s r i n e c r s , C o n -&#13;
d u e t « r a a n d R a i l -&#13;
w a y n i e n . T h e y a r e&#13;
r e c o g n i z e d a s&#13;
T l l r n i O T t l m e a n d d u r a b i l i t y a r e re-&#13;
• l i t * . * 9 \ I 'qui f» i t e a . S o l d i n i&gt; r i m l p a l&#13;
I f l l B | | . 1 1 c i t i e s a u d t o w n s b y t h e € 0 ¾ .&#13;
I I I L M k U I p \ K Y ' S e x c l u s i v e A g e n t *&#13;
CiMMUngJew»l«ri,) w h o g i v e a F a l l W a r r a n t y *&#13;
H0$MER5&#13;
)^ h STOMACH^&amp;&#13;
Hnstetter's Stomach&#13;
Hitters la n tin e&#13;
blood &lt;iepurentarattonal&#13;
Crtthnric, and&#13;
superb antl-bHtnm&#13;
specific. It rallies&#13;
the falling energies&#13;
of t h e debilitated,&#13;
and chec^a premature&#13;
deoar Keyer&#13;
a n d a g u e , billons&#13;
r e m i t t e n t dyspepsia&#13;
and b o w e l&#13;
c o m p l a i n t s are&#13;
am^rfr t h e e v i l s&#13;
which it remove*.&#13;
In tropical oountri&#13;
«», w h e r e t h e&#13;
liver and bowels are&#13;
org'Ps most unfavorably&#13;
affected by&#13;
thecombined nflueneeof&#13;
climate, dtet&#13;
and w a t e r i t i s a&#13;
ve'y n e c e s s a r y&#13;
safejniard. For sale&#13;
by all Druggists and&#13;
OO T R l i Y l K i M . ' K I . R VOTT? H A V E THEM&#13;
E X A M I N E D W I T H OUR N E W TEST LENSES&#13;
BY W H I C H W E O F T E N SUCCEED W H E N&#13;
OTHERS F A I L .&#13;
N ROEHM &amp; WRIGHT,&#13;
IMPORTERS. J E W E L E R S A N D OPTICIANS.&#13;
1 4 0 W O O D W A R D A V E . , DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
David Preston &amp; Co.,&#13;
BAXIZEBS.&#13;
DETROIT, - MICHIGAN.&#13;
ESTsLBZISHED 1853.&#13;
on&#13;
Deolera generally.&#13;
CHENEYS&#13;
S t o m a c h I Liver&#13;
REGULATOR'}&#13;
Wetraniact a general Banking Business&#13;
Proaapt and careful attention to Collections&#13;
any part of the globe,&#13;
BONDS,&#13;
We buy and sell all classes of reliable securities—&#13;
United States. State, County, Town, and School&#13;
District Bonds. Good&#13;
REAL ESTATE MORTGAGES&#13;
Land Warrants and choice commercial papers. Interest&#13;
allowed on time deposits, Careful attention&#13;
given to the account* or nut of town Banks and&#13;
Bankers. DAV1U PRESTON A Co.&#13;
MME. CCKJTELLLER.&#13;
tiV.At.BH IN&#13;
CURES CQNSTIPAT.O.&#13;
2?SflLj7er«-I"dl,8?s"3n,-Fe«ribnm, Malaria,&#13;
Rheumatism, Palpitation of the Heart when&#13;
an8tng from indigestion or deranged condition&#13;
pn««J!£i?a c h S S i c * «e a d a&lt;*e or Migrain,&#13;
fift?* ftud Female complainta. The only med^&#13;
loin©in the world that&#13;
P o s i t i v e l y C u r e s C o n s t i p a t i o n .&#13;
*?Heo» f 1.00 per bottle ; 6 bottle3, 86.OO&#13;
BKKD FOU CIKt'lLAKS, KHK£.&#13;
**•«*• C H E N E Y ^ A C O . , Prop'rc,&#13;
ll-a-^.ractiu'inj Casmlitt,&#13;
T O L E D O , o *&#13;
. , L Y D J A E . P I N K H A w V S&#13;
VEGETABLE COMPOUND&#13;
• . • I S A rosmvE CVRE FOR ° . •&#13;
AH tJmsn ^iiinfql Complaint^&#13;
»• an! WoMliiicxscs so roiumon *&#13;
* * • • * * * • &gt; our bm.t * * * * « '&#13;
, * FKHALE rOPVLATION. * »&#13;
Frier $1 la tlqbM, pill c- l « n | « ton*.&#13;
• It* purpose rt vatelu for t)u kvitima't healing oj&#13;
AUeeue ami Vat relief of pain, and that it does all&#13;
It claim* to do,thoinmnd*of lad:ft 0aM gladly testify. •&#13;
* It will cure entirely nil Ovarian troubles, Inflwuraation&#13;
and-Ulceration ' Jf^lUnjr and Displaeer-entw, and&#13;
oonseaucnt ^iiiul ^v..•a.:;t^esB. a:id la particularly&#13;
Ostrich Feathers, 8 4 8 Wooi&gt;\WHi&gt; A V E&#13;
DETROIT, - MICHIGAN.&#13;
C^'The mo^t reliable house, ("E«tahll9hed&#13;
lj-7bj for the Dylne, Cleaoinfi; and Curling of&#13;
Ostrich Feathers; and also for the renovating&#13;
of Black Crape. Ladle* living out of the city&#13;
can send their feathers by mail or express and&#13;
rest assured of the most careful attention.&#13;
T h e ' B U Y E R S ' G U I D E is issued Sept.&#13;
and MaK'h, each year: 224 rmges, S\x 11J&#13;
inches, w'th over 3 , 3 0 0 illustrations—&#13;
a whole picture frallery. Gives wholesale&#13;
prices direct to crnsumcrs on all goods for&#13;
. personal or ^ ^ 0 9 ^ ^ family use.&#13;
Tells how to MJ^^^^^ order, and&#13;
gives exact fltt ^ A cost of everything&#13;
you ^ ^ ^M use, drink,&#13;
eat, wear, o r — ^ B ^ f ^ f l ^ ta-v«—fua&#13;
with. These ^ • B ^ * ' - invaluable&#13;
hooks contain information gleaned froBB&#13;
the markets of the T ^ritK SVe will mail&#13;
a copy F r e e to any address upon receipt&#13;
of the postage—8 cents. Let us hear&#13;
from you. ^ Kespectfullv,&#13;
MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO.&#13;
* S ? * S « » Wabash A v e a u * tklca**, l i t&#13;
SI I K R F M N A N T S ^'"O. colored tits&#13;
OIUIV n C I f l H « n i l O ieryjvhs.plalnorflgi»r«a To&#13;
close out remnants w«&gt; wil I send C&gt; piPcej»-«TTone'cok&gt;r&#13;
or assOrtfd,tor '.;&gt;c, 1'i torfiO.' :'4 tor-^rTNo pieces less&#13;
tban t„ yard, man j longer. Aj^Used successfully in&#13;
mating a n irlmnilni{draiks*» pa'chqullw.nec'tiles,&#13;
&amp;c i-KAZV QVlLji^niS in etjjht colura, showing&#13;
lit) different *tiu#tw. I!J. Vuredt novelty. Tots appears&#13;
butjjja«e J. C. COI.UY, «hic.i80. It.&#13;
ki,TIarjrland, My -Tlaryland.''&#13;
* * * "Pretty Wives,&#13;
Lovely daughters and noble men,&#13;
" My farm lies in a rather low and miasinatic&#13;
situation, and&#13;
"My wife!"&#13;
'•VMior'&#13;
"'Waa a very prttty blonde ! "&#13;
Twenty yeara ago, beca me&#13;
'•Sillow!*-&#13;
4'Hollow-eyed! "&#13;
"Withered and aged! ."&#13;
Before her time, from&#13;
"Malarial vapors, though she made no&#13;
&lt;S&#13;
partloular&#13;
complaint, not being of the grumpy&#13;
kind, vet causing me great uneasiness,&#13;
"A short time ago I purchased your remedy&#13;
for one of the children, who had a very severe&#13;
attack of biliousness, and it occurred to me&#13;
that the remedy might help my wife, as 1 found&#13;
that our little girl, upon recovery nad&#13;
"Lost!"&#13;
" Her saJlowness, and looked as fresh as a&#13;
new blown daisy. Well the story is soon told.&#13;
My wife, to-day, has gaiued her old-time beauly&#13;
with, compound interest, and Is now as handsome&#13;
a matron ('f i do say It myself) as can be&#13;
found in this county, which is noted for pretty&#13;
women. And I have only Hop Bitters to thank&#13;
fortt.&#13;
"Triedear creature just looked over my&#13;
shoulder, and 6iJ&gt;, I ^u flatter equal to the&#13;
days of our courtship,'and that reminds me&#13;
there might be more pretty mix* if my brother&#13;
farmers would do as 1 have done."'&#13;
Hoping that you may long be spared to do&#13;
good, I thankfully remain,&#13;
C. L. JAHSH.&#13;
BELTSTILLE, Prince Geonre Co., Md., &gt;&#13;
May 28th, 1SS3. ;&#13;
9 -&#13;
adapted totho ch.i'in'it life. • . „&#13;
• It remove* Kai.it ••&gt;, Viu.iicncy.dw&#13;
for stimulant*, &lt;u a u'u .v. s \s'i^axne:« 0^^1-Stoiij«i.-r..&#13;
It enrea liloatiny, a ad.^ln's, NOJWTIS Prostrrftiun,&#13;
Qeneml Dt&lt;hiUty, Slo^-pi •ssiK'^a^roprt^cdon and Indigestion,&#13;
That fctlin 1 othtteffiw down, eawsinff pain,&#13;
and backache Is alwjO&amp;&lt;^i'mw&gt;r.ently vitrud by its usr&#13;
• 8t&gt;nd stamp toL*wmi Ma.*.*., for p-uuphlel. Letters of&#13;
Inquiry conademTa: ly au.*w»T«.l. *'&lt;»• »al&lt;aldruggitt*,&#13;
» * • %*•&lt;* » - . - » . &lt; - &lt; , « * « * * * » * • » » •&#13;
arms in Michigan&#13;
Descriptive ard Price-List now ready for FREE&#13;
DISTKIBUTION. Over !JUU first clna* KarmvranBtn&#13;
» from4U 10800 acres, at prices from fS5t»$l00per&#13;
acre, The premium farm of 700 acres at »Tj per&#13;
acre. Address. Geo. W. s»n&lt;iver. Keal Kstato and&#13;
Loan agent. lWGitswold street, l&gt;etrolu Mich, .- •&#13;
*&#13;
Anyone.—1 manufacture and keep ^ ^ ^&#13;
constantly on hand svsry article n s e &lt; l ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
by the • portlafr fraiern i rv to WIN will ^ ^ ^ B&#13;
in parries of chance, Sen4 for mam ^ ^ ^ ^ V&#13;
mothrlrrnlar. Addrri^ VICMTTDAM.'^^^^&#13;
66aa4«7 Sawaa Su&gt;Mt, » t v Vara CUi. •&#13;
None gennlne without a bunch of green&#13;
HODS on the white label. Shun all the vile&#13;
poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" In&#13;
th«'ir nain^.&#13;
B V S I W E M C O a ^ l . £ e £ ,&#13;
[BstAblisht d IflTHiJ lT6Plnm »C, sDeecturroeiat. tMhoircobu.,igah tbhuea tpnleaecaeed t-o* iTHHic, grarnmar, bnslnoeacaa tatonnd. orBnoaomJUeneetapli apge, namritahn**&#13;
CHESHIRE tiWIXE&#13;
A New Breed in Most of the States;&#13;
bend for Price List and Illustrated circular,&#13;
W. G. 3 t. ITU X Co , Mansfield, Ohio,&#13;
HLACTB to secure* tnoro&lt;-fm u&#13;
asefnlertucation.ls atth^UHASD&#13;
ddr&#13;
HAPir» (Mich.) Brsisicss 1 01.&#13;
LXOB. Writ* for Collage Journal.&#13;
C. O. SWENSBDRG.&#13;
SOLDIERS or heirs send stamp forcircu*&#13;
l.irs showing who is eoiitled&#13;
• a topensior bounty, A c i . C»&#13;
%T WOOD, Pension Atty., Vashingtoa, D . C&#13;
U l t T A«EWT8 W A X T K D i To Introdaaa&#13;
and sell Dr. Linn««t't Spinal Health Coras*. Aar'T to&#13;
.B.LIN iUlsfrSCOHSKT0O.,4U Broadwa&gt;.rf. T&#13;
. OOTTUTSHIP and MARRIAQa —&#13;
AVonderfni secret*, revelation* and&#13;
discoveries for married or •ing-la, —&#13;
isecnring health.wealthandhappln1&#13;
_T»iirThir5aaii«onie bo&lt;ik of i« r«uro», mailed fori&#13;
10 orota by theiJnlon Publishing Co.. Newark, &gt;. J&#13;
4 FR4RN-i^E«RAikHV.-er^HC«lT-HAHl&gt; and&#13;
I oailil TYPB WRITING hm. BitnaUons fnr-&#13;
JJ niahed. Address Valentine Bros.. Janearille. Wk.&#13;
W N . L , ! • _ * - - 4 5&#13;
-OPIUM novptotnp I f a » t f r u i w d t a l k&#13;
A a e n U Hf/aatedS It will&#13;
r extra terms for |,fJJ'.n» ..J.^A^r'a^^oo*'. Bible*&#13;
pay perwins Wan tin*&#13;
for " " ia.n&#13;
nnd Albums to NATIONAL t'UB. CO., PhUadalptaia,&#13;
profitable empliynjent to write&#13;
tne best and tastes&#13;
Pa., Chicago, lit.&#13;
'osttiTSly eure SICK-BBAOACHX&#13;
p:.OOD POISOJf,_and Bkin Dis&#13;
nave no equal.&#13;
"In my praotias&#13;
• i x i l f o f V&#13;
" I find them a&#13;
• X uae no ot'&#13;
eta, lr. stamp*.&#13;
ARSONS&#13;
i I&#13;
\&#13;
a«L mimm&#13;
,*«•••• i . /&#13;
r ijWW.npi rf -r&#13;
i&#13;
?••&#13;
i&#13;
l&#13;
i~l l|m'&gt;U-L.lML.UUUl.lLliUIL— !ff!5P&#13;
Tb« #Qth &lt;% of Oct. bmng the 68th&#13;
(birthday ot Pastor Vettii, of the Una-&#13;
4illa Baptist church, some .of" bis parishioners&#13;
obtaining a knowledge of the&#13;
fact thought it not amiss to give him&#13;
a little surprise. The plan was so&#13;
.adroitly ffiiaaaged that about fifty of&#13;
his people arrived at his very door unpbserve^&#13;
and pilegl into jbhe house until&#13;
it was uearly rilled. After friendly&#13;
greetings ttoe tables .weve spread&#13;
and a sumptuous feast prepared of&#13;
such things as they brought. Dinner&#13;
being over and the social feast now&#13;
at its highjt it was suggested that we&#13;
gather into the parlor (as much as&#13;
Xjould be,) when one of the Deacons on_&#13;
]the behalf of the company presented*&#13;
' the Pastor with an upholstered easy&#13;
chair and Mrs. Pettit with a bedquilt&#13;
pieced for the occasion and a small&#13;
purse of com. Deacon Bird presented&#13;
the Articles to Pastor and wife in very&#13;
-few words saying that the friends&#13;
wished us to accept them as tokens of&#13;
their yeryHhigh-esteem-, then-of course&#13;
/same the:response.in a fe\v &gt;ele_e11&gt;d&#13;
words showing that the esteem "was&#13;
mutual- After prayer the~.afterroon&#13;
being somewlu.t advanced, they began&#13;
taking leave; each feeling that the&#13;
season had been both profitable and&#13;
enjoyable.&#13;
The f&lt;&amp; owing Patents were granted&#13;
¢0 citizen'of MICHIGAN, beaming dale&#13;
Oct, 28, 1S84, lenoi^ed expressly for&#13;
this paper by Louis Ba^ge/ k Co.. '«iecn^&#13;
incaTEyTieT^-aTrd-Stu^tcitors'ofPtrK&#13;
NEEDLEWORK!&#13;
BKKiliS'&#13;
WCLOAKS! CLOAKS \*m&#13;
TKANSKKI*&#13;
AND&#13;
EMHKOIDKRY&#13;
IWTTKK.VS i&#13;
LKS.&#13;
We are showing a v:v,7 h uj;e liiu1 of these irood^ in r-5&#13;
m&#13;
,ents, Wash ng'on, D. C.&#13;
Alexander, A. D., Lawton, giam-&#13;
.drill, 0 0 7 , 1 ^ .&#13;
Alexander, A. D., Lawton, graindrill,&#13;
307,100.&#13;
- Biediting, Fran?.' Grand fiapids.&#13;
4ralt evener for wagons. 307.08^.&#13;
Pfe.ciiting, Franz, Grand Kojvds,&#13;
tongue supnoit, 307,090.&#13;
Hicks, I. V., Kalamazoo, adju^ablf&#13;
sleigh shalt. 307.-J02. * V " v&#13;
Kellam* D. C, Detroit, steam presume&#13;
regulator, 307,201.&#13;
Shaw, C. N., lJevoskev, meat-freezer,&#13;
307,311.&#13;
Spicei, P. A., Marshall, Hay-tedder,&#13;
,807,317.&#13;
Stokoe, J . W., Manistee, teed-machine&#13;
for saw-mill carriages, 307.348.&#13;
Stokoe, J. W., Manistee, feed-machine&#13;
for saw-iniil carriages. 307,349.&#13;
Sulhvan, Joseph,"Delroit, caster for&#13;
stove-le^s, 30,7,414.&#13;
Tregea, South Lyon, automatic. 1 ail-&#13;
)vay signal, 307,242.&#13;
AISTD&#13;
T H H I T - i T L T l N U .&#13;
Over 300 shades of fino imported&#13;
embroidery .silks sn gindrd as to make&#13;
aiti^lie work |&gt;(i&lt;&gt;iUc t.u all. We have&#13;
just put in a full line of t.liefe silks U&gt;&#13;
•Mcriiiupany llie liriggs lJ;i!?i'nis and&#13;
can supply any wants l».'&gt;s than yon&#13;
can buy them elsewhere. Ladies,&#13;
please 1,1!! and see ( he-silks and receive&#13;
free samples t)i llrigg*' I'drVrns,&#13;
W l N i HKLl.'s Dlil'ii S T O K K .&#13;
DETROIT &amp; CLEVELAND.&#13;
Steam Navigation Company's Steamers&#13;
City of Detroit—Northwest between&#13;
Cleveland and Detroit-Leave from foot&#13;
of Third St Detroit at 10 p. m.-Leave&#13;
from 23 River St. Cleveland at 8.30 p. m.&#13;
T H E $ 2 . 2 5 R O U T E .&#13;
Week days-standard lime.&#13;
T H E $ 3.00 R O U T E .&#13;
City pf MgC&gt;inac--C'ry ° f Cleveland&#13;
Leave from foot ©f Wayne St. Detroit,&#13;
Wednesdaysand Fridays at 10 A. M.&#13;
Monday^and Saturdays at 10 P. M.&#13;
For Marine City St Gair Port Huron&#13;
Sand Beach Oscoda Alpena Harrlsvilla&#13;
Cheboygan St. tgnace and&#13;
PICTURE-SO U£ MACKINAC.&#13;
Folders free—Or send 25 cents for our&#13;
.illustratedjaook of 120 pages,&#13;
ft LAKETOURTO PICTURESQUE MACKINAC&#13;
historical and descriptive of this&#13;
Great Historic Summer Resort&#13;
and Sanitarium.&#13;
C. Da Wtiitcnmh, Con'l Pass. Agent.&#13;
NRO rA 10P WI aDyn^e TStR.. DAet-roNit,S MIi chT.&#13;
I.,, .TrJ3 BJBJ3J3IE33&#13;
&lt; T ^ . - - d -&#13;
these goods were made to ordel* and are first-class-in every respect.&#13;
In addition we have a large consignment of very fine&#13;
The Democrats claim to have gained&#13;
two Congressmen in this State, which&#13;
* consoles them for the deteat of Uncle&#13;
Jpsiah.&#13;
• — — ^ — ^ w — ^ ^ ^&#13;
m he attention of our readers is callpd&#13;
to the advertisement of Lewis k&#13;
Sykes in this issue, and we heartly&#13;
concur in the advice printed on their&#13;
"barrel," viz: Ask your grocer for&#13;
Jjewis &amp; Sykes XXX crackers." These&#13;
goods are macje of the. very best material&#13;
and by the most experienced&#13;
workmen. Lewi* and Sykes' hew factory&#13;
on Congress street west is .one of&#13;
the largest and mo*p complete in every&#13;
Retail in the Northwest. They make&#13;
the very best ot everything and tlie&#13;
people nave found it out, Try their&#13;
prackers and you will use no other.&#13;
BUGGIES ANDTJUTTERS.&#13;
Having the.agency for the Kalamazoo&#13;
Buggies and Cutters those wirjhHI&amp;&#13;
to buy a good buggy cheap would do&#13;
well to call on me.&#13;
—Emmett Murphy,&#13;
at Pinckney Livery Barn.&#13;
( TEAM FOR SALE!&#13;
I offer for sale at a -bargain my span&#13;
"pfBoarrMares, 8 years"6ldT"sound;&#13;
jgdlinatched, and excelleni^weyk&amp;rsv-'&#13;
Any one desiring such a team wiTT-do&#13;
'well tp loqk *t them.&#13;
James T. Eaman.&#13;
Handsome line of fancy goods, bo6ks&#13;
and games, Japanese novelties, art&#13;
goods, etc., arriving at Winchell's&#13;
pryg Store. Call and see them.&#13;
The Greatest Medicine of the Age.&#13;
Kellogg's Columbian Oil is a powerful&#13;
remedy, which can be taken internally&#13;
as we}l as externally by the tenderest&#13;
infant. It cures almost instantly,&#13;
is pleasant, acting directly upon the&#13;
nervous system., causing a sudden&#13;
buoyancy ot the mind. In short, the&#13;
wonderful effects of this * wonderful&#13;
remedy cannot be explained m written&#13;
language. A single dose inhaled&#13;
and taken according to. directions will&#13;
convince anyone that it is all that .is&#13;
claimed for it. Warranted to cure the&#13;
following diseases; Rheumatism or&#13;
Kidney Disease in any form, Headache*&#13;
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,&#13;
Sprains, Bruises, Fles.h Wounds,' Bunr&#13;
ions, Burns, Corns, Spinal Affections.&#13;
V'olic, Crammng Pains, Cholera Morbus,&#13;
Flux, diarrhoea, Coughs, Colds,&#13;
...Kroncbiai Affection, Catarrh, and all&#13;
iiches and pains, external or interna).&#13;
fulL^irections with each bottle.&#13;
^$Q\ Sale at WWCHKLI/B DRUO*STORE&#13;
^ . .- &gt;&#13;
From a jobbing house, thus making in all one of the largest lines&#13;
in the county. This line consigned to us we.intend to CLORE IN&#13;
EIETEEN DAYS, and in order to do tin we are making *\&#13;
VERY LOW PRICES.&#13;
We cordially invite an inspection of this stock.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
LAKIN &amp; SYKES.&#13;
RSTAV.TJSHT:I) ixiu.&#13;
NO PATENT NO PAY&#13;
t/79&#13;
?A 1 ii NTS&#13;
Obtain -for"Media 11 ic»l Devices, Com-&#13;
^uiuids_^Designs_a m l^^abels^^&#13;
A'l preliminary examinations as&#13;
to patentability of inventions, free.&#13;
Our "Guide to Obtaining Patent,"&#13;
is sent free everywhere.&#13;
Address,&#13;
LOU .IB'BAGGER &amp; CO.,&#13;
SJLICITORS OF PATENTS,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C.&#13;
Bakery &amp; Restaurant&#13;
NOW OPEN AND&#13;
READY FOR BUSINESS!&#13;
Bread and Buns Fresh Every Day,&#13;
w &amp;rm muftis &amp;nrt lunches at nil hourc. Ovutprd&#13;
and all rlrlioK-ips in tholr at-ason. \\*&gt; have a line&#13;
of fresh groceries,,a j»e«(l assortment of tea from&#13;
• &gt; to 7"&gt; centH a ]&gt;o«n&lt;l, Highest pric'i* ]«tkl ftTr&#13;
Butter and. Efffca. Come and H s. Wis will give&#13;
you good Roods and fair prices.&#13;
During the past week we have received large&#13;
additions to our stock of&#13;
PUnT DRUGS AND MEDICINES,&#13;
STATIONERY,&#13;
FANCY GOODS,&#13;
Pictures and Picture Frames, Artists' Supplies,&#13;
Books, Games, Toys, Japanese&#13;
Novelties, Etc., Etc.&#13;
TOBACCOS,&#13;
* KEROSENE OIL. • Everything in our line at lowest prices.&#13;
Call and see us when in town.&#13;
WJNCHELL'S DRUG STORE.&#13;
5 ^ 5 l ^ : ^ : 7 ^ ) T A t throht stairif"Beebe Stofe/' \%t MaMreet, Pmcknpjr,&#13;
UNDERTAKER,&#13;
AND IU:AI,I-:&#13;
FURNITURE.&#13;
J'ii-tm'o l'limiiii^.' K'-piiifinT, Kit&#13;
\. K&gt;T M.MN ^ T ! : ; : I : T ,&#13;
PIKCKNEV&#13;
-'•nHhTlAX \&#13;
MICHICA!!.&#13;
i±±&#13;
BLACKSMITH&#13;
All kinds of cirsjjiiit lvork, s;:i&lt;I ircncrnl&#13;
HOHSF. SHOEING.&#13;
i 1 1; 1 r i ; l c of M ' I M K V&#13;
55 and :u ileJTt'ivori. A\&#13;
UN Ml-] IJ NEW&#13;
f i r .&#13;
MAXACEMENt!&#13;
REM) I H L DETROIT POST&#13;
Tht' Kest N(MV&gt;papt'r in Michigan.&#13;
Diil.v—S*i' ]&gt;er Y«'ar; (Ml (\'H(H \&gt;er Montli. %\"of kly&#13;
— Oni' Didlur IMT Your,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
CIRCULATING&#13;
LIBRARY.&#13;
Books loaned at 5 cents per von&#13;
ume, for 7 days.&#13;
« Tickets for . . . . . . 25cts.&#13;
li\ ••- " . . . . . ;,() a&#13;
New books are being added every&#13;
week, and the proceeds will be devoted&#13;
to increasing and improving&#13;
the library&#13;
For books or fiirtlier information&#13;
apply at " '&#13;
W I N C H E L L ' S 1&gt;KUG S T O R E D&#13;
" P m e x s h y , MICHIGAN ; '-&#13;
&gt; ty&#13;
/&#13;
i k x&#13;
_ _&#13;
-V—T</text>
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          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="36156">
              <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 Dispatch November 06, 1884</text>
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                <text>November 06, 1884 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
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              <elementText elementTextId="2734">
                <text>1884-11-06</text>
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                <text>Jerome Winchell</text>
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